Archive for May, 2008

h1

The reality

May 30, 2008

The reality is good – but maybe not spectacular. Today we got an order for 10 of a title from an account we had been courting for some while. 10! – You say. What about 5000? Well, that’s actually the way of it when you are small. Ten – with a re-order for 20 in a couple of week’s time will be just the ticket. And one of our authors looks to have put together a real deal for a venue and a joint reading with a bit of a rising star ( as he is himself when folk cotton on) – and we would dearly love to wheel a big siege machine of publicity behind the opportunity - but when it’s fixed we’ll make sure it’s on our website and blog ! Grains of sand, that’s what we are talking about. Or spoonfulls of concrete that will one day raise a great platform with a wonderful view. Yep, that was a good day, steady progress and a wonderful community of authors who know what we are up against. Thanks.

David

h1

A day in Orkney, from a virgin blogger

May 29, 2008

Pamela Beasant is a writer based in Stromness, Orkney, and last year was holder of the first George Mackay Brown Writing Fellowship. Her collection of poetry, Running with a Snow Leopard, was published by Two Ravens Press in January 2008.

Today I spent some time writing this and wondering what a blog is trying to do. I can see it’s a good way to think out loud – communicate in a raw way and see if anything comes back. Some people really enjoy this – a kind of remote gregariousness – but I tend to only have this kind of discussion with people I know and trust. And it’s interesting to hear about people’s days, or books they are passionate about, and especially to hear how people write, and why. But when it comes down to it, I find it hard to join in. I don’t want to describe writing, or discuss it in the germination stage – I just want to think it, fiercely and intensely, and on my own.

Having said that, some people are brilliant at it. One of the best pre-blog bloggers, in my opinion, was George Mackay Brown. Never mind all the slightly mystical, archetypal stuff; he wrote a weekly column for the local paper for years and years, with a directness that was intimate, and there was nothing egotistical, and no agenda, behind it. He wrote about all sorts of things, but the ones I like best are about the mundane, everyday things: when he accidentally put strawberryade into his stew, for instance, or, best of all, when he tried to resuscitate his dead toaster by sweeping out all the crumbs, at which he could only gaze in awe. These things are the stuff of great blogs, and they are individual and universal.

This is a letter from Stromness, but not, I’m afraid, about stew or exploding toasters. This is a not very interesting day in the life of a poet.

We’ve had a long spell of dry, sunny weather in Stromness, but I still can’t go out without a coat, or, heaven forbid, socks. How can people do it, and why does someone who feels the cold so much live in a place like this? Making a concession to the time of year, I reluctantly do without a vest, and end up on the brink of hypothermia after a trip to the Co-op. Back home, it’s colder indoors than out. After guiltily lighting the fire, and toasting a red, mottled stripe of warmth into cheeks, hands and feet, I get down to some work.

A poet seems to fill the day with almost everything except poetry. Today, my sixteen year-old is packed off to a standard grade with lunch money, two pens and a pep talk about focusing, writing legibly, caring about passing, not taking in mobile phones, reading the instructions on the paper, remembering calculator/dictionary (how come they are allowed to take in dictionaries?)…. He sails off blithely and I run to the toilet, feeling all the nerves and over-anxiety he should be feeling, damn him.

