Writing group annual dinner

Last night was my new writing group’s annual dinner, and roughly three-quarters of the membership turned up, some with partners. It took place at a local “pub grub” chain pub where the building was nice, the food was nice and the service was… let’s just say that basic arithmetic induces terror in modern serving staff*.

Due to the unusual seating setup, I ended up seated by the secretary and his partner and was pretty much within shouting distance of two other people, so it made most of the evening a relatively close-knit chat. Though some of the people began moving around and chatting after the main course, so I got to chat with a few other people, too, and it was in general a lovely night.

If you are new to a writing group, or you have somehow not managed to attend your group’s annual dinner (or similar), I highly recommend you make the effort. If nothing else, you have a nice meal, a few drinks and the chance to socialise with people you have a great deal in common with… even if some of them write in genres that you don’t like or couldn’t imagine writing. The depth and breadth of the genres in my group is breathtaking, and I find each of them fascinating as I get to know the people who write in them.

If you’re a writer (or wannabe writer) and you’re still flying solo: join a writing group. It will broaden your horizons, expand your social circle, teach you a great deal about writing and how to read, and will provide opportunities that sitting at home are much less likely to do.

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* They wouldn’t let us pay individually, as there were thirty of us. They wouldn’t let us pay as a group, as the group’s official cheque book was a business-type account without a guarantee card. In the end we did manage to convince them to let us pay by tables, of which there were three. Then began the inevitable ‘But I only had the lentils!’ bean-counting common to groups the world over. When I’m King Of The World, it will become law that all group meals will be totalled up and divided evenly between everyone who participated in the meal. Seemples.

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Tuesday birthday haiku

Another year past,
another solar orbit.
Time flies, doesn’t it?

My birthday sure came around quickly this year. It seems only a week or two ago that I was digging my driveway out of the snow so that I could head off to Christmas Day festivities, a month or so before that it was Easter, and then a few weeks prior to that it was my previous birthday. Tempus does indeed fugit

In your pre-teens time takes an eternity, often measured by the arrivals of birthdays, summer holidays, Easter and Christmas. Then you hit your teens and things are then measured (at least where I grew up) by notable birthdays — 13 (teenager!), 15/16 (age of consent), 17 (driving licence) and 18 (drinking age). Aside from the round numbers of 20 and 25, and the more traditional and now meaningless “coming of age” 21st birthday, in your twenties you notice that these events start to speed up. I’m now officially in my “late thirties” and they’re getting even faster. But there’s hope once you get into your forties, fifties and beyond. No, wait… I got that wrong. There isn’t. It just gets faster still, so I’m told.

But it’s not all bad. Growing old is a privilege that most of humanity doesn’t get — even in this day and age. I also like to reflect that those who have achieved mighty things had exactly the same hours in each of their days as I have in mine. If anything, we have more leisure time available than any of the generations who have gone before us. Most of us get Saturday off for a start, saying nothing of not having to forage for food or shelter, and living twice as long with better quality lives than people even a century ago. And while it’s a far cry from the futuristic computer utopia we were promised in the 1970s — that computers would reduce our working days to 4 hours or less with the same productivity and pay — the reality is that we’re required to get more done in the same amount of time simply because we can.

The plus side to this is that we can achieve more in each of those days than ever before — the trick is to make what you’re doing meaningful, if and where you can. And that’s exactly why I’m writing and working on building a career as a writer.

While exactly how I achieve that is still slightly nebulous (to use classic British understatement), I am working on creating a short story each week and submitting it to publishers, building my technical skills as a writer (not that you’d see it in this long and winding, self-indulgent ramble of a post), testing out how social networking can complement my activities, building a network of contacts and going to conferences. If nothing else, it’s a fascinating journey that I’ve just begun, and I’m enjoying all of it.

I received an excellent birthday present from the Open University last night: the results of the writing course I’ve recently completed. It’s a result with which I’m extremely pleased, and the tutor’s marking and personal comments are extremely encouraging. The tutor is also encouraging me to turn the piece I wrote for the assessment into a full book, so I suppose that’s high praise? She’s also encouraging me to take the next level creative writing course, which is the natural progression of this creative writing stream. It’s a year-long course costing over £600 and will require 600 hours of study (around 19 hours per week), so it’s not something I’m going to do without serious consideration. But I am serious considering it, and have until late Summer to decide.

