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Monthly Archives: February 2017

Competitions to Enter in March

26 Sunday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Competitions, Maggie

≈ Leave a comment

crimefest

Here are some competitions to enter in March – some with early deadline dates, so be warned.

Flashbang Contest for 150 words. Entry fee: £2. Prizes: two weekend passes to Crimefest 2018; one weekend pass; special Crimefest delegate bag; shortlisted entries will be invited to Crime Writing Day on 19 May. Details: flashbangcontest.wordpress.com

Crime Writers Association Margery Allingham Short Story Competition for a 3,500 word story written to ‘Margery’s definition of a mystery’. Fee £12; Prize: £500 plus a selection of Margery Allingham-related books. Details (including her definiation of a mystery): thecwa.co.uk/debuts/shortstory-competition

Mslexia is inviting entries for a new women’s flash fiction competition, which is running alongside its short story competition. The new Women’s Short Fiction Competition 2017 – Flash Fiction is for stories up to 300 words and will be judged by Kit de Waal. There is a first prize of £500 and three other finalists will each win £50. All the winning entries will be published in Mslexia. The entry fee is £5 and all stories must be by women writers. Their Women’s Short Fiction Competition 2017 – Short Story is for stories up to 3,000 words and will be judged by Deborah Levy. The first prize is £2,000, plus an optional week-long writing retreat at Gladstone’s Library and a day with an editor at Virago Press. Three other finalists will each win £100, and all four winning entries will be published in Mslexia. The entry fee is £10 per story and, again, you need to be a female writer. Deadline is 20 March. Details: http://www.mslexia.co.uk/competitions.

Visual literary journal Short Fiction is inviting entries for the Short Fiction Prize 2017, for stories up to 5,000 words.The winner will receive £500 and there is £100 for the runner-up. The winning and runner-up entries will be published in Short Fiction. The third-prize winner will receive a place on a Short Fiction online masterclass. Entry fee is £7 and the closing date is 31 March. Details: http://www.shortfictionjournal.co.uk

The Play’s the Thing. The Windsor Fringe Kenneth Branagh Award for New Drama Writing is open for entries to the 2017 competition, which is intended to encourage new writing talent. The competition is for original, unpublished and unperformed one-act plays no longer than thirty minutes by amateur playwrights. Three scripts will be selected to be performed at the Windsor Fringe Festival in October and the overall winner will also receive £500. Scripts must be for no more than six actors and suitable for staging in a studio theatre. Only one script per author will be accepted. There is a £10 entry fee and the closing date is 5 March. Details: http://www.windsorfringe.co.uk/drama-awards-2017-apply-now/

Submissions are invited for the inaugural Saltash Short Story Competition on the theme of ‘community’. Original stories of up to 1,000 words are wanted and winners in each category (adult, young person 12-17 and child up to 12) will receive book tokens worth £100. Winners and runners-up will also have their entries published in an anthology. Entry fees are £5 adults, £2.50 young person, £1 child. Closing date 31 March. Details: http://diverse-events.com/events/saltash-may-fair-2017.

Making Waves is a new competition for spoken word poetry from Falmouth Poetry Group amd has a first prize of £600. There is a second prize of £250 and a third prize of £150. To enter send digital sound files of short spoken poems, up to 200 seconds. Entry fee is £6 and the closing date is 31 March. Details can be found at: https://cornwallcontemporary.wordpress.com/making-waves-spoken-poetry-competition/

Fish Publishing Poetry Contest for a poem of 300 words. Online fee: 14 Euros; postal fee: 16 Euros. Prizes: £1,000 Euros; week at Anam Cara retreat. Details: http://www.fishpublishing.com

 Please remember to carefully check all details before entering.

Remember that New Year’s Resolution you made – to write more, enter more competitions – now’s the time to surprise yourself and follow through!

Fear of long lists

24 Friday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Sarah, I’m practising blogging but wanted to again say how thrilled I am that your talents are being recognised.
Love, Jane

Interview with author Sarah Salway

22 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Fiction, Getting Published, Inspiration, Marketing, Poetry, Stories, Tanya

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Alice Duer Miller, Carol Shields, Denton Welch, Gardens, Margaret Atwood, Sarah Salway

sarah-books

In this guest post ninevoices talks to Tunbridge Wells author Sarah Salway

First of all, tell us about what you are writing now?

