Tuesday, 10 July 2012
ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S AND SILENT SAND
Pre-ordering has now commenced for ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S and SILENT SAND and I'm delighted with both covers too. These are the handiwork of artist MARTIN BAINES.
Both novels will be launched at THE ASYLUM 2012 in Lincoln town centre, 6th-9th September 2012. This is 'the most splendid Steampunk festival in the world'.
ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S - Steampunk/Horror Novella.
Kat Lightfoot thought that getting a job at the famed Tiffany’s store in New York would be the end to her problems ... she has money, new friends, and there’s even an inventor working there who develops new weapons from clockwork, and who cuts diamonds with a strange powered light. This is 1862, after all, and such things are the wonder of the age.
But then events take a turn for the worse: men and women wander the streets talking of ‘the darkness’; bodies vanish from morgues across town; and random, bloody attacks on innocent people take place in broad daylight.
Soon Kat and her friends are fighting for their lives against a horde of infected people, with only their wits and ingenuity to help them.
A steampunked story of diamonds, chutzpah, death and horror from the blood-drenched pen of Sam Stone.
SILENT SAND - A Vampire Gene Novel.
Secrets can be found in the most unlikely of places…
Lilly thought that her vampire lair under Rhuddlen Castle in North Wales was safe … until the dangerous fixer Darren Preacher tracked it down.
Gabriele Caccini thought that he knew all about being a vampire, but his life with newly turned lover Anya is sent out of control by the discovery of a new strain of vampirism, one which leaves its victims as ghoulish revenants, shells of the beings they used to be.
And deep in the Nevada desert, Lucy Collins, Gabriele's maker, is undercover, working with the CIA investigating the vampire revenants and what they might mean for humanity.
When Preacher brings Gabriele into the CIA base, Lucy fears her cover may be blown, but there is something far more dangerous than vampires hiding beneath the sands of Nevada … something ancient and vengeful, with an eternal patience and a lust for revenge.
Soon, the ancient vampire family will find themselves facing their greatest foe yet, something primal and insidious, and from which they have no protection…
ALL PRE-ORDERS WILL BE SIGNED AND DEDICATED.
Saturday, 7 July 2012
Petition
Following my outburst yesterday - about the Governments plans to bring in a bill that will effectively pirate the copyright of creative people - a petition has been raised to show our displeasure.
I don't need to express how important it is that we do not become complacent at this time. Although the government are saying that this bill will help to make 'orphaned materials' available for public consumption, the implication is that a blanket bill on copyright will effectively mean that unless you 'opt out' your works may be 'seized' and sold on to a third party - who will then be able to exploit them in anyway they wish. This might, and probably will, mean that the owner of the materials will not earn anything from this. But presumably the government will.
It has been said to me that merely stating your copyright ownership on your works is enough to protect you (Via a USA copyright lawyer). I am in doubt about this ... it will depend a great deal on the legal jargon used in the bill no doubt. I don't trust these guys - do you?
My feeling is that this may not be the case, and we have to assume that the need to 'opt out' that is being imposed on the bill is being put there as a legal loophole. If you don't opt out for example, but declare copyright on your work, does this mean they can use your complacency against you? Who knows. But much clarification is going to be needed before I'll be convinced that my works are safe.
If you agree, or are worried at all then I urge you to sign this petition. At the very least I would like to see something that protects us put into the bill - without the need to opt out.
SAY NO NOW
I don't need to express how important it is that we do not become complacent at this time. Although the government are saying that this bill will help to make 'orphaned materials' available for public consumption, the implication is that a blanket bill on copyright will effectively mean that unless you 'opt out' your works may be 'seized' and sold on to a third party - who will then be able to exploit them in anyway they wish. This might, and probably will, mean that the owner of the materials will not earn anything from this. But presumably the government will.
It has been said to me that merely stating your copyright ownership on your works is enough to protect you (Via a USA copyright lawyer). I am in doubt about this ... it will depend a great deal on the legal jargon used in the bill no doubt. I don't trust these guys - do you?
My feeling is that this may not be the case, and we have to assume that the need to 'opt out' that is being imposed on the bill is being put there as a legal loophole. If you don't opt out for example, but declare copyright on your work, does this mean they can use your complacency against you? Who knows. But much clarification is going to be needed before I'll be convinced that my works are safe.
If you agree, or are worried at all then I urge you to sign this petition. At the very least I would like to see something that protects us put into the bill - without the need to opt out.
