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Category Archives: Poetry

Poetry, Please.

28 Thursday Sep 2017

Posted by ninevoices in Jane, PMRGCAuk, Poetry

≈ Leave a comment

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National Poetry Day, The Times

 

How better to celebrate National Poetry Day than to share with you words penned by our resident poet, Jane, on the birth of a grandchild?

Reuben was one of the poems in Jane’s book Fragments of Love, the title poem of which was originally printed in The Times in February 2010 as Love’s Fragments.

Jane generously donated profits from Fragments of Love to the ‘Cinderella’ charity PMRGCAuk, which supports sufferers from the painfully debilitating condition, polymyalgia rheumatica.

Being any kind of writer is hard. Being a poet is almost impossible. Let’s celebrate every last one of them on this, their day.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

A Poem that was Published in The Times

24 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by ninevoices in Competition Win, Jane, PMRGCAuk, Poetry, The Times

≈ Leave a comment

scan_20161119-2

In 2010, Jane – our resident poet – took part in a competition held by The Times to write a love poem for Valentine’s Day. Her entry, Fragments of Love, was among those chosen for publication in the newspaper. Quite an achievement.

In the spring of 2015 ninevoices held its own short story competition to raise funds for Jane’s chosen charity PMRGCAuk, which supports sufferers of linked rheumatic conditions that cause severe pain and can lead to sight loss. Few people have heard of either the condition or the charity, so it is greatly in need of funds and we were delighted to be able to send them a cheque for £500 raised by our efforts.

Ninevoices subsequently published a ‘slender tome’ of ten of Jane’s thought-provoking poems, copies of which were also sold in aid of this ‘Cinderella’ charity.

We are currently offering copies of this attractively illustrated booklet for sale at £5 each, to include postage and packing (UK only, we’re afraid). Payment can be made by PayPal (our preferred option) or by sending a sterling cheque, made out to ninevoices, to: Poetry Book Administrator, 53 The Boundary, Langton Green, Kent, TN3 OYA. We would also need your address details (which we won’t keep) sent either to the address above or to our email address: ninevoices@ymail.com

Most of us have a friend or relative for whom it’s difficult to find a modest Christmas present that’s a bit different. Why not give them Fragments of Love and Other Poems to read while they’re digesting their Christmas pud? You will also be donating in the region of £4 per poetry booklet to an exceedingly worthy cause.

Buy with PayPal:


Buy Now Button

 

If you click on this link to Fragments of Love , on YouTube, you will be able to enjoy hearing Jane’s poignant poem, which is sensitively read by Val, another member of ninevoices.

Digging for Words

11 Tuesday Oct 2016

Posted by ninevoices in Maggie, Poetry, Read Lately, Seamus Heaney

≈ Leave a comment

 

cimg0101

 

‘Between my finger and my thumb
The squat pen rests, snug as a gun…’

 

A quote from that wonderfully evocative poem, Digging, by Seamus Heaney.                  (1939-2013).

Competitions to Enter in October

01 Saturday Oct 2016

Posted by ninevoices in Competition Winners, Competitions, Maggie, Poetry, Short stories

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bath Flash Fiction, Earlyworks Press, Fifty Word Competition, Flambard Poetry Competition The London Magazine Fifty Word Competition, Flash 500 Novel Opening Ouen Press, Ouen Press, The London Magazine Short Story Competition, UCG International Literary Prize

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With ninevoices’ member, Tanya, winning two writing competitions this summer, Val winning another, and Sarah being short-listed, I make no excuses for urging everyone to attempt at least one of the following competitions. There are lots of them, so something for everyone:

Bath ‘Rolling’ Flash Fiction Awards. Their current competition is for up to 300 words, with prizes of £1,000, £300, and £100. In addition, the fifty long-listed story writers will be offered publication in an anthology. Deadline October 16. Details from bathflashfictionaward.com

Flash 500 Novel Opening Chapter and Synopsis. Send 3,000-word opening chapter, plus a one-page synopsis. Entry fee is £10. Prizes: £500 and £200. Details from http://www.flash500.com  Deadline October 31.

Earlyworks Press Short Story Competition. 8,000-words. Fee: £5 for up to 4,000-words; £10 for over that length. Prize: £200. Details from http://www.earlyworks-press.co.uk   Deadline October 31.

Ouen Press Short Story Competition. This is for a factual story of between 3,000-10,000-words. The theme is: The Journey. Entry is free. Prizes are £300; 2 x £100. Details from http://www.ouenpress.com    Deadline October 31.

East London’s Writeidea Festival 2016 has a Short Story Prize aimed at writers who have not previously been published (comforting to know you won’t be competing with Hilary Mantel!). They are looking for up to 3,000-words, in any genre. There is a first prize of £300, with four runners up each receiving £50. The closing date is October 10 and entry is free. Details on their website: http://writeideafestival.org/

The WOW Awards 2017 invite entries of fiction and poetry. In each category there are first and second prizes of 750 Euros and 150 Euros. The winners and five shortlisted entrants in each category will be published in an anthology and ten shortlisted writers will each receive 30 Euros. The stories may be up to 3,000 words and the poetry entries up to 100 lines. There is a fee of 15 Euros per story and 10 Euros per poem.  Deadline is October 31. Website: http://www.wordsonthewaves.com

The London Magazine Short Story Competition want stories of up to 4,000-words on any theme. There is a first prize of £500, a second prize of £300 and a third prize of £200. The winning story will be published in the magazine and the deadline is October 31. Details from http://www.thelondonmagazine.org

