Tuesday, 29 June 2010

Bye!





I've decided to stop writing this blog. When I began my blogs I had the need to write somewhere, anywhere as a creative outlet and as a way of replacing my MA classes.

Now I've found my stride as a 'graduate' writer (i.e. one that doesn't need the support of my classmates) I no longer need them. I've also got so much going on that I can't fully maintain them as they deserve to be.

So, dear reader, this will be my last blog on here. If you'd still like a peek into my brain then follow me on tumblr instead.

Stay happy,

WG x

P.S I'll continue to feature a cat of the week on my tumblr page x

Sunday, 30 May 2010

Oh, what a night!












































Soooooo I was supposed to let you all know how the anthology launch went...and I totally forgot!

Once again life - a new job and a new health kick plus trying to see my man and my friends - distracted me! Sorry!

The launch went soooooo well, it really couldn't have gone better!

I wrote a little micro-blog about it the next day, click here to see it.

Apologies for the lazy blogging, I'll put a proper one up soon - promise!

Stay happy,

WG x

Saturday, 15 May 2010

Not long to go!

A while ago I mentioned that my Master's degree culminates in an anthology which is launched in London.

All of the big agents and publishers - and many of the smaller ones - are invited and it's hoped that at least some of us will launch our careers that night. Even if we don't it's a great way to introduce ourselves to the industry and to showcase what we've achieved in the last eighteen months.

Well....that launch is almost here! After months of planning, dreaming and thinking about it, the launch is THIS TUESDAY and I could not be more nervous!

I've got a dress, a train ticket and the hope that, if nothing else, I will get over my fear of public speaking.

I'll let you know how it goes!

WG x

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Ten, Nine, Eight, Seven, Six...






















These are the five best books that I've read in the last few weeks.... (in no particular order)

- Hit The Road, Jack by Mimi Thebo - This is the story of a young boy who sets out to find his father after discovering some letters in his mother's bedroom.
At first I was unsure of where it was headed but, already being a fan of Thebo, I trusted in her writing and enjoyed the gentle beginning, getting into Jack's world and meeting his varied and eccentric circle of friends. However, this gentle tone was shattered when Jack's father finally made an appearance and Thebo's true skill at producing tightly written prose was revealed in all it's glory. I won't spoil the surprise, but trust me, this short novel is most definitely worth a read...

- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dogs Days by Jeff Kinney - I've reviewed this series before and this, the latest instalment is just as brilliant as the others. Funny, witty and well observed.

- Desperate Measures by Laura Summers - Narrated by twin sisters who take one chapter each, this is a look at the fostering system and what happens when siblings are torn apart. Particularly interesting as each sister's voice is clearly defined from each other and completely believable in their own, specific way.

- Arch Enemy: The Looking Glass Wars by Frank Beddor - This is a brilliant ending to a very imaginative and well written trilogy. In this, the final book, Beddor has once again managed to successfully blend fantasy and reality in a way that makes the reader forget to look for the line. Interwoven is love, hate, ambition and friendship as his characters struggle against each other as well as themselves. Just brilliant.

- Daughter of Fire and Ice by Marie-Louise Jensen - I've already reviewed this book here but I cannot praise it highly enough! I've read it three times now - a very rare occurrence for me!

Those are my top five of the last few weeks but I've read lots of other great books which I will be featuring over the next little while.

Stay happy,

WG x

P.S. If you have a recommendation for me, just leave a comment or send me a message!

Thursday, 8 April 2010

Just a quick note...




















...to say take a look at my other blog to see a list of my favourite blogs and tumblrs. Never know, you might find something you like!

There is also a quick update on there.

I will post a proper blog on here sooooooon, promise!

Stay happy,

WG x

Sunday, 21 March 2010

Checkmate, Malorie Blackman





























Synopsis: Can the future ever erase the past?
Rose has a Cross mother and a nought father in a society where the pale-skinned noughts are treated as inferiors and those with dual heritage face a life-long battle against deep-rooted prejudices.
Sephy, her mother, has told Rose virtually nothing about her father, but as Rose grows into a young adult, she unexpectedly discovers the truth about her parentage, and becomes determined to find out more, to honour both sides of her heritage. But her father's family has a complicated history - one tied up with the fight for equality for the nought population.
And as Rose takes her first steps away from Sephy and into this world, she finds herself drawn inexorably into more and more danger.
Suddenly, it's a game of very high stakes that can only have one winner...

