Archive for the ‘multi-tasking’ Category

And The Winners Are…

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Sorry for the delay in posting this… things have been bedlam over here in Preston.

The lucky winners of the Blog Giveaway are…

Elizabeth Wilkinson from Ormskirk Writing and Literature Society
Toni (no details for you Toni…)
Sj (no details for you yet either)
Martine Ellison-Smith
Tyler Massey @tylermassey and Tyler Massey.com
Annie Clarkson at Forgetting the Time
Layla Vandenbergh @LalaL0 and The Intercontinental Music Lab
Marjorie Taylor (no details here yet)
Jacqueline Christodoulou at Dirty Sparkle
James Wall
Carolyn (no details here either)

For those of you who commented on the original blog post and do not have profiles that lead back to blogs and email addresses, you need to contact me with your postal address and details of your blog or where you plan to put the review.

These are the first ten. And because Daniela at Arcadia is so generous, she’s promised me a couple of extra copies that will be winging their way to Tom and Holly.

If the people who I don’t have details for, but who made the top ten, don’t get back to me by wednesday with their details, I will move down the list and offer the book to someone else. So if you didn’t get in on time, don’t despair yet… :)

Post-Novel

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

I’m home again, with a bit of the anti-climatic feeling you always get after a very nice holiday which included kippers, Dracula, the Vampire Prawns, scrambling up a rock face in wellies and a wedding dress, and lots of lazing about reading.

I was so busy before the holiday: scrambling to finish the last chapter of Cold Light and rewrite the final scenes in the light of some last minute research I did about water cooled power stations and their effect on sea-temperature, that coming back from Whitby to my bomb-site desk with its row of mouldy mugs and keyboard decorated with orange peel feels a bit like waking up from a dream.

Here are some of the things I was too busy to tell you about before I went away.

An article in the Swedish Daily News about Annie and me.

Writing an introduction for the anthology ‘Mostly Truthful’ published by Flax, available to read on-line and featuring the work of North-West writers Katherine Woodfine, Jane Routh, Adrian Slatcher and Kate Feld.

Getting a sneak preview of the U.S book cover for A Kind of Intimacy – appearing on this blog very soon.

Being an on-line writer in residence and teaching creative writing workshops in libraries across Lancashire for the Learning Festival Revolution – including one workshop in Lancashire Record Office where we used old Wanted Posters as prompts and inspirations for writing. if you’re from Lancashire, you can join in. Click on the link and tell me a story.

Here are some of the things I’ll be doing during November:

Planning a creative writing project working with prisoners starting very soon. Can’t say more about this yet, but it is one of the most exciting things I’m doing with my time right now and I can’t wait to get going with it.

Planning, with my mentor, how I’m going to spend my time next year. Am I going to be a full-time writer forever? What kinds of things do I need to do to earn money? What sort of projects do I like doing best? How do I go about getting the kind of work that I want, and still being able to write and have time with the SmallFry? How much time do I want to spend writing novels and stories, and how much time do I want to spend working outside my house?

Since I left the prison in August, I’ve been saying yes to almost everything because I want the experience and I want to find out what sort of work I enjoy doing, and what I’m good at (and no good at). I’ve been very, very lucky in that I’ve had more work than I know what to do with and have still had to turn down a few things. Now I want to start choosing what I do more carefully.

And of course, I’ll be writing down all those post-sending-the-novel-to-be-looked-at niggles and too-late ideas for the next edit I’ll no doubt be doing very late this year or early next.

I’m kicking myself that I forgot to put the knitted dog into the last chapter.

Lift Off

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Yesterday was my first day on the new job. Despite common assumptions (names withheld to protect the innocent) that I’d be spending it loafing, I was in a variety of meetings all day concerned with some freelance projects I’ll be working on.

The work trousers, you’ll be glad to know, stayed in the wardrobe (by wardrobe, I mean dangling over the side of the washing basket).

I did, however, also manage a couple of hours writing – which is going to be my primary task over the next few months. A ‘time to write’ grant from the Arts Council has made it possible for me to be picky about the other kinds of things I do, and has also, since I’ll be being mentored through the next few months, impressed on me the need to get some kind of plan together for how I’m going to tackle this last bit of my book.