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Kindle 2 and I just had our first argument

Flickr CC-BY timspalding

Last night I tried to use my Amazon Kindle 2 for the first time in a week or so, but took it out of the case in which I keep it to discover a dreaded new screen with the bold title: Critical Battery.

It said to charge it for a few minutes before I could use it and, as the Kindle only comes with a US mains charger, I use my iPhone’s mains-to-USB adapter to charge it beside the bed. Because the iPhone takes us back to mid-1990s in terms of battery life, I charge that every night and neglected the Kindle while I’ve been reading a couple of dead-tree books. So I put the Kindle on charge for 15 minutes then, when it still wouldn’t do anything, I left it to charge overnight and went back to reading the paperback version of Ernest Hemingway’s remarkable A Farewell to Arms (Amazon|Kindle|AmazonUK).

First thing this morning I discovered that the charging light had gone off sometime overnight (it’s supposed to go from amber while charging to green when fully charged). I did a few online searches and discovered various ways to kick it back to life, but none of them worked. One of the recommendations was to plug it into a computer USB slot and when I did this the USB drive connection came up straight away. A few minutes later the screen flashed a few times, I gave it a few more minutes, unplugged it, held the power switch for 15 seconds and released, then held the Home switch for 15 seconds. Presto fixo!

I’ve since been reading up on why I got such appalling battery life while the unit was switched off. (Manuals, pfft!) Sliding and releasing the power switch only puts the unit into Sleep mode, and it will still connect periodically via 3G to download any subscriptions, update page locations, bookmarks, etc.

To switch the device Off (as in for it not to consume any power), with the device still On you need to slide and hold the power switch until the screen goes blank.

Everything I’ve read indicates that this will maximise battery life while the device is not in use. And, unless you’re one of those people who have daily newspaper subscriptions or have multiple devices that you sync between regularly, who needs to have it synchronising while you’re asleep? It will do that anyway once you switch it back on next time, and will take all of about 15 seconds.

To maximise battery life while you’re using the device, disable the wireless (Menu > Turn Wireless Off). You can always enable it periodically to do a sync. This will give you a few weeks battery life when used with other battery-saving settings (small font to minimise page turning, not using the Kindle Store via the device, etc).

I very much like my Kindle 2 and, while it’s not perfect, it is another step towards an interesting future for publishing.


Update (7 April 2010):
Since writing this article almost eight weeks ago — after which I switched the wireless off unless I was actually downloading content via wireless or USB (which I did 3-4 times) and switched the device Off (as above) when not in use — I have been using the Kindle almost daily and haven’t had to charge it. The battery meter was gradually decreasing from 100% and got down to about 70% full until last night when it gave me a Battery Low popup, then five minutes later gave me the dreaded Critical Battery screen. I plugged it into the mains charger that came with it (via a US-to-UK plug adapter) and it restarted happily a few minutes later, after which I left it to fully charge overnight without problems. Aside from the sudden change from 70% charged to Battery Low to Critical Battery — making the charge level indicator worthless — I’m very pleased that I got nearly eight weeks of regular use from the Kindle between charges.

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Tuesday sleep deprivation haiku

The weekend on-call,
risk of sleep deprivation.
Kills desire to write.

Part of my day job involves being on-call for one weekend in every 6-8 weeks to fill in the gaps between our 24-hour “follow the sun” customer model when the North American team finishes their Friday afternoon and the Asia-Pacific team starts their Monday morning. It’s easily the worst part of my job which, as far as things go in workplaces, means it’s a pretty good job.

My first week on-call saw my first call-out occur at 1:00am Saturday morning and took 3 hours to fix. The next call came in at 5:00am and took 4 hours, during which another call came in at 7:00am so had to work two emergencies concurrently. By 11:00pm Saturday evening I was beginning to panic as it was clear the calls were going to continue, many being worked in parallel, I’d had no sleep since Thursday night, and I was working at 100% workload. It continued until 6:00am Monday (before we had the Asia-Pacific team)… and I had to be in the office for 9:00am. Your mind starts to do weird things in that kind of situation, and I can honestly say that I have some idea of what sleep deprivation torture is all about. (Though such victims tend not to get paid for the experience and it’s not done by their employers).