My Thoughts:I was a massive fan of the first book in this series as I thought it was interesting, thought provoking and tightly written.

This isn't the case here.

Although Blackman has brought together the numerous strands of the complicated narrative well, this novel is also repetitive and very slow in places.

Towards the end of the novel I became impatient with Callie and her never-ending angst and I just wanted to grasp Sephy by her shoulders and give her a good shake! Jude is also a bit of a cut-out villain and his passages left me cold.

On the plus side however, Blackman did keep me reading as I wanted to know where the twists of the narrative would take her characters next. I also liked the early passages with Callie where she talks to her dead father as I thought Blackman caught the spirit and voice of a young girl well.

Overall, although I found this book a bit hard going and tiresome in places, it was a satisfying conclusion to the series and a fitting end to Sephy and Callum's story.

***

Tuesday, 16 March 2010

Patience...


















...is not actually a virtue. Did you know that?

But sometimes, having a little of it pays off.

I'm not know for my patience - apart from when it comes to taking care of children - but I've had to try and find some in the last few months as I wait and wait and wait and WAIT for answers from Agent A and to generally find some balance in my life.

Well, it has paid off in both ways!

Firstly, Agent A emailed me a couple of weeks ago to say that she likes my manuscript and would like to see it once I've made some adjustments! Mostly her notes were about lengthening it which I think it valid as it only currently weighs in at 35,000 words, pretty short, even for a Young Adult novel. So this week I've taken some holiday from work and am ploughing through it, making changes and adding more plot lines. I don't plan on making all of the changes that she has suggested, it still needs to be the novel I wanted to write, not one that I wrote to please someone else. Hopefully by Friday I'll be able to send it off to London once again and then the waiting can resume! But it's a big step forward just to get a response, I'd almost decided that it had been slung on the rubbish heap long ago!

Secondly, the job that I've wanted since I was 15 has fallen into my lap! I start in mid May and I literally cannot wait! It's a job as a Nanny for a private family and so I obviously can't go into details but put it this way - it's perfect! And it leaves me time to write so score all around!

Anyway, the point of this post is to say this: sometimes you have to hang on for the good things to happen. Just have patience!

Until next time,

Stay happy,

WG x

Friday, 12 March 2010

Daughter of Fire and Ice, Marie-Louise Jensen




























Synopsis: 'A sense of menace grew on me all morning. Not a vision. No glimpse of the future disturbed me. It was more a shadow of approaching danger...'
Snatched by a notorious Viking chieftain, Thora is set to leave her homeland on a ship bound for Iceland. But when her captor is murdered an altogether different journey begins...

My Thoughts: The phrase 'I couldn't put it down' is often thrown around and has been used so much that it's becoming clichéd. However, with this novel, it's completely true as this book was pretty much stuck to my hands for the three days it took for me to consume it.

Jensen shows once again that she is a master at creating a realistic world that blends the familiar with the foreign.

The protagonist, Thora, is a well balanced character who manages to be good without being saccharine and who pulls the reader along with her on her journey as it twists and turns.

Forbidden love can often be frustrating and annoying for the reader but Jensen manages it so that the reader feels as though Thora and Bjorn will be together eventually, making the reader willing to wait for this outcome.

The antagonist, Ragna, is also well drawn as Jensen avoids making her into a cartoon villian, instead creating a character who is complicated and for whom the reader feels a small amount of sympathy for.

Overall, this is a novel that twists and turns, taking the reader to places that they don't expect and that had me wishing for more as I read the final words.

*****

Sunday, 7 March 2010

To Autumn, John Keats.































I studied Keats at secondary school, then at college and finally at university. This has always been my favourite of his poems, there is something about it that evokes such a deep longing...

