July events (and the last one for June)

A few events to look forward to and to liven up a dull wet Friday.

lovers lies fish

Tomorrow, Saturday 30th June 11-6 we will have a stall at Crystal Palace Overground Festival, Westow Park SE19. We will be selling books, and signing them if anyone wants us to, and – depending on the ambient noise – maybe an impromptu reading…

BC-IllustratorArachne founder and Author Cherry Potts is reading at Brixton Book Jam on Monday 8th July at the Hootananny, 95 Effra Road, Brixton, SW2 IDF sometime after 7:30 and can also be caught singing in the chorus of Blackheath Halls Community Opera, Verdi’s Macbeth for most of the rest of that week.

Further readings to be had at
Southwark Arts Fair at Hays Galleria 1 Battle Bridge Lane, London SE1 2HP (right on the river)
Saturday 13th July 6-7pm

with readings from
London Lies: The Suitcase Rosalind Stopps
Stations: A Place of Departures Cherry Potts
Lovers’ Lies: For Your Ears Only Bartle Sawbridge
A threat at London Bridge Station … a tour guide who may be more than he seems …
and temporary deafness cured by art.

saf banner a4_2-001On the same day, 13th July, earlier in the afternoon, Arachne author Liam Hogan will be reading at the  OxJam Dalston Takeover launch party. The Party goes from 2pm -7pm but Liam is on at 4-4.15pm (so make sure you are there in plenty of time!) – that’s all happening at the Tipsy Bar 20 Stoke Newington Road N16 7XN

ARACHNEFEST a4 POSTER copyArachnefest at Clapham Books
Thursday 18th July 7pm.

We are celebrating Arachne’s first birthday with a reading at Clapham Books
120 Clapham High Street SW4 7UH

readings from all our books:

London Lies: Martin Pengelly‘s Incurable Romantic Seeks Dirty Filthy Whore read by Phil Mulryne
Stations Rosalind Stopps’ How to Grow Old in Brockley read by Carrie Cohen
Lovers’ Lies Bobbie Darbyshire Something Missing

and from our forthcoming books
Weird Lies Nichol Wilmor An Account of Six Poisonings
Mosaic of Air Cherry Potts Penelope is No Longer Waiting

arachne logo white on black bus card sax2On Saturday 27th July we will be at Leeds Book Fair 
St Johns Shopping Centre, Merrion Street, Leeds, LS2 8LQ
with a stall, and readings (times to be confirmed) from
Lovers’ Lies – This isn’t Heat by Richard Smyth and Mirror by Cherry Potts,
and from Stations – Morning Sunshine by Louise Swingler.

Literary Events: a guest blog from Michelle Shine

Michelle Shine, author of Skin Deep (Lovers’ Lies) puts her reader’s hat on and goes to other people’s readings and discussions …

meeting authors and eating cake at an Arachne event

meeting authors and eating cake at an Arachne event

Literature is the only art form where fans can regularly get up close and personal with someone who has delighted and entertained them. For the audience this is an incredible privilege with a financial cost of only a few pounds and very often just the price of getting to the venue. However, as the question and answer session gets underway, it can put the author in a vulnerable situation. I remember going to see Sarah Waters in conversation with Russell Celwyn-Jones at Birkbeck University. It was a huge auditorium. I would guess, perhaps five, six hundred people turned up. Things seemed to be going swimmingly until the microphone was taken to a lady at the back of the audience who said that she wanted to congratulate Sarah on a sex scene she’d written where one of the characters says to the other, ‘you’re so wet.’ Not a literary moment that Ms Water’s wanted to be reminded of as you could see by the reddening of her face, but nonetheless one that the woman found memorable, and wanted to share. Such is the arena that a writer enters into when they sign themselves up for such an event.

