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Yachting Monthly, edited by Theo Stocker, covers everything that interests active yacht enthusiasts.

Yachting Monthly is a technical magazine about yacht cruising under sail, written by sailors, and for an audience of life-long and experienced sailors,’ said Theo. Readers might sail close to home, in UK waters, but might equally be blue-water sailors who venture much farther afield.

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Writing Magazine
July 2019
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Other Articles in this Issue


Writing Magazine
Welcome
Dear Reader
A £20k Amazon award
You could win £20,000 in the Kindle Storyteller Award.
GLOBAL TRAVEL MARKET
Get travelling
Expanding novel possibilities
Fitzcarraldo Editions is accepting submissions for
Write a Big Finish adventure for Doctor Who
The Big Finish is giving writers the chance to submit
Make the best impression
The competition is for writers who have not had a book
Make ‘em laugh
Furthering its aim to empower women in comedy, the
Scantic opportunity
The Scantic River is a delightful US indie based near
FLASHES
Just Jazz magazine covers traditional jazz and is edited
Environment matters
In conjunction with Aftermath online literary magazine
Mystery winners revealed
The Mystery Writers of America have awarded the 2019
Phileas Blog
A travel site with ‘travel news, commentary, insight
Cycles of feminism
Elly Blue Publishing projects is a quirky personal
GLOBAL MAGAZINE MARKET
Dig deep
A foot on the ladder for new writers
Scottish Book Trust is inviting applications for its
It’s a Funny Old World
Comedian Tony Hawks (centre) has written a new book
FLASHES
Which magazine, edited by Harry Rose, awards £150-worth
UK LITERARY MARKET
Planetary attraction
Prize poems for Winchester
The Winchester Poetry Prize 2019 is open for entries.
Get into Grist
Grist is the print and online journal produced by the
GLOBAL LIFESTYLE MARKET
Gay for today
UK NON-FICTION MARKET
Go beyond
Get busy for Bedford
The International Bedford Writing Competition is inviting
FLASHES
That’s Life Mega Monthly, launched by Australia’s Pacific
AUDIO SPECFIC MARKET
Be heard
Set out for Hunger Mountain
Hunger Mountain is a lively arts print journal with
Stories to go
Three vending machines have been installed at Canary
GLOBAL POETRY MARKET
Rattle off a submission
In a dark place
Noir Nation is a crime fiction journal with bite. It
OK’s OK, OK?
The newly published fifth edition of Collins Official
And another thing And another thing
‘It gets both easier and harder at the same time. Easier
FLASHES
Simon Caney, editor of Garden News, welcomes letters
GLOBAL LITERARY MARKET
Urban Farmhouse Press
Finally not trivial
What is the use of being remembered as the world’s
Excitement from Exeter
Exeter Literary Festival 2019 is inviting entries for
Develop your play, and your career
New full length stage plays are wanted by Panglossian
INTRODUCTIONS
Writing Magazine presents a selection of Specialist travel magazines currently accepting contributions. We strongly recommend that you read back issues, familiarise yourself with their guidelines before submitting and check websites for submission details.
GLOBAL CULTURAL MARKET
Progressive gains
FLASHES
Suren Ala edits, and welcomes letters for, The Hardy
GLOBAL SPECIFIC MARKET
Dream on
Spook stories for Olga
Norwich Writers’ Circle is inviting entries for the
Celebrating Simon
Simon Armitage was announced as the 21st Poet Laureate
UK GENRE MARKET
Deadstarly dealings
FLASHES
The Flash 500 quarterly flash fiction competition for
UK HISTORY MARKET
History matters
Prize drawer for poems?
Entries are now being accepted for The Writers Bureau
INTERNATIONAL ZINE SCENE
Third Point Press publish ‘the not-quitegenre and not-quiteliterary
FLASHES
Scribble’s annual article competition for pieces between
GLOBAL GENRE MARKET
Get in Pace
Get in Pace GLOBAL GENRE MARKET
PDR Lindsay-Salmon US small press Pole to Pole Publishing
Alien induction Timeworn opportunity
The editorial team at Timeworn Literary Journal, feel
GLOBAL LIFESTYLE MARKET
Head for Paradise
Tor goes dark
Nightfire is a new horror imprint to be launched by
Merely poetry
Entries are invited for the Mere Literary Festival
REGULARS
THE WORLD OF WRITING
It’s elementary, in this month’s wide world of writing. Derek Hudson discovers we should junk the jargon and read portable pieces of thought
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
We want to hear your news and views on the writing world, your advice for fellow writers – and don’t forget to tell us what you would like to see featured in a future issue
Editorial calendar
Strong forward planning will greatly improve your chances with freelance submissions. Here are some themes to consider for the coming months.
On the movie
Greta Powell looks at video-editing software and its applications for writers
Don’t be sorry
Patrick Forsyth commends having the courage of your convictions
Novel Ideas Touch wood?
Lynne Hackles wonders if chance and fate play a part in the writing life
Change checker
Keeping readers updated in times of change is a good skill for the travel writer, says Patrick Forsyth
FLASHES
Each week Hour of Writes offers a new peer-reviewed
GLOBAL LITERARY MARKET
Inspiring notes
Scumm writing
Planet Scumm is a lively SF audiobook, print and ebook
£500 prize for pre-teen poets
The 2019 Betjeman Poetry Prize is open for entries
Young poets line up
The Poetry Society’s Foyle Young Poet of the Year Award
UK WELLBEING MARKET
