tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10302443564445009982024-03-19T03:18:17.064+00:00B. R. CollinsAward-winning author of novels for young adults.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger61125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-74357461788061341782018-07-10T10:46:00.001+01:002018-07-10T10:46:44.237+01:00News! OK. Wow, that was a <i>long </i>silence.<br />
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I won't go into why I disappeared like that - suffice it to say that my career went quiet, and I struggled a bit, and I started asking myself existential questions like, why would I write a blog when I can't write anything <i>else</i>? (Which is balanced by the equally sensible question, why would I write a blog when I <i>could</i> be writing something else? which rather highlights my reluctance to blog in the first place... Anyway.) In a nutshell, I threw up my hands (metaphorically) after a couple of years and said to myself, right, I am GIVING UP, I am now going to write something ENTIRELY FOR MYSELF and FORGET ABOUT IT BEING COMMERCIAL. So I did.<br />
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In the way these things often work, it turned out to be (apparently) quite commercial.<br />
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Also, it's an adult book, which means a lot of my <strike>friends</strike> acquaintances are now saying <strike>complimentary </strike> annoying things about 'proper' books. Hmph. (But not HMPH, because to be fair I am quite pleased about this whole development and it would be ungrateful to be <i>too </i>precious.)<br />
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So let me introduce: <i><a href="https://www.harpercollins.co.uk/9780008272111/the-binding/">The Binding</a>. </i><br />
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For those of you who enjoy slash... well. Hope you like it. ;)<br />
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There will, no doubt, be more to follow - but I wanted to share my news with you. After all, you're part of the reason I kept writing, rather than jacking it all in completely. So thank you.<br />
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If you are in the US and would like a (beautiful!) proof-copy, email me. (The usual, brcollins999[at]btinternet.com.) I can't promise anything but might be able to cadge a few for a worthy cause...<br />
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-25796817254385313332014-08-04T10:55:00.000+01:002014-08-04T10:55:28.629+01:00Of holidays, fan letters and lost envelopes...Ah, holidays. Long days of chateaux, wine-tasting, museums, the occasional bit of canoeing or Via-Ferrata-ing (not too much, though), the smells of grass and sunshine and the salty stuff they put on vineyards... Followed by long evenings of driving through the French countryside looking for a campsite, long hours of arguing about which road that 'Camping' sign was actually pointing to, and long minutes of staring at French <i>responsables </i>of said campsites and saying, '<i>How </i>much?!'<br />
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Oh, and food. Did I mention the food? Not the restaurants so much (although I'm not complaining), but the crackle of a fresh baguette, the squeak of <i>saucisson </i>between your teeth, the light crumbly folds of a <i>pain au chocolat</i> or a croissant. Not to mention my new discovery, the Paris-Best, which is like a doughnut-shaped profiterole filled with nutty creme patissiere and topped with flaked almonds. Although all of this palls beside the way that, after a day in a not-very-cool-bag in a hot Land Rover, <i>everything </i>tastes of cheese. Yum.<br />
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I've been away. For a whole month, more or less. (That's one benefit of being a writer, I guess: no one notices your absence.) And now I'm back, serene and relaxed and extremely glad to be sleeping in a bed.<br />
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Not much has happened in my absence. This is both reassuring (no one's died, my agent hasn't dumped me, no one has yet discovered that <strike>I falsified my tax return</strike>* <strike>I plagiarised all my novels</strike> <strike>I was married already</strike> er-hem anything bad), and depressing (I haven't won any prizes, no one desperately wants the film rights to my books**, I haven't unexpectedly inherited a massive legacy from an anonymous reader). Oh well.<br />
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But there were a couple of things which I found in my inbox. Nice things. I love hearing from you, dear Readers, and it was lovely to get back and find you'd been in touch. I won't boast about you here (because quoting one's own fan letters is possibly as bad as quoting your own good reviews***) but thank you. You are very nice. :)<br />
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However, there is one exception to the don't-boast rule, for reasons which will hopefully become clear. I don't often get real, physical letters, especially not from outside the UK, and in this electronic age there's something particularly nice about it. (I was going to say, especially when it's a nice letter, but I suppose if it's not then you can actually literally burn it in a cathartic sort of way.) The downside, of course, is that it's not easily retrievable if something... hypothetically... happens to it. If you know what I mean.<br />
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This is the point at which you're all nodding wryly and assuming I spilt a glass of wine over it. Right? Well actually you're wrong. I am in the delightful position of being able to blame this entirely on my agent, who opened the letter and threw away the envelope before he realised what it was. Yes. He <i>threw away the envelope</i>. The one on which there was, presumably, a return address. This is the sort of quirk of fate that put paid to Romeo and Juliet. Hmph.<br />
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So Halleye (sorry, not sure how to do the accent here), if you're reading this, apologies for the delay and THANK YOU! And can you email me your address, please, so I can send you a proper answer? I feel like your letter definitely deserves one. :) My email address is on my 'Contact Me' page. (Then again, if you sent me a proper letter in the first place, you may not have internet access, in which case I'm talking to no one. Oh dear. Very R+J again...)<br />
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And now... back to work. <br />
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* This is for comic effect. My tax return is TOTALLY HONEST. Trust me, I'm a Quaker.<br />
** Actually the film rights for <i>The Traitor Game </i>are already spoken for, but that's another story. <br />
*** Quoting your own <i>bad </i>reviews is very good form indeed. (When I'm feeling down I google a book I love and console myself with the thought that there are a lot of idiots out there.)Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-4175158177211255692014-02-19T16:25:00.004+00:002014-02-19T16:25:59.446+00:00An Old Flame*Are you the same person that you were ten years ago? I mean, obviously in a lot of ways you are (name, memories, NI number and so on). In some other less obvious ways you... maybe... aren't. Those pink corduroy flares that you thought were a good idea? That evaporated milk habit? That - ew, squick! - that <i>boyfriend?</i>**<div>
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If you're wondering why I'm asking, it's because I'm editing my first novel. I wrote it nearly ten years ago, and it's an odd experience coming back to it. I hadn't even <i>read </i>it for years, and so in some ways it was rather exciting. There are lots of adverbs (sadly) but also some rather fun scenes, and some plot twists I genuinely hadn't remembered. It needs work but I think it could be quite good, if I do the right things to it. And the right things aren't the opaque, totally mysterious impossibilities that they are for my most recent <i>magnum opus</i>, thank God, they are actual definite changes that I can do. This is all good. </div>
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But - as I say - it's odd. It's odd because my writing voice has changed, and I'm trying to work out how much I should go with my old one and how much I've got better. It's odd because the sort of book I write now isn't the sort of book I wrote then, but that doesn't mean I don't <i>want </i>to write that sort of book. It's odd because I recognise myself and I recognise the differences, the way I've developed as a writer and as a person. <br /><div>
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It's oddest of all, I think, because it's a love story.*** It was my <i>first </i>love story. </div>
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People talk about how first novels are autobiographical (and then often go on to say that they're rubbish because they're autobiographical). That's not true, obviously, because loads of people write novels without ever writing anything recognisably autobiographical. But in a way it <i>is</i> true: your first novel is the one you've waited your whole life to write. It's the one, I think, where the purest expression of yourself comes out. You're less guarded, less ambitious, less driven by career moves or vanity. Not to mention that every time you write a book, you narrow down the possibilities for your next one - so the first, the <i>first</i>... It's not the best. But sometimes it's the most <i>yours. </i></div>
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And so... my love story. It's making me feel the way I did ten years ago. I was in love with my character then, and I'm still in love with him. I have to be, or I couldn't write the book. But now... I don't know. It makes me feel... off-balance. Haunted. Maybe slightly unfaithful. Like a perfect lover from the past has walked in and expects me to love him as much as ever. And I do. </div>
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We'll see. But right now, I'm enjoying it. To be fair, I'm only four chapters in. But I can't help thinking, maybe I've cracked it. Maybe that's the trick of happy editing: leave the book for a decade. </div>
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<i>* </i>I love this metaphor. Especially as the character in question is called Ash. </div>
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<i>** </i>This is a joke. I didn't have a boyfriend ten years ago. And not having a boyfriend is never a bad choice.</div>
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*** Slashy?! Of <i>course </i>it's slashy. </div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-4280826869156023342013-11-29T12:13:00.000+00:002013-11-29T12:14:14.331+00:00Help! This title isn't working!OK, that is not an attention-grabbing metajoke about titles. My blog site is genuinely doing something weird. 'You request cannot be fulfilled', it says, when I try to type in the title bo-- oh. Wait. Maybe this <i>is </i>metaphorical, after all. Anyway, if I were sensible I'd stop right here and check whether this will post, in case I spend hours writing and then discover I've lost it all. But I'm not. I'm going to write it anyway. (Ever feel like you're really not trying to be metaphorical, but the bloody metaphors WON'T LEAVE YOU ALONE?)<br />
