Friday, 26 October 2012

Writer - David Viner

Welcome to my interview with writer, David Viner.  Enjoy.


David Viner

Hello David.  Can you introduce yourself?
I'm David Viner from Norwich.
How long have you been writing?
Dabbled in the 1970/80s.  Became more serious in the past 10 years. 
What first got you interested in writing?
Reading and thinking "I could do this."
Positive thinking!  Do you attend a writing group?
Redwell Writers.  One of the original members in 2006.
Why do you attend a writing group?
Mutual encouragement.  Get feedback on my own writing.  Interesting to hear what others are writing and how they are progressing. 
What is the most valuable thing you've taken away from your writing group?
Encouragement. 
What genre(s) do you write?  What drew you to this/these genre(s)?
Sci-Fi, slipstream, anything that takes my fancy!  Have always read Sci-Fi since childhood.
Are there any genres that you don't enjoy writing?
No, I won't preclude any style or genre for which I get an idea.
What types of things do you write?
Short stories mainly though there are a couple of novels under the proverbial bed! (aren't there always?)
Indeed there are.  Have you ever had anything published?
Yes, 3 short stories: 

  • Eight Excerpts from a Secret Inter-dimensional War  - published in The Hub magazine (now defunct) 2007 – a science fiction story told in eight unconnected flash fiction sections. 
  • Home For Christmas – a story of one man's struggle to return to the city of his birth after the onset of a new ice age. Published in "Angles, an anthology of Speculative Fiction featuring authors/stories based in East Anglia, edited by Ian J C Millsted" 
  • No Accident – a tongue in cheek murder mystery set in the 1960s - published in First Edition magazine (also now defunct). 
Have you sent your writing to agents/publishers?  Have you received any rejections?
Yes and yes!
Would you consider self-publishing/e-publishing?
Yes, the anthology that we are considering doing for the writing group would be self published. It is no longer looked down upon – the "vanity publishing" aspect has almost disappeared now. Personally I prefer the feel of a proper paper–made book in my hand.
I agree about the paper made books; that's what makes it a book and not a computer screen!  Who/what influences your writing?  Where do you get your inspiration from?
Inspiration can come from anything: a chance comment, an article in a magazine, an idea seemingly from out of nowhere. I often start writing with no idea of what I am writing about – the Eight Excerpts story started like that as did the story I read out at the writing group a couple of evenings ago. 
How do you come up with your characters' names and personalities?
It depends on the setting of the story – Zartok Krackskull is obviously not the sort of name I'd use for a story with a modern day domestic setting whilst Elsie Thompson wouldn't sound right for an evil Galactic Overlord! J The personalities tend to grow with the writing.
Unless Elsie was Zartok in disguise, to lead his/her enemies into a false sense of security...  Do you start out with a complete idea for your stories, or do you just start writing and hope for the best?
Either will do. 
Do you have a writing routine?
No routine whatsoever!
Do you have an editing process?
The read and review sessions at the writing group are good for identifying problems that I haven't spotted.
Have you ever entered any writing competitions?  Have you ever won?
Yes and no.
Have you ever attended an open mic event for spoken word performers?
Yes, though I didn't get the chance to read anything and wouldn't have wanted to at the time as it was first (and only) time there.
How important is it for you to share your writing?
Quite important as it gives the feedback I need to improve.
What do you enjoy the most/least about writing?
A feeling of achievement when it goes right.  Getting started can often be hard.
What is the best piece of writing advice you've ever been given?
Writers write.
What advice could you give to a new writer?
As above but also to believe in yourself – usually, it can only get better! 
Apart from writing, what are your other hobbies/interests?
Music (I play guitar in a folk/ceilidh band).  Computers (I build web sites for a living).
What types of things do you read?  Do you think your writing reflects your book tastes?
Sci-Fi, comedy, technical, scientific.  Yes!
Do you have any favourite lines from novels/plays/poetry/songs, or any favourite literary quotations?
"It's the same old story.  Boy finds girl, boy loses girl, girl finds boy, boy forgets girl, boy remembers girl, girl dies in a tragic blimp accident over the Orange Bowl on New Year's Day."  Actually, that's from a film – but it shows up my wacky sense of humour.  Google it – it's not hard to find. 
If you could have written anything, what do you wish that could have been?
Day of the Triffids – my favourite book. 
Do you have a website/blog/Twitter/Facebook dedicated to your writing?
I have my own website though it is used for much more than my writing – www.davidviner.com
Would you be able to provide a short piece of your work?
This is from the 7th excerpt of Eight Excerpts and is a soldier's view of the start of an encounter with the "other dimension": 
The view screen in front of him is blank and white, a wall awaiting a door. He gulps, swallowing the excess saliva. It’s not real, he tells himself. 
And, indeed, it isn’t. The screen is not a window; it is a camera projecting an image into his cubicle as similar cameras are projecting similar images onto the screens of those in the cubicles around him. The white wall is miles away and he is safe in the bunker. 
“Ten seconds,” says a dispassionate voice through his headpiece. He swallows again. 
The ten seconds is gone in five and the wall starts to dissipate, to melt from white to Between grey and finally to streaked yellow. 
He looks into another world. 
He has seen the images before but, then, they had just been recordings and there had been other men and women at the controls. His turn now. 
© David Viner
Thank you David. 

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Writer - Antony N Britt

I'd like to welcome you to my interview with writer, Antony N Britt.  Enjoy.

