Loughborough - like many town centres - has a lot of charity shops. And most of them have at least one shelf given over to second-hand books. Apart from WHSmiths and Waterstones, they're the only places you can get your hands on physical books, unless you include certain market stalls that either trade paperbacks or sell on discounted wholesale stock.
My favourite place for second-hand books was the Age UK bookshop-cum-coffee shop. It was somewhere I'd pop into on the way back from town - have a mooch, perhaps pick up some children's books for the school library or something a title I'd heard of but never read. And equally, it was where I sent books I'd finished with.
Maybe a couple of months ago, the shop relocated; it moved to premises at the bottom of Biggin Street.
I've been meaning to pop in for a while - it's not too far out of the way - but today was the first opportunity I'd had, coupled with the fact that the kids had had a bit of a book clearout, topped up with a few I'd read and finished that could be recycled.
The new bookshop is even better!
It's a fabulous little place! Light, airy, clean, with much more space to move around than the old shop, and spread over two floors; downstairs is non-fiction and children's books, upstairs is fiction paperbacks and a few hardbacks. The books are all in really good nick - a bit different to some of the tatty and dog-eared copies I used to buy back in my uni days from the book-house. (Literally - it wasn't a shop. It was a house filled with books!)
There's also a table and chairs upstairs, so you can actually sit and read. Though as the manager remarked, it's a bit warm up there at the moment and the window can't be opened - they're waiting for a fan to be delivered.
I took in probably a dozen books - and walked out with four!
Delighted to have my very own copy of The Last Hero now - I borrowed it from the library some years ago - as there are very few Discworld books I don't have on my Pratchett shelf. Now there's one less!
The others are a bit of an eclectic mix - an historical and a couple of chick-lits, but at £11 for all four books, (Last Hero was £6 - more than I'd normally pay, but this copy is pristine) I can afford to try a few different genres and authors without breaking the bank. And if I don't like them, they'll just head back to the bookshop for someone else to discover.
I hope the shop does well in its new setting - not just because of the charity it supports - but also because second-hand shops offer a much broader range of titles than the average big chain bookstores, at least in my town. (Might be different if you live in a city with supersized branches of Waterstones and the like)
So if you're passing the bottom end of Biggin Street in Loughborough and fancy a good book, drop in
Showing posts with label discworld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label discworld. Show all posts
Wednesday, 5 August 2015
Saturday, 14 March 2015
So much to tell you...
The last week or so has passed by in a bit of a blur. There's been so much happening!
Wednesday 4th March: Author visit to Holywell School.
I had a fantastic time with two Year 3 classes at Holywell, looking at the essential ingredients of a Granny Rainbow story and then helping the children to come up with their own ideas for a Granny story. We focused on the idea of something being lost; working out what it was, who'd lost it, why was it such a problem that it was lost, and most importantly, what was Granny going to do to help find it?
My personal favourite was the lost tiara...which just happened to be stuck to the Lady Larabelle Loolilace's wig, so when she lost her wig - and the tiara - she couldn't go to the posh party she'd been invited to because actually, she was as bald as a coot in real life! Second favourite was the lost penguins - or was it the treasure chest? SO many ideas! In fact it was hard to stop the children from coming up with more and more ideas and actually settle down to writing the outline of the story they'd be penning...
It was a really special visit, because Holywell was my primary school...and here I was, forty odd years later, returning to spend time with a fresh generation of students.
Thursday 5th March: World Book Day.
A planned author visit had to unfortunately be cancelled, so instead I bagged up a copy of Granny Rainbow as a World Book Day gift and left it in a playground in Queen's Park. I've done something similar with the Lonely Bouquet - left a bunch of flowers for someone to find and take home, so I was hoping the same principle would work with a book.
I don't know whether anyone picked it up - when I passed back that way later in the morning, the book was still there and being studiously ignored by the parents present, in spite of the invitation inside the bag to 'Take me Home!' Hope someone's enjoying it...
Friday 6th March: Lords and Ladies at the Manor.
A group of Cloudies had booked a Manor House in Oxfordshire for the weekend, with the intention of writing, hearing other's work and getting to know some of the folk who are recognised only by an electric persona on the Word Cloud.
We had a blast! Quite a few more Cloudies arrived on Saturday to spend the day with us (I ran a short writing exercise in the afternoon, there was a table tennis compeition, a bring-and-share lunch) and a few of the day visitors stopped overnight. We drank wine (and champagne for those who took part in The Great Fizz competition of reading work to an audience), ate very well, sang songs until the wee small hours, wore tiaras and top hats (as befits a Lord or Lady of the Manor) and made lots of new friends.
The weirdest thing was reading a Granny Rainbow story to an audience of adults instead of to children...
I came home exhausted but happy on the Monday and started to thrash out some words and ideas on Ani's story.
Tuesday 10th March: Proof Pick-up!
I picked up the proof of More Granny Rainbow. There are some glitches with the cover, as I realised there is a fundamental design flaw (of my own making) which needs to be addressed. So I shan't be launching just yet... The inside pages are looking pretty flippin' good though - I didn't see any typos at all. I'll leave finding them up to the eagle-eyed reader...
Wednesday 11th March: Painting Text

I'm involved at the moment in a passionart project - eight town centre churches are creating a piece of artwork depicting a part of the Easter story, which will be displayed outside the churches from Palm Sunday through to Easter Monday. The one I'm involved with is the seven sayings of Jesus from the cross, on a 4 by 3 metre banner. I spent most of Weds (and Thursday and part of Friday) painting the text onto the speech bubbles...