To Autumn, John Keats

Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness!
Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun;
Conspiring with him how to load and bless
With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eaves run;
To bend with apples the mossed cottage trees,
And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core;
To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shells
With a sweet kernel; to set budding more,
And still more, later flowers for the bees,
Until they think warm days will never cease,
For Summer has o'erbrimmed their clammy cells.

Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store?
Sometimes whoever seeks abroad may find
Thee sitting careless on a granary floor,
Thy hair soft-lifted by the winnowing wind,
Or on a half-reaped furrow sound asleep,
Drowsed with the fume of poppies, while thy hook
Spares the next swath and all its twinèd flowers;
And sometimes like a gleaner thou dost keep
Steady thy laden head across a brook;
Or by a cider-press, with patient look,
Thou watchest the last oozings hours by hours.

Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they?
Think not of them, thou hast thy music too, -
While barred clouds bloom the soft-dying day,
And touch the stubble-plains with rosy hue;
Then in a wailful choir the small gnats mourn
Among the river sallows, borne aloft
Or sinking as the light wind lives or dies;
And full-grown lambs loud bleat from hilly bourn;
Hedge-crickets sing; and now with treble soft
The redbreast whistles from a garden-croft;
And gathering swallows twitter in the skies.

Sunday, 28 February 2010

Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer

























Synopsis: Twelve-year-old villain, Artemis Fowl, is the most ingenious criminal mastermind in history. His bold and daring plan is to hold a leprechaun to ransom. But he's taking on more than he bargained for when he kidnaps Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon (Lower Elements Police Reconnaissance Unit).
For a start, leprechaun technology is more advanced than our own. Add to that the fact that Holly is a true heroine and that her senior officer Commander Root will stop at nothing to get her back and you've got the mother of all sieges brewing!

My Thoughts: I had mixed feelings about this novel.

On the one hand, I found it very readable and each character was quickly formed for the reader, making it easy to follow. The pace is also very swift and the blend of the 'real' world and the fairy world is artfully dealt with by Colfer.

However, I also had some problems with it.

The main issue that I had was with Artemis himself. Generally with a protagonist, the reader is supposed to like and sympathise with them and want them to succeed with whatever their quest is. With Artemis, this isn't the case as he is so self-centred, calculating and cold. Colfer has obviously tried to make him sympathetic with the fact that his mother is clearly mentally ill but this has failed because of the way that Artemis deals with her.

The other problem that I had was the constant repetition in parts of the text - particularly in the scenes between Foaly and Root and their 'banter'.

However, despite these problems, I still enjoyed this novel and read it very quickly. I'm just not sure that I would read any of the others...

***

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Across The Nightingale Floor, Lian Hearn






















Synopsis: In his palace at Inuyama, Lord lida Sadamu, warlord of the Tohan clan, surveys his famous nightingale floor. Its surface sings at the tread of every human foot, and no assassin can cross it.

But 16-year-old Otori Takeo, his family murdered by lida's warriors has the magical skills of the Tribe - preternatural hearing, invisibility, a second self - that enable him to enter the lair of the Tohan. He has love in his heart and death at his fingertips...

My Thoughts:This is a very tightly written novel that weaves the various strands of the story together to create a strong narrative that carries the story and the reader along.

Although Hearn claims that the novel is set in an imaginary land and time, it has a strong Japanese flavour which creates an atmosphere of honour and tradition.

The love story is developed well and very slowly so that by the end you completely believe in it and want them to succeed and be together.

My only complaint with this novel is that Hearn sometimes slips into telling us what is happening instead of showing us which is a bit distancing. I wanted to get closer up to Takeo at some points, particularly in the beginning and when he is learning to become one of the Tribe.

However, overall, this is a vibrant and compelling novel and a brilliant start to a trilogy that I will definitely be reading more of.

*****

Friday, 19 February 2010

Choices.























Do you ever wish that your life was a novel that you could flick to the end to and find out how everything turned out?

I usually know where I'm headed and what I'm doing but lately I've been struggling to make some very important choices. Should I stay in my current job or go for the new one? Should I go back and rewrite an old story or carry on with the one I've been working on since November?

There have been other choices that are on my mind but they are more personal and I'll only let you know when I've made them!

A choice that all writers have to make is whether or not to get an agent.