Antony N Britt



Hello Antony.  Can you introduce yourself?
I am Antony N Britt and I'm based in Walsall.
How long have you been writing?
I wrote a lot as a kid but stopped for near 20 years during a marriage, now put down to being a very bad dream. I started again in 2005 while in the full throws of a breakdown.  I'm not sure if writing aided the recovery process but it makes sense of it now, looking back.  I blogged online for a few years until trying to be a bit more serious and get stuff published about two years ago.
Writing is extremely cathartic, and a way of organising thoughts and feelings, as well as being an excellent form of escapism.  What first got you interested in writing?
It was the love of writing my own comics and books as a kid then in recent years, the realisation that it was something I still enjoyed and could be quite good at.
Do you attend a writing group?
Every month I attend the Walsall Writers' Circle which I have been going to for about 18 months. I have also recently started taking part in another monthly local group – Walsall Adult Writers.
Why do you attend a writing group?
It was to network with other writers, originally, then I enjoyed the workshops, talks, etc. And they're also an awfully nice bunch, anyway.
Well that's always a bonus!  What is the most valuable thing you've taken away from your writing group?
Networking, feedback and simply talking with like-minded folk.  In fact, at the writing groups, there often isn't the time for socialising as you are often engaged in a talk or workshop.  Therefore, it's nice to get together on a more casual basis and just talk writing or whatever else comes to mind without the fear you're boring the pants off somebody going on about plots all night.
What genre(s) do you write?  What drew you to this/these genre(s)?
I tend to go towards the dark.  Not out-and-out horror but stuff that could happen to anybody.  I much prefer to bring the terror to the living room as opposed to the stereotype image of dark forests and crumbling mansions.  Having said that, I spend much time writing humour as I like the idea of the fine line between light and dark.  I like to be scared but also enjoy a laugh.
Are there any genres that you don't enjoy writing?
It's unlikely you'd see me shooting off into space in Science Fiction. Strange as my favourite TV show is Doctor Who and I like Star Trek, but it's not something I'm comfortable writing as even when I watch those genres, I tend to skip past the techobabble.
I'm with you on that one!  What types of things do you write?
I've had most success with short stories though my articles are taking off.  Less of them but higher success rate in a shorter space of time.  I do have one fully finished novel about to pester agents and publishers with and a second ready to undergo its first edit.  My poetry is a strange one.  I don't get most poetry.  In one ear and out the other.  I like poetry with something to say and as in all the things I write, I try to make them accessible to all.  One thing I hate is certain members of the writing community who try to make writing a minority interest – almost an exclusive clique with them all smug that they are in the know and nobody else is.  It's not what it's about. It should be about entertaining the reader.
Have you ever had anything published?
I've had several pieces all within the past two years. A short story in an anthology, two in magazines and a further one in Writing Magazine when I won the monthly competition. I've also had articles published in anthologies and two in a current edition of a local magazine.  I have had one poem published and was shortlisted in a prestigious competition recently.
Have you sent your writing to agents/publishers?
I sent my novel to six agents a year ago but in hindsight, the book wasn't good enough at the time. It is now after another two edits/rewrites with fresh eyes after a long gap. I send my short stories out all the time to magazines with some success.
Would you consider self-publishing/e-publishing?
I love the feel of a book.  Cliché, I know, but I do.  As for publishing via that medium,  I am sticking with the plan of agents, publishers and see how I go.  I don't think you can undersell yourself.  I have to believe my book is good enough to be a best seller.  Therefore, I shall start at the biggest publisher and work my way from there.  If nobody wants it, then I can consider self-publishing or an e-book, but doing it the traditional route, at least I've tried and I know.
I feel the same.  I'd like to exhaust all traditional channels first.  You mentioned earlier that you won a competition in Writing Magazine.  Have you entered any other writing competitions?
Yes, I won Writing Magazine's and have been shortlisted on another three occasions there. I have also been shortlisted in other fiction, poetry and non-fiction competitions. I also won the Walsall Writers' Circle Non-Fiction Competition, recently.  And I've just received news that I won a major short story competition, and that will be published in the next edition of the magazine.
Congratulations.  Who/what influences your writing?  Where do you get your inspiration from?
Former partner and author, Clare Hill got me writing again after my previous marriage hiatus and her honesty made me a better writer.  I take a lot of inspiration from authors, Mark Billingham, Martyn Waites and Neil Cross and have always loved the dark of Stephen  King, James Herbert and Richard Laymon.  However, I get general inspiration from the weirdest things.  A comment, somebody tripping up, an abandoned item in the road.  All are beginnings and once you start on the trail, anything can happen.
Influences on the poetry front are without doubt, John Cooper Clarke and Attila the Stockbroker.  Give me those two above one hundred stuffy playing the art game, poet bores, any day. 
I really like John Cooper Clarke too.  How do you come up with your characters' names and personalities/
Hard to answer that one, it just happens. I've never had to sit and agonise over names or personalities, they are just there. I get a basis of a character in my mind and once I start to write that character, they take on a life of their own.
What is your writing routine?
As I've spent the last 18 months as full-time carer to my son, I've had more time.  I like to go to a nice little coffee bar and get away from the house.  Generally, I write when I feel like it. 
Do you start out with a complete idea for your stories, or do you just start writing and hope for the best?
A bit of both.  It depends on the piece.  Some, I've had the complete idea in my head, others were born from a single image and the story led to reaching that image.  The second novel which I am about to start editing, I had planned out about two-thirds.  I sort of knew the conclusion but that last third to get there, the story wrote itself. 
Do you have an editing process?
I edit numerous times.  It's the most important thing to do.  I'll do a couple of edits until I'm happy then several more including reading out loud.  I do like somebody else to read for things I have overlooked and errors I can't see. 
It's always good to have a fresh eye look over our work.  As writers, we are too close to what we write and we often miss things that other people will pick up.  Have you ever attended an open mic event for spoken word performers?
I plan to. However as poetry is the medium I am least confident in, I've yet to do so. I did perform a piece at the Coventry Mysteries Festival and it went okay. Having said that, I did have to contend with a drumming band in the background. Poetry to music? I suppose it never did John Cooper Clarke any harm.
How important is it for you to share your writing?
I want to share it all. No point writing to hide it in a drawer. Whether in a group or online or finally, in print. Get it read and heard.
I'm sure there must be some things you've written that you want kept hidden in a drawer.  I know I have.  What do you enjoy the most/least about writing?
I enjoy the entire writing process but there is nothing like punching the air when you get an acceptance.  The thing I like least is writing snobbery.  Those who want to create an elite and think themselves as only they can write great poetry and prose when in fact, all they write at times is self-indulgent dirge.  I attended an all night workshop a year ago in a museum.  We were sent off to gain inspiration from a collection of over 100,000 artefacts and one guy returned with his piece on an empty cabinet, based on the potential of what it could have displayed.  Everybody else in the group were fawning and clapping saying, 'how brilliant,' when all I wanted to scream was 'Get lost!' 
Okay, it may have been another word for “get” and yet another for “lost,” but you get my despair. 
Ha! That sounds like it could be a basis for one of your own humorous stories!  Or maybe even something a bit darker!  What is the best piece of writing advice you've ever been given?
Get a writing buddy.  Somebody to read your work and give feedback objectively.  I can edit a dozen times and still miss the obvious.  With your own work, you know how it's supposed to read, then don't always see when it doesn't.
What advice could you give to a new writer?
Edit, edit and edit again.  Never think a piece is finished and can't be improved on.  Your best piece of work is the last one you wrote.  You improve with each new piece so there is always room to improve a piece of work.  The only time I stop editing is when it's in print and I can say goodbye to it. 
Even then it must be tempting to keep editing!  Apart from writing, what are your other hobbies/interests?
I've never had time for hobbies as the writing takes up so much spare time.  In addition, much of my recent years have been spent caring for my heavily autistic son who lived with me.  I do have an interest in ghost hunting.  I have had many experiences but remain a sceptical believer.  I try to explain it all and am delighted when I can't.
What types of things do you read?  Do you think your writing reflects your book tastes?
I read a lot of crime fiction: Mark Billingham, Val McDermid, Martyn Waites, Peter James.  However, I like a bit of humour with authors like Mil Millington and Sophie Kinsella.  I don't read as much dark stuff as I used to and maybe that's because I write more of it myself.

