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Log of the weekly changes on the site on 2007
This week's changes 2001
2002 2003
2004 2005
2006 2007
2008 2009
Some of the links are broken when items are archived - Please check the
page address (url) and it should be fairly easy to find the original page
or section. The site search facility on each page is also a great way to
trace articles.
17 December 2007
 |
News Review on the
clash of the titans, as Wikipedia squares up to Google and they both
announce major new plans to dominate the delivery of information on
the web. |
 | Enjoy some
early entries
for the 2007 Diagram Prize including
How to Write a How to Write Book (for those self help fanatics)
and
If You Want Closure in Your Relationship, Start with Your Legs. |
 | 'The most important job of a writer is to tell the truth and I feel I've
done that… ' James Lee Burke on Katrina in Publishing News, quoted in
our Comment column. |
 | This week's
Writing
Opportunity for UK residents is at £15,000 the richest short story
competition in the world. |
 | Our
An Editor's Advice
series is by Maureen Kincaid Speller, a
long-serving WritersServices freelance editor, and covers Dialogue, Doing
further drafts, Genre writing, Planning, Points of view, Autobiography
and Presentation. |
 | 'Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood.'
T S Eliot in our Writers' Quotes.
|
10 December 2007
 | Enter our new Poetry Writers' Yearbook
Competition, with copies of the book for the winners. |
 | Our article
from the book is 'a useful and practical guide to the fast-growing world of
the poetry ezine and epoetry'. |
 | Chas Jones warns about the sinister
Botnets which
have taken over huge numbers of computers across the world, and
shows you how to avoid being turned into a cyber zombie. |
 | As Chinese author Jian Rong wins the
inaugural $10,000 Man Asian Literary prize for his novel Wolf Totem,
News Review focuses on the
breathtakingly big Chinese book market. |
 | We've just added another another piece of glowing praise to our
Endorsements page. |
 | 'The best consequence of a novel selling well is that it gives you the
freedom to carry on writing for a while longer and, hey, it's a great problem
to have.' Kate Mosse on life after Labyrinth in Publishing News,
quoted in our Comment column. |
 |
Working with an agent shows you how to get the most out of this key
relationship.
Preparing for Publication is a run-through of what will happen after you
find a publisher, with specific information on the stages your manuscript
goes through on its way to publication. |
 | ‘I feel that criticism is a letter to the public which the author,
since it is not directed to him, does not have to open and read.' Rainer
Maria Rilke from Letters to a Young Poet, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
3 December 2007
 | What's happening on the web? Webmaster Chas Jones writes about a
‘joe job’ - a spam attack - on WritersServices.
Spam and some
serious ill effects |
 | 'Ghostwriting has been very much in the news recently, with the host of
celebrity memoirs fuelled by the public desire to read the inside story of the
lives of the rich and famous.' News
Review investigates the secrets of the ghostwriting fraternity. |
 | 'I'm here to answer reader expectations and my readers want a good
feeling at the end of a book… Having grown up in category romance, you have to
build an audience and then keep your name in front of it.' Debbie Macomber,
in Publishing News, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | A new writers' opportunity
is literaturetraining's downloadalbe pdf with a 20-page listing of
organisations, websites, magazines, publications and information sources in
the UK. |
 |
Looking for an agent? Check out our new
UK,
US and
International
agency listings from the 2008
Writers' and
Artists' Yearbook. |
 |
'Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far
as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.' E L
Doctorow in our Writers' Quotes.
|
 | The December Magazine is
ready! |
26 November 2007
 | 'Why do aspiring writers want to write? Because we want to give
up our jobs, because we want to be rich, because we want to be famous,
because we have a burning need to entertain – lots of reasons, of
course, but they all essentially boil down to one: we think it will
make us happier.' Bob Ritchie
in his Journal. |
 |
Does the Kindle herald a revolution in the book world? Have we arrived at what Evan Schnittman, Oxford University Press’s VP of
Business Development, called in this week's Publishing News ‘the most
significant moment in the history of e-books’?
News Review jumps in. |
 | Chas Jones' latest article on
Audio formats helps you choose the best
of the many available audio formats to use in your own sound
recording. |
 | It's part of our extensive new
Audio
Publishing section,
which guides you through recording your own work. |
 | 'There is no scientific proof that you will become a better, wiser
person if you plough your way through Dostoevsky...' Nick Hornby in The Times,
quoted in our
Comment
column. |
 | Are you wondering whether your work needs Copy editing? Read our
articles on the difference between
Copy
editing and Proof-reading and the
British/American divide. Our own
Copy editing service can
cope with it all. |
 | This week's
Writing
Opportunity is for Brendan Somers' one-day Screenwriting
Masterclass at the Society of Authors in London on 10 December. |
 | 'There is no way of writing well and also of writing easily.' Anthony
Trollope,
quoted in our
Writers' Quotes.
|
19 November 2007
 | The new 2008
Poetry Writers Yearbook is an essential book for poets which helps you to
survive and thrive as a poet. |
 | The Internet provides poets with an exciting new outlet for their poetry.
We are reprinting an excellent
article on poetry
ezines and epoetry by Kostas Hrisos, founder and editor of Interpoetry. |
 | Bob on the latest from
Writers' Block, Rosetta Stone mouse-mats, bibliotherapy (what we used to call
‘reading to people’) and his thriller: 'Walking home through city resolve to archive my thriller. Finally accept
it’s going nowhere. Maybe without it weighing me down I’ll at last overcome
two-year writing block.' In his Journal. |
 | 'We are no longer trying to entice people who don’t really want to buy
the hardback to do so.’ Is this the paperback revolution at last?
News Review investigates Picador's
move to paperback. |
 | 'A great irony of creative nonfiction is that one of its chief assets is
also one of its chief liabilities. The fact is that in nonfiction, everything
actually happened. It’s all true.' Richard Goodman on writing creative
nonfiction in The Writer’s Chronicle, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | We have over 1800 pages. Our
Help for
Writers page and
Site map will
help you find the information you need. |
 | You've only got until 30 November to get your entries in for
The New
Writer prizes for 2007! |
 | 'The cat sat on the mat is not a story. The cat sat on the
other cat's mat is a story.' John le Carre in our
Writers' Quotes.
|
5 November 2007
 | Now available on the WritersServices website, the fully updated
2008 Writers' and Artists' Yearbook
UK,
US
and
International agents. |
 | The
2008 edition of this essential reference book has a foreword by
Alexander McCall Smith, and new articles by Claire Tomalin and Jane
Green, as well as new pieces on Writing a Blog and Audio Publishing.
|
 | At midnight on Saturday the Writers Guild of America,
representing 12,000 writers, went on strike, demanding an
increase in the fees writers receive from residuals and new
technology. News Review
investigates. |
 | The 2008 T S Eliot
Prize shortlist (the world's top poetry award) is announced and
the Shadowing Scheme starts now. |
 | '"You're quite good are telling stories - why don't you make
one up?" So I screwed my courage to the sticking place. At the end of the session they
all shouted: 'Oh, sir!' They wanted more. In one afternoon I
understood what it is to be a storyteller.' Michael Morpurgo,
quoted in our Comment column. |
 | To keep up-to-date with the writers' world,
sign up for our free email
newsletter. Newsletter stats show
you who else subscribes. |
 | 'Except a living man there
is nothing more wonderful than a book! A message to us from the dead - from
human souls we never saw, who lived, perhaps, thousands of miles away. And
yet these, in those little sheets of paper, speak to us, arouse us, terrify
us, teach us, comfort us, open their hearts to us as brothers.'
