TEN YEARS AN AUTHOR… JANE CABLE SHARES HER MOST IMPORTANT LESSONS

Jane Cable self published her first book in 2013, after it reached the final of a major national competition sponsored by Harper Collins. After a brief flirtation with an agent and another publisher, in 2018 she signed to Sapere Books, for whom she writes haunting romances. Two years later she achieved her dream of becoming an Harper Collins author, writing as Eva Glyn. So far four women’s fiction titles have been published by One More Chapter, three of them set in Croatia.

This week, lessons eight to ten:

Publishing deals are increasingly hard to find

One thing I really wish I had been able to tell my twenty-something self was to prioritise my writing then, because publishing would become an increasingly tough business. Sadly that still holds true today.

Think about it; when one of the mainstays of your business plan is the 99p ebook (of which the platform selling it will take a very large share), a huge number will need to be sold to make anything like a profit. And it seems to me a bit of a fallacy that the costs involved are lower; the only thing missing are printing and physical distribution, and those can be done very cheaply in bulk, especially when you consider the differential in price.

So publishers have to be incredibly careful about what they acquire. Celebrity authors are bankers who bank roll the rest of us, but very little else is certain. Even authors with contracts can find themselves in choppy waters if the first book of a deal does not sell well. It’s brutal, but it’s a business. And sadly, with a cost of living crisis gripping the country and beyond, I can’t see it getting better any time soon. Sorry.

 

You will spend more time marketing your books than you ever imagined

When new authors blithely ask what they need to do to make sure their book sells I do have a wry little smile to myself. If there was a magic bullet and I knew what is was, I would be top of the Amazon rankings.

The one thing I can say with a degree of certainly is that you need to choose your marketing channels and stick with them consistently. I can tell when some authors have a book out in the near future because suddenly they pop up on social media, after an absence of months or even years. In that time all but your closest contacts are going to forget you.

Of course marketing takes time. I spend at least an hour on it each day, mainly on social media, but also looking at other promotional opportunities such as advertising, preparing new graphics, polishing up my website and Amazon pages, writing guest blogs… The list is pretty endless, but it’s only by trial and error you will discover what works for you.

 

A good edit is the best learning experience you can have

The first book I wrote for One More Chapter was The Olive Grove, and when the structural edit came back it wasn’t so much a case of ‘could do better’ as ‘must do better’. I was devastated, but the notes I was given were so detailed they provided a roadmap for how to improve the book, so it could become the best seller that it has.

I learnt so much from that experience. How to fill the pages with wonderful settings and deep, credible emotions. How to take a reader inside the story and keep them there, turning every page. It was the most valuable learning experience of my entire writing life, and I have pumped what I learnt into everything I’ve written since. Of course, that doesn’t mean I’m perfect and every time I receive an edit back from One More Chapter I am trembling not only with fear, but with anticipation.

Each and every one has made me a better writer. And that’s very exciting indeed.

 

Lessons one to seven have been published on the previous two Wednesdays.

 

NEW BOOKS FROM THE CARIADS

The Secret Sister by Jan Baynham, reviewed by Jane Cable

This beautiful book transported me not only to Sicily, but to mid Wales during the Second World War, and the claustrophobia of the small communities where everyone knew everybody else’s business. It is here the book starts, in 1943, when Italian prisoner of war Carlo meets Sara, who had been trapped in an abusive marriage.

The Secret Sister is unusual for a dual timeline because the whole wartime narrative is played out before the story moves on to 1968, but I can see it had to be this way for the story to work, and the author definitely made the right decision to do so. It is in this second part of the book that we travel to Sicily and Baynham brings the island to life in a wondrous whorl of colours, tastes and sensations. I was absolutely transported there and now cannot wait to visit the island.

I thoroughly recommend this emotional tale of family secrets and enduring love.

