Ginsberg found himself confronted with the typewriter. A story a day, that was his minimum task; two thousand words, preferably with a plot, development, a climax and a twist. After six months of this routine, he was beginning to feel an intense hatred of the short story, in fact of all writing. What an abominable occupation it was! What a struggle! For what meagre prizes! Only the middlemen, he felt, were to be envied; the publishers, editors, anthologists and functionaries who stood between the raw material and the public purse. ...the thought of writing another short story disgusted him. He had had enough of battering his head against a brick wall. In six months, three acceptances, by obscure magazines published from addresses deep in the countryside. Three stories at three or four guineas each; a little over ten pounds for six months' hard labour, exclusive of expenses or paper, postage and so on. He put the cover on the dusty typewriter...
From Scamp by Roland Camberton, republished soon by New London Editions
Wednesday, 26 May 2010
Friday, 21 May 2010
Tolpuddling around
Five Leaves is putting out a new edition of Alan Brown's (or rather Alan James Brown as he must become because someone else nicked the franchise on his first name) children's book, Tolpuddle Boy, in time for the annual Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival in July. Rooting around on the Tolpuddle Museum's website I was strangely thrilled to find God is our Guide: the Tolpuddle Martyrs and their Methodist Roots. This pamphlet tells of the Tolpuddle Martyrs and how their faith guided their actions but made them rebels in the eyes of the established church. The booklet tells of the Tolpuddle Chapels built by the village Methodists. It is published by the Dorchester Circuit of the Southampton District of the Methodist Church. I think it was the publisher that made it an exciting find. Who needs HarperCollins?
Wednesday, 19 May 2010
Lowdham at eleven
Sunday, 16 May 2010
The Year of Alexander Baron
We are very pleased to see that Black Spring has published two classic Alexander Baron books, From the City, From the Plough and The Lowlife. Both were high on our wants list for New London Editions but we are not complaining, and wish Black Spring the best for these editions. From the City... is generally regarded as being one of the best novels about WWII, while The Lowlife is a great book about one of the Jewish characters who did not take the north west passage, continuing to live in Hackney, still gambling down the dog tracks. Black Spring also promise the release of Baron's book of war short stories, The Human Kind, next spring. A tremendous book. Meanwhile we have just received Andrew Whitehead's introduction to Alaxander Baron's Rosie Hogarth, due out in October from Five Leaves, to add to our King Dido. More on that one later.
Labels:
Alexander Baron,
Andrew Whitehead,
Black Spring,
Rosie Hogarth
Saturday, 15 May 2010
Vimtos all round
You need something to wash down Dairylea white bread sandwiches, Victoria sponge and the like, a major feature of Maxine Linnell's 1962 food table at the launch of her book Vintage on Thursday night. I was too busy with bookselling to get anywhere near the '62 or the 2010 food tables (her novel is set in both times) but the crowds got stuck in. And there were crowds too, so thanks to Kate, Terry, Rod Duncan and the others at Leicester Writers Club for organising a great launch. Maxine was a bit shocked at the numbers, but proved to be a great reader and good in conversation. The audience also got stuck into debating the differences between then and now, and it was good to have a teenager debating as well as some of the older crowd. It was a great night. Well done Maxine.
Labels:
Leicester Writers Club,
Maxine Linnell,
Vimto,
Vintage
Sunday, 9 May 2010
Memories of Ted Hughes
Today's Observer: "...an exceptional memoir, Memories of Ted Hughes, 1952-63 by his Cambridge friend Daniel Huws (Five Leaves, £5.99), published in an exquisite paperback edition by the contemporary designer Richard Hollis. Huws believes "Ted's character has been traduced" by the "highly distorted picture" derived from Sylvia's letters and journals. For him, Hughes is an enthusiastic, romantic figure, a young undergraduate "dressed in grey flannel trousers and a black corduroy jacket". This tantalising fragment will make any Hughes fan impatient for Jonathan Bate's projected biography. Letters, memoirs, a renewed sense of the poet's importance; the time is ripe for that life of Hughes."Robert McCrum
Labels:
Daniel Huws,
Richard Hollis,
Robert McCrum,
Ted Hughes
"Keep beavering away" - Stanley Middleton 1919-2009, a celebration
Tamar Hodes, one of the speakers at the Nottingham celebration of the life of Stanley Middleton repeated this (a variation on the less polite army version), his advice to her as a young writer some 27 years ago, in describing how Stanley took her under his wing in Cambridge, leading to so many years of correspondence. Various of us read from or commented on his literary work, or talked about his life outside of the book world. Paul Binding gave a critique of some titles, which will certainly drive me to read or reread the ones he discussed. We were accompanied by songs from Caroline Danks, one of his grandchildren. The highlight of the day for me though was Philip Davis reading a section from Stanley's last novel, A Cautious Approach, to be published this August by Hutchinson. Philip read, wonderfully, a very moving passage about a son and father relationship, a difficult relationship. I hope the rest of the book, Stanley's 46th I think, will be as good. The event was largely organised by David Belbin and supported by both Nottingham universities, Five Leaves, Writing East Midlands and The Bookcase. The celebration was fully booked, the audience largely from an older generation of readers and those who had known Stanley from his teaching days and from his church as well as from his writing. A very fitting occasion.
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