Charles Kingsley, in our Writers'
Quotes |
29 October 2007
 |
Bob wakes early with the
rewrite of a violent scene in his TV drama playing itself out in his
head. Meanwhile: 'Am now the darling of Writers Block – as I could
have predicted after my sentimental piece on the untimely death of a
pet cat loosely based on an incident from my childhood is read out to
the class.' In his Journal. |
 | Why is there a compulsive need to write about dreadful real-life murders?
And why are their perpetrators sometimes so keen to unveil their crimes?
News Review looks at O J
Simpson and Krystian Bala. |
 |
Oxfam Life Lines 2
Oxfam have just launched the second Life Lines CD featuring 56 poets
reading their own work. |
 | Have a look at our
page of
endorsements from writers who have visited the site and used
what we provide. |
 | ‘A poem is direct, and charged with energy. Its language is not
clichéd nor second-hand. Its meaning, whether force or revelation, or slow
truth, is something we can actually use.' Jeanette Winterson in her
wonderful column in The Times, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Have you tried our page on
Using the
web as a research tool? There's also
Advanced
Searching to help you make the most of this wonderful tool. |
 | 'Contrary to what many of you may imagine, a career in letters
is not without its drawbacks - chief among them the unpleasant fact
that one is frequently called upon to sit down and write.' Fran
Lebowitz, quoted in our Writers'
Quotes. |
22 October 2007
 | Our
Review of The Handbook of
Creative Writing
concluded:
'This is a serious handbook for people who approach the business of
writing in a particular fashion, for whom simply ‘doing’ isn’t quite
enough; it’s for people who need to know ‘why’ as well as ‘how’. On
that basis, I have no hesitation in recommending it.' |
 | News Review on the
e-book: 'But when Amazon’s Kindle is launched we should see the answer to the
questions which have been hanging in the air for several years: Will the e-book
have a real impact on traditional book sales? Is this the future for books?' |
 | 'Biography is still, all too often, viewed as the skill of finding as
many facts as possible and assembling them into a definitive likeness, as if
each piece of paper, each interview, were a clue leading to a solution.'
Laura Thompson, author of Agatha Christie: An English Mystery, quoted in
our Comment column. |
 | This week's Writing
Opportunity is the bluechrome Short Story Collection Award,
which is open to all.
The winner will
receive £250, plus an offer of a contract to have a collection of ten of their
short stories published. |
 |
Finding an Agent helps you to get the right one for you,
Working with an agent suggests how to get the best out of the
relationship. |
 | 'I am inclined t think that as I grow older I will come to be
infatuated with the art of revision, and there may come a time when I
will dread giving up a novel at all.' Joyce Carol Oates, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
15 October 2007
 | Bob on Nobel prize-winner Doris
Lessing ('gave up after only a few pages') and competition to his own writing: 'Now why did I have to look him up?
Only to learn he’s just completed a two-part TV film which looks
worryingly like the play I’ve been trying to write for the last three
years.' In his Journal. |
 | Our updated
review of the
Children's Writers' and
Artists' Yearbook 2008
concluded that it provided
'superb listings of publishers and agents specialising in children's
books across the world'
and that it is still
'a fantastically valuable resource for anyone who wants to venture into
this highly specialised area of publishing'. |
 | 'Books are different, as people have always argued through the
ages... The amount of time a £6 (around $12) book provides - 20 hours
of entertainment? - means they are fantastic value.' Luke
Johnson, whose company has just bought Borders UK, in the Observer,
quoted in our Comment
column. |
 | News Review looks a a
hugely successful children's book project, Bookstart, the new Booked
Up and
Richard and Judy’s Best Kids Books Ever. |
 | Are you worried
about writer's cramp? Our
Health
Hazards series will bring you up to speed on
Repetitive
Strain Injury and
Carpal
Tunnel Syndrome and suggest how to avoid them. |
 | 'I've always just wanted to earn my living by writing. The best
thing is to go into my study in the morning and put words together.' Robert Harris, whose new political novel The Ghost is
causing a furore, quoted in our
Writers' Quotes. |
8 October 2007
 | The Frankfurt Book Fair, which starts on Wednesday, is trying
to broaden its appeal and secure its position as the global market place for
content. News Review reports. |
 | Does all this talk of Frankfurt make you think
about submitting your own book? Have a look at our
Editorial Services to get your
book into shape and there are also pages on
Making submissions,
Finding an agent and
Avoiding rejection. |
 | 'A self-help book for poets, providing 101 suggestions about how
develop your career as a poet and sell your work. If you’re
serious about selling your poems, this book is a must.' Our
Review of 101 Ways to Make Poems Sell by Chris Hamilton-Emery of
Salt Publishing. |
 | 'E-books will drive book demand: Amazon
is expanding the market, not cannibalising it; print-on-demand will drive book
production; and agents and publishers will both thrive because the cake itself,
online and in print, will expand.' Bookseller editorial, quoted in
our Comment column. |
 | Our latest
Writing
Opportunity is the Amazon First Breakthrough Novel
Award, with a $25,000 contract with Penguin USA as a first prize. You
have until 5th November to enter. |
 |
'I used to think all poets were Byronic.
They’re mostly wicked as a ginless tonic’
is Wendy Cope's view as expressed in Triolet, quoted in our
Writers' Quotes. |
1 October 2007
 | Macmillan New Writing
'With around 80 submissions a week and 7,000 manuscripts sent
in to date, MNW is not short of material but is still looking for more good
manuscripts.'
Chris Holifield takes a look at this
ground-breaking imprint which is looking for submissions from unpublished
writers. |
 | Bob, back again with his
Writers' Block writers' group, muses on reading novels and what novelists are
for:
'"What are novelists for?" ... to make things right, to correct the mistakes
of real life. Or, to put it slightly less charitably, to get one’s own back.’
In his Journal. |
 | Writing has been rated the top job to dream of in a recent YouGov poll.
