I’ve just realised how exciting my life is right now.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s not like I forgot what’s going on but somehow, with my head in a whirl I just couldn’t quite find the space to get excited. Heck the nerves haven’t even kicked in yet.
You see, the thing is, suddenly everything is different.
For one thing, my writing life is just awesome, considering I’m not yet published in the traditional sense. I love writing for Fantasy Faction and I am stoked with the programme we have created for Get Writing 2012.
But that is not all. Oh no!
Whilst I’ve been working on all of that I’ve also been drafting CV after CV, specific ones for every job I wanted to apply for. At first it seemed that I wasn’t getting anywhere but then I am a firm believer in that saying that when it’s meant to be, it will be.
To cut a long story short I have found a fantastic job with Southern Rail. It will be a challenge, taking my environmental career to the next level but I’m excited about it, looking forward to all the new experiences I’m about to have.
I’ll also be moving home, leaving my beloved Hertfordshire behind and discovering the delights of the West Sussex countryside. Morpheus my gorgeous little black cat will be shaken for a little while, it’s a big move for a little cat but in the end, I think he’ll be happy.
I’m taking the opportunity to make some sustainable choices too. I’ll be travelling to work by rail, slashing my car use, plus I’ll be sharing a house with my newly retired mum. Sure that’s going to be a challenge after years of doing whatever I want but it has it’s advantages. Not only will it be cheaper running one house instead of two flats but it also reduces our various footprints. I’m hoping to start a new personal project (more on that soon) and also, I’ll have the freedom to spend time writing, travel a bit and more knowing that my little cat will always have someone home for him.
Of course, big changes like this mean lots of goodbyes too. I’ve met some amazing people through my work at Dorma, my membership of Verulam Writers’ Circle, East Herts Fantasy Writers, Herts & Middlesex Wildlife Trust, Badger and Bat Groups, Stevenage Council’s Tree Warden Scheme… so many friends and so little time to say goodbye to them all. So I’m not saying goodbye. These days contact is so easy with facebook, twitter, email, post, phone, travel all available. I will see everyone again, not as often as I wish I could but I am not losing friends, I’m gaining new ones. If I haven’t been able to get in touch yet, know that doesn’t mean I’m not thinking of you, I am well aware of the impact you’ve all had on my life and for that I thank you.
I’m writing this sitting on the train on my way to Fantasycon where I’m meeting up with people I know, people I’ve met once or twice and people I’ve only met online, just another branch of my life these days.
My future is open to offers. Seriously, how much more exciting can life get?
Contrary to popular belief I am not a naturally confident person. It’s taken a lot of effort to build up to change myself from a girl who spent all her time wondering what people thought of her to someone who is able to believe in what I can do.
Back in May 2009 I had my first article published in The View From Here. By now lot’s of people have read it, or heard it as it has also appeared in the Verulam Writers’ Circle anthology ‘The Archangel and the White Hart‘. A few weeks ago we had the launch party and I read it out.
As I read it occurred to me that when I wrote the article I could barely read to the circle in private for critique, let alone to perform to an audience. I grinned as I reached the sentence stating that I had just submitted my first short story. That story went to The People’s Friend and was accepted and has since been published. Imagine how I felt when the readings were done and people started coming up to me to congratulate me on the piece and to tell me that they had been inspired by it. Inspired by little old me.
I’ve been working hard on organising Get Writing 2012 and sometimes you get lost in the thick of things. There are also some huge changes coming up in my personal and work lives and you just forget to stop and appreciate where you’ve got to. So let’s have a little look.
This year I joined the staff of Fantasy Faction and took over as GW12 co-ordinator. I’ve written articles and blog posts, including my first guest blog on Steve Lockley’s Confessions of a Technophobe and even hosted a guest blog from the incredibly talented Jonathan Pinnock of ‘Mrs Darcy Versus the Aliens‘ fame. I feel like I have started to become ‘someone’ in writing.