 

The Sea Sisters Swimming Club by Sue McDonagh, reviewed by Morton S Gray

Fran is a survivor and a woman cast adrift by a heart attack which cut short her police career. She is finding the adjustment to life outside of the force difficult and unsettling. She really doesn’t know who she is at the beginning of the novel. An opportunity to house sit by the sea in Wales offers her the chance to explore options for her future and rediscover her spirit.

Wyn is also wounded by life after an accident changed him forever both mentally and physically. He agrees to teach Fran to swim and they get ever closer, but he is hiding secrets of his own and has a needy ex-wife.

Enjoyed the references to the Art Hotel encountered in other Sue McDonagh books and the comradery of the sea sisters. I loved some of the secondary characters too – Elin, Gavin, Caitlin. And the novel made me want to enjoy coffee and cake by the sea, even if I don’t venture into the waves beyond paddling, but who knows I may get braver like Fran after being shown a glimpse of possibilities by this book.

A feel good, inspiring read which made me want to read more of Sue McDonagh’s novels.

 

The Lost Heir by Jane Cable, reviewed by Kitty Wilson

The Lost Heir is a dual timeline story that flits between Regency Cornwall and Cornish life in 2020. For the historical element, Jane Cable has taken her location and characters straight out of the Cornish Archives and built a world around them that you can absolutely believe to be true, or at the very least, wish it was.

Jane Cable meshes history, romance, and the supernatural and touches on subjects that are far from easy to write about, rape, the scandal of illegitimacy, the limitations placed on women in Regency times, the lockdowns of recent years; and yet each and every storyline is written with an insight and sensitivity that pulls the reader thoroughly into the world inhabited by these characters.

It is the descriptions of Cornwall however that set this book far above others of a similar vein. I was galloping across the cliffs with William, sat with Harriet as the oil-lamps flickered and I found myself escaping to this book whenever I had a few spare minutes, racing through the story desperate to know how Franny would resolve her situation, keen to know if the modern-day romance could possibly play out as I wished it to.

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and if you too want to escape to Regency Cornwall, then I highly recommend that you do so with this beautifully captivating, insightful and evocative book.

 

 

 

 

Project Greenfingers by Alex Bannard Wellbeing and Wellness editor

Last year a psychic told me I loved gardening, not to mention dirty hands covered in soil. This couldn’t have been further from the truth – my garden was, quite frankly, like the Day of the Triffids with head high weeds dominating  the space the trampoline didn’t monopolise. Gardening felt like housework and it was the one mindful activity I just couldn’t embrace.

But his words had sown a seed:

I had  been exploring a more Ayurvedic approach to life and menopause. Ayurveda is the sister science of yoga, steeped in ancient tradition, and is recognised by the WHO as one of the oldest medical systems. It’s a beautifully holistic, whole-body approach to physical, mental & emotional wellbeing, with herbs an essential part of Ayurveda: cooking with them, herbal teas & infusions, herbal tinctures for specific aliments.

I am also increasingly drawn to natural surroundings, and the seasons. I began to admire those living more self-sufficiently,  perhaps even off the grid. In fact I discovered someone in Melbourne who had been off the grid and self-sufficient for 15+ years and  felt inspired. After all, if it could be done in the middle of a city surely/maybe I could do the same in the Vale of Evesham.

So I decided to plant a small herb garden & Project Greenfingers was born.

I was mindful that a small herb garden was a realistic start. It wasn’t plain sailing as my Percy Thrower-ess is severely limited: I bought marjoram instead of oregano, then potted & unpotted mint only to discover it was sage. There were many other comedy moments.

I bought  house plants for some much needed interior greenery.  The kids began to think I devoted more time to the plants than to them as each day I dreamed of how I could extend the transformation of the garden.

Then one day, completely out of the blue one of my neighbours asked if I wanted some sleepers and top soil. I hadn’t anticipated my dream would manifest so quickly but 2 days later my son and his best mate transported it all around the block. I piled on manure to fertilise it and bought packs of wild flower seeds which I scattered on top. Suddenly I was being given all sorted of plants, sunflowers, pumpkins, squash, courgette, tomatoes, more herbs.