But why? News Review investigates this
surprising statistic. |
 | Our most recent Writing
Opportunity is the Academi International Poetry Competition, closing 1
February 2008, so plenty of time to enter. |
 | 'For three years, you're alone with your thoughts, then for three
weeks you're thrown to the microphones in the name of 'publicity'. The
modern writer's life is like a cross between that of the Venerable Bede and
Naomi Campbell.' Sebastian Faulks, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Does your work need Copy-editing?
But do you know what the difference is between
Copy editing
and Proof-reading? Or do you want
American copy editing? |
 | 'What we want above all things is not more books, not more publishers,
not more education, not more literary genius, but simply and prosaically more
shops. George Bernard Shaw, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
24 September 2007
 | Are you worried about
The Writer/Publisher Financial Relationship? The latest new
article in our 19-part Inside Publishing
series deals with this tricky relationship and gives useful advice on
how to approach it. |
 | News Review looks at the storm in
an agency teacup caused by Carline Michel's appointment to head PFD, and how
this affects authors. |
 | What's an ISBN? We've updated our page on
international
standard book numbers and added new information about book
registrations. See our WritersPrintShop
self-publishing service. |
 | 'Demographically women of my age group are the largest group in the
population and certainly of the book buying population and we are not very well
catered for.' Sarah Challis, author of Footprints in the Sand in
Writers' Forum, quoted in our Comment
column. |
 | Do you want free intellectual property advice? Our latest
Writing Opportunity leads you to
an online video. |
 | 'In America only the successful writer is important, in
France all writers are important, in England no writer is important, and in
Australia you have to explain what a writer is.' Geoffrey Cotterell
provides a witty international commentary in our
Writers' Quotes. |
17 September 2007
 | Are you having difficulty deciding which service might be right for you?
Choosing
a Service by Chris Holifield offers advice on what to go for,
depending on what stage you are at with your writing. |
 | Bob on the strange power of language and his latest really good idea:'In a smell-o-fiction novel certain pages, paragraphs, sentences or even
individual words would be impregnated with an appropriate odour...' In his
Journal. |
 | Surviving the 'omnivores and the 'killer store' - last week
News Review looked at how publishers are reacting to digitalisation.
This week it will
investigate how it is affecting bookselling and the outlook for the
future. |
 | A L Kennedy in our Comment
column on her own prolific output: 'If you're quite a fast cook, you don't have children, you don't have pets
and you've got no-one to talk to, what else are you going to do? In the
Observer. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is for young poets. The Children's
Poetry Bookshelf Competition challenges 7-11 year-olds to write a
poem on the theme of 'Dreams'. New British Children's
Laureate Michael Rosen is the Chair of the judges. |
 | We've updated our wonderful page of
Rotten Rejections with this gem
on Sylvia Plath: 'There certainly isn't enough genuine talent for
us to take notice.' |
 | And cookery writer Clarissa Dickson Wright on
writers' motivation: ‘Most writers need to write. I write for
money, really. If I won the lottery, I would never write another word. I
would rather read.’ In our Writers Quotes |
10 September 2007
 | 80,000 visitors a week are coming to the WritersServices
website! Our visitor numbers continue to grow rapidly and the
site is expected to attract 5 million people this year. Read up
on this amazing
success story. |
 |
Poorly Outlook - webmaster Chas Jones tells the sad story of
losing his email and tells you what to do if your Outlook file is
unreachable. |
 | Have a look at our
WritersWebWatch
for over 100 other useful articles on dealing with every aspect of
technology. |
 | Digitalisation has become such a huge issue in the book world
that News Review will be
investigating the latest developments over the next two weeks. First,
what are publishers doing about it and how will this impact on
writers? |
 | 'So here's the essence of what I learned as a do-it-yourself author: a
publisher is far, far more than a printer and distributor of books, and an agent
is more than a deal-maker.' Jack Henderson on self-publishing, in
Publishing News, quoted in our Comment
column. |
 | This week's
Writing
Opportunity is The Poetry Business Competition for a Poetry
Pamphlet. The closing date is 31 October and winners receive
publication of their pamphlet plus cash prizes. |
 | To keep up-to-date with the writers' world,
sign up for our free email
newsletter. Newsletter stats show
you who else subscribes. |
 | Piers Paul Read, author of Alive! still
thinks that 'Truth is always duller than fiction.' He's in our
Writers' Quotes.
|
3 September 2007
 | Does presentation matter? In the
seventh and final Editor's View
Maureen deals with typefaces, layouts, page numbers, putting your
material into one document and spell-checkers. 'So far, in these
columns, I’ve been talking about the nuts and bolts of writing, and
about the ways in which people come unstuck in terms of content. This
time, I want to talk about the ways writers can make life easier for
editors and readers like me.' |
 | News Review looks at
the effect of stock market turbulence on the book world and better
news from booksellers Borders. |
 | Bob is still experiencing the
effects of heavy rain, but this time on holiday in France, where he
serendipitously discovers a study showing the benefits of writing a
diary: 'it’s not just OK to write about feeling lonely and
miserable, it’s positively beneficial. We should write about what we
feel. It’s good for us. Let the words flow; don’t worry about spelling
or grammar.' In his Journal. |
 | 'In this blizzard of commentary, from blogosphere to talk radio, it's odd to
discover that literary prizes now stand out as a remarkably reliable guide…'
Robert McCrum in the Observer, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is a teleseminar with well-known agent Simon Trewin on
How to make the perfect pitch to agents. |
 | If you're just back from a summer of working on your manuscript, don't forget we have a full range of editorial
Services to help you get it into
shape, from Reports for adult
and children's manuscripts to
Copy editing,
Submission critiques
to Rewriting. |
 | ‘Good novels are not written, they are rewritten. Great novels
are diamonds mined from layered rewrites.’ Andre Jute, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
20 August 2007
 | Are you keen to get your poetry published but don't know where to
start? Our
new
article helps you to look at the best approach to help you make
your way into print. |
 | After last week’s look at brand name authors whose books are written by
others, this week News Review investigates those who continue their writing
careers from beyond the grave. |
 | You need to hurry if you want to take advantage of this week's
Writing Opportunity and
get your screenplay in for the £5,000 ($9,908) Red Planet Prize by 1
September... |
 | 'With success I think a lot of it is luck. I've met a lot of depressed,
frustrated authors who are still lugging their manuscripts around publishing
houses.' Joanne Harris in Writers' Forum, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our Help for Writers page
guides you to hundreds of pages of advice to improve your writing, get
published, raise money and publish your own book. |
 | And from our Writers' Quotes
this gem from Groucho Marx: 'Outside of a dog, a man's best friend is
a book. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.'
|
13 August 2007
 | Bob on being nearly
flooded but catching the attention of foreign media and the argument
in US books groups about whether listening to a novel is the
same as reading it: 'The ‘hardcore’ book clubbers accuse the
listeners of ‘cheating’. Listeners tend to laugh it off, but
confess to feeling ‘guilty’. In his
Journal. |
 | 'Random House UK announced recently that their newly-acquired
mega-selling author James Patterson will nearly double his annual
output to eight books a year.' So how does he do it?