But, something was missing. I was always using my Libertine picture as my Avatar and never used my own image. I still do use her because now she is out there and recognised. I couldn’t quite allow myself to look at a photo of me and like it. No matter how many people said how ‘nice’ any picture of me was, (you know the phrase “Ooh, that’s a NICE one of you!”), I could not see it. As a result I hide photos on facebook, have very few at home and generally avoid the stare of a lens.
I knew this would have to change. How many people in the digital age manage to be successful and anonymous? Well, I guess there’s Banksy but then his art speaks for itself. Mine doesn’t yet…
So I figured I need to get some photos sorted.
About the time I came to this conclusion I found out that Paul Simister was setting up as a professional photographer. He was starting to take some shots of friends to build up his portfolio and that included some fantastic black and white shots of a DJ which really caught my eye.
I talked to Paul and told him how I felt about posing for photographers but somehow he convinced me that this time would be different. I decided that if I was going to do this, it would be good to have some fun with it.
We did a few black and white ‘serious’ shots, in less than half an hour I’d relaxed a little and Paul managed to capture several that I was satisfied with. Then it was time to play.
One of the books I’m working on is a steampunk novel. I love the genre, there are some fantastic novels out there, the community and fashions are thriving and some of the art is just mindblowing.
My main character, Lady Elizabeth Silverwood is a staunch, strong-willed woman with an ordered world that is turned upside down. I created an outfit which represents who she is when we first meet her. The costume is starting to evolve with the character as she journeys into a dark world where murder is currency and heroes become villains. You could argue that she was doing the posing, not me. To be fair I wouldn’t argue back.
Either way, the results speak for themselves. Paul taught me how to relax and pose in front of the camera. We had a great afternoon wandering around in a local woodland, working with different locations, waiting for the light to change and the sky to present the perfect backdrop. Sure, there were moments when I wondered what the Hell I was doing there but Paul made it fun and who was I to question when he told me to look up, turn to the side, move an arm here or there…
Believe me when I say, this is a guy that is going places. Check out his website, I’m sure you can guess which ones are me, I hope you enjoy them. When you’re done with those, look around at the others, portraits, corporate, construction, wildlife – in Paul’s hands everything is beautiful.
First of all I’d like to thank Sandra for inviting me in as part of my Never-Ending World Blog Tour to promote my new book Mrs Darcy versus the Aliens (available at all the usual online places and in all branches of WHSmith, if you’re in the UK). I was wondering what on earth I could talk about when it struck me that Sandra has very kindly asked me to run a workshop at next year’s Get Writing conference (launching soon, check here next week) . The workshop currently has the working title of “Weird and Wonderful” and this seems like an ideal opportunity to give you a flavour of what it’s going to be about.
However, if the truth were told, right now I only have the barest idea of what shape and form the workshop’s going to take. But I’m not sure that matters. Because part of what I’m going to be saying is that the best way to release the weird and wonderful stuff inside you is to take a step into the unknown. You don’t need to know where you’re heading in order to start the journey.
If you don’t know quite where you’re going when you set off, your readers certainly won’t, and this will give your writing an extra edge right from the word go. Of course, you do have an implied contract with your readers to deliver an ending – LOL RANDOMZ is, generally speaking, not an acceptable conclusion to a story (although there are a few geniuses who can pull something like it off) – but the point is that your subconscious is utterly brilliant at making sense of things. Consider the way in which it takes the stuff floating around inside your head whilst you’re asleep and builds a narrative out of it.
I hesitated for ages before starting to write Mrs Darcy versus the Aliens, because while I was fairly certain that it was a viable concept, I had no idea where to take it. I’d written a lot of short stories by simply sitting down at the keyboard and seeing what emerged, but I’d never considered using the same technique for a full novel. It seemed crazy. But in the end I did just that: I simply sat down and started to write a few scenes, one at a time, just to get going.