It’s all higgledy-piggledy and very random but I have loved every minute of creating, planting and getting my hands dirty. I have watered and nourished my plants, watching them blossom and bloom.

I had no idea when I embarked on Project Greenfingers how quickly it would evolve and how much I would truly enjoy creating a more natural haven in our garden. It had not – ever – occurred to me that I would be a participant in the joy of creation, but indeed I was, and grateful beyond measure for the seed of inspiration the psychic shared.

Alex is a yoga teacher, mindfulness coach & menopause mentor & you can find out more about her antics on my socials or blog:

Website: alexbannard.com

For free resources check out:

Facebook group: Mindfulness & Yoga for Self-Care: https://www.facebook.com/groups/MindfulnessYoga4Relationships

YouTube channel: https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCQlKZJ7MeyYc6lqkv6seISw

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alexbannard/

TEN YEARS AN AUTHOR… JANE CABLE SHARES HER MOST IMPORTANT LESSONS

Jane Cable self published her first book in 2013, after it reached the final of a major national competition sponsored by Harper Collins. After a brief flirtation with an agent and another publisher, in 2018 she signed to Sapere Books, for whom she writes haunting romances. Two years later she achieved her dream of becoming an Harper Collins author, writing as Eva Glyn. So far four women’s fiction titles have been published by One More Chapter, three of them set in Croatia.

This week, lessons five to seven:

Writers who have successfully self published tend to be more savvy

I started out by self publishing my first novel, The Cheesemaker’s House, because at that time in particular, publishers were afraid of ghosts. In romance books anyway. I knew nothing about the process, so put in into the capable hands of assisted publisher Matador, but even so it was a very steep learning curve.

I needed to understand retail distribution, I didn’t know book bloggers existed, and barely anything at all about Amazon categories, let alone going wide or narrow. The whole process of publishing and marketing baffled me, but I had to learn pretty quick. Also to moderate my expectations about the sales the book might achieve, although the ebook at least vastly exceeded them.

All of these were important lessons to take with me when I found a publisher. Everything from assessing the contract to understanding the control I would be giving up, and the promotion I would still need to do. If I hadn’t indie published first I would have been clueless.

 

Writer friends you really trust are invaluable

Ten years ago I had only one writer friend, introduced to me by a neighbour, and that was Claire Dyer. Through getting to know her I learnt the value of having someone to talk to about all aspects of our craft and of the crazy world of publishing we operate in, and we are friends to this day.

Writers talk about ‘finding their tribe’, and I found mine first in Chindi, a group of independently publishing authors in Chichester, where I was living at the time. Three of us moved on to find deals more or less together and we have remained close, but I learnt so much from almost every member of that group I will be forever in their debt.

As my career has changed, I have made many new writer friends, but there is a solid core of those I trust implicitly; people I can turn to when times are tough, and celebrate the successes too. Without them, being an author would be a very lonely business.
When you’re in the publishing wilderness, keep writing if you can

Overnight success in publishing is rare and most authors have periods they either feel they are never going to make it, or that they have been in the wilderness so long there is no possible way of crawling back.

It is so important to keep writing. One famous author described her work as her life raft when her publisher dumped her, and I totally understand that. Writing is as much a vocation as it is a profession, and without it many of us would feel even more lost. It can be a life, and mental health saver, but if you take a break then that is fine too. Your brain and body will tell you what you need to do if you listen to them.

Of course you also need to keep writing to have something to submit. Or even a drawer full of somethings, so that when that deal arrives you can offer more than one book, because you’re going to need it. It proves you have the work ethic, commitment and ideas it takes to succeed now it’s your turn to shine.

Lessons one to four were published last Wednesday, and lessons eight to ten will be published next week.

 

Geomag –Educational Toys Which Are Way Too Much Fun – by award winning author Dr Kathleen Thompson

Are you reaching that point where getting the kids back to school sounds more tempting than you care to admit? You’ve gone through your list of fun things to do and it’s starting to look a little threadbare.

