Tuesday, 26 August 2025

A Writer’s Holiday

 


I’m off on holiday again soon and we’re going back to the place that really got me writing and in fact writing for children.

But can a writer’s holiday be a bit like a busman’s holiday?

I’m pretty well living the dream now.  Okay, so I’m not rich and famous but nor am I necessarily sure I want to be either of those things. However I have a life style that allows me to spend my time writing and I feel justified in that because some of my work is accepted and occasionally admired. Yes, the rejections are hard, but I do remind myself that I’m doing better than Van Gogh; he only sold one painting in his life time.

So do I need a holiday?

I still write or edit and polish pretty well every day on holiday though probably for less time that I would normally. I often find that bigger ideas come to me whilst I’m away. And sometimes new ones.

I do put the marketing and submitting on hold but keep social media ticking over. That makes it feel more like a holiday.

I know some writers who use ‘holiday’ time for research. They go and visit historic houses, take interesting journeys or try to live some of the life that their characters enjoy or endure.

‘What else would I do?’ asks one writing friend.  ‘I can’t just go and lie on a beach.’

Actually it was lying on a beach, people-watching, seeing some freak weather and visiting some magical caves that spurred on my writing.

Pretty soon, when I’ve finished both Schellberg 7 and Peace Child 7 I’ll be taking a trip to a National Trust property. I’m planning a trilogy set in Birmingham in the early 20th century. It will be based roughly on my maternal grandmother’s life. So I’ll be vising the back-to-backs in Birmingham.  

I’ll also have to find our more about the jewellery quarter.

I’m still keen to follow in Clara’s footsteps: the Schellberg cycle, Clara’s Story. I want to visit Mecklenburg, Berlin, Jena, Stuttgart, Rexingen, Theresienstadt and Treblinka, preferably going all the way by train. Does that count as a holiday? Probably not.  A trip more like? Or even a pilgrimage.  

And I also want to spend a few days in Munich to help with research for Schellberg 7.

What’s a holiday, actually?     

    

Thursday, 14 August 2025

Gift and Craft Fairs

 


So, I’m attending a Gift and Craft Fair on Sunday 30 August. See image for details. I’ve gradually started visiting a few of these occasions and I’m quite enjoying them, even though I don’t sell a lot of books. Much of the aim it to raise awareness of what we do and of course that includes talking about my own books.

I’m gradually buying a few bits and pieces to make it all run more smoothly. For example, I have bought pull-up table-top banners inviting people to sign up for our newsletter about new publications or to volunteer to review a book.

I’ve bought some book stands – books look so much more inviting if they can be seen standing up than if they’re flat on a table.

Next I’ll get a table covering made.  Currently I’m using a rather large orange tablecloth we have.  It does go with the turquoise banners.

On the day I’m offering a free book to anyone who signs up for our mailing list or newsletter. Normally anyone who signs up online gets a few freebies, delivered electronically and if you volunteer to review you’ll get a PDF and a Kindle file.

I’m keeping the pricing structure simple:

1 book £6.00

2 books £10.00

3 Books £14.00

4 books £15

And if you buy one book you get a bookmark, two books a pen, three books a keyring and four books a tote back, while stocks last. I buy these promotional items from time to time.

I’ve taken to buying five copes of each new publication to take to these fairs and after a fair is done, I’ll buy five copies of a backlist book.

We publish fourteen different types of books and so I take along three of each.

If the fair is near you and you have a writing project you might like to discuss, come along and have a chat.

See you on 30 August?      



 

Wednesday, 13 August 2025

Matthew Roy Davey talks to me about his recently published collection of flash fiction

 