To get published you can go down two routes; to get an agent and let them do the work or to go it alone and approach a publisher or editor without representation.

I have taken the agented route (and I'll have some news about Agent A in the next two weeks!) for the following reasons:

a) They are the experts. I've got more knowledge of the industry than most due to the Masters course that I did but I'm no expert. Agents know the industry inside and out and will know exactly which editors and publishers to target with your novel so you won't waste precious time and effort sending it out to people who won't be interested.

b) They can guide me. I've got a vague idea of the kind of writer that I want to be but I'm not completely sure how to get there. And a good agent will hopefully find me work that I wouldn't be able to find on my own.

c) They leave a writer free to do what they are supposed to be doing; write. Whilst they are dealing with contracts and wrangling you a higher advance, you can be free to just write and come up with the next best selling idea. A good agent will deal with all of the business side of things and you will only have to sign on the dotted line.

There are downsides to having an agent, of course. The main one is money. Most agents take between 10 and 12% of their clients profits. However, I personally think that this is worth it but it's a choice that everyone has to make individually.

Choosing an agent is also difficult. I wanted to find a small agency so that they would have more time to focus on me, rather than a bigger one in which I'd be just another writer in a big pool of them. But then, a bigger agency will have more money to put behind you...oh decisions!

The best way to find an agent that you think would be suitable for you would be to buy The Children's Artists & Writers Yearbook 2010 because it is literally the writers bible! Every agent and publisher in the UK (and some abroad) who deal in children's literature are listed, along with their details and the types (genre, age range) of literature that they deal in.

My advice would be to make a short list and then whittle it down to five by looking at their websites and trying to get a feel for them. Look at their client list and see if you would fit in with it. Then approach them but don't forget the number one golden rule...

ONLY APPROACH ONE AGENT AT A TIME!

Most agents hate it when writers do multiple submissions (i.e. when they send it to more than one agent at a time) so just send it to one agent and wait for their response. This can take up to six months so this is a very slow, but hopefully worth it, process. Just hang in there!

Anyway, those are my thoughts on being agented, I'll blog about going it alone in the next little while.

Hope everyone is well and good luck if you're trying to get agented - I know how tough it is!

See you soon,

Writer Girl x

Tuesday, 9 February 2010

Practical Magic, Alice Hoffman
































Synopsis:
From one of the most captivating storytellers in American fiction comes a tale of two sisters, Gillian and Sally Owens, brought up by their two elderly guardian aunts in a world of spells and exotica.

As the magical charm of their childhood wears away, they escape from this mystical mayhem - one by running away, the other by marrying.

Many years go by before strange circumstances thrust them together again, and once more they are in a place that blends the mundane and mysterious, the familiar and fantastic, the normal and the numinous.

Three generations of Owens women are brought together in an experience of unexpected insight and revelation, teaching all of them that such perceptions are rare and wonderful and - to be sure - practical.

My thoughts: This is a brilliantly written, atmospheric novel that looks closely at life, love, loss, growing up and believing in yourself.

It's nothing like the film - apart from the basic plot in which Gillian kills Jimmy by accident and the sisters bury him in the garden - but the two run alongside each other nicely.

I particularly liked that the small amount of magic that is included - from the potions of the aunts and Kylie's ability to see people auras - was woven in so subtly that Hoffman has managed to make it seem like an ordinary, every day event.

My only complaint is that the end is far too neat and each character is paired off with their perfect match.

Overall though, I was pleasantly surprised by this novel, although I have learnt that in future I should never be surprised by the brilliance of Hoffman's writing...

*****

Friday, 5 February 2010

Running Wild, Michael Morpurgo

































I blogged a little while ago about not judging a book by it's cover. Well, look at this cover, isn't it great? It's bright, vibrant and tells you what to expect on the inside, just what I said was important right? Well, if only the inside was as good as the cover...