I am such a messy writer. I go back and forth through the manuscript, taking seven or eight or nine drafts to turn something that is nothing more than a hand-written note form plot-outline-with-dialogue in seven A4 notebooks, into a document that is fit for someone else to read. I don’t work in a linear fashion, and there are still a few gaps in the book where I’ve been merrily typing around issues I promised myself I’d ‘sort out later’. Later is now, which is the long way of saying that I realised I needed to do some more research.

(This is a hint for lazy writers: don’t, whatever you do, start writing about a character that is very knowledgeable (near obsessed, in fact) with something that you know nothing about. If you are going to do that, don’t structure your book in a way that means you’ll need to have the facts about these things explicit. Even if they are really, really interesting and fit fantastically well with your theme.)

I know some writers go and see people and conduct interviews. Others read books or take pictures. I’ve read a lot of books: my favourite was There Are Giants in the Sea: Monsters and Mysteries of the Depths Explored, by Michael Bright.

Sometime in the next couple of weeks I’m planning a day trip to Morecambe Bay to research setting, and another to Lancaster to visit this museum. I’m not sure yet what it is exactly I need to find out, so I think it will be a day of wandering with a camera and a cagoule, picking bits up here and there like a magpie.

Unless anyone has a better suggestion?

Count Down

Thursday, July 16th, 2009


I’m a bit poorly at the moment. Possibly, I’ve overworked myself. I know for certain that I’ve over-trained myself. I mean trains like the carpet-smelling sardine tins that take you to other places, not the thing that Rocky does.

At the end of last month, I took my trip to Norwich to do readings with Chris and new friend Joe Dunthorne. The reading was good: I think I’m getting better at them – I try and do voices a bit now. The high-lights were: pretending to be an indie band for the photographer, getting taken for a nice tea out and a fire-engine arriving at the Arts Centre in order to curtail our drinking (that may not have been the real reason).

After Norwich, I had another little event at Blackburn library – a reading and Q and A, and a week after that met a reading group in Preston who’d just finished A Kind of Intimacy. I like meeting with reading groups – readings with microphones and theatre-style seating do not hold the terror that they used to (as Annie would say, a person can get used to anything) but what I really like is eavesdropping on conversations about why Boris’ parents suddenly moved away, just what happened to that baby, and what colour the house-warming party dress was. I never find them boring – and it makes me laugh when the readers ask me for the definitive answer, ‘so, why did Will’s first wife run away to Hungary with their baby? What, exactly, did he do to her?’ or ‘what is that thing at the end with Cliff?’ and all I can do is shrug. Sorry reading group folk. I just made it up.

Interviews are another Q and A, although it is kind of against the rules to ask questions back – which is a shame, because I always want to. Here and here are parts one and two of an interview that I did a while ago with The View From Here, which is a print and web-based magazine all about books and reading and writing. I think I mainly behaved myself during the answers, although it makes me smile when I read an opinion I’ve given as if I’m certain about it – as if of course this is what I think, this is what I’ve always thought, there isn’t really any other way to think, is there? When actual fact I try very hard not to make my mind up about anything, most of the time. Or so I like to think. Sometimes.

Last, but not least, I’ve been programming and doing a bit of publicity (with help from Mel, Viv and Ed) for Word Soup #4. We’ve got an excellent line-up, as always – and this Word Soup is a bit special, as we’re holding it as part of the Preston Tringe Festival – which means we’re probably going to be broadcast on a couple of community radio stations too. Great opportunity for open mikers to get a bit more coverage, if you’re so inclined. If you’re interested in getting more involved with the Preston Writing Network (we have excellent plans afoot) then email me and we can chat. I’ll get out the best tea-pot.

The title of this post: Count Down. It’s only two weeks now (and it will feel like less if the doctor signs me off sick with the pig thing – although I don’t think my temperature is high enough – and if I can type, I can work) until I finish my job in the prison library and start my job as a full time freelance writing person.

I’m hoping to spend three days a week working on Cold Light, and the other two days a week doing other writing type jobs, and teaching, and planning things like Word Soup, and doing editing. I’ve prepared for this very carefully, by buying a small plastic box with twelve compartments to put my receipts and invoices and remittances in. There’s only one receipt in it right now, and that’s for the box itself. I hope this isn’t the shape of things to come.

