As a fan of the paranormal, I was delighted to learn that this month sees the release of the next predicted ‘big thing’ from director Peter Jackson, following his huge successes with Lord of the Rings and King Kong. This time, the story lucky enough to receive his magic touch is the 2002 novel by Alice Sebold, The Lovely Bones.
Monday, 28 December 2009
The Lovely Bones
As a fan of the paranormal, I was delighted to learn that this month sees the release of the next predicted ‘big thing’ from director Peter Jackson, following his huge successes with Lord of the Rings and King Kong. This time, the story lucky enough to receive his magic touch is the 2002 novel by Alice Sebold, The Lovely Bones.
Wednesday, 23 December 2009
Happy Christmas and a Merry New Year
Sunday, 20 December 2009
Erotic Fiction: The DOs and DON'Ts
Saturday, 19 December 2009
Submissions
Publishers are free to submit review copies for consideration. Please email submissions@wordswithjam.co.uk for a UK postal address.
SHORT STORIES AND POETRY
We feature one or two short stories and poems in each issue. Due to the magazine being free, we are unable to offer payment at this time. We are however more than happy to consider previously published material, and include a short bio and links back to your own site.
Word count for short stories should be no more than around 2200 words and poetry no more than 45 lines ish - this is purely because we are tight on space and in February only managed to squeeze in one story and one poem, and not because we can't be arsed reading longer submissions.
Due to the number of submissions we receive (and because it's rather messy and confusing) can you please include on the actual Word document, at the top, your full name and email address. We don't mind what font you use, or colour, or size, or alignment, so long as you don't take the piss - white is very difficult to read.
This is so we can contact you back and you don't think we're ignorant when your email gets buried and all we have a file and we've no idea who it's off.
The email address is submissions@wordswithjam.co.uk
ARTICLES
We are always on the lookout for new articles by aspiring columnists.
Due to the magazine being free, we are unable to offer payment at this time. We are however more than happy to consider previously published material, and include a short bio and links back to your own site. That said, please don't send us articles about how wonderful you are or how brilliant a site/service you can provide for the writing community (see 'advertising' for that). Generally useful and/or funny is what we go for.
So, if you have a distinct voice, with an edge, and something to say, put a proposal together and send it to editor@wordswithjam.co.uk. Don't forget, flattery gets you everywhere. We'll consider it and get back to you (we aim at less time than your average agent ...).
Friday, 18 December 2009
Paul Auster's Invisible
Tuesday, 15 December 2009
Experiencing Synopsis Hell?
Sheila's first novel, Ready to Fall, won her a place on the 2008 Apprenticeships in Fiction programme. The novel was also short-listed for the Wannabe a Writer novel-writing competition and the Youwriteon.com Book of the Year. The book is currently with a publisher who may or may not decide to publish it. In the meantime, she's working on her second novel and spending way too much time indulging her unhealthy interest in synopsis-writing.
To read the full article, please make sure you are subscribed to Words with JAM, and we'll send you the next issue directly to your inbox.
Sunday, 13 December 2009
Rights and What You Need to Know
Saturday, 12 December 2009
What Makes a Reader Choose YOUR Book?
Thursday, 10 December 2009
60 Second Interview with Peter Ho Davies
Born to Chinese/Welsh parents, Peter Ho Davies’ first published collection of short stories was The Ugliest House in the World (1998), which contains tales set in Malaysia, South Africa and Patagonia. This collection won the PEN/Macmillan Silver Pen Award and the Mail on Sunday/John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. His second collection, Equal Love, was published in 2000. In 2003, he was named by Granta magazine as one of twenty 'Best of Young British Novelists'.
His first novel, The Welsh Girl, published in 2007 was ‘long-listed’ for the Man Booker Prize 2007, and short-listed for The Galaxy British Book Awards ‘Richard and Judy’ Best Read in 2008.
Peter Ho Davies lives in the United States and directs the MFA Programme in Creative Writing at the University of Michigan.
www.peterhodavies.com
Tuesday, 8 December 2009
Popular or What?
Please do keep forwarding your copies and asking anyone you know, who you think would like to read it, to subscribe.
Friday, 4 December 2009
We have a date!
If you are subscribed you will automatically receive a copy direct to you inbox (or in some unlucky cases, your spam folder, so don't forget to check).