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I can't remember what I was going to blog about now. :)</div>
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Was it the Stonewall party? Yes, maybe it was the Stonewall party. Which was fabulous. I don't have any photos of the actual place, because I didn't have any pockets and therefore no camera or mobile, but I do have this:</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBm0LE96jYzoDkA6QxvBZXW10Y4WV5kGOZkcrriNA_NGLDrNDNzMQWePZ6Fuwwuvo0CuQvqyYezt-9ytxVNqS0Gh1VllFk0HcJFsFJmqjJN3QoOKDTCiOXQlEDVfuTxKV34uSl3po0FEjp/s1600/nick+and+me+in+stonewall+clothes.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBm0LE96jYzoDkA6QxvBZXW10Y4WV5kGOZkcrriNA_NGLDrNDNzMQWePZ6Fuwwuvo0CuQvqyYezt-9ytxVNqS0Gh1VllFk0HcJFsFJmqjJN3QoOKDTCiOXQlEDVfuTxKV34uSl3po0FEjp/s1600/nick+and+me+in+stonewall+clothes.jpg" /></a>Hmmm, it's very small. It wasn't meant to be that small (obviously today is not a good day for me and techonology*) but you can at least see that we were really overdressed and enjoying it. But then, if we are occasionally overdressed we make up for it by always being immensely overeducated...</div>
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Also, we got congratulated by the hotel staff. That was fun. If slightly awkward, in a how-do-you-explain-that-yes-you're-in-a-wedding-dress-but-actually-you-<i>haven't</i>-just-got-married? kind of way. </div>
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And since then... well. Work goes on. It went quickly for a while and now it's going slowly again. As I explained to a friend of mine, it's like watching a video on youtube - if you fast forward you have to wait for it to catch up with you before you can go on watching it. So while I'm not actually stuck, I'm wading a little bit. Although I'm generally quite excited about the book, and I'm not complaining. It's going to be <i>long</i>, though. I'm on 80,000 words and only two-thirds of the way through. </div>
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Anyway, I'll keep you posted. If this posts. Here goes...</div>
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* Or typing. </div>
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-85672964700660710422013-10-03T13:04:00.000+01:002013-10-03T13:04:50.878+01:00Stonewall Writer of the Year - Shortlisting...That is possibly the most unimaginative title for a blogpost <i>ever</i>, but I am feeling excited to the point of incoherence.<br />
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I have been shortlisted for Stonewall Writer of the Year!<br />
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No, really, I have.<br />
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This means that someone at Stonewall <i>knows who I am</i>. That is pretty cool in itself. Also, I think (I hope) I get to go to the party, which is at the V&A and actually costs<i> real money </i>to go to if you buy a ticket. ('Do they know you're not gay?' my mother asked me. 'Should you pretend you are?' To which I replied, 'Mum, if <i>Stonewall </i>don't think you should be allowed to love who you want, the world is a sad and hopeless place.' Or would have done, if I'd thought of it. I think actually I burbled something about, 'Er... no, does it matter?')<br />
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The news came yesterday, totally out of the blue. As far as I'm concerned, the symptoms of being a Proper Writer include your heart sinking when you see your publishers' or agent's number coming up on your phone, so it came as a complete shock that my agent wasn't just ringing to ask me where the new book is.* I was so taken aback that it was good news that I didn't hear the word 'Stonewall' and thought he was talking about an in-house Bloomsbury Writer of the Year or something... (Luckily I think just having been shortlisted for something means you can be a bit more of an idiot than usual without your agents frowning and idly crossing you off the list of writers on their desks. Hopefully.)<br />
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Then: <i>the V&A</i>, he said.<br />
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Oh, I thought. That sounds... posh.<br />
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<i>Sarah Waters won it a few times, </i>he said.<br />
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Oh, I thought again. She's... well, a <i>proper </i>writer.<br />
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<i>Stonewall</i>, he said.<br />
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Stonewall? I thought. Stonewall?! What, like the - like really, <i>Stonewall</i>?!<br />
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I must have sounded utterly punchdrunk. Maybe he did absent-mindedly black out the letters of my name, after all.<br />
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But seriously, as well as being honoured and excited and all that (also, did I mention that my agent said he didn't think any other YA writers had ever been shortlisted? That was cool), I feel really proud. Because - as those of you who follow this blog might remember - <i>Love in Revolution </i>had a bit of a rough ride. Could I, my editor asked me - after the book had been accepted - change the love affair to, well, a "passionate friendship"? Because, you know, it's difficult, teenage fiction is really bought by the gatekeepers, the parents and librarians, and, well, we don't want to put anyone off... No one actually said, AND SOME PEOPLE WHO MIGHT OTHERWISE BUY THIS BOOK DON'T LIKE LESBIANS, but really they might as well have done.<br />
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I said no. I just said no. (I have said no on other occasions to my editor, but I'm not sure it's ever <i>stayed</i> no.) Bollocks to sales, I thought.** I mean, imagine calling a book <i>Best Friends in Revolution.</i><br />
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And kudos to my editor, who respected that decision entirely - and indeed foregrounded the love story in the blurb, with no fudging or blurring of pronouns so that people might not notice the characters were both girls. Kudos to the cover designer, for making it look romantic. Kudos to my publishers for going with it and not putting pressure on me.<br />
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Right now I feel really proud of them, too.<br />
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* Still being buggered about with, and probably will be for some time, but that's another story.<br />
** No change there, then. :)<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-17772885881514961812013-05-13T15:33:00.000+01:002013-05-13T15:33:01.733+01:00Quaker Meeting, Quaker MinistryThis is a slightly different post to the sort of thing I normally write. Feel free to stop reading right now, because it's not about writing or my life as a writer, and only tangentially about words. But it was such an odd and extraordinary thing for me that I wanted to try and write about it - even knowing that I'm almost certainly going to fail to convey what I mean.<br />
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I've been going to Quaker Meeting for several (3? 4?) years now. For anyone who doesn't know much about Quakerism (or, more properly, the Religious Society of Friends), I should say that Quaker Meetings, or at any rate the sort of British unprogrammed Quaker Meeting I go to, take place almost entirely in silence. You sit there for an hour or so, and wait in case the spirit moves you to stand up and speak. Which it rarely does - at least in our Meeting. In our Meeting, the spirit definitely bloweth where it listeth, and we spend the majority of our Meetings in silence. I think most of the Quakers I've spoken to have ministered a few times in their religious lives, if ever.<br />
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The thing is, you see, that you don't - no one does - ever just <i>decide </i>to speak. A lot of people, I think, imagine a Quaker Meeting to be a sort of religiously-themed free-for-all. It isn't. Nor is it a discussion. Nor is it even a place for people to give considered, economically-phrased mini-sermons. You don't get up because you think you have something valuable to contribute, or because someone else's ministry could be improved upon, or because there's something that you've been thinking about all week. You get up because you <i>have </i>to. That's it.<br />
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Now. As I say, I've been going to Meeting for years now, and I've read things here and there about Meeting, and Quakers generally, and ministry*. I'd read about the impulse to stand up and minister. (One of my favourite stories is about two Friends sitting next to each other in a Meeting. There's a silence and one of them fidgets and shuffles about in his chair for a long time. Then, finally, the other one gets up and ministers. When he sits down he leans across to the other Friend and says, 'Next time, say it yourself.') I'd sat in several Meetings and thought, hmmm, I can think of something I could say at this juncture... but I won't. I was used to that.<br />
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But on Sunday something else happened to me.<br />
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It was... odd. Extraordinary. I keep coming back to those words.<br />
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There'd been a couple of ministries already - which, as I say, is quite rare for us - and one of the things that had come up was a bit from the Advices and Queries** which says, 'Attend to what love requires of you.' I sat there and thought about it, and about how it was particularly resonant for me at the moment. I thought in words, which isn't always the case. I thought of a metaphor for how I felt. I thought, hmm, that's an interesting thought. I could say that. But I won't.<br />
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Then... This is the hard bit to explain.<br />
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My heart started pounding. I started to find it hard to breathe. It was as though I was terrified. I have never felt such extreme physical stress without any kind of outside stimulus. I suppose I <i>was</i> quite scared, because it was like having some kind of attack, and I thought I might faint or black out or my heart would actually stop because it was beating so hard and so fast. I moved a bit in my chair and tried to take deep breaths, but I couldn't. I tried to say to myself that I could calm down a bit and <i>then </i>decide whether I should minister or not. I tried to tell myself that there was no urgency and I should deal with what was happening to me physically before I thought about ministering. I really didn't want to stand up. But nothing I did was any good and I somehow knew that I would either have to stand up or run out of the room, and even if I did that I wasn't sure that it would be any good.<br />
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So I stood up. And I said something fairly lucid, not exactly profound, something that didn't encapsulate exactly what I meant but was sort of in the right area... and then I sat down and had to struggle not to burst into tears. Not because of what I'd said or the experience of saying it, but because of the intensity of what had <i>made </i>me say it.<br />
