BIG NEWS: ANIMAL TRILOGY

I have been waiting to release all this for some months… here it is!

BOOK ONE

This is available as a revised, updated version on Amazon as an ebook and as a paperback! It has a new cover and is ready to read.

BOOK TWO

Is available on pre-order as an ebook. The release date is: 14th February 2023

On that date this book will also be available as a paperback!

BOOK THREE

Is available on pre-order as an ebook. The release date is: 31st May 2023

On that date this book will also be available as a paperback!

Book Talk: The Goldfinch

The Goldfinch is undoubtedly one of Donna Tartt’s masterpiece novels: an engrossing, heartbreaking, detailed tale of a boy who loses his mother and gains a world famous painting. The opening scenes are some of the most gripping I’ve ever read, we follow Theo Decker, a 12 year old boy, as he visits The Metropolitan Museum in New York with his exuberant, intelligent, art loving mother. What follows is a worst nightmare scenario.

Theo loses his beloved mother in the catastrophe whilst he survives, physically unscathed but forever mentally impacted. As he leaves the scenes he takes with him a priceless painting named ‘The Goldfinch’ which he proceeds to hide and hoard throughout the remainder of his youth. Incidentally, the beautiful little painting exists in real life and lives at The Hague in the Netherlands.

The entire book follows Theo and his life journey through to adulthood and it is he I care for above all whilst reading the story. His voice is clear and developed and I couldn’t help wondering how far his voice was from the author’s own because of the absolute precision of the depiction.

Theo is very much a boy lost in a big city, a kind of Harry Potter figure, a parentless survivor (although he does have an absent, alcoholic father). I couldn’t help taking a motherly stance towards him as I became increasingly concerned about his wellbeing. I cringed when he made bad decisions (multiple times), I rejoiced when he found respite, I wanted to personally thank those who helped him out.

There is one point where he leaves Las Vegas alone, where he has spent a considerable amount of his teenagehood, he takes a bus to New York with his little Maltese dog in his bag who isn’t allowed on the bus. He has just enough money to take the journey and that is it, he has no place to go when he gets there, no relatives to call on. He may as well have been travelling alone into a deep, dark cave to face an angry dragon and the sheer reality of the situation only served to intensify the suspense.

The atmosphere in this book is unparalleled, every time I opened the pages I was immersed in the dark, gothic, cluttered surroundings. The New York in this book is an Old World one filled with antiques, exquisite furniture, dust, old money, European paintings, grimy alleyways, cold weather, rain and creaking floorboards. The time Theo spends in the ultra-modern, soulless vast desert that is Las Vegas serves as a stark contrast to the ancient, mothball environs of New York.

Family, or lack of it, loneliness, survival and friendship loom large in the pages of this book. Theo spends a portion of his youth living with the Barbours, a rich New York family living in a dark, elegant apartment stuffed with priceless antiques.

Their material fortune does little to prevent misery and even though Theo has no blood ties it’s hard to be convinced by the Barbours that he is missing out. It is only when we remember the bond he had with his loving mother when she was alive that we’re reminded family isn’t all misfortune and disaster.

The relationships Theo forms throughout his life become family of a kind. There’s the noble, nieave, kindly Hobie who lives to restore treasured pieces of furniture and there’s Boris Pavlikovsky, a brilliantly drawn character who lives hard and fast, a Russian teen when we first meet him in Las Vegas, wild, savvy, having travelled the world with his businessman father. Then there’s Poppy, the girl who shares Theo’s catastrophic experience, a glowing, fractured character who he adores with every inch of his soul.

The Goldfinch is a masterpiece, 11 years in the making, fully deserving of the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, a wonderful, daring, ambitious book, filled with art and humanity. I can’t wait to see what Donna Tartt comes up with next.

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10 Tips For Starting Out on Wattpad

Wattpad is a writer/reader platform, like a YouTube for stories. There are around 45 million users, so if you are a writer, looking for a home for your work – it could be right up your street.

I joined Wattpad in 2011 and since then I’ve posted 3 short stories, 2 novels and a collection of essays, and had over 2.4 million reads of my work. These are my top ten tips to starting out.

  1. Have a read

The first thing I would recommend is something all writers are good at – grab a cuppa, put your feet up and enjoy a good read. There’s all sorts of stuff on there. The majority of the users are female teens, so there’s plenty YA. The Romance and Fantasy genres are strong but there’s also loads of other stuff such as Sci-Fi, Historical and Poetry. Hopefully there’ll be something that will float your boat. There’s an app if you like reading on your phone.

