NEWS INDEX
Free
spirit Coral
Swansea writer Coral Leend whose second novel is published
by Robert Hale wrote short stories for many years, selling
around 80, mainly to women’s magazines, before turning
to novels.
Plonk travels
Member Jacquelynn Luben has written at least 50 short stories,
many shortlisted in Writers’ News, and now
a novella, A Bottle of Plonk, published by Goldenford
Publishers
Life ashore and afloat
When Dubliner Jimmy Logan retired in 1998 at the age of
60 he took up bridge and singing but it was another class
that introduced him to a new passion: short story writing.
Champagne moment
With seven non-fiction titles under her belt, subscriber
Deborah Durbin, Bristol, was keen to try her hand at fiction
writing. Nine months later, Pink Flip Flops & Champagne
was at the printers.
Island opportunity
Short story writer and Frome Festival literary organiser
Alison Clink is still pinching herself after the recent
offer of a job on the Greek island of Zakynthos where she
will be helping to run a book club
Step back in time
An enthusiastic participant of the Writers’ News
Talkback website discussion group, Stanley Evers, had his
latest book published with the backing of his local church.
Dawn's helping hand
One year on from her first sale, Dawn Copeman has had 30
articles accepted for publication and become a contributor
to two websites.
Maggie goes from strength to strength
Maggie B Dickinson features in the latest anthology published
by US e-zine Absolute Write.
Campfire tales
Longtime member Maggie Craig has set up a website ‘by
book lovers for book lovers’.
Star poetry
Lancashire member, Norman Johnson is fed up with prejudice
against rhyming poetry.
Great writing year’
A short story win and magazine publication motivated Bradford
writer, Elizabeth Hopkinson, to carry on.
Matthew at double
A relative newcomer to writing, Matthew Ravden managed to
secure an agent and a two-book deal.
Fast work
Dave Haslett reveals how top writers complete a manuscript
in days, rather than months or years, in his new book.
Debut tale from Pam
Good news from subscriber Pam Fudge, whose first book is
to be published by Transita this April.
Magnificent seven
It is not easy to write when you live with a debilitating
condition but one member has written seven ‘self help’
books since ill health forced her to give up teaching.
Crime novel hat-trick
Ex-journalist turned author, Nick Fletcher, has published
his third crime novel featuring an ex-journalist turned
private detective.
Poetry in print
Subscriber Carol Midwood has found a publisher for her first
poetry collection, a decade after she completed it.
Stagecraft secrets
Playwrights who despair of having their work performed might
well take a leaf out of Welsh subscriber Roger Pinkham’s
practice and mount their work themselves.
Thrill of success
English may have been her best subject but Angela Cunningham
was advised to take up farming when she left school.
The craft ark
Freelance craft writer Lynne Garner has written seven books
and for twenty magazines over the past eight years but nothing
prepared her for the work involved in her new venture.
Two-book deal
Children’s writer Fiona Higgins, Kent, has signed
a two-book deal with a top publisher.
Workshop dates
Buckinghamshire subscriber, Jan Moran Neil, has seen life
from both sides as a professional writer turned creative
writing teacher.
Joy for Jeff
Since winning the WN Adult Fairy Story competition
in 2004, Jeff Gardiner has had nine stories published in
anthologies and magazines.
Adrienne’s Transita
Home
Irish-born subscriber Adrienne Dines, 46, has found a home
for her writing with a fiction imprint aimed at women aged
45 or over.
Textile tales
Writers’ News Home Study co-ordinator Rachel
Bellerby has had her first book published, a history of
textile mills in and around Bradford.
Ripping yarn
Liverpool children’s author Alec Sillifant, who started
out with humourous picture books for little ones, has a
new book out for slightly older children.
Tips on writing
poetry
Subscriber Judy Karbritz hopes to demystify writing poetry
with her latest book, Pots, Pans & Poetry.
Writers’ group has Internet roots
A chat on the Writers’ News website discussion
area, Talkback, led to the formation of a writers’
group in Peterborough.
Tales of life
Intrepid doctor Emily Joy, aka Gail
Haddock, wrote her first book, Green Oranges on Lion
Mountain, about her desire to save the world, save
her soul, save lives, lose weight and find a man.
Bitten by writing bug
She may not have produced anything
more than a melancholic poem in her teens and early married
life but subscriber Margaret Walker has certainly made up
for it since.
Celebration
in verse
Writers' News subscriber, freelance journalist
and poet Sarah Leavesley has produced a collection of poetry
to mark her sons’ thanksgiving service.
Don’t give up
If your manuscript has bounced back with a ‘thank
you but no thank you’ 59 times and you feel like giving
up, Leeds writer Gillian Rogerson urges you not to.
Hazel’s help in
the classroom
Subscriber Hazel Bennett distils
over 30 years’ classroom experience into her guidebook
for teachers.
Leeds
writing group
An enthusiastic amateur writer, Sara Burgess, Harrogate,
made the most of her position as a bookseller to start her
own writing group at the Borders branch in Birstall, near
Leeds.
Final
Proof
It is easy to be naive when you start trying to get your
book noticed, according to WN subscriber, Debbie
Edwards.
Experience of life
is vital
Writers need experience of life, says long-time subscriber
Sarah Pat O’Brien, whose memoir has been published
by Simon & Schuster.
Lyrical venture
Although it meant taking direct responsibility for writing,
production, marketing and sales of her book, and funding
it herself, Beverly Maiden was undettered in self-publishing
her debut poetry collection.
World of workshops
Bringing an international flavour
to Members’ News, a member who divides her time between
Santiago, Chile, and Toronto, Canada, writes to tell us
of her foray into the world of writing workshops.
Magical memories
Another international subscriber,
Pam Laird, North Shore, New Zealand, is celebrating the
completion of her book after 25 years of preparation.