SAY NO NOW
Friday, 6 July 2012
Legal Piracy
Today it was brought to my attention that the government is pushing through a bill to take away the legal rights of artists, writers and photographers.
According to Andrew Orlowski on The Register, this 'New legislation is proposed that would effectively introduce a compulsory purchase order, but without compensation, across an unlimited range of creative works, for commercial use.' You can read the full article here
Effectively the government are enforcing a legal snatching of our copyright and it is down to the author, artist or photographer to 'Opt Out' before the Government then allows their copyrights to be exploited by third parties. The third party can then legally use your works in any way they wish and make a profit from doing so. It is unlikely that you will receive any money at all of this.
The Intellectual Property Office have posted an update that seems to confirm that the government have drawn up a policy statement Consultation on Modernising Copyright.
I am furious that creative people are again being abused in this way. It seems to me that everyone in this world is entitled to be paid a fair amount for the work they do: except writers, artists and photographers.
Would David Cameron work as Prime Minister for months without being paid? Would a solicitor even work for one hour unpaid? Would you go to work and spend weeks doing your job without being paid? Of course not.
It takes me months to write a novel so why then should I work for free? Why should any professional work for nothing? How are we expected to pay our bills? Feed and clothe our children? Do they think because we are creative then we don't need the basics to live?
This government has severely disappointed me on every level in the last twelve months. Not only have they taken away our NHS, they are also stamping on our rights at every opportunity. We've spent years fighting off the pirates who steal our work on the internet and now the government comes along and just tries to take it all.
This is 'legal piracy'. And we can't let it happen.
Our country is turning into the vision that George Orwell had when he wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four and our government is so reminiscent of Big Brother. What will be next? The 'Thought Police'?
And dare we ask who the 'third parties' will be? I assume it will be those who bid the highest and give our officials the financial - somehow 'legal' - bung that they will get for selling on all of our hard work. So it will be companies set up and run by the already rich and bloated mega-corporations who already own and run most of the outlets for creative work - they are those with most to gain by being able to exploit anything which the copyright owner has not opted out of.
Will I allow this to happen? NO.
My intellectual property and copyright belongs to me. I claim my copyright. If you want to use my words - then you come and pay me the going rate like everyone else. Otherwise, government or no government. You're not using it. Final.
If you want to act on this then I suggest you write to your MP. I have sent a letter myself, but I'm not convinced it will do any good. WriteToThem
But if we all stand together, then this Legal Piracy can be shown up for the 'theft' that it is.
According to Andrew Orlowski on The Register, this 'New legislation is proposed that would effectively introduce a compulsory purchase order, but without compensation, across an unlimited range of creative works, for commercial use.' You can read the full article here
Effectively the government are enforcing a legal snatching of our copyright and it is down to the author, artist or photographer to 'Opt Out' before the Government then allows their copyrights to be exploited by third parties. The third party can then legally use your works in any way they wish and make a profit from doing so. It is unlikely that you will receive any money at all of this.
The Intellectual Property Office have posted an update that seems to confirm that the government have drawn up a policy statement Consultation on Modernising Copyright.
I am furious that creative people are again being abused in this way. It seems to me that everyone in this world is entitled to be paid a fair amount for the work they do: except writers, artists and photographers.
Would David Cameron work as Prime Minister for months without being paid? Would a solicitor even work for one hour unpaid? Would you go to work and spend weeks doing your job without being paid? Of course not.
It takes me months to write a novel so why then should I work for free? Why should any professional work for nothing? How are we expected to pay our bills? Feed and clothe our children? Do they think because we are creative then we don't need the basics to live?
This government has severely disappointed me on every level in the last twelve months. Not only have they taken away our NHS, they are also stamping on our rights at every opportunity. We've spent years fighting off the pirates who steal our work on the internet and now the government comes along and just tries to take it all.
This is 'legal piracy'. And we can't let it happen.
Our country is turning into the vision that George Orwell had when he wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four and our government is so reminiscent of Big Brother. What will be next? The 'Thought Police'?
And dare we ask who the 'third parties' will be? I assume it will be those who bid the highest and give our officials the financial - somehow 'legal' - bung that they will get for selling on all of our hard work. So it will be companies set up and run by the already rich and bloated mega-corporations who already own and run most of the outlets for creative work - they are those with most to gain by being able to exploit anything which the copyright owner has not opted out of.
Will I allow this to happen? NO.