And sign themselves up they do. Everyone from Martin Amis to Caitlin Moran; lit-fests are not elitist affairs. They embrace writers of all genres. Personally, I am completely hooked. I love going along to these happenings whether they take place in the cool atmosphere of a tent in Charleston in Sussex that was once the home of artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant of the Bloomsbury Group, or at a school hall in Hampstead, London, or even a small local bookshop. The prospect of listening to an admired writer talking about their writing never fails to attract me. Memories of Andrew Miller languishing in the fruits of his own imagination whilst ruminating about the green suit bought and worn by Jean Baptiste-Baratte, his protagonist in the award-winning novel Pure was, in my view, not only memorable but also alluring. Or listening to Kate Atkinson who after an admission of aspiring to be a ‘romantic novelist’ answers a question that goes someway towards disputing this fact by plucking out a humorous line that could have been from a page in of one of her own novels. ‘Oh, but I am a romantic novelist!’ she said.

And in this way it appears to me that novelists are very special people. Brave characters who embrace humility, who take little conscious credit for their creations and when talking about the process of writing say things like, ‘I don’t know what I’m doing, or where things are going to go next. It’s all such a surprise,’ Kate Atkinson. Or ‘It’s like organised dreaming,’ Andrew Miller. As if writing is not something they actively do but something that happens to them.

Book signings at these events are de rigeur, so not only does a member of the audience come away with the feeling that they’ve just met an interesting and unpretentious new celebrated friend, but they also get the chance to own a handwritten dedication to them personally inside the front cover of one of the author’s bestselling works.

How can you compare this intimate experience with watching a favourite musician in miniscule dimension on the stage at Wembley as they shout across the vast auditorium, ‘Hello London,’ or the fleeting moment when a movie star wafts past you on the red carpet outside Leicester Square, or even the complete absence of an artist’s presence when viewing an exhibition of their work at a major gallery? You can’t. In my experience, being in the presence of a writer who is open and generous with their time has never been a let down and is a much more fulfilling experience, something that should be taken full advantage of whilst the tradition still exists, a real opportunity.

Which books have you read recently? Whose imagination has turned you on? If the work is recently published, the chances are the author will be coming to a venue near you in the not too distant future. It’s definitely worth checking out.

© Michelle Shine/ Arachne Press 2013

Lennart Lundh and Michelle Shine on inspirations

Michelle Shine (Lovers’ Lies) and Lennart Lundh (Weird Lies – due out Sept 2013) talk about the inspiration for their stories, Skin Deep and Antique Shopping

© Arachne Press 2013

Sodden Summer: Risk Assessing outdoor events

The trouble with books is that they are sensitive to humidity.

Yesterday was the longest day -“mid” summer. Today the detailed weather forecast is for rain every other hour and high winds.

Risk assessment for Hilly Fields Midsummer Fayre commenced at 6:45 this morning.

Wind: too strong for the gazebo.

Rain: too frequent to not have the gazebo.

all packed upLosses for not going:

  • cost of pitch,(not that much);
  • possibly an afternoon of seeing it dry up and the wind drop, leading to kicking self, although all the forecasts agree that’s (pretty unlikely).
  • Effort already invested in publicising and packing up stock and banners and whatnot. (too bad).

Potential losses for going:

  • wrecking the stock and making it unsaleable (Significant)

Decision: Don’t go.

It feels like the wrong decision: it’s our local event, we’ve got local books and local authors, but there’s no point destroying the stock on the off-chance the weather will buck up.

(Sigh) Sometimes I hate the British “summer”.

Never mind, Crystal Palace Overground Festival next Saturday: they are providing the cover so that makes decisions easier.

Hilly Fields Summer Fayre

Arachne Press will have a stall tomorrow at Hilly Fields Summer Fayre, Brockley SE4.

We will be selling our books, and our famous BADGES!  Local Arachne authors will be dropping by, so there’s a chance to get books signed as well, by whoever you coincide with.

However, if it POURS with rain we will go home, there’s no point ruining our stock!

