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I feed my kids to a hungry tyrannosaur

I feed my kids to a hungry tyrannosaur

ROAR!

Great news! I’m writing the text panels for an exhibition on TYRANNOSAURS with the Australian Museum. I never knew there were so many species of tyrannosaur! T. rex had cousins, and lots of them.

Things I’ve learned so far:

- Dinosaurs like T. rex may not have had vocal chords. Which means they probably went raging through the jungle, roaring whimpering gnashing their teeth.

- Dinosaurs aren’t actually extinct! The hot theory is that avian dinosaurs (A.K.A birds) survived the mass extinction and evolved in to chickens and emus.

- And while we’re on the subject of birds, dinosaurs probably had feathers. Cute, fluffy, fuzzy feathers. Even the blood-crazed meat-eating giants. How adorable!

Seriously, dinosaurs have a lot of secrets for dudes who’ve been dead for hundreds of millions of years.

The exhibition opens late 2013 and it’s going to be AWESOME.
Think up-close-and-personal Walking with Dinosaurs. Think OMG I hope I don’t wet my pants.
It’s going to be scary (and fascinating)(and seriously interactive).

See you there!

 

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CrimeScene logo

Seen at CrimeScene 2012

Bring a whole heap of amazing crime fiction authors into a room with some incredibly interesting forensics people, and then dust for prints. Or something like that.

The CrimeScene conference was held over two days and featured some of Australia’s best writers, all of whom were superb. Funny. Generous with time and advice. Inspiring. All the things I love in a meet-the-author session.

Check out the line-up!

Katherine Howell crime writerEx-ambo and two-times Davitt Award-winning Katherine Howell was fabulous and took time-out from her sixth Ella Marconi novel to share her tips on

- writing great characters (make them compelling),

- using setting (feel free to drop in some setting-specific lingo, even if your audience won’t understand the word…they’ll work it out from the context), and

- suspense (Howell did her Masters thesis on building suspense, so watch out: don’t start reading Katherine Howell and expect to be able to stop).

Forensic tourist’ and bestselling author of the Mak Vanderwall novels, Tara Moss, delivered a great session on her writing journey, including

- the importance of research (be prepared to be choked unconscious, set on fire, hang out with the FBI),

- the need for dedication (be prepared to fly across the world to grab your one chance) and

- being a woman (be prepared to be judged first on your appearance, then your mothering skills, and finally your writing). I am a regular reader of Tara Moss’s blog and applaud her work for and writing on feminism, UNICEF, breastfeeding and more. Check it out for a thought-provoking read.

There were also sessions by David Whish-Wilson, author of  Line of Sight, short-listed for a 2011 Ned Kelly award (David can write as many as 250,000 words in a first draft, then whittle it down to the required 80,000 or so!), and Alan Carter, author of Prime Cut, winner of a 2011 Ned Kelly Award.

I also had the pleasure of meeting Sarah Evans, who writes romance, comedy, crime and rom-com crime, all while attempting self-sufficiency on a rural hobby farm.

I caught up with Stephen Dedman, who was nice enough to pretend he remembered me from the Perth Writer’s Festival, even if he didn’t.

And saw Felicity Young, whose new historical mystery series (featuring Britain’s first female autopsy surgeon) is being published with Harper Collins in Oz and Penguin in the US.

Told you it was an awesome lineup!
And that’s only the writers!

There were also a host of forensics specialists, covering everything from frozen pig-meat bullets (they won’t really work) to forensic astronomy (where we took a virtual ride through space and time to view our galaxy from the outside…spin out!).

Every session I attended was brilliant. The presenters pitched at exactly the right level. The science was fascinating, the case studies were gripping. SciTech, eat your heart out.

The sessions were small, intimate in cases, which meant we had all the time in the world to ask specific questions and get detailed replies. Next year, we might not be so lucky! Let’s hope so.

Thanks to the organisers and speakers for a great weekend!

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Attention: kids and people who like writing for kids

I’m working with the Victoria Park Centre for the Arts to present two exciting and (hopefully) useful workshops for writers, young and not-so-young:

- FIRST DRAFT BOOT CAMP – WRITING CHILDREN’S BOOKS (for adults)
Get started on a first draft, or polish your work-in-progress.  Pick up great tips, practice new techniques, discover publishing markets and more.
Starts: Monday 7 May, 7.30-9pm.  Cost: $150 for 6 weeks.

and

- WRITING ADVENTURE STORIES (after school, for kids around 8 to 12)
Do you like reading action, adventure, fantasy or horror?  Want to write your own cliffhanger stories?  Fire up your imaginations and get ready to create.
Starts: Monday 7 May, 3.30-4.30pm.  Cost: $100 for 6 weeks.