My intellectual property and copyright belongs to me. I claim my copyright. If you want to use my words - then you come and pay me the going rate like everyone else. Otherwise, government or no government. You're not using it. Final.
If you want to act on this then I suggest you write to your MP. I have sent a letter myself, but I'm not convinced it will do any good. WriteToThem
But if we all stand together, then this Legal Piracy can be shown up for the 'theft' that it is.
Thursday, 5 July 2012
Thought for the day ...
Sometimes when you try to do the right thing, the odds seem stacked against you. That doesn't mean you shouldn't try in the first place. It takes great wisdom to back away from a bad situation, and realise that your best was all you could do.
Sam Stone
5th July 2012
Sam Stone
5th July 2012
Sunday, 1 July 2012
This Is Horror Event
THIS IS HORROR - NEW POSTER
I just had to share this new poster for the This Is Horror Literary Event at the Electric Cinema in Birmingham next Sunday 8th July. This event is part of the Shock and Gore Festival.
Don't forget from 6pm-8pm Jasper Bark will be hosting readings and a Q and A session.
If you've seen my earlier post you'll notice there has been a slight change of line-up and so I'm pleased to tell you that the awesomeness that is John L Probert will now be joining David Moody and I.
Hope to see some of you there.
For more information on this event go to This Is Horror
Or visit Shock and Gore to book your tickets now.
I just had to share this new poster for the This Is Horror Literary Event at the Electric Cinema in Birmingham next Sunday 8th July. This event is part of the Shock and Gore Festival.
Don't forget from 6pm-8pm Jasper Bark will be hosting readings and a Q and A session.
If you've seen my earlier post you'll notice there has been a slight change of line-up and so I'm pleased to tell you that the awesomeness that is John L Probert will now be joining David Moody and I.
Hope to see some of you there.
For more information on this event go to This Is Horror
Or visit Shock and Gore to book your tickets now.
Thursday, 28 June 2012
Silent Sand - Vampire Gene Series
The stunning cover for SILENT SAND is now unveiled. Needless to say I'm very excited to share this with you.
The novel can be purchased from all major book stores and will be available around the beginning of September.
The official launch takes place at The Asylum Steampunk weekend in September along with my Steampunk Novella ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S (Cover reveal soon), but check out my appearance dates if you want to buy a signed copy personally.
To buy your copy of my Vampires' latest adventure then go to Murky Depths and order now.
Remember to make sure you indicate if you require a signed copy.
Can't wait! I hope you feel the same.
The novel can be purchased from all major book stores and will be available around the beginning of September.
The official launch takes place at The Asylum Steampunk weekend in September along with my Steampunk Novella ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S (Cover reveal soon), but check out my appearance dates if you want to buy a signed copy personally.
To buy your copy of my Vampires' latest adventure then go to Murky Depths and order now.
Remember to make sure you indicate if you require a signed copy.
Can't wait! I hope you feel the same.
Wednesday, 27 June 2012
Vampire Sunday
On 22nd July 2012 Grimm Up North will be hosting VAMPIRE SUNDAY, at The Dancehouse Theatre, in Manchester.
I'll be there to open the proceedings with a reading and a short Q & A.
Followed by more guests and three terrific movies!
For more information visit Grimm Up North
I can't wait. Sounds like a great way to spend Sunday to me.
I'll be there to open the proceedings with a reading and a short Q & A.
Followed by more guests and three terrific movies!
For more information visit Grimm Up North
I can't wait. Sounds like a great way to spend Sunday to me.
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
Sunday, 17 June 2012
Club Class Charity Rally
A very worth cause has recently been brought to my attention.
Club Class Charity Rally is jointly run by Shaun Wells and his partner Nick Goulding, of Club Class Travel and they are trying to raise £10,000 for charity.
Shaun is currently undergoing treatment in his ongoing battle with cancer and yet he is giving so much of his time and energy to help raise awareness, and money, to help other people. This has really impressed me.
The rally will start on the set of Coronation Street, at Granada Studios in Manchester and will travel down the country, through London and Dover and will then commence through parts of Europe, ending in Gibraltar.
Club Class Rally will be supporting two charities this year. The Christie Charitable Fund and SAMM (A charity that supports the family's of victims of murder and manslaughter. They are two worthy causes who need as much support as they can get. Even a few pounds will help.
So if you want to support something worthwile this year, then please consider giving a donation to this cause.
If you want to learn more about the Rally and the fundraising activities of Club Class Rally, please check out their website HERE.