That experience was almost five years ago and I’m pleased to say that this weekend on-call was nothing like that first one (in fact, nobody in the company has ever seen a weekend like that). But living with that possibility stifles all creativity, so this weekend was spent watching DVDs and, perversely, waiting for Monday. On the plus side, I’ve now finally seen George Romero’s Dead trilogy — which was purely for research on the zombie story I’m writing, you understand…

Now it’s Tuesday and the juices are flowing again!

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Wednesday creative headspace haiku

A brand new story
was writing itself tonight.
No chance of sleep now.

As I’ve probably mentioned already, I’m a huge fan of the zombie and zombie apocalypse genres, including but not limited to things like Army of Darkness, 28 Days Later, Shaun of the Dead, Dawn of the Dead, World War Z, and the Resident Evil series (Zombieland and a few others are in my LoveFilm queue). So I’ve been wanting to write a short story in the genre for a while, and I’d very much like to write a novel and/or screenplay in it eventually.

Having not done it at all before, on the way home from work this evening I put a bunch of the pieces together, came up with some great ideas and decided to give it a go. Here we are 2,100 words later (and nowhere near finished) and it’s time for me to go to bed. With all this creativity bursting out of my head, the story wants to continue writing itself. I could probably reach 8,000 or more words tonight if I just let myself go.

The problem is that I can’t — I have a day gig that pays the bills. The other problem is that with this creativity unleashed, I am going to have a hell of a time getting to sleep tonight. I mean… it’s midnight and I’m writing a new blog post, the night is cool, the heating is off, and I’m running like a fan heater.

Is there a trick to just switching off?

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Sunday story submission haiku

Tried new software to
write more productively, but
it ate all my work!

Tomorrow is the deadline for the Spring edition of a magazine that I’ve been interested in submitting something to for a while now, called The First Line, as mentioned in an earlier post. I nearly chose not to write something for this edition, as I’m not a big fan of writing on religious themes, but I found a way around it and decided to give it a go.

As I had all afternoon and evening available, I decided to try out a new piece of writing software I bought this weekend that’s designed to make you more productive, the desktop edition of Write Or Die! (US$10). It’s written in Adobe AIR (familiar to most Twitter users) and — along with the expected text input area and ability to save as plain text — it will give you a progress bar if you specify the number of words or the amount of time (or both) that you want to write in that session, and it has a few options that will first prod you or even punish you, if you want. Not a bad motivational tool, as you find yourself typing continually to avoid the flashing and noise, while avoiding self-editing, and it’s easy to churn out words with little effort.

Or so the theory goes. Cutting a long story short, after using it to write a story that I was quite pleased with, I saved it over a file of the same name (no big deal, the operating system should ask me if I’m sure, etc, and do it seamlessly), exited the program and opened the file in an editor to discover that the save I’d just made didn’t happen. I don’t know what went wrong, but none of it got saved: 1200 words and 45 minutes flushed away.

I was not a happy bunny at all. I’m not pointing my finger at the software, as I really don’t know what went wrong and where. It could have been the software, it could have been AIR, or it could have been me, I just don’t know. Besides, it’s not like it was a novel.

So after making a cup of tea to regain my composure, I set about to writing it again, with as much of it from memory as possible. This time I used another piece of software that I’ve been meaning to use properly for some time: OmmWriter (watch the demo video, it’s stunning). It’s currently only available for the Mac, it’s free, and it uses a Zen-like atmosphere to stop you from getting distracted. It’s a beautiful looking piece of software and does the job very well.

The story has now been fully written, imported into OpenOffice.org for formatting, edited and improved, saved as a Word document (per their submission guidelines), and submitted for their consideration. Now begins the waiting game…

Borrowing an idea from a friend’s website, here’s a bit of fun to sum up today’s writing:

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Friday end of writing course haiku

Writing course finished.
Time to focus on writing,
markets to conquer!

Today marks the end of the writing course I’m taking with the Open University, as the final assignment (worth 70% of overall course mark) is due. I submitted mine last night, in a rare example of beating the deadline by a mile, and now the waiting game begins. Marking may take a couple of months.

It’s a basic level 12-week online course that I decided to take in order to pick up any fundamentals that I may have missed throughout the years. It turns out that I’d missed very little, but there were a few bits here and there that were useful, it was excellent practice, it gave me a huge ego boost (the feedback on the first assignment was stunning), and it provided the ability to get the work critiqued objectively (something I now can obtain via my writing group).