Then there are the emails. Please drop everything and write an advert/press release, find out about something, contact so-and-so about some other thing, read someone’s novel/play/poem. (I’m not exaggerating about novels – there seems to be a novel epidemic all over the west mainland of Orkney.) And getting the messages isn’t as easy as it sounds. With a knackered computer at home and temporarily no internet access, I trek to the library with a borrowed laptop, enough milk in a bottle for one coffee, phone and fags. On the way, I nod or say hello to most people, look at the posters in the window of Tam’s bookshop, squint at the exhibition in the Porteous Brae gallery, glare at the ginger cat who bullies all the others and craps in our garden, skirt round a nasty looking post-folk festival stain on the flagstones. Three-quarters of the way there, I realise I’ve forgotten the library key, and walk back home fuming. Once installed at last, I plug in the computer and get going. I’m lucky to have hung onto an office in the library, from when I was officially there all last year through the George Mackay Brown fellowship which I was awarded. My daughter gave me postcards to put on the walls and there are posters from all the events of last year. When coffee is required, I wash out the mug from last time in the tiny, metallic-smelling toilet and fill the kettle with fresh water. When the emails are done, I trek home, hang out the washing, phone someone, panic about whether so-and-so got some message, etc. On the walks to and from the library I often see the ferry, which looms so hugely when glimpsed intermittently down the nousts. If it’s breezy, I get a full, fresh whiff of the sea, and fleetingly notice where I am.

And then guilt sweeps in. Just when I’m tempting myself with the idea that I could type up the poem in the notebook, or have a long session with the novel, I remember that I’m not earning any money, and time is being swallowed up. I have obligations to the Scottish Poetry Library, and am putting together stuff on Orkney writers for Highland Library, and editing a book about Eday. So I do some of that, but the smallest thing can trip you up, or feel dangerously like a victory. The other day, for instance, a guy I’d been meaning to contact for weeks miraculously turned up right outside the house, sitting on a wall having a cigarette. I asked him all the urgent things I needed to, and felt like I’d done half a day’s work.

By lunchtime, not much creative has been achieved. My husband’s the chef in our house, so he emerges from his cave of a work room upstairs and cooks a couple of sausages for me (a treat – I don’t have them every day), and I butter the bread and put juice in glasses. We eat, make a cup of tea and go back to work. It all takes about twenty minutes. Then I get some writing done. At last. And if it goes all right, I don’t care about all the other undone things.

But today I’m clock-watching for my son to come back from his exam, nervously waiting to hear how it went. He arrives, dumps his jacket and two pens, cheerfully says it was fine and off he goes. I feel relieved and a bit foolish, and hope he’s right – and marvel at his attitude, remembering the weight of something huge, dreadful and never-ending at exam time.

More writing gets done before tea. I’m working on a series of themed poems: the jobs all the redundant saints and angels are doing in a godless world. It’s obsessing and becoming much more serious than it was at the outset – but it’s hard to concentrate. The other complication at the moment is that there’s an imminent performance of a rock musical I’ve been doing, on and off, for a few years, with composer Gemma McGregor. She has written brilliant music, and I’m sure it will all be fine. There are some very talented kids involved, an imaginative director and people running about doing sets, props and costumes. But it’s the first libretto I’ve done, and I feel in a state of apologetic panic about the whole thing. Responsible, and helpless. It’s been transformed into this whole other entity, and I can only stand back and watch, and occasionally send round a hastily updated version of the script. It’s a weird feeling, the kind that causes breath-catching anxiety at three in the morning, and the urge to run away very fast and far. At the moment, it’s invading the days as a kind of uneasy undertow.

We have tea, pasta tonight, and I ritually watch a TV programme which I won’t name because it’s too embarrassing. (It’s not even a soap.) Then I make phone calls that should have been done earlier. Later there’s a long, tangled conversation with my daughter, who’s away studying art at Dundee. She’s happy in a fragile way, but sometimes needs to offload. I try not to worry about her, but do. Then there’s some good writing time, when it’s too late for people to phone and the day’s shutting down. I feel alive by 11pm, and could work until 3, but usually don’t unless insomnia sets in. I have an apple before bed, and read for at least half-an-hour. Then sleep, and it all starts again.

h1

A case of literary hero worship

May 28, 2008

There comes a time towards the end of every day here on the croft when I need to collect the eggs, feed the various hangers-on and walk the dog down by the lochside (a perilous adventure right now, as nesting oystercatchers dive-bomb you to keep you away from their territory). About an hour ago, picking my way across the rocks, I heard my mobile phone ring. It was David ringing from the house, in a complete and largely incoherent tizz. Immediately imagining the worst, I set about extracting from him what had happened. It transpires that there had been a telephone call from Alasdair Gray. Well, we’re lucky enough that a few weeks ago he offered an excerpt from his new play, Fleck (a modern-day take on Faust) to put on our literary webmag, Corvaceous. He was calling to see whether we’d like to serialise the whole thing. David, fresh from a reading of Lanark and deeply impressed (he hasn’t rated a novel since Camus’ L’Etranger – except mine, of course, under some duress :-) was in a complete state of tongue-tied hero-worship, mopping his brow and stomping around the house like a star-struck teenager.