Club Class Charity Rally is jointly run by Shaun Wells and his partner Nick Goulding, of Club Class Travel and they are trying to raise £10,000 for charity.
Shaun is currently undergoing treatment in his ongoing battle with cancer and yet he is giving so much of his time and energy to help raise awareness, and money, to help other people. This has really impressed me.
The rally will start on the set of Coronation Street, at Granada Studios in Manchester and will travel down the country, through London and Dover and will then commence through parts of Europe, ending in Gibraltar.
Club Class Rally will be supporting two charities this year. The Christie Charitable Fund and SAMM (A charity that supports the family's of victims of murder and manslaughter. They are two worthy causes who need as much support as they can get. Even a few pounds will help.
So if you want to support something worthwile this year, then please consider giving a donation to this cause.
If you want to learn more about the Rally and the fundraising activities of Club Class Rally, please check out their website HERE.
Wednesday, 13 June 2012
Exploring Heinlein's Rules
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Robert Heinlein |
In 1947 Robert Heinlein wrote an essay called “On the Writing of Speculative Fiction” in which he established five rules that he felt were crucial to becoming a professional writer, and, more importantly, getting published. This work has been frequently re-printed and I have heard Heinlein quoted in abbreviated forms and versions ever since I became a writer myself.
Here are the five rules, and in this article I intend to explore them in context with my own experiences and the way in which I believe publishing works today.
1. You must write.
2. You must finish what you start.
3. You must refrain from rewriting except to editorial order.
4. You must put it on the market.
5. You must keep it on the market until sold.
These rules look fairly easy to follow and perhaps in 1947 the publishing industry was indeed that simple. In today’s market however, I’m not totally convinced that becoming a published writer is that easy.
Firstly, before I get into the discussing these rules I’d like to define what I think a ‘Writer’ is:
I can’t count how many times people at events have told me that ‘they are writers too’. Then on further questioning I discover that this person has never actually written anything, or had anything they had written published. If you fall into this category then, no, you are not a writer, but you would clearly like to be one.
Great! I understand where you are coming from completely. I was aspiring once too.
Just a little point to explore:
You wouldn't go to your doctor and tell them that you are a doctor when you have no education, training or experience, would you? Or tell your hairdresser that you can cut hair when you have never even picked up a pair of scissors and done it.
Think about that for a second.
To me a writer is someone who has written, completed and sold a piece or pieces of their writing in the professional market, be that fiction or non-fiction. It is not someone who ‘wants to be’ a writer. You are only 'aspiring' until someone else pays you good money to publish your work and publishes you at their expense.
I have written six novels (five sold), a novella (sold), several short stories (sold), a collection of short stories and poetry (sold), Edited and written a screenplay (sold) edited professional journals, biographies and novels. But only since I began to write full time two years ago have I really considered myself a proper 'writer' and believed that I had the right to use that title.
Now that I have clarified my definition let us look at Heinlein’s five rules on how be published and to go from 'aspiring' to 'professional'.
Rule 1
Firstly, as Heinlein says, you do have to write. Obviously I agree wholeheartedly with this. You need to write as much as possible and this should be every day if you are serious. This helps you to build up that creative muscle, hone your skills and makes the art of writing become such a natural thing for you to do that the words flow easily.
Many agents will tell you, and believe me I had one say this to me about eighteen months ago, ‘write around 1000 words a day’. I think, to be honest, you should write as many words as you can manage. But make yourself do it.
Get a routine. Discipline yourself to keep to your schedule. Set yourself goals and beat them. Challenge yourself every day. If you do this, then five hundred words will soon become a thousand, a thousand will become two thousand and pretty soon you are finishing that book you always wanted to write.
How I apply this discipline is that I write every day as soon as I get up. This has become so part of my life that I feel strange if my day starts any other way. I also hold competitions with myself. How many words can I write today? Can I do better than yesterday? This is completely insular – I don’t actually care what other people do or don’t write in a day, be it more, or less, than I do. It’s about me beating me. Me achieving my very best. Challenging myself.
The goals you set yourself could be about improving, doing something original, and strengthening your known areas of weakness (I used to hate describing: now I love it because I’ve worked so hard to become good at it). The harder the challenge, the greater the high you will get from overcoming the obstacles.
Rule 2.
Without doubt you have to finish what you write. If you don't finish your story, novel or script then how can you ever possibly hope to become published? No one will take a newbie seriously who doesn't finish anything, and no one will invest in you either. Plus finishing things proves to yourself that you can do it. In the end you need that self-esteem and confidence in order to be successful no matter how far you want your career to go.