Then we had a NIBS meeting - the Nanpantan Improving Body of Scribblers writing group. Four of us wrote off-the-cuff about what we wanted to see more of or less of in the world; combined three trinkets (chosen from a selection) into a piece of prose; and then considered what we would include in a time capsule to represent ourselves and our lives. There were some rather poignant pieces written, which brought a tear to my eye...
Thursday 12th March. RIP Sir Terry Pratchett
I cried.
Sir Terry's Discworld books are my absolute favourite thing to read. I have a shelf filled almost entirely with Discworld...there are a few titles missing still, but in time I am determined to have the full set.
To know that I will never read about Vimes or Carrot again, hear the witches own particular brand of wisdom, or find out what C.M.O.T Dibbler's latest money-making scheme is, makes me unbearably sad.
And only Sir Terry could have written the end of his own story as he did, with Death coming to take him for a walk.
I hope Sir Terry finds what he was expecting in the black desert...
Friday 13th March: Comic Relief
I was auctioning off a copy of Granny Rainbow for Red Nose Day; I'd drawn red noses on all the illustrations and the front cover. I am delighted to say that the top bid was £30 - £30! - and I decided to double that. Hence a whopping £60 will be winging its way to Comic Relief HQ and Red Nose Granny to Birmingham, to a very special librarian.
And I think that's us all caught up! Normal blogging service will be resumed...assuming I have something interesting to tell you!
Wednesday 4th March: Author visit to Holywell School.
I had a fantastic time with two Year 3 classes at Holywell, looking at the essential ingredients of a Granny Rainbow story and then helping the children to come up with their own ideas for a Granny story. We focused on the idea of something being lost; working out what it was, who'd lost it, why was it such a problem that it was lost, and most importantly, what was Granny going to do to help find it?
Getting to grips with the digital whiteboard...and the essentials of a Granny Rainbow story |
I don't know what had just been suggested, but I look pretty shocked at the thought! And for some reason I can't seem to write straight... |
My personal favourite was the lost tiara...which just happened to be stuck to the Lady Larabelle Loolilace's wig, so when she lost her wig - and the tiara - she couldn't go to the posh party she'd been invited to because actually, she was as bald as a coot in real life! Second favourite was the lost penguins - or was it the treasure chest? SO many ideas! In fact it was hard to stop the children from coming up with more and more ideas and actually settle down to writing the outline of the story they'd be penning...
It was a really special visit, because Holywell was my primary school...and here I was, forty odd years later, returning to spend time with a fresh generation of students.
Thursday 5th March: World Book Day.
A planned author visit had to unfortunately be cancelled, so instead I bagged up a copy of Granny Rainbow as a World Book Day gift and left it in a playground in Queen's Park. I've done something similar with the Lonely Bouquet - left a bunch of flowers for someone to find and take home, so I was hoping the same principle would work with a book.
I don't know whether anyone picked it up - when I passed back that way later in the morning, the book was still there and being studiously ignored by the parents present, in spite of the invitation inside the bag to 'Take me Home!' Hope someone's enjoying it...
Friday 6th March: Lords and Ladies at the Manor.
A group of Cloudies had booked a Manor House in Oxfordshire for the weekend, with the intention of writing, hearing other's work and getting to know some of the folk who are recognised only by an electric persona on the Word Cloud.
We had a blast! Quite a few more Cloudies arrived on Saturday to spend the day with us (I ran a short writing exercise in the afternoon, there was a table tennis compeition, a bring-and-share lunch) and a few of the day visitors stopped overnight. We drank wine (and champagne for those who took part in The Great Fizz competition of reading work to an audience), ate very well, sang songs until the wee small hours, wore tiaras and top hats (as befits a Lord or Lady of the Manor) and made lots of new friends.
Lady Squidge of the Manor...complete with tiara. |
The weirdest thing was reading a Granny Rainbow story to an audience of adults instead of to children...
I came home exhausted but happy on the Monday and started to thrash out some words and ideas on Ani's story.
Tuesday 10th March: Proof Pick-up!
I picked up the proof of More Granny Rainbow. There are some glitches with the cover, as I realised there is a fundamental design flaw (of my own making) which needs to be addressed. So I shan't be launching just yet... The inside pages are looking pretty flippin' good though - I didn't see any typos at all. I'll leave finding them up to the eagle-eyed reader...
Wednesday 11th March: Painting Text
I'm involved at the moment in a passionart project - eight town centre churches are creating a piece of artwork depicting a part of the Easter story, which will be displayed outside the churches from Palm Sunday through to Easter Monday. The one I'm involved with is the seven sayings of Jesus from the cross, on a 4 by 3 metre banner. I spent most of Weds (and Thursday and part of Friday) painting the text onto the speech bubbles...
Then we had a NIBS meeting - the Nanpantan Improving Body of Scribblers writing group. Four of us wrote off-the-cuff about what we wanted to see more of or less of in the world; combined three trinkets (chosen from a selection) into a piece of prose; and then considered what we would include in a time capsule to represent ourselves and our lives. There were some rather poignant pieces written, which brought a tear to my eye...
Thursday 12th March. RIP Sir Terry Pratchett
I cried.
Sir Terry's Discworld books are my absolute favourite thing to read. I have a shelf filled almost entirely with Discworld...there are a few titles missing still, but in time I am determined to have the full set.
To know that I will never read about Vimes or Carrot again, hear the witches own particular brand of wisdom, or find out what C.M.O.T Dibbler's latest money-making scheme is, makes me unbearably sad.
And only Sir Terry could have written the end of his own story as he did, with Death coming to take him for a walk.
I hope Sir Terry finds what he was expecting in the black desert...
![]() |
Illustration by the very talented Mat Sadler |
Friday 13th March: Comic Relief
I was auctioning off a copy of Granny Rainbow for Red Nose Day; I'd drawn red noses on all the illustrations and the front cover. I am delighted to say that the top bid was £30 - £30! - and I decided to double that. Hence a whopping £60 will be winging its way to Comic Relief HQ and Red Nose Granny to Birmingham, to a very special librarian.