News Review investigates. |
 | We've updated a lot of our recommended
Links, so take a look at our lists
of Writers' Web Resources and
Writers Magazines & Sites. |
 | 'We can enjoy a thousand passionately consumed book cults - unpredictable, unbankable,
artist-led and the worst nightmare of the risk-phobic, sequel-crazy,
celebrity-obsessed multinationals that dominate world publishing.' Celia
Brayfield in The Times, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is the Small Wonder Short Story Festival at
Charleston in the UK from 19-23 September. |
 | 'The two most engaging powers of an author
are to make new things familiar, and familiar things new.' Samuel Johnson in our
Writers'
Quotes.
|
6 August 2007
 | Are you working on an autobiography or travel writing? In the
the sixth article in
the Editor's View series Maureen deals with these popular genres:
'Generally, I enjoy my work, but reading autobiographies and travel
stories for assessment is the hardest thing I ever do. Why? Because I
feel I’m not so much passing judgement on a piece of writing as on a
person’s life and experiences.' |
 | The battle of the classics has commenced!
News Review looks at two big
classic series relaunches and new 'compact' versions for the
time-strapped reader. |
 |
Auto-googling,
the latest article in our
Writers' Web Watch, is about finding yourself on the web and how
to boost your own identity. See also our many articles on
Web
issues and
Getting
the best out of the web. |
 | 'Today the danger for writers who continue to aspire to "good" in the old
sense is that they won't get published at all, or it will be with miserable
print runs.' Fay Weldon in The Times, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is for the UK's National Association of
Writers' Groups' Open Annual Festival in Durham at the end of the
month. |
 | 'Better to write twaddle, anything, than
nothing at all.' Short story genius
Katherine Mansfield, quoted in our
Writers' Quotes. |
30 July 2007
 | Our latest new
review is
for Alison Baverstock's book, which asks a fundamental question for every
writer: Is there a book in you? 'Being realistic about the resources you
will need... are what this immensely useful book is all about. It should be
required reading for all writers who aren’t sure about their commitment to the
craft.' |
 | Other reviews on the site cover
The Creative Writing
Coursebook, Your First Novel
and The Right Way to Write,
Publish and Sell Your Book: Your Guide to successful authorship. |
 | News Review looks at the sale
of successful independent publisher Piatkus and what it means for the
corporate battle for market share. |
 | 'I can't imagine setting a novel in a place I've never visited. I need smells, textures, the colour of the light. When I wrote a
novel set in Antarctica, for example, I went down and lived on a research
station for six weeks.' Rosie Thomas in Writers' Forum, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing Opportunity
is Legend Press's third short story collection. |
 | 'Pedestrian writing, thin characters - I can
handle the criticism. I write to pedestrians. And I am a pedestrian. I write
the best I can. I know I'm never going to be revered as some classic writer.
I don't claim to be C. S. Lewis. The literary-type writers, I admire them. I
wish I was smart enough to write a book that's hard to read, you know?' Jerry Jenkins, co-author of the Left Behind series, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
23 July 2007
 | A revolutionary online licensing system,
Creative Commons is 'a
clever and innovative way of licensing material which both makes it
widely available and also protects and controls the licence given. |
 | The article is part of our
Inside Publishing series, which deals with everything from
Advances and royalties to
Copyright, from
Subsidiary rights to
Children's publishing. |
 | Bob on writing from life:
'For myself, after letting friends and family read my first novel, I
rather depressingly saw that their inability to recognise themselves
properly was less a reflection of their vanity, more a reflection of
my shortcomings as a writer.' In his
Journal. |
 | 'The Harry Potter saga shows that the book world has changed for good, and
not in ways that make sense in relation to the simple equation of writer,
book and reader.' News Review is
still ruminating on the biggest one-day sale of any book in history. |
 | 'We must marshal knowledge from the relevant disciplines — design, the
arts, cognitive science, engineering — in order to
build tools and interfaces that will help us make sense of the huge masses of
information that have been dumped upon us with the advent of computer networks.'
Ben Vershbow quoted in our Comment
column. |
 | 'Writing ought either to be the manufacture of stories for
which there is a market demand - a business as safe and commendable as
making soap or breakfast foods - or it should be an art, which is
always a search for something for which there is no market demand,
something new and untried, where the values are intrinsic and have
nothing to do with standardized values.' Willa Cather in our
Writers' Quotes. |
16 July 2007
 | Can you trust
Free
software? Chas Jones looks at what you can get for free, in a
consumer's guide to what's out there. His view is that: 'There is
nothing wrong with free software.' |
 | Is this the last Harry Potter? 'It’s ironic that the book which is the biggest seller on the planet should be
treated as just another loss leader.' News
Review on Pottermainia. |
 | The first in a
new series of writers' success stories - children's author Rosalind
Kerven sets up her own publishing company to bring out her new
historical series. |
 | 'A good book is a good book no matter what the genre or how many copies it
sells. And a bad book remains bad, whatever the pedigree of the author.'
Scott Pack of the Friday Project in The Times, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | With web etiquette becoming topical, you can always consult our
well-established guide to make sure your
email
etiquette is bang on the nail. It's one of over 100 pages of help and advice in our
Writers' Web Watch. |
 | 'You don't write because you want to say something, you
write because you've got something to say.' F Scott Fitzgerald, quoted
in our Writers' Quotes. |
9 July 2007
 |
Bob on Le Tour, the nature of
tragedy and returning to the novel which came to him in a dream:
'Against my better judgment find myself writing odd paragraphs of
novel dreamt up some three months ago...' In his
Journal |
 |
Colour printing - advances in technology mean that it's now
possible to produce colour books using print on demand. So if you've
got a project needing colour illustrations, you can now self-publish -
with just a small quantity if you want - through
WritersPrintShop. |
 | The retailer Fopp has collapsed. The British book trade is close to meltdown at the moment, due to
circumstances which affect mature bookselling markets across the globe.
News Review reports. |
 | WritersServices webmaster Chas Jones has just had his book,
which sold out in hardback, published in paperback. It's called
The Forgotten Battle of 1066: Fulford. The battlefield Chas
discovered outside York is still
under threat.
Available from
Amazon
at £9.09($17.17). |
 | 'The idea that thrillers are peripheral to literature drives me
nuts. The thriller concept is why humans invented story-telling,
thousands of years ago.' Lee Child in Seven, quoted
in our Comment column. |
 | Our latest
Writing
Opportunity is the prestigious and highly competitive National
Poetry Competition run by the Poetry Society in the UK. It's
open to everybody. |
 | ‘An intelligent observation of the facts of human existence
will reveal to shallow-minded folk who sneer at the use of coincidence
in the arts of fiction and drama that life itself is little more than
a series of coincidences.’ Rafael Sabatini, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
2 July 2007
 | Who's telling your story? In her
fifth article
of advice for writers our editor Maureen Kincaid Speller deals with
points of view: 'It is a great temptation for the inexperienced
author to write from the first-person viewpoint.' |
 | 'Have those involved in the latest terrorist threats in the UK also been
inflamed by news of Rushdie’s knighthood?'