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I suppose this is hard to write about because it isn't the words, the ministry itself, that stays with me - although I think that ministry was for me as much as for anyone, as though it was a way to make <i>myself </i>listen and take seriously something that would otherwise have been a passing thought. No, it was the absolutely irrational, unpredictable, mysterious <i>physical </i>phenomenon. It felt as though I'd been in the grip of - of what? I don't know. Something Else. I wasn't afraid of standing up in Meeting to speak (I'm an actor, I do school visits, blah blah, that really doesn't bother me). I wasn't worried about what people would think. I didn't have any of those trivial, comprehensible, <i>personal </i>fears.*** It was something entirely other. I'm not sure I want to say that it came from outside myself. Maybe it did, maybe not. I'm not sure if that matters. <br />
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I have never felt physically <i>compelled </i>to do something. It was not about desire, or obligation, or decision, it was... physical necessity. It was frightening. Really.<br />
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But later, when I was walking home, and thinking about what had happened, that it occurred to me: there was no way I could say to myself, well, you idiot, why didn't you just stay sitting down? Because I couldn't have done. I <i>literally </i>had no choice.**** (Apart from leaving the room. As I say.)<br />
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And for someone like me, who thinks and rethinks and analyses and edits, who <i>always </i>wants to go back and say it better or differently... or indeed for everyone... that's a blessing. I said the right thing. I did the right thing.<br />
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I must have done, because I couldn't have done anything else.<br />
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* Incidentally I should point out that one of the joys of Quakerism is that there is no central authority who decides what is or isn't true. Which means pretty much all the generalisations<i> </i>I make here are debatable. Sorry.<br />
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** The closest Friends get to a statement of belief. (You have to love a religious movement where the closest we/they get to formal commandments is advising and querying.)<br />
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*** Later I did. Of course. (See the next paragraph for details.) I don't want to imply that I'm above all that. Nothing could be further from the case. It was just - in that moment...<br />
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**** Before you think I am using the word "literally" to prop up an exaggeration, I would like to say that I am doing my damnedest to write the exact truth as I experienced it. As you can imagine, it's difficult for me. But the whole point is that I'm trying not to exaggerate <i>at all.</i>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-5719790706722593402013-04-08T15:32:00.000+01:002013-04-08T15:32:57.281+01:00The Art of Beginning AgainThat's probably a pretty appropriate title for this post, in the sense that you might have thought that I'd been kidnapped, got seriously ill, become entirely disaffected with this whole writing thing or indeed just died. (Out of interest, I just googled "is B. R. Collins dead?". Happily, I seem, on the whole, not to be.) But in fact it's apropos of something entirely different, namely my new novel.<br />
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I had a bit of an arid patch over the summer. (Metaphorically. There was room for a hell of a lot more aridity in the actual weather.) A lot was happening, and my life has undergone a lot of personal changes since then - which I won't go into, but suffice it to say that more of my 2012 New Year's Resolutions were successfully completed - and the writing kind of went on a back-burner. That was OK, until I started to think about having to earn a living, and then I tried to force myself to start something new. It was a struggle. It really was. But <i>then </i>I had this brilliant (no, really!) idea. One of those ideas which remind you why you want to be a writer at all. I didn't really care about selling this book, or winning prizes with it, or even getting it published. I just wanted to <i>write </i>it.<br />
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Hurrah.<br />
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I wrote it. Well, some of it. I sent it to my agent, who really liked the idea. I carried on writing it. She showed it to my publisher. I carried on writing it. I got to 40,000 words of it.<br />
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Whereupon my agent got back to me with the news that two books with similar "hooks" were being published next year. This book, she said, is not the one that you should be writing now.<br />
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Bugger.<br />
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Now. I realise that this is not the end of the world. The book I'll write with Hook A is not the same book you'd write with Hook A. It wouldn't be the same book if I used the same <i>blurb</i> as your book. My book will always be mine. (I was going to say "special"... but it might not be, actually.) There might be a good time for it eventually. If those other books are successful it might be a positive advantage that they have something in common. ("If you liked <i>Hook A</i>, you'll love this...") It's just that right now... well. It's not the book I should be writing.<br />
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Why don't you have a think, my agent said, and maybe send me five or six ideas, and we'll talk about which one you should work on...?<br />
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<i>Five or six? </i>I said. (Well, no, I didn't. I <i>thought</i>.) <i>Five or six?! </i>If I had <i>five or six ideas </i>I'd be rich by now.<br />
<br />
So all was sombre in the Collins household. My beautiful little book was half-formed and not going to be born. The world was a vast wasteland, idealess and unforgiving.<br />
<br />
And then... I had another idea.<br />
<br />
It happens. Eventually. You batter at yourself and fume and rage and sigh and give up. And <i>then</i>, invariably, you have the idea. They come, not at your bidding, but in their own infuriatingly sweet time.<br />
<br />
It took me a long time to turn round, like a battleship. But now I am on a new course, cautiously optimistic, and a Better, Stronger Person.<br />
<br />
Well. Optimistic, anyway.<br />
<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-77666776540174580352012-10-16T11:37:00.000+01:002012-10-16T11:37:25.037+01:00'There's nothing sadder than a neglected blog...' So, the summer is over. The season of mists and mellow fruitfulness and, you know, harvests and first frosts and new stationery and Michaelmas Term is upon us... which means I need to Get Down To Work. I don't know about you, but I think of autumn as the beginning of the year (for which I blame eighteen years of formal education) and October as the beginning of autumn (for which I blame 8-week university terms). So in my book (no, not an actual book, although more of actual books later) it is <i>perfectly fine </i>to take two and a half months off over the summer. No, really.<br />
<br />
Rationalisation? What do you mean, rationalisation?<br />
<br />
No, but seriously... Then again, I realise it does get monotonous when I start every post with apologies for not blogging enough, so I will stop. Suffice it to say that someone - in a completely different context - did say, 'Ah yes, there's nothing sadder than a neglected blog, is there?' to which I could only shake my head dumbly and inwardly wince.*<br />
<br />
The other thing is, I had <i>so much </i>to blog about! All of which has been either forgotten or gently overlaid with other concerns. Here, for your interest, is a quick (and non-exhaustive) list:<br />
<br />
- <i>Fifty Shades of Grey</i>. Notably the underlying assumptions of same, i.e. that consensual sex-play with a riding-crop is Terrible and Shocking, whereas a controlling partner who won't let you drive your own car or meet male friends and who <i>calls a doctor to give you a hormone injection </i>because you've forgotten your pill is <i>absolutely fine </i>because he loves you. I am sure other people have pointed this out already, and more lucidly, which is partly why the blog never got written. Plus, a friend of mine insisted that the third book was really feminist (no, really!) and redeemed the gender politics of the first two, and that if I wanted to blog about it, it was only fair to read all three. Which I couldn't bring myself to, so that scuppered that.<br />
<br />
- Rereading things from your childhood, especially things that scared the shit out of you. A few months ago I was suddenly reminded of a story I'd read when I was about eight, about which I could remember nothing except that it was bloody terrifying and about a Christmas pudding. So I googled 'children's story christmas pudding' and found it - result! - and it was quite a weird experience, because of course when I reread the story it turned out to be quite creepy, but with nowhere near the haunting, nebulously horrible quality I remembered. It's funny how revisiting somewhere in your mental landscape can be like going back to a place - it felt so much <i>smaller </i>this time round...**<br />
<br />
- The brilliance of google. Same story as previous one...<br />
<br />
- <i>She Stoops To Conquer</i>, which was the most recent play I did. There was no intellectual content to this post but I did have a wig and a costume with paniers, and being the sort of person who gets excited about that I was going to share it. (Ah, actors. It's basically all about dressing up. And being loved.***)<br />
<br />
- The Giant Rat of Sumatra. Well, someone should.<br />
<br />
- Progress on my adult book. Basically I finished the edits and my agent has started sending it out. As blogs go, this one would have been quite brief, because until you hear back from publishers there is really nothing to say. Although I can tell you that the rejections from the first round of submissions (apparently in adult publishing you can have lots of rounds because there are more publishing houses than in children's publishing, which is great because it means that, figuratively speaking, I haven't been knocked out yet. Although I might be at the bottom of my group. It all depends on Wales and Outer Mongo-- oh. No, wait. Sorry, I'm getting confused with the World Cup) were pleasantly contradictory. ("I wasn't entirely convinced by the Edwardian voice." "It's just too authentically Edwardian." Etc., etc.)<br />
<br />
- Basic writing angst. Don't know why I'd bother, really, it's not as if you haven't heard it before. :)<br />
<br />
- An update on my New Year's Resolutions. The fun ones are going well. The other ones are... well, still in the realms of possibility. Most of them.<br />
<br />
Anyway. There might have been more potential posts, but they obviously got sucked under by the bog of daily life, to the extent that I have no idea what they were. I just didn't want you to feel that I wasn't <i>thinking </i>about blogging, because I was. Really. So there.<br />