Two weeks ago I sold a new novella, Zombies At Tiffany’s, on a six line pitch. This was the first time I had sold something before I had actually written it. I set myself a goal to write this novella to first draft in a week. It meant obsessive dedication and real stamina. I started on the Monday one week and by Sunday I knew I wanted to complete the draft the next day. I woke early and started right away. I finished that book by 2pm on the Monday. I had written 6,425 words in that day alone.
I would not have sold this book, however, if I hadn’t already proved that I could finish what I started, or see through my ideas to completion.
This is where challenging your word count can come in. It’s an easy way of raising the bar of your stamina. I won’t stop writing today until I have done so many words, or so many chapters, or until my character reaches this point in the story.
Keep setting those goals: I’m going to finish this book today! And you will finish what your started. If you do that, you are halfway there to selling it.
Rule 3
Heinlein said that you should never rewrite your work unless advised to do so by an editor. My definition of re-write can mean anything from editing small changes in, to making major changes to the text that may completely change the original meaning.
One thing you should do is edit and proof-read your work, and if possible ask someone else to read it too. Let's face it, you are not perfect, especially if you are an ‘aspiring writer’. We learn from mistakes, and so will obviously make some in the early days. These mistakes may be enough to make an editor think that you are not good enough, or not ready yet to be published. Typos and spelling errors detract from the work, no matter how good your idea may be.
I have now finished my novella in record time but the work doesn’t end there. My next task is to edit and improve it. I don’t want to send it to my editor only to be told it needs more work. The truth is I want it to be the best it can be first.
Editors are vital.
Writing is a collaborative art and we all need editors because we are just too close to our own work to see its flaws sometimes, but you shouldn’t rely on them so much that you turn in substandard work that needs a lot of editing. It should be something you challenge yourself with every time.
You can learn to self-edit.
If you don't feel confident about self-editing I would advise taking writing courses or joining a writers' group so that you can gain the experience of working with others before you attempt to sell your work. Sharing your work can help you gain confidence in your own abilities and help you recognise your flaws. However, a word of caution here: courses cannot teach you talent - you need to remember that this has to be intrinsic, but they can teach you to be analytical and understand the art of writing. It can help you appreciate structure which could help you shape your words in the best possible way. Ultimately improving how well that natural talent is conveyed in your work is the aim of any of these courses, as well as giving you the confidence to believe that you may actually have the talent needed to go the distance.
Rule 4
Submit what you write:
That's not quite as easy as it sounds. Firstly, how do you sell your work? Who do you sell it to? Well this is the hard part. You need to research your market. If you want to sell a novel you need to be able to express to your potential publisher that you understand your market. Who do you write like? What fan base do you appeal to? What age range is your work suitable for? If you don’t know the answers to these three questions then it’s probably not that clear in your writing either. This makes the book harder to place. It also makes it less likely to sell. If you have read a lot of one particular writer’s work, and you are aiming at their audience, then you should understand your market.
You may find The Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook and The Writers’ Handbook useful. These books provide lists of agents and publishers, their submission criteria and who and what genres they publish, which will give you some clue about whether they might be interested in your work.
Clearly if you don't submit work you will never sell it, but be prepared for rejection when you do start to submit. It happens to us all. This is the time to take on board any advice that the editor or agent who rejects has to offer. They know what they are talking about, so listen.
Rule 5
The final rule is far less easy to agree with in the current market. The big six publishers have slush piles so high that you would need a great deal of luck to even get one of the editors to look at your work.
Years ago I would have advised going to literary conventions and networking. I now wouldn't. Because they won't make the slightest difference to your career at all. It might, in fact, be detrimental to you if your face doesn't fit. My advice is remain anonymous, but keep on sending out your work to agents and editors and always follow their submission guidelines. Make changes you agree with, ignore those you don’t. Changes and editorial suggestions are purely subjective (and I know that this actually clashes with the comment I made above about listening to editors and agents – but you have to use some judgement in this as well.) Learn to recognise generic advice that they send out to everyone. A personal, detailed response to your work is another matter entirely.
I once got a rejection letter from an editor who advised joining ‘writers’ groups, don’t use adverbs, and write every day’. By then I was writing full time (3-5k daily), had an MA in Creative Writing, had won an award, and was a stickler about ridding my manuscripts of adverbs during edits. I knew in that one paragraph that they hadn’t even read my book.