News Review looks at the links between literature and terror. |
 | To give some light relief we've added to our downloadable
poster collection with the fourth
Writers on Writing. The
whole collection is 15, with
Who needs experts? and
Computers particularly
recommended. |
 | From our Comment
column: 'I don't think writers choose their subjects. The process seems
to work in reverse. An image, a picture unfurls in your
imagination, or a line of dialogue, or a situation...' Joseph O'Connor,
author of Redemption Falls. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is Media Predict's innovative Project Publish, which
we urge you to take a look at for yourself. |
 | Don't forget that there are extensive
publishing and printing and
web and
technical glossaries on the site, useful for checking unfamiliar
words. |
 | 'What's the product that is imbued with the most value,
and the most meaning, and is the most important thing in the world? And
without a doubt, that is books.' Emma Barnes, MD of Snowbooks,
confriming our won view in our
Writers' Quotes. |
 | The July Magazine is
ready! |
25 June 2007
 | Setting as character
- Timothy Hallinan, author of A Nail through the Heart - on the
importance of place in your writing. |
 | News Review
investigates the row over publishers’ attempts to rewrite author contracts
to allow for changes in technology which make it possible to keep books
perpetually ‘in print’. |
 | Bob on suing if you get a bad
reviews (but how do you judge what is good?) and Salman Rushdie's
knighthood: 'has anyone – pro or con – actually read The Satanic
Verses?' In his Journal. |
 | 'There are whole new generations of writers waiting to come to the fore
via the internet rather than via the traditional route of agents and
publishers...' Richard Bawden of KPMG in Publishing News, quote
din our Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing
opportunity is the New Writer Prizes. |
 | 'Almost anyone can be an author; the business is to
collect money from and fame from this state of being.' A A Milne in our
Writers' Quotes |
 | Sign up for our weekly
newsletter to keep up with what's new on the site. |
18 June 2007
 | The long and winding road to publication... WritersServices'
freelance editor Colin Murray
on his own tortuous path to eventual publication: 'No matter how
jaded and cynical one pretends to be, there is nothing like holding a
copy of your first book.' |
 | Michael Rosen has been appointed UK Children's Laureate, and will make
children's poetry and picture books the focus of his Laureateship.
News Review reports. |
 | Bob on: 'the ideal form of
censorship: the kind we writers feel compelled to do to ourselves' and
more from the writer's life. In his
Journal. |
 | 'I never asked myself whether a 500-page novel about a Greek
family told by a hermaphrodite would be the kind of thing people would
read.' Jeffrey Eugenides, author of Middlesex, which
has just been chosen by the Oprah Book Club. In our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing
opportunity is a free Writing Masterclass in a
competition set up by Penguin to promote Naomi Alderman's
Disobedience. |
 | Having problems with technology? Or savvy about the web
and up for advanced technical articles? Either way, you're
catered for in more than 100 pages in our
Writers' Web
Watch. |
 | ‘Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again.
Fail better.’ Samuel Beckett, quoted in our
Writers' Quotes. |
11 June 2007
 | Do you need to plan your novel? The
fourth article in our Editor's View series deals with the
vexed question of whether you should plan before you start writing:
'the important thing to remember is that you’ll have to do it at some
stage ... and to find the point in the process that works best for
you.' |
 | 'I’ve been offered a deal for £50,000.' ‘New author
scoops big publishing deal’ is always a cheering story about the
launch of a first-time writer’s career...
News Review follows Marie
Phillips' progress. |
 | 'Paramount option around 100 scripts each year and make ten
pictures.' John Jenkins, editor of Writers Forum magazine,
in his last column for the
magazine on film deals.' |
 | 'Publishing one's first novel at 58 is both wonderful and terrifying...' Her advice to
literary late-starters: ' Keep going, keep going. It's not too late.' Marina Lewycka,
author of Two Caravans, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is to write a poem to help celebrate the
Bicentenary of the Slave Trade. |
 | Trying to get your children's book published? Our
children's editorial services
include reports and copy editing by skilled editors. |
 | 'There is absolutely no point in sitting down to write a book
unless you feel that you must write that book, or else go mad, or
die.' Robertson Davies in our
Writers' Quotes. |
 | The June Magazine is
ready! |
28 May 2007
 | Our latest contribution to
My Say from Eliza
Graham tells how she finally got her novel, Playing with the Moon,
published as part of the Macmillan New Writing programme. |
 | Bob muses on England and
Englishness:'In fact, according to E M Forster, Englishmen aren’t
really allowed to feel anything at all... "It is not that the
Englishman can’t feel…he has been taught that feeling is bad form."'
In his Journal. |
 | 'I never liked that tradition of post-feminist writing which is
all celebrating periods and pregnancy. I'm much more interested
in the real nuts and bolts of how women experience their bodies.'
Sarah Waters in the Independent on Sunday, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Following on from last week's look at the audiobook market,
News Review investigates how
downloads will lead the audio revolution. |
 | Our latest Writers'
Opportunity is the Winchester Writers' conference at the end
of June. |
 | Have a look at our page of
endorsements from writers who have visited the site and used
what we provide. |
 | 'Just because you go somewhere it doesn't mean you have a
peculiar or vivid or insightful take on the place. Any story takes
place in the landscape of the imagination.'
Stef Penney on her refusal to visit the northern Ontario location for
her Costa-winning novel, The Tenderness of Wolves, quoted in
our Writers' Quotes. |
21 May 2007
 | Booktrust and Writers is the
first in an occasional series about organisations of interest to
writers. First, Chris Meade, its Director, on the work of
Booktrust, which provides a model for new initiatives to promote books
all over the world. |
 | Are audiobooks becoming sexy at last, in decline, or staging a comeback?
News Review provides an
update. |
 | 'Biographies have become the standard-bearers of Western
culture, the lives by which we measure our lives.' Ben
Macintrye in The Times, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Does your book need research? We have a helpful article on
using the
Web as a research tool and a list of handy sites, plus a
review of Ann Hoffman's useful book Research for Writers.
|
 | 'The profession of book writing makes horse racing seem like a
solid, stable business.' is John Steinbeck's sightly depressing
view - in our Writers' Quotes.
|
14 May 2007
 | Bob wonders about the link
between depression and writing: 'Have I become too happy to be a
writer?... I still enjoy writing and I still want to write. But – how
to put it? – I no longer feel driven...' In his
Journal. |
 | 'The romance genre has traditionally been rather looked down on by the
publishing industry and thought to have an ageing market, but there are signs
that it is rapidly reinventing itself for the Internet world.'
