Sunday 31 January 2021

OCR

 I great find yesterday - I can use Onenote, which is already on my computer as part of Windows, to use optical character recognition to transcribe my old typed stories into digital format. It is an easy process, basically scanning the original, inserting it in Onenote and clicking on it to produce the digital text on the clipboard, from where it can be pasted into Word or anywhere else.

So far I have transcribed  two stories in a lot less time (and effort) than it would have taken me to retype them. 

Saturday 30 January 2021

I made someone cry

 It always good to get feedback from a reader. One lady messaged me this week: " I finished reading your book. It was great. The last chapter brought me to tears. That's how involved I got."

What more can an author ask? As the BeeGees almost sang: "I wrote a book and started the whole world crying."

That was The Man Who Didn't Like People.  Some suggested I should now write The Woman Who Didn't Like People. Maybe it will make readers laugh.



Friday 29 January 2021

2021 Update

 The new year has started off brilliantly. I am writing again after a long spell thinking I wasn't going to write another word.I am compiling an anthology of about 30 of my short stories, writing two short stories for the up-coming anthology of the Rockingham Writers Centre and starting to put down some ideas for my next novel.

Meanwhile, my two novels: A New Era For Manny Youngman and The Man Who Didn't Like People; are among the best sellers at the Friends of Rockingham Arts Community exhibition which has been running all this week and will be on again in March. I'm not sure why there has been this burst of interest in them but it may be because I have become more involved in the Writers Centre activities and have taken over as convenor of their short story group. Some of the members who hadn't heard of me may have decided to check out my novels to see if they are any good.

Not that I worry why people read my books as long as they do. 

With the anthology of my own stories. it may take some time as a lot of my early stories were pre-digital and will have to be transcribed from the hard copies I have kept in drawers for a couple of decades. The earliest go back to the 1960s.

It has been fascinating to revisit them. I can see a period in my twenties when I was first published and sent off story after story, a long hiatus while I aimed at a more up-market publication without any success, then back to where I could get published. By then my life had moved on, I was married and had children and was busy running my writing business, which included writing for clients and not for publication.

During this time I started writing a number of novels without getting any of them to publishable stage. That was very much a learning period. I did write some short stories, mainly aimed at competitions.

Around 2011 I had success with a couple of minor competitions and that set me off on a burst of short story writing.

Finally I started writing novels again, having by then learned what I needed to do, and A New Era For Manny Youngman and The Man Who Didn't Like People were published.

However, trying to write another novel took me down a dead end, mainly I believe because I was trying to write for a market and not what I wanted to write. That dried up and I stopped writing for about a year. Now I'm back in the writing harness again and it feels good.