I’m writing what I hope will be my fourth novel. It’s provisionally called ‘There Was Nobody There’, and is a detective story – but with a difference. It’s told over a week, and from a series of first person voices. Everyone sees a little bit of what happens but a) doesn’t realise or b) has their own reasons for keeping quiet. I was inspired by how the police put out that rather plaintive request sometimes: ‘surely someone must have seen something’! We’re all so tied up with our own lives and stories that sometimes we miss the huge things going on around us.

This is traditionally published – were you still able to choose the title and cover and other aspects of the design? What about the blurb?

Actually, this is the only novel I’ve written that hasn’t been already signed up by a publisher. Even my first was under contract to Bloomsbury before it was finished. I deliberately haven’t tried to sell this one although my agent has seen it. There’s something liberating about writing it while thinking it may never be published. It has allowed me to really play with the format and the story, although I’ve realised that I do need a deadline!

With the others it was a mixture, really. I’ve been published in both the US and the UK, and Something Beginning With was called The ABCs of Love in the States – this led to confusion with people complaining because they’d bought both thinking it was a different book. I haven’t been involved with choosing the covers of my novels – the big publishers have experts on hand so it seemed better to leave it to them. I have been involved with choosing the covers of my poetry and short story collections though, and have really enjoyed that. There’s something satisfying about getting stuck into all aspects of the book.

I love the physicality of books anyway – I’m often to be found stroking beautiful covers in bookshops!

Tell us how you first became a published writer?

I was a journalist, and studied fashion journalism at the London College of Fashion. I have worked in fashion PR, for Cosmopolitan, the Scotsman and Time Out magazine. We were living in Edinburgh when I had children, and I found a morning drop in class in creative writing. I’d always loved to read, but at school we mostly studied dead male writers so I didn’t think it was something someone like me could do. After the first class, I was hooked. I started writing short stories, and one of those stories was on the internet where it was found by my first agent who asked me if I would turn it into a novel. This became Something Beginning With, my first novel.

What have you published since?

I’ve published two more novels, Tell Me Everything and Getting the Picture, a collection of short stories, Leading the Dance, two poetry collections, You Do Not Need Another Self-Help Book and Digging Up Paradise, and a collaboration of short pieces with Lynne Rees, called Messages.

How difficult is it to get your books into bookshops? Do you have to do a lot of marketing yourself?

It depends on the genre, I think. And also the publisher. I was lucky with my novels in that Bloomsbury had very strong links already, although there was one instance when my book was placed on a table right at the front of the Waterstone’s near where my father lived. He very carefully moved all the copies to the shelf under ‘S’. He was very proud of himself, so I didn’t tell him that it had actually been a coup to have been so prominently displayed! Luckily, my publishers saw the funny side.

Contemporary poetry doesn’t tend to have a big space in bookshops – I think I’ve sold more copies online and at readings.

More and more though writers are expected to do their own marketing. It’s difficult because it feels a completely different set of skills is needed from the actual writing. Many of us write because we are happy pottering around on our own, making up stories and sometimes spending days searching for the perfect sentence. The real world can be a shock – not just because you have to get dressed! I’ve often talked with other writers about forming a co-operative where we promote each other’s books – somehow that’s an easier thought than selling our own. I don’t know if this is different in other cultures, but I was always told not to talk about myself because nobody would be interested.

But then here I am… right now… talking about myself!

How do you use social media to promote yourself?

I’m a big fan of social media, but more to find out about other people, other books, other worlds than promoting myself. It works best for me when it is a conversation – I love how generous other people are. I tend to stay away from the trolls and the haters – although recently there seem to be more and more of them.

Where do you find inspiration?

What a question! All over, really. There are times when I have to consciously turn myself off because there are too many stories coming at me. I love history, strange facts, old books, snippets of conversation, people’s faces. I often have to stop myself staring but I’m sure most people don’t realise how beautiful they are. The trick, I’ve found, is to put two things together. Often I’ll get inspired by one thing but it isn’t enough to sustain a story. Add something else into the mix – especially if doesn’t immediately seem to connect – and I have a more interesting story.