Hilly Fields on a quiet day

Hilly Fields on a quiet day

dancers at a previous Hilly Fields Summer Fayre

dancers at a previous Hilly Fields Summer Fayre

Pre-ordering Weird Lies and Mosaic of Air

mosaic glyphIt’s always nice to know your marketing works – how do we know? People buy things!

We’ve just had our third pre-order for Weird Lies and first for Mosaic of Air. Yes, it’s modest, but its a start.

So to get the message really clear: YOU DON’T HAVE TO WAIT! You can preorder our September books NOW (at a reduced price) and you will receive them ahead of publication as soon as we have them, at the same time as the reviewers. (And if you know anyone who might review for us, please tell us.)

Of course, the absolute best marketing is word of mouth, so please tell your friends, family, colleagues, your bookshop, your library, your reading group, the person sitting next to you on the bus…

weird handsSomething else we’d like you to tell them is that there are only 28 hours left to back our Kickstarter campaign. I know, I keep on about it, but if we don’t get all the money we don’t get any, so a big thank you to Steven in the USA who is our star backer so far (most recent and most generous), and who has also just ordered a copy of each of the existing books and preordered both September titles: we don’t know who you are, but we like you! (Thank you also to Rebecca, Wendy, Heath, Clare, Doris, Kenneth, David, Stephen, Carrie, Gloria, Edel and Lyn, whose generous pledges mean an enormous amount to us.)

There are still some great rewards left, including a copy of Weird Lies Author Joshan Esfandiari Martin‘s short Film Test Driving on DVD or BlueRay, or a guided walk around the City of London for up to 12 people with award-winning blue badge guide, (and Arachne Author) David Mildon, or a HANDWRITTEN unique, one-off episode of ‘Mrs Darcy versus the Aliens’ from Weird Lies Author Jonathan Pinnock, featuring YOU (or a nominated other if you are thinking of it for a gift) as a named character. A guaranteed collectors item of the future. (If it wouldn’t mean giving money to myself I’d have that one… Ooh! if anyone is stuck for a birthday present for me…).

Obviously, not everyone is in the position to be promising us money, so if you feel passionately about what we are trying to do here at Arachne Press and want to help, check out our support us page, there are lots of things that will help us, including pre-ordering Weird Lies and Mosaic of Air. And don’t forget, you technical whizzes you can now get our books on Kindle and ePub devices from your prefered retailers.

Martin Pengelly Interview

Martin Pengelly gets on the phone before breakfast to talk to Cherry Potts about London, coffee, art  house cinemas and art – and writing in the laundry room.

Martin is the author of Incurable Romantic Seeks Dirty Filthy Whore and Girl with Palmettes, both of which were published in London Lies

http://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2013/06/martin-pengelly.mp3

Arachne Press to Headline at Southwark Arts Fair

A bit of a stop press.

Southwark Arts Forum are holding a fair at Hays Galleria  by the river and just off Tooley Street near London Bridge Station, on Saturday 13th and Sunday 14th July.

Last year's SAF market

Last year’s SAF market

There will be lots of stalls with local artists and crafts people selling their wares,  workshops (including for children) and a stage with an hourly turn round of acts, (Music, dancers, singers…) and on the Saturday, at 6pm Arachne Press authors/actors will perform 3 stories. Don’t know who or which stories yet as we’ve only just met with SAF, but watch this space!

And in other news, just under 48 hours left to contribute to our Weird Lies funding drive over on Kickstarter. If we don’t get all the money we don’t get any of it!  There are still some awesome rewards available, including, for the writers out there, detailed assessment of your work by Katy Darby (Novels) or Cherry Potts (Short Stories); there’s original art from Richard Smyth, and strictly for Londoners, there is cake (!) from the kitchen of Katy Darby. Anyone who has been to one of our caked up readings will know this is a prize beyond rubies.