Remember that all subscribers are automatically entered into our free prize draw held every issue!
Wednesday, 2 December 2009
Eclectic, Intelligent and Accessible ...
Tuesday, 1 December 2009
It's Free-e-Day
Find out more, spread the word, enjoy the downloads, and join in a range of debates and webchats and workshops for independent creatives at
http://www.facebook.com/l/
http://www.facebook.com/l/
plus download the fantastic free eprogramme for the event with 100 contributors and some amazing creativity in its own right as well as complete listings
http://www.facebook.com/l/
The hard work's over - have some fun!
And if you're in Oxford, come to Free-e-day live!
http://www.facebook.com/l/
And keep spreading the news for December 1st 2010!!
What the agents say about Words with JAM?
Betty Schwartz - freelance agent for Christopher Little
Monday, 30 November 2009
Wigtown Poetry Competition
Please click here to view full details and to download an application form.
The Wigtown Poetry Competition is the largest in Scotland with a first prize of £2,500, runner up prize of £750, eight additional prizes of £50 each and a Gaelic prize of £500. The winning poem and runner up will also be published in the Scotsman, or its sister paper Scotland on Sunday and the winner will be invited to appear at the Stena Line Wigtown Book Festival 2010.
To download an application form click above, or alternatively email poetry@wigtownbookfestival.com or send an SAE to:
Wigtown Poetry Competition
County Buildings,
Wigtown,
DG8 9HL.
If you know anyone who would like to be added to this mailing list please send their full email and address to mail@wigtownbookfestival.com.
Sunday, 29 November 2009
Don't have a copy?
Friday, 27 November 2009
That's it, Folks!
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Ta Much, Everyone!
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
The Man Behind Sherlock Holmes …
Sunday, 22 November 2009
We have a WINNER!
Saturday, 21 November 2009
Christmas Prize Draw Closes Tonight!
New Address
Thursday, 19 November 2009
On Meeting an Agent
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
Writing for Children - Successfully!
Monday, 16 November 2009
Douglas Jackson - History in the Making
Sunday, 15 November 2009
What Not to Tweet
An article by Dan Holloway
Becoming a self-publishing pariah, virtual or otherwise, is very simple if you remember the prime directive, and let everything you do flow from it. Self-publishing is about writing a book and selling as many copies of it as you can. The poor deluded fools who tell you it’s about engaging with your readers, about a long-term strategy, about building a base of loyal fans over several years, and selling progressively more copies of each of several books, are just that. Poor deluded fools. It’s about this book. The one on your hard drive. The “book you had in you”. And flogging it. To as many people as you can persuade to part with their cash. After all, tomorrow takes care of itself. Right?
Social Media and the self-publisher
We’re in the heart of a technological revolution. We have more gadgets and widgets at our disposal for Flogging Our Book (fobing) than ever before. The key to becoming a virtual pariah is to use them all. As much as possible. After all, you want to fob as many people as possible, so you’d better use as many tools as possible, and spend as much time as possible doing so, because that way you will have the widest audience possible and the most people possible will buy your book ...
Full article in the first issue of Words with JAM!
Saturday, 14 November 2009
Flash Fiction Competition
Christmas blessings, Christmas nightmares or just Christmas Grumbles, the theme is wide open, but you must set your story against a Yule tide backdrop.
Tinsel Tales is open to ALL WRITERS irrespective of where they live!
You can register on the website now and then submit your entry before the closing date, 31st December.
Thursday, 12 November 2009
A Father Worries
Joseph swept the floor. It didn’t need to be swept but he was trying to delay going home. The workshop was as clean as it could be. The table and chairs for Julius sat by the door ready for delivery the following morning, and they had turned out very well, even if he did think so himself. Things had been good lately, in general. He had just finished a big fencing job that had paid a tidy sum and once the Roman had paid the balance on the furniture he would be set up for the next six months or so.
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
FREE Christmas Prize Draw - 10 days left!
Quinn Publications' first venture into the world of literature, was to produce a collection of work, compiled from writers all over the world, to be given to their loved ones this Christmas. Whatever that indefinable something is that makes Christmas special, you’ll find within Bits, Bobs and Baubles. From an unforgettable chilli experience to recipes of times gone by, from grannies getting revenge to heart-warming traditional tales, from daft odes to moving poems, from grown-up stories to those created especially for children, there is something for every member of the family.
