Yup, still banging on about Sunlounger, but it seems like a public service to herald the fact that it has just gone on Summer Sale at 99p on Amazon, which is less than 3p a story. Yes really, 3p. (Actually 0.0225p if you want to be mathematic about it). I'm sure penny chews can't be had for 3p nowadays, in spite of trade descriptions rules...
(For those in the outerworld, you can currently acquire it on Amazon.com for $1.51. Sorry, did you want the math too? That's 0.034cents a pop. Bargain!)
For those who haven't bought it yet, the saving you'd make means you could have a ice-cream while you read it on your sunlounger.
Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm!
Friday, 26 July 2013
Tuesday, 23 July 2013
Stories, stories, stories
I know I
have been hammering on about the Sunlounger anthology quite a bit recently, but forgive me- it might be my only moment. However, more importantly, it has highlighted that I
had forgotten briefly how much I like short story anthologies. So this is about
anthologies in general, and why I’m suggesting you should have some in your TBR
pile.
Anthologies are pick-up-and-put-downable. You don’t have to feel guilty about it. And let's be honest, if you don't like a story, you can just skip to the next without anyone noticing that you are cheating...
Genrewise,
if you are new to a genre or want to extend your field of preferred writers,
anthologies are fab for giving you a taster without the commitment to a whole book.
Some writers will appeal and some might not. You cannot like everyone’s style.
FACT. You’ll know not to seek their books out in future, but instead to go
hunting for that author who you'd never heard of but who wowed you.
Reading
them as a collection, they bring something else to the table. I've just
finished reading 21 Proms. As you can
imagine all the stories were based on the theme of prom in all its guises. Reading
all these stories as a batch showed how all these different writers tackled the theme in a vast variety of ways.
They wrote from differing genres and with different POVs and tones. Across the
book, you come to consider the choices they have made in constructing the
story.
If you write, it encourages you to try something new in your own
writing. I just had a go at 2nd POV, which isn’t my norm, prompted by one of
these stories. Using Sunlounger as an
example, the collections shows a multitude of ideas based on women travelling.
They are all so different. Some involve a love interest, some don’t; some are open
ended, some complete; most are realistic, but some have a fantasy
lilt. So many styles, all within the umbrella of Women’s fiction or Chciklit.
This isn’t
just a one off. There have been various anthologies in my TBR lists in the few
years;
21
Proms -ed. David
Levithan and Daniel Ehrenhaft
Losing It - ed. Keith Gray
Let
it snow. (Three
stories by three writers, to form one whole.) -John Green, Maureen Johnson, Lauren
Myracle)
Steampunk! ed. Gavin J Grant
Naked
City , Tales of Urban Fantasy
– ed. Ellen Datlow
The Curiosities -Maggie Stiefvater, Tess Gratton & Brenna Yovanoff)
If you are
looking to add something different to you TBR pile, this would be my summer
recommendation: Whether you are a writer or not, grab yourself an anthology, of
the theme of your choice, and see the joy that a cluster of little things can
bring.
Anyone got any to recommend? Please let me know through the comments box below.
Sunday, 14 July 2013
It's all gone quiet
After the posting frenzy that the Sunlounger extravaganza instigated, you may have noticed that things have slowed down somewhat. I suspect it is a welcome break from my witterings. Given school is about to kick out here, you're probably good for another six weeks too.
I'm spending the summer thinking about something new. I'm plotting, researching, writing character sketches and generally taking the time to write around it, getting to know it. This is new for me. I usually have a premise and then write hundreds of snippets of dialogue, until the story emerges. That hasn't really been working for me recently, so a new approach was required. I posted here about how ideas need to have time to simmer and develop, how they cannot be expected to be perfect from the word pop. Because they cannot be. It is too much to ask of something so newborn and fragile.
So I'm plotting and nurturing this summer, in the hope to have something to throw myself into. What are you up to?
I'm spending the summer thinking about something new. I'm plotting, researching, writing character sketches and generally taking the time to write around it, getting to know it. This is new for me. I usually have a premise and then write hundreds of snippets of dialogue, until the story emerges. That hasn't really been working for me recently, so a new approach was required. I posted here about how ideas need to have time to simmer and develop, how they cannot be expected to be perfect from the word pop. Because they cannot be. It is too much to ask of something so newborn and fragile.
So I'm plotting and nurturing this summer, in the hope to have something to throw myself into. What are you up to?
Sunday, 7 July 2013
Christmas in July
If anyone is in
the mood for a pitching competition, then the annual Christmas in July
event is about to start over on Ruth Lauren Steven's site, which you can
find here.
Entries need to be in on Tuesday the 9th July and the selected pitches, based on the first 500 words, will be announced on the 15th and potentially requested by 16 agents on the 18 & 19th. Unfortunately for us on this side of the pond there don't seem to be any Brit agents (Boo hoo!), but you still might find it suitable for your MS.
Good luck!
Entries need to be in on Tuesday the 9th July and the selected pitches, based on the first 500 words, will be announced on the 15th and potentially requested by 16 agents on the 18 & 19th. Unfortunately for us on this side of the pond there don't seem to be any Brit agents (Boo hoo!), but you still might find it suitable for your MS.
Good luck!
Tuesday, 2 July 2013
IT'S OUT!
Yesterday I pottered into London to help hand out promo postcards to unsuspecting women with some of the authors, judges, family and friends. We were later joined at Salvador e Amanda by the editor, agent and art director and stylist. Everyone was very friendly and welcoming to the newbie (me). I'd had a few white Sangrias, and prattled non-stop to all of them, as is my usual M.O when vaguely inebriated.
The Sunlounger authors in the room were Belinda Jones, Anna-Lou Weatherly, Carrie Duffy, Lucy Lord, Molly Hopkins, Ilana Fox, Rosie Blake, Wendy Rigg, Emily O'Neill, Holly Martin and ...me!
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