Both writing courses will be held at the gorgeous Victoria Park Centre for the Arts. Hope to see you there, and if you have any questions, please feel free to email me on cj@cristyburne.com or contact the Centre:

Victoria Park Centre for the Arts
12 Kent Street, East Victoria Park, 6101
Tel: (08) 9470 5520
E-mail: vicparkarts@westnet.com.au

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Was it your New Year’s Resolution to write a book? Yes? Then here’s your chance to get it done and get it published.

Shami Chakrabarti, Director of Liberty (The National Council for Civil Liberties), and Alex Wheatle MBE, the award-winning British novelist of Jamaican heritage, have joined the judging panel of The Frances Lincoln Diverse Voices Award.

This is terrific news for anybody who has never published a childrens novel but has always longed to write one….

Grab on and enjoy the ride: the Diverse Voices award is for YOU!!!

I won this award back in 2009 and now have four books coming out with Frances Lincoln Childrens Books in the UK, and Walker Books in New Zealand and Australia, not to mention translations in Indonesia, Finland and more. This is a REALLY BIG CHANCE, so go to it!

The award is for a manuscript that celebrates cultural diversity in the widest possible sense, either in terms of its story or in terms of the ethnic and cultural origins of its author.

The prize of £1,500, plus the option for Frances Lincoln Children’s Books to publish the novel, will be awarded to the best work of unpublished fiction for 8–to-12-year-olds by a writer, aged 18 years or over, who has not previously published a novel for children. The writer may have contributed to an anthology of prose or poetry.

The work must be written in English and it must be a minimum of 15,000 words and a maximum of 35,000 words. Previously submitted manuscripts which were not short-listed may be re-entered two more times.

The closing date for all entries is Monday 31 December 2012.

You can download the 2013 Diverse Voices Award leaflet here, and stick it up on your wall (or your friend’s wall), and you can download the entry forms here.

So go, go, go…and I wish you best of luck!!

(With thanks to matryosha for the photo)

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This may be the last post from me for a while… I’m taking a break to focus on the next big project: Baby #2.

He’s due Friday, but like Baby #1, he still shows no signs of realising it.

Still, I’m optimistically typing this in the hope that if I don’t post this now, I won’t be able to do it later (because I’ll be rushing around birthing and feeding and catching up on sleeping)(come on baby!!).

So, since I’m faffing around waiting, I’ve composed a 10-step process that demonstrates why having a baby is like publishing a book:

Cooking a baby is much the same as cooking a book.

1) It seems to take much longer than you realise or even sign on for.

2) The first bit is by far the hardest: you are struck with nausea, your energy flags, you’re sure there’s no way you’ll ever reach halfway, let alone the finish line.

3) Once you’ve thrashed your way through the first trimester, you spend the next month or so confused. Did I actually write a book? Where has it gone? I don’t feel that different. I don’t look that different.

4) Then you get your edits back and you realise your life really has changed. You can’t wear all the things you used to love. You can’t do all the things you used to do.  In fact, important parts of you don’t even look how they used to.

5) You get used to the new you. You get used to doing things a bit differently (like getting out of bed). You accept you are on a collision course and nothing you can do now will wildly change the outcome.

6) Nothing happens.

7) Nothing happens.

8 ) Nothing happens.

9) You think you might have an exciting email from your editor. You don’t. You think you might have an exciting package in the mail. You don’t. You think you might take a long, relaxing bath. You can’t.

10) Finally, almost unexpectedly, something happens. It happens so quickly and so strangely that you almost can’t believe that it actually has happened. The proof, however, is in the tiny bundle you hold in your hands. Unspeakable joy and unspeakably fatigue. And it is only now that the real work begins. (And strangely, with time, you forget how harrowing it all was and you start to play with the idea of doing it all again. Ye gad!)

But me? Right now?

I figure I’m up to Step 9, although I’m probably closer to Step 7.

Oh well. I figure I’ll get to Step 10 eventually and by then I’ll be wishing for Step 11: Can’t-I-just-read-the-paper-and-have-a-coffee-in-a-quiet-sunny-place.

Wish me luck!!!

xxx

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Paula Hart kids interactive mural at Perth Writers FestivalAfter the festival was over…

I’m sitting at home, taking out my metaphorical glass eye.

And I’m procrastinating wildly, because I now know for certain that I have to ditch the first 20,000 words of my new novel and start again.

It’s not that the start isn’t good; it’s just not the right start for the story.

Goodbye, enormous chunk of sweat and tears and typing

It hurts to know these first chapters have to go, but I’m not in total mourning because I know the new start will help the story to breathe.

So far I’ve been pushing words uphill and that’s never fun. I prefer to write when the story just won’t stop coming.