In Norwich, after the reading, but before the fire-engine, a nice man offered to pay me money if I read the rest of the book out to him in ‘my accent.’ Now, I don’t have an accent – you Southerners do, but I’ve got to pay my council tax today and when I look at my tiny plastic receipt box I kind of wish I’d taken him up on the offer.

Blog Free

Saturday, June 6th, 2009


I’ve had a whole week on annual leave from my library job, and I’ve been able to spend lots of extra time with the small-fry.

Who told me yesterday she liked playing with me and me NOT being on the computer like I was ALWAYS not having my eyes on her but TYPING a story and she would not wait one more minute but play with me NOW.

She’s got blue eyes, and her iris goes violet when she’s pissed off. It’s a stop-typing-put-your-eyes-on-my-eyes warning. Scary. Apparently, I’ve got a look like that too.

Guilt comes with motherhood and it’s there no matter what you do, but if you’re owed email, blame her, not me. I’m off to do some dressing up for a fairy-castle tea-party with my very own enemy of promise right now.

Linky + Sicky

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

I’ve been reading this blog a lot recently. I hate twee mummy and baby type writing, but this one is not like that at all.

There are so many stereotypes about young single mothers that when you are one, it is very difficult to be anything other than a walking, sleep deprived cliche. And when, as well as a pram-face, you’re also a writer, the cliche bit is a horrible thing to drag around with you. But this blog isn’t like that, and everyone should read it immediately.

A shy friend of mine has just joined blog-land with an amazing post stolen from a Facebook meme than turned into a bit of a rant.

I am not a fan of memes and internet quizzes and tagging and all that other strange stuff. But if I could work the ’25 things about me’ meme that’s going around Facebook right now as well as my friend the Capt’n has done in his new blog, I’d be more inclined to join in with them. I demand that you read and comment so he will carry on blogging.

I read this, and nodded a lot
.

This should be a good-enough answer to the question I’ve been asked more and more often recently: how autobiographical is your writing? Of course it is. Yes, all of it. If I hadn’t have spent a lot of time thinking about it and experiencing it in my head, I wouldn’t have been able to write it. And for me, things experienced in the head are much more solid and real and memory-making than the other kind of experiencing, which mainly involves sitting in chairs or putting books on shelves.

Now – my Small Fry has spent twelve hours vomiting over everything in the house. Now is the time for me to turn off the computer and don my rubber gloves.

The next post will be about meeting web designers and photographers, planning launch parties, and getting my author copies. There will be real ‘author glamour’ in the next post. But not now. My whole house smells like sick.

UPDATE: Sorry about all the typos, especially if your reader got it before I corrected it. Put it down to the 3 hours of sleep I got, and the 10+ hours of nursing I’ve just done. And now she’s running about crazy demanding Santa, chocolate and ‘a type.’

Disappointment

Monday, December 29th, 2008


I looked at this picture today. It is not mine, but from here. This is The Mount, in Fleetwood, Lancashire. A little bit more googling and browsing and I turned up this – The Mount’s official blog.

The Mount is the name of the hill – a pretend, artificially designed hill – and the thing on top of it is called the pavilion. You climb (not a hard job, unless you’re pushing a toddler in a pram, as I was) right to the top and, apart from the view, which is of a grey sea and a lighthouse and some memorials to lost fishermen and a lost fishing industry, getting up there is a disappointment. Right at the top, and the pavilion – not as nice in real life as it is in the photograph – is shut up and shutters down. It doesn’t have opening hours – it’s been like that for years and no-one I’ve been able to ask (including the very nice librarians at Fleetwood Library) knows what it is like inside. Although they did tell me all about Decimus (tenth child – his mother probably had better stories) Burton.

I suppose I was hoping for a tea-shop or at the very least a skanky public inconvenience. Nope. I took a note of the graffiti and moved on.

I was out in Fleetwood because I was wondering how to do research for a story I was planning to write. Going there and looking at things seemed to be a good start, although because I didn’t know exactly what I was doing – either with the research, or the writing, or even the pram, the trip seemed like a disappointment.

