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I’m a writer based in South Wales, with an unhealthy obsession with stationery and baking. I mainly blog for my own sanity, but I’m also working on a novel. Still.
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A Tribute to Fictional Female Flatshares
What’s In A Title?
To tweet or not to tweet…
11/11/13
10 Ways To Do Good In 10 Minutes
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The friendships between women cohabiting have long been fodder for novelists and scriptwriters. Have you considered adding this element to your short story or novel?
This week I’m paying tribute to fictional my favourite fictional female flat share: the twins in “Her Fearful Symmetry” (Audrey Niffenegger). Female twins are the protagonists in this novel. The majority of the novel is set in and around their flat, located close to Highgate Cemetery in north London, and it works very well. I admire their relationship in the very least; my sister and I would certainly not survive if we had to live in a little London flat together! Everyone who has ever shared a house or a flat with someone other than family or a partner knows there’s ups and downs to sharing where you live with others. Friends or ‘randoms’ thrown together, it can be an interesting mix. There’ll be someone in the possibly ‘unnaturally’ thrown together household who winds you up, no doubt. My friend has constructed a whole (hilarious and shocking) blog on this subject alone. For instance, one of your housemates might watch TV on a loud setting into the night. There’ll be someone who doesn’t pull their weight with the cleaning or restocking of the toilet roll. And you know each tenant will have a different standard of what is deemed to be clean! However, you might also enjoy the company and find a new friend, make life a little cheaper by sharing the rent and bills, and cooking together can be fun. There’s positives and negatives to having a female (or indeed male/mixed) houseshare, and literature reflects this. Many of your readers will be able to relate to this situation, either having shared a place with someone before or having had kids who are doing it at the moment. Setting the domestic scene as a houseshare is a perfect example of a way to bring real life, real problems, and real relationships into your writing. You know, I can’t think of any fictional male flatshares in literature… Maybe men just aren’t so interesting to read about in a domestic or friendship context! Sure, there’s several famous ones on TV and in movies, but in books, I’m trying to think of one. Let me know if any spring to mind for you… Lou x Image from Learn Vest Find me on Facebook
My precious reading record
I’m a reader. I’m a writer. But what do titles of books mean to me? What’s in them which pique my interest and make me buy, read, or borrow that novel?
A discussion evolved a month or two ago between myself and a friend. We both decided that the words in a fiction title will influence how keen we are to buy said volume. However, if we were shopping for non-fiction, the content and writer may carry a higher weighting than how the title is phrased. I’m a book geek, I admit. I have kept a personal ‘reading record’, as I was taught in primary school, since January 1998. I have written the author’s name, the title, and a score out of ten for every book I have read between then and now. It would be one of the first things I’d grab if my house caught fire! Looking through my notebook, I started wondering, which books have I read where it was purely the title which encouraged me to delve into the pages? The Beach – Alex Garland The Wasp Factory – Iain Banks Millennium – John Varley How to be a Canadian – Will and Ian Ferguson Egg Dancing – Liz Jensen I didn’t read these books due to how well the novel was known or regarded. It wasn’t the cover design. It wasn’t the reputation of the writer, or the fact I’d never read anything by them before. It was the fact their novel had a fab title. I prefer short, snappy titles, but it’s not essential. Writers: Now consider the blog, short story, novel you’re working on, or even the poem. What does the title say to you? Does it give you a clue as to what the piece is about? Do you think it would intrigue the reader enough to open the cover or click the link? If you really get stuck (or bored!), take a look at Lulu’s online title scorer. It’s a quick test which analyses the words in your title and gives you a ‘likelihood of success’ score at the end. Statisticians have studied the bestselling novels of the last 50 years and come up with this equation…. It’s just a bit of fun, really, but it’s worth considering to help play around with your title configuration. This post was inspired by a conversation I had with Northampton’s newest hair blogger, Sarah Becker. Take a look at her new blog, Get The Look You Want. See you next week, Lou x Find me on Facebook This fell onto the page this week, so I thought I’d share. I do not hate Twitter and I do not love it – it’s a just a great tool I use to promote my blog, to network, inspire and be inspired.
LOVE – HATE Sometimes it’s a very fine line between the two! Tweeting is a thing I do not need Lou x Find me on Facebook Last month saw Make a Difference Day (26th October), and this is a cause close to my heart (see my post on Volunteering Abroad: Valuable and Rewarding). Sooooo, here are 10 things you can ‘do good with’ in just 10 minutes of your time.
1. Find a charity you’re keen on and set up a direct debit. You won’t even notice a couple of quid leaving your account each month, most likely, so find one which resonates with you and go for it. If you’re worried about where the money’s going, check out these tips on Monday Supermarket. 2. Give a colleague 10 minutes of your day if they look like they need to chat or off-load. In these austere times and days of increased chances of redundancy, moral can be low. However, showing a friendly face and giving someone a chance to rant can help. Be careful to not take their worries onto your shoulders though – just be an outlet and someone to talk to. Angry rants, done privately, are great, according to the guys at Real Life Law of Attraction. I tend to agree! 3. Donate your unwanted books, CDs and furniture to a charity shop. More and more people are selling online nowadays and I imagine the charity shops are losing out. You’ll feel so much better for doing it than making a couple of pounds on ebay and there’s no postage to pay! 4. Bake a cake for someone sick. You know they’ll appreciate the thought, even if it’s a questionable bake!). If you google easy cake recipes, there are lots to start you off with – BBC Food is particularly good, and some really do only take 10 minutes to whip up. 5. Call your local Council to report that unsightly flytip you pass every morning. They might not know it exists and may even clear it up, improving your local area. 6. A grandparent is for life, not just for Christmas. Call them. 7. Hunger affects every community. Find your local food bank and donate a few cans of something non-perishable. 8. If you’ve got a bumper crop this year on your allotment, why not take your spare veg round to a neighbour or give to a friend? Waste not, want not! #lovefoodhatewaste 9. Test your kids. Give them a quiz to do between main course and dessert round the dinner table. Something will stick and they’ll win a pub quiz in the future (or pass their GCSEs more easily…)! 10. Got a stressed out nightshift worker for a housemate? Why not help her out by doing her washing up which is building up on the side. The house will look cleaner for it too! Feeling inspired? Check out 67 things to do in 67 minutes, and action for Mandela Day (18/7/13). Let me know what you get up to in the comments below! It’s International Volunteer Day in less than a month (5th December) so why not get involved? Check out Do It, the volunteer opportunity website. There are many roles to look at, and so many benefits from lending a hand, so take a look! Lou x Find me on Facebook Image courtesy of The Future Melting Pot |
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