If you could have written anything, what do you wish that could have been?
Hotel New Hampshire by John Irving.  Some novels are almost poetry, and this is one. Life is a fairytale.
Do you have any favourite lines from novels/plays/poetry/songs, or any favourite literary quotations?
From Hotel New Hampshire - “Keep passing the open windows.”  Drove an ex-partner barmy for years, me keep saying it. 
What are you working on at the moment?
Just finished the definite final edit on novel number one.  Well, final edit until the next time unless it's published.  I'm working on some short pieces then about to start the major first edit of novel number two. 
Do you have a website/blog/Twitter/Facebook dedicated to your writing?
Yes, I can be found at www.antonynbritt.com where I blog regularly and post the occasional poem and piece on autism. The regular thing I do is my Sunday Roast column. Once I week, I take a sideways swipe at life and things in the news. The intent is to make serious comment but honestly, it's a lot more fun when it degenerates into taking the pee with the thing full of nob jokes.
I am also on Twitter @nickb1963. 
Is there anything else you'd like to add?
Yes. Any potential agents and publishers reading this, I'm awfully nice, can produce the goods and worth the investment. 
Oi, get in line, behind me!  Would you be able to provide a short piece of your writing?

 Middlefield

Summer of '85.
Middlefield.
A home meant for people in poor mental health.
I called it an institution.
Somewhere to put the unwanted.
Hide the embarrassment.
“There is no place in polite company
for people such as these.”
So spoke the message of the day.

Disabled,
epileptic,
autistic,
downs,
spelled dead to society
along with unmarried mothers,
labelled insane
then shut away.
Their children
torn from the breast.
Unruly youngsters,
uncontrollable,
removed from circulation.

I remember one such a man,
Albert, we'll call him
because after all this time,
I'm not even sure of his name.
Incarcerated at twelve,
unfathomable,
too difficult to handle.
Then, seventy-five,
a gentle old soul.
He spoke about cricket
and the big wartime bands.
Always a cheery smile,
a precursor to the request.
Could I check if there was a letter?
One from his mum and dad.
“It's been such a long time,” he sighed.
There was never any mail.

An uncaring world, back then;
maybe it is now.
I'm ashamed I do not remember his name
and I always wonder
if his family ever did?

© Antony N Britt

Thank you very much, Antony.

Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Betwixt The Cup and The Lip #3


Here is my third installment of excerpts from Betwixt The Cup and The Lip; my lipogrammatic* novel in 26 parts.  The first installment can be found here, and the second can be found here.  Please feel free to make comments or suggestions; I'm open to any ideas you might have.  And if you're a publisher and you would like to publish this collection, please don't hesitate to get in touch with me.  You can find my contact details here.

* A lipogram is a piece of text that contains 25 letters of the alphabet by omitting one.

Warning: This book is not suitable for anyone under 18 years old.  The excerpts that I publish on here are family friendly (ok, they're probably PG if I'm being honest), but some of the completed stories contain graphic scenes unsuitable for children.


Shane
I’m not racist or nothing, but I just think that people shouldn’t leave their mother land.  People go on and on and on about pride for their skin colour and heritage and all that.  I’m proud to be Indian.  I’m proud to be Chinese.  I’m proud to be African.  If these people were so proud, we wouldn’t be infested with them.  These ‘proud’ people would be in their own countries being proud there.  But no.  These foreigners insist on being proud in England and expect us to change our lives to accommodate them.  I’m Muslim.  I want a mosque.  I’m Buddhist.  I want a temple.  I’m Sikh.  I want a gurdwara.  What would Jesus think?  Huh?  He was a good old English Christian.  I’m sure he wouldn’t have been pleased with all of these weird looking worship buildings popping up all over the place.