Now the amazing thing about the human brain is that if you do sit down and write without any fixed plan, you introduce some unexpected democracy to it. The creative right-hand side suddenly finds itself on an even footing with the logical left-hand side and an interesting tussle starts to take place. The right-hand side will start throwing out all sorts of weird and wonderful stuff whilst the left-hand side is frantically trying to impose some discipline on it. And if you get the balance right, then you’re in business.
I don’t want to over-analyse (we are, after all, talking about a book called Mrs Darcy versus the Aliens here), but this process happened time and time again when I was writing it, both at the micro level in individual scenes and at the macro level when considering the overall story arc. Whether or not it’s worked will of course emerge over time as the sale figures come in.
Anyway, to get back to where we started, that’s the kind of thing I’ll be talking about at Get Writing: bringing democracy to the unliberated portions of your brain. Power to the cerebellum, eh?
[Links:
Mrs Darcy: http://www.mrsdarcyvsthealiens.com
Where to buy: http://www.mrsdarcyvsthealiens.com/buying.php
Wickhampedia: http://www.mrsdarcyvsthealiens.com/wiki ]
When I first took on the challenge of organising Get Writing 2012 I had no idea where it would take me. Well, I’ve already met some amazing people and launch date is looming ever closer, so I’m going to start blogging about some of our guests from my personal perspective.
And what better place to start than with Stephen King’s UK editor. Below is a message from Philippa Pride but first, let me tell you a tale of just how lovely she is.
Warning, I made an idiot of myself. Again!
It was at the York Festival of Writing, and we were just meeting up for the Gala dinner on Saturday evening. I was almost ready to go when the zip on my dress got stuck. I mean, really, what’s the worst that can happen when you are staying somewhere on your own…
Well, I’d arranged to meet my friends Susan Franklin and Lesley Eames outside the accommodation so thought, “It’s fine, they’ll help me fix it”. So I peeked outside and, true to form, I was confronted with a gathering! Now, don’t get me wrong, they were all people I was pleased to see, but maybe when my zip was functioning…
Susan and Philippa dashed to the rescue, bundled me back inside and a battle ensued. The zip was caught on a seam, it was fixed and all was well. Pride intact? Well, not mine but I’m kind of used to that!
ANYWAY!!! I digress. A course with Philippa would be money well spent, of that I am absolutely certain so please do check this out, it’s booking fast, just three weeks away:
Dear Friends of Sandra
Would you or any of your friends or clients like to come to France this September? We are gathering at a gorgeous farmhouse in the Dordogne from 10-15 September for the next Book Doctor writing course.
It will be a wonderful opportunity to free your creativity, start or continue your book and gather some insider tips for getting it published.
For more information, contact me at philippapride@yahoo.co.uk and click on the animated gif below to go through to my website www.thebookdoctor.co.uk and on the YouTube to see a short video with me; I’m a certified NLP Coach and Stephen King’s British editor.
There are just three rooms left now.
With best wishes from Philippa
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qawl8evdIT4
For some background, this is her biog for Get Writing:
Philippa is a writing coach, publishing consultant and book editor and runs workshops in which she combines inspirational exercises for freeing creativity with the nuts and bolts of getting published. A former commissioning editor with a major publishing house, PHILIPPA PRIDE has worked with some of the most successful writers today, including world superseller Stephen King who knows of ‘no-one in the writing and publishing business who is better equipped to talk about and teach the art and craft of writing’.
Described by Hodder’s MD as ‘a talented spotter of new fiction, a creative editor and a terrific champion of her authors’, Philippa continues her connection with Hodder & Stoughton as Stephen King’s British editor and has branched out into coaching; she is a certified NLP Master Practitioner and NLP Coach.
I can assure you that Philippa is the most genuine lady, totally encouraging and supportive and truly inspiring. I’m hoping to book up for the next course, which will be after GW. And, of course, if you can get to the UK on February 11th 2012, she will be running a workshop for us and taking some One to Ones – not to be missed!