<br />
And in other news, I have just started a new book. (I am excited. It is going well.) When it's a bit more established, I shall tell you more about it. Promise. :)<br />
<br />
Watch this space...<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
* Obviously there are in fact <i>lots</i> of things sadder than neglected blogs, like forgotten cups of tea and snails that get trodden on and people dismantling the NHS... But it was meant as a rhetorical flourish. Presumably.<br />
<br />
** The story was 'A Christmas Pudding Improves With Keeping', by Philippa Pearce.<br />
<br />
*** As is the rest of life, really.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-49857257087927933512012-07-13T10:34:00.000+01:002012-07-13T10:34:07.686+01:00Oh, and another thing...Honestly. You wait months for a blog post and then two come along at once.<br />
<br />
I discovered this song a few days ago (it's the hidden track on <i>Rose</i>, by Rose) and have been listening to it continuously. Or, as I suppose I should say, <i>en boucle</i>.<br />
<br />
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<br />
It's got a lovely obsessive walls-closing-in-on-you feeling - next time I'm heartbroken I will no doubt appreciate it even more, but right now I really love it despite being quite happy, thank you.<br />
<br />
So anyway. Enjoy.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-11183384751110612742012-07-13T10:27:00.000+01:002012-07-13T10:27:39.399+01:00A quick update.This may not mean anything to anyone who didn't follow the original soul-searching about <i>Come The Revolution</i> a while ago, but to anyone who did and remembers vaguely what I was on about - I seem to have won the fight. Give or take a few explicit details in the sex-scenes, which I can live with. I love my editor.<br />
<br />
I thought about making this post less mysterious, but if I did that I would have to kill you. And the Internet is a very populous place...<br />
<br />
In other news, I am in <i>She Stoops To Conquer </i>at my local theatre next week (wigs, corsets, West Country accents, lots and lots of knob gags), am recovering (I hope) from a cold, doing well on my New Year's Resolutions (except for the one about punctuation), and haven't read <i>Fifty Shades of Grey</i> yet. (One of my friends is going to lend it to me. I suspect that as a big fan of <i>The Story of O</i> I will be disappointed. But watch this space. It strikes me as the sort of thing I might want to blog about.)<br />
<br />
Anyway. Right now, my main feeling is: hurrah!<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-52917482550785171232012-06-18T10:35:00.000+01:002012-06-18T10:35:43.242+01:00Climbing and the power of negative thinkingI went climbing on Saturday. It wasn't the first time I've ever been climbing, as I used to go bouldering in Mile End when I lived in London, but it's the first time I've done proper roped, outdoor climbing on Actual Rocks (at least since I was a kid, which was only once and too long ago to count). So it was quite exciting and actually quite scary, as obviously when you're roped you go higher and do harder pitches than when you're not. And I'm a little bit afraid of heights.<br />
<br />
It's always good to do things you're scared of, though. You discover things about yourself. Like your maximum heart-rate. And your default swearwords.<br />
<br />
But the best thing I discovered was the liberating power of low expectations.<br />
<br />
Now I realise this goes against a lot of what we get told. The general philosophy seems to be that in order to achieve something you have to tell yourself incessantly that you can do it. Be determined. Tell yourself you won't be beaten. Insist on the possibility of your chosen task. Insist on your own brilliance. Sooner or later all that positive thinking will convince everyone who needs to be convinced, and all will be well. And often it works, and you can see why. No one ever got anywhere by deciding it was useless to try.<br />
<br />
But on Saturday... It was funny. I struggled not to give up because I didn't want everyone to think I was pathetic. I was determined. I was positive. And I clung helplessly to various rockfaces, occasionally bobbing up and down on my toes and reaching limply for bits of rock that were just too far away to touch, telling myself I was Not Going To Be Beaten. Until finally I thought, bugger this for a game of soldiers, waved down at my climbing partner and said, 'I'm stuck.'<br />
<br />
Whereupon I could move. And did. Upwards. In a beautiful fluid leap, right to the top.*<br />
<br />
As soon as it was OK to fail, it was easy to climb.<br />
<br />
I suppose the logical extension of this is to accompany every demanding task with a little pep-talk about how no one could reasonably expect me to attempt this, let alone achieve it, and failure is absolutely fine and indeed to be expected, and - well, getting stuck and having to be lowered down is TOTALLY OK.<br />
<br />
The implications for writing are too obvious to be pointed out. (And they don't come as a surprise. Although it was a salutary reminder for me, right now.)<br />
<br />
I will simply say that, as with writing, you know you've made a decent stab at it when you end up with bruises.<br />
<br />
Bruises... <i>everywhere</i>.<br />
<br />
<br />
* Yeah, so this is a bit of an exaggeration. (*Cough*<i>huge</i>exaggeration*cough*.)Unknownnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-27322773650173769592012-05-31T13:15:00.000+01:002012-05-31T13:15:10.941+01:00It's summer. Which means you must BUY...<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGkOtT88dg8cM6hyMBM1KVqr_STXpjGpDJ32M0hD-Emj5fe0_prN6ZX6NCVcCQrn1x4hDfw37x3BZt0KNAURRT7GX0JUK6-a-K50c91ezTzJc7te7699rcCv2XNNxeDp0uLyvRRo9MvN-w/s1600/3for2+(2).jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGkOtT88dg8cM6hyMBM1KVqr_STXpjGpDJ32M0hD-Emj5fe0_prN6ZX6NCVcCQrn1x4hDfw37x3BZt0KNAURRT7GX0JUK6-a-K50c91ezTzJc7te7699rcCv2XNNxeDp0uLyvRRo9MvN-w/s320/3for2+(2).jpg" width="240" /></a> Hurrah! It's summer!<br />
<br />
But when summer arrives, we all have responsibilities. Especially if we are planning to wear summer clothes. I love it that Boots is supporting us through this difficult time, and is giving us so much generous help. God forbid that we should embarrass ourselves by not living up to society's high standards.<br />
<br />
We all know that if you are a woman, you have a duty to be:<br />
<br />
- entirely <a href="http://vagendamag.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/hair-not-musical.html">hairless</a> (except for head-hair, see below).<br />
- bronzed.<br />
- sweet-smelling (ideally of something edible, because that means the Men In Our Lives will find us mouth-wateringly attractive).<br />
- smooth-skinned.<br />
- smooth-footed (those pesky rough bits on our feet can really rub against his virilely hairy legs in bed).<br />
- bright-eyed (those vitamins are really important <i>for our appearance</i>).<br />
- glossy-haired (except for body hair, see above).<br />
- beautifully made-up (but take it off at night, girls, otherwise you might get <i>spots</i>).<br />
- young (the rest of us will have to fake it).<br />
- wearing something strapless, backless and skimpy (ideally, of course, <i>naked</i>).<br />
- dazzling (or as Boots puts it, "outshining the sun". Let's gloss over the slight logical problem there, and just take note that, as we're doing the dazzling, sunglasses aren't included. Those are for the <i>men</i>). <br />
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So go out, girls, and BUY BUY BUY! "Say 'YES'." How life-affirming. God forbid you should say 'NO'. Then you might end up <i>ugly </i>and no one will like you. Let alone <i>fancy </i>you, which is (after all) the Purpose Of Our Lives. Not <i>fancying</i>, <i>being fancied</i>.<br />
<br />
If you're a man, you have a duty to be:<br />
<br />
Oh, no. Wait.<br />
<br />
Thanks, Boots. And FUCK OFF.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-779794961947135012012-05-23T10:19:00.000+01:002012-05-23T10:26:25.406+01:00Stories, truth and ourselves.I've been thinking a lot recently about truth, and honesty, and reality, and the relationships between them. I like to think of it as a Truth Detox. Not that I want to be honest all the time, you understand (I'm not quite ready for that yet, and I'm not sure if I ever will be) - it's more about being aware of the ways I lie and elude and fudge things to myself. One of the things that has dawned on me over the last few months is that lying to other people is morally grey, in the sense that you can judge each lie on a case-by-case basis, dependent on context: but lying to yourself is always, always wrong, because it means you <i>automatically </i>pass that on to other people. Once you stop being honest with yourself, there's no choice involved.<br />
<br />
That is one of those things that when you write it down looks about a hundred times less profound than when you thought of it. Phooey.<br />
<br />
But aaaaanyway. Thinking about truth is particularly interesting if the way you earn your living is all about fiction. Because, at its best, fiction is truthful. It's the big Defense of Poesie, isn't it, that by creating something that isn't real you can find a space to say something that is enlightening and recognisable and, well, you know... spot on. We've all had those moments, when you read a novel and think: <i>yes</i>. Yes, absolutely <i>yes</i>. The best moments in reading are when you come across something - a thought, a feeling, a way of looking at things - that you'd thought special, particular to you. And here it is, set down by someone else, a person you've never met, maybe even someone long dead. <span style="font-family: inherit;"><span style="background-color: white; line-height: 19px;"><a href="http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_History_Boys">And it's as if a hand has come out and taken yours.</a> </span>Y</span>es, the past does come back and haunt us <i>exactly </i>the way it does in <i>The Ghost of Thomas Kempe</i>. Yes, misery does make me lean against walls for no apparent reason, like in <i>I Capture The Castle</i>; yes, memory does run the risk of driving us mad, like in <i>Funes, His Memory</i>. And yes, the important thing in this life is not aunts but the courage with which you face them.*<br />
<br />
But it's not that simple. The big problem a lot of people have with trashy writing (mentioning no na<i>Twilight</i>mes, of course) is that it just doesn't ring true. Or worse, it provides people with a narrative that is simultaneously dishonest and seductive - which means that not only is it not edifying (and I use that in the deepest, most liberal sense, which is nothing to do with "improving" literature) it is actually really problematic. Like it or not, books rehearse the world for us: they teach us how to think about ourselves, our relationships, our bodies. They work in the same way that advertising does. We need to think carefully about the narratives we give people, because narratives are <i>powerful</i>.<br />
<br />