‘Oh not that again Mum?’ ‘I’m bored’ ‘What can we do?’ – Striking any chords?

Well if you haven’t discovered Geomag yet, this could be the answer to your prayers. In fact these toys are such fun for all ages that I’m sorely tempted not to share.

Like most of the best toys, they’re simple but clever. Magnetic brightly-coloured plastic rods and metal balls, with variously-shaped bases – that’s it.

But what fun – the magnets are powerful, making it really easy to construct all sorts of stable buildings -from houses and towers to pyramids – even a dodecahedron (yes I had to look that one up too).

You can also use them on a flat surface to make stick men, flower shapes and stars – the only limit is your imagination. This means that kids from 3yrs upwards can enjoy them at different levels – and this includes big kids too, did I mention that I just can’t stop playing with them?

But there’s more – they’re also great for helping school age kids with STEM (science, technology, engineering, and maths). You can build all sorts of geometric shapes in either 2 or 3 dimensions and these toys help kids understand magnetic polarity – if you try to attach two positive ends together you’ll see what I mean.

I personally love the Supercolor set with brightly-coloured rods. The 42 piece set is perfectly big enough for hours of fun and makes a great introductory set, although larger sets are available too.

If kids are looking for something a bit different the Glow set pieces contain natural plant minerals which absorb sunlight and then start to glow – fun for night-time.

The sets come with small storage boxes which mean they take up almost no room at home and are really easy to take on journeys. The other big plus of the magnets, is that individual pieces are less likely to fall – thus avoiding the ear-piercing screams and demand that you stop immediately on the motorway and retrieve pieces from the car footwell (or is that just my painful memory?)

You can add to the sets too, with lots of different selections suitable for different age groups.

You’ve probably noticed, I simply love these. If you want to grab some for the rest of the holidays check out the links below but you’d better hurry – there’s a serious risk I’ll be buying out all supplies myself. Well I am in the middle of building a rather impressive space craft.

Geomag Supercolor 42 Piece, £29.99 from ToysRUs.co.uk

Geomag (329) Glow 42 Piece Set £19 from Amazon

By Dr K Thompson, author of From Both Ends of the Stethoscope: Getting through breast cancer – by a doctor who knows

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01A7DM42Q http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01A7DM42Q

http://faitobooks.co.uk

Note: These articles express personal views. No warranty is made as to the accuracy or completeness of information given and you should always consult a doctor if you need medical advice.

Dumbledore Is SO Gay at Southwark Playhouse, London reviewed by Paul Vates, Drama Critic “A great show – fun but slightly frivolous”

Fancy seeing a show that’s gloriously uplifting and very funny? You couldn’t go far wrong than this one: Dumbledore Is SO Gay – do have fun stressing the ‘so’ – which is a look into the world of Jack. He’s a fan of Harry Potter, suffering teenage angst and, on top of it all, coming to terms with the fact that he’s gay. Could things be any more frustrating?

The play is short, just over an hour long. There’s a stunning cast of three actors playing all the parts and, for Rowling fans, there are plenty of references to the books and films (albeit with a couple of spoilers, just in case you haven’t read/seen them all…)

Alex Britt plays Jack, full of energy, sincerity and joy. He is joined by Martin Sarreal and Charlotte Dowding in this madcap scenario. All three have a blast in their parts, fizzing the story along at a blistering pace. Look out for Charlotte’s swimming – hilarious upstaging, but worth it! It can’t be a coincidence that there are two men and one woman on stage here as the main protagonists – just like at Hogwarts!

Directed by Tom Wright, simplicity is the key here – letting Robert Holtom’s script and the performers do the rest. I specifically enjoyed the subtle soundtrack music by Peter Wilson.

In style and vigour, the production puts me in mind of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. But here, the two shows differ. Curious Incident is a full-length theatrical event and makes Dumbledore feel a little on the small side, a play that rushes to get everywhere and touch all the bases as fast as it can when, perhaps, it should slow down and take its time. The emotional scenes hit just as hard as the comic, but could the levels of Jack’s self-identity and his relationships with family and friends be explored more in depth? It is performed in the ‘first-person’, mainly as reportage and commentary – whereas some longer, deeper scenes would not go amiss.