Here is my guest blog as part of Steve Lockley’s Open House.
I am feeling rather humbled as the guests so far have been extensively published, incredibly talented people. I, on the other hand, am still finding my place…
I recently booked to attend FantasyCon 2011 down in Brighton and was already excited about going. Then I heard that there was to be a British Fantasy Society Open Night held at The Mug House, on the 3rd June.
Should I go? Hell yeah, course I should, it was a chance to meet some people before going away for a weekend with a bunch of strangers.
Well, let me assure you, they’re strangers no more!
I arranged to meet my friend from EHFW, Nyki Blatchley, who was later insulted by Dean M Drinkel (from El Lupo Films) who married us off (sorry Nyki!). Mind you, he also decided I was nearly 20 years older than I am. *sigh* Whilst white hair makes me stand out from the crowd it does also have that effect! I’m 40, just for the record, not that it matters
Seriously though, what a fabulous night I had. I was determined to meet lots of people and over the course of about five hours I did just that.
A couple of special mentions for great advice, contacts and all round good belly laughs:
The aforementioned Mr Drinkel, force of nature and great fun to be around. It all started with a photo then I couldn’t get rid of him… he he, in a good way! Dean told us all about M is for Monster an anthology he’d put together, featuring a certain Mr Jonathan Pinnock from VWC (yes, he of Mrs Darcy and the Aliens fame). I’ve now arranged to buy a copy from Jon, can’t wait to read it!
Later we were joined by Adrian Chamberlin, from Dark Continents Publishing, and we chatted for ages about the company, it’s authors and even, my work. He also recommended I read The Left Hand by Serenity J Banks, so I downloaded it when I got home and will be reading it when I’ve finished the book I’m on right now. I’ve been thinking about doing some reviews so watch this space…
Joe Hill, author of Heart Shaped Box and Horns, also came along. I was able to have a brief chat with him (cheekily asking if he might be in the UK in February… watch this space too!). What a great guy, he is just so easy to talk to and passionate about his work.
I also caught up with the lovely Robert Shearman, writer for Doctor Who and fellow Exeter graduate. We had a really relaxed chat, and plan to meet again soon to talk some more.
Paul Kane and Marie O’Regan, organisers of FantasyCon made me feel most welcome too so I’m now really looking forward to going, knowing that I will be meeting new friends when I get there.
Finally, I got to meet Craig Lockley. I came across him on the Musicbrick site a good couple of years ago. He noticed that I’d mentioned my fantasy writing and told me he is heavily involved with the BFS, organising all the reviews for their publications (and trust me, there’s a lot of them, their readers are a busy lot!). Anyway, we became friends on facebook and twitter and have been in touch ever since so meeting at last was brilliant. The icing on the cake was that he also put me in touch with his brother Steve Lockley who has his own blog and I will be guest blogging there on 22nd July. Of course, I will add a link here!
So all in all, it was a great night. All these things aside, it was a fabulous venue with great food, beer and atmosphere and everyone seemed to be having fun. Thanks to Martin Roberts for organising it!
If you’ve ever thought about going along to an Open Night but weren’t sure, trust me, you’ll love it. Hopefully the London ones will become a regular thing, hope to see you at one of them.
The Verulam Writers’ Circle has published an anthology!
It’s called The Archangel and The White Hart, fondly named after the two places we meet, the St Michael’s Church Hall and The White Hart Hotel both in St Albans.
The anthology is available on Amazon, Lulu or you could just come and visit us and buy it direct. Watch this space for news of the Launch Party coming soon at Waterstone’s St Albans (where you will also be able to buy a copy!) We’re making it easy for you to get hold of it, just let us know what you think, we’d love to hear from you!
I should mention that I am in it. Twice actually, since you’re asking!
The opening scene of Libertine is in plus my first published article ‘Don’t Revere the Peer’. Sincere advice that we should all follow!