I have no doubt that there are still editors in big publishing houses who are capable of excitement over the literary excellence of an author rather than the amount of cash they’re likely to generate for the company. But at Two Ravens Press we do sort of specialise in it.  It’s what makes it all worthwhile – the opportunity to promote really fine writing in any way that we can.

Sharon

h1

Cottage Industry or Multinational?

May 28, 2008

I guess the answer is – both. Print costs for short-run digital books are a miracle of the modern age – if it were still just litho available we probably wouldn’t have started this whole deal in the first place. But digital is still expensive – for a big fat book almost too expensive. So we are constantly being advised to look to Poland for a printer. Resisted so far. For all sorts of practical reasons – fear of being left unable to meet a deadline, time spent in chasing ‘bugs’ in what is a highly automated process. But we do have to look at it. Shaving 30p per copy off a book can be the difference between profit and loss. So our croft HQ might be beaming files to Warsaw before long.

Then we just sent a small consignment to Australia. Another to Canada about to materialise. Just looking at a POD solution for the US market. All from a tiny housey in Ullapool. All a far cry from an idea to ‘produce a few really good quality books, working from home’.  But now we have a hold on this lion’s tail – we’d better hang on. Though it does seem to confuse a few people. An agent rang the other day and asked to be put through to the rights department. I put them on hold (humming my best tuneful hum) , walked out onto the lawn and gave the phone to Sharon – who was watering the vegetable patch.

David

h1

Ted Hughes on the dire consequences of a good review

May 27, 2008

No, I’m not banging on about bad reviews again … honest! – but as I slowly wade through Ted Hughes’ Collected Letters (published by Faber) every now and again I come across some gems, and I found this one this morning in a letter from Hughes to poet Anne Sexton about reviews. It’s from the writer’s perspective rather than the publisher’s, and it made me laugh. Here is a wee bit of it:

Don’t you worry about reviews. I’ve just been getting a load of them too. Both kinds are bad, but the favourable are worst I think. They tend to confirm one in one’s own conceit – unless they praise what you yourself don’t like. Also, they make you self-conscious about your virtues – just as when you praise a child for some natural charm. Also, they create an underground opposition: applause is the beginning of abuse. Also, they deprive you of your own anarchic liberties – by electing you into the government. Also, they separate you from your devil, which hates being observed, and only works happily incognito. Also, they deprive you of your detachment from the scene into which you are injecting your work, by making you a visible part of the scene. Also, they satisfy ambition, which only works from a radical discontent and public neglect. Also, they banish your spirit helpers, as when the eskimo hunter enters a gift shop and buys a car. Also, they falsify your life, by forcing an identification of you and your poems: your poems earn the praise but you read and accept it. Etc Etc.

Sharon

h1

Monday Guest Blog by Lisa

May 26, 2008

These pictures seemed apt with the following talk of heat and light. Thanks to Rich, my glassblower brother for letting me snap his glassworks.

Just a quick blog today, since it’s a bank holiday here and I’ve only been out of my pit for approximately three minutes.

The Observer’s literary editor, Robert McCrum, who stood down this month after ten years, has written an interesting article ‘Ten years that changed the world of books,’ where he talks about Amazon, book festivals, the kindle, and even ‘Blogs vs Reviewing.’ Excitingly, he says: ‘Now these book blogs – in Britain, for example, a highly responsible site like Vulpes Libris – could take over and hand the power back to – time honoured term – the Common Reader.’