But for now, I’m tidying my desk, and as part of that I’m going through notes from last weekend’s Perth Writers Festival. I thought I’d share some tidbits from the workshops I attended:

Paula Hart, artist
Paula is the pen-genius behind the interactive murals that were part of the kids stage at Family Day. She drew the black-and-white characters and kids of all ages and sizes helped to colour them in. The images on this page are sections of that mural. I joined in the colouring and it was FUN! Thanks Paula!

David Whish-Wilson, crime writerPaula Hart kids interactive mural at Perth Writers Festival
David’s crime writing workshop focused on how to pull a braided narrative together.

The braided narrative is common in crime fiction, where each ‘strand’ is narrated from a different character’s point of view (written in third person). When woven together, the braided strands are strong enough to carry a more powerful story.

I usually write from just one person’s perspective, but as David pointed out, if you’re only inside one character’s head, you never get a detailed look at the motives and backgrounds of the other characters. And when you’re talking crime, that’s just too black-and-white. Who decides what constitutes a crime anyway? And what constitutes truth? You need several characters to weigh in with what they think.

Anthony Eaton, fantasy/childrens/YA writerPaula Hart kids interactive mural at Perth Writers Festival
I haven’t read Anthony’s fantasy, but his writing for kids is hilarious (as is his live presentation for kids: if you get a chance, see it!) so I was keen to meet him (plus his sister-in-law is in my sister’s book club, so we’re virtually family, right?).

Anthony’s workshop was on fantasy writing and I was horrified to learn that his recent trilogy took ten years to write, including two false starts (of tens of thousands of words each!!). That takes some determination!

Still, he seemed chirpy and he survived the rewrites to produce three awesome-looking books. I’m taking courage from this (deleting 20,000 words is nothing, right?; it’s just the getting-to-know-you stage of a book)(I try not to weep).

Anyway…Anthony’s top fantasy writing tips included:

- Story structure: Ditch ‘beginning-middle-end’ as a story skeleton and instead go for ‘interesting question + interesting answer = interesting story’

- Writers block: It doesn’t exist. If you get stuck with writing words, put away your keyboard, pick up your pencil, and sketch the scene you’re trying to write.

- Universal truths: Fantasy novels work best when they include some universal truths/touchstones of truth that readers can identify with. This can be as simple as a character needing coffee in the morning, despite living on another planet.

Did anyone else go to the festival? Any highlights? Any writing tips or recommended reads?

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I am EXHAUSTED and I didn’t present a thing today!

Instead I attended the Perth Writers Festival’s day-long workshop, the A-Z of Getting Published, and it was great! There were 200 people there and the entire session was MCed by Angela Meyer of Literary Minded, who kept things cool, calm and interesting all day long, despite Perth’s heat, the bright lights and the long hours.

‘D’ is for Don’t Give Up

The lineup was terrific, with info on how to get published, trends in publishing, how to get an agent, how to work with an editor, how to choose a publishing house, etc, etc. (See below for my fave moments from each presenter).

Many people may have come away from the day depressed by the reality of how hard it is to get published.

To these folk I say: don’t give up! All this doom and gloom is just part of the process of testing how badly you want to be a writer. The weak will fall by the roadside but the passionate will drag themselves from their knees and keep writing.

The publishing secret they didn’t reveal: Writing competitions!
I think one huge (and encouraging) thing was missed during the day: Writing competitions! Entering legit competitions is a great way to get your work under the noses of publishers and out of the slushpile.

There are heaps of great competitions out there, but also some less reputable ones that charge huge fees and offer little in return. The big rule is: do your research before you enter!

Some great writing competitions that are well worth the price of entering (or free to enter), spring immediately to mind (but there are a gazillion more and many are genre-specific…just Google):

But back to the A-Z of getting published…..

Favourite moments from the day.

Meredith Curnow, publisher from Random House:
“Some people have voice. Some people can long-jump. We all have things we wish we were good at.”

Mandy Brett, senior editor with Text Publishing:
“You have to ‘hear’ what is wrong with your work. Like music, you can develop your ear. You need to know what good writing sounds like.”

Clive Newman, foreign rights manager at Fremantle Press:
Fremantle Press don’t mind taking risks: they picked up Elizabeth Jolley after she had been rejected 57 times; they published Craig Silvey after his manuscript had languished on the desk of an unnamed major publishing house for two years; they took time to edit and trim A.B. Facey’s A Fortunate Life and gave it a life when noone else would.

John Harman, writer:
“Which is more important, plot or character? That’s like asking Cathy Freeman, which is your most important leg?”

Lyn Tranter, agent with Australian Literary Management:
Agents are worth their weight in gold: L M Montgomery, author of Anne of Green Gables, apparently sold her copyright to this work for a pittance and spent the rest of her life trying to get it back. So book contracts were complicated even back then! As Lyn said: “What she needed was an agent.”