Which is not to say that there isn't a place for trashy books, in the same way that there is sometimes a place for conscious lying - or self-indulgent dreaming, or any kind of activity which takes us out of ourselves. Actually - yes, that's a good phrase. Things that take us out of ourselves are fine - good, in fact - as long as we can put ourselves back afterwards. Lying - or buying into someone else's lie - is defensible <i>as long as you know it's a lie</i>.<br />
<br />
What makes this more interesting is that it's not only bad writing that helps us lie to ourselves. I originally started thinking about this post because of something I remembered from a long time ago, when I was in a messy love-triangle-relationship-thingy, and happened to go and see the film of <i>The End of the Affair</i>. I still remember, very clearly, walking out of the cinema, feeling suddenly very passionate about my lover. Not because of anything about him, you understand, but because the story had resonated with me, because the tragedy and romance of it made me think of my own situation - in the same way that seeing an advert for a perfume you already wear can, briefly, make you feel more glamorous than just wearing the perfume does. This, I said to myself, is <i>my </i>story. Like those characters, I am having an affair. Therefore, like those characters, I am tragic and lovable and romantic... It's dangerous. And yet, the ability of narratives to validate our own experience is part of its wonder. It just has to be confronted honestly.<br />
<br />
Not sure what point, if any, I am trying to make here. Maybe that, when it comes down to it, real people are more important than fictional characters. Life is more important than art. Lying can be good as long as it's done knowingly, in the context of the truth.<br />
<br />
Not, perhaps, terribly profound. (OK, that "perhaps" is there to salve my pride. But I'm going to leave it there anyway.) But - I like to think - for a writer, it's a good thing to get clear in my head.<br />
<br />
<br />
* Jokes, of course, have to pinpoint something that's simultaneously an exaggeration and absolutely<i> </i>true, otherwise they're not funny.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-64784570711475384252012-05-03T10:03:00.000+01:002012-05-03T10:03:50.982+01:00I'm back!So, it turns out that the slightly valedictory tone of my previous post might have been a little bit histrionic, as I did, in fact, survive the flights to and from Qatar. (Without getting too nervous, as well, which was nice.) Not to mention the conference itself.<br />
<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Me (in blue) in a workshop led by the wonderful <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/zuza_em">Zeinab Mobarak</a> </td></tr>
</tbody></table>
But "survive" isn't quite the word. The conference was <i>brilliant. </i>I loved it. It's been a long time since I've spent three days with such interesting, intelligent, amusing, warm people - even if the conversation was so unrelenting well-informed and incisive that I had to resist an urge to lower the tone. ("Revolution in Egypt?! Has there been a <i>revolution </i>in <i>Egypt</i>? Why wasn't it in <i>Hello! </i>magazine?") As a translation conference, it was probably always going to attract clever, open-minded people with a heightened awareness of international affairs - but honestly, it was so high-powered it was verging on the ridiculous... And yet no one made me feel like an impostor, despite my lack of any relevant expertise (when people asked me whether I was a delegate I always said, 'Who, me? No, no, I'm only an author.'). The speeches and workshops were stimulating, everyone seemed to talk to everyone - and immediately cut to the chase about things that mattered, rather than, you know, accommodation or the weather or how long our flights were - and, to cap it all, with careful planning you could eat five meals a day. I felt exhilarated and privileged to be part of it.*<br />
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And the place was pretty amazing too. The photo on the left is of the Doha skyline, taken from a courtyard at the Museum of Islamic Art, which is itself an astonishing building (think halfway between a modern mosque and the National Theatre, but with an incredible austerity and grace). There's not much that's old in Doha, as far as I could tell, but the architecture is varied and energetic and really exciting. (On the whole. Our bus did drive past a derelict-ish apartment block, half boarded up and half just falling down, with a helpful facade claiming that it was "VERSAILLES". But I didn't have my camera that day.) <br />
<br />
I would also add a photo of my hotel room, because it was far too good for the likes of me, but there are levels of smugness to which even I will not sink.<br />
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I got back yesterday and am still recovering after not going to bed for 32 hours, so I'm not going to go on raving about what a lovely time I had. (Also I am running out of adjectives, and Roget's is in the other room.) I will just leave you with my favourite photo of all. Yes. It's a watermelon. But not any old watermelon. This is a <i>Faberge </i>watermelon. There were others, actually. But this one was the best.<br />
<br />
Strangely enough, one of the keynote speeches was the great <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Hahn">Daniel Hahn</a> talking about his translation (or was it? well, it's funny you should ask that - what <i>is </i>a translation, anyway?) of a picture book called <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Happiness-Watermelon-Your-Head-Daniel/dp/1907912053/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1336034497&sr=8-1" style="font-style: italic;">Happiness Is A Watermelon On Your Head</a>***<i> </i>(or as the Amazon web address puts it, with a certain threatening terseness: "happiness - watermelon - your head"). Which made me feel that this picture was particularly appropriate.<br />
<br />
And now back to real life. And rain. And work.****<br />
<br />
But any more invitations are welcome...<br />
<br />
<br />
* Note to any British Council readers: is this enough, or should I lay it on a bit thicker? I do <i>want</i> those "expenses"... **<br />
<br />
** This is a joke. I am actually deadly serious about all of the paragraph above.<br />
<br />
*** It is an odd and wonderful book. Buy it. In English.<br />
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**** Or should I say, back to good intentions scuppered by the World Snooker Championships? Somehow I know today, at least, is going to be a dead loss. But that's OK. Maybe one day I'll write a book about daytime television, and it will all have been worthwhile.)Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-22040814582540662712012-04-27T14:39:00.000+01:002012-04-27T14:42:29.316+01:00Taking stock...I'm off to Qatar tomorrow for a three-day translation conference. This is about as glamorous as my life gets - even more glamorous, and this is saying something, than medieval-lynch-mob-decorated CAKE - but this post is not simply boasting. Obviously it is <i>mainly </i>boasting, and I'm sure I'll do more boasting when I get back, hopefully with pictures (I'm hoping for a sunlit portrait of me against a wonderful panorama of Doha - think blazing blond hair, white shirt, English-Patient chic - although judging by previous experience all my photos will almost certainly involve lots of squinting, a sunburn line across my nose from my sunglasses, and a ridiculous hat). But... well, maybe it's just me, but I find there's something about flying halfway across the world that focuses the mind on mortality.<br />
<br />
I am not a nervous flier. Well, no, I <i>am </i>a bit of a nervous flier (I don't fly very much, and it scares me for much the same reasons that I play Euromillions, i.e. the triumph of imagination over statistics), but I think this particular phenomenon is more to do with the way journeys mark milestones - the way I was strangely thoughtful before I set out for Santiago de Compostela, for example, which didn't involve any flying. Medieval pilgrims always used to write their wills before they left home, and while that was quite sensible, really, because in those days it really <i>was </i>hazardous, I think it's a good tradition. Then again, I have no money, so writing my will isn't really worth the time.*<br />
<br />
But instead I have been Taking Stock of my life. And I thought I would share my thoughts with you. Just in case. (NB: this is, as you might expect given the above, a singularly self-absorbed blog-post. Please stop reading now if that's going to irritate you.)<br />
<br />
I am thirty.** I have published five books, had seven accepted, written ten. I have had emails from people I don't know and probably won't ever know, telling me that my books have made a difference to them. I have played Juliet, Antigone, the Duchess of Malfi, Cordelia and Margaret Thatcher. I was once accosted in the street after a show by a member of the audience who wanted to shake my hand. (It was in Elephant and Castle and for a second I thought she was going to mug me.) I have walked from Le Puy to Santiago with only a few bus journeys in the middle. I can make vinaigrette, harissa and roast chicken without a recipe. I can throw a pot, replace a zip, speak French - all after a fashion - and I can ride a bike, run a mile, keep honest counsel and mar a curious tale in the telling of it. I have a scar on my forehead that I got in a dagger fight. At drama school I was given a chocolate bar by a teacher because I was the only person to walk past when he was teaching a class and considerately not let the door slam. I once sent a clipping to the News Quiz and they read it out***, which is something I am genuinely proud of.<br />
<br />
So much for achievements. It seems quite a short list.<br />
<br />
I have written some quite bad plays, some quite bad essays, and some quite cringe-worthy poetry. I can't hold a harmony or whistle a tune or touch the floor with my hands while keeping my legs straight. At drama school I was held up as an example to the others of how a backbone should <i>not </i>behave. I was a <i>terrible </i>Kvashnya in <i>The Lower Depths</i>. I have done some truly awful auditions, most of which I can now laugh at. I don't know how to change a fuse or make a Word document into a pdf file. I once made garlic soup which stayed in the plate when I turned it upside down over my head. I have never earned more than £10,000 in a year. At infants' school I dropped a guinea pig, and it still haunts me.<br />
<br />
What else?<br />
<br />
I have 230 facebook friends. Some of those are really friends - including, I think, some of the ones I've never met. That's nice. Five people have declared love to me, a couple more have asked me out, no one has asked me to marry them. (Or not seriously, anyway.) I have been gloriously, blazingly in love once, and less euphorically and intensely in love six-ish times, of which at least two were unrequited. I have never slept with anyone and regretted it. I <i>have </i>regretted <i>not </i>sleeping with people. (You know who you are. Probably.) I have only ever deliberately put one ex-boyfriend into a book, and it ended up being a far more flattering - and much less exact - portrait than I originally had in mind.<br />
<br />
I've never stolen an idea for a novel. Yet.<br />
<br />