 
              What attracted you to write flash fiction in the first place?
I think it was probably when I was living in Japan and reading a lot of Japanese literature, which is often very pared back. The enigma and economy of the zen koans particularly intrigued. Subsequently I enjoyed the short works of Franz Kafka and Richard Brautigan’s The Revenge of the Lawn. I’m drawn to the no-nonsense approach of flash fiction, the need to cut out any extraneous information, to get in, give the most important information, and then get out. It doesn’t waste the reader’s time but it makes them have to work. I was writing flash fiction before I’d heard of the term.
How did you go about putting this collection together?
I started writing autobiographical pieces – memories in flash – in a file that I titled ‘My Humiliations’ – this was before Knausgard published ‘My Struggle’. I was also writing stories which had nothing in common, other than their brevity. Due to reasons of probity, taste and quality – concepts usually alien to me - I realised that many of the stories were best left unpublished, and this left me with two truncated collections, and so I decided to bring them together. However, without any unifying theme it was a bit of a dog’s breakfast… Then I landed on an ingenious marketing concept, which was to create a library of flash fiction. This would allow the different stories to sit alongside one another as though on the shelves of a public library, each in their own section. In a time when physical libraries are being closed, I thought it no bad thing to introduce a new one. I dare say it will be similarly neglected!
Do you have any particular favourites?
I’m a poor judge of my own writing. Stories that have failed to find a publisher are often my favourites, and ones that get the best reaction are often ones I think less of. Within this collection I have particular soft spots for: Glospak, The Quarry, The Wringer, and Light From Above
What else do you write?
I write longer short stories and novels. I’ve self-published a couple of YA novels – Into the Water, Into the Flame, and Other Voices which can be found on Amazon. I used to write poetry but that seems to have dried up. I am also the sometime lyricist of rock group Schnauser, whose tunes can be found on Spotify and Bandcamp.
Do you have a writing routine?
I write as much as possible. The more I write the better I feel, which is the inverse of what my reader experiences, hence the flash fiction. The drafting process, which takes at least 5 times as long as the writing, is the real drag of it. I am in a drafting cycle at present and not having much fun. I find that when I write it is an unstoppable urge, like a coil or a spring - having been wound and tightened - being released. I am still tightening at present.
Can you recommend any other writers of flash fiction?
I can’t think of any. Stories have an impact on me, rather than authors. The ‘big names’ in flash fiction that I’ve read have left me rather cold. As I often find with feted novels, I can’t see what the fuss is about. Maybe I’m missing something.
Are you working on any more projects at the moment?
I have another collection of flash fictions that is nearing completion – one that has a very definite unifying theme, unlike Shhh. I also have another collection based on my experiences in the Czech Republic, but that is a long way off completion. I am also redrafting a novel - Always Burning, Always True – which deals with the aftermath of a young man’s psychological breakdown and his father’s attempts to help. I tried to write it as a comedy, but no one found it funny.
Do you have any events planned?
      I will probably organise a book launch, though the thought of being the centre of attention, even         if it is for a very small group of people, is a source of grave discomfort.
 

Find your copy of the book here  


Monday, 11 August 2025

Amita Basu talks to me about her recently published collection 'At Play and Other Stories'

 


Summer, 1999. Twelve-year-old Pragya spends her summer holiday with relatives in Calcutta, a muggy city stranded in the last century. Pragya can’t wait to grow up. But she struggles to choose a vocation. Bored by her gossipy relatives, Pragya befriends Maya the maidservant. Maya, fresh from the countryside, is devoted to her family, but harbours dreams of her own. Pragya and Maya rebel against gender and class constraints and bond over their ambitions. Soon, the two girls are ready to run away together and try life on their own terms.

“At Play” is the title story of this collection.

 


What made you select these particular stories for this collection?

AB: This is my first collection. I simply chose the best among the stories I had available. I’ve been writing short fiction for a few years.

I aimed for variety in theme, setting, and character. The collection’s unifying theme is broad: the experiences of women and girls (and the occasional nonhuman female) in contemporary India. The stories have women grappling with family and friendship, miscarriages and runaway children, love and sex, work and ambition, physical and mental illness, coming of age and aging, and the struggle to make a living.

 


How did you decide on the order for these stories?

AB: Just as, for the collection as a whole, I aimed for variety, so, in terms of sequencing these pieces, I aimed for contrast. I alternated longer pieces with shorter ones, darker with lighter.

 


What enticed you to write short stories in the first place?

AB: Getting stuck as a novelist! I spent my teens and twenties working on one epic, unfinished novel after another. I longed to have finished works to put out into the world. So I began writing short fiction in 2019. I’ve published in about 90 magazines so far.

I hadn’t ready very much short fiction before then; now, a good short story collection rivals a novel for my attention as a reader. My favourite of the short fiction writers I’ve discovered are Alice Munro, Raymond Carver, Anton Chekhov, Deborah Eisenberg, and Lydia Davis.

 


What is more important to you, characters, setting, or plot?

AB: This has changed over time. In my teens, I used to love reading and writing description. Now, I prefer to focus on the story, setting the scene just enough so that the reader can picture what’s going on. In some stories, the setting gets more of the limelight. This is true in “Holiday,” where the characters take a trip to Nepal. This is their first trip abroad. And the mountainous setting causes nausea, which affects the characters’ judgment. So there I give the setting more space.

That said, I love stories that transport me. So I’m aiming now, in most stories, to replace tracts of description with a few precise, vivid details to create immersion.