Synopsis: When 10-year-old Will's father dies in the Iraq war, his mother surprises him with a trip to Indonesia. But little could she have known what awaited them both there.
The first Will knows that anything is wrong is when Oona, the elephant he is riding along the beach, begins to spook. Then, suddenly, she takes off into the jungle with Will on her back. And that's when Will sees the wave come crashing in!
With his mother almost certainly drowned, with nothing to cling onto but an elephant and nothing to help him but the clothes on his back, Will faces a terrifying future. But maybe the jungle, and Oona the elephant, can help him?

My Thoughts: *SPOILERS*

Being a big Michael Morpurgo fan, I was excited to read this book.

What a disappointment.

The narrative is clunky and uneven and I just didn't feel the fear that Will would have been going through when the tsunami hit. There didn't seem to be any major highs or lows and even when Will was captured by the hunters, I didn't fear for him.

Will himself is interesting with all of his back story and emotional luggage but I didn't completely connect to him as his voice seems too old for a ten-year-old.

Of course, it turns out in the end that it's his grandfather telling the story but I don't think this works at all, it would have been more empowering for Will - and therefore his readers - if he had been telling this story for himself.

The ending bothered me as well because it was all far too neat and felt like the ending to a Disney film.

The only positive for me was the character of Oona. I think that Morpurgo drew her well, especially considering that she doesn't speak.

Overall, this could have been a really inspiring story about a young boy surviving a horrible situation and overcoming the difficulties involved but instead it is dry, clunky and I would be surprised if many children were drawn in.

**

Wednesday, 3 February 2010

Warning by Jenny Joseph






























This is one of my favourite poems, there is something so vibrant about it and it is comforting to think that old age doesn't have to mean invisibility.

Warning by Jenny Joseph

When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me.
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandals, and say we’ve no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I’m tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick flowers in other people’s gardens
And learn to spit.

You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
And eat three pounds of sausages at a go
Or only bread and pickle for a week
And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes.

But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
And pay our rent and not swear in the street
And set a good example for the children.
We must have friends to dinner and read the papers.

But maybe I ought to practice a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.

Monday, 1 February 2010

Evermore, by Alyson Noel




















After looking back at previous reviews, I realised that I haven't put up a review that is less than glowing. So, I thought I'd review this novel Evermore by Alyson Noel which didn't exactly jam my doughnut...

Synopsis: Since a horrible accident claimed the lives of her family, sixteen-year-old Ever can see auras, hear people’s thoughts, and know a person’s life story by touch. Going out of her way to shield herself from human contact to suppress her abilities has branded her as a freak at her new high school—but everything changes when she meets Damen Auguste…

My thoughts: I found this book to be mediocre at best. The writing is flimsy in places and none of the characters seem to develop properly.

Noel also doesn't answer a whole range of questions that are set up which is frustrating for the reader and makes the ending unexciting.

I did like the pace and the interludes with Ever's younger sister Riley who was like a breath of fresh air in an otherwise stale narrative.

Overall, this could have been a much better and more interesting novel but instead it was lukewarm and I won't be reading the others.

**

P.S. Sorry if this doesn't make total sense, I've got a lovely dose of tonsilitus right now! WG x

Wednesday, 27 January 2010

Ghost Hunter, Michelle Paver





























Synopsis: As winter approaches and Souls' Night draws near, the Eagle Owl Mage holds the clans in the grip of terror.
To fulfil his destiny, Torak must seek his lair in the Mountain of Ghosts. He must defy demons and tokoroths, and find his way through the Gorge of the Hidden People. Wolf must overcome terrible grief. Renn must make an agonizing decision.
And in the final battle against the Soul-Eater, Torak must face the most heart-rending choice of all.

My Thoughts: I picked up this book on a whim, not realising that it was the sixth and final book in the Chronicles of Ancient Darkness series.

That didn't matter at all.

The writing is so strong that I wasn't confused at any stage and was immediately swept into the story as Torak and Renn battle Eostra and the darkness that she brings with her.

I loved the way that Paver had written Wolf's sections, she pulls the reader into the animal's viewpoint effortlessly and makes them look at the world in a different way. I also liked the way that she paralleled the story of the humans with that of the wolves.

My only problem with it was that Eostra is defeated rather easily, after all the build-up I was expecting more of an epic battle.

Overall though, this is an interesting novel and Paver has an easy, flowing style that makes it difficult to put down.