I have never broken a bone or spent the night in hospital (except when I was born). I have never been pregnant or taken any Class A drugs. Two of my teeth are fake. I had my first filling a few weeks ago. All my vaccinations are up to date. I've tried to give blood three times, and the last time I was so much trouble they had to drive me home in the blood van and took me off the donor register.<br />
<br />
I have written some letters for Amnesty International, given a few quid here and there to the Red Cross, signed endless petitions for Avaaz and 38 Degrees, written to my MP more times than I remember, and helped wash up coffee cups after Quaker Meeting; I delete emails from Amnesty when they've been sitting in my inbox for longer than a few days, I buy cheap clothes even though I know they're probably made in sweatshops, I'd rather get a laugh than be universally kind, I can't always be bothered to rip the plastic windows out of envelopes so I can put them in the paper recycling, I once held up a love-letter someone sent me to invite ridicule from our mutual friends, and I've done a few other things which I'm not prepared to admit to on the Internet. Morally speaking I'm probably in the red, like most of us. (Then again, they say that when old or ill people are asked what they regret, the two commonest answers are, 'I wish I'd worked less' and 'I wish I'd been less virtuous'. So, given the above, and that I have never had a proper job, I guess I'm doing fairly well.) <br />
<br />
So... I can't think of anything else. That's it. My life in a nutshell.<br />
<br />
OK, so this has been a really self-indulgent post. But strangely enough, it's made me feel better.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
* Although, now I come to think of it, I did do my tax return this week. But that was mainly so I could spend the money I'd put aside for my tax bill. (One of the few advantages of being totally poverty-stricken is that I can proudly say I am not funding David Cameron <i>at all</i>. Take that, Tory bastards!)<br />
<br />
** I was going to work in a Tom-Lehrer style gag: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hH4J8CIBc7Q">'It's people like that [Alma Mahler] who make you realise just how little you've achieved. For example, when Mozart was my age he had been dead for two years.'</a> Then I looked it up and found, to my disappointment, that I am still too young for that joke...<br />
<br />
*** It was the label off a jar of sweet peppers in oil, which said, 'Why not toss into a bowl of fresh green salad?'Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-19175227098994406332012-03-29T20:56:00.002+01:002012-03-29T20:58:22.838+01:00A glimpse into the glamorous life of an author...<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGmqFtX5Un6QVW6mBDX8yggysM91MLlWJvvO6Tyiv_ucaegv-O_YmSdfAgVlMNMeUzbZ2u_7SZtCBkahXCIzv4OsmP79C-W6cuT0zpTnGF8wBtEseXFPCIa68RdhEr6q_1Ggs9sP92E_q9/s1600/broken+road+cake.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGmqFtX5Un6QVW6mBDX8yggysM91MLlWJvvO6Tyiv_ucaegv-O_YmSdfAgVlMNMeUzbZ2u_7SZtCBkahXCIzv4OsmP79C-W6cuT0zpTnGF8wBtEseXFPCIa68RdhEr6q_1Ggs9sP92E_q9/s320/broken+road+cake.jpg" width="240" /></a>...i.e, me.<br />
<br />
On Tuesday I had a launch party for <i>The Broken Road </i>(I know, I know, only two months late) at my local Waterstone's. It was a fantastic evening - I saw so many of my friends there that I started to feel like I was at my own wake (in a good way) - but the best thing about it was: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNjcuZ-LiSY">the CAKE</a>.<br />
<br />
As an incentive, I had promised everyone in the publicity that there would be CAKE. (Yes, in capitals. It's just not the same when it's in lower case. Believe me. I am now stuck in an eternal caps lock that is specific to the word CAKE. I am going to have to avoid the topic entirely in my next novel or face major problems with my copy-editor.) And that the aforesaid CAKE would have a sugarcraft lynch-mob on it.<br />
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<a href="http://xkcd.com/606/">The CAKE was not a lie</a>.<br />
<br />
And... for those of a squeamish disposition, look away now. (Or rather - sorry, you should have looked away a few seconds ago. Oops.)<br />
<br />
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2Z2n3vV61LIob4cDqkevFzPMnDYcdvLhpUZWYfrNJhDOSw9KMc9cRwCUf5z6WFuGxbWicQDwEkW9PylOueiCRbmS9BT_kFsIxfw1Gq9E6P_ffh7XKEe0gq6Uul3iGmNVRAr3SHyx2Y4jY/s1600/broken+road+cake+close-up+no.+1.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2Z2n3vV61LIob4cDqkevFzPMnDYcdvLhpUZWYfrNJhDOSw9KMc9cRwCUf5z6WFuGxbWicQDwEkW9PylOueiCRbmS9BT_kFsIxfw1Gq9E6P_ffh7XKEe0gq6Uul3iGmNVRAr3SHyx2Y4jY/s320/broken+road+cake+close-up+no.+1.jpg" width="320" /></a>Yes. A sugarcraft medieval lynch-mob. Don't you wish you'd been there? Made, I hasten to add, not by me but by a great artist of CAKES called Jackie Grover.<br />
<br />
And here, if that photo wasn't enough, is a close-up - just in case you didn't catch their expressions...<br />
<br />
I could add more pictures. There are a few of me cutting it, and probably a few blurred ones of me reading, or brandishing a glass of wine and grinning like an idiot. (Or maybe, on second thoughts, after all that wine it wasn't the <i>world</i> that was blurred...)<br />
<br />
Anyway. I had a fantastic evening. I read and talked about myself and signed copies of my book and generally had a lovely time.<br />
<br />
But really, I just wanted to show you the CAKE...Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-71754138295666717782012-03-25T13:18:00.001+01:002012-03-25T13:29:50.789+01:00On a lighter note...The last couple of times I blogged, it was a bit angsty. The problem hasn't gone away, but I'm determined not to worry about it until it raises its ugly head again, so for the moment all is relatively serene in the Collins household. (Unless someone asks me how the writing is going, in which case they are almost literally knocked backwards by a gale of ranting. But people are rapidly learning not to ask...)<br />
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
And yesterday I spoke to my lovely hopefully-soon-to-be-agent (don't worry if you're getting confused about how many agents/editors I have - it doesn't really make any difference to this story) and she really made me laugh. Partly because of what she was telling me about my book - I was making notes, and one of them says, and I am not making this up, 'try to write good prose' - and partly because she said, 'You know <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LC0JjvAJt8">that Mitchell and Webb sketch, where one of them is an editor and keeps saying, "How about doing like this? Well, not like <i>this</i>, obviously, but maybe a bit like <i>this</i> - well, not really<i> </i>like <i>this</i>, but..."?' </a></div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
But mainly because she said that when her assistant put <i>Edward Leigh </i>onto her Kindle to read it, she accidentally loaded the Word document with tracked changes.</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
Now. I didn't know this. But apparently when that happens the Kindle isn't equipped to deal with it. So it loads <i>everything,</i> original and final versions combined - so all the deleted bits, all the new bits, all the comments - without any kind of formatting or signposting... I.e., in this case, all the cut 10,000 words <i>and </i>the new 15,000 words. Not to mention the occasional moment where I'd lost my temper and put in a note-to-self like (and I quote) 'Yes, but where the hell is the PLOT?!'. </div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
Apparently, the assistant, when asked her opinion, said, 'I'm enjoying it, but the narrator does seem to do a lot of things... well, <i>twice</i>.'</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
It reminded me of the time I listened to Mozart's Requiem for the first time*. It was on vinyl, and I put the turntable on the wrong speed. I told my parents I thought it was brilliant but... maybe a bit high-pitched. </div>
<div>
<br /></div>
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* I am not going to tell you how old I was. Suffice it to say that I was at secondary school - old enough, you might think, to realise that the music was over in roughly 3/4 of the time one might have anticipated.</div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-73461780058228333612012-03-13T09:07:00.000+00:002012-03-13T09:07:56.930+00:00Thank you.Thanks to everyone who commented on my previous post - I really appreciate your responses. And let me say that I am a) not surprised by the overwhelming consensus from you all, and b) utterly in agreement.<br />
<br />
As I said - I have no idea how much power I have in this situation, and as soon as negotiations start it may be indiscreet to blog about them... but for what it's worth - I will do my absolute best to stick to my guns.<br />
<br />
I really only wanted to garner your responses, so I've taken the post down now. Given the situation, I thought it was more politic not to leave it there for ever, especially since it's now served its purpose. I hope that doesn't seem cowardly.<br />
<br />
And again - thank you all.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-82208257707670156022012-02-21T11:38:00.000+00:002012-02-21T11:38:39.493+00:00Done. Almost.I thought about just leaving this blog post as the title on its own, because it just about sums up everything I have to say. But that seemed a bit... stingy. Oh, by the way, I haven't had much sleep. So don't expect the right words in the right places or anything. (Or rather, as I typed that originally, "don't expect the right words inntb eh righy placex". Which, coincidentally, is one of my favourite Basque proverbs.)<br />
<br />
I don't know if you've seen the film <i>28 Days Later</i>. It's not one of my top ten... but there's a moment when the hero's making his way through the apocalypse-torn, disease-ridden world and he goes into a church and up some stairs, and the camera focuses on some graffiti: <b>NIGH</b>, it says, in huge spray-painted letters. And then the shot pans up, and it says above that, <b>FUCKING</b>. And then <b>EXTREMELY</b>. It takes longer than you think to get to <b>THE END IS</b>...<br />
<br />
So my edits were - OK, <i>are</i>, so much for having finished, I've got to start again at the beginning now - a bit like that. Last week I worked really bloody hard (up at six, worked till four, started again after dinner, till midnight) thinking that <i>that </i>day I would get there. It wasn't till <strike>yesterday</strike> this morning, at ten past three, that I finally wrote the last sentence. I was too tired even to feel particularly triumphant. But now I have a new draft. Not the final draft. Probably not even close. But those problems, which seemed like a brick wall, did have handholds, after all. I'm not sure that, having climbed up, I won't have to inch my way painstakingly back down again and find another route - but right now I can take a breather, hoping I'm on the right track.<br />
<br />
Sleep. Read. Do some laundry.<br />
<br />
I did tell my agent that she'd have the MS by the end of the week, though. So tomorrow I will be back to work. No doubt, this time tomorrow, I will be staring helplessly at my computer screen and wondering if I could just cut straight to the middle of the book. Actually - there's a thought...<br />
<br />