I can’t even go shopping without falling over Polish shops and Chinese shops and West Indian shops.  Isn’t our food good enough or something?  If these people want to eat their own foodstuffs then being in England isn’t the best thing.  But I wonder where these people could go.  Hmmm.  Ah, that’s it.  Back to their own  countries.

In England.  Eat English food.  Never did me no harm.



Queenie
I will die this evening.

It’s a fact.  But I’m pretty much already dead.  I’m just waiting.  The queue is a bit lengthy and I’ve never been great at being early.  I’ll just make myself snug here and wait until it’s my turn.  I’ll wrap myself up in blankets as it’s always a bit chilly in here.  It’s a miracle we aren’t dead already.  With all this cash that keeps getting hurled at these infirmaries and care residences, I deliberate why they keep the temperature at freezing during the winter.  But I’ve heard death is an icy place at the start; maybe they’re just preparing us. 

I am 100% sure that it’s happening, that I will die this evening.  I’m relaxed.  I’m calm.  I’m ready.  It’s like déjà-vu.  I have that feeling all the time.  I am sure that I’ve been in a certain place but can’t remember when, but everything is familiar and the reminiscences feel real.  I feel like that at this very minute.  Maybe it's preja-vu.  I’m sure that I will be visiting a certain place that I haven’t visited yet, and it feels as real as if I had already been there.

It’s made me realise that we can’t just trudge and meander in life.  I’m sure they’ll all say that I’ve had a great innings, which I have, it’s true.  I’ve reached a ripe age, 89, and it’s finally time.  But we can never be certain that we will live until the weekend, and we definitely can’t ever be certain that we will live until we’re 89.  Life isn’t certain.


Charlie
There’s more to me than what you can see but it takes someone special to look further than the surface.  It didn’t take me too long to learn that, considering what I used to look like.  But then most of us went through a bit of an ugly stage during our teenage years.  Unfortunately for me, mine was more of an ugly couple of decades.  And no I’m not wallowing in self-pity.  I’m happy now and that’s all that matters.  I am actually quite glad that I had those ugly decades.  It makes me appreciate the good things that are a part of my life now.

I look the way I look because I chose to.  We don’t get many choices in life.  We can’t choose who our parents are or where we grow up or what our first words are or how tall we are.  And to an extent we can’t choose what our face or body look like; that is, until we reach 18 years old.  I grew up with an awkward body and an unfortunate face.  No one noticed me except to make my life hell.  I was always the last picked for teams in P.E. lessons and no one wanted to be my partner for drama class.  I was pushed out of the way and I was tripped up and I was ignored and I was sworn at and I had things thrown at me and I was laughed at and I was made to feel worthless.  And no matter how many times your parents tell you how wonderful you are and that the other kids are jealous, it doesn’t make life any easier.  My mother would tell me that I was good-looking as she wiped away my tears, but at school I was ugly and no matter how much you try to ignore those comments, they do stick with you for your entire life.   If 100 people tell you you’re ugly, you truly think you are ugly.  And that’s when I made my decision to look like this.  I feel gorgeous on the inside and I definitely look gorgeous on the outside.  People look at me for all the right reasons, and that makes me feel good; better than good.

My birth parents didn’t want me.  They got rid of me when I was a baby.  I really don’t want to meet them.  I am unable to bear children so I don’t know what it’s like to be pregnant, but from what I can imagine it’s an incredible feeling.  A human being is right there inside you.  You are its protector.  It relies on you for food and company and affection.  There is a special bond, an incredible connection between you and the baby that you know nothing about and yet at the same time, know all there is to know about it.  Nature is amazing, isn't it? 

She called me Dothan when I was born.  What kind of name is Dothan?!  Apparently she stuck a pin in an atlas and that was the name she found.  Clearly not too smart, my birth mother.  What was she thinking, if she was actually thinking at all?  Hmm, I’d like my son to be called something unusual, something different, something that will make him stand out from the crowd.  He will be unique and his name will reflect that.  I know.  Dothan is a perfect name.  He will not get beaten up at school because of his name.  He will not be treated as an outcast because of his name.  He will not be teased or tormented or tortured because of his name.  He will be well liked and well respected and people will want to be his friend because he has such an unusual name.  It will make him interesting; therefore people will be interested in him.  Dothan will be popular and intelligent and sporty and deep and will 100% not get his face kicked in year after year after year because of his name.  Girls will think he’s mysterious and charming and will always want to be around him because of his name.  They won’t laugh at him or ignore him because of his name.  They’ll be begging him to go out with them on dates because he’ll possess something the other boys won’t; that je ne sais quoi, that X factor, and all of this will be because of his name.

Yeah, thanks so much birth mother.  You really knew what you were doing when you chose my name.  As soon as I had the chance, I changed it and now go by the name of Charlie.  Apparently it means ‘free man’ which is kind of ironic but it’s how I feel now.  Once I shed my skin and got rid of Dothan, I felt freer and more confident. 


Alissa
My dog; is that a pin sticking in a map of your past actions?  My dog, my charming young pup, my baby boy, Bruno, wasn’t in his puppy mansion six days ago at 4pm, that hour at which I got back from work.  Bruno is normally sunbathing on his patio at 4pm.  I did sit and wait for him.  I thought it silly to call Scotland Yard straight away.  Bruno had possibly had a brainstorm to go for a short walk on his own although Bruno knows to wait for his Mummy.  A tasty aroma could always attract him away from his mansion, and possibly Bruno got a whiff of a yummy bit of food coming from a building abutting ours, and thought it was a good plan to sniff around for a snack.  I didn’t worry too much as I know Bruno is a smart dog and would walk back to his Mummy as soon as starvation struck.

