day seven of #backtobooksaugust: view from where you read đž
trying on a metaphor
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@societyofauthors
day seven of #backtobooksaugust: view from where you read đž

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Reading for pleasure is one of the most important lessons children can learn at school which is why we need more dedicated School Librarians and fewer SATs.
Does the current system work for teaching children how to write in school? Many authors donât think so.
We spoke to Doctor Who writer Daniel Blythe to hear his thoughts on the subject.
Council member Neil Gaiman gives his favourite bit of advice for young writers (feat. Daniel Handler).
Celebrate your amazing local library on #LibrariesDay Use it! Love it! Join it! http://thndr.me/Q8Yhjd

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The most controversial theatre company of the 1900s
Stage Society members Clifford Bax, Harley Granville Barker and George Bernard Shaw
When Harley Granville Barkerâs Waste was famously banned by the Lord Chamberlain in 1907, it found itself in illustrious company. Unable to be performed in public, it was perfect fodder for the Stage Society. The theatre company, which, in its opening year, caused a police raid by staging Bernard Shawâs You Never Can Tell, was no stranger to controversy.
The Incorporated Stage Society, better known as just the Stage Society, was founded in 1899 to âregenerate the Dramaâ. With members including Harley Granville Barker, Bernard Shaw, J.E. Vedrenne, Flora Robson and Laurence Olivier, it continued in one form or another until the outbreak of the Second World War â during its 40-odd year history, it achieved its initial goals and then some.
Charles Edwards and Olivia Williams in Harley Granville Barkerâs Waste, first performed by the Stage Society. Photo by Johan Persson.
Primarily, the societyâs business was putting on plays. It got around the Lord Chamberlainâs restrictions by hosting private evenings in London Theatres, most commonly the Royal Court, and provided platforms for such writers as Shaw, Granville Barker and St. John Hankin, as well as overseas playwrights including Chekhov and Ibsen. Plays debuted by the society include Shawâs Mrs. Warrenâs Profession, which shocked audiences with its portrayal of an unrepentant sex worker, the premiere of Granville Barkerâs Waste and R.C. Sherriffâs Journeyâs End, starring a young Laurence Olivier.
As is clear from its body of work, the society had a purpose beyond the plays themselves. It was the discussion of important themes and subversive attitudes that spurred it on â from Wasteâs discussion of realpolitik and abortion to Toussaint Louverture by C.L.R. James, which, in 1936, became the first production to cast black actors on the British stage in a play by a black playwright. The societyâs constant pushing of boundaries and dislike of authority are illustrated in a 1910 letter from Shaw to Barker:
I learn with disgust and horror that you played the National Anthem and made the audience stand up on Monday⌠Have you any notion of the extent to which your sworn supporters are republicans or aristocratic souls with a loathing for public demonstrations?
The NTâs 1985 production of Mrs Warrenâs Profession. Photo by John Haynes.
Despite such disagreements between its members and its ârebelâ status within theatre, the society managed to contribute hugely to the development of the art. By 1930, it had created so many copycats that a motion was put forward for its dissolution; however, it was defeated, and the society continued until the outbreak of World War II.
We can see its influence not only through the body of work discussed above, but in the very fact that we currently have a National Theatre. Through work at the Royal Court and his and William Archerâs publication A National Theatre: A Scheme and Estimates, Harley Granville Barker became one of the greatest advocates of such an institution. It is only right, then, that his work currently graces the Lyttelton stage. Through its work, its attitudes and its legacy, the Stage Society has developed from the 1900s most controversial theatre company to a key group in the history of British theatre.
Harley Granville Barkerâs Waste is playing in the Lyttelton Theatre until March. Click here to buy tickets.
Huge cuts threaten Welsh literature
More than 400 writers have written to protest against proposed cuts which threaten the future of the Welsh publishing industry.
Welsh- and English-language writers are standing in solidarity to oppose the 10% cuts to the Welsh Book Council (WBC). The SoA shares their concerns and welcomes and supports the letters to the Welsh Assembly.
The WBC supports hundreds of publications in Welsh and English each year, as well as many magazines and journals. The cuts will have a huge negative impact on publishing in both languages.
âSo this is my manifesto, my promise to you, the reader. From you, I ask that you take it in good faith, respond in kind, and understand that, whatever I do, I do for the sake of something we both value - otherwise we wouldnât be here.â
A really interesting piece that Iâve hugely enjoyed.
Joanna Barnard is an English Literature graduate and works in marketing. In 2014, she won the inaugural Bath Novel Award and her first novel, Precocious, was published by Ebury in August. A Northerner currently exiled in the South of England, Joanna misses flat vowels, friendly bus drivers and chips and gravy.
Joanna Barnard joins us this month for an interview!Â
So, the rundown: your debut novel, Precocious, won last yearâs Bath Novel Award, nabbed you an agent and was published by Ebury in August. The route of traditional publishing has lately been seen as inaccessible, with worries that only âloudâ books â those with big, dramatic hooks and high-concept bylines â or celebrity tie-ins can still find success. Precocious is about a complex relationship between a woman and a man. Would you describe it as a âquietâ book?
In a way, yes. I mean, it's an attention-grabbing headline, isn't it â the whole teacher-pupil thing. It tends to be presented, especially in the media, in quite a salacious way. But Precocious is a very internally-focused book, it's about emotions, the power of memory, and complex choices â not headlines. So in that sense it's quiet, yes.
The Society of Authors believes literary agents should do enough to justify their commission. Would you point to your agent as a good example? How much has representation helped you?
Juliet is a brilliant agent. She's helped me in the obvious practical ways â it's virtually impossible to break into traditional publishing without an agent, after all, and it's incredibly useful having someone 'on side' who understands and is knowledgeable about the industry.
More than that though â and I think this is what separates a great agent from a good agent - Juliet has been a big source of support. She demonstrates passionate belief in all her authors and this has helped my confidence enormously â being a writer can be pretty lonely and, for me anyway, having an agent has made me feel less like I'm on my own.
Read the full interview