That last sentence probably won't be the real, final, actual last sentence. But the end is <i>extremely </i>fucking nigh.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-55863319219191760182012-02-08T13:49:00.000+00:002012-02-08T13:49:56.833+00:00Editing. Still.I refuse to get into the habit of starting every blog post with an apology for not blogging more, because that way madness lies... but, er, well. Sorry. I should blog more. I suck.<br />
<br />
Basically, this is because I'm still editing. And the editing is weighing so heavily on me that if I do anything else I feel guilty. Including blogging. Right now, though, I'm on my lunch hour (ha! who'm I trying to kid? my lunch hour<i>s</i>) and facebook was looking boring and googling myself wasn't fruitful and the BBC iPlayer wasn't showing anyth-- wait, I'm giving away far too much, here. I am a hard-working writer, honest.<br />
<br />
Anyway, here we go. Hello. Long time no see... :)<br />
<br />
I was hoping to get a new draft of <i>Edward Leigh </i>to my agent last week, for the 1st of February. I did actually think I could do that, right up until the 30th or so of January, when it dawned on me that I'd only got halfway through and most of the work is in the second half. I've never missed a writing deadline before, and it came as a bit of a shock. The thing is, I thought I had it sorted. In January I'd sat down and more or less told myself what I needed to do, scenes I needed to add or delete and so on. Then all I had to do was just implement my notes and All Would Be Well.<br />
<br />
Did you spot the deliberate mistake? Yes, it was the "more or less".<br />
<br />
So there are a few problems with that rosy idea of editing. Firstly, edits, like a novel, are only meaningful once you've written them. They will always work in theory. It's only when you're writing them that you realise that there's a glitch or a bug or whatever. (In my case, MAJOR PLOT POINTS which have been ENTIRELY FORGOTTEN. Oops.) And secondly, "just adding or deleting scenes" is like saying "just writing a novel". Today I've written more than a thousand words from scratch, which in a first draft situation would be a good day's work. But according to my (and I do not want to admit that it's even slightly optimistic) schedule, I have another fifty pages to get through this afternoon. And another hundred tomorrow. Wish me luck.<br />
<br />
It's like toothpaste. You look at the nearly empty tube and think, oh, not much there, better buy some more. But then, as you squeeze, the toothpaste builds up until by the time you've rolled the tube up halfway you realise there's a bloody sight more toothpaste than you'd bargained for. (OK, so that metaphor would work better if toothpaste was more of a burdensome, negative thing. Probably not many people find out they've got more toothpaste than they realised and feel utterly daunted and overwhelmed. Although if you do, let me say that I know exactly how you feel, because toothpaste - well, it can be so like editing...) <br />
<br />
Or rather it's like a machine. You think it's just a question of changing a few cogs and then you realise that a) now the whole balance of the thing has gone and there's a lot more recalibration to do and b) it's still not going to work after that and you <i>don't know why</i>.<br />
<br />
Sigh.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/images/Books/medium/9781408806494.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="http://www.bloomsbury.com/images/Books/medium/9781408806494.jpg" /></a>Actually, I think it is advancing. I might get it done by next week. I really hope so, because I'm dying to do some reading and writing and fiddling and thinking and you know, writerly stuff*, without feeling guilty. Then again - anyone else find themselves editing and gradually starting to think, hang on, I think I'm making this <i>worse</i>? Those moments when there wasn't enough of a particular character, so you take them out entirely, or you suddenly realise you've cut the very part your agent liked so much, or... wait, this is getting too depressing. Enough - if you know what I mean you know what I mean.<br />
<br />
On the plus side, it will be finished one day. I hope. And then we will look back and laugh. Ho ho.<br />
<br />
And <i><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Broken-Road-B-R-Collins/dp/1408806495/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1328708699&sr=8-1">The Broken Road</a> </i>came out this week - hurrah! - and has already had <a href="http://www.thebookbag.co.uk/reviews/index.php?title=The_Broken_Road_by_B_R_Collins">a lovely review</a> on bookbag.<br />
<br />
And the salt and pepper pots are safely back at King's College.** (I assume. I didn't phone to ask.)<br />
<br />
You lose some, you win some.<br />
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* AKA sleeping.<br />
** Although sorry, Elin, those Maltesers may never return to their rightful home...Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-29672765251690478342012-01-20T18:00:00.000+00:002012-01-20T18:01:46.997+00:00Of deadlines, editing, wading through treacle, and the relative easiness of the latter.So. It's just as well "write more blog posts" wasn't one of my New Year's resolutions. It's better not to fail spectacularly at <i>too </i>many things at once...*<br />
<br />
At the moment I am editing.<br />
<br />
More precisely, I am trying to edit. This week I have actually done some work, i.e. cutting and rewriting, which is an improvement on last week, but that putative deadline of 1st of February - oh, I was so <i>pleased </i>to have an actual deadline like a real writer! - is looking less and less achievable. Especially since the Australian Open is NOT BEING SHOWN ON THE BBC, which means I have no reason to stay at my computer, idly editing in the changes of ends... (If you think that's a joke, by the way, sorry, it isn't. I was genuinely relying on the motivational power of watching BBC Sport, with Word open in a different window. Please don't laugh.)<br />
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I don't know why it's so hard, but it really is. Maybe because I've just got another idea for a novel, or rather an idea for another novel, and all I want is to start writing that... or because I'm trying to <a href="http://www.jugjugjug.blogspot.com/2011/12/new-years-resolutions.html">do something new every week</a>, which is quite exciting but rather distracting, or because I'm feeling strangely domesticated and would happily spend a lot of time cooking. As I say, I don't know. It's not even that I think the book is bad. I think it's fine. Maybe it's just that it's not the sort of book I feel like reading right now.<br />
<br />
It doesn't matter. The crucial thing is that it's difficult, but it's advancing. I think I have tentatively decided how to solve my problems - ha! note the "tentative" - and now all I have to do is Just Do It. (To coin a phrase. Thank you, Nike.) As someone rather vulgarly and brilliantly says in <a href="http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2012/01/03/25-things-writers-should-stop-doing/">this relevant blog post</a>, "That story isn't going to unfuck itself." Well, quite.<br />
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So I suppose I should be optimistic. I <i>might </i>hit the deadline. You never know.<br />
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Then again, I should be working on it now. <i>Right </i>now.<br />
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* If you're interested: out of my 12 New Year's resolutions, I have so far kept 6 (more or less); 3 of them are unkept as yet, but since I regard myself as having until the end of next December to keep them I'm not being too hard on myself; and I have failed miserably so far at the remaining 3 of them. I'm not going to specify which are which. :) <br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-72288738536703682352011-12-31T16:36:00.000+00:002011-12-31T16:36:41.437+00:00New Year's Resolutions<b>1</b>. Send back the silver salt-cellar and pepper-pot to King's College. I am not going to give indiscreet details about how they came into my possession; suffice it to say that they shouldn't have. And I have held on to them for long enough (i.e. more years than I care to remember).<br />
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They will be going in an anonymous, unlabelled parcel, of course. My instinct for righting wrongs is not infinite.<br />
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<b>2</b>. Get my M.A. As this consists entirely of writing a letter asking aforesaid King's College to graduate me <i>in absentia</i>, it's rather embarrassing that I haven't done it yet. But sometime in 2012 I will be B. R. Collins, M.A. (Cantab). Promise.<br />
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<b>3</b>. Do something at least once a week that I haven't done before.<br />
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<b>4</b>. Fall in love with someone single, available, fairly well-adjusted, fairly solvent and living within ten miles of Tunbridge Wells. (Which is where I live, rather than just some arbitrarily picked area.) How hard can it be?<br />
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Oh, and resist the temptation to blog about my love-life...<br />
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<b>5</b>. Edit <i>Edward Leigh</i>. Finish <i>The School of Glass</i>. Think up an idea for my next book for Bloomsbury and write that too.*<br />
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<b>6</b>. Keep writing. Stop giving myself a hard time about getting a proper job. If I decide I really need<i> </i>a proper job, just <i>get one</i>.<br />
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<b>7</b>. Have more sex. As before: how hard can it be?**<br />
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(Note to self: lower standards if necessary. Possibly also applicable to Resolution 4.***)<br />
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<b>8</b>. Answer all queries about laundry, washing up, tidying up, emptying the dishwasher, cooking etc. with, 'Sorry, I made a New Year's Resolution not to do that any more.'<br />
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<b>9</b>. Live adventurously.<br />
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<b>10</b>. Stop getting really, really angry about politics. Do whatever I can, and then swallow unnecessary fury and try to achieve serenity. (Ha!)<br />
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Also, hold people in the light more. Try to see the good in everyone, even wankers, arses, idiots and total shits... (Yes, well. Possibly this one might need some work.)<br />
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<b>11</b>. Stop overusing brackets, italics, smiley faces, asterisks and... ellipses.<br />
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<b>12</b>. Stop buying lottery tickets. Except metaphorical ones. Buy <i>more </i>metaphorical lottery tickets.<br />
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* If I put these all in one terse, unchatty resolution I'm hoping they'll seem like less work.<br />
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** Oo-er.<br />
