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E-book Sales top Paperback Sales

"The publishing tide is shifting fast: E-book sales in February topped all other formats, including paperbacks and hardcovers...  E-book sales totaled $90.3 million in February, up 202% compared to the same month a year earlier, according to a study from the Association of American Publishers. That put e-books at No. 1 "among all categories of trade publishing" that month -- the first time e-books have beaten out traditional publishing formats. " Source:  http://money.cnn.com/2011/04/15/technology/ebooks_beat_paperbacks/index.htm?source=cnn_bin&hpt=Sbin

Writing: Waiting for Submission Responses

With spring now well underway, perhaps it was inevitable that Riverside Writers latest meeting turned into an informal discussion about the passage of time and how much people hoped to achieve, writing-wise, during the coming year.  Several people mentioned frustration over poor responses to submissions.  That's when they even get a response!  Despite the reply-by times offered as part of submission guidelines, in practice many agents and publishers don't reply at all, not even with a pro forma email.  Meanwhile, the writer is left dangling, waiting to receive a response to the MS they spent several hours tweaking in order to fulfill each set of submission guidelines.  Weeks turn into months, and no reply comes.  For my part, in one instance I received a 'thanks but no thanks' letter from an agent one entire year later, though they claimed to reply to queries within six to eight weeks.   In another case, an anthology which accepted one of my stories in 2007 still h

Wirral Egg Run 2011

The annual Egg Run brings Easter eggs to children in Clatterbridge Hospital and raises money for the hospice. The video shows only a tiny fraction of the 10,000 bikes which took part in the huge convoy which roars around the Wirral, starting from New Brighton then moving along the coast road and through West Kirby to reach the hospital.  It was filmed while standing on Black Horse Hill in West Kirby. Hmm, I recognise that bloke with the Jack Russell Terrier...! Learn more about the Egg Run here: http://hubpages.com/hub/Wirral-Egg-Run  

Horses Die at Aintree Races

"Death came again to the Grand National yesterday...as two horses died in appalling falls.   There were four deaths at the three-day meeting last year, five in 2009 and since 2000 a staggering 33 horses have died at the Aintree spring festival..." Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/racing/article-1375310/Grand-National-2011-Aintree-day-horror-millions-2-horses-die.html?ITO=1490 What a disgraceful waste of beautiful, feeling animals.  Have a race by all means - horses like to run - but why does this particular race insist on installing these awful fences with pits, sometimes filled with water, hidden behind them?  The pro lobby point out, truthfully it seems, that it brings in big money.  Money to see death?  How pathetic.  And very ugly, even.

Forget Paris

We watched a hilarious film last night, which had us laughing not just at the sarcastic humour but at ourselves.  Forget Paris tells the tale of a couple (played by Billy Crystal and Debra Winger) who meet in the French capital and enjoy a fabulous time together, then who go on with their own separate lives only to realise they miss each other.  So begins their relationship and swift marriage.  They quickly discover that romantic holidays are soon over, whereas the necessities of demanding careers and everyday life can seemingly go on without respite.  The film explores the numerous changes people experience when they have to adapt from a single lifestyle to being part of a couple - the tensions, the sacrifices and seemingly endless compromises; but also the simple pleasures of sharing life's fun stuff with someone else.  The dialogue was well written, and seemed to have been the product of close observation of people's habits.  It's funny because it rings true.  Don&#

Telling Tales - Riverside Writers Event

On Saturday, July 9th, Riverside Writers will present Telling Tales, a free afternoon of new fiction and poetry to be hosted by West Kirby Library, Wirral. Press Release for this Event

The Seductive Romance of History

We've been enjoying viewing Robin of Sherwood   which has Michael Praed in the heroic woodsman-archer-rebel role.  Many people would have viewed it years ago on TV, but it's new to our eyes.  It's interesting to note an element of pagan references woven into the plot, one obvious example being the appearances of Herne the Hunter.  Even these-days, with the ever-growing avalanche of New Age fluff, it isn't often that a TV series or film contains references to Britain's pre-Xtian religions.  And on those occasions when they do, the tendency is to trot out stereotypical superstitions and historical inaccuracies.  The argument for this claims that viewers want entertainment over factual information.  The result is that many people mistake fiction for fact. Viewers don't want to know that people living rough in a forest would have been crawling with lice, ticks and fleas.  They don't want heroes with decaying teeth, rickets and other visual signs of life-lon