I’m just going through the copy edits on A Kind of Intimacy and have been reminded that the hill and the pavilion thing became a setting for a nasty scene towards the end of the book – my Annie climbs up there and – out of breath but hopeful – meets a bad man in a denim jacket who didn’t bring flowers but a bad joke I stole from my brother.

Library Assistant Wanted

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008


As you know, I have been writing Sh with fellow librarian Emma J. Lannie for a few months now. (Full list of chapters here, for the ill-informed).

I need to take a bit of a break from it. Possibly until December. So I am looking for a stand-in. Someone to post alternately with Emma and continue the story.

Haven’t you ever dreamed of becoming my body double?

You don’t need to be an actual librarian in real life, although if you were, that would be good. Email me or Emma and we’ll set you up.

I need to take a break because I’m going to be working on another blogging project, collaborating with Tolu Ogunlesi. We’re still tossing around ideas at the moment, but we think it is going to be about doubles, identity theft, on-line personae, stalking and internet creepery. Hopefully, it won’t all be entirely made up either. All my favourite things.

You can read Tolu’s blogs here and here, and some of his short fiction here, here, here and here.

This is what the Litfest festival brochure will say about us:

Flax is blogging delighted to have commissioned writers Jenn Ashworth and Tolu Ogunlesi to collaborate on a fictional blog.

Jenn, based in the north west of England, and Tolu, currently in Sweden, will create one character, who will take you through the quirks and obsessions of their life, introduce you to new virtual friends, and unravel a fascinating tale of identity theft. The story starts as the festival closes, on Monday 3 November.

Bags of Not Writing

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

This is a picture of me writing on the new typewriter. I am typing so fast my hands are blurry. I like that.

The one above it is something I made when I should have been writing. Everyone needs more bags. Bags are useful things. But even at the time it smelled a bit like procrastination. My desk is almost clear of empty cans, mugs, crisp packets, felt tip pens missing their lids and all other things that normally collect there when I am in the middle of something.

I have found that I haven’t had much time recently. I still have twenty four hours, same as everyone else, but those twenty four hours tend to be more and more full of stuff to do that isn’t writing. I think it might be a bit of procrastination and I think it might be that I am quite busy, no excuses.

When I didn’t work I didn’t write during the day either. Writing has always been saved for the evenings. When I started working I thought it would be easy to carry on this way. But the things apart from mothering (like laundry and cooking and food shopping and cleaning the toilet) were also done during the day. And I had naps. Which meant the nights were generally longer. So it isn’t working out as well as I had hoped.

Here are some of the other things that I do instead of writing:

a) Making bags and shawls and other not strictly Essentials Of Life.
b) Reading.
c) Having very long baths – often combined with (b)
d) other kinds of writing: emails, blogs, book reviews, journals, letters, lists, plans.
e) talking to my friends
f) watching films
g) ‘pottering’ (this generally means rearranging the things in my house then putting them back where they were)
h) ironing trousers for work
i) housework (although I have cut hoovering down to a minimum)
j) dozing
k) watering houseplants

I think I need to eliminate some of these things so that I can write some more. I was going to get a hair-cut today but I decided to spend the money on getting five loads of laundry washed and dried and folded at the launderette. I even asked the man to fold my clothes and the Small Fry’s clothes in different baskets so they would be quick to put away when I got home. I think this is a good step forward.

Getting About

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

1. I have written a short story about a cat called Dewey Decimal which you can read here, if you like. If you want to write a story about a cat you should. It is the cure for hoity-toity writing and it makes me laugh.

2. I have been asked to be a contributor to Vulpes Libris which is a blog about books. I will be writing quirky and grumpy reviews about books that I read. One will be going up there this weekend. I haven’t written book reviews before but I am going to type fast and do my best. There will be a few other reviewers as well as me so even if you don’t think I will be that good at writing about books you should go there and look at it every day and find out about new books to read from the others.

3. Tomorrow I will be doing a reading at the Spotlight Club in Lancaster, and if you want you can come and see me. I don’t know what I will be reading yet, or if I am good at it. I get very nervous, but the last couple of readings went okay so I am sure this one will too.


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