Writing on Islands – a guest blog from Andrew Blackman

As I write this post, I am gazing out at the following scene:

Andrew' Island View

Andrew’s Island View

On the hillside below me I can hear birds tweeting and the occasional tinkle of one of the bells tied around the necks of grazing goats. It’s all pretty idyllic. In fact, it’s more or less what I imagined when I was a child picturing ‘the writer’s life’.

But of course, life is not a holiday postcard. In this post, I’ll look at some of the advantages and disadvantages of leaving the city in search of the ideal writing location.

The pros of island life

1. It’s cheap. When I tell people that I lived on the west coast of Barbados last year, and am in Crete this year, the most common response is to say how lucky I am (jealousy comes in a close second). The assumption seems to be that these places are hopelessly exotic and beyond the reach of everyone except someone with some unspecified ‘luck’.
In fact, the main reason I left London was that I couldn’t afford to live there. In Barbados and now in Crete, I am paying a fraction of my old London rent, and most other costs are cheaper too. What that means is that I can concentrate on writing, and not have to take on other work just to pay the bills. I’m not lucky; I’m an economic migrant.

2. It’s inspiring. Take another look at that photo I posted. Now imagine yourself sitting on a balcony with a laptop on your knees, gazing out at the sea whenever you’re lost for a word. Picture occasional ships gliding to and fro across a peaceful sea that subtly changes colour as the sun moves across the sky. You can’t fail to be inspired. You have to come up with an entirely new set of excuses for not writing.

3. It’s practical. Not so long ago, moving abroad meant finding work locally, unless you were in the happy position of being able to live purely off your publisher’s generous advances and royalties. Now, it’s easy to stay in touch with all your London contacts, get freelance assignments and make a living through the magic of the internet.

The Cons

1. The logistics are a nightmare. Shipping boxes of stuff from London to Barbados, back to London and then to Crete is expensive, ridiculous and time-consuming. I ended up selling off a lot of my stuff, including some treasured books, just because it’s so impractical to keep transferring them. But no matter how minimalist your lifestyle, there’s still a substantial transition cost every time you move. We came to Crete knowing nothing about where we’d live, so had to hire a car and drive around looking at places and staying in hotels for a couple of weeks before we got an apartment. All in all it cost several thousand pounds (partly paid for by the selling, but still a substantial drain).

2. You miss events. Although I said earlier on that you can stay in touch and get work via the internet, you still miss out on the important face to face stuff. Since leaving, I’ve been invited to give three talks and appear at a literary festival, which is particularly annoying since those invitations were not flooding in at the same rate when I was in London. I’m going to do one of the talks via a Skype connection, but I’ve had to decline the others. And it’s a lot harder to sell books over Skype.

3. You’re not connected with your subject. All of my books and the bulk of my short stories have been set in England, mostly in London. It’s where I grew up, and it’s the place I know best. And yet I’ve been living away from it for almost two years now. I missed the Olympics and a lot of other new developments. I’m slowly losing touch with what it means to be a Londoner. There’s a danger that I’ll keep dredging the same old barrel of images, and my writing will become stale, fossilized in the London of 2011.
Non-writers tell me ‘Oh, that’s great – you can set your next novel in Crete!’ The reality is that to write a novel in which the setting is actually important and not a mere backdrop, you have to know it really well. I lived in New York for six years, and didn’t feel qualified to write a New York novel. London is still what I know, and I think I’ll continue to write about it, even as I drift further and further away.

© Andrew Blackman 2013

Writing Ambitions – three days to go on Kickstarter funding bid

Just thought I’d mention, its three days almost exactly until time runs out on our funding bid. If you’d like to support us, please take a look at the pitch – you can have a laugh at me and Katy being distracted by every butterfly that flew past, and remaining oblivious of the trains roaring by at the bottom of the garden – one of the few decent patches of sun so far this ‘Summer’, a bit like today.

And in the meantime, watch a whole bunch of Arachne authors talk about their writing ambitions…

© Arachne Press 2013