The problem with short breaks is facing your email inbox on your return - mine were absolutely overflowing especially as I belong to three online writing groups. Among them was a link to the Guardian newspaper website's How To Write series. I haven't had chance to read everything but there are articles on scriptwriting, comedy, poetry, journalism, historical writing and writing for children. There are words of wisdom from Robert Harris, Antonia Fraser, Michael Rosen, Linda Newberry and Meg Rosoff. There is also a great piece on the benefits of reading your work aloud to children by publisher David Fickling. I've mentioned before how horrible I find reading my work to other people, and I haven't yet tried reading it aloud to them although I have had a couple read it and give me their thoughts. Perhaps I should be brave and approach a local school to see if I could try it out on a class. I also think it's important to read aloud your story to yourself - although it can be a bit embarrassing if anyone hears you. When I first read some Dr Midas aloud (to a writer's group) I realised I had used 'said Dr Midas,' and 'said Millie' far too many times. It just sounded silly. It can also help to make sure sentences aren't too long and that there's a nice natural rhythm to your writing. My great ambition of course it to have complete strangers reading my stories, that's why I keep sending them out in the hope of publication. Find out more at http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/series/howtowrite Another email waiting for me was from the North West branch co-ordinator of SCBWI (www.britishscbwi.org) which I joined just over a year ago. SCBWI is the Society of Children's Books Writers and Illustrators and it has a British group. SCBWI organise regular events with top agents, publishers and writers. The north west group also meet regularly for critique groups (in Manchester and soon in Chester) and have just set up their own website with the fantastic address www.afewofmyfavouritethings.co.uk which publicises local writers and artists including me! If you would like to read my short story 'Diversity' which won the Writers' Advice Centre for children's books competition just check out the website. The final email I'm going to share is from an independent bookseller Simply Books based in Bramhall Village, Cheshire - about upcoming children's author events. I've yet to visit the shop but I will have to as it looks amazing on their website - they were also 'runner-up' for Independent Bookshop of the Year 2008 and have regular author events. On Wednesday, October 1st, (4pm - 5.30pm) Rick Riordan American author of the 'Percy Jackson' series of books will be visiting and signing books. Simply Books say: "'Percy Jackson' books take stories from Greek Mythology and set them in modern day New York -they're fast, funny adventures with lots of action and real page-turners. Perfect for boys and girls aged 9-12 and Rick himself is great fun." Then on Tuesday, October 7th, (11.00am-12.30pm) author of The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson will be chatting and signing copies of her brilliant new book Stick Man. Simply Books said: "Separated from the 'family tree' we follow Stick Man's perilous adventures and eventual reunion with his 'Stick Lady Love and their stick children three'. Funny and touching, we think this is likely to be another classic of 'Gruffalo' proportions." Find out more at www.simplybooks.tbpcontrol.co.uk Don't forget you can share your writing news and events or links with me via the comments section or email me at www.drmidas.co.uk
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Blog: Writer's Block (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: The Penguin Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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St Trinian’s began life as a single cartoon drawn by Searle, aged 21, for the magazine Lilliput in 1941. He was then swept up in a particularly horrible way by the Second World War, captured by the Japanese and sent first to Changi gaol and then to work on the building of the Burma-Thailand railway, the ‘Death Railway’. He made secret drawings of life in the camps which were eventually published in To The Kwai and Back.
Searle was released at the end of the war, after three and a half years of captivity, returned to London and became an incredibly prolific and funny artist. He became famous first for the St Trinian’s series (I have happy memories of repeatedly reading my parents’ copy of his St Trinian’s collection Back to the Slaughterhouse) and then for the miraculous Molesworth books, with texts written by Geoffrey Willans: Down with Skool!: A Guide to School Life for Tiny Pupils and Their Parents, How to be Topp, Whizz for Atomms and Back in the Jug Agane. I’m sure that while running Penguin Modern Classics I have published several more intellectually coherent and searingly powerful works, but getting these books back into print (as a one-volume complete Molesworth) was by miles the most enjoyable thing I did.
The films based on the world Searle created in the St Trinian’s cartoons began in 1954 with The Belles of St Trinian’s with Alastair Sim in the drag role of the headmistress (now taken by Rupert Everett in the new film). The rest of the cast was a chaotic mass of British comic actors - Sid James, George Cole, Irene Handl, Joyce Grenfell and so on – and while it has dated in some ways it maintains a lunatic idiocy that makes it still very funny. There were three sequels which can be less whole-heartedly recommended.
In Penguin Modern Classics, aside from Molesworth, we have a selection of Searle’s best cartoons from the 1950s called The Terror of St Trinian’s and Other Drawings, including all of his hilarious updates on Hogarth’s The Rake’s Progress, remodelled for 1950s Britain with actors, clergymen, critics and painters mercilessly ridiculed.
Now to celebrate the new film we have put together all of Searle’s St Trinian’s drawings, some not seen for many years, into a single volume just called St Trinian’s.
Searle is a total hero. He has made life for very many people much more enjoyable for sixty years and the new film is a great opportunity to celebrate a strange, unique figure. He is still painting and drawing, living in France (where he moved in the early 1960s), now aged 87. This Christmas it would be actively dysfunctional not to give your friends copies of the new Penguin St Trinian’s.
Simon Winder - Publishing Director, Penguin Press
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