The other reasons I took the course were to give me confidence in my abilities by knowing I understand the fundamentals, to be able to say that I have taken a formal creative writing course, and it acts as a good preliminary to a more intensive course of study. The natural progression from this course is Creative Writing, which is a year-long course representing around 600 hours of study and costing over £600, so is not something to be taken on lightly. Other choices include an MFA degree course or other individual courses, either with the OU or elsewhere. If I do decide to take another course sometime soon, expect I’ll mix-and-match individual OU courses with third-party courses.

While I very much want to develop my creative writing skills, I also very much want to develop scriptwriting skills — primarily screenwriting for film and television. As of October 2009, the OU seems to have completely flushed all screenwriting and playwriting courses out of their course list… including the basic level Start Writing Plays course I wanted to take. It’s possible they’re in the process of developing new courses, particularly as there are excellent private screenwriting and playwriting courses available for comparable cost, but I’ll have to wait and see.

So for now, my plans are to just get on with writing and submitting work to markets, as well as gaining a foothold in periodicals that interest me. I now know I have the necessary fundamentals, so now it’s just a case of putting it to practice more often and playing the submit-and-wait game.

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First visit to a writing group

Following my own advice on the power of the writing group, I made contact with a local writing group a few weeks ago and began chatting with the secretary, Josh.

The group are called Reading Writers, based in Reading, Berkshire (it’s not meant to be a play on words).

Josh seemed a nice chap and we discussed things ranging from all my queries about the group — including if they were a specific genre group, a literary ‘knitting circle,’ consisted of members with a broad range of levels and types of experience, published and unpublished writers, hold competitions and perform critiques and other challenges to help you progress as a writer — to ideas about publishing, writing tools and software, and other general banter. The whole email experience made the group feel accessible and worthwhile, and I thought I’d share my own experience in case it’s useful to others.

I ended up being the first arrival after the chairperson and secretary, so it was a good chance to introduce myself to them while we set up the tables and chairs. Twenty minutes later the room was full and the meeting began. Tonight’s topic was the Submission Pack and was led by two of the group’s published authors, one primarily a writer of poetry and the other of commercial women’s fiction (chick lit, I think).

The tutorial was run by a combination of lecturing, giving handouts, and individual and group exercises (yes, one of the tutors was a teacher until recently). I don’t think I’m giving out confidential or copyrighted information here (please let me know if I am), and I’m doing so to give you an example of what a writing group can be like.

The Submission Pack — the collection of documents required when submitting work to editors and agents — consists of the following information:

  • Autobiography. Roughly half a printed page about you, not your story. Think of it as a job application.
  • Synopsis. Roughly one printed page, based around the three-act structure (or similar), including the resolution and ending. It will be read by editors and agents, not your audience.
  • Blurb. Not normally written by the author, though sometimes it is requested. Regardless of this, it is an invaluable exercise should an agent ever ask you, “So what’s your story about?” Doing this before you start speaking with editors and agents will provide you with the ‘elevator pitch.’ Condensing it down to a single sentence will provide you with the classic ‘strapline’ or ‘logline.’ Or you can try making something up on the spot when asked. Good luck with that.

The autobiography was approached by getting us to brainstorm and individually list:

  • Publishing history. It’s surprising what you can put down, even if you don’t have your name in a magazine or on a novel yet, including any writing prizes and awards.
  • Writing qualifications. This including memberships to any writing or reading groups, online communities, and courses taken.
  • Unique selling points (USP). Anything that is specific and unique (or rare) to you, not your work. This can include particular skills (e.g. you were once a demonstration parachutist), experience (e.g. you once flew a Cessna to Marrakech and back) or facts about your life (e.g. your family escaped attempted genocide in another country, you have a disability)
  • Other relevant information. Anything relevant to your bio that isn’t covered above.

The synopsis was approached by one of the tutors providing us with a synopsis from one of her recent novels and having us go through it, with the aid of a handout that showed the three-act structure and what is expected of a synopsis, and to identify each act. It showed us that a 100,000 word novel with multiple background plots, story arcs, points of view and other complex structures can be condensed into a single printed page that provides an introduction, an explanation of each act as it applies to the main character or characters.

