Wednesday, December 28, 2011

It's graduation time...

Graduation ceremonies are long, aren’t they? I must thank my sainted mother and my beloved for enduring the two plus hours to see my split second of glory. But as a social study, it was fascinating.

It was the shoes that sparked it. I have feet like a coral reef walker and shoes are the bane of my existence. My feet may look sturdy, but they bleed. They blister and suffer. I can find any number of things to wear, but unless they suit thongs, Birkenstocks, runners or my faithful boots, I’m in dressing hell. Discovering Doc Martins in my youth is my downfall. Choosing that path in the footwear road led to the inexorable spreading of my already large feet, denying me the joy of footwear freedom. It is my cross to bear.

I had a pretty pair of flats and a fear of falling, but as we sat through the different faculties accepting their honours, the fear faded. Accounting was first. I was most impressed by the skills of few young ladies with extremely high wedge heels, tied flimsily with ribbon round their slender little legs. I wondered idly why their calves weren’t more developed with all that weight to carry, but other than that it was looking like a long day.

Next was Business Management. A few more pairs of giant wedges, but more clip-clopping smartly in 10cm stilettos, sharp at heel and toe. Fierce looking things, they were. No fear from the wearers. Envy started to tickle. I, too, wished to be smart and efficient and clip-clopping surely. And fearless.

Then we came to Marketing. Oh my goodness, how do they do it? Those amazing girls in their gravity-defying shoes: not a stumble, not a hiccup, not a thought of danger. No less than three pairs of red patent leather god-knows-how-high heels. A greater variety of shoes climbed the stairs to the stage, and the tickle was turning to a cough. All the stories were all there — Cinderella, The Wizard of Oz, The Red Shoes. The Elves and the Shoemaker had been hard at work. And I was Little Goody Two Shoes.

But Advertising, oh my goodness, one girl had Christian Laboutins! Kid you not. Red soles were all I saw. I’m blind to the rest because my deep dark secret is a dangerous desire for the shoes no-one can afford. Or walk in without years of practice, of which I have none. Go on: ask me about Jimmy Choo… The money may be better, but if all my money would go to shoes I can’t walk in, I think I’ve chosen the right profession. Besides, books are cheaper, and don’t give you sore feet. And the Jimmy Choo one was a good read.

After that peak, Journalism started to bring some sense of gravity back to the proceedings: a few wedges, a few fierce heels, but more sweet flats than anything else.

Suddenly there was whooping. I snapped out of my daze, the world came back into focus, my breathing calmed. It was the Communication graduates. These guys were the jocks. Too much noise to notice shoes, let alone hear names. My mother sat thin-lipped.

Us in Book Editing and Publishing wore sensible shoes. I got blisters. And a diploma. Nobody fell.

Belinda Holmes

29 December 2011

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Ten things that make a compelling story by Belinda Holmes

Ten things that make a compelling story

1. Good writing: A good writer can make any story worth reading. Style is a subjective thing, but there are a few universal rules — avoid wordiness, be specific, use active verbs, avoid clichés, and the most used cliché itself, show, don’t tell.

2. Correct grammar: As a writer, you probably have a good ear for language. Use it and trust it. You will find that you have an instinctive grasp of correct grammar, but there are many resources to check,

3. Description: Keep it short, active and specific. Touch on vivid aspects of the setting. Try to use original imagery, and avoid mixed metaphors as this can be confusing.

4. Good dialogue: Spoken language must flow naturally from the characters. It can drive the story, providing information, revealing the characters, creating a sense of space, as well as summarising events.

5. Characters: Characters drive the plot in compelling stories. Don’t let the plot drive the characters or action. Specifics of character make it easier for the reader to identify.

6. Viewpoint: This is the place from which the reader views the story. Most common is the viewpoint from a major character in first or third person. Be careful not to switch viewpoints unknowingly.

7. Show, don’t tell: Maintain subtlety in your presentation. Trust your reader is with you, don’t hammer the point home.

8. Conflict: Some kind of obstacle must be encountered or there is no story. Tension can be used to keep the reader involved.

9. Form and content: They must work together. If it isn’t a novel, make it a short story. By the same token, don’t limit yourself to a short piece when a compelling story may require a longer piece.