Heinlein’s fifth rule makes me a little cross to be honest.
Keep it out there until it sells? That's harder than it sounds.
For a start rejections can be soul destroying - that's where stamina, dedication and confidence come in. You have to believe in what you've written in order to have the confidence to keep sending it out despite many rejections.
Plus there are the publishing industry rules to consider too!
Okay, let’s look at the general rules of submitting manuscripts. Most publishers and agents will tell you that they won’t even look at your work if you’ve done a multiple submission (unless you have an agent and this agent is clear that they are doing a multiple submission). By their ruling you submit to one, you wait for a reply, when/if, rejected you are then free to send the work out to someone else.
The average reply time from most publishers ... three months to a year (if they even bother to reply). If you stick to the industry rule you would be sending the same manuscript out once a year. It could take you twenty years or more to actually get that one piece of writing in print.
Sorry to depress you if you are just starting out. But that’s the reality.
So what did Heinlein mean by rule 5, and how can we apply it to today's markets?
I think it's safe to assume that there probably weren't as many potential writers submitting to editors in 1947. Heinlein may well have had quick rejections, or left his work with his agent to offer around. I don't know though to be honest. But what I do know is that there are a lot of people out there today - maybe millions of people - who are aspiring writers, and that is a lot of competition.
So what do you do?
I used to follow the rule of waiting for a rejection. I'm still waiting for rejections on books and stories that have since been sold. The truth is, they wouldn't be in print if I hadn't decided to put a cap on this for my own sanity. I now have a rule myself where this is concerned - give a publisher three months, unless they have expressed clearly in their guidelines that the response time is longer. If I don’t hear back in that time, then I write them off as not interested and send it someone else.
This rule doesn't apply if I submit early to an anthology that has a submission deadline. I fully accept that the deadline means I won't hear until sometime afterwards. It is rude, however, if the editors never tell you that you didn't get in. But so far my experience has been very good in this area.
So do Heinlein’s Rules still stand up today?
For some people these rules seem to work just fine. Perhaps they are the lucky few whose work lands on the right desk at the right time. Generally, the advice is fine as long as you define it in a way that works for you.
If I were Heinlein and I were writing these rules today, I’d feel like I had to give more than these five basics because the industry has changed so much since 1947. With all the competition editors are swamped.
So this is how I would change the focus of those rules.
1 Be dedicated. Write every day.
2 Build stamina. Finish what you write.
3 Edit until you are confident that your manuscript is the best it can be.
4 Research and submit to the ‘right’ market.
5 Listen to advice and then submit your work elsewhere.
I don't think this is a perfect formula however. So much depends on luck. The right person seeing your manuscript, on the day when they have been told to find something just like you have written.
After all that do you really want to do this?
I realise that my definition of what a 'writer' is may actually upset some people because they want to live in their own little pipe dream. But the fact is, being a writer is hard. It does not automatically mean you will have the success and money of J K Rowling. In most cases it is quite the opposite.
Getting something published is only the beginning of what might become a career for you. The majority of writers I know still hold down day jobs. I may consider myself a 'writer' and do this full time but it is still very much the start of my career (after five years of hard slog). So if you think writing will lead to fame, money, success ... Well, to be honest, that's very unlikely.
How to be successful? Well that’s another blog entirely, and I’m not sure I will ever know the answer. Give me a few years to get past the fledgling writer stage and I might be able to tell you!
Tuesday, 12 June 2012
This is Horror Literary Event
THIS IS HORROR LITERATURE EVENT, 8th July 2012
This Is Horror present a brand new evening of horror literature as part
of Shock & Gore 2012, as award-winning horror author and crowd
favourite Jasper Bark plays host to special guests David Moody, Conrad
Williams and Sam Stone, three acclaimed authors who will be answering
questions from the audience and reading excerpts from their work.
Address: Shock & Gore Festival, Electric Cinema, 47-49 Station Street, Birmingham, B5 4DY, Tel: 0121 643 7879
Time: 6pm
Date: Sunday 8th July 2012
Saturday, 9 June 2012
ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S
ANNOUNCEMENT FROM TELOS PUBLISHING
To celebrate the publication of a new Steampunk/Zombie novella by the inestimable Ms Sam Stone called ZOMBIES AT TIFFANY'S (press release can be found here: http://telospublishing.blogspot.co.uk/), we here at Telos Towers thought it would be fun to run a competition for all interested parties.