Once we’d done that, we were asked to work in groups of three to write a synopsis of the classic Cinderella fairy tale. I found this initially difficult as I’ve not read, seen or heard that story in its entirety since I was a child but, after a few minutes quite a bit of it came back to me. In reflection, what I found most notable was that the bits I remembered first were the important parts of the three-act structure (rather than the details of what people said, etc): the problem definition and setup, the event that starts it all, high and low points, the darkest (rug-pulling) moment, climax and resolution. That was enough to bullet-point the exercise, and from there it was straightforward.

The blurb was approached by providing examples from popular current books:

Look at the Product Description section for each of these books on Amazon (links provided) — that’s the blurb. In each case, it is a single paragraph that provides a broad overview of the story without going into detail or ruining the ending, but getting you interested. The idea is to hook the potential reader.

From there we were provided a handout containing two groups of straplines and one group of book titles. The first group were actual novel or film straplines that most of us recognised, the second were similar to the first but were written by one of the tutors and we got some of them, and for the last group we were asked to spent 2-3 minutes writing our own straplines. I found writing the straplines quite challenging, and I think it may have been because I tend to write a lot and then edit down to a manageable size; the cost of that is time.

After the meeting had finished around two-thirds of the group went to the pub next door for drinks, so it was great to sit down with a pint and chat with people from all walks of life, and different generations, all with the common interest of writing. Each person wanted to know what I wrote and what I thought of this and that, and was equally passionate about sharing their writing styles and thoughts. Around the table were writers of chick lit, Regency period historical fiction, erotica, hard science fiction, fantasy, poetry, romance, etc. Fascinating.

So that was my experience at my first writing group. I have to say that it was one of the most enjoyable evenings I’ve had in some time, and I can’t recommend the experience enough to other people. If you’re a writer and are not a member of a writing group, you’re doing both yourself and a writing group somewhere a disservice.

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The power of the writing group

Flickr CC-BY dbdbrobot

For some time I’ve been considering joining a writing group, as many writer friends have told me that they are an invaluable resource to the writer, regardless of whether you’re just starting to put pen to paper or if you’re JK Rowling.

From my own research, here are some ways in which writing groups are useful:

  • Social environment. Writing is a lonely occupation, and being able to socialise with, get to know and connect with other like-minded people is a remarkably cathartic experience. What better thing for a writer to do than attending a useful meeting, then visit the pub afterwards and talk writing over a pint?
  • Getting your work critiqued. Many writers initially rely upon family or friends for opinions of our writing, and rare is the family member or friend who tells you exactly what you need to hear in a way that avoids getting your back up. You will also be dealing with writers who know what to look for, understand how a story is structured, and know what to expect at certain points. This is also a vital step in learning how to grow a thick skin, an unavoidable pre-requisite to anyone seeking publication.
  • Learning how to critique. Beyond simple typographical and grammatical issues, most people haven’t a clue how to analyse a piece of work. Being in a writing group will teach you this vital skill. which you can also apply to your own work.
  • Tricks of the trade. Most people know that writing is more than just getting a neat idea down on paper. From poem, lyric and short story to novel, multi-volume epic and film, there are technical aspects of storytelling that nearly all works follow. Understanding the three-act structure and the Hero’s Journey will give understandable structure to almost every story ever written, and knowing what kind of event to place at which point will make all the difference. The concepts of main story or plot, backstory, background plot, story arcs, cameos, time-shifting and other techniques will give your stories greater appeal and better cohesion
  • Learning about markets. The modern writer needs to know a lot more than ‘simply’ how to write good stories. If you are seeking publication, then you need to understand markets, publishers, agents, and how to write for and tailor your works to them. This goes for poetry, short stories, fiction, non-fiction, novels and screenplays.
  • Learning about genres and audiences. The genre in which you write will determine its readership and directly relate to potential sales. For example, science fiction is well known for its obsessively loyal followers (who will often buy every piece of work an author publishes), but one price is their demanding nature and intolerance of logic and continuity problems. They often know your universe better than you, its creator. This can also mean your target audience is a much smaller slice that popular general fiction that might normally appear on your favourite book show (two popular UK shows being The Book Show and The TV Book Club).
  • Getting to know published authors. Most general writing groups consist of members whose experiences range from those just realising they might like to write, to old hands who have 20 or more books published, all sorts of awards under their belts, and in many and varied markets and genres. This gives a writer a chance to look across genres and markets. You may see yourself as a character-driven fantasy writer, and then may be surprised to discover that the skills used in that genre translate easily to children’s fiction, historical fiction or even romance.
  • Networking. It’s a simple fact that being a within a group means that you have people of diverse backgrounds, with equally diverse social and professional circles. The simple act of making a friend in such a group can open doors that would otherwise have remained closed (or been much harder to open).
  • Competitions and awards. Many groups run their own competitions throughout the year, and some give awards to members based on things such as their improvement or number of published works. Others will also participate as a group in third-party competitions, writing and entering as a group exercise. Not only can this give you immense satisfaction and encouragement, but it gives you the ability to include “Winner of…” in your author biographies and submission information.
  • Accountability. Most groups have regular ‘manuscript meetings’ where all members are asked to submit a short story (sometimes with a theme) to the group. Each member reads one another’s work and that is used to gauge your progress as a writer, help you find suitable material for submission to publication, teach you how to accept and give constructive criticism, and teach you how to analyse writing. Depending upon the group, it is unlikely that submitting your stories for critiquing is compulsory, but not making use of such a valuable facility is unlikely to do your writing much good (editors or agents are unlikely to look kindly upon a submission with basic errors).
  • Simply being a member. Just being a member of a writing group, and attending and participating at whatever level suits you, is likely to have an immediate and lasting positive effect on your writing and your sense of purpose as a writer. There is also the added benefit that membership to such as group counts as a writing qualification for your author biography when submitting work, and shows that you take writing seriously.
  • If you’re the old hand. If you’re the JK Rowling or Stephen King of your writing group, then the benefit you get may be different to everyone else. You’re unlikely (though it’s possible) to learn much about the craft of writing and the massive publishing behemoth that straddles it, but you will be an invaluable resource for advice, tutorials, guidance and other philanthropic activities. For some people that’s going to be an immediate disincentive, but for others that gives them the opportunity to put something back into the writing community and potentially mentor the Next Big Thing. Sure, they may wind up being your competition, but surely that will make you a better writer?

