Marie Marshall

Author. Poet. Editor.

Tag: publishing

What will emerge from the fire of inactivity?

Phoenix

I seem to recall, from James A Michener’s Centennial, that twentieth century ranchers with sizeable flocks of sheep deliberately kept a few head of cattle, so that they could legitimately call themselves ‘cattlemen’, in order to benefit from the cachet of that name. Well, I’m an author. The fact that I also cook, clean, and have a paid job – all of which takes up most of my waking day – is neither here nor there. This means that in order to keep the content of this web site fresh, however, I have to manufacture news on a slow news day.

So, what is actually happening in my non-quotidian world? Am I currently authoring? ‘Yes and no’ is the answer to that. My second novel, The Everywhen Angels, is currently with three publishers, two of which actively expressed interest in having the manuscript; I have recently tweaked the content slightly, to reflect how the world has moved on in the handful of years since I completed it. I have plot outlines and chapters-in-progress of two other novels, neither of which has progressed for some time, I have to admit. There are many genuine reasons. However, the more these reasons accumulate the more they seem like a list of excuses – the household chores, the paid work, the fact that for much of 2012 I was working on a new collection of poetry (I am not a fish) for a publisher, the promotion of that published collection and of my first novel Lupa, the editorial work on The Phoenix Rising from the Ashes, the quarterly editorial work on the zen space

Something had to give, and it has been work on my next novel(s). So what else of note is there? Well, since 2011 I have not been submitting much in the way of poetry to magazines. The exception being that recently I dropped a handful of haiku to Bones Journal and to Blithe Spirit (the poetry magazine of the British Haiku Society) and had one accepted at each, bringing my total of poems published since 2005 to two hundred and thirty-two. I need hardly add that this does not include poems blogged etc., which would take the number into the thousands. Nor does it include an extempore poem recently tweeted to the Scottish Poetry Library, which they instantly re-tweeted to all their followers. Nor, for that matter, does it include the poems that were published but which I’ve forgotten.*

Phoenix2Work on The Phoenix Rising from the Ashes has reached galley proof stage. I shall be engaged in that over this weekend. Publication is late, but the anthology should be out in July. I am looking forward to that greatly, as is the whole of the editorial team. With all the work mentioned above going on, I rather foolishly proposed to five fellow-poets a small chapbook anthology – I’ll do it, I’ll do it, I promise! Thankfully the next issue of the zen space has a guest editor…

All this makes me realise that what I do not have, and should have, is a schedule detailing what I have to do. It should list tasks as ‘urgent’, ‘important’, and ‘routine’; attention to serious writing should never drop into the ‘routine’ category, even if it is to be tackled routinely, if you see what I mean.

It is 8:15 on Saturday morning. I have been up since 4:15 and have spent most of that time here at the keyboard. Have I written much? No, I’m ashamed to say that I haven’t, but I will admit that it’s a wonderful time of day for it. I really must put ‘making a schedule’ on the list of urgent tasks for today.

__________

*A lot of my records went missing in 2007.

A wee billet doux from the NLS to my agent

©Bookseeker Agency

©Bookseeker Agency

‘Reading Corner’ on Day Two.

©Bookseeker Agency / Balbirnie Collective

©Bookseeker Agency / Balbirnie Collective

Popped my head in briefly to see that everything was in full swing. Gratified for the exposure, the poetry-reading, and the interest shown in my books.

©Bookseeker Agency

©Bookseeker Agency

‘Reading Corner’ at Balbirnie.

Members of the Balbirnie Collective, ©Bookseeker Agency

Members of the Balbirnie Collective, ©Bookseeker Agency

I was told that my books – my novel Lupa and my poetry collection I am not a fish – would occupy ‘a corner of a table somewhere’ at Balbirnie Craft Centre. In fact I was delighted to be informed by my agent that I had a whole bookshelf to myself when he arrived there today – see below. A pity I can’t fill it, but there will be more books there shortly…

'Reading Corner', ©Bookseeker Agency

‘Reading Corner’, ©Bookseeker Agency

The wonderful world of social media

Twitter

Just how circular can things get around here? I’m blogging the fact that I’m now on Twitter, and I’m going to share this blog entry on my Facebook status and also on Twitter. All I need now is for people to re-blog my blog, share my Facebook post, and re-tweet my tweet. Move over Stephen Fry, I’m wondering where all this will end…

More news of the Phoenix

© Describe Adonis Press

© Describe Adonis Press

At the suggestion of the Editor-in-Chief, Richard Vallance, and with the agreement of the others on the editorial team, I will be credited as ‘Deputy Editor’ when the anthology is eventually published. I am honoured.

P’kaboo day at Glenstantia Library, Pretoria, SA.

(c) Lyz Russo

(c) Lyz Russo

The mini-launch in South Africa went off quite well. I was able to ‘join’ the proceedings by keyboard chat. The photo above shows the publicity table before the event began, with – yes! – Lupa on view there. My thanks go to Lyz Russo at P’kaboo for all the energy she has expended getting an event before Christmas. I’m told that there will be some more events in South Africa over the coming months, hopefully with Naked in the Sea and Mercury Silver featured also. Stay tuned.

If you happen to be in South Africa…

Lupa header temp

… on the 20th of December 2012, and you can get to Constantia Park Library, Pretoria, for 6pm, you will be able to attend a mini-launch of three books published by P’Kaboo Publishers. This will include my Lupa. Recommended – a book is always a good Christmas present, and a visit to a library is time well spent.

I mourn the passing of a blog today! Canadian poet Steve Myers – a totally unique voice – has left a farewell note on his now-empty blog. I am glad to see that he may still write, later, but sad to see that his future projects will not involve this medium, which even a technophobe such as myself acknowledges to be a remarkable tool for communication.

Good interviews are like Gold Dust…

… and when the chance comes I take it. A couple of months back I was interviewed for Gold Dust, the twice-yearly magazine of literature and the arts. The interview came out in their Winter 2012 issue. It has been overtaken by events a little, inasmuch as The Everywhen Angels is currently being considered by a UK publisher, and the new collection of poetry, I am not a fish, will be published early in 2013 (I know, I know, I keep telling you this).

If you happen to want to order a copy of the original imprint of Naked in the Sea from your local Waterstones, they should be able to get it for you. Just give them the ISBN 978-0-9566041-0-1. It’s certainly on Waterstones’ on-line ordering system, and is still available direct from Masque Publishing. Meanwhile the second imprint, courtesy of P’Kaboo Publishing, is available as in Kindle format from Amazon UK, or Amazon USA, or as an eBook direct from P’Kaboo.

More news about Lupa when I have it.

‘I am not a fish’

My collection of never-seen-before poems, I am not a fish, has been accepted for publication. I’ll give you more news as it occurs, but I thought I would share the initial buzz. Yes, it’s still a buzz when this kind of thing happens…