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5 Nasty Ladies In Fiction

Everyone loves an evil female character, right? I do! Whether it’s uber glam wrong-doing or just plain old nasty stuff… I’m loving it. Along with my fellow awesome writer E.Latimer, we both decided to compile our top 5 female villains list. Here is mine. To see Erin’s please go here.

1. Cersei Lannister, Song of Ice and Fire Series

She is one of the best female dirty-doers I’ve read in years! She’s immoral and bad on so many levels… She sleeps with her brother and her cousin, she’s ordered the murders of thousands, she’s cold-blooded, icky and power mad. But then, on the other hand she’s also creepily relatable – she’s very much a woman in a man’s world and why should her brothers get all the power whilst she gets married off to an overweight boar-hunter? And she loves nothing more than her ‘sweet’ children… Who would begrudge her that? Cersei is world class female villainy at its best.

look at that pout!
look at that pout!

2. Annie Wilkes, Misery

This bad girl has none of the glamour of Cersei, but all of the devilishness, and more. She is a full on creep fest of a character. The one person you do not want to meet if you’ve had an accident and there is no one else around to take care of you. The scene where she clubs her captive, Paul Sheldon’s feet still haunts me to this day. A terrible and brilliant example of a ‘fangirl’ gone horrendously wrong.

I dread to to think what she is about to do with that thing in her hand.
I dread to to think what she is about to do with that thing in her hand

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What’s So Good About Whiplash?

This weekend I watched one of those films that is so memorable I’m still mulling it over days later, and I’m telling my closest friends that they just have to watch it. The film is Whiplash, and it is about a young guy who attends an elite music school in New York. He’s a jazz drummer and he wants to be the best in the world. He doesn’t just want it, he really wants it.

Like, he doesn’t have much of a life, at all, apart from his dad and his music. He just wants to be the best, friends take up too much time and judging from the other students in his school nobody would want to be friends with them anyway. He’s quiet, and cute and he practices his drums a lot.

There’s this conductor/teacher who leads the top ensemble in the school and our guy is invited in. He’s thrilled to have the opportunity… Then all sorts of stuff ensues (to cut a long and complex story short). I won’t spoil it for you, if you haven’t seen it. Let’s just say the story is about being pushed to one’s artistic limits… the complexities of artisitic greatness, what that is and how it comes about.

It’s one of those films that leaves you feeling like you’ve been punched in the stomach, in a good way. I relate to it on quite a few different levels. Firstly the guy and his desire to be the best in his field. I was never so focused as he is at his age. If I were in New York at the same stage in my life, suffice it to say I would not have spent the time in my room practicing… But at this age I am at now – 36 – I can completely and utterly relate to his devotion to his craft.

It has always been there for me, that I wanted to write and that I wanted to be really, really good at it – great at it. I’ve always written but I’ve always lived too, which I would say, in hindsight, is actually a large part of writing. The living. The adventures I’ve had, good and bad, inform my writing now. For me at that age, I could not have had the maturity and deeper understanding of life, people and situations necessary to write very well.

These days I am much more like the character in the film. It’s like all roads have led to this point and now I am more than happy to spend hours and hours and days and weeks and months and years… devoted to my craft. Great story-telling has developed into something of an obsession, because I finally feel like that’s all right. I can spend my minutes doing that, because it is what I am here to do. And it doesn’t matter who would prefer me to be doing something else, or the fact that it is in no way financially viable. I believe that it will be, one day soon.

So yeah, I relate to the drummer. I relate to his willingness to sacrifice for greatness. One of the visual motifs of the film is him drumming so hard and so long his fingers are actually bleeding. His drums get covered in blood. And the first reaction could be, ew, that’s gross. And it is. And it’s what I thought. But then I remind myself that I might not have outright bled at the keyboard but I have bled in my own way, in a different way.

I could have been doing a million things that are much easier and far more lucrative than writing a book. I have a baby who I love with all my heart. I need to raise that baby, feed him, clothe him and give him the best possible start in life that I can give him, that is the most important thing to me. Things got real when I suddenly had a child in my life. The stakes raised but instead of running from writing I turned to it and the pressure of parenthood has pushed me along more than any other experience I’ve ever had.