Terri-ann White from UWA publishing
Terri-ann gave an interesting breakdown of where the money goes when a consumer buys a book: 10% to the author; 20-27.5% to the book distributor; 40% to the book seller and the rest to the publisher (0ut of which comes expenses including printing, design, editing, etc). The average number of copies sold when it comes to Australian fiction is 919. A good seller sells around 3000 copies.

Amanda Curtin, freelance book editor and writer
Amanda recommended authors create a style guide for their work, listing the correct spelling of character names, a family tree and chronology. This, Amanda said, not only helps you write your book, it also helps the editor who will be assigned to edit your work once it is accepted.

Emma Morris, publicist with Scribe
Emma’s message: Do any interview that comes your way. Forget your nerves and talk about your passion: the book. And embrace social media: Twitter, blogging, FaceBook.

Any other tips?
Do you have tips to share from today’s session or from your own publishing journey? I’d love to hear what you think!

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I have been drafting a new project for the last couple of weeks and it’s killing me. Despite having one book published and two on the way, I am still ambushed by feelings of uselessness, of being rubbish, of not knowing whether I can actually write. It sucks!

The only way out from this mess (and I know it to be true) is to write, write, write until all my thoughts are on the paper and none are left in my head to sabotage the day. Unfortunately, this isn’t as easy as it seems. Or is it?

I just read this post from The Craft of Writing Fiction and realised: I am useless and I am rubbish, until I drop all the moaning and groaning and just get on with what I love to do. Why torture myself with this writing gig unless I love it? And if I love it, why torture myself?

And now, inspired, I’d love to get on with the job of writing. Only thing is, Fergus is about to wake up…

But so what? I’ll grab the ten minutes while I can. (Thanks Rebecca)

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THIS PRESS RELEASE WENT OUT THIS WEEK: HAVE YOU READ IT YET?
What are you waiting for??? :-)

REMINDER OF DEAD LINE   - it is not too late to enter…..

The closing date for the current Frances Lincoln Diverse Voices Award is Friday 25th February 2011.

“Gather your courage and just do it: this award is the break you’ve been looking for.

Anyone with a secret manuscript in their bottom  drawer or a story brewing in their head should enter the Frances Lincoln Diverse Voices Childrens Book Award. It’s free to enter, you can enter by email, and if you make the shortlist, your writing life will never be the same.”
From Cristy Burne, winner of the inaugural award with Takeshita Demons (selected for Children’s Book Week, Booked Up and January 2011 Blue Peter Book Club title)

“Hello all you budding writers,

Just a year ago I was in your shoes, attempting feverishly to finish that manuscript ready for the big deadline.  The good news is that you still have time.  You still have time to tweak that bit of dialogue, tidy up that plot twist and sharpen that characterisation.

Diverse Voices
gives you the opportunity to meet some wonderful people, have your manuscript read by a host of excellent critics and possibly work with the great team at Frances Lincoln to publish your book.  So don’t give-up, don’t stop now, don’t falter at the final hurdle.

All the very best, hopefully meet you one day!”
From Tom Avery, winner of the 2010 award with Too Much Trouble (publication: June 2011)


Frances Lincoln Limited, the award-winning publisher, and Seven Stories, the Centre for Children’s Books, are delighted with the success to date of the Diverse Voices Award, set up in memory of Frances Lincoln (1945-2001) to encourage and promote diversity in children’s fiction. The prize of £1,500 plus the option for Janetta Otter-Barry at Frances Lincoln Children’s Books to publish the novel is awarded to the best manuscript for 8-to-12-year-olds that celebrates diversity in the widest possible sense.

“The exceptional quality of the winners of the first two awards is a real measure of the success of our Diverse Voices joint venture with Seven Stories.

And by the time the third winner is announced in June 2011 I will have commissioned or published six books by writers who entered the award: the Takeshita Demons trilogy by Cristy Burne, winner of the inaugural award, Too Much Trouble by Tom Avery, the 2010 winner, and A Hen in the Wardrobe and Chess and Chapattis, the first two titles in the Cinnamon Grove series by Wendy Meddour, who entered the 2009 award.

I am proud that the Frances Lincoln Diverse Voices Award is achieving exactly what it set out to do – to discover and encourage new writers of exciting, culturally diverse fiction.”
From Janetta Otter-Barry at Frances Lincoln Children’s Books

For full details about the award and to download an entry form go to
www.sevenstories.org.uk

Alternatively, contact the Award Co-ordinator, Helena McConnell by email diversevoices@sevenstories.org.uk or helena@sevenstories.org.uk

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PiBoIdMo

What a cool idea this is!

I’ve signed up…how about you?

I think inspiration can come at any time, but so often I’m totally absorbed in my current project and I don’t take time to write down the new (but unrelated) flashes that come to me.

This month…I’m writing them down!

Thanks to the fabulous Tara Lazer for organising and hosting!

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