I sat by my patio window, waiting for Bruno, and at 5pm Bruno strolls back into our backyard, slightly limping, almost zigzagging across our yard.  I ran out to him but Bruno was a tad anxious and timid.  Bruno was not my normal Bruno.  Normally Bruno is so happy if his Mummy is around.  Normally his tail wags and his mouth forms a grin, but that night Bruno was sad and forlorn.  I brought him his food but Bruno had got into his napping sack on his twin dog divan, and was off in his napping fantasy land so quickly.

Bruno didn’t suitably nap that night.  I got up at about midnight to a sound of Bruno crying.  It was a kind of high pitch howl with a bit of sobbing.  I saw him moving around in his napping sack, his tiny paws running away from I don’t know what.  I sat with him and sang to him and soon Bruno was back in his happy fantasy land.  But this conduct was awfully unusual for him.  Bruno would normally nap straight through, from sun-down to sun-up.  Not a sound would sally forth from his lips.

By morning I was hoping that Bruno would show total signs of normality but this was not so.  Bruno was lying on his back with his limbs akimbo.  I took his bowl indoors, hoping that Bruno would follow.  Bruno would walk thousands of yards for food but on this occasion Bruno did not shift.  I hit his bowl with a spoon, hoping that would stir him, but Bruno still did not shift from his twin dog divan.  I put my hand on his body and Bruno was cold.  Bruno had no pounding in his ribs or drool around his mouth.


Mima
No, I don’t believe that I have committed a crime.  Please, oh wise policeman, tell me what exactly it is that I’ve done wrong.

Breaking and entering?  Ok, I may have entered these people’s homes, per se, but never did I break anything while I was in the houses.  I didn’t even break in.  The doors were always unlocked.

I checked.  I waited until they’d gone out and tried the doors.  It was normally the back doors that weren’t locked.  But I’m not a vandal.  I’m not going to smash up someone’s windows and doors just to get in.  There are so many houses with unlocked doors that I don’t need to waste my time breaking prior to entering.

It was simple really.  I’m a people watcher, see?  I watch them closely and intently. 

No I am not a pervert.  I watch their actions and their movements and listen to what they say.  People are so busy these days that they don’t pay attention to anything that doesn’t directly play a role in their lives.  Even then they sometimes don’t pay attention to that.  I’ve seen parents ignoring their children so that they can talk to work colleagues on their mobile phones, leaving those poor little things to dunk their chips in their ketchup and stare out the window, dreaming about stimulating conversation.  And it is these children who are being ignored that turn into the attention seeking criminals that you should be out hunting.  Go and arrest these parents, adopt these children into loving homes and watch the crime rate diminish over the next ten or so years.

I watch people barge other people out the way because they need to get somewhere 20 minutes ago and they’re not going to let anyone get in their way.  I’ve seen them knock over old ladies carrying heavy shopping bags and people on crutches and little children that have done nothing wrong.

Yes, I know that knocking into people isn’t a crime, but when someone shoves someone else out the way because they are too arrogant and wrapped up in their own world to even care, then it should be a crime.  These people are all Me! Me! Me! that they don’t notice when they hurt someone else.  I have never hurt anyone during the last two years.  I have been quiet and inconspicuous and have even helped out on occasions.  When I wasn’t in the houses, I’d carry old lady’s shopping and give up my seats on the bus so they could sit down.

I’m not trying to balance out my bad deeds with good ones.  I don’t believe in Karma.  And I also don’t believe I’ve done anything wrong.

Trespass?  Well, yes I did go into other people’s property without permission but I never did anything to show that I’d been there so it was as though I hadn’t been there so I wasn’t actually there.

Yes, I know I was discovered in one house and so I was most certainly there and that’s why I’m here, but the others had no inkling that I was there so was I really there?

Yes, I know I’ve admitted to it but without my admission I could say that I wasn’t there and your case would mean nothing.

Stealing?  I did not steal a thing while I was in these people’s houses. 

Yes, I took things but I did not take them out the house.  Everything I took was used inside the house.  I’m sure that stealing means that you have to take something away, and I didn’t take away.  I took in.

Oh, it means taking without permission?

I could hardly ask permission, could I?  Then they would have known that I was there and that would have been silly, on my part.

*****

Stay tuned for more stories.


Monday, 22 October 2012

Writer - Robin Bailes

Welcome to my interview with writer, Robin Bailes.  Enjoy.