I also relate to the conductor, despite the fact that he is a grade A jerkass. He pushes his students to breaking point and it is really quite ridiculous the lengths he goes to. I’m in no way condoning abuse however he says he’s doing it to get the best out of his musicians. And on a more humane level, looking at it metaphorically, it makes me think of again of pressure. That’s how diamonds are formed, right?

Without pressure I find it harder to produce the work I’m proud of. I need pressure. Now, I seek it out. I gain pressure from, like I said, the pure necessity of looking after another small person. The need to provide for him and his future. The need to ensure that he is never ever left without the resources he needs to lead a decent and fulfilling life. I gain pressure from the desire to lead the life I’ve always wanted, to actually live the life I always believed was possible.

I know from experience that this life can come to an end. An abrupt, unexpected end. It can seem like we live in this comfortable world where everything is A-OK most of the time and there’s all this stuff around us that makes it seem easy and makes us feel content. But the fact is that it can all end, in a moment. And there are things in the world that are very much worth fighting for. Other people, perhaps in places far away from us, that need us to be the best we can be so that we can create the resources to help them. I think of all this, and it makes fingers hit the keyboard.

I also relate to the director whose name I don’t even know, but by watching this film I have a certain understanding of who they are. And I feel like they have mirrored the artistic rise and perfectionism of the young drummer in the film itself, by making it one of those rare pieces of film-making that live in your heart for a long, long time.

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Interview With a Book Lover

I love it when you find a great blog to read. And that’s exactly what I did a few months ago when I started following Polyliteramore. Written by 19 year old Gillian Ebersole, the blog includes regular insights into her life and her loves, which include books, dancing, travel and more.
Gillian drinking real butterbeer!
The posts are composed in such an honest and eloquent way, they really caught my attention. I just had to reach out to Gillian, to ask a few questions of my own. So, here we go…
1. What are your top 3 books and why?

My all time favorite book is A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith. I also love The Book Thief and Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore. In general, I love historical fiction and watching a character triumph despite incredible hardship. To me, the best books are ones that encompass both the joy and the pain of the simple moments of everyday life, and these three books capture this perfectly.

122. I noticed you did a series of posts ’52 Weeks of Gratitude Challenge’ – what things are you most grateful for in your life? 

I am so grateful for so much, but it truly is the little things that make me stop and take a moment to wonder at the world around me. Light rain, good books, bustling coffee shops, summer sunsets, the thrill of dancing – all of these are the most precious aspects of life I give thanks for every day.

3. What is your favourite thing to bake?

Pumpkin muffins. Or any kind of cupcake really. I read this book called The Cupcake Queen in middle school, and I have been in love with baking cupcakes ever since. They are just so fun!

4. What is your favourite place in the world, and why?

Over the summer, I travelled to Amsterdam, and I fell in love with the city and the culture. The lifestyle there focuses so much on living in the moment and enjoying everything from food to biking and walking to art and architecture. If I could, I would move there in a heartbeat.

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5. If you could give a few words of advise to your younger teen self, what would they be?

I would tell myself to stop doubting the worth of my own thoughts. Older generations tend to pick apart the thoughts and arguments of the teenage generation, and I think this age range holds some of the most powerful ideas. Society is stifling six years of valuable and unprecedented creativity when teenagers are told to grow up and be adults.

6. What do you most want for your life?

I want my job to be my life’s work and passion. It is a lot to ask, I know, but I am determined to combine my love for art and dance with my love for writing and thinking. While I would love to perform as a dancer, I also am drawn to using dance as a form of social action to bring art to those who lack the access to it.

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7. Who has helped you most in your life so far?

I have been blessed with many excellent teachers, both in school as well as in the arts, who encouraged me to follow my dreams. When a teacher tells a young student that anything is possible, it has a massive impact on the formation of that student. My accomplishments rest upon the words of the teachers who believed in me; I owe everything to them.

8. If you could go anywhere in the world, where would you like to go the most?

Right now, I am dying to go to Spain. I speak a little Spanish, and I love the language and culture. One of my life goals is to hike the Camino de Santiago, from France across the northern border of Spain, and enjoy the art and journey along the way.

9. What do you think is the most important thing that needs to happen to make a better world?

People need to care for each other more. Today, so much focus is placed on numbers and data, and we lose the sense of humanity in these numbers. I truly believe that the world would change overnight if people looked around and gave a little more love to everyone they met. And, I think art, in all its forms, is a vehicle for this change, for it counters the data-obsessed nature of current society, encouraging open-mindedness and the need for appreciation of all people.

