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Writers' News

Rejecting writer’s block: rediscovering your writing passion this summer

theboar.org – Monday July 29, 2024

There is a sense of irony about writing whilst talking about writer’s block. But this frustrating struggle has been bothering me all throughout the summer months. Whether it’s a sense of burnout after exam season, or just the warm heat getting to my head, writing can be tough during such a long break. Every budding writer has experienced it, so where does it originate, and how do you get over this tendency found in every creative person?

The phenomenon of writer’s block is defined as the “temporary or lasting failure to put words on paper”, often provoked by worry, academic fatigue, or just the fear that your writing will not be good enough. Due to the fact that writing is such a creative process, relying on flow, passion, and courage, the inability to complete such a task is frustrating for the sufferer. Even successful authors, such as the Franz Kafka, have personal accounts of their frustration, with words in his letters poignantly phrasing that his personal worries and woes led to his despair and battle with creativity.

The antidote for writer’s block is often quite, dare I say, trivial. Many articles have told me to go on a walk, or remove distractions, and whilst I cannot deny this works to an extent, it will not hit the nail on the head. Returning to “the roll, the rise, the carol, the creation”, perhaps pretentiously put by Gerard Manley Hopkins, feels like it comes from within. The art of putting pen to paper is a personal thing, and overcoming that is tough.

[Read the full article]

BAFTA Rocliffe new writing competition

cinematography.world – Saturday July 27, 2024

The BAFTA Rocliffe new writing competition is a platform for aspiring screenwriters to have their work showcased and a fantastic opportunity to take their writing career to the next level. 

The competition, which runs twice a year, calls submissions for Film, Television Drama, Children, Family & YA Media, and Television Comedy scripts. In 2024, we will be running Television Comedy and Film.

Following a blind judging process, selected script extracts are performed by a professional cast to an audience of producers, development executives, directors, actors and literary agents, aiming to give a platform to emerging writing talent from across the country.

[Read the full article]

Amanda Harris to leave YMU in 2025 and set up new literary agency

thebookseller.com – Friday July 26, 2024

Literary agent Amanda Harris is leaving YMU to set up her own literary agency. Harris will be leaving the company in early 2025, however she will continue to work with YMU clients on future projects.

Speaking exclusively to The Bookseller, Harris, managing director of Literary, said: "I have had a great time at YMU, and I am thrilled to be continuing my work with YMU clients as I take the next step in my agenting career. I feel very honoured to have launched a bespoke literary business within the company, and to have worked with such a talented team of award-winning agents.

"YMU Literary’s impact on the group, and the UK publishing industry, is reflected in the bestseller charts, national book awards and huge TCM sales figures achieved by our authors and their publishers."

[Read the full article]

Plans for national writing centre put to government

bbc.co.uk – Wednesday July 24, 2024

Plans to create a national writing centre in the North East have been put to the government.

The Centre for Writing would be based at Bolbec Hall in Westgate Road, Newcastle, and would support community writing and reading initiatives.

New Writing North, the charity behind the plan, said the centre would cost £14m and it was seeking £5m from the government's Cultural Development Fund.

Claire Malcolm, the charity's CEO, said the investment would "help train and develop a new generation of local talent".

"I want young people here to be able to grow up to be publishers, writers and creatives without presuming they need to leave the North East to achieve their ambition," she added.

If approved, the centre would provide support for professional writers and publishing businesses across the north of England.

[Read the full article]

Peng Shepherd On Writing A Choose-You-Own-Adventure Speculative Mystery

crimereads.com – Tuesday July 23, 2024

Having just survived writing a speculative mystery novel that allows readers choose what happens at certain points in the story, when CrimReads asked me to write an essay about the experience in the same format, I felt:

Terror

Excitement

TERROR

It’s already hard enough to write a book. But to write one in which there are multiple versions of the main character’s story, all of which make sense, and more importantly, all of which feel just as true, was a whole new beast entirely. What if I’ve bitten off more than I can chew? What if readers think it’s too weird? What if I fail? The writing of the manuscript really was like a microcosm for life.

And this is the thing, both about writing and about life: one of the best parts is getting to make choices about what’s most important, because that’s how you define yourself as “you”—and one of the hardest parts is having to make choices about what’s most important, because you might get it wrong. And if you do, how do you live with that?

Nostalgia

No Good Options

 

NOSTALGIA

Many of us are familiar with the children’s Choose Your Own Adventure series of books from our childhood, in which you start as a blank “You” canvas and are immediately launched into an outlandishly fun adventure in outer space or on the open seas or deep in some jungle.

Why did we all love that series so much as kids? What was it about those paperbacks that could transport us somewhere else for entire afternoons at a time? My personal theory is that choice is exciting to children because at that age, you almost never get to make them. Most of your life is dictated by your parents or your teachers, and so any opportunity to exercise some autonomy, no matter how trivial, is thrilling. If you put on a blue shirt for bed, will the aliens invade Earth? If you have the granola instead of the chocolate puffs, will a portal open in your basement?

