Monday, 19 March 2007
In the Oriental Reading Room, Editing
I could have picked any part of the Bodleian Library in which to edit my ms for Joshua 1. Like the Duke Humfrey's Room, where they filmed Harry Potter (don't ask me what scene, but I direct all the tourists that I meet who ask for Harry Potter hotspots, to this part of the Bod.)
Truthfully though, I can't be bothered schlepping all the way there. It's, like, a bit further away and up some stairs!
So I chose the Oriental Reading Room, in the New Bodleian Library. Like New College, it's not especially new, unless you were born in the eighteenth century.
The Oriental Reading Room turns out to be the perfect place for the total concentration that editing requires. I don't have this trouble writing a first draft - the story sucks me in. Editing, you need to have half your mind in the book and half of it on the editor's suggestions. Which often say, in a much kinder, more helpful and more specific way than this: Write this bit better.
No through-traffic to somewhere more interesting; a long, peaceful room with a window on the Broad. Nobody asking for the latest journals or the latest anything (which is why I won't go back to the haunt of my student days, the Radcliffe Science library; lots of activity there). Just scholars working intently on deciphering their manuscripts, in lovely exotic scripts. The woman who works opposite me seems to be reading something quite spidery and pictographic. Yummy!
You aren't allowed to take bags in, so I have to unpack my laptop and the box with my marked-up manuscript. The Bod Squad (library security) have to check the box, every day. Today I told the guard that I had my future best-selling first novel in there.
He laughed and laughed and laughed.
(Okay, I was going for the laugh...)
Title Dilemma
On the phone to Agent Cox this morning, we muttered words about my title suggestions for Joshua 2.
None of them are on the money. Hmm, but why?
I've been through about 15 suggestions by now. I came up with a new batch this evening. Avoiding words with 'fantasy' connotations, heavy on the 'adventure' connotations.
Hopefully I'm getting closer. We'll see!
None of them are on the money. Hmm, but why?
I've been through about 15 suggestions by now. I came up with a new batch this evening. Avoiding words with 'fantasy' connotations, heavy on the 'adventure' connotations.
Hopefully I'm getting closer. We'll see!
Friday, 2 March 2007
Chocolate and Harry Potter
Interesting to see that Galaxy (chocolate bar) are sponsoring the British Book Awards (Nibbies) this year. With a missionary zeal to persuade people to eat chocolate whilst reading!
Well if only, but I daren't; I'd get too fat.
However, this is in fact my own private ritual when it comes to Harry Potter day. The day of the new release, I'm down at little Sainsbury's in town, buying a big bar of milk chocolate and the latest copy (I went to Sainsbury's because unlike some other major book-sellers, they did not give dark warnings about running out of copies to people who couldn't be bothered to turn up at midnight...). Then it's back to mine, flop onto my bed and a day of bliss with chocolate and the latest installment of Harry.
Bit of a dilemma for JK, whether to kill the lad or not. Hmmm. I won't say what I think, in case it gives insight into my own proclivities.
Well if only, but I daren't; I'd get too fat.
However, this is in fact my own private ritual when it comes to Harry Potter day. The day of the new release, I'm down at little Sainsbury's in town, buying a big bar of milk chocolate and the latest copy (I went to Sainsbury's because unlike some other major book-sellers, they did not give dark warnings about running out of copies to people who couldn't be bothered to turn up at midnight...). Then it's back to mine, flop onto my bed and a day of bliss with chocolate and the latest installment of Harry.
Bit of a dilemma for JK, whether to kill the lad or not. Hmmm. I won't say what I think, in case it gives insight into my own proclivities.
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