10. Who inspires you the most and why?

My hero is Anne Frank, and I had the privilege of visiting her hiding place in Amsterdam over the summer. Here is the message I left in the guestbook, “As a teenage writer myself, I can only aspire to convey the truth as Anne did. Her striking honesty and faithful optimism shine even today as an example of the human power to persevere and to thrive, even in the darkest moments of history. Anne’s voice will live on, fulfilling her dream to become a renowned writer and proving the potency of the thoughts of the teenage generation.”
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Ladies That Kick Ass

I love ladies that kick ass! I’m almost as intent on it as Quentin Tarantino and look what he’s come up with. It all started in the summer of 1993 when I was 12 years old living in a small town in Lancashire and hanging out on a constant basis with a great friend with blonde curls and a fantastic sense of the ridiculous. Together we would make up the silliest funniest characters such as rainbow coloured bickering carrots and we called ourselves ‘longheads’ due to the feeling that we both had foreheads that are too big.

Batgirl - my fav comic book character
Batgirl – my fav comic book character

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Passion

My husband loves cameras. He loves photos, he loves bits that go on cameras and he loves unfathomable technical facts about cameras. Fact. He and his Dad (who also loves cameras) give each other strange, expensive bits of camera equipment to each other every Christmas whilst the rest of the family go – what’s that?

Secretly I love my husband’s passion for all things photographic but please do not let him know I said this as he may use it to bribe me into getting him more cameras. He is a master at this passion and to watch him work is really a pleasure, you can see some of his work right here.

Last weekend we went for an evening photo shoot to a forest and beach, the kind of forest and beach that can only be found in Scotland. Fresh, temperamental and a little bit magic. The sky was fogged filled and the light was just right. Thought I would post a few of the photos here for you to enjoy.

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Fashion Fantasy

When I found out a few weeks ago I would be involved with a fashion film – to co-write & direct – I was excited – jumping up and down fangirl style excited. I love clothes and always have done, especially the kind of silky, glamorous clothes Iona Crawford makes.

It began with the initial concepting stage which I always find rather fun. This involves sitting down with the other half of my creative team, Sophia Fraser. The kettle goes on, the cups of tea get poured, the lights start flashing (really?) and the ideas start to roll. We had a whole world of thoughts, it being a completely up our street style project. There were the inklings of a short film in there, hell probably a feature.

We divorced ourselves from any kind of physical universe realities during this process and I’m glad we did because if we had any ideas about what we would need to do to pull it off in the real world, in the winter, in Scotland, I seriously question whether we might have thought of an entirely different, entirely warmer idea. As it is I’m glad we ignored reality because the finished film is, I think, well worth every frozen toe on the shoot.

It took a day to film with a full crew and I worked with the two models, one of whom – Caeley Elcock is actually a theatre actress – a beautiful girl who did an amazing job and of course Jordon Steele who was also lots of fun to work with. It was absolutely freezing cold. We trekked up the sides of various hills, galavanted around the countryside with the horse ‘Casino’, waded through mud, filmed from the back of a pick-up van and generally caused havoc in the quiet regions of Stirling in Scotland.

Sophia, the co-creator, was also on the shoot, assistant directing. We kept looking at each other through interminable blasts of wind and snow, saying things like – who the hell came up with this idea? They must be goddam crazy!

Despite all that, I can hardly the numbness and pain. Not now.

Now all I can remember is the fun. And the beauty. Here’s the film:

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Cupar Arts Festival

Good news! Rosie Lesso & I have been chosen to be a part of the Cupar Arts Festival 2013. We will collaborate on a one-off book project. The theme is ‘FATE’ so watch this space. I will provide the writing, Rosie will provide her beautiful illustration. Together Fate will be all ours. If you are around in Scotland, in October please don’t fail to come along and check us oooot. Let me know you are coming and I will personally give you a high five.

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what the hell, crystal ball?

 

Music & Writing

For me music and writing go hand in hand. When I write I love nothing more than to listen to music. Somehow music can reach right into my soul, lightening quick. I admire musicians possibly more than any other artist firstly because it is something I don’t do myself therefore it has an even more mysterious quality. Sometimes I just plain wonder, how the hell did they come up with that?

I used to listen to a very special musician called Wendy Carlos on an obsessive basis some years ago. I still listen to her sometimes and for some reason she’s back in my thoughts again. She’s a pioneer composer, a master of the moog synthesizer, a wonderful gentle person and someone who takes music production to new heights. I can’t listen to Wendy without feeling that life has the possibility to turn to magic.