Dumbledore Is SO Gay is a great show – fun but slightly frivolous. I think it should take itself a little more seriously. I want to know more about Jack and his world; so, although I had a good time, I do feel short-changed. This production was performed in 2020 at VAULT Festival and at The Pleasance Theatre the following year – it is obviously growing in confidence and power. It is going to keep evolving. Hopefully, I’ll be able to see a full-length exploration of Jacks’ amazing story – in the West End and on tour very, very soon…

Photography David Jenson

Producer Hannah Elsy Productions

Production Mgmt Harry Fernley-Brown for New Wolf Productions

Director Tom Wright

Movement Director Rachael Nanyonjo

Set and Costume Natalie Johnson

Running Time 75 minutes (no interval)

Dates until Saturday 23rd September 2023

Monday to Saturday at 8pm

Tuesday & Saturday Matinees at 3.30pm

Venue Southwark Playhouse, 77-85 Newington Causeway, London SE1 6BD

Tickets https://southwarkplayhouse.co.uk/productions/dumbledore-is-so-gay/

or Telephone – 020 7407 0234

Age Guidance 14+

Content Warning Homophobia, strong language, sexual references and themes of racism,

suicide, and sexual assault.

Instagram @swkplay

Twitter @swkplay

Facebook @SouthwarkPlayhouse

Goodness – Joffe Books has news of Awards plus new books… read on.

A cracking book of the week from Joffe Books – The Widow’s Boyfriend by E.V. Seymour – a new unputdownable psychological thriller with a breathtaking twist — THE WIDOW’S BOYFRIEND is out now for just £0.99 | $0.99*. This is a special launch price:   Verity’s widowed mother has been secretly dating a man she met online. Verity should feel pleased for her but she can’t help doubting his intentions. Then a dead bird and surveillance photos are delivered to her mother’s front door and Verity’s suspicions are confirmed — but can she prove it.

Now for my own pick of the week from Joffe’s offerings this week.

                                     

Rather a Vicious Gentleman by Frank McAuliffe @  £0.99/$0.99

This is a classic spy thriller full of twists from the pen of master writer, McAuliffe, who died in 1986. Do read this, it’s a steal at the usual  £0.99/$0.99

Augustus Mandrell aims to commit the ultimate ‘locked room’ murder. His plan is perfect . . . but even the best-laid plans can go awry.  With the guards onto Mandrell, he must think of a new plan — and quick. He’s found a way in. Now he must find a way out.

Plus another favourite author of mine: the fabulous Simon Brett with The Complete Mrs Pargeter Cozy Crime Mysteries 1 – 8  @ £0.99/$0.99

‘Murder most enjoyable.’ Colin Dexter     ‘Like a little malice in your mysteries? Some cynicism in your cozies? Simon Brett is happy to oblige.’ New York Times.

Now for a couple of Choc Lit newbies.  Remember there are more on Joffe Books website

                                      

Morton S. Gray’s ( a lovely author) The Truth Lies Buried  is a romance full of mystery @ £0.99/$0.99

Jenny is instantly drawn to widower and sculptor Carver Rogers — but is it his handsome good looks or their shared twenty-five-year history?  Now they’ve found one another, can they solve the decades-old mystery? Perhaps they can find a way to move on from their pasts . . . together?

Meet me on the Buddy Bench by Hannah Pearl is a love story that will pull on your heartstrings. £0.99/$0.99

Could a serendipitous meeting change the lives of two lost souls?   Ava didn’t expect to meet the perfect Dr Sam at the buddy bench. Is their memorable encounter a one-off, or could the pair become so much more?  Ahhh, me to know, you to find out.