In literary fiction, character drives plot, and plot reveals character. I have little innate gift for plot; it’s taken me a long while to stumble into an understanding of this precept in mechanical terms. George Saunders identifies causality as perhaps the most important element in a good story. He also discusses pattern variation and escalation in his excellent book, A Swim in a Pond in the Rain, which my friend Anna Mandelbaum recommended to me. Creating a causal chain of events – with, say, two characters locked in an escalating rivalry – is the simple but powerful backbone of a good story. I think it’s rare, though: I can count on one hand the films, for instance, that build a long and solid causal chain. (The Dark Knight does this; so does HBO’s Rome series.)

Most successful short stories tell two stories in one. This layering is something I first structurally identified in Alice Munro’s novelette “Vandals.” This story is structured in two rings, which are both chained and concentric. The outer ring of the story, introduced first, is: a young woman takes her boyfriend to an old friend’s house and trashes it. So you wonder what’s gone wrong with this young woman. Then the story introduces the inner ring: you realise the answer lies in the young woman’s childhood experiences with her old friend and the latter’s boyfriend.

I first used this structure for my speculative/climate fiction short story, “Peace.” In the story’s outer ring, you wonder whether the protagonist will survive the storm. In the inner ring, you realise he doesn’t want to survive. So then you wonder if he will regain his will to live and his connection to humanity. The conflicts in both rings are resolved in the end.

Structure is something I’ve always struggled with. Again, I recommend Saunders’s book on writing and reading for anyone who shares my struggles. I’m also studying Carver’s work. When I read a story of his, I’m always satisfied, but I often struggle to articulate what exactly the story was, the connection between the characters or the events. He eschews conventional plot structures. To me this means his story logic is strong but subtle: the story’s flesh has hidden its bones well.

 


Are you a planner or a panster? Can you tell us a little about that process?

AB: This, too, has varied over time. As a failed novelist, I’d produce extensive drafts and then try to structure them.

When I began writing short fiction, I was a planner. I wrote increasingly extensive outlines as well as summaries of plot, story, and theme. The extensive outlines led to overlong stories: stories where the causal chain was roundabout or muddied. Also, of course, an overly extensive outline forestalls the joy of discovering as you draft.

Currently, I wait to start drafting a story until I have a fair idea of what a story is about, and where it will begin and end. Ideally, I’d take the shortest causal route from start to finish – but a route that was also surprising and novel. So, I suppose, I’m currently a semi-planner, semi-pantser.

 


What else do you write?

AB: I recently resumed writing poetry after a 20-year-gap. In secondary school I read the Romantic and Elizabethan poets and emulated their styles. Currently, I don’t read poetry, so I don’t know whether and how I’ll keep writing it. I’ve been writing straightforward narrative poems that address similar topics as my short stories. I’ve always wanted to write humour, so I’m trying that in my poetry.

I’ve got several novellas and novels in various stages of drafting or revision. I’ll go back and finish drafting my climate fiction novel in 2026. Climate fiction is a genre I’ve explored with some short stuff. I have several pieces of short climate fiction and speculative fiction in draft or revision. At some point I’ll put aim for a collection of speculative fiction. I prefer to read and write stories where, whatever the genre or setting, the focus remains on how people feel, think, and relate. So my speculative pieces are few and far between.

 


Are you working on any more writing projects at the moment?

AB: Yes, my second collection of short stories. Same genre – contemporary realist literary fiction. And a trio or quartet of novellas set during my PhD days. And another trio of novellas about sex, marriage, and treachery in contemporary India.

For now I’m focussing on the collection. I’ll finish it this year. Then the climate fiction novel. Then I’ll finish drafting one set of novellas, then another… And the moment I set down a plan like this, a list of priorities – something lawless in me decides, ‘To hell with the plan. I’ll write what I like, when I like.’

But finishing and publishing this first book has given me a boost of self-confidence. Most importantly, now I know that, however hard it is to buckle down and finish one project at a time, I can do it.

 


Do you have any events planned for the book?

AB: No.

Initially, I’d planned to get myself to do some marketing for my book. I did a few posts on social media. A friend drew up a full social media calendar. I got up one morning, glanced at this proposed scheduled of activities, and wanted to go right back to bed.

Marketing is not fun for me. Marketing would be nonoptional if I were a full-time writer. I’m not. I have a full-time job in climate action. So, for now – having told everyone I know about the book – I’ve decided not to do any more marketing, but to focus on writing. (I interrupted myself while writing this to send everyone I know a follow-up request to read and review the book.)

In my view, writing better stuff, and publishing it in better magazines, is the best means of marketing at my disposal.

Find your copy of the book here.  


 

Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Maria Kinnersley tells us about her involvement with The Best of CafeLit 14

 





How did I come across CafeLit in the first place?
I think it was first mentioned by a writing group friend on Facebook. It was a while before I summoned up the courage to take a look. When I did, I was charmed and thought "I can do that".