Do you belong to writing organisations?

I’ve taught creative writing for many years now so I suppose I’m making my own organisation! I’m very proud of my students who have been published widely over the years, and I’m gradually curating a bookshelf of their work. As well as classes in my own home, I teach at the University of Kent’s Tonbridge centre, and with the Freestyle Yoga Project in Tunbridge Wells. I keep a list of classes and events on my website, http://www.sarahsalway.co.uk.

I have a special interest in working with groups and individuals for writing for wellbeing, and was co-founder, along with Victoria Field, of the Kent Writing and Wellbeing Network. It is now being ably run by Nicky Thompson. I’m also a member of Lapidus and National Association of Writers in Education. Part of my day job is to be the Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the University of Kent, and although it’s not an official organisation, we have a busy Fellows forum which I find very useful.

Which authors have influenced your writing?

There are so many, but three I’d particularly like to mention. Denton Welch was a writer from Kent who wrote so beautifully and with so much attention that he can make three pages of description about one plate completely thrilling. From him, I learnt to slow down and allow the reader to breathe. Then, one rainy holiday in a rented cottage in the Lake District, I discovered an American writer called Alice Duer Miller. She wrote in many different genres – poetry, novels, even silent movies – and I absolutely loved her sly wit and playfulness. Lastly, Carol Shields is such an elegant writer and what she does with structure blows me away. Reading her gave me a real feeling of permission. I’ve just realised I’ve nominated no living writers, so I’m going to add Margaret Atwood here too – not just because of her words but because she is always pushing the limits of what people expect her to be doing. I take courage from that.

What would you like to do next?

Last year I worked on so many projects that – although busy and stimulating – meant that I didn’t feel I was finishing anything. SO… this year I have made a resolution to work on one thing at a time. I’d like to finish my novel before doing anything else, although I have a list of things I want to do. It seems to be the way of it that when we’re working on anything for a long time, there are always ideas that seem so much better waving at us from across the desk!

I’d like to get the final draft of the novel finished by the summer though, so I can carry on with my writing blog, writerinthegarden.com. I studied garden history relatively recently and am now obsessed – there are so many stories, so many eccentric gardeners, and so many dreams involved in gardens throughout history.

www.sarahsalway.co.uk

www.writerinthegarden.com

Fear of longlists …

17 Friday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Competition, Exeter Novel Prize, Sarah

≈ 2 Comments

I’ve lost count of the number of writing competitions I’ve entered. With a couple of exceptions I’ve got nowhere. Even though writing is something I love, the number of hours I’ve clocked up, not to mention the so-called opportunity cost, can feel pretty dispiriting without a readership (beyond my wonderful writing group). Which is why I decided I wouldn’t bother checking the latest ‘longlist’. If I was on it, the organisers would let me know. If I wasn’t, I wouldn’t have to go through that heartsink scanning-to-no-avail thing. Liberation! On Valentine’s Day I woke up to an email: one of my lovely writing pals thought she recognised my novel on the Exeter Novel longlist but she wasn’t sure; there were no authors’ names. I jumped out of bed and got checking. Feverishly. And …

… she was right!

Whoop! I felt so encouraged I got working on a short story to enter into another competition. But if my friend hadn’t told me, I’d still be in the dark. I was wrong about the organisers being in touch.

So in future I’ll be checking longlists, however much my poor old heart has to sink!

‘The Elements of Eloquence’

14 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Ed, Grammar, Read Lately, Words

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Bible, Dashiel Hammett, Elvis Presley, Lennon & McCartney, Mark Forsyth, PG Wodehouse, Philip Larkin, Procol Harum, Rolling Stones, Shakespeare, ST Coleridge, Wordsworth

“‘I wandered lonely as a cloud …’ Clouds are not lonely. Especially in the Lake District where Wordsworth wrote that line. In the Lake District clouds are remarkably sociable creatures that bring their friends and relatives and stay for weeks. … It’s not that Wordsworth didn’t know about meteorology, it’s that he did know about metaphor.” (Mark Forsyth)

elements-of-eloquence

I distrust books that have blazoned on the cover, “I laughed out loud”. But in the case of The Elements of Eloquence – How to Turn the Perfect English Phrase, I did too. My fellow travellers on the train to Rochester pretended not to notice.