Now for a new one from LUME – a box set for only £0.99/$0.99

The Warwyck Saga by Rosalind Lake. Three historical tales of love, loss and family. Set in the seaside resorts of Victorian England, this evocative historical romance trilogy follows the Warwyck family through three generations. ‘One of the genre’s leading lights.’ Kirkus Reviews.

Anyone for some Lovely Award News? Thought so – drum roll.

RNA WINNERS — KATY TURNER AND SALLY JENKINS-  two of Joffe Books incredible authors – took home a clean sweep of awards at the annual Romantic Novelists’ Association (RNA) Conference. And let’s not forget  congratulations are due to Katy Turner for winning the Joan Hessayon Award for New Writers with her novel LET’S JUST BE FRIENDS, and congratulations also to Sally Jenkins for winning the Elizabeth Goudge Award for her one-thousand-word opening for a novel on the theme: Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder.

Hang on, not finished yet, the good news keeps on coming: 2023 NGAIO MARSH AWARDS Blood Matters by Renée is a finalist at the Ngaio Marsh Awards 2023 for Best Novel, with this fascinating New Zealand crime novel. Have you visited Porohiwi and discovered all its secrets? Why not discover Renée’s award-winning crime fiction today for just £0.99/$0.99.

Which seems to make it a ‘wrap.’ Great news all round, and more fabulous books at Joffebooks.com   https://www.lumebooks.co.uk/

 

 

 

 

TEN YEARS AN AUTHOR… JANE CABLE SHARES HER MOST IMPORTANT LESSONS

Jane Cable self published her first book in 2013, after it reached the final of a major national competition sponsored by Harper Collins. After a brief flirtation with an agent and another publisher, in 2018 she signed to Sapere Books, for whom she writes haunting romances. Two years later she achieved her dream of becoming an Harper Collins author, writing as Eva Glyn. So far four women’s fiction titles have been published by One More Chapter, three of them set in Croatia.

Today, lessons one to four:

Making connections through social media is fun

I know social media isn’t for everyone, but I do feel sad when authors say they hate it. I love interacting with other writers, bloggers and readers, chatting about books in general and hunting around for interesting content to post on my feed. On Twitter especially there are people from around the world who share my posts most days, and I of course reciprocate. I even feel I know them quite well.In my business life I used to do a fair bit of face to face networking, which being a shy person I did not always enjoy, but it taught me to treat my virtual networks in the same way; that to make it enjoyable (and successful) you need to put in more than you hope to get out. Although some days it seems like a uphill struggle to think of something to say, if I keep this in mind I still enjoy the interaction.

Twitter is LinkedIn for writers

So often people dismiss Twitter as ‘just talking to other writers’. Firstly, I don’t see the problem with that. Writers are readers too, and big recommenders of books other than their own. They have blogs and mailing lists you can swap with, and what’s even better is that their natural audience is the same as yours.But more than that, there are a large number of book reviewers and publishing professionals using Twitter every day. Pitches are announced, book deals, new publishers even. By connecting with these people they at least know your name. And you never know when that could be important.

You never stop honing your craft

And you never should. Every single book you write is a learning experience. If I had the time I would love to go back and rewrite my first novel, The Cheesemaker’s House – my skills as an author have improved so much. But perhaps I’m being too fussy, because readers still absolutely love it.Like most authors I take great pride in everything I produce. And I want that pride to be justified. After all, I am asking readers to invest not only their money, but their valuable leisure time, and in return they deserve my best.

 

Publishers acquire books because they think they will sell

There is no other agenda here. It doesn’t matter how beautifully you write, or how lovely a person you are; publishing is a business and money talks. Of course your contacts and reputation as a writer will put you a notch further up the slush pile, but without a book that will work in the market of the moment (which of course changes all the time), you will still be rejected. It’s nothing personal.It is the way of the world, and understanding this will help to protect your mental health. I’m lucky that I have a reasonably thick skin, but of course rejections still hurt. I have just learnt not to dwell on them. It only takes one book to land on one desk at the right time. Keep believing.

Lessons five to seven will be published next Wednesday.