Words with JAM are pleased to announce they've got their hands on a copy of the book (which is pretty good going, considering only 125 copies are being produced).
To celebrate the first issue being out for December, we are going to get the compiler to autograph, gift wrap, and stick a bow on it, and post it out to one lucky subscriber in time for Christmas. The winner will be announced in the first issue, and contacted by email for their postal address.
To be eligible, you simply need to subscribe to Words with JAM.
Closing date: Saturday 21st November.
Monday, 9 November 2009
Feeble Excuses, Procrastination and Displacement Activities
(Things I do when I should be writing.)
An article by Perry Iles
This autumn I will be mostly thinking about Cheryl Cole. Not with any sense of prurience – a man has to know his limitations, as Clint Eastwood once said, and I’m reliably informed that I’m hung like a hummingbird and have the sexual imagination of a fencepost, without any trace of its attendant rigidity. But dear little Cheryl has achieved a kind of asexual, robotic perfection, which was aptly, if unconsciously, parodied on last week’s X-Factor when she did that military dance routine as she mimed to her appalling new song. What I mean is, is she actually human any more? Time was, long ago, when the combination of attractive womanhood and a Geordie accent used to flick my lust-nipple for some totally inexplicable reason, but it now no longer does, and it’s all her fault. Soon you’ll be able to buy your own Cheryl Cole on the internet, and she’ll be everywhere, and familiarity will breed contempt so you’ll need a puncture repair kit so you can make her better every time you batter her senseless for not getting your dinner on the table by five o’clock.
The X-Factor, which I’m watching every week instead of writing ...Sunday, 8 November 2009
UPPERCASE Nightmare!
Saturday, 7 November 2009
Three Days in Syrupville
Friday, 6 November 2009
"I hurt ... to know they yearned for freedom, fought for one last flight ... And when I draw them, I too, am free."
I follow their silent swooping, rejoicing in their no-sound dance, using my sighter to bring them close. Another day, I’d attempt a sketch, but not today. Today I wait, my trigger finger poised. Another survey of the terrain shows no movement. Perhaps the info was wrong, perhaps the rebels will not come this way. But if not here, where will they cross? They must break through, ford the river, escape the closing net ...
Extract from Watching, by JW Hicks
Full story in the first issue of Words with JAM. Sign up now!
Thursday, 5 November 2009
FREE Christmas Prize Draw
Words with JAM are pleased to announce they've got their hands on a copy of the book (which is pretty good going, considering only 125 copies are being produced).
To celebrate the first issue being out for December, we are going to get the compiler to autograph, gift wrap, and stick a bow on it, and post it out to one lucky subscriber in time for Christmas. The winner will be announced in the first issue, and contacted by email for their postal address.
To be eligible, you simply need to subscribe to Words with JAM.
Closing date: Saturday 21st November.
Tuesday, 3 November 2009
Ask Away ...
To save us dreaming a few up for the first issue, if you have a question, please post or email to editor@quinnpublications.co.uk
Sitting on Offence
Words. That’s what we think we deal with. They’re just words. But it’s what they stand for that can often cause the problems. A word that means nothing to one person can deeply offend another.
Initially we’ve got the difficulties involved with localisation. The bonnet of your car is a bonnet, unless you travel across the Atlantic in which case it becomes a hood. A cupboard in most of the world is just that, but in Ireland it’s a press. And so on.
Full article in the first issue of Words with JAM. Sign up now.
Sunday, 1 November 2009
Libraries: What's in it for me?
An article by Catriona Troth
For all the concern expressed about the decline of libraries in recent years, there are still more than 4500 public libraries in the
Read more in the first issue of Words with JAM. Sign up now to receive your copy (due out end of November 2009).
Wednesday, 28 October 2009
Short Story & Poetry Submissions
Saturday, 1 August 2009
FREE Prize Draw
To enter, you need do nothing but subscribe. The competition is open to all subscribers (except contributors), and we will announce the winner in each issue. The prizes will be posted out via standard post within 28 days of announcement.
Monday, 19 January 2009
Advertising
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