And I think that's us all caught up! Normal blogging service will be resumed...assuming I have something interesting to tell you!
Thursday, 19 February 2015
The Watch Box Project.
As I'm away at the mo, I thought I'd leave you a story to sink your teeth into.
This one was created last year for a peer-judged competition over on The Word Cloud. We had to choose two places. Mine were Sardinia (my most favourite place to holiday) and Ankh-Morpork, from Pratchett's Discworld. Which was fine - until the challenge expanded; we had to get from A to B.
It was at this point I realised I'd put myself in a VERY difficult position. How the heck was I going to get from a real place to a fictional one? It took me ages and ages and ages to work it out, but in the end I came up with a solution.
The following could be best be described as my first attempt at fan-fic, which I have since discovered that Sir Terry never reads and does not approve of particularly. That being so, I will probably never submit it for publication, so decided to post it here on the Scribbles instead. I hope Sir Terry will forgive me... and if you are a fan of Discworld, I hope you will, too.
PS. With apologies to fans of a certain popular TV series too...
The Watch Box
Project.
Commander Vimes stood in his usual spot
in front of the desk, staring just a little to the left and slightly above the
Patrician’s head.
Lord
Vetinari sighed and steepled his fingers. “It’s an experiment, Commander. To
have refreshment and relief facilities stationed at intervals throughout the
city. I’m sure you’re aware that it’ll save your men from having to return to
the Watch houses quite so frequently.” He looked pointedly at the Commander.
“Or the Mended Drum.”
“Yessir.”
Vimes kept staring at the same spot. “Only problem is, sir, it’s a bloody
stupid idea.”
The
Oblong Office suddenly felt a lot colder.
“Do
expand on that theory, Commander.”
Vimes
took a deep breath and started ticking off on his fingers. “One. It’s going to
cost a helluva lot to make the number of boxes you want. Two. The good folk of
the city have taken a liking to the refreshments we stocked the first box with.
And no, it didn’t matter whether the refreshments were rat-on-a-stick, slumpie
or Mr Dibbler’s finest sausage-inna-bun. They broke in and nicked it all. Have
you any idea, sir, how crabby a hungry Watchman can get? And three, certain
bright sparks have cottoned on to the fact that you can lock a member of the
Watch inside the box, tip it up and cover him in the relief.”
"Ah,
yes. Perhaps it was a mistake to run the pilot scheme in the Shades.” Vetinari
sniffed, almost imperceptibly. “Has Constable Goldhammer managed to get rid of
the smell yet?”
“Not
quite.” Vimes finally allowed himself to meet the Patrician’s eye. He’d made
sure there was plenty of hot water available, but even after an hour in the
bath - with the most aromatic of Lady Sybil’s floral oils to mask the unsavoury
odours which had been introduced to the station house - the unfortunate dwarf
had been banished to the basement. At least Igor wouldn’t mind either of the
overpowering scents which now clung like treacle to Constable Goldhammer.
Vetinari
picked up the newspaper he’d set aside when Vimes arrived. It looked as though
he was only halfway through the crossword. “I’m sure the novelty – and the
smell - will wear off, given time. Try a second box in a different location.
Don’t let me detain you, Commander.”
*
Ankh-Morpork’s Finest eyed the box
suspiciously. It had been painted a rather fetching shade of dark blue and had
a blue glass lantern on the roof, currently unlit.
Corporal
Nobbs shook his head. “It don’t seem right, sarge, the Commander making us stay
put in one place for our whole shift.”
Fred
Colon sighed heavily. “Things are changin’, Nobby. Gone are the days we ’ad to
decide, all watchman-like, whether trouble was worth takin’ notice of or not
and root it out.”
“So
what do we do now? Sit here and wait for it to come to us?”
Fred
thought hard for a moment. You could almost see the cogs turning. “I reckon so.
If trouble’s happening somewhere else, it ain’t our fault if we’re not there to
help. Instead, we can have a nice quiet cup of tea and some of Mrs Colon’s
biscuits.” He rattled the cake tin to emphasise the point. “We’ll keep the
peace on this patch and let the coppers in the other boxes look after the
trouble on theirs.”
Nobby
brightened. “Shall we go and ’ave a look inside then, sarge?”
“You
go in, Nobby. I’ll keep an eye on things out here.” Fred prided himself on
keeping an eye on things. That way, you saw trouble coming – and could run in the
opposite direction.
There
was the sound of a door opening behind him. Then silence.
"Er,
sarge? Did the wizards have anything to do with this box idea?” Nobby sounded
decidedly worried.
“Not
as far as I know,” Fred rumbled. “Lord Vetinari wouldn’t hold with that.”
“Only…”
Nobby gestured towards the open door, “it’s bigger on the inside than the
outside, sarge!”
Fred
looked inside. He rubbed his eyes and looked again. Then he walked slowly
around the blue box, pausing in front of the open door.
“Ah,
well… that’ll be an ill-oooshun, Nobby. You know, like when they got the
conjuror in at the Pink Pussycat Club.”
“Oh
yeah…I remember that riot,” Nobby said fondly, his eyes glazing over. The
clients of the Pink Pussycat had become understandably agitated when their
favourite performer, Dilys Twirlee, vanished from a cabinet on stage. Demands
for her immediate return had meant that the conjuror had been forced to reveal his
secrets. And then leave the magic circle in shame a week later.
Fred
squeezed his massive girth through the doorway. “There’ll be a kettle somewhere
in this ill-oooshun, Nobby. Fancy a cuppa?”