I can't wait to go back and read the first five!

*****

Sunday, 24 January 2010

Don't Judge A Book By It's Cover...

Hey all,

Apologies for not really blogging lately (apart from the occasional review), I've started my very first full time job and everything else seems to have been hurled out of the window!

Anyway, today I was thinking about book covers (whilst I was cleaning my kitchen - I'm just that cool!) and how important they can be.

Think about it, what is it that makes you pick a book up off the shelf? Sure, things like promotions or recommendations from friends are big factors, but if you're just randomly browsing the shelves, what is it that draws you to one book instead of another?

It has to be the cover.

A great one can make you pick up and read something that you would otherwise have passed by.
Or a bad one can make you miss out on something really great.

Recently, I had to read The Last Elf by Silvana De Mari for my MA course. When it arrived I
was less than excited because the cover was so dated and uninspiring. So I put it to the bottom of the pile and didn't read it for weeks. How foolish of me! When I did get around to it, I found that not only was it a moving and thoughtful story, it was also one that I could barely put down. I've since recommended it to my friends and family and they have all had the same reaction to the cover as I did.

Here, see what you think:
















It's dated, isn't it?

So, what makes a good cover? This is obviously subjective but to me it's one that is bright and eye-catching - it has to be to compete with all the over covers jostling for position on the shelves! It should also sum up the novel and be aimed correctly at the target audience.

Some of the most clever covers that I've seen recently are the ones for the Skullduggery Pleasant series by Derek Landy. They are bright and fun and give the reader an immediate idea of what will be inside. They also have coloured edges which is great as they will always stand out and each book in the series is a different colour.

Take a look at a couple:

























































Obviously you can't see the edges in these pictures but next time you're in a bookshop, take a look!

Another author who always has great covers is Terry Practchett. His novels, particularly the Discworld novels, always have bright, humorous jackets and they have a style that immediately tell you who the author is. And that is what you want, a signature style. Like this:




























The Twilight Saga by Stephenie Meyer also have their own distinctive style with the black background and red picture.

So, why all these thoughts about covers?

Well, the MA course that I was on, has put together all of our manuscripts into one anthology which will be sent to all the agents and publishers in the UK. Then in May/June time we will all go up to London for a big launch and - hopefully! - some deals will be made. For this we needed a cover, both for the anthology as a whole and for our individual pieces. The university paired us up with people on the Art/Graphics MA and I got mine today!

I can't show you yet (everything is still heavily under wraps) but I will as soon as I can! Mine is really edgy and drawn like graffiti which reflects the story well. It's very odd seeing someone else's translation of something that I've carried around with me for months though!

Anyway, those are my rambling thoughts on book covers!

And hey, next time you're in a bookshop, take a risk on the book that doesn't have the best cover...you just might be surprised!

WG x

Friday, 22 January 2010

The Fifth Elephant, Terry Pratchett
































Synopsis: Sam Vimes is a man on the run. Yesterday he was a duke, a chief of police and the ambassador to the mysterious, fat-rich country of Uberwald.

Now, he has nothing but his native wit and the gloomy trousers of Uncle Vanya (don't ask). It's snowing. It's freezing. And if he can't make it through the forest to civilization there's going to be a terrible war.

But there are monsters on his trail. They're bright. They're fast. They're werewolves - and they're catching up.

"The Fifth Elephant" is Terry Pratchett's latest installment in the "Discworld" cycle, this time starring dwarfs, diplomacy, intrigue and big lumps of fat.

My Thoughts: I'm a massive Pratchett fan and this is my favourite one yet.
Once again, Pratchett has taken a big topic - this time politics - and wrapped it up in a hilarious, dramatic and fast paced story that pulls the reader along with it and doesn't let them go until the final page.

Vimes is developed even further in this one and his wife Sybill becomes less of a cartoon cut-out of a character and more like a real, well rounded person.

Angua's family are really interesting and give us a better view of who she is and where she came from. And her relationship with Carrot is deepened and made more important to the reader.

Overall, this is a brilliant Discworld novel - but then, what else would you expect from a master like Pratchett?

*****