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STILL UNDER THE GUN TO NOT BE EVICTED âŚ
My bookstoreâs finances right now (summer was not such a good one for usâtourism is way down and now the Summer People went home) are such that I need at least another $500 in the YouCaring site to not be evicted at the end of the next weekâI have to buy books for customers, which means whatâs in my bank account ($300) is already used up, so to speak.
The YouCaring site has so far raised $220 of the $2250 I need to get the rent paid up fully. I know you guys can spread the word: Indie Bookstores are so, so, so important!Â
I DO have irons in the fire to get money myself from cashing out some of the accrued life insurance money in my account, but this is a one-trick pony. Itâs the last âsavingsâ I have. Everything, everything is in the store. Iâm trying to be a responsible adult here and not just rely on the kindness of strangers.
Please think about donating, and please please please encourage reblogging. I donât get many notes on this and Iâm despairing. I know people followed me re the Neil Gaiman auction, so there must be some people reading me! I hope âŚ
https://www.youcaring.com/nancy-hanger-star-cat-books-425592
NEWS ON THE NEIL GAIMAN FRONT âŚ
Neil will be getting 9 of the books from me in about a week or less, which hopefully be before Amanda gives birth. Otherwise, he will sign them as soon as possible (there are only 10, after all) and get them back to me. Then the online auction can begin.
There is 1 more ( The Sleeper and the Spindle) which heâll get in another two weeks (see below about pub dates and release dates that we have to comply with).
NOTE: Because The Sleeper and the Spindle isnât officially released until Sept 22, we canât start the auction until after then, due to publication dates by the publisher and such. My distributor wonât send me the book, in fact, until after Sept 22âI have to rely on Baker & Taylor to send it to me fast, but sometimes I get the books a week or more after pub date.
PLEASE REBLOG THIS SO PEOPLE KNOW THE AUCTION WILL BE IN SEPTEMBER, IF THE CREEKS DONâT RISE.
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LIST OF BOOKS IN THE AUCTION:
The Graveyard Book vol. 1, graphic novel (hardcover) The Graveyard Book vol. 2, graphic novel (hardcover) Coraline (hardcover) The Graveyard Book (hardcover) American Gods (trade paperback) Fortunately, the Milk (hardcover) Odd and the Frost Giants (hardcover) Neverwhere: Authorâs Preferred Text (hardcover) Trigger Warning (hardcover) The Sleeper and the Spindle (hardcover)
The first known poet in history, Enheduanna, was an Iraqi woman. She wrote about Inanna on tablets in the cuneiform language. Â The interesting thing about her is that she had a position or title. It was âThe keeper of the flame.â I think that if a poet should have any role at all, it should be (wherever and whenever) the same: âkeeper of the flame.â
âDunya Mikhail, from âNew Directions Interview with Dunya Mikhail,â Cantos (April , 2010)
#library #scheming
submitted by obeynicktheratchetjkthatsstupid
Ever heard of the Authorsâ Foundation? It awards grants to authors to help them with the costs of completing a work-in-progress, whether that money is for research, travel, or simply time away from work to write. Check out the guidelines on our website and see if youâre eligible to apply.
If so, the deadline is 30 September, so youâd better get working on your proposal!
Ice Cream for the Soul
Council member Anne Sebba reflects on reading for pleasure.
I fell asleep last night with a book in my hands. There were just 40 pages to go until the end but, after a long and tiring day, much as I was desperate to know who lived and who died, I just failed to make it to the finish. Luckily I woke at 5am, before the rest of the household, and raced to the end, sorry it was over but happy to have shared a few days of my life with those heroic yet flawed characters. It was the most gripping and poignant story I have read for ages and urge anyone looking for a beautifully written tale in an original voice, who wants to understand how the heart functions and learn something about twentieth century history along the way (thatâs all of us, right?) to read Ayelet Gundar-Goshenâs novel, One night, Markovitch â although you have to get to the end of the book to find out why it is so named.

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hi! so this isn't book related but more like writing related: do you know any tips (or links to tips) to write about barista and/or bartenders? i'm currently writing about a coffeeshop and the main character is the barista. i've tried to find the tips on google but i just can't seem to get the right keywords! so if you know anything, any links, that would be very helpful. thank you and have a nice day! :)x
Totally depending on what youâre afterâŚ
This website tells you about the drinks, how to make them, the machines and well, the basics to being a barista.Â
This is an article about some downfalls of being a barista
Hereâs the benefits of being a barista
Thatâs all Iâve got! If any followers have some more information, that would be awesome! Thank you :)
my aunt took her indoor cat outside for the first time