While
his sergeant hunted the equipment, Nobby inspected a large hexagonal table in
the centre of the room. From it, a lighted column rose almost to the ceiling.
“I’m
stumped, Nobby,” Fred said eventually. “Can’t find a kettle anywhere.”
“What’s
the point of havin’ all this fancy stuff then, sarge? All these knobs and lights
and things?” Nobby waved a hand over the console. “What good are these to a
copper when he wants a decent cup of tea?”
“Per’aps
there’s an instruction manual, Nobby. We’ve jus’ got to…”
“Hullo?
Hullo? Is someone there?” A flat square, suspended above the table, suddenly
lit up with the image of a long-faced young man. “Oh good-o! You got in!”
Fred
and Nobby froze.
The
young man frowned. “Good Lord! Where in the universe did the Tardis take
herself off to?” His face enlarged in the square until only a single eye was
visible, hugely magnified. “I’ve seen some species in my time, but you’re a new
one on me. What are you?”
Nobby,
realising he was the object of the eye’s attention, pulled off the smartest
salute he could muster. “Corporal Nobby Nobbs of the Ankh-Morpork Watch, sir!
Certified human, sir!”
"Human.
Are you sure?” The eye shrank back to normal size as the rest of the face
reappeared. “If you say so…I wonder… can you do me a favour? I’m in a spot of
trouble.”
Nobby
pulled off another salute, so sharp, he nearly cut himself. “Trouble’s what
we’re good at. Ain’t that right, sarge?”
“Er…yeah,
but…” Fred visibly expanded with self-importance and puffed his chest out. It
almost achieved the same girth as his stomach. “We need to know who we’re
dealing with first.”
“Oh
– you mean me? Well, I’m The Doctor.”
“One
of Doctor Lawn’s doctors? From the Lady Sybil?”
“Lady
Syb-? No, no, no. I’m The Doctor. The Doctor.” The face beamed down at the
bemused coppers. “But I’m on holiday at the moment, so I’m not doctoring.
Problem is, the Tardis decided she didn’t want a vacation. She upped and offed
without me. I can’t bring her back from here, so I need someone to do it for
me. Looks like it’ll have to be you.”
A
look was exchanged between the coppers. A look that passed judgement on the
young man’s mental acuity and found it wanting.
Fred
cleared his throat. “This…Tardis. Can you give me a description of the lady,
sir?”
“She’s
no lady! Well, not in the way I think you mean, though I suppose she is normally
perfectly well behaved… You’re inside her, man! She’s my ship.”
“Ship?”
Fred stared at face beaming at him from the screen. “But there are no sails.”
“She
doesn’t need them. All you have to do is twiddle a few dials and flick a few
switches and she’ll end up here with me. Well, you will if she’ll let you,” the
Doctor added in an undertone.
Nobby
tugged Fred’s sleeve. “I’m not so sure about this, sarge," he whispered.
"I reckon he’s a bit…” The corporal’s finger twirled next to his temple.
“Let’s
find out,” Fred whispered back. Straightening his helmet, he addressed the
screen in his best sergeant’s voice. “Of course we’ll bring the Tardis to you.”
The
Doctor flicked his hair out of his eyes, grinned and slapped a peculiar red hat
with a tassel onto his head. “Right – here’s what you do…”
*
Foul Ole Ron had seen and heard many
things in his time, but the strange thrumming noise was a new one on him. It
seemed to be coming from the blue box standing at the end of the street. As he watched,
the lamp on the roof started to flash and the box faded in and out of his
vision until it disappeared completely.
“Buggrit!
Millenium hand and shrimp, I told ’em,” Ron muttered.
*
“And here you are!” The Doctor’s face
had disappeared from the screen, appearing instead at the open door of the
Tardis. He leapt inside and ran straight to where Nobby had just released the
particle gravitator lever and Fred was winding down the distance dial. “Oh, you
beauties! You’ve brought her back to me!” He spun round, pausing as the lights
dimmed. “Now then, I know you were sulking, but I needed a holiday.”
To
the watchmen, he appeared to be addressing thin air.
“I
think you’ll like it here, I really do,” the young man continued, patting the
console. “Sand, sea and sun…just what the Doctor ordered.” He grinned as the
lights brightened again. “That’s my girl. Now – where are my helpers?”
A
green light shone in Nobby’s face; the Doctor was pointing a long thin cylinder
at him. “Hmm. Definitely human.” The green light vanished and the object
that made it disappeared back into the pocket from whence it came.
“Now…gentlemen. Care to join me on the beach?” The Doctor almost danced through
the door.
As
soon as Fred stepped outside, his feet sank into golden sand and sweat broke
out on his forehead from the sun which beat down on his helmet. Stretching out
in front of him was an endless expanse of clear blue sky which met a curve –
definitely a curve - of turquoise water. He looked at Nobby, who was grinning
like a monkey. “Where are we? Quirm? How did we get to Quirm?”
“Quirm?
Never heard of it.” The Doctor whipped off his hat. “We’re in Sardinia !”
He kicked off his shoes and began to roll his trouser legs up. “Last one in’s
a…”
Whatever
the last one was going to be, they never found out.
“Sarge
– look!”
Fred
glanced in the direction of the corporal’s pointing finger. “Good gods,” he
muttered weakly.
To
be fair, he’d seen Mrs Colon without her stockings on once or twice. He’d also
witnessed the young ladies in their working clothes at the Pink Pussycat Club,
though he’d spent most of the visit trying not to look. But the ladies
here…well. Fred had never seen quite so much of the opposite sex before.
“I’m
goin’ in for a dip, sarge. You coming?” Nobby – who’d divested himself of his uniform
and was now dressed only in his unmentionables – sprinted towards the water.
There was a splash and the corporal disappeared.
Fred
took a deep breath.