He also says, however, that ‘My view is that the Common Reader generates more heat than light.’

In crass capitalistic style, I couldn’t help but wonder if ‘light’ sells more books than ‘heat’ sells?

And who exactly is the Common Reader? Is it me?- a reader of litfic, chicklit and Andy McNab? Is it my dad? – who reads mostly non-fiction and Tom Clancy? Or maybe it’s my college friend, who reads poetry and erotic thrillers?

Does the Common Reader even have a specific taste, or do they read pretty much whatever comes to their attention? My colleague, Mary, wrote an article ‘Too much of a good thing?’ which contended that there were too many books being published. A commenter on the piece, Jim Murdoch, made the interesting point:

The ease with which one can get a book into print now is a real problem because of the lack of proper editorial control so we are awash with books and how does one tell the good from the bad? So, what do most readers do when faced with a mountain of books? They pick from the outside, from what they can get to with ease.

So where does that leave a small new publisher of literary fiction like Two Ravens Press? Richard and Judy, Tesco and Waterstone’s 3for2s would certainly make these books accessible, but R&J is as available as the holy grail and Tesco and the 3for2s could also be thought of as problematic because of high discounting. Which leaves what? Perhaps word of mouth generated by newspaper reviews and book blog reviews, and the resulting heat of that elusive creature, the Common Reader?

Lisa Glass blogs as part of the Vulpes Libris (Book Fox) collective. Her novel, Prince Rupert’s Teardrop, is out in paperback now.

h1

The weekend at Two Ravens Press

May 24, 2008

Back from the big city, as David said, to civilisation Lochbroom style. Neither of us are much use any more away from this place – after 5 years here I feel totally cast adrift when I’m gone. A big sigh of relief to find all 11 goslings still alive (thanks to my mother and stepfather, professional croft-sitters), the four that we hatched in the incubator slowly munching their way down to England (they do like a nice drop of grass) and even the sheep looking on with astonished respect. This weekend brings more stress and excitement: the hopeful hatching of some of the 24 poultry eggs now in the incubator: Lavender Araucanas (a flighty and slightly tarty Chilean hen – lay very fine bue eggs) and Rhode Island Reds (the big fat slobs of the chicken world). Always a scary time when they start pipping, hovering to see whether they’re going to make it out alive. As you can see from this little thing (it’s only red because he’s under a heat lamp) it’s an exhausting process!

He looks like he’s going to grow up a true Scot – reading the football page …

Then, this afternoon, while the sun is still shining, a bonfire on the beach with a bunch of neighbours. Back to the books soon but even we figure they can do without us for a wee wee while …

h1

Launch the fleet

May 23, 2008

Ask a bunch of authors we publish  – they’ll probably tell you that we are a pair of party poopers who don’t much rate book launches. And they do have a point. We’ve just got back from attending two in Glasgow – Larry Butler’s Butterfly Bones, and J. David Simons’ The Credit Draper.  Two more different launches you’d struggle to find. But try as we might to be miserable at another night in a very cheap hotel where the walls were so thin you could the hear the guy two floors up shaving – well, goddam it, this was fun. Larry is a west-coast American long ago re-planted in Scotland, who read a lot of his poetry with a percussion accompaniment and then had a throat-singer do a version of one of his poems ‘from the throat’. Larry is the guy with ‘ching’ on his T-shirt, though being a poetry launch I don’t think the hidden part says ‘Cha-’. 

The throat-singer is the guy with one leg shorter than the other and Gerry Loose is standing next to Larry – and we can thank him for finally getting Larry to put a full collection together for publication after many years of writing, performing and publishing poetry by other means – bravo!