In this book Mark Forsyth explains figures of speech (39 in all) used by writers good and not-so-good over the last 500 years, with examples and comment. Shakespeare, the Bible, William Blake, Leonard Cohen – they’re all here. This is a great read in its own right, and also a mine for the writer aspiring to write better.

Take Merism. This is when you don’t say what you’re talking about, but instead name all of its parts, as in “For better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health”, when you could just say “in all circumstances”…

Or Polyptoton, the repeated use of one word as different parts of speech or in different grammatical forms, eg Lennon & McCartney’s Please Please Me. Or the Bard in Richard II – “Grace me no grace, nor uncle me no uncle”.

Enallage, a deliberate grammatical mistake – “Love me tender” works where “Love me tenderly” wouldn’t. Unadverbial Elvis.

When Mick Jagger, singing of his honky tonk woman, tells us that “She blew my nose, and then she blew my mind,” he is demonstrating his use of Syllepsis, where one word is used in two (or more) incongruous ways.

There are Transferred Epithets, when the adjective is applied to the wrong noun, as in Wodehouse: “His eyes widened and an astonished piece of toast fell from his grasp.”

We all know Hyperbole: Dashiel Hammett on a private eye: “He … could have shadowed a drop of salt water from Golden Gate to Hong Kong without losing sight of it.”

Philip Larkin’s most famous line, we learn, is an example of Prolepsis, when you use a pronoun before saying what it stands for. We don’t know who They are, until we’re told they’re Your Mum and Dad. Doesn’t work the other way round, does it?

‘The Fourteenth Rule’ – Mark Forsyth’s own term – is that a number can give an apparent significance. The “sixteen vestal virgins” in Whiter Shade of Pale work so much better than “several vestal virgins”.     The Spirit that follows the Ancient Mariner’s doomed ship does so “Nine fathoms deep”.  (What was so special about 54 feet down?)

And many more, as they used to say on compilation albums …

Great entertainment, and you’re learning while you laugh! Published in 2014 by Icon Books Ltd, ISBN 978-184831733-8 RRP £7-99

 

The Rejection Diaries

13 Monday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie, Mslexia, Writers' Forum

≈ 1 Comment

cimg1735-1

Last year wasn’t impressive on the competition front. I didn’t even receive many rejections – though that was largely due to concentrating on my novel.

This morning’s post brought another thumbs down, for my entry to Writer’s Forum Short Story Competition. HOWEVER, the story involved, Party Girl,  was at least placed on their shortlist, suggesting it had something going for it.  So – being a hopeful soul – I’m dusting it off and sending it to Mslexia for their current short story competition.

Despondent? Never!

Good news for a certain chain …

03 Friday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Bookshops, Ed

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

profitability, Waterstones

books

Waterstone’s are back in the black – good news for those of us old-fashioned types who like to buy actual books and who feared that our few actual remaining bookshops were in danger of disappearing ….   And sales of novels are up – more good news!  https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/feb/01/waterstones-first-year-of-profit-since-2008-financial-crash-bookseller-amazon-rise-sales

No favourite books?

02 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Uncategorized, Valerie

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

favourite books

At lunch recently three friends agreed that it is impossible to have a favourite book as different books become special at various stages of one’s life. I was the only person who admitted to having three favourite books dating back to schooldays. I’ll tell you mine, if you say yours…

Selfishness and Jane Austen: an irresistible competition

01 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Competition, Tanya

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Hampshire Cultural Trust, Jane Austen, Jane Austen's House Museum, Selfishness

Occasionally a short story competition comes along that gives you a thrill of creative excitement.

The competition set up by Hampshire Cultural Trust in association with Jane Austen’s House Museum is like this. Perfect for all of us who can’t get enough of our idol, even in this 200th anniversary year of her death. Aren’t we so steeped in Jane Austen that we might have a chance this time of writing something which will catch the judge’s eye?

Stories must be no more than 2017 words and respond to the quote from Mansfield Park ‘Selfishness must always be forgiven you know because there is no hope of a cure.’

One snag – the closing date is 28th February. Website: http://janeausten200.co.uk/competitions

 

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