Fiona

A full diary

After a lull at the start of the year, the literature scene in the North East is in full swing which means a full diary and regrets over those things I can't attend.
The Newcastle Lit and Phil seems to be featuring in my diary quite a lot at the moment. My first visit there this year was for the Arrowhead reading. It was good to hear friends Bob Cooper and Sue Vickerman read again, and the evening also introduced me to the work of Jennifer Copley. I bought her pamphlet House by the Sea and rushed home to read it.
Then last week I was back for the evening with Val McDermid and Ian Rankin. As they weren't promoting new books, Chaz Brenchley was able to lead the evening in much more interesting conversations. I was intrigued by the idea that people can bid to get their name used as a character in books, with the money going for charity, and it sparked off an idea for a short story that I'm working on now.
This was the first evening in the Lit and Phil's crime month. There's still lots planned and tickets are free, so definitely worth considering if you're in the area.
I'll be reading at the Lit and Phil on March 11th with others from Newcastle University's MA in Writing Poetry who appear in our anthology Under Your Skin.
I've been adding lots of links to this page, as I know how annoying it can be to have to keep searching for more information. Hopefully, you'll keep returning to read on as I have one more interesting link to add!
The poem I'm working on at the moment is based on internet "travelling", as I've been having fun with one of those translation pages, letting my stanza explore the world in various languages, then translating it back. It's great fun, and even more exciting to then turn the journey into a poem.
If you are a poet and of "a certain age" - that's 50 and over - then don't miss the Blinking Eye poetry competition which has just been launched by Jeanne Macdonald. Even if you're not entering, the website is worth visiting, so here is my final link for this entry. I'm off to London for a touristy half-term with David and Robbie (16) tomorrow, so will be taking some of the entry forms to the Poetry Library - my guarantee that we'll be visiting there after the London Eye!

Posted by Fiona on 12 February 2004 at 09:03 AM GMT [Link]


Ellen

To market, to market, jiggety jig

Last night I went to the launch of Tim Dalling’s CD ‘Blossom’ at the Bistro Bar, at the Tyne Theatre. I am a great fan of Tim’s music, both his settings of Louis MacNeice poems and his own songs.
What I enjoy is the marriage of meaning in the text and melody. Both complement the other. The haunting arrangements are played beautifully by Ian Carr, guitar and Neil Harland on bass. It’s funny too - anyone who drinks too much, (and according to the acupuncturist I saw at the Sports Injury clinic, that’s usually writers), will recognise the sentiments of The Flight of the Beer Monkey. Worth getting a copy from: annietimcd@hotmail.com

I am reading a lot of children’s literature at the moment. I always have done: having children means you are in constant touch with their current age range favourites.
Shirley Hughes’ ‘Dogger’ was very popular, and the Alfie series, and I am enjoying passing on our family copies to my great nieces and nephew in Wales, who of course is called Alfie.
My ten year old is reading the Harry Potter series (though he foundered on the last one, Order of the Phoenix, it just went on a bit too long ) and The Edge Chronicles; I’ve read my way through the entire Potter oeuvre, but not the Edge Chronicles yet. And I’m constantly trying to find teen fiction for my elder boy, though now he’s sixteen, he’s really into the adult world. I bought him Brave New World, and re read it myself. It had a big impact on me at 15 or so, and I’m amazed at how prescient Huxley’s themes are for today.
I enjoyed Philip Pullman’s Trilogy, although neither of my boys have managed to get themselves into reading them, but the first in the series, Northern Lights, was extremely popular with both of them on one of our regular long car journeys to Cornwall as a tape.
I am currently tutoring on a Writing for Children course at the Centre for Lifelong Learning at Newcastle University, and I have a keen and astute group. We explore the world of children’s literature together, and ponder on the mysterious process of writing for particular age ranges. Do you have an idea and as you start to write, discover which age audience it suits ? Or do you set out to fulfil the ingredients for a particular niche ?
As all our information suggests that although the children’s market is flourishing, it is still very difficult to actually get your work seen and published, it seems you ignore current market trends at your peril. I spoke to a children’s fiction agent the other day for advice to pass on to the group and it was all - ‘ poetry is difficult because it can’t be translated easily, so we can’t sell foreign rights’, etc. The market speaks.
It can be very disheartening, so we can only carry on writing because we’re driven to do it, not because we think we can guess what the next ‘Big Thing’ will be. We should be aiming to make our writing the best it can possibly be.
As a final note, I discovered from my welsh relatives that I was born on St Dwynwen's Day - patron saint of welsh lovers. Not people who love the Welsh, but Welsh people in love.
Now there's a subject for you, boyo.

Posted by Ellen on 4 February 2004 at 09:20 PM GMT [Link]


[Archives]   [Home page]   [Previous page]

Search entries:

Powered By Greymatter

Site designed and maintained by Cornwell Internet
This template last updated 20th March 2011