News Review investigates. |
 | John Jenkins, editor of
Writers Forum magazine on creative writing courses:
'the phrase which worried me most was that the object of the course
was not publication... If Miss Student is not studying to get published what’s she
doing there for 90 weeks spread over three years?' |
 | Are you thinking about submitting your work? Our
Help for Writers section includes
Preparing Your Submission Package
and Finding an Agent. |
 | 'The idea that those of us who blog about books and reading might somehow
be degrading literary taste is a patronising and ridiculous one…' Susan Hill
in her blog, quoted in our Comment
column. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is Julia McCutchen's teleseminar interview with
Gabriella Goddard
on developing a platform for getting published and selling your
books. |
 | 'The end of a novel, like the end of a children's dinner-party,
must be made up of sweet-meats and sugar-plums.' Anthony Trollope
in Barchester Towers, quoted in our
Writers' Quotes.
|
7 May 2007
 | How do you become a successful genre writer?
In her third article our
long-serving WritersServices Editor answers this important question. |
 | The London and Bologna book fairs show the extent to which the
book business is increasingly reaching out across the world'. In this
week's News Review. |
 | New Writing Ventures offers fantastic opportunities for
unpublished British writers of poetry, fiction and creative
non-fiction in our latest
Writers' Opportunity. |
 | 'As you start writing a short story there's the sense that perfection is just beyond your reach.' Peter Ho Davies, author
of The Welsh Girl quoted in our
Comment column, on the
difference between writing short stories and novels. |
 | 'I think we got much better poetry when it was all
regarded as sinful or subversive, and you had to hide it under the cushion
when somebody came in.' Philip Larkin in our
Writers' Quotes. |
 | If you're interested in how software might help with your
writing, take a look at our
writers' software
review section. |
30 April 2007
 |
Diagram Prize Winner announced
- check out the 2006 winner of the Prize
for the oddest title of the year. |
 | 'Recent mega-deals for two history-writing superstars show the
increasing strength of this genre in both fiction and non-fiction.'
News Review investigates. |
 | Check out our carefully chosen Links,
with many new entries and 18 sections to help you find what you're looking for
on the web. |
 | 'The past? I don't want to see the past. I want to see the
future. I get very jealous of the future, because I know I'm not going to
be around.' Douglas Coupland in the Observer magazine, quoted in
our Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writing Opportunity
is the Daily Mail First Novel Award, with a £30,000 contract with Transworld
Publishers as the prize. |
 | And here's a sharp comment from P D James from our
Writers' Quotes: 'Publishers don't
nurse you; they buy and sell you.' |
23 April 2007
 |
News Review looks at authors' names
and whether they affect their sales, plus the finding that 49% of
readers are influenced by word-of-mouth. |
 |
Bob ruminates on connections
between writers and places, George Orwell and Southwold, and M R
James and the ghost-town of Dunwich: 'Which only goes to show
one shouldn’t associate a writer with a place too closely.
Graham Swift aside, either they never lived there, or they just made
it up.' In his Journal. |
 |
Getting the best from Amazon - our new article shows you how to
work with Amazon to maximise your book sales through them.
Promoting your book sales online outlines options for selling
books through Amazon. |
 | 'It is time to make a distinction between
writing which is produced with the intention of being literature, and what I
call ‘wreading’, words produced primarily as personal documentation, an activity
which has mushroomed online.' Chris Meade of Booktrust, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | 'A writer's duty is to register what it is like for him or her
to be in the world.' Zadie Smith in the Guardian, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
 |
Sign
up for our newsletter to keep up to date with what's new at
WritersServices. You can also check out
the
subscription statistics. |
9 April 2007
 |
In spite of feeling jealous of a successful fellow-writer and disturbed
by the size of his wife's royalty cheque,
Bob still thinks a writer's life
is preferable to: 'previous twilit years of salaried employment, when my days were ruled by
words like efficiency, time management, priority scheduling.' In his
Journal. |
 | Print on demand is coming of age.
News Review reports on the way
it is changing publishing and enabling writers to self-publish. |
 |
How to Write a Novel
Author Donna Grisanti offers some advice on getting started:
'Before starting the exciting journey of writing a novel, check the
true level of your enthusiasm.... On average, writing a novel
is a 2+ year task, which requires a strong positive attitude...' |
 |
'It's not easy to convey the impact on corporate thinking of the sheer
cataract of money that floods the coffers when a really humungous hit comes your
way.' The making of a blockbuster junkie from Anthony Cheetham in the
Bookseller, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest
Writer's Opportunity is the 2007 Biographers' Club Prize,
which last year we helped to achieve a record number of entries. |
 |
Do you need help with your writing? Included in our
16 services for writers
are the Editor's Report,
Copy editing
(including for American English) and
Manuscript Polishing, to
bring your English up to scratch for publication. |
 | 'The ancient historians gave us delightful fiction in the
form of fact; the modern novelist presents us with dull facts under the
guise of fiction.'
Oscar Wilde, in our Writers' Quotes. |
2 April 2007
 | The second Editor's
Advice deals with the need to do further drafts:
'It must be very disheartening, when you’ve spent eighteen months
sweating buckets over 150,000 words of fiction to have a report coming
winging back, effectively saying ‘do it again’... |
 | Book purchases up by 8% and genre titles strong -
News Review reports from the
annual Books and the Consumer conference. |
 | John Jenkins on his 10 favourite audio works, censorship,
printing, piracy - and what authors earn:
'10% of authors get 50% of the money earned from publishing. Only 20%
of authors earn all their income from writing.' The
Editor's Letter from
Writers' Forum magazine |
 | 'Rejection does not mean no. You wouldn't believe how many
scripts of mine have been rejected, only for me to sit on them, re-submit
them, and have them accepted.' Lynda la Plante in the Observer
magazine, quoted in our Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writers'
opportunity is the Masterclass on How to get published at the
London Book Fair. |
 | Interested in taking a writers' magazine to help with your
writing? Check out our
magazine reviews. |
 | 'No one who can read, ever looks at a book, even unopened
on a shelf, like one who cannot.'
Charles Dickens, in our Writers'
Quotes. |
26 March 2007
 | Bob's idea for a novel
strikes him suddenly in bed one morning: "I’ve just had this amazing
idea for a novel…"Partner raises her eyes to heaven. "Not another one.
When are you going to finish that bloody play?" In his
Journal |
 | 'A
self-publisher has just as much chance of achieving a powerful viral campaign by
coming up with a clever way of marketing their book as a big publisher does.'
News Review
on web marketing. |
 | Shortlist for the
2006 Diagram Prize - for the oddest title of last year, which has received unprecedented
international coverage, from the Orlando Sentinel to the Hindu. |
 | 'The internet has provided the opportunity to reinterpret
Bodley's vision of the library's universal value by adding a potential
readership of billions to the 40,000 or so individuals who are able to
physically visit its premises each year.' Reg Carr, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Are you considering self-publishing?