“Corporal
Nobbs!” he bellowed as soon as Nobby resurfaced, glistening and grinning. “You
are an officer of the Ankh-Morpork Watch and
still on duty, wherever we are! Get your uniform back on this instant!”
“Aw,
sarge…”
“We
can’t be ’aving a holiday, Nobby.” Fred frowned “Ankh-Morpork needs us. We’ve
got the Doctor his box back and we ought to be getting home.”
“You
don’t have to, you know.” The Doctor looked up from the sandcastle he was
making. “You can spend as long as you like here, then I’ll take you back and
no-one will even know you’ve been gone.” He turned his attention back to the bright
yellow bucket he’d packed with sand, upended it and proceeded to smack it with
a small blue spade. “By the way, I never asked – which planet do you come from?”
“Planet?
Discworld o’ course,” Fred said. “Where did you think we were from?”
“Weeell,
I did wonder if you were from the Dungeon Dimensions when I saw your friend.
But Discworld…isn’t that the one on the back of the giant turtle and the
elephants? Think I visited a few aeons ago. Nice place. You’re on Earth at the
moment.”
“But
how…”
“The
Tardis is a clever old girl – travels in space and time.” The Doctor gave the
bucket a twist and lifted it away, revealing a compact mound of sand. Then he
stuck a small green flag in the top of it and looked up at the sergeant. “Kick
your sandals off and feel the sand between your toes for a bit. It’ll be
alright.”
*
Foul Ole Ron had just reached the
corner of the street when the thrumming sound began again. Glancing over his
shoulder, he saw the blue box fade in and out before reappearing, more solidly
it seemed, than before. A door opened in its side and two members of the Watch
stepped out.
“Buggrit,”
Ron muttered darkly and hurried off to catch up with his Smell.
*
The Doctor was grinning at the watchmen
from the door.
“There
you go! Back where and when you started from, give or take a couple of minutes,
after a lovely day at the seaside. Thanks again for getting me out of a pickle
– it’s good to be back with the Tardis. Isn’t it, old girl?” He patted the door
affectionately. “Right! Must be off. Daleks to sort out and fishfingers to
fry!”
When
the thrumming stopped, silence fell. There was nothing to show the box had ever
stood on the cobbles.
“Did
we just dream all that, Nobby?” Fred asked slowly.
“Dunno.
S’pose we could have. But if we dreamt it, your nose wouldn’t be sunburnt and I
wouldn’t ’ave sand in my unmentionables.”
"What
the wizards wouldn’t give for that box,” Fred said thoughtfully. “I reckon it
was a good job it was us what found it, Nobby, or else-”
A
heavy rumbling drowned out the rest of his words. Rolling down the street on
the back of a cart was a blue box, accompanied by the shining Captain Carrot
and the lumbering form of Corporal Detritus.
“You’re
here already? Good. Keen to try out your Watch box, Fred?” Carrot said, jumping
down. “Let’s get it down and you can try it out for size.”
Five
minutes later, Detritus had troll-handled the box to its final resting place
and Carrot dropped the keys into Fred’s sweaty palm.
“Open
it up, then.”
Sergeant
Colon couldn’t get rid of the keys quick enough. “You do it, Nobby.”
“Fair
bit smaller than the other one, sarge. Def’nately a kettle inside. No knobs or
levers. And no Doctor.”
“What
‘other one’? And why would you need a doctor, Nobby?” Carrot said.
“Er…sarge…not
sure you’re goin’ to fit in ’ere…it’s a bit tight even for me.”
*
The Patrician waved
a copy of the Ankh-Morpork Times at Vimes, who was trying very hard to suppress
his feelings.
“And
Mr de Worde just happened to walk along at the precise moment that Sergeant
Colon got stuck in the door of the Watch box?”
“He
was taking a constitutional, I believe.”
There
was the hint of a raised eyebrow from the Patrician. “Indeed. Along with Mr
Chriek the iconographer, and a notebook. I suppose that to build the boxes
large enough to accommodate the sergeant or any of our trollish Watch members
would be a waste of civic monies and take up too much room on the streets?”
“I’ve
heard discussions to that effect, sir. Be much cheaper to keep sending them to
the Drum. Sir.” The grin was much too close to the surface now – it was
threatening to break free.
The
newspaper slapped onto the desk. “Very well. Do away with the boxes then, and
keep your watchmen moving, Commander. In the interests of law-abiding citizens
throughout the city.”
“Thank
you, sir.” Vimes turned and marched towards the door. As he reached for the
handle, the Patrician called out to him.
“Oh
– and Commander? If ever a police box appears on the streets of the city again
– do make sure to send The Doctor my best wishes.”
Tuesday, 27 January 2015
Blurbing
When I walk into a bookshop to browse, the first thing that catches my eye is probably the cover. Something about the artwork draws me in, makes me want to pick up the book and take a closer look.
The next thing I do is check the blurb.
Blurb is crucial. Those words on the back cover? They give me, the potential reader, a taste of what is sandwiched inside that rather attractive cover - and if it's interesting and appealing enough, I might check out the first couple of pages and who knows? I might even buy the book...
StarMark's going to need a blurb.
There's loads of advice on writing blurbs. The main advice seems to be 'keep it short, make it interesting, and pack a punch.' Others suggest including a hint of the plot, the main characters, words that evoke the genre, an idea of setting, a question to suggest mystery, a strong theme if the book contains one, and even something about the author or what other people think of the book...
Trying to include all of that sounds harder than writing the flippin' book! How do you condense the essence of your story into around 150 words? Where do you even start?
So I took a look at the blurbs from some books I have on my shelf.