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My Favourite 3 Fashion Videos

Recently I’ve been doing some research into fashion videos as I have been asked to script and creative direct one for a well known designer. It has been great fun digging through piles of fashion videos. They range from the beautiful to the ridiculous. I’m not a great fan of the whole habit of elongating them so that they seem more arty, but many don’t do that too much – they still manage to keep the attention.

I picked out my three favorites to share with you guys. Please, if there are any fashionistas out there who are well acquainted with fashion videos, send me what you’ve got! I’m always curious.

1. This is a video for the luxury fashion company MAIYET, directed by a film director and it shows, in all the right ways. I love the intimacy and beauty of this video it is absolutely captivating. Love it. My number one.

2. This a video for Nina Ricci. Strange, verging on disturbing, incredible music – gives us an expected twist that I relish!

3. Vanessa Bruno has an admirable habit of making sumptuous, wonderful fashion videos. This one literally blows my socks of in its poetic beauty.

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Rosie & Gill

My friend Rosie Lesso who I have known since we studied at Edinburgh College of Art together a few moons ago is an amazing visual artist. We just got news that together we are going to be part of the Cupar Arts Festival in October 2013. I’ll do the writing, Rosie will do the art; we’re putting a book together which I’ll talk about in another blog post soon.

Rosie is also creating another book as part of the ‘Sky Bound’ project which is part of another arts festival called North Light in Dunbar, Scotland.

To find out more about the upcoming book for the Sky Bound project and to get more insight into how words and art can interact I did an interview with Rosie and here it is in full:

1. Can you tell us a bit about yourself? What is your background etc?
I am an artist based in Scotland. Drawing is my main interest, and I like to try and stretch the boundaries of what the term means. I am interested in the informality of the word drawing; it implies less permanence than say, painting or sculpture. More recently I have also worked on a number of participatory projects like this one for North Light; I also do part time and freelance education work and this kind of project has meant I can explore and overlap educational elements with my own practice.

2. Can you tell us about the project for the poetry book?

The poetry book is the second part of a binary project called Sky Bound, for the North Light Festival in Dunbar. The first part was a series of interventions; 5 graphic road signs featuring flying gannets, which are very dominant in Dunbar, were spread across the town. A location map was distributed, encouraging locals to walk the route and think about travel, flux and migration. Alongside this I also put three poetry boxes out in Dunbar, with a call out to locals and other writers from Scotland to create or contribute short poems on the theme of migration. In its two month duration 35 poems were submitted. Poets include Ken Cockburn, Angus Reid, Colin Will and Lesleymay Miller. The next stage is to select and refine and create a permanent hard back book featuring the poems and my own art work, for official launch in early June next year.

3. How does the book fit in with the North Light festival?
This is the first year the North Light festival has run, with funding from a variety of sources including Creative Scotland. The purpose was to engage and bring together the local community with a variety of site specific, environmental art works celebrating the character of the location. I hope my project has contributed to the festival in that way and drawn some parallels with other artists’ projects too. The book will be launched next year in early June 2013, so it also creates a legacy from one year to the next.

4. What is the goal of the book?
The book will become a lasting archive of the 2012 festival and be stored permanently in a location in Dunbar, to be confirmed. It brings together voices including artists, poets, and local writers who were in Dunbar at that moment in time, and who have responded to a theme so relevant to Dunbar with its constant flow of birds to and from the sea, so a document of time and place.

5. How do you see your drawings working alongside the poetry for the book?
I think there are many parallels to be found between drawing and poetry as both can have a fragile, papery quality. I once read a quotation somewhere that said writing poems was like dropping leaves onto a highway, and I thought the same could be said of making a certain type of drawing. The plan is to create black and white drawings or etchings for the book which will have a condensed use of visual language and an ambiguity similar to that found in many of the poems, hopefully leaving more room for multiple interpretations.

6. Why did you chose poetry/short prose?
I chose poetry partly for some of the reasons outlined above, but also just because I love reading poems myself, particularly short poems which use language in a very economical or abstract way. The theme of migration is quite open so I saw abstract possibilities in it for poetry. I was also aware there are a number of poets living in Dunbar, or who would be involved in North Light and this would be a great opportunity to meet and work with them.

Rosie Lesso
Rosie Lesso

Road sign featuring a flying gannet in Dunbar, part of the North Light Festival