Check out our
WritersPrintShop
self-publishing service for writers, which uses
Print on demand to provide a
cost-effective quality service. We can
sell your book
online for you too. |
 | 'In other countries, art and literature are left to a lot of
shabby bums living in attics and feeding on booze and spaghetti, but
in America the successful writer or picture-painter is
indistinguishable from any other decent business man.' Sinclair
Lewis in our Writers' Quotes. |
19 March 2007
 |
Which service
should I choose? Do you think you
need some help with getting your manuscript into good shape for submission,
but don't know which service to go for? Our new page helps you work out what's
best for you. |
 | News Review looks at
international book fairs, including the push to make Abu Dhabi's 'the gateway
to publishing in the Arab world'. |
 | Our latest Writing opportunity
is the screenwriters' courses at Pinewood Studios. |
 | 'I'm not quite sure why literary publishing should deserve more support than,
say, educational publishing in Zimbabwe.' Richard Charkin, in his blog,
quoted in our Comment column. |
 | If you need a book to help with your writing, check out our
Review section. New ones include
Writing fantasy and science fiction and
The Right Way to Write, Publish
and Sell Your Book |
 | 'The only important thing in a book is the meaning it has
for you.' Somerset Maugham, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
12 March 2007
 |
Preparing for submission
It is important to think hard about whether your
manuscript is ready for submission before you start sending your work to
agents and publishers. Here are some tips on how to go about it. |
 | Bob, stuck on his TV thriller,
the pleasures of a Doomwatch revival: 'Forget The X-Files.
Forget Primeval. Forget Doctor Who and Torchwood. Nothing
but tongue-in-cheek sci-fi fantasy. Doomwatch was the real thing, and
we need it now more than ever.' In his
Journal. |
 | Authors' incomes are declining, often to subsistence levels. 'Copyright
is still the only way to secure the financial return necessary to keep us
writing. It is a battle we cannot afford to lose.’ Maureen Duffy of ALCS
in News Review. |
 | 'You either rest on your laurels
and wait for retirement to tap you on the shoulder, or you think: 'Now what can
I do?' John Harvey, on being awarded the Diamond Dagger by the Crime Writers'
Association, in The Times, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Are you considering self-publishing?
Check out our
WritersPrintShop self-publishing service for writers, which uses
Print on demand to provide a
cost-effective quality service. We can
sell your book
online for you too. |
 | 'Most people won't realise that writing is a craft. You have to take
your apprenticeship in it like anything else.' Katherine Ann Porter, in
our Writers' Quotes.
|
5 March 2007
 | Our new series, An Editor's Advice, is based on the advice
Maureen Kincaid Speller, a
long-serving WritersServices freelance editor, has given writers over the
years.
In the first article Maureen writes about dialogue:
A Word In Edgeways: Letting
Your Characters Have Their Say … |
 | News Review on Stef Penney's
surprise win and its effect on Quercus: ‘The company has moved, in one
startling lurch, from the margins to the mainstream, where the current is
faster and more dangerous.’ Chairman Anthony Cheetham |
 | John Jenkins of Writers' Forum on Andrew Crofts; Andrew Lownie; the London Book Fair; and
more on Stef
Penney: 'So much for write about what you know. Stef Penney, who has never
visited Canada, has won the Costa Book Award with her first novel, The
Tenderness of Wolves... ' |
 | Charlotte Mendelson, quoted in our
Comment column, on being an editor
and an author:'To write with any kind
of confidence and momentum and happiness you need to forget that the outside
world exists - and I can hear it yelling in my head, talking about 13-digit
ISBNs.' |
 | Our latest Writers'Opportunity
is the Brighton Children's Book Festival in the UK. |
 | Ready to submit? check out our pages on
Your
submission package, Finding an
agent and Making submissions. |
 | 'I review novels to make money, because it is easier for
a sluggard to write an article a fortnight than a book a year...' Cyril Connolly in his Journal,
quoted in our Writers' Quotes. |
26 February 2007
 | Bob on the search
for the GLA (Greatest Living Author): 'My own opinion is that the
popularity of these games illustrates a sad truth about contemporary
fiction, namely that it is often more of a pleasure to write about
than to read.' In his Journal. |
 | 'Quick Reads will not solve the world’s problems, but they do
provide a way to start engaging the millions of adults who have missed
out on the sheer pleasure of reading.'
News Review on the 2007
World Book Day initiative. |
 | Our latest Writing
Opportunity is the Bridport Prize for poetry and short stories,
described as the ‘richest open writing prize in the
English language’ and open to all. |
 | 'As electronic publishing gains traction, which it clearly somehow must, I
can see a sort of parallel emergence... an
abbreviated book-writing that is suited to electronic consumption.'
Natasha Randall in her New York Notes in Publishing News,
quoted in our Comment column. |
 | Looking for an agent? Check out our
UK,
US and
International agency listings from the 2007
Writers' and
Artists' Yearbook. |
 | 'Books choose their authors; the act of creation is not
entirely a rational and conscious one.' Salman Rushdie, quoted in
our Writers' Quotes. |
19 February 2007
 |
WritersServices powers
ahead Every week over 60,000 visitors come to the site, with over
3 million in 2006 and 4 million expected this year. And there's a big new launch
to come... |
 | 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows will hit bookshops on 21
July... But a price war has already broken out.' News
Review looks at the last Potter. |
 |
Promoting your book sales online - online options for selling books
through Amazon, including Marketplace, Associates and Advantage. |
 | 'Dear Louise, thank you for refusing to take no for an answer.