The winner will receive the dubious honour of being brutally slain and eaten by Zombies in the novella ... not something that happens every day, I grant you, but in Ms Stone's world of Victorian gadgets, invention, and attacking zombie hoardes, it's a fairly commonplace happening.
To enter, we simply want you to name the author of the novella BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S, upon which Ms Stone's newly formed fiction is very loosely inspired.
Please send entries to Telos Publishing at david@telos.co.uk to arrive before the end of JULY 2012. Please put ZOMBIE COMPETITION as the subject line. We will then put all the winners in a hat (probably a bowler, or perhaps a Fez), and select the lucky victim winner. They will receive the aforementioned accolade of being fictionally slaughtered, and also a signed copy of the finished book when it is published in time for The Asylum 2012 in Lincoln, at which event it is being officially launched.
The decision of Telos Publishing in the final result is final. To find out more about Telos Publishing, please visit www.telos.co.uk.
Needless to say I'm delighted to be writing this novella and working with Telos Publishing again. Good luck to all!
Sam x
Thursday, 7 June 2012
Support Your Library's ...
And support professionally published writers ...
Did you know that authors get a very small royalty everytime their book is out on loan from a library?
If you go to your local library and find that they don't stock the book/books then you can request they order them for you. This means a book SALE to the author also and if the books are then stocked by your library other people will see them and borrow them.
It makes sense to me ...
If you want to help and support local authors but can't afford to buy their books - why not order them at your local library?
I challenge you to do this in the next week!
Sam Stone
Did you know that authors get a very small royalty everytime their book is out on loan from a library?
If you go to your local library and find that they don't stock the book/books then you can request they order them for you. This means a book SALE to the author also and if the books are then stocked by your library other people will see them and borrow them.
It makes sense to me ...
If you want to help and support local authors but can't afford to buy their books - why not order them at your local library?
I challenge you to do this in the next week!
Sam Stone
Monday, 21 May 2012
This weekend I'll be at MCM EXPO in London
25th-27th May. MCM EXPO, ExCel Exhibition Centre, 1 Western Gateway, London, E16 1XL.
I'll be guesting on The Victorian Steampunk exhibition on Saturday (all day) and Sunday (until around 3pm) with David J Howe. We will have books and other goodies for sale during this time.
Also attending on Saturday afternoon is Stephen James Walker. Copies of his latest book 'Cracks in Time' will be available.
I've been told that there are around 62,000 people attending this event. Plus MCM Expo have just announced that DAVID GIUNTOLI the main lead in GRIMM will be there. So fans of the show may want to attend this year.
For more information check out the MCM Expo Website HERE
See you there!
I'll be guesting on The Victorian Steampunk exhibition on Saturday (all day) and Sunday (until around 3pm) with David J Howe. We will have books and other goodies for sale during this time.
Also attending on Saturday afternoon is Stephen James Walker. Copies of his latest book 'Cracks in Time' will be available.
I've been told that there are around 62,000 people attending this event. Plus MCM Expo have just announced that DAVID GIUNTOLI the main lead in GRIMM will be there. So fans of the show may want to attend this year.
For more information check out the MCM Expo Website HERE
See you there!
Monday, 14 May 2012
GalaxyFest 2012
We arrived in Colorado on Tuesday 21st February after travelling for approximately 24 hours. Yes! It was a very long trip. David and Diann Wacks met David, Frazer and I at the airport with a lovely young lady called Stacey Vowell. With all our luggage they rightly guessed that we would need two cars.
Relaxing in the lounge |
Once at the hotel we discovered that the convention had booked us into a double suite. Frazer had his own bedroom and bathroom on one side and we had a bedroom and bathroom on the other side. Between us was a huge lounge/dinning area with a kitchen and yet another small bathroom. We were utterly spoilt. David went straight to bed and Frazer and I went over the corridor to GalaxyFest Central - where we soon learnt that the heart and organisation of the con was taking place night and day.
Frazer and I had a glass of wine and a donut (dunked in Kraken rum). It was probably about 9pm local time when the jet lag really bit and we both went off to our rooms. We were aware by then that the altitude really did effect our ability to consume much alcohol. One drink, and I was certain to sleep well that night.
David - garden of the Gods |
Colorado Springs is a mile above sea level and so this can have an effect on you until you adjust to the environment. David suffered nose bleeds every morning and I did have problems with my breathing - fortunately I had my asthma inhaler and that did help a lot. By about 5pm we were feeling the effects of the jet lag and altitude quite substantially. Karyn took us back to our hotel and said goodbye. We chose to have a very light supper and then all went to bed.