Robin Bailes

Hello Robin.  Can you introduce yourself?
I'm Robin Bailes, from Cambridge.
How long have you been writing?
15 years (ish).
What first got you interested in writing?
I've always liked stories.
Do you attend a writing group?
Yes, London Comedy Writers.  I've been going there for seven years.
Why do you attend a writing group?
To get unbiased feedback.  To meet like-minded people.
What's the most valuable thing you've taken away from your writing group?
Listen to feedback but remember it will not all be right. Listen for the voice that is saying what you would say if you were reading your work for the first time. 
What genre(s) do you write?
I work in many genres but comedy principally because I find it saleable.
Are there any genres you don't enjoy writing?
Sketches.  I prefer stories. 
What types of things do you write?
Almost anything.
Have you ever had anything published?
On Amazon Kindle.  In a few magazines.  Five stage plays published by Spotlight Publications. 
Have you ever entered any writing competitions?  Have you ever won?
Yes and Yes. 
Who/what influences your writing?  Where do you get your inspiration from?
Various writers; P G Wodehouse, Carl Mayer, Ben Hecht, Meryn Peake.  Inspiration comes from wherever it comes from, you can’t plan or predict it. 
Do you start out with a complete idea for your stories, or do you just start writing and hope for the best?
I plan everything rigorously before starting to type.
How do you come up with your characters' names and personalities?
Personalities come with the story, they are a prerequisite.  Names from the Radio Times. 
What is your writing routine?
I write 9am-12, 2pm-5pm, 7pm-9pm.  I treat it as a working day.  The morning is usually most productive. 
Do you have an editing process?
I read dialogue aloud as I write.  I write two drafts, get a read through for feedback and then do a third draft. 
How important is it for you to share your writing?
Very. 
What do you enjoy the most/least about writing?
Most - Structuring a story.  Least - Selling stuff. 
What's the best piece of writing advice you've ever been given?
Write every day.
What advice could you give to a new writer?
Be confident but not arrogant; believe in yourself but recognise the value of other people’s opinions.
Apart from writing, what are your other hobbies/interests?
Acting, film, and film history.
What types of things do you read?
I have reasonably eclectic tastes.  You can usually tell what I’ve been reading/watching from what I am writing, I’m easily influenced.
If you could have written anything, what do you wish that could have been?
The City of Lost Children.
What are you working on at the moment?
A film script, TV drama, stageplay for children.
Do you have a website/blog/Twitter/Facebook dedicated to your writing?
www.robinbailes.co.uk 
Would you be able to provide a short piece of your writing?
Excerpt from a novel-
It was quiet in the attic room, the only sound coming from within the cages that lined the walls. Behind the wire mesh the rainbow clouds of birds flitted from branch to branch with delicate grace; opalescent finches, fiercely coloured gouldians, richly chocolate bengalese and prim lavender waxbills. A red-billed firefinch, far from its African home, regarded its exotically named cage mates with sharp black eyes; twinspots and avadats, mannikins and cardinals, weavers and whydahs. They pushed their heads into their feed pots, scattering millet seed that fell to the ground with a gentle patter. They splashed in their water bowls, cool, clear water spilling across their wings and back, washing the dust from their brightly coloured feathers. They twittered amongst themselves in high but quiet conversation.
In its own way this muted backdrop of bird sound provided a more calm and relaxing environment than pure silence would have done. Which was ideal for the attic’s only human occupant, who sat cross legged on the floor in the centre of the room, hunched over in apparent thought. He shifted slightly in his position, adding the scrunching of crushed millet shells to the whispered tapestry of background noise, he had been seated like this for a long time. 
© Robin Bailes 
Thank you Robin.

Sunday, 21 October 2012

Turn a negative into a positive

In the last week or so I have received two more rejections from literary agents for my first novel.  I know rejections are a rite of passage for any author, but it's still not nice to get them.  Each one I've received has knocked a little bit of enthusiasm out of me.  I don't want that to happen.  I want to keep a strong grasp on my drive to be published, and not let these minor knock-backs affect me.

On 18th October, I received this e-mail.



Dear Rebeccah Giltrow

Thank you for your submission. We apologise for the delay in responding, which is due to a large backlog of submissions.

Unfortunately, we do not feel sufficiently committed to your material to offer representation. As you know, this is a highly competitive field and an agent needs to be 100% behind a writer in order to represent them effectively. Unfortunately, we cannot give detailed feedback.

We are sorry not to have responded more positively, but do remember this is the reaction of just one agent, and you may well get a different response elsewhere. Thank you again for your submission and best wishes for your every success.

With best wishes



Not the best response, but at least they replied.  Again, giving the same reasons as the others.  I guess I should be used to those reasons by now.  But I'm not.

A few days later I got a letter through the post.  Before opening most things I hold them up to the light to try and see what's in the envelope.  If it looks horrible, I'll leave it to open later.  This one didn't seem too horrible.  It was in an A4 envelope, and from the feel of it, the paper inside was of a high quality.  My heart jumped.  I mean, no-one would use such high quality paper if they were going to send out a rejection, surely?  The past postal rejections I'd received were photocopies of photocopies of form letters.  But this one felt different.  If it's not a rejection, it can only be one thing; an acceptance.  I tentatively opened the envelope and pulled out the piece of paper, that felt almost card-like.  I didn't want to read it.  I didn't know how I would cope if it was an acceptance.


Dear Rebeccah Giltrow

Many thanks for sending me the pages from your novel.  I read the material with interest but I'm sorry to say that I didn't fall in love with your book in the way I had hoped to.  Thank you very much for thinking of me but I'm afraid I don't think I would be the best agent for you.

My opinion is only one in a business full of them and I hope you find someone who feels passionately about your work.  I wish you the best of luck in the future.

Yours sincerely


Ah well.  I did feel a bit deflated after these, but today I pulled myself out of it and got back on the case.  Sitting next to me is an envelope addressed to another literary agent, containing the first 30 pages of my novel, a synopsis, and a covering letter, all ready to be taken to the post office tomorrow.

No matter how much I feel like giving up, if I don't send things off then there is absolutely no chance that I will get published.  So if I do send things off, there is a slim chance that I will get published.  And that's got to be better than nothing, right? 

Saturday, 20 October 2012

Betwixt The Cup and The Lip #2


Here is my second installment of excerpts from Betwixt The Cup and The Lip; my lipogrammatic* novel in 26 parts.  The first installment can be found here.  Please feel free to make comments or suggestions; I'm open to any ideas you might have.  And if you're a publisher and you would like to publish this collection, please don't hesitate to get in touch with me.  You can find my contact details here.

* A lipogram is a piece of text that contains 25 letters of the alphabet by omitting one.

Warning: This book is not suitable for anyone under 18 years old.  The excerpts that I publish on here are family friendly (ok, they're probably PG if I'm being honest), but some of the completed stories contain graphic scenes unsuitable for children.


Jason
To be honest, I don't know why I'm writing you this note.  I have too much to say to you but I don't think I can do it face to face.  In truth, I have no idea what I'd do if I saw you right now.  You know I'm not an aggressive person, but this time you have managed to push every one of my buttons, so a note is the best way of communication for me at the moment.  You make me sick.