I'm not sure that in Dickens' day, there would have been a blurb on the book cover - I imagine all books at that time to be leather bound and gilt-edged, without the need for anything other than a title. However, a Puffin Classic copy of A Christmas Carol says this:
Go on a ghostly journey with Ebeneezer Scrooge... Scrooge is a mean old man with no friends or family to love him - he's just so miserable and bitter! One freezing cold Christmas Eve, Marley's Ghost pays Scrooge a visit and an eerie night-time journey begins. The Christmas spirits are here to show Scrooge the error of his nasty ways. By visiting his past, present and future, will Scrooge learn to love Christmas and the others around him?
OK, so we have character (Scrooge) who's not very nice, we know it's a ghost story which happens at Christmas, and Scrooge has a lesson to learn from the encounters. Sets the scene and leaves the reader with a question...Nice. (Although I probably would have changed the first sentence to read less...teenagery.)
Sir Terry Pratchett is my favourite author, so I don't always read his blurbs - I'd buy the books, regardless. But here's what's on the back of my copy of The Colour of Magic:
On a world supported on the back of a giant turtle (sex unknown), a gleeful, explosive, wickedly eccentric expedition sets out. There's an avaricious but inept wizard, a naive tourist whose luggage moves on hundreds of dear little legs, dragons who only exist if you believe in them, and of course THE EDGE of the planet...
Hmmm. Setting, characters, a hint of fun - and literally leaves you hanging on THE EDGE. There's a pattern emerging.
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone:
Harry Potter thinks he is an ordinary boy - until he is rescued by a beetle-eyed giant of a man, enrols at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, learns to play Quidditch and does battle in a deadly duel. The Reason: HARRY POTTER IS A WIZARD!
Now that one's actually very clever. See the word 'thinks'? And 'rescued'? Completely undermines the use of the word 'ordinary'. Regarding character, only Harry is mentioned, though it hints at Hagrid. There's no mention of Dumbledore or Ron or Hermione, who are pretty major players - nor even He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named...
And my own Granny Rainbow:
Granny Rainbow has a knack for solving problems. Whether it's getting rid of the Black Shadow, improving a violinist's performance, helping to mend a quarrel or putting the secret ingredient into perfect marmalade, she has a potion or a powder for the job. Step into a world of colour with these illustrated short stories about a very special lady.
You know who the main character is, what she does, and that there are pictures. I reckon that's not bad, even if I do say so myself.
I only took a small sample of blurbs, but it was enough to get me started on a blurb for StarMark. I had something left over from the agented days, when the book first went out to UK publishers, but it felt very explain-y, and too long for a back cover. So I tried to write something a bit more question-y, to hook the reader in. I'm not sure that it hits the spot exactly - and the team at Bedazzled Ink will do a much better job of writing the finished copy - but it's a start:
Imagine your future, written on your skin.
The StarMark; black on the skin at birth, which changes to gold when it's your turn to be in charge.
But what happens when you don't know it's there - and someone else discovers it before you do? Especially when that someone will do anything in their power to stop you from fulfilling your destiny?
Irvana is about to find out...
So be honest - would that blurb make you want to read StarMark? And if not, what else would you want to know?
The next thing I do is check the blurb.
Blurb is crucial. Those words on the back cover? They give me, the potential reader, a taste of what is sandwiched inside that rather attractive cover - and if it's interesting and appealing enough, I might check out the first couple of pages and who knows? I might even buy the book...
StarMark's going to need a blurb.
There's loads of advice on writing blurbs. The main advice seems to be 'keep it short, make it interesting, and pack a punch.' Others suggest including a hint of the plot, the main characters, words that evoke the genre, an idea of setting, a question to suggest mystery, a strong theme if the book contains one, and even something about the author or what other people think of the book...
Trying to include all of that sounds harder than writing the flippin' book! How do you condense the essence of your story into around 150 words? Where do you even start?
So I took a look at the blurbs from some books I have on my shelf.
I'm not sure that in Dickens' day, there would have been a blurb on the book cover - I imagine all books at that time to be leather bound and gilt-edged, without the need for anything other than a title. However, a Puffin Classic copy of A Christmas Carol says this:
Go on a ghostly journey with Ebeneezer Scrooge... Scrooge is a mean old man with no friends or family to love him - he's just so miserable and bitter! One freezing cold Christmas Eve, Marley's Ghost pays Scrooge a visit and an eerie night-time journey begins. The Christmas spirits are here to show Scrooge the error of his nasty ways. By visiting his past, present and future, will Scrooge learn to love Christmas and the others around him?
OK, so we have character (Scrooge) who's not very nice, we know it's a ghost story which happens at Christmas, and Scrooge has a lesson to learn from the encounters. Sets the scene and leaves the reader with a question...Nice. (Although I probably would have changed the first sentence to read less...teenagery.)
Sir Terry Pratchett is my favourite author, so I don't always read his blurbs - I'd buy the books, regardless. But here's what's on the back of my copy of The Colour of Magic:
On a world supported on the back of a giant turtle (sex unknown), a gleeful, explosive, wickedly eccentric expedition sets out. There's an avaricious but inept wizard, a naive tourist whose luggage moves on hundreds of dear little legs, dragons who only exist if you believe in them, and of course THE EDGE of the planet...
Hmmm. Setting, characters, a hint of fun - and literally leaves you hanging on THE EDGE. There's a pattern emerging.
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone:
Harry Potter thinks he is an ordinary boy - until he is rescued by a beetle-eyed giant of a man, enrols at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, learns to play Quidditch and does battle in a deadly duel. The Reason: HARRY POTTER IS A WIZARD!
Now that one's actually very clever. See the word 'thinks'? And 'rescued'? Completely undermines the use of the word 'ordinary'. Regarding character, only Harry is mentioned, though it hints at Hagrid. There's no mention of Dumbledore or Ron or Hermione, who are pretty major players - nor even He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named...