10. Unity: Of theme, style, time frames and viewpoint

Five books about writing

1. On writing, Steven King

2. The first five pages, Noah Lukeman

3. How to write a damn good novel, James Frey

4. Eats, shoots and leaves, Lynne Truss

5. Putting pen to paper, Caroline Webber (www.greenolivepress.com)

Monday, December 12, 2011

Supporting Australian Women's Writing....

This is excellent - join up, join in!


Australian Women Writers 2012 National Year of Reading Challenge


Keen on romance, fantasy, crime, YA, literary, mainstream women's fiction? Contemporary or historical? Memoir, other nonfiction or poetry?

Whatever your preference, whether you're a fan of one genre or a devoted eclectic, the 2012 Australian Women Writers Book Reading & Reviewing Challenge invites you to celebrate a year encountering the best of Australian women's writing.

Objective: This challenge hopes to help counteract the gender bias in reviewing and social media newsfeeds that has continued throughout 2011 by actively promoting the reading and reviewing of a wide range of contemporary Australian women's writing. (See the page on gender bias for recent discussions.)

Readers should approach this challenge with a spirit of willingness. There are no failures, just personal goals. Reviews can be long or short, favourable or "this book is not for me". Hopefully, along the way, we'll all discover some future classics and perhaps a few surprises among genres we're not familiar with. The main aim is to have fun.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Musings of an Editorial Intern

I don’t mean to skite, but life is good when it’s all about books. When I’m not working with words in my role as editorial intern for Green Olive press, my other job is as a bookseller at Ariel, in The Rocks. Are you jealous? I’m sorry, but it is as delicious as it sounds. Not a bad balance for an obsessive reader. Especially since for both jobs it is a requisite to read. Can you imagine? Now I’m not messy, I’m busy.

Every day is different at the bookshop. Sundays are crazy and busy and fun; people from all over, and Walter the Farting Dog the biggest seller. Monday nights are lovely and peaceful; fellow booklovers quietly browsing, unconscious half smiles on their faces. Monday nights I dust and polish and tend to my books and chat, all of us in the same place of gentle bliss. Book chat turns to life chat, strangers join in, and we’re commiserating and communing and fixing the world. And then chat turns back to books.

That’s the normal turn of events. Christmas is special. Christmas at Ariel sparkles. I like to get there early and stay late to fight any dust that might deflect the shine. The shop is full and fat with luscious books. Customers enter with a bounce in their step. They come to me juggling armloads, asking advice. I love those conversations. Even though first instincts are always right, we talk them through and I learn all I can about granddad and mum and nephew and child and sister-in-law. They leave with bags crackling, full of festively wrapped perfect gifts, each so thoroughly discussed they can’t possibly be wrong. The bounce would be a skip if they weren’t so laden.

Christmas parties I’m not so sure about. The Society of Editors’ (NSW) Christmas party was a winner. Have you been to the Flying Squadron Club at Milsons Point? You must. What a view. Who cared about the weather? Caroline, Mandy and I had a great time, and everyone sitting near Caroline won prizes. I didn’t, but that would just be greedy, wouldn’t it?

- Belinda Holmes


And here's where we went...http://www.sydneyflyingsquadron.com.au/restaurant-bar/



Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Review of Le Pain Quotidien: Poems on the Pleasures of Life, by David Wansbrough

"In this book of poetry, David celebrates the senses, especially that of taste but also touch and sight.

Epicurean that he is, he has savoured roast sheep skull ears in Marrickville, Madeleines in Paris, wild boar and kumara in New Zealand, caviar in Moscow, wild strawberries in the Russian countryside, shark on the Black Sea, iced mint water in Istanbul, coffee and cakes in Vienna, carp with ginger sauce in China, clam chowder in San Francisco, as well as turbot, oysters, coffee, many different varieties of breads, marmalade, eel, hedgehogs, honey, sardines.

Every meal for David is a sacrament, to be relished with every touch of lip and tongue, appreciated with heart and mind and yes, the soul.

He knows the origins of the fare before him on marble or wooden table and, like indigenous peoples the world over, expresses gratitude for the bounty that the earth yields up before consuming it with reverence.

And let’s not forget David delightful sense of humour in poems such as “Salad Afternoons” where he pokes gentle fun at the “Ladies who lunch like salads”

Caroline Webber is to be congratulated for producing such a lovely volume under her imprint Green Olive Press, and I commend the book to you."

IRINA DUNN, Director, Australian Writers Network


Le pain quotidien is available from: www.greenolivepress.com