Hello, and thank you for visiting my site. I hope that you'll return often and always find something of interest about my world and what inspires me to pick up a pen. (This is a figure of speech, unfortunately. My handwriting is terrible!) Here's what I've been up to recently...

What the Dickens!

I’ve always loved a challenge and the latest one was to write the ‘next chapter’ of a well known story.

Scanning the book shelves that line most rooms in the house, I came across A Tale of Two Cities. It always seemed a shame to me that Sidney Carton – forever pictured in my mind as Dirk Bogarde – had to die at the end. Well, now he doesn’t and you can read the update on my Stories and Poetry page.

Maybe one day I’ll also ‘rescue’ Romeo and Juliet from their fate!

 

30 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

Even better than being shortlisted…

… is a win! I’m delighted that Helen Yendall has chosen A Timely Solution out of all the entries in the open section of her recent flash fiction competition.

The brief was to come up with a story in a maximum of 250 words which included the following: bone, collar, dog and stray (in any form). My entry also includes Louis XV of France, his favourite mistress,Madame de Pompadour, a certain Doctor (Who?), a hapless maid and a very 20th century product.

You can read this and much more at http://blogaboutwriting.wordpress.com/

29 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

An Interview With Karin Bachmann

Karin's photo

 

I was delighted with the opportunity to interview Swiss writer Karin Bachmann, whom I first met a few years ago at http://swanwickwritersschool.co.uk/ the Writers’ Summer School in Swanwick.  Karin is unnecessarily modest about her command of English, as you will see from her answers below. You can read Karin’s reciprocal interview with me on http://stories47277.blogspot.co.uk/
Have you always been a keen writer?

I’ve been making up stories for as long as I can remember. So it came naturally to write them down once I’d learnt to read and write. In the beginning, they were micro-stories of only a few sentences. I’ve always had problems with spelling, and it took me some years to discover a love for letters. It helped a lot that I grew up in a house full of books. Both my parents are avid readers, and they always read stories for us at bedtime. I doubt whether I’d have become a writer without their support.

Where do you find the greatest inspiration?

I’m a born eavesdropper. And I commute to work. That’s where I find most ideas. You wouldn’t believe what great stories you can come by using public transport.  I also find it inspirational to stare out of a train window while the world is gliding by.Having said that, I’ve also found great story ideas listening to the news or watching documentaries on TV. Once I had to wait at the town hall and found a fantastic story beginning simply by reading a flyer. Stories are everywhere. All you need are open eyes, open ears and an open mind.

Do you have a favourite story out of all those you have written?

I usually like my latest story best. However, there’s one of the children’s whodunits I wrote for SJW-Verlag, Zurich, called Die Zirkus Affäre (The Circus Mystery) that I think turned out rather well. It’s a mix of circus  versus village life and a burglar mystery. There’s also a good deal of humour in it. When I’m invited to school readings, it’s often that story that I choose to read.

Do you always write first of all in German or sometimes directly into English?

The language I use depends on the market. If I’m writing for an English market, I’ll write the story in English. I have some very dear, long-suffering friends who are native English speakers and who proof read my texts, as my English is still very far from perfect. I have used stories in both languages and my blog is bilingual, in which cases I translate either from German into English or vice versa.

Do you plan everything to the last detail before you begin a new story or do you prefer to ‘go with the flow’?

I’d say it’s a mix of both. When I begin to write, I usually have a pretty good idea of the beginning and I know where I want to go. I also know what topics I’m going to use and what obstacles the protagonist(s) will encounter. So I know what kind of research I’ll have to do before fully embarking on a project. I don’t do to much planning because I’m afraid I might grow tired of a story before I even start. The disadvantage is that I might have to do stubstantial re-writing because a twist I insert doesn’t go anymore with an earlier part. But I like being surprised by a story, so I don’t mind the additional work.

What are you working on at the moment and what are your future plans?

For some time, I’ve been trying to interest a publisher or agent in a children’s whodunit set in the Isles of Scilly, without any success. A course at last year’s Swanwick Writers’ Summer School set me thinking about going the self-publishing route. Two Swanwick friends read the story and I’m now re-working it according to their ample and helpful suggestions. A lady friend of mine, who’s an illustrator, will do the cover. I’m at the editing stage and hope to bring out the book either in time for the next Swanwick Writers’ Summer School or for Christmas (probably in both, English and German). The working title is The Venetian Pearls.

My plans for the future? I have two or three projects in the pipeline, which I hope to be able to finish soon and sell. Being superstitious, I won’t tell you more at the moment. But if you wish, you can follow my progress on http://stories47277.blogspot.com or on Twitter (@BookwormKarin).

 

Thank you very much, Karin. I’ll continue to follow your career with interest and look forward to seeing you again at  http://swanwickwritersschool.co.uk/ Swanwick in August. In the meantime, I’ll test out my German skills by reading Die Zirkus Affäre, which can be found in http://www.amazon.co.uk/Mord-Switzerland-Kriminalgeschichten-Edition-ebook/dp/B00BQ8OR86/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1367145473&sr=8-2&keywords=Mord+in+Switzerland Mord in Switzerland.

 

Cover_Antho_jpeg

28 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

A Timely Solution

Squeezing a credible story into 250 words is a tricky business, so I’m very pleased to have made the short list in Helen Yendall’s latest mini-saga competition.

A Timely Solution can be read at

http://blogaboutwriting.wordpress.com/2013/04/24/shaggy-dog-tales-competition-the-shortlists/

25 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

Featured in the local press

Crafty Folk taster2

Laura and I sat for an hour over coffee last month and this is the result of her many pages of shorthand notes. I should point out for those not able or wishing to read the whole article that she means ‘crafty’ in the sense of pursuing a craft and NOT devious! As I share the glory with Paul Richardson, you’ll be able to read all about him and then scroll down to the second half of the article to find what Laura wrote about me.

http://www.ripongazette.co.uk/lifestyle/local/feature-crafty-folk-it-s-never-too-late-to-pick-up-a-pen-1-5581208

The Ripon Gazette’s own photographer was on holiday, so Gary from the Yorkshire Post came round with his camera and set me up in some very ‘writerly’ poses in my unusually tidy study.

Crafty Folk Maggie cropped

11 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

Now for something completely different!

Just to prove that I don’t always write tales of murder and mayhem, I’d like to draw everyone’s attention to my story ‘The Leading Lady’, included in the latest issue of The People’s Friend. The inspiration came from one of my mother’s anecdotes about her time in amateur operatics and I think she’d have been delighted with the illustration. I certainly am.

The Leading Lady in TPF

10 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

Writers’ Forum

I’ve long been an admirer of prolific writer Sally Quilford and hope one day to meet her in person.  It was partly due to Sally’s advice and encouragement since we became Facebook friends that I went ahead with a plan to group some of my short stories into collections and upload them onto Amazon.

That being so, I was proud and delighted when Sally invited me to contribute some thoughts on competition writing for her column last month.

Writers Forum article

9 April, 2013 Make the first comment on this story

Check Out My eBooks
Armed with a battered copy of Jack Kerouac’s On The Road, Maggie Cobbett crossed the USA by Greyhound bus during the chaotic summer of 1968. The distances were vast, her budget minimal, and anything seemed possible. From camp counselling in the Catskills to bagels for breakfast in the Bronx, her first sojourn in the States had it all.
Supporting artists, or ‘extras’ as they’re more commonly known, are the unsung heroes of television and film. Maggie Cobbett recalls the ups and downs of twenty years of ‘blending into the background’.
A working holiday in France for so little? “It sounds too good to be true,” says Daisy’s mother, but her warning falls on deaf ears.
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