And my own Granny Rainbow:
Granny Rainbow has a knack for solving problems. Whether it's getting rid of the Black Shadow, improving a violinist's performance, helping to mend a quarrel or putting the secret ingredient into perfect marmalade, she has a potion or a powder for the job. Step into a world of colour with these illustrated short stories about a very special lady.
You know who the main character is, what she does, and that there are pictures. I reckon that's not bad, even if I do say so myself.
I only took a small sample of blurbs, but it was enough to get me started on a blurb for StarMark. I had something left over from the agented days, when the book first went out to UK publishers, but it felt very explain-y, and too long for a back cover. So I tried to write something a bit more question-y, to hook the reader in. I'm not sure that it hits the spot exactly - and the team at Bedazzled Ink will do a much better job of writing the finished copy - but it's a start:
Imagine your future, written on your skin.
The StarMark; black on the skin at birth, which changes to gold when it's your turn to be in charge.
But what happens when you don't know it's there - and someone else discovers it before you do? Especially when that someone will do anything in their power to stop you from fulfilling your destiny?
Irvana is about to find out...
So be honest - would that blurb make you want to read StarMark? And if not, what else would you want to know?
Monday, 16 December 2013
Dear Santa...
Dear Santa,
I've been very, very good this year. Please can you bring me a couple of books to get stuck into in the New Year?
1. Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett.
I'm a big Discworld fan. My ultimate aim is to have all the Discworld novels on my shelf at some point; I think there's only a couple of the Tiffany Aching stories and Eric and I'm there. I am in awe of Sir Terry's ability to create such a believable world. I've learnt a lot about characterisation and economy of words through reading Mr. Pratchett.
2. That Close by Suggs.
I don't usually go for autobiographies. I've often been disappointed by the content when I have picked one up, and I'm not really into 'celeb' culture. But every now and again, I will have another go with someone I admire. Such is the case with Suggs.
I grew up with Madness. Heck, I still buy their CD's now (and damn good they are too!). Suggs as a person looks to be a fascinating character, and a sneaky peek into the book when I popped into Waterstones last week indicated that the book is filled not only with his story but with his unique poetical lyrics and pictures drawn by the man himself.
They're a bit too big to fit in my stocking, Santa, but if you can slip them under the tree, that'd be just as good...
Thanks,
Katherine x
Go on then - what books are you going to ask Santa for this year?
I've been very, very good this year. Please can you bring me a couple of books to get stuck into in the New Year?
1. Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett.
I'm a big Discworld fan. My ultimate aim is to have all the Discworld novels on my shelf at some point; I think there's only a couple of the Tiffany Aching stories and Eric and I'm there. I am in awe of Sir Terry's ability to create such a believable world. I've learnt a lot about characterisation and economy of words through reading Mr. Pratchett.
2. That Close by Suggs.
I don't usually go for autobiographies. I've often been disappointed by the content when I have picked one up, and I'm not really into 'celeb' culture. But every now and again, I will have another go with someone I admire. Such is the case with Suggs.
I grew up with Madness. Heck, I still buy their CD's now (and damn good they are too!). Suggs as a person looks to be a fascinating character, and a sneaky peek into the book when I popped into Waterstones last week indicated that the book is filled not only with his story but with his unique poetical lyrics and pictures drawn by the man himself.
They're a bit too big to fit in my stocking, Santa, but if you can slip them under the tree, that'd be just as good...
Thanks,
Katherine x
Go on then - what books are you going to ask Santa for this year?
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
The Forgotten Library.
Right - I ought to explain the reason behind this blog post.
I follow terrible minds, the blog by Chuck Wendig. Every now and again, he sets a writing challenge for his readers - this is the first one I've had a go at. You can check out how the challenge works here.
So, welcome, fellow terrible minders - hope you enjoy my offering and feel free to have a look round while you're here! (If you like what you're reading, you can even challenge me...check out this post.)
The Forgotten Library.
I follow terrible minds, the blog by Chuck Wendig. Every now and again, he sets a writing challenge for his readers - this is the first one I've had a go at. You can check out how the challenge works here.
So, welcome, fellow terrible minders - hope you enjoy my offering and feel free to have a look round while you're here! (If you like what you're reading, you can even challenge me...check out this post.)
The Forgotten Library.
I don’t know why I kept having this urge to keep going to
the Old City .
‘It’s dangerous,’ they said.
‘There’s nothing there,’ they said.
‘The hive mind has declared it unnecessary,’ they said.
The hive mind. Yeah.
Perhaps part of the attraction was because I was only weeks
away from being initiated into it? I was rebelling against the restrictions
that were soon to be placed upon me.
‘It’s perfectly natural,’ Maira told me. ‘We all go through
it. Prior to initiation we are so used to thinking for ourselves, we imagine it
hard to give up that independence of thought.’
‘Is it? Hard?’ I asked.
She smiled. ‘Of course not.’
Even so, I made the most of the weeks left to me. I explored
the shells of houses, wondered at the simplicity of engineering in the rusted
vehicles, imagined what it must have been like to live – in those times.
I discovered the library one day when it rained; I only went
in so I could eat my lunch and stay dry.
I noticed the twisted columns first, flanking a door which
hung loose from its hinges. The roof still looked fairly intact so I risked it,
pushing my way through the gap. Inside, it wasn’t as dry as I’d hoped; a glass
dome in the ceiling had partially collapsed, rain staining the marble floor
beneath it. But from both sides of the room, a sweeping staircase ascended to a
balcony; it’d be dry under there. I dropped into its shelter, shrugging off my
damp leathers. When I looked up, my breath froze in my chest.
Books!
How had the hive missed them?
