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Raine replied to the topic Traditional or Self-Publishing? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 4 months ago
@janeshuff said much of what I would have done. Basically, going it alone means a biggish up front investment by you, and it also means you have to be prepared to invest the time into marketing and promo without the support of a publisher. The plus is that you have full control, and don’t have to wait/hope/get lucky enough to find a…[Read more]
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Doug started the topic Traditional or Self-Publishing? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 4 months ago
Hi all,
Hope everyone’s holiday season is going well.
Right now I have two novels. I put one up on Amazon a few years ago, but when I re-read it a while later, I withdrew it in horror. And this was a book I’d had critiqued. Since then I’ve torn it apart and put it back together.
The other novel I’ve just about completed, and is patiently…[Read more]
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This is such a HUGE subject Doug. And the quick answer is you should do whatever works best for you and your book. There are, I think, essentially three options!
Trying to interest an agent who will then approach publishers on your behalf (a must if you want to be pub’d by a big press) which can take a long time unless you’re one of the lucky few…[Read more]
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Thanks for the feedback. I’ve subscribed to Adam Croft’s podcast and it sure looks interesting. I listened to one episode today. He has a sponsor called Ingram Spark, and for curiosity’s sake I checked them out. It looks like maybe a vanity publisher…? But anyway, thanks for giving me info to consider as far as which path to take.
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Janette replied to the topic Monthly comp: December 2020 in the forum Monthly Competition 5 years, 4 months ago
A New Opening
Lockdown. Away from a contageous world full of contageous people. Away from touch. Away from hold. Away from gossipy nudges and ear-whispers in the office, shrinking my world to room size; specifically the area where work-table met window. I unfasten the latch and swing it wide open in a desperate bid for expanse.
Between remote…[Read more] -
Doug replied to the topic How do you deal with the ever-distracting Internet??? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 4 months ago
Maybe I should also mention, that the timer I use is an online timer like a bomb with a fuse. You set the time, and the fuse slowly burns down while the clock ticks. When it runs out there’s a big “KABOOM!” I’ve been tempted to set the time, turn my speakers up on high, then try to write so many words before the thing goes off.
Maybe someone…[Read more]
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Doug replied to the topic How do you deal with the ever-distracting Internet??? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 4 months ago
Thanks. I’ve found what helps for me, when it’s really getting *bad*, is to set a timer. For the next 15 minutes I look at nothing but the story! Writing or revising. Then I can goof off a bit if I want. Not too long. Then I set the timer again.
Doing this, I’m finding it helps get me into the mode where I’m safety into the story.
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JaneShuff replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
You’re quite right Richard. Although the lack of hoovering and the pile of christmas cards still waiting to be written might point to a different conclusion!
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RichardB replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
‘Instant hit of relateable truth’: yes, that a good way of putting it.
Jane, if you got a result you haven’t been wasting your time, have You?
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Raine replied to the topic How do you deal with the ever-distracting Internet??? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 5 months ago
When I need to be productive, I set myself time slots for internetage. i.e. 15mins when I first sit at the laptop, during a lunch half hour, and then that’s it apart from evening phone-evil-blackhole-of-distraction. Tbh, I like being able to quickly check something as I’m writing – find a photo of a place, or look at a map or whatever, so I…[Read more]
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Daedalus replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
They do have that sort of instant hit of relateable truth don’t they? Ironic, or perhaps not, that Roche’s career might apply to the principle of ‘Connections’, even though it’s clearly about something much more personal. A missed connection here or there is the difference between national treasure status and obscurity.
Also interesting for me to…[Read more]
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JaneShuff replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
I’ve just wasted an hour, thanks to you Richard, trawling through the internet searching for Brian Patten who was my particular favourite and ordered a copy of Little Johnny’s Confession which I am sure is the book of his I used to have. Fingers crossed.
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RichardB replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
Jane, I suspect that, er, somewhere on the way you too encountered that anthology, so long ago you’d forgotten about it until my post reminded you.
Yes, I like the Liverpool Poets too. It’s only one aspect of his talent, but Roger McGough has raised that lowest form of wit, the pun, into an art form. Like this, from The Mersey Sound:
The Act of…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
From JaneShuff (copied from the wall)
Thank you for this, Richard. I spent my childhood and teenage years in Liverpool and The Liverpool Poets were a big part of it. I thought I hadn’t heard of Pete Roche but, amazingly, I found myself able to recite Somewhere On The Way as I read it so the poem must be buried somewhere inside the dusty old a…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
I’d not heard of Pete Roche, and much enjoyed these two examples, thank you for them.
It’s that sort of recognition/everyday honesty that draws me to certain songwriters (I’m thinking Aidan Moffatt in his Arab Strap days), and why Vicki Feaver spoke so loudly to me.
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RichardB started the topic Richard's Literary Byways: Pete Who? in the forum Blogs 5 years, 5 months ago
No, not that Townshend fellow. Read on…
Back in 1967, when I was in the midst of studying for English A Level, a book came out that introduced me and a lot of other people to a new idea of what poetry could be: accessible, direct, down-to-earth, irreverent, witty. Those who derided it as not proper poetry missed the point. This stuff was…[Read more]
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Thank you for this, Richard. I spent my childhood and teenage years in Liverpool and The Liverpool Poets were a big part of it. I thought I hadn’t heard of Pete Roche but, amazingly, I found myself able to recite Somewhere On The Way as I read it so the poem must be buried somewhere inside the dusty old antique shop of my mind. Thank you!
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Jane, I’m taking the liberty of copying your post onto the thread. It’s a bit difficult carrying on a discussion in two places at once, and stuff has a nasty habit of vanishing from here.
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I never know where’s the best place to reply – so thanks!
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JaneShuff replied to the topic How do you deal with the ever-distracting Internet??? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 5 months ago
Weirdly enough it helps my way of working which is to do intensive bursts of writing and then let myself be distracted for a brief while before I attack again!
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Libby replied to the topic How do you deal with the ever-distracting Internet??? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 5 months ago
I haven’t removed the internet connection from my laptop because it’s too useful when I want to check something, but keeping the laptop for writing and using a PC for everything else – emails, online purchases etc – makes distraction less of a problem. When I’m using the laptop I’m in writing mode. It’s a little thing but it helps.
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Doug started the topic How do you deal with the ever-distracting Internet??? in the forum The Writers' Lifeboat 5 years, 5 months ago
I’ve read William Gibson quoted as saying, it’s the biggest time-waster ever devised by man! I hate to think of how much time I’ve wasted with it, from 1996 until now. Ah well.
So far I’ve discovered the strategies of two authors.
Margaret Atwood: She has two computers, one connected to that ever-ensnaring Web, the other not connected. We…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Monthly competition November 2020 in the forum Monthly Competition 5 years, 5 months ago
@Daedalus, I know exactly what you mean: most of my novels start with a conversation between two characters, me thinking they’ll be the opening chapter, then, as things develop, I find they’ve moved to the middle of the middle.
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Daedalus replied to the topic Monthly competition November 2020 in the forum Monthly Competition 5 years, 5 months ago
@sandradavies thanks, I will look that up. I’m a fan of keeping speech tags/descriptions to a minimum and I often write scenes with dialogue first and then build the other stuff around it, so this is very much up my street
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Sandra replied to the topic Monthly competition November 2020 in the forum Monthly Competition 5 years, 5 months ago
@Raine – exactly! When I first read A L Kennedy’s tale, I had to re-read to see how it was done. Then di my best to emulate.
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Very helpful, Raine.
Oh good! I was just stream of consciousness wittering, but if there was something useful in there, then yay! 😀