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*** This is a joke. Probably. :)Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-44846142527941899262011-12-11T12:14:00.001+00:002011-12-11T12:56:28.768+00:00The glamorous life of a writer...I was a little bit fragile last time I posted... I won't apologise, though, as I feel like it's important to share these things. Mainly because when I'm having a crisis of confidence it cheers me up no end to know that someone else is feeling bad. Hopefully that works for you, my lovely readers, as well - meaning that moaning and whining are in fact providing a useful public service. Wait, what do you mean, that's just me? :)<br />
<br />
However. Thankfully things are looking up. (Or, as I mistyped that initially, "looking yup". I rather like that.)<br />
<br />
So, NaNoWriMo, plays, love affairs, and books all end. But hey. Here is something which will always, always cheer me up. Yes, that's right. Lunch.<br />
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Especially lunch at someone else's expense. And <i>especially </i>lunch at my agent's expense.<br />
<br />
In this case, wood-pigeon, twice-baked goat's cheese and thyme souffle, white chocolate and chestnut tart, and coffee. And wine, of course. Although not too much of it because I had to catch the train home and didn't want to doze off and wake up in Hastings. (I have nothing against Hastings but it's right at the end of the train line.)<br />
<br />
And it was lovely. The food, obviously (see above) but also the company (my hopefully-soon-adult-book-agent*) and the conversation (about me)... We were talking about my grown-up novel, <i>The Two Lives of Edward Leigh</i>, which I sent off months ago and managed to forget about - only to get an email a few weeks ago which said that she was really excited about it and could we meet for lunch? Cue great jubilation in the Collins household. And added to that, the agent in question worked with me on <i>The Traitor Game</i> before it went out on submission and was a wonderful, incisive, tactful editor - so I was (and am) really pleased that she's interested in <i>Edward Leigh</i>. Now I just have to redraft it... <br />
<br />
That was Wednesday. And on Thursday I was at the Bloomsbury Christmas party - Quality Street, pretzels, satsumas, wine - chatting to my editor and copy-editor and lots of other nice people. (The big names included <a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/NM-Browne/authors/482">N. M. Browne</a>, <a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/Celia-Rees/authors/709">Celia Rees</a>, <a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/Mary-Hooper/authors/599">Mary Hooper</a>, <a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/Mary-Hoffman/authors/598">Mary Hoffman</a>, <a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/Mark-Walden/authors/3230">Mark Walden</a>, <a href="http://www.bloomsbury.com/Gareth-P-Jones/authors/3654">Gareth Jones</a>... and possibly lots of other lovely writers whom I met too late in the evening to remember clearly. My apologies if you're one of them. You were lovely, anyway.) It was fantastic. I came home on Thursday night feeling very glamorous and exuberant. Just those two occasions made up for many long weeks of slaving away alone over a hot computer.<br />
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And I'm not, contrary to appearances, just saying that because of the free food.<br />
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* Fingers crossed. If I manage to implement all her terribly sensible suggestions. Watch this space... :)Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-55708821464141589612011-12-05T10:21:00.001+00:002011-12-31T16:37:13.046+00:00Endings, real and imaginarySo. NaNoWriMo is over, and - as you might have guessed if you saw the Winner's Badge on the right - I DID it! 50,000 words in a month. Actually, it's probably not the most intensively I've ever written, but it's pretty damn' close. I finished a day early, after a weekend of really good, hard work, and since then I haven't even looked at the novel. You will be glad to know that I've taken nearly a week off.<br />
<br />
And I feel... bad.<br />
<br />
It's an interesting one. I should be feeling triumphant, I guess. I may not have written a whole novel (50,000 words? Ha! It's got to be at least 80,000, and at this rate it looks more like 100,000) but I've done well, by anyone's standards. My characters definitely hate each other, and now I can get down to the serious business of making them fall in love. The path is there, in front of me, and another month or two and I should get to the end. <br />
<br />
And yet, and yet... Maybe it's the anticlimax of it - exhaustion, the slow realisation that self-imposed tasks only garner self-imposed rewards (i.e., not much), a vague crisis of faith in the novel... But also, I think, I was using the discipline and the absorption of the deadline to keep me going after <i>King Lear </i>finished. I didn't have post-show blues, because I was moving straight on to NaNoWriMo, I had something new to create, something new to get excited about... But it's like drinking to get over a hangover - it just hits you harder, the longer you put it off. Did I say recently that <a href="http://jugjugjug.blogspot.com/2011/10/another-play-another-love-affair.html">plays are always, for me, like love affairs</a>? Now I feel... heartbroken.<br />
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So I am thinking about endings. Real ones. But I am also thinking about fictional endings, because - well, I may have mentioned that I have no idea where or how my novel is going to end. So that's... interesting.<br />
<br />
And I was wondering whether fictional endings are a sort of way for us to confront the way things change in real life. Fictional endings, you notice, are incredibly final, in the sense that that's the last page, there is no possibility whatsoever that there's more to come. (Unless the author cheats and write a sequel. :) But the less said about that the better...) But at the same time, they're only final in the sense of a door closing - and you can make believe that behind the door, life is still going on. Think about the last lines of a novel you love. Here's a quick, random-ish selection from my bookshelves (extra points if you can name the book):<br />
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<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Scarecrows-Definitions-S-Robert-Westall/dp/0099482347/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1323088380&sr=1-1">'"Hallo, you great turnip," said Tris La Chard.'</a><br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Eagle-Ninth-Rosemary-Sutcliff/dp/0192753924/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1323088414&sr=1-1">'...They are rebuilding Isca Dumoniorum."'</a><br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/I-Capture-Castle-Vintage-Classics/dp/0099460874/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1323088444&sr=1-1">'Only the margin left to write on now. I love you, I love you, I love you.'</a><br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Frenchmans-Creek-Virago-Modern-Classics/dp/1844080412/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1323088479&sr=1-1">'Then out of the sea, like a ball of fire, the sun came hard and red.'</a><br />
<br />
You see? The start of a conversation. A town being rebuilt. Sunrise. The absolute <i>opposite </i>of an ending.<br />
<br />
I'm not, you'll be glad to know, going to quote my own last lines, more (I have to admit) because of spoilers than because it's embarrassingly bad form, although obviously it is... but they all, I think without exception, contain something that references the future, the beyond-book, as it were: 'tomorrow' or 'I had a long way to go' or 'I'm quite looking forward to it' or even just a verb in the future tense. The best endings, for me, are the ones that work against their own finality. They soften the blow. And I don't think that's me being squeamish, or sentimental. I really don't.<br />
<br />
Because life, I think, is exactly the opposite. The end of something in real life - a production of a play, a love affair, whatever - isn't clean, in the way that a blank page is clean. But there's no comfort, either. You know you have to go on - Becket again*: 'you must go on, I can't go on, I'll go on' - but what you love is over, and you miss it. Sometimes you miss it... well, horribly. Which is exactly why we need novels to end the way they do - and partly why, I suspect, we feel so cheated by bad endings, or fudged endings, or meretricious cliff-hanger endings (mentioning no names, <i>cough</i><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Knife-Never-Letting-Chaos-Walking/dp/1406320757/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1323088343&sr=8-1">PatrickNess</a><i>cough**</i>). We get enough of that kind of sadness and frustration in real life. Art is there - yes - to confront that grief, to teach us how to cope with it - but if it were exactly the same as<i> </i>real life, it wouldn't be art. Real life is a character getting randomly written out halfway through a story. Art is when that means something: when it makes us, on some deep level, recognise the rightness of it. When we think, yes, OK, I see now why that had to happen. (And often in real life that's the biggest problem, when it just doesn't seem to make sense.) It's a consolation, of sorts. Understanding is a consolation. <i>Narrative</i> is a consolation. If only real life were more like books.<br />
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Then again... once the book is over, the characters are stuck. Even if the ending tries to evoke the future - it can't ever really give them more life. They don't grow or change or have any more adventures (see previous caveat re sequels), they don't fall in love again, they never have the opportunity to be glad that their story <i>didn't </i>end right there. There's a moment I love in revenge tragedies, after the orgy of fights and bloodshed and death at the end - which is often really macabrely funny - when suddenly there's silence. And you realise that for the characters... that's <i>it</i>. The party's over. The Great Climax has come and gone, and the poor sods will <i>never have another one</i>.<br />
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I'd like the drama and meaning and catharsis of a fictional ending. And sometimes, after something's finished, it would be great not to have to get up the next morning and live with the emptiness. But, in the end, I guess we'd (most of us) still choose real life. Because at least then you can take a deep breath and start something new.<br />
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Or, possibly, in my case, just stop moaning and get back to work. :)<br />
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* No, <i>not</i> 'But is it true love, in the rectum? That's what bothers me sometimes.' Although I will try to find an opportunity to shoehorn this one in somewhere next time. If that's the phrase I'm after... :)<br />
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** I have a friend who, seeing that Patrick Ness was my friend on facebook, said, 'P. Ness?! <i>P. Ness?!</i> This is a penis joke, right? He doesn't really <i>exist</i>...' 'Nuff said, I think.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1030244356444500998.post-50371828319860886992011-11-30T11:18:00.001+00:002011-11-30T11:19:48.391+00:00I am striking today in support of the public sector workers.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0