My hand is shaking.  Maybe from the vodka or maybe from seeing you, seeing you.  I can't even bear to write it.  That image of you and him, you and him, YOU AND HIM, is repeating over and over in my head.  What possessed you?  In our marriage bed?  Did those vows mean nothing to you?

It sickens me to think that you'd treat me this way.  Goes to show that I didn't know you as much as I thought I did.  And to think that I'd emptied my heart to you.  You knew about the others who cheated on me, and you promised.  You stared deep into my eyes and promised that you'd never treat me that way.  Do you even know what the truth is?


Oliver
Was that the last time I saw Sarah?  Well, no it wasn’t.  At that time I was so confused.  I needed to know what was going on so I went to her flat the next day.  There was no answer so I waited outside the newsagents on the corner because I know she goes there a lot.  She came and she bought another pint of semi-skimmed milk.  I caught her eye and her face changed.  I went to speak to her but she interrupted me.  “If I see you around here again I will personally break both your kneecaps,” she hissed.  “But Sarah, I love you,” I said.  “My name isn’t Sarah,” she snapped and shoved me out of the way.

How did I feel?  Well, I felt sick to my stomach.  She’d never spoken to me like that before, ever.  We hardly ever had arguments, and if we did they were so minor that we wouldn’t even raise our voices.  We have a special relationship, Mr. Telfrey.  Not many people are as lucky as us.  I’ve seen so many relationships fail because people are with the wrong people.  They think they’re in love but it’s only an infatuation with their idea of what marriage should be; two people tolerating each other’s negative points and pretending they’re happy to save face.  But it’s nothing like that, Mr. Telfrey.  Those two people shouldn’t even notice the negative points.  They should be so wrapped up in love that the negativity doesn’t have room to rear its ugly head.  And that’s how we are; Sarah and I.

Did I leave her alone after that?  Well, yes and no.  Mainly no really.  I didn’t speak to her but I went to see her.  I watched her from afar.  I knew she went to that newsagents quite often so I would walk past there a few times a day.

Didn’t I have to go to work?  Well, my boss had been extremely kind and allowed me to take some time off to try and sort things out with Sarah.  He could tell that my mind wasn’t on my work and thought it would be a good idea if I took some paid leave to sort myself out.  To be honest, I was very tired and took the leave without a second thought.  Since all this started with Sarah, I haven’t been able to sleep properly.  I keep waking up in the middle of the night.  I have such weird dreams where they seem so real at the time but when I wake up I can’t remember anything.  Sarah’s always in them; I know that for sure but the rest fades away as soon as my eyes open.  I wish I could remember something. 


Cedar
It wasn’t like all those others you hear of.  No.  This one was different and I think it is due to how different I am.  They knew.  I know they knew.  They must have known.  They wouldn’t have forgotten.  No.  We only wanted to stay for a short while.  It was a fact finding mission, searching new ground for new resources.  It was all in the name of knowledge and learning and experimentation.  Never harm though.  We never intended to hurt anyone or anything.  We tried to remain unnoticed.  Others like the attention.  They like to jump around in full view, having the photos taken.  We kept ourselves to ourselves, only removing items that had many duplicates.  The things we could not take, we watched and noted from afar.  The others would remove anything they wanted and experimented with them and then would return them when they were done.  Yet those who were taken would have traumatised minds from the whole situation, and we consider this harmful so we do not do it.  No.  We live lives of respect and expect it in return. 

So on one journey, we came to track the growth of one of the millions of plants that exist, and although learning is fascinating, it can get slightly tedious when looking at the same plant or a similar plant night after night after night.  I only wandered a small distance, just to see something different.  I guess it was curiosity that drove me.  I wanted to look at something that wasn’t on the list; perhaps find something new that no-one else had found prior to my discovery.  I’m sure I wasn’t gone for long.  No.  Not long at all, yet when I returned to the experimentation area they were gone.  They had left me.  Something must have interrupted them and in the rush to get away they must not have noticed that I wasn’t there.  It wasn’t their fault.  No.  I shouldn’t have wandered off.  I waited for a while just in case they returned that same night.  Unfortunately for me, the sky was clear.

I have looked in the sky, night after night for many years, ever since I was left here, waiting for my family to take me home.

Yes, my real family.  Not those elderly people who live in my house.  They called themselves my parents, yet I called them my carers.  They were kind enough to look after me while I wait for me real family to return to take me home.  However, for some reason, they were convinced that I was their real son rather that someone they found in their garden one night.  Perhaps they couldn’t have children of their own and I came along at the right time.  I do find it strange, though, that they didn’t take me to the police.  I mean, if you found a tiny child in your garden, you’d think it was slightly strange, wouldn’t you?


Beth
Oh my goodness.  That woman’ll get a fork stabbed through her face soon.

The same as usual.  Mrs. Look-at-Me.  Mrs. Know-The-Lot.  Mrs. Never-shuts-up-even-though-other-people-want-to-talk-and-are-fed-up-of-her-bothersome-tone.

She’d sat herself down on the floor, as per usual, and spread all of her papers all over the carpet.  You know how small that room becomes when there are more than two people there and there were four of us by then.  The photocopy queue had already begun to form and there she was, sprawled out so that everyone had to step over her to get anywhere. 

Angela came through on her hunt for a cup of tea.  She can’t start her day unless she’s had her tea.  She’s very fussy about that.  Val doesn’t even move.  Angela’s rush caused her to stumble over Val’s bags and all of Val’s papers are knocked all over the place.  Val then got angry at Angela and then huffed and puffed more than she already was.  So not only do we have to look at her fat arse on the floor, we have to hear her too.  Angela poked her tongue out at Val but Val doesn’t see.  Everyone else laughed so Val started to make more of a racket.  No one else can be louder than her.  Were Jesus, John Lennon and Bob Marley to walk through the door, Val would make sure that people overlooked them and turned all eyes to her.  Val does all she can to keep the focus on her. 