Make your own magic
Write lines for Ledbury
Ledbury Poetry Festival is inviting entries for the
Home Study Course Started A 20- Year Writing Career
Heather Burnside took a home study Creative Writing Course with The Writers Bureau in 1999. 20 years on Heather is still writing and has recently signed another threebook deal with Aria Fiction at Head of Zeus.
ASK THE EXPERTS
Weigh anchor on piracy
Online piracy is real concern for authors. The Society of Authors’ public affairs manager Tim Gallagher has advice on tackling book pirates
FROM THE OTHER SIDE OF THE DESK GETTING RIGHTS RIGHT?
Make sure you understand about rights reversion to give your book the possibility of second-chance success, urges Piers Blofeld
Ask a Literary Consultant
Is it possible to write and self-publish a book in a very tight time-frame? It is if you take Helen Corner Bryant’s advice!
On Writing
Tony Rossiter explores great words from great writers
Helpline Diana Cambridge solves your writing problems
Email your queries to Diana (please include hometown
Researching while travelling
Turn time away from home into a fact-finding mission with advice from research expert Tarja Moles
BEHIND THE TAPE
Expert advice to get the details right in your crime fiction, from serving police officer Lisa
WRITING LIFE
Strength in numbers
Forget the stereotype of the solitary author and let your creativity flourish in the company of like-minded writers, urges novelist Clare Empson
Write away
Why should you go on a writing retreat? Tina Jackson highlights some of the many benefits
Giving yourself PERMISSION
Jane Wenham-Jones urges a reader who has spent her
PATHS TO PUBLICATION
There are many ways to achieve your publishing dream. Margaret James talks to four authors with very different routes to seeing their books in print
I wish I’d known…
‘When I self-published Working it Out in 2011, I thought
Mapping a way through
Bestselling children’s author Abi Elphinstone tells us how she used her dyslexia to evolve writing strategies including imaginative thinking and creative courage
Away from your desk
Get out of your garret for some upcoming activities and places to visit \
Let us prey
WM’s Open Poetry Competition yielded a masterpiece of precision, says its judge, poet Alison Chisholm
School ’s out for summer!
Managing a writing business with children isn’t easy during the long summer holidays. Simon Whaley discovers how two writers cope.
You wrote in
Lorraine Mace has been tickled by the stories you’ve shared about the idiosyncrasies of the writing life
CREATIVE WRITING
Real world building
Think worldbuilding is mainly a fantasy thing? Think again. All fiction writing requires you to carefully construct the world of your novel, says Gary Dalkin
Make it happen
Keep readers hooked by paying attention to what happens next in your story, says Adrian Magson
Parrot talking
How do you create characters who speak a different version of English from you? Follow Jan Snook’s linguistic advice to make them sound convincing
Under the Microscope
James McCreet puts the first 300 words of a reader’s novel under his forensic gaze
The write idea
Helen M Walters explores what writers can learn from a story about the contrast between an unpublished writer’s dream and his everyday existence
Script to screen
Interested in getting into writing TV scripts for children? Amy Sparkes gets advice from the experts
Fear in all FIVE SENSES
Alex Davis shows you how to create an atmosphere of fear using each one of the senses
INTERVIEWS AND PROFILES
IN THE NOW
The thrills and pacing ratchet up the tension and keep adrenaline high for readers, but it’s all meticulously planned, Jeffery Deaver tells Tina Jackson
CAZ FREAR
The author tells Dolores Gordon Smith how her debut, Sweet Little Lies, won the Richard and Judy Search for a Bestseller competition.
The style & technique of DANIEL DEFOE
Tony Rossiter looks at a writer who has been described as the first true novelist
Shelf life: TIM WATERSTONE
The book chain founder shares his top five reads with
THE GOOD SOLDIER
‘This is the saddest story I have ever heard is the
THE LEOPARD by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
‘The novel is best understood as a sweeping, glorious
THE END OF THE AFFAIR
‘The novel is set in London in the Second World War
CITIZEN CLEM
‘I chose Clement Attlee as my “hero” in the initial
THE OXFORD BOOK OF ENGLISH VERSE
‘I was tempted to list here Wavell’s Other Men’s Flowers
RENITA D’SILVA
Margaret James meets a writer whose novels transport readers to different times and places
CHARLES CUMMING
The spy novelist tells Lynne Hackles how the reality of his writing life fails to match up to his dreams
COMPETITIONS AND EXERCISES
A Thing
Anna Pye is working on the fi rst book in a fantasy
Beach combing
Use what you find by the sea to prompt new writing in these exercises from Jenny Alexander
Cooking up a storm
Use recipes as a template for crafting new writing in this group exercise from Julie Phillips
CIRCLES’ ROUNDUP
If your writing group would like to feature here, whether you need new members, have an event to publicise or to suggest tips for other groups, email Tina Jackson, tjackson@warnersgroup.co.uk
SUBSCRIBER SPOTLIGHT
Share your writing success stories. If you subscribe to Writing Magazine and would like to feature here, email Tina Jackson, tjackson@warnersgroup.co.uk
POETRY
Butterfly going backwards
Alison Chisholm is impressed by a poem that reverses the life cycle of an insect
Poetry in practice
Stuck for ideas? Doris Corti has a plan to prompt a new poem