The next night we were at the Sauchiehall Waterstones, courtesy of Frank Rooney – a fine bookseller who really cares about where the store stands for local authors and the reading community. David drew in an enormous crowd, 80+, augmented by a lot of genuine ‘members of the reading public’. Despite a big (I was convinced over-optimistic) order there was not a copy of Credit Draper left on the shelves ten minutes after David finished reading – and we barely escaped with our lives from the baying crowd demanding signed copies. David got his fiver for the foolish bet that I took – that he wouldn’t sell-out.  Well, sorry David, and we do live and learn.  Not that Waterstones need the publicity – but glad to show David signing here in front of the company logo. The Glasgow flag-ship store took a local debut and launched it good and proper.

Then a midnight dash back to base (one night listening to the guy shave was enough) and a bulging e-mail box and copies of The Sam Book just delivered. Plus a first-thing re-order for more Credit Drapers!

 David

h1

Book festivals

May 22, 2008

As those of you who read this blog regularly will know, we spent most of last weekend at the Ullapool Book Festival. Right now there seem to be book festivals of one kind or another springing up all over the country. Surely a good thing – any chance to celebrate books and reading is something to be applauded. Little by little at Two Ravens we’re trying to expand our presence at book festivals. We started last year with an event on what it’s like to be a new published novelist with Peter Dorward and Tom Lappin at the wonderful Wigtown Book Festival. Unfortunately we couldn’t stay long enough to soak up the atmosphere but from what we heard it was wonderful – Wigtown is a very small place with quite cosy venues and a disproportionately large number of bookshops – and I think this gives a festival a relaxed and pleasantly intimate feeling, where the authors are not too divorced from the audiences but mingle quite freely with them. Ullapool was especially successful in this regard – it lasts only a weekend, and so most people seem to come for the whole thing. You can wander round the village and run into people that you recognise from the events; the authors and the audience all eat and drink together (if members of the audience are smart enough to choose to) at The Ceilidh Place (now surely that IS the centre of the universe … if you’ve never been there, rush at once to Ullapool – http://ceilidhplace.com/ceilidhplace/default.asp – it also has one of the best small independent bookshops in the entire country with a unique, thoughtful and literary selection of books) and you go home feeling enriched rather than exhausted. People in Ullapool don’t seem to know the meaning of the word ‘hype’, and so there is none. There’s simply a love for art and books and writers.

On the other hand and at the other extreme, five of our authors are at the Edinburgh International Book Festival in August, with another two giving readings at the book fringe festival. Edinburgh in August is an entire city full to the brim of visitors for the many arts events that dominate the place during that month. It’s a completely different atmosphere – but then it has a completely different aim. We’re really looking forward to seeing the difference.

Given the large number of book events out there, it can be hard sometimes to identify the kind of festival that Two Ravens Press would fit cosily into, so any suggestions will be gratefully received – as will any comments about what you like and don’t like to see from authors at a festival.

Sharon

h1

Poetry shines

May 21, 2008

A week ago I would have wanted to write a blog entry entitled ‘Poetry fiddles’ – that is, poetry fiddles while Rome burns. There was a lot of stuff getting me down – people with one or two bursaries under their belt who kept sending me another goddam poem just about oystercatchers. (Don’t get me wrong – I love oystercatchers, I know them and their nests and their chicks, and I rate them in the same way as I really do love the weird, magical old guy up the road who wears an off-orange waistcoat and spits a lot – but anyone who describes an oystercatcher’s call as ‘ethereal’ has disappeared up a dark place: they just haven’t listened.) But coming to my rescue were the poets at the Ullapool book festival, dragging my disillusioned iron out of the fire. Donny O’Rourke got it right through the near tears of a late-night poetry session when he said that poets can, and have, guided us forward. Shone a light on the dark path ahead. Told us who we might be. A hair’s breadth from being sloppy sentimental. Teetering on the brink of nonsense. But not falling in.

So there were Richard Price, Anne Frater, Rody Gorman and George Gunn making peoples’ hair stand on end with poetry that demanded to be taken seriously. On pain of death. Nothing less. They were connected to their moment in history, their place in the wide world, their craft and what it just might be able to rescue us from. Shining.

David