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You are here: Home / Archives for writing

writing

Hey! Look!

4th May 2011 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Should you deign to, you can get yourself a copy of a book that includes a short story of mine! When Amazon get it back in stock, anyway. This book is an anthology of work by writers that graduated from my MA programme at Goldsmiths between, I think, 2006 and 2009, selected by some of the staff. I would list the contributors, but there are forty.

My story is 2,846 words long and is about a girl with a strange name (‘The Secrets of Millennia Nolan’), no real friends, a fair-sized secret, and a longing for a decent summer. Everybody else has quite dull names, as names go. I guess I was running low on name-fuel that day (I have since bought another baby naming book. The first one really freaked my mum out when she saw it. The conversation went something like this: ‘Li, I’m not sure I want to ask this, but why is there a copy of Baby Names For Dummies in the boxroom?’ ‘Because I’m a writer. I have to name characters.’ ‘Oh. Riiiiight.’). It is set at a party. There are only two references to Buffy the Vampire Slayer in the story, which shows remarkable restraint on my part. Nobody dies. There is vodka.

My sister said it was really good, if that encourages you, though I’m quite sure that precisely nobody reading this will buy the book. Then, years later, obsessed fans of mine will be trawling through the blog archives, and they’ll read this and kick themselves. ‘Where was I in 2011,’ they’ll say, ‘before that tiny print run ran out?’

And they’ll pay £££££s for a copy on eBay. Two months later, I’ll announce a collection of short stories about girls with strange names, which will include a reprint of ‘The Secrets of Millennia Nolan’, and they’ll kick themselves. HAHA! Don’t worry, it’s an investment for your (great?)grandchildren, when in the centuries to come my work is rediscovered and all relevant paraphernalia becomes worth gazillions of creds.

I have read too many sci-fi books in which the currency is ‘creds’. Why isn’t it Earthos, like Euros? Possibly because ‘Earthos’ sounds stupid, and kind of like a breakfast cereal. I think the universal currency should be called the yen, like the current Japanese currency, because then, in English, ‘I have a yen for that’ would take on a whole new double meaning! Just me?

Filed Under: Book Chat Tagged With: book chat, books, I ramble on for a couple of paragraphs, my writing, short stories, writers I have met, writing

Book Review: The Artist’s Way: A Course in Discovering and Recovering Your Creative Self, by Julia Cameron

28th June 2010 By Julianne 2 Comments

Photo by Ian Sane

The Artist’s Way is one of the best books I have ever purchased. I had been recommended it several times before I finally went out and got it. It is a twelve-week course, with essays, exercises and tools designed to help you unblock your creativity and become a happier, more freely creative artist. It is suitable for anyone practising any form of art, or who wishes to do so. Writers, visual artists, musicians, actors, directors, comedians – all can find something useful in this book. This book does not teach you how to be creative, exactly, but it will hopefully show you how to be creative and happy, how to be creative without drugs or other addictions. It can help you shed your creative inhibitions. The Artist’s Way teaches you how to let go of negative beliefs that can hold you back from realising your creative potential.

I think anyone who wants to be a artist of any variety, professional or amateur, should read it because it will help you discover what has been holding you back. It changed my life. I completed the course for the first time in 2006, and I’m doing it again now, because there is much in it that I think I need to revisit. The Artist’s Way will not make you successful. You will still need to work on your craft, and learn to market yourself – none of which is covered in this book. It’s more about getting going in the first place than learning to be good at what you do.

My main criticism of this book is that it is very spiritual, although not confined to one particular religion. At the start of the book Cameron says that you don’t need to believe in God to follow the path in the book – but if you don’t believe in God you will probably not engage with some sections of the book so well. Cameron also talks a lot about ‘synchronicity’ and the universe helping those who help themselves, seemingly believing that once a person has recovered their creative ability, all they need to do is create, and then they will be successful! It’s very “New Age” in this way, and if you are the type of person who enjoyed The Secret and believes in the law of attraction then you will have no problems following what Cameron teaches.

I will make one point that goes against the ideas in the book – with practice, you can type your morning pages. I nearly always do, because my handwriting is appalling and I don’t have room for all the notebooks I’d need to keep. When I first started doing them I hand wrote them, but my writing hand got tired quickly and I couldn’t bear the thought of using up all that paper, so I trained myself to do them on the PC. As long as you can type fast enough to keep up with your thoughts it’s fine!

I didn’t complete The Artist’s Way within the twelve weeks. I’ve been on week three of my second go for about a month now. If you need to start and stop, it’s easy to read through the previous chapters and remind yourself of what you’ve missed. The main thing is keeping up with the morning pages. I’ve stopped writing them at various times, and when I get myself writing them again it’s like coming home, and I wonder why I ever stopped. Committing to them really works.

The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: art, book review, books, creative, creativity, Julia Cameron, review, The Artist's Way, writing, writing guidebooks

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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