Angela was over by the kettle and before she had a chance to ask the other members of staff what they wanted, Val yelled, “Black, one sugar, thanks Ange.”  Well, Angela hates the name Ange and she hates that name even more when someone she can’t stand calls her Ange.  Some hand gestures followed from Angela but Val hadn’t seen those as she was too busy on the floor.  Angela made her own tea then stepped carefully over Val, even though everyone knew she wanted to pour her extremely hot tea all over Val’s head then put her boot through Val’s face.

Oh she can be that bad.  She can be that bad and worse.  Val then got up and left all of her crap all over the floor.  She barged to the front of the photocopy queue.

“These pages need to be enlarged,” demanded Val, as she held a book above her head.

No-one moved to help her.  She’s so rude.  She never says thanks when you do help her, so people pretend they don’t know how the photocopy apparatus works.  And the fact that she pushed to the front of the queue annoyed everyone and made them not want to help her at all.  She turned and looked at me, as though she expected me to pander to her every beck and call.  She drummed her thumbs on a bookcase shelf and glared at me.  That was the gesture to tell me that the enlargement was to be done by me.  The photocopy apparatus’s not hard to use.  You follow the commands on the screen.  All the commands are easy to follow.  ‘Press that button’ then ‘press that button’.  A baby could copy were they to read and follow the commands.  So Val stood next to me; her arms were folded and she watched my every move to make sure the enlargements were done to her standards.  Her eagerness just made me go slower.  She rolled her eyes and drummed her thumbs louder, and that made me stretch and yawn and turn the pages of her book at a hedgehog’s pace.

Eventually, all the pages had been enlarged and she snatched the papers out of my hand; no remark of thanks or gratefulness.  Then saw that Angela held a mug of tea.

“Where’s my tea, Ange?” she demanded.

Angela kept her eyes focussed on her newspaper and slurped her tea.

“Ange?  Where’s my tea?”

Angela turned the page and coughed.

“Angela?”

“Yes Val?”

“Where’s my tea?”

“Oh, were you after a cup of tea?  Couldn’t have heard you.  All the hustle and bustle here makes all the sounds merge so can never work out what people say.”


Christine
Sorry, anyway, once I’d finished tidying the cupboards I emptied the washing machine and realised that everything in there was his.  I just sat down in the middle of the utility room floor and burst into tears.  I was surrounded by his damp shirts and trousers and I just wanted to bury myself in them but his smell had been replaced by lavender and jasmine fabric conditioner.  I stuffed them in the dryer, poured myself a glass of sherry and set to scrubbing the floor.  I needed to occupy myself with something, anything, and put some alcohol in my system at the same time.  I could hear his voice, "Christine, what on Earth are you doing?  It's 11:30 in the morning and you're already pissed as a newt."  I'd heard him say those exact words on more than one occasion, but we were a lot younger then.

When they dryer had finished, I pulled out all of his clothes and threw them into a bin bag.  I then went upstairs to the bedroom and started to empty his cupboards and drawers.  I couldn’t bear to have his things around me anymore.  He was gone and it was silly to hold on to everything.  I didn’t truly believe that, but I was angry and scared and confused, and if I hadn’t gone through his wardrobe I wouldn’t have found his diary.  Something was telling me to go up and there and sort his clothes out. 

I wasn’t on the hunt for anything to start with.  I was just pulling out jumpers and ties and anything of his I could find.  Then at the top, on one of his shelves I felt a tin box.  I was actually a bit scared to open it at first.  I didn’t have a clue what to expect in there.  I sat down on the bed and held the box in my lap fingering the edges.  I closed my eyes and winced as I opened it, as if I was expecting it to explode in my face, or at least have some giant comedy worms jump out. 

It was just papers, all handwritten.  Some with scribbles on, drawings, maps, diagrams, lists, diary entries.  I then felt really naughty, as if I’d found my Christmas presents that my parents were trying to hide.  I glanced over my shoulder and even shut the curtains before I started to read the papers.

Listen to this one. 

Wednesday 14th May – Doug told me that the card game would be at The Mad Dog and Parrot at the top of the high street.  I’d never been to a card game before so I was really quite excited to get the chance.  Since marrying Christine I’ve not really had friends of my own so it was about time that I did.  He said that I should go to the bar and request a pint of ale.  He said not to say anything more.  He said that the barman would then say, “Toad’s Testicles or Gutbelcher?” to which I’d have to reply “I’m allergic to nettles.”  I thought this was a bit of a strange procedure, but he told me that it was a private party and only a select few had been invited.  The password, as he called it, was to ensure only those invited would get in.  Doug said that once I’d given the password the barman would then open up the bar and guide me through to the bottom of the stairs leading to the residence above the pub, which he did.  I’d also have to give him one of these strange medallions, which I did.

He left me at the bottom of the stairs and told me that I would have to find my own way up.  It was actually a bit creepy, but I heard Doug’s voice which made me feel a lot better.  When I got to the top of the stairs, a man was standing there.  He was wearing white robes and no shoes.  He held me by the arm and led me along the corridor into a large room, modestly decorated with paintings of very stern-faced men.  I saw five men sitting in a line behind a long table covered in a white and red tablecloth.  Around the edge of the room were more men wearing white robes and no shoes.  Now, I haven’t ever been to a card game but I was sure that they weren’t supposed to be the same as this.  It then started to feel a bit odd.  Doug was one of the men sitting behind the long table and he was wearing white robes similar to the men around the edge of the room, but his robes were covered with gold embroidered patterns.  He was also wearing a turban type hat, as were the other four men sitting alongside him. 


Lynda
(I'm afraid I can't post any of this story; it's a bit too rude.)

*****

Stay tuned for more stories.