But when you’re an adult, the game changes. Now you have entirely too much choice, none of which leads to extraterrestrials or SCUBA diving for lost treasure in the Bermuda Triangle. The responsibilities can be so much, we might almost wish that sometimes, the pressure of choosing could briefly be taken away from us again.

Then it was.

You can only go to “No Good Options”

[Read the full article]

Max Edwards leaves Aevitas to return to Apple Tree Literary

thebookseller.com – Monday July 22, 2024

Max Edwards has left Aevitas Creative Management after five years to re-open his own agency, Apple Tree Literary. 

Having originally founded Apple Tree in February 2019, Edwards merged it with Aevitas later that year. He brings his list of authors with him to the re-launched Apple Tree Literary.

Edwards said: “I’m excited to be re-launching Apple Tree Literary. I have learnt so much over the last five years and will miss all my former colleagues at Aevitas Creative Management. But the opportunity to grow my own agency from a sapling once more is a thrilling one. I look forward to nurturing the continued successes of my brilliant clients, and to working closely with their publishers around the world.”

Toby Mundy, c.e.o. of ACM UK, said: “I think I speak for everyone at Aevitas Creative Management when I wish Max the very best with his new venture. I look forward to seeing him and his clients flourish in their new home."

[Read the full article]

Thoughts on writer’s block and other first word problems

auburn-reporter.com – Sunday July 21, 2024

“I once heard an anecdote about a writer who’d spent a week in his apartment working on his novel, without a break. Compassionate friends finally dragged him away to dinner for the sake of sanity, and for a much needed breather.

“What did you get done this week?” the writer’s chums inquired.

“In the mornings, I put in a comma,” he answered gloomily, “and at night, I took it out again.”

Perhaps the guy had a creative block, who knows? But I’ll wager he’d also neither read nor followed the great Ray Bradbury’s advice in his book, “Zen in the Art of Writing.”

“This afternoon, burn down the house,” Bradbury wrote. “Tomorrow, pour critical water upon the simmering coals.”

In other words: don’t judge what you’re writing while you’re at it. Reserve your critiques for the editing phase. That’s the time to correct errors.

Of course, Bradbury is saying, the creative and judgement moods must be separated. Failing to recognize this is one sure way to get nothing done but spin your wheels, like our unfortunate writer with his vexing comma. When the creative fire is under you, go nuts.

[Read the full article]

Working with Roald Dahl helped me find Harry Potter

bbc.co.uk – Saturday July 20, 2024

he publisher who discovered Harry Potter has said working with Cardiff-born children's author Roald Dahl helped him see the potential in JK Rowling's novel.

Barry Cunningham has worked with some of the most well-known children's authors in the world.

He said Roald Dahl was "a tall, quite grumpy, rather heroic, very frank author" who was adored by children.

"He was occasionally extremely grumpy and short tempered with adults, but never with children," he told the Books That Made Me programme on BBC Radio Wales.

Roald Dahl was born on 13 September 1916 in the Llandaff area of the Welsh capital, and died on 23 November 1990, aged 74.

As marketing director for Puffin, Mr Cunningham travelled around the country with him.

It was during one of those marketing trips that Dahl revealed what he believed was the secret to the success of his books.

[Read the full article]

First romantic fiction festival held in Manchester

thebookseller.com – Saturday July 20, 2024

The first romantic fiction festival was held in Manchester last week, which saw readers and writers gather from across the country.

Manchester Central Library hosted Love Stories etc festival on 13th July, with 28 author panels, five writing workshops and an immensely popular book stall staffed by romance experts from Waterstones Arndale.

Co-directed and co-founded by Simon & Schuster’s brand development director Sara-Jade Virtue and HarperNorth’s head of marketing and publicity Alice Murphy-Pyle, the cross-publishing festival featured authors from several publishers at all stages of their careers. Authors including Milly Johnson, Harriet Evans, Cesca Major, P J Ellis, Veronica Henry and Isabelle Broom took to the performance space, while workshops from literary agent Lisa Highton, the RNA and publishing staff helped inspire writers. 

[Read the full article]

Digital Audio Up 15 Percent: A 23-Percent Jump YTD

publishingperspectives.com – Saturday July 20, 2024

In its May 2024 StatShot report released this morning (July 18), the Association of American Publishers (AAP) cites total revenues across all categories up 10.8 percent over May 2023, at US$1.1 billion.

Year-to-date revenues, the AAP reports, were up 5.5 percent, at US$5.2 billion for the first five months of the year.

For a second month, the United States’ book publishing industry—as assessed by the StatShot program—shows a significant boost. The analysis shows total gross sales increasing 5 percent, with net sales rising 11 percent, according to the report’s authors.

The trade itself—the commercial books industry and the part of the international business most closely followed by Publishing Perspectives—saw gross sales of 9 percent, but because of a 31-percent decrease in returns, that gross-sales figure jumped to 31 percent. Hardback and paperback formats in the trade saw increases of 21 percent and 17 percent, respectively, in net sales, boosting the year-to-date trade net sales to 5 percent.

[Read the full article]

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