The Flambard Poetry Prize, awarded by Newcastle Centre for the Literary Arts to honour the achievements of Flambard Poetry Press, is for a group of five poems, which must be original and unpublished. First prize is £1,000 and a second prize of £250. Each poem must be a maximum of forty lines. There is a £5 entry fee per group of five poems and the deadline is October 31. Details can be seen on their website: http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ncla/competitions/flambard

The UCG International Literary Prize, is a new creative writing prize run by Hammond House Publishing in association with the University Centre, Grimsby. They are asking for between 2,000-3,000-words on the theme of conflict. There is a first prize of £500, a second prize of £100 and a third prize of £50. Winners will also be published in an anthology. With an entry fee of £10, the deadline is October 30. Details from their website: http://www.hammondhousepublishing.com

Last, but by no means least, why not have a go at our very own FIFTY WORD COMPETITION – inspired by the spooky photograph on our blog of today’s date? The prize may not be huge, but entry is completely free and £25 would fund a couple of pretty good bottles of wine or some other treat to inspire your further writing. The deadline is on THE STROKE OF MIDNIGHT on October 31. See below for details.

Good luck! Remember, someone has to win these prizes. Why not you? But DO remember to check all details on-line in case there have been changes or we have inadvertently interpreted them wrongly.

Ironed Out

23 Monday May 2016

Posted by ninevoices in Jane, Poetry, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

All is rucked on the wind-blown line

Billowing sheets and puffed up skirts
are plucked from gripping pegs
and lowered where the basket lies
expectant as an empty cradle.

Pressing knife-edged pleats
into their crumpled lives
seemed like an assertion
kindled in the kitchen’s hectic heat.

But thrusting home the point of the iron
in the sear-seamed point of the cloth
where they’ve reaped the rewards
and I gathered the leavings –
the odd pink sock, a poplin shirt:
double cuffed, collar fraying –
feels like failing.

I’m laundering a lot
(to keep my hand in.)
Stretched across the ironing board
Lies a shirt, sleeves trailing.

I rub the fabric between thumb and forefinger
to feel the texture of our love:
thinned and weakened by the friction
of endless smoothing..

All should have been abandoned,
rumpled and reeking in the wicker bin.
Instead, I’m eking out a whiff of them
in the washed-out folds of my memory.

Now they iron out their own wrinkled lives
or not. To ask
seems like a submission.

(Jane Dobson)

 

 

 

 

Richard III

02 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Crime, Ed, History, Horror, Poetry, Seen lately

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Carol Ann Duffy, cunning aunts, Josephine Tey, Leicester, Richard III, Robert Louis Stevenson, Vincent Price

My interest in Richard III – or specifically whether he was a bad or a good king – dates from an aunt cunningly suggesting to me as a young teenager that I read The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey, in which the murder of the Princes in the Tower is investigated in detective story fashion. And as a boy I could also enjoy his appearance as Richard of Gloucester in that great adventure story The Black Arrow by Robert Louis Stevenson.

I was fortunate to see Ian Holm play RIII (complete with hunchback, deformed foot and all) in the great Royal Shakespeare Company series in the early 1960s. (It was when my father was driving us back home from Stratford that we heard on the radio the news of President Kennedy’s assassination.) In another league, let us not forget Vincent Price’s portrayal of RIII in the 1961 film ‘Tower of London’. As you would expect, VP does not play him as the good guy.

I used to believe in Richard’s innocence of the murder of the Princes, but am now agnostic on the subject. Even so, I much enjoyed last week’s interment in Leicester Cathedral, so well done. Great sermon from the Bishop of Leicester. And a great poem from Carol Ann Duffy, ‘Richard’. You can read it at http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/mar/26/richard-iii-by-carol-ann-duffy. “ … I once dreamed of this, your future breath in prayer for me …” A wish now granted. RIIIP.

Memory of Izu

09 Thursday May 2013

Posted by ninevoices in Elizabeth, Poetry

≈ Leave a comment

The wind blows
Bear grass turns green to silver
Tears won’t come

Three-word poem challenge

09 Thursday May 2013

Posted by ninevoices in Christine, Maggie, Poetry, Sarah

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

challenge, Poetry

Can you write a three-word poem? Here are three we made earlier:

Ode to William the malingerer

Still ill, Bill?

End of the honeymoon?

Fat bum, hon.

Failed murder plot

You’re here, dear!

Paul Farrell – Hearing Gull, Silkscreen Print, 22 x 30 cm

28 Sunday Apr 2013

Posted by ninevoices in Christine, Observations, Poetry

≈ 2 Comments

On one of those sites selling lifestyle homewares
I notice a print for sale
A Hearing Gull.

I’ve heard of hearing dogs that bark for doorbells
But a hearing gull?
How?

At once, I see my own gull – cold-eyed,
A cruel mouth, but loyal
His name – Gabril.

He alights crisply on the garden table and speaks.
“I hear the cracking of the eggs
Soon, beware the swans.”

“The noise beyond the houses is a helicopter
Hovering above a crash…
There is blood.”

“I hear a roar of angry air above the clouds.
The geese will not fly tomorrow;
Pinion the barbeque.”

And then I see another featured print…’Black-headed Gull’
And realise that a human finger
Has typed ‘a’ instead of ‘r’.

In a single instant, gone is the hearing Gabril
Brushed from existence
By a typo.

Hearing gull

Christine

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