For ignoring my in-built hesitance and for giving me the confidence to put pen
to paper.' Nigel Slater thanking his editor, from our
Comment column |
 | Our latest
Writing
Opportunity is Gather.com's First Chapters Writing Competition. |
 | Our Health
Hazards series provides a warning and advice about
repetitive strain
injury,
carpal tunnel syndrome and other risks for writers. |
 | 'Writing is more than anything a compulsion... It pays a whole lot
better than this type of compulsion, but it is no more heroic.' Julie
Birchill, in our Writers' Quotes. |
12 February 2007
 | Win a website of your own -
competition winner announced
Londoner Rebecca Hazel is one of the two winners. |
 | Read the winning story -
An Introduction to the Internet |
 | Bob ruminates on what wimps we have all become about the weather:
'What we need is a Poet of the National Weather, a writer in residence
at the Meteorological Office who can knock off an uplifting poem every day
to round off the weather forecast.' In his
Journal. |
 | 'I never wanted it and I never expected it and certainly didn't work for
it and see it as something that I have to get through, really…' J K Rowling on
the nature of fame, quoted in our
Comment
column. |
 | Find our what
audio publishing can do for you. Check out our just- overhauled new site. Start with
Getting
Connected. |
 | Our latest Writers' Opportunity
is the V S Pritchett Memorial Prize for the best unpublished short story. |
 | And here's John Osborne in our
Writers' Quotes: 'Writers don't need love; all they require is money.' |
5 February 2007
 | If you want to self-publish and plan to design your own book, here are
some Notes
to help you do it. |
 | News Review looks at new evidence
on the importance of parents involvement in their children's literacy: 'Amazingly, it is a more powerful force than social class, family size or level
of parental education.' |
 | We've updated our selected Links, with some
interesting new ones under Commercial
sites. |
 | ‘The first challenge, of course, is finding something that interests you... and you'd better be sure, because
you are going to be living with this idea, like a combination of wife, lover,
concubine, schoolteacher and prison warder, for months to come…'
Andrew Taylor on writing a book, quoted in our Comment
column. |
 | Last chance for a
Free 20 minute telephone coaching session with Julia McCutchen. |
 | Our latest Writers' Opportunity
is the Mslexia Poetry Competition, open to woman all over the world. |
 | And Iris Murdoch, in our Writers'
Quotes: 'Writing is like getting married. One should never commit oneself
until one is amazed at one’s luck.' |
29 January 2007
 | Bob finds someone
in the news has appropriated his main character's name: 'Turn on TV
to be informed about the goings-on in the world, only to discover a
name in the news is exactly the same as that of my hero.' In his
Journal. |
 | 'We’re only just coming up to the end of the first month of the new year,
but already there are signs that the pace of change is not going to slow.'
News Review
looks at big changes in the book world. |
 | Only two more days to enter our very short story competition -
your chance to
win a website of your own. Closing date
midnight GMT 31 January 2007. |
 | 'The acquisition of Serpent's Tail by
Profile... guarantees that Serpent's Tail remains within the independent sector. It also means I can devote myself to publishing and
editing – a dream come true.' Pete Ayrton of Serpent’s Tail, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Our latest Writer's
Opportunity is a call for submissions for The Mammoth Book
of Lesbian Short Stories. |
 | Need a book to help improve your writing? Our
WritersBookstall has over 200 carefully
categorised titles. |
 | 'What a blessed thing it is, that Nature, when she invented,
manufactured, and patented her authors, contrived to make critics out
of the chips that were left!' Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jnr, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
22 January 2007
 | Do some things just not work on your computer? You might need to deal with
Pop-up
Blockers. Pop-ups can be a nuisance but they are also useful when you want
to access the many features offered by websites. |
 | 'Following the recent furore relating to the Decibel Penguin Prize, the
organisers have been forced to back down.'
News Review on whether you can support
particular ethnic groups without discriminating against others. |
 | Our latest Writing Opportunity is
the Waitrose Food Illustrated Recipe for Success - a £20,000 prize for
the best new British cookery writer. |
 | 'Large advances attract huge publicity, not all of it good. Literary
critics will be more inclined to review whether the book is value for money than
whether it is a good read.' Danuta Kean in Mslexia, quoted in
our Comment column. |
 | Are you struggling to get your work ready for publication? Check out
our 16 Editorial Services, which range from
Reports to
Copy editing and
Rewriting, including
Children's Services and
Scriptwriting. |
 | 'I have no problem with chick lit. I love Bridget Jones's Diary, it's
just great. It's all the muck in the middle I mind. I hate anything that's
middle brow. Let us have art and let us have entertainment.'
Jeanette Winterson in The Times, in our
Writers' Quotes. |
15 January 2007
 | Want to find out abut a book fair near you? Our updated
2007 list of
International Book Fairs
crosses the globe. |
 |
Bob starts the year with a bang, musing on Post-Modernism,
deconstruction and the Intentional Fallacy:
'A character in the film gradually realises he is actually a character in
another character’s novel-in-progress and naturally becomes quite upset...'
In his Journal. |
 | 'I never set out to write historical fiction: it's just that history keeps
being what I want to write about.' Emma Darwin, author of
Mathematics of Love, in Writers' Forum, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 |
Don't forget that you can
win a website of your own by entering our very short story
competition. Closing date 31 January 2007. |
 | It’s pretty unusual for a novel to start an international movement, but
Catherine Ryan Hyde can claim to have done just that.
News Review looks at
Pay it Forward. |
 | Catch up with the winner of the
T S Eliot Prize for Poetry,
just announced. |
 | And, as the poet said: 'Poetry is not a turning loose of
emotion, but an escape from emotion; it is not the expression of
personality but an escape from personality.' T S Eliot in our
Writers' Quotes |
8 January 2007
 | Our latest review is of Your
First Novel by Ann Rittenberg and Laura Whitcomb: 'an excellent
tutorial and reference source for anyone who wants to become more than a
weekend scribbler... with a book like this on your desk, you stand a much
better chance of succeeding.' |
 | Fast forward into the digital future?
News Review looks at what the
futurologists are saying. |
 | Don't forget you can get a Free 20 minute telephone coaching session with Julia McCutchen if
you register for any of the individual Coaching service packages by Friday 9
February 2007. |
 | 'When I first considered self-publishing I worried that it might be
career suicide. But my experience has been really great.' Frances
O'Brien, author of Sheer Bliss, quoted in our
Comment column. |
 | Check out our new audio
section, now updated. Record your own work using the facilities built
into your computer. |
 | 'Reading groups, readings, breakdowns of book sales all
tell the same story: when women stop reading, the novel will be dead.' Ian McEwan,
in our Writers' Quotes. |
 | Do you need help with your writing? Included in our
16 services for writers
are Copy editing
(including for American English) and
Manuscript Polishing, to
bring your English up to scratch for publication. |
1 January 2007
 | Set up your own website! Soon you'll be able to join our
community of writers at WritersHomePages and have your own window on
the world. |
 |
Win a website of your own by entering our very short story
competition. Closing date 31 January 2007. |
 |
Bob's
Journal goes
into its 7th volume as Bob contemplates the New Year, George
Orwell, work done and work to come: 'Finish TV thriller. I’ll just
write that again. Finish TV thriller...'
The new entry. |
 | 'The Christmas figures are not yet out, but it’s a racing
certainty that customers will once again have flocked to Amazon and
further increased its grip on gift sales.'
News Review looks at
Amazon. |
 | 'Surely it is an odd way to spend your life - sitting alone in
a room... year after year, struggling to put words on pieces of paper
in order to give birth to what does not exist - except in your head.'
Paul Auster in the Observer, in our
Comment column. |
 | Considering writing a memoir, your own or someone else's?
Our article on
Writing
a biography or autobiography will help get you started. |
 | 'Novels seem to me to be richer, broader, deeper, more
enjoyable than poems.' Philip Larkin, in our
Writers' Quotes.
|
This week's changes 2001
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2004 2005
2006 2007
2008 2009
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