22 May 2023 - What's new
22 May 2023
- 'For God's sake, never use a metaphor and then explain it... You can assume a world from so little and readers will. So I'm more interested in economy than encyclopaedism, in how little you can get away with rather than how much you can cram in...' M John Harrison, author of The Pastel City, Light, Nova Swing, A Storm of Wings and the Virconium sequence, amongst his 16 novels and short story collections, in an interview about his new book, Wish I was Here, in The Times.
- An Editor's Advice is a series of seven articles by one of our editors on really useful subjects for writers such as Manuscript presentation, Dialogue, Doing further drafts and Planning: 'The idea of planning doesn't fit well with the idea of the writer as inspired genius, frantically scribbling away. However, I am willing to bet that, no matter what they would have you think, most successful writers plan as much as they write. They just don't tell you about it. The biggest objection that most inexperienced writers raise when someone broaches the delicate matter of planning is that it will get in the way of their inventive powers. A plan will be like a straitjacket. They'll be stuck with this plan and if they come up with a good idea along the way, they will not be able to use it. They are genuinely horrified at the thought...'
- The Moth Short Story Prize 2023 closes on 30 June and is open to all writers over 16. The entry fee is €15 per story. 1st prize €3,000, 2nd prize week-long writing retreat at Circle of Misse in France plus €250 travel stipend, 3rd prize €1,000.
- Are you getting ready to publish your book - perhaps planning to self-publish? WritersServices offers a suite of nine services which help writers get their work into shape before they self-publish. Services for Self-publishers
- Other prizes and competitions which are still open till the end of May.
- Links on writing and the writer's craft: we're living in a time when readers don't have to tolerate anything less than a dramtic start, For Today's Crime Novels, the Stakes Are High, Right from the First Sentence ‹ CrimeReads; the benefit of writing in different genres and styles, How Screenwriting Can Help You Write Stronger Fiction ‹ Literary Hub; sitting in my bedroom, reading, disappearing into those impossibly glamorous worlds , On not holidaying on a superyacht; and the best piece of advice writers ever received, How do You Write Compelling Characters? Find the Source of Their Pain ‹ CrimeReads.
- An enthusiastice endorsement from Nancy Jarzombek, Belmont, Massachusetts: 'Thank you! I received the comments - most eagerly awaited - and just sped-read through now. When everyone is off to school I will go back to read through all of the details. It gives me much to think about. I'm most grateful for the thoughtful and articulate response. It's fantastic!'
- Are you ready to submit your synopsis and sample chapters to agents or publishers, but worried about whether you are presenting your work in the best possible way? It's dispiriting to receive rejections just because your submission package is not up to scratch. Our Submission Critique has helped many authors to improve their submission packages, helping them to get published.
- Links about the tech upheaval affecting writers: creative artificial intelligence provokes a strange mixture of contempt and dread, The Future of Writing Is a Lot Like Hip-Hop - The Atlantic; its classic search engine has had an AI makeover, Google's New AI-Powered Search Is Going to Look Very Different; exploring automation of the book business's pitches to readers, ‘Beowulf is lit AF' - could ChatGPT really write good book blurbs? | Books | The Guardian; getting to a demographic with a willingness to pay for news, "More adults use it than Twitter, Snapchat, TikTok or Reddit": How LinkedIn is increasingly driving content discovery for publishers | What's New in Publishing | Digital Publishing News; and preventing today's chatbots discussing taboo topics, Anthropic explains how Claude's AI constitution protects it against adversarial inputs | Engadget.
- Health Hazards is our special series about the various health risks for writers, including the dreaded Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. If you know you've been spending too much time at a keyboard, it's worth making sure you're being careful about how you're sitting, your eyes and your wrists.
- If you need to clear copyright for your book, Clearing Copyright shows you how to do this: 'Copyright provides a framework for trading in intellectual property. In practice it protects the author's position and ensures that the publisher is able to take on the risk of publication in the knowledge that the publisher's rights are protected. In effect authors, (the originators of intellectual property) sub-license their rights through their book contracts to different parties in individual territories and in specific forms...'
- WritersServices offers a wide range of editorial services to help you prepare your manuscript for submission to an agent or publisher, or for self-publication. Our team of expert editors has years of experience in helping and advising authors; we can help you bring your work to a professional level of excellence. All our editing services offer competitive rates and excellent value for money. If you are not sure which of our editing services you require, we can assess your manuscript, and recommend the service that is most appropriate to your needs. Copy editing services. Get in touch to let us know how we can help.
- Links from the publishing and bookselling world: a fascinating article about different reading tastes, Why is Serious Nonfiction in the US Taken More Seriously Than in the UK? ‹ Literary Hub; would fewer books work better for publishers? The Bookseller - Comment - The 'publishing less' conundrum; the latest on the US book chain, The Bookseller - News - Daunt reveals home truths about 'evolving' Barnes & Noble; and more on bookshops, Good news: there are more bookstores in the US this year than last. ‹ Literary Hub.
- Tips for writers 6 is about other kinds of writing which can extend your writing and develop your writing skills, such as short stories for magazines, anthologies, competitions and short story websites. Although it's still hard to get a collection of short stories published, individual stories are another matter. If you really see yourself as a fiction writer and can't come up with the goods on non-fiction, then research the possibilities for short stories and get writing. Very short stories are currently in vogue and are working particularly well on the web.
- Avoid rejection - it is demoralising to get your manuscript rejected by publishers or agents. To put it into perspective, you may find it helpful to go through some of the reasons why this happens and to see what we suggest you can do about it.
- A miscellany of links: a new trend in handling authors' estates, The Bookseller - News - Intellectual property rights of Wilbur Smith's novels put up for sale; the author said it 'was not meant to please everybody - only children', Where the Wild Things Are: The greatest children's book ever - BBC Culture; he was as interested in how stylishly the thought was expressed as in what it was expressing, Martin Amis: he stamped his style over a generation of writers and readers | Books | The Guardian; less than a year after an attempt on his life, Salman Rushdie says 'attack on books' in Florida 'has never been more dangerous' | CNN.
- Our publishing and printing glossary is a useful reference tool.
- 'Language leads a double life - and so does the novelist. You chat with family and friends, you attend to your correspondence, you consult menus and shopping lists, you observe road signs, and so on. Then you enter your study, where language exists in quite another form - as the stuff of patterned artifice.' Martin Amis, who died this week, in our Writers' Quotes.