So if you are a writer of any level, or are interested in becoming one, I exhort you to find your local writing group (preferably find a couple within reach so you have a choice), make contact and go along. You have nothing to lose, and it may open up a world that you never thought existed.

Your favourite search engine is your friend when it comes to knowing where to start to find your local writing group. Ten seconds of searching found me some howtos (suite101, eHow), directories (FindAWritingGroup, Writer Magazine), and of course try searching for “writing group” followed by your location.

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London Book Fair: Here I come…

Some time ago I came to the realisation that attending events in the writing community would be a fun and educational way to spend time, would spur me on to do more writing, all while potentially generating friendships and contacts. A local literature festival was to be my first attempt at this last year, but two events clashing made that a non-starter.

To make up for that, I’ve decided to go for one of the big events of the publishing calendar: the London Book Fair. It takes place 19-21 April 2010 at Earls Court, and its website describes it as follows:

The London Book Fair is the global marketplace for rights negotiation and the sale and distribution of content across print, audio, TV, film and digital channels.

Taking place every spring in the world’s premier publishing and cultural capital, it is a unique opportunity to explore, understand and capitalise on the innovations shaping the publishing world. The London Book Fair brings you direct access to customers, content and emerging markets.

Makes me wish I had something notably pitch-worthy, providing me the dilemma of negotiating rights, sale and distribution…

So to be clear, it is not a literary festival where people leisurely read books and chat with authors and like-minded bibliophiles in between said authors giving talks about their new books, worlds or styles of writing. It is definitely an industry fair that helps determine the course of the publishing industry over the coming year, with wheeling and dealing happening all over the place.

In addition to the main Fair taking place from Monday to Wednesday, the weekend beforehand (17-18th) is when a number of seminars take place. And most of them are free.

It’s this combination of a ‘look inside the industry’ and seminars is precisely why I want to attend and have paid the £25 entry fee. I must confess it’s quite embarrassing looking at the attendee badge with its Matt Bruce – Author taking up most of the front, and I’m dreading the second shoe-drop at the Fair when I expect someone will ask, ‘Oh, so what have you written…?’ Still, this gets me access to all 3 days and any of the free seminars, though there is one paid-for  seminar I’m considering attending: How to Write For Screen: Film & TV Masterclass. It’s just a shame this 2½ hour class costs more than 3 days entry to the Fair itself…

I expect to attend more fairs and festivals during the year, so I’ll post about it here.

So who else is planning on attending these kinds of events in 2010, and where and when are they?

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