My Contribution
I've always been interested in the "What if's?" As someone with an interest in all things biological, the idea of releasing a single celled organism into the wild unwittingly has the potential for all sorts of problems, I wondered what would happen if plastic eating bacteria were exposed to the environment before they were fully tested. My story, "The Consequences of Ambition" arose from that.  

My Choice of Drink
That choice was quite simple (and a bit boring). It's my main hot drink and could be supped in the time it takes to read my story. It's also dark and indicates that it's a story to be savoured.

What do I Like About Writing Short Stories/Flash Fiction
I like that you can write a complete story in a very short time. For me, it's a way of exploring a character  or situation. Some of these short stories have evolved into longer tales as further issues are explored. "The Consequences of Ambition" interested me enough to write more about the main character and the position she found herself in. You never know; one day it may have enough material for a novel.

What Else Do I Write?
In a cupboard and in files on my laptop, I have a number of draft novels/novellas, some in a more complete state than others. More are of the science fiction genre. I do find writing other genres not as easy but I keep trying. My problem is having the confidence to take them further and to publish. They are like eggs waiting to hatch. And one day, I will get back to writing my blog, "The Devon Way".

My Life as a Writer
I currently have no specific routine . I write when I am able. I do suffer from the usual habit that writers have - that of thinking of too many ideas and going off on tangents. That said, I do try to write every day and count myself lucky if I manage 500 words. Of course, sometimes (rarely) it's more. I'm fortunate in that I belong to a couple of online writing groups which force me to put pen to paper regularly.
 
For various reasons recently, I've had to forgo writing to attend to other aspects of my life. This cycle is now coming to an end and will give me more space to write and hopefully, to self-publish again.

Am I Working on any Interesting Projects?
Having written a draft novel in 2017, I decided further work on it is long overdue and it's time to work and edit on what I have so that I can publish it,
 
It's based on another bit of speculation; what would happen if a village on the coast was separated from the United Kingdom following a geological incident?
 
Most of the draft, I'm happy with, but I now need to work on the beginning which at the moment doesn't have that "hook" to grip the reader.

Do I Have any Events Planned?
Not currently.   
 

Find your copy of the book here   

Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Niall Crowley talks to me about his involvement with CafeLit

 


Niall Crowley

How did you come across CafeLit in the first place?

I met up with CafeLit during COVID, when I returned to writing fiction, short stories in particular. I joined an online writing group which led to significant improvement in my writing. One of the members was a fan of CafeLit, with published work to prove it. I followed his recommendation and ‘Christmas Dip’ was published in December 2021. Since then I have had three further stories published by CafeLit. Even better, this year I was delighted to  make the cut for CafeLit 14 with my story ‘On the Spur’.

Tell us something about your contribution to this year’s book.

‘On the Spur’ is about memory, in all its distortions, and the precious stories, both warming and disturbing, that we hold in memory. It is about train travel in all its disconcerting splendour, with the freedom it offers and the encounters it involves. It is about ageing and the challenges in a society that fears age and disempowers older people.

How did you choose the drink to go with your contribution?

‘Instant Coffee’ is of the past, with such a diversity of coffee drinks and coffee machinery now on offer. It can be thrown together ‘on the spur’. It relaxes and eases the pressures of the day to day. Perfect for this story!  

What do you like about writing short stories / and  /or flash fiction? 

Short stories capture an instant or an angle that has something to tell us… about people and how we relate, about places and how we interact, about issues and how we engage. The writing of the short story involves satisfying hours of exploration of language and how it might best give effect and impact to the story, and how it might best attract and draw in the reader.

What else do you write? 

I write on issues of equality and human rights, with three books published on the trials and travails of pursing social justice and way too many articles and reports on the topic. There is a novel in there too seeking an author, but for now short stories hold sway for me, with a touch of flash fiction when the mood takes hold.

Tell us a little about your life as a writer.

As a child I would write short stories or snippets of fiction in any spare moment, never showing them to anyone and, sadly, keeping none. As an adult I work too intensely, in the field of equality and human rights, which has limited my opportunities to write. Abruptly in 2009 I was unemployed for a period, did a writing course and found fellow strugglers. Over four years, I wrote a novel. I loved every minute spent on it, but never found a publisher. Work took over again with its fascinations, until the calm and isolation of COVID opened up a new space and a new focus. I discovered the short story, which has been my focus and passion since. 

Are you working on  any interesting projects at the moment? 

Short stories, and then more short stories are my current project. My dream is to create the conditions and the body of work to have a collection published. That would be more than interesting for me, and, the key challenge, hopefully for others too!

A presence in CafeLit 14 was a big boost in this… so hoping you buy the book and like the story!

Do you have any events planned?

Nothing in particular, but ever open to opportunity and ideas.

 

Find your copy of the book here