‘All relevant information was aquired after The Resolution
and absorbed by the hive. Physical books were destroyed as there was no
requirement to assimilate knowledge on an individual basis.’ I could almost hear
Draib’s voice in my ear – the lesson had been drummed into us in preparation
for the initiation.
But right here, right now, I still had my brain to myself. I
crept towards the nearest shelf. I’d seen paper of course, but in the relic
rooms. I’d never held a single sheet, let alone a whole book; there were thousands here. Had it been a public
library? A space where knowledge had been freely available to anyone who walked
in? Or was it a private collection?
I ran my finger along the wooden shelf, not daring to touch the books,
pausing by a faded spine which caught my eye. Thank the hive for lessons in the
Ancient Language. ‘The C..l..or o.. M…gic, Terr..Pra..ett.’ Had the words
inside fared better?
Trembling, I pulled the paperback from the shelf, dislodging
dust and dead flies. I felt the weight of it in my hand and stared, entranced,
at the colour and wild images on the intact cover.
‘The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett.’ My voice was loud
in the rain-soaked silence. ‘In a distant and second-hand set of dimensions, in
an astral plane that was never meant to fly, the curling star-mists waver and
part… See… Great A’Tuin the Turtle comes…’
It was only when I heard the dogs barking that I realised
how late it was getting. The book had been like a drug, compelling me to keep
reading. Is this what it had been like? Before the hive? How was it possible
for words to create images in my head, make my heart pound, make me laugh out
loud? I stuffed the book back on the shelf and began to run, hoping to make it home
before curfew.
I went back as often as I could, devouring those pages
that remained legible within their covers, losing myself in mythical worlds and
fairytales and horror and history. And I started to write…strange tales that
were not as polished as those I read, but which sought to be free of my mind. I
filled notebooks with scribbles and ideas, revelling in them all, yet strangely
angry that I would lose this newly awakened ability at my initiation.
On the day of the initiation, I tucked that first book – The
Colour of Magic - into my shirt. I would keep it with me throughout the
procedure, hoping that its physical presence would soften the blow of losing it
all.
Maira strapped me in, waiting as I sank into the soft gel
seat and the first tendril snaked down from the pulsing blue mass above my
head, questing, looking for my nose. I stiffened at the tickle in my nasal
cavity, swiftly followed by the thrust of the tentacle breaking into my brain. I
pressed a hand to my chest – to where the book was concealed – and closed my
eyes.
An image of Great A’Tuin filled my head. A weight pressed
down in my brain, suppressing it, until it disappeared like smoke on a windy
day.
Another image: a wooden trunk on legs, running, always
running. Followed quickly by a failed wizard…dragons…a skeleton in a black
cloak with eyes like blue diamonds… Every time a new image rose up, the weight
in my brain tried to press it down…
But there were too many pictures.
Instead of the weight, from elsewhere I felt…curiosity? Inquisitive others, seeking more of what I
was viewing inside my brain, images that could not exist in mere fact.
The pictures began to merge, a collage of characters and
scenes and emotions. With a herculean effort the hive pushed the
tentacle further and harder, but I fought it.
My eyes shot open as I realised other minds connected to it were
fighting too.
Above me, the hive was seeping green-blue fluid from a
million puncture wounds, shrivelling even as I watched. The tendril inside my
head retracted so fast, it felt like it dragged half my brain
with it.
With a scream of pain...fury...despair…the blue-green mass
exploded.
‘Where are the books?’ Maira whispered into the stunned
silence.
Tried to find the artist's name to credit this, but no success.
Hope you don't mind that I used this picture as inspiration for the story. Katherine
Monday, 1 July 2013
Tea with Sir Terry.
If I could pick just one writer to have tea with, it'd be Sir Terry Pratchett. I'm a big fan of his - especially of the Discworld novels.
There's something about his alternative universe that never fails to grab me - whether it's the humour, the larger-than-life characters, the poignancy of certain scenes, or the reinterpretation of modern life into something a little more medieval and magical which remains utterly believable. In fact, it's Sir Terry's ability to take the everyday and twist it that inspired my own story, Follow the Yellow Sick Toad; it was a deliberate attempt at 'Pratchettesque'. (If ever you read it, you'll have to let me know whether I succeeded; it's definitely not in Sir Terry's league, but I do know it raised a few laughs from some readers.)
Over a cup of Earl Grey and a toasted crumpet or two, I'd ask Sir Terry where he finds inspiration for his characters, and once they're born, how on earth does he keep track of them all? Could Ankh-Morpork host a Discworld Olympics to rival London 2012? Will Nanny Ogg make another fortune from her cookbook? And could Lord Vetinari ever be outwitted?
But that's me and Sir Terry - if you could have tea with any writer, living or dead, who would it be and what would you ask them?
There's something about his alternative universe that never fails to grab me - whether it's the humour, the larger-than-life characters, the poignancy of certain scenes, or the reinterpretation of modern life into something a little more medieval and magical which remains utterly believable. In fact, it's Sir Terry's ability to take the everyday and twist it that inspired my own story, Follow the Yellow Sick Toad; it was a deliberate attempt at 'Pratchettesque'. (If ever you read it, you'll have to let me know whether I succeeded; it's definitely not in Sir Terry's league, but I do know it raised a few laughs from some readers.)
Over a cup of Earl Grey and a toasted crumpet or two, I'd ask Sir Terry where he finds inspiration for his characters, and once they're born, how on earth does he keep track of them all? Could Ankh-Morpork host a Discworld Olympics to rival London 2012? Will Nanny Ogg make another fortune from her cookbook? And could Lord Vetinari ever be outwitted?
But that's me and Sir Terry - if you could have tea with any writer, living or dead, who would it be and what would you ask them?
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