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Poetry with a Pen and a Passion

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Writing Magazine
October 2024
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Other Articles in this Issue


Writing Magazine
Ghosting around
Writers love telling stories. Simon Whaley chats to two writers who help bring others’ stories to life through their ghostwriting services
FICTION OPPORTUNITIES
The Fiction Desk Summer 2024
NOVEL COMPETITIONS
The 2024 Exeter Novel Prize Win a £1,000
GENERAL NEWS
Hugo Awards 2024 The Hugo Awards, the most
LITMAG OPPORTUNITIES
The McNeese Review The McNeese Review is produced
SHORT FICTION COMPETITIONS
The Bath Flash Fiction Award October 2024 The
NON-FICTION COMPETITIONS
Bridport Memoir Award 2024 The Bridport Memoir Award
ANTHOLOGY MARKETS
Flame Tree Publishing UK press Flame Tree Publishing
Gypsum Sound Tales: On the Farm
Submissions are curently being accepted in any genre
POETRY COMPETITIONS
Passionfruit Poetry Prize 2024 The Passionfruit Review’s competition
Make oportunities knock
Patrick Forsyth suggests forward planning for future promotional opportunities
SMALL PRESS OPPORTUNITIES
Horrorsmith Publishing Lyndsey Smith, editor at Horrorsmith Publishing,
PODCAST MARKET Mirage
Mirage is a niche travel writing podcast looking
WRITING FOR CHILDREN OPPS
The School Magazine The School Magazine is the
ZINES AND WEBSITES ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS
The Dodge The Dodge is a literary magazine
NOVEL PRIZE
2024 Blue Pencil Agency Pitch Prize
Editorial
WELCOME
DEAR READER Why think small when everything is
ON THE COVER
Making talent PAY
In par t three of this series, James McCreet looks at how you can put your honed writing skills to use in creating readable, persuasive words that pay
THE FICTIONAL SUITCASE
Your children’s stories can take their readers on a journey that will introduce them to the rich diversity of the world. Children’s author Chitra Soundar offers advice on infusing your writing with culture and heritage
What is writing?
As writers, how much do we consider what writing actually consists of, and what the act of doing it means? asks Tim Brookes. founder of the Endangered Alphabets Project
FINDING poems
As National Poetry Day approaches, poet Kenneth Steven offers a thoughtful writer’s guide to the process of finding your poems – and opening up space so a poem can find you
CROSS-POLLINATION
Poetry can offer transferrable skills to prose writers, says Helen Stockton, as she outlines poetic techniques that will put the shine on your words
Go with the flow
Literary author Will Eaves, whose new book is called The Point of Distraction, tells Tina Jackson about the sense of liberation to be found in pursuing different areas of creativity
CREATIVE WRITING
Dress up and show up
Thinking about what your characters wear and how their garments were produced adds layers of meaning to your worldbuilding, says fantasy author and fashion historian Natania Barron
REAL LIFE, great stories
Jenny Alexander looks at autofiction, which mixes fact and fiction, and advises you how to write it and when it might be particularly effective to tell your story
Your writing critiqued
James McCreet applies a forensic micro-critique to the beginning of a reader’s manuscript
THE BUILDING BLOCK OF CHARACTER: PART FOUR
Everyone in your stories needs a reason for being there, says author and tutor Ian Ayris, as he shines a light on the role played by secondary characters
House of SECRETS
Polly Crosby looks at the creation of the beginning of her new gothic novel, and how she generated the impression, right from the start, of a place steeped in mystery
Time travel for the clueless
Novelist Jodi Taylor explores how to write science fiction when you know nothing about science. And not much about writing fiction.
JULIET GREENWOOD
The author of emotional historical novels tells Lynne Hackles about fitting deadlines around her day job
Expanding possibilities
Feeling a bit stale? Tired of writing the same old same old? Margaret James suggests you push yourself out of your comfort zone and explore unfamiliar areas of writing
Five quick5 questions
When and where did your journey as an
Moonlighting
Helen Walters looks at how information can be communicated in a story, using an example of a gothic tale with unreliable narrators
WINNING SERIES
With the WM Children’s Book prize open for entries, Amy Sparkes looks at how considering the series potential of chapter books can put you in pole position for a win
Sunshine HORROR
Alex Davis shines a light on how you can write summer frights
INTERVIEWS AND PROFILES
G. D. WRIGHT
The former police officer describes how a heart condition put a stop to his first career – and made him determined to realise his ambition to write
SHELF LIFE
SALLY PAGE
As sayings go
Alison Chisholm examines a draft of a poem that takes proverbs as its theme
COMMUNITY AND COMPETITIONS
Resting bitch face
Writers’ talks inevitably attract ‘the one’, says Lynne Hackles
The world of writing
What goes through a writer’s brain? Readers’ letters and dispatches from the wide world of writing
THE POWER OF FICTION
‘In many ways I think fiction is the
TYPOTASTIC
Perhaps the word rate for proofreading in Whitstable
EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Can I play devil’s advocate here, or at
SOMETHING IN MY EYE
I don’t shed tears very often, some say
WORDS FLY
The question of when and where to put
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: YOUR WRITING
Write what you love
WE WANT YOUR WRITING
(and we’ll pay you for it!)
Subscribers’ news
To feature in Subscribers’ News contact: tjackson@warnersgroup.co.uk
A TROVE OF TINY TRAVEL TALES
I didn’t discover travel writing until my sixties
Get the write idea
Explore the possibilities of writing settings in these place- related creative writing prompts to try right now
FIRST impressions
Alison Chisholm applauds the winners of WM’s Impressionist Poetry Competition
Jax
Deborah is a specialist teacher who, even
INSIDE THE INDUSTRY
Experimentation
Dr Tarja Moles takes you through a systematic process of discovery that will expand the parameters of your research
Behind the tape
Expert advice to get the details right in your crime fiction from serving police officer Lisa Cuttsts
ADAM GAUNTLETT
Simon Whaley chats to agent Adam Gauntlett about the narrative non-fiction market, and his recent experience of becoming a published novelist
GET PUBLISHED
You’ve read the advice – now get into print! Find the most up-to-date calls for submissions, writing competitions to enter and publishing opportunities to suit you and your writing in our easy-to-navigate news pages
Considering genres
Authors should be aware of what genre their work-in-progress falls into, but let it develop organically, advises Cornerstones’ Monica Chakraverty
Don’t wee in the sea
Laws you shouldn’t fall foul of on holiday make good travel writing topics, says Patrick Forsyth
ADVANCE WARNING
Not all authors are treated equally when it comes to publishing-industry finance, says Piers Blofeld
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