The Hidden Art
How are you supposed to get your children to eat the recommended
five portions of fruit and vegetables a day? ‘Quite
simple,’ says subscriber Karen Bali
York Writers
Over the past 25 years, members of York Writers have seen
over 1,000 items of their work in print.
The
world of Charlie
Working writer and part-time creative writing tutor
Patti Hales has written a string of stories, features, a
full-length serial and several six-part series, all published
in UK women’s magazines.
Charity booster
A short story written by Hertfordshire subscriber
Matthew Cox has been published in an anthology to raise
money for SightSavers International.
Fiction successes
Welsh-Canadian subscriber and established
non-fiction writer Carol McCuaig allowed herself five years
to try her hand at writing fiction.
Conference
delights
The 25th Annual Writers’ Conference, Winchester, guaranteed
a superb weekend, writes subscriber Brian Lux.
Double
delight
Durham author Roz Southey celebrated a double win after
hearing that one of her short stories had won two prizes
at the DSJT/Writers’ News Awards
Island
discoveries
Peter Breakwell’s book A Walk With Aphrodite
is his account of a 450-mile charity walk to raise funds
for Cyprus’s General Hospital.
Course
booster
Devon writer Doreen Hughes caught the writing bug
last year, planning to take her writing more seriously.
Publication finally comes true
Margaret Pelling says sometimes you have to go round the
houses to discover the one thing you were put on this earth
to do...
Stop
the bullies
Many writers draw on childhood experiences and Scottish subscriber
Jennifer Thompson, Isle of Cumbrae, has turned her own negative
experience of bullying into a positive by writing about it
for others. Celia's
collection joy
We watch with interest the revival
of the short story and were delighted to hear that Newcastle
subscriber Celia Bryce, an advocate of the form, is to have
her first short story collection published next month.
Football flashback
Nobody alive today in England can
remember a professional football game during the 19th century
and little first-hand knowledege is available about the
level of skill or attitudes towards the Association game
during the Victorian period.
Power of online friends
With e-mail-based writers’
group Alpha Circle completing its cycle, member Zena Grant,
Hitchin, Hertfordshire, describes how important the group
has been to her.
Pointing ahead
It all started for Salisbury subscriber Pam Pointer, with
an article in her local church magazine but things really
took off when she decided to self-publish a book of short
meditation pieces, some of which had appeared in church
magazines and the diocesan paper for which she writes a
regular column.
Appeal
to rail writers
A long-term subscriber with
a track record of published articles on trains, Clem Huzzey,
Stoke Heath, wondered why he doesn’t read more news
from other railway writers in Writers’ News.
Debut novel for Wally
At the age of 60, Harrow member,
Wally Robson, has written his first novel, not based on
his own adventurous life but post-apocalyptic children’s
book.
Beacon
of light
Life as a lighthouse keeper was a harsh, spartan
existence spent battling the elements and adhering to strict
routines.
All
together now
Writing can be a lonely job, according to Hampshire
member, Helen Witcombe, who reached out to others ‘struggling
to make it in the world of publishing’.
Bitten by writing bug
As e-mail-based writers’ group Alpha Circle nears
the end of its trial year, member Sue Jones, Shavington,
Cheshire, reflects on what she describes as an entirely
enjoyable experience.
Initiative for youngsters
Freelance writer Chris High, a Writers’
News subscriber, has created a new writing competition
with the hope of transcending borders and encouraging youngsters
to engage in writing.
Motivational matters
After Diana Cambridge answered two
questions about motivation in the same edition of her Helpline
(Writers’ News, June), subscriber John Cosgrove,
Troon, Cornwall, stumbled on another suggestion of how a
writer forced himself to buckle down.
Poets at the double
Lancashire duo Just Poets, WN
subscriber Norman Warwick and his writing and performing
partner Pam McKee, are to feature in a Macmillan anthology
after being spotted in the pages of Writers’ News.
Publishing
double
We last featured author Jay Mandal, who has written
over 100 short stories, in Writers’ News
May 2003. Since then he has published a new book Precipice
with BeWrite Books and his collection of short stories Slubberdegullion.
Love of Staffordshire
Self-publishing author Jean Wood
channels a love of her Staffordshire home into her latest
book, Through Rose Tinted Spectacles.
Four-book deal joy
When ex-firefighter, Tony Paul,
started writing two monthly columns for the practical art
magazine Leisure Painter, he had no idea that it
would lead to a book deal, let alone a four-book series.
Tyke Script venture
When a journalism job went ‘belly-up’
and left Bradford scribe, Mark Cantrell, with some unexpected
time on his hands, he launched Tyke Script, an open-ended
anthology of writing which features examples of his work.
Poetry anthology
Richmond, North Yorkshire, grandmother,
Daphne Clarke, upgraded her writing class end of term assignment
into a small anthology of poems about childhood.
Dream holiday prize for Maurice
A Nottinghamshire pensioner, whose biggest previous writing
success was a novel about the 1926 miners’ strike
that earned him £500, won a £10,000 holiday
after following up a lead in Writing Magazine.
Step back in time
The author of self-published novel
The Farthing Mark, a story about a rural community
on the South Downs of England set at the end of the 19th
century, has a special interest in the late Victorian era
and its social conventions.
Persistence is key
Undeterred by rejection, West Yorkshire member, Shirley
Heaton, continued to explore new avenues for her work and
was eventually rewarded with an offer of publication.
Writing from the front
seat
Much of 2004 was a good year for Devon member, Margaret
Powling.
Highland adventure
Highland Rebel, a historical
romantic adventure novel, by Scottish author Loren Teague,
now resident in New Zealand, has been contracted for publication
by Whiskey Creek Press, an American publisher based in Wyoming.
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