On Thursday David Wacks had arranged for a signing for us and some other authors at a local bookstore. It was really fun to meet some of the others in this intimate venue and we sold a few books to some lovely people who turned up to meet us. It was nice to meet up with Christopher M Salas, Gary A Wilson, David J Corwell and Samantha Shu. David Wacks also surprised us all with a gorgeous cake. I felt pretty honoured to have Killing Kiss named icing covered spine alongside Kevin J Anderson's Veiled Alliances. It was super to see Karyn Valentine again and meet her husband Steve and to hook up with Russell Lott too.
That evening we went out with Karyn for dinner to a lovely restaurant she recommended called Mackenzies and had a great steak dinner - which I couldn't finish partly because of the huge portion sizes and partly because my appetite had shrunk down since we arrived.
Frazer Hines, Chase Masterson in the Dealer's Room |
On Friday the convention started and so we were seriously to work for the first time. We were allowed in the dealer's room around 10am to set up our tables and then went off to relax for a few hours. The event officially started at 3pm when the dealer's room would be open. Outside in the lobby there were huge queues forming for people to register and the hotel was buzzing with anticipation and excitement which was emanating from the attendees. The dealer's room was huge, filled with booksellers, steampunk stalls, artists and of course the main guests which included Kevin J Anderson, Dean Haglund, Denise Crosby, Chase Masterson, Angus Oblong, as well as David Howe, Frazer Hines and me. I noticed that outside there were many tables lining the hallways which were rapidly filled with a variety of dealers also.
David Howe, Frazer and I were the first panel - the Brit Invasion. This started at 4pm and was moderated by David Boop, Toast master of the event, who interviewed us all together and individually on stage for an hour. It was great fun.
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David, Sam & Kevin J Anderson |
Immediately following this event was opening ceremonies and while we waited for this to start I went to the back of the room only to bump into Kevin J Anderson. I recognised Kevin immediately as we are facebook friends and I follow him on Twitter as well. Nothing could have prepared me for the warm welcome I received from him. He said 'Oh my God. Sam Stone. You're just as gorgeous as your photos'. Then he hugged me and I felt an immediate warmth and friendship for him. I never expected him to recognise me and so that welcome was a highlight for the convention for me. He is a truly lovely person.
Opening Ceremonies went off without a hitch. We were all called on stage to say hello and it was really fun to see all of the other guests together. David Boop and James Nimark did the introductions and in James' case gave advice to attendees about personal hygiene (which was not only inspirational but was hilarious as well).
After that Kevin invited David, Frazer and I out to dinner with him and his lovely wife Rebecca Moesta. He took us to a local pub which was literally in walking distance of the hotel and had great food. It was super to spend the evening with Kevin and Rebecca and actually start to get to know them.
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David Wacks, Chase Masterson, Sam & David |
After dinner we had a con commitment to go to a private party that attendees had paid for so that they could get an opportunity to meet up with the guests and chat to them informally. This is where I first got to speak to Denise Crosby. Denise and I spent the evening putting the world to rights and drinking wine, (I definitely had too much of the latter). I'm a huge Trekkie fan, having watched Next Generation for years. The icing on the cake was to learn that she is so down to earth and incredibly easy to talk to.
By about 11pm though, David and I were feeling the effects of the day again and we went off to bed leaving the party in full swing.
Sam & Chase |
Saturday and the first full day of the con. This was a day of panels and spending the time in the dealer's room. One panel was on 'Niche Writing' with Rebecca Moesta, Betsy Dornbusch and some welcome gate-crashers - Mario Acevedo, Jeanne Adams. It was well attended and much fun. It was interesting to hear the views of American authors and their take on niche writing.
That evening Kevin and Rebecca took us to their local pizzeria - which was awesome. Then we returned to attend the guest mixer party for that evening only to learn everyone had disappeared to go to the Kilt Blowing event (I heard it was very, very funny).
Sunday seemed to come around so quickly. It was the last day on the con and we had more panels, another Brit Invasion interview and Closing Ceremonies to attend. I spent the time in the dealer's room chatting to Dean Haglund whenever we were free, and Denise and occasionally the lovely Chase Masterson. For closing ceremonies Chase performed a terrific riff of 'Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend' but with substituted words that were Babylon Five specific. She was awesome. Stunning voice, great performance and she deserved the standing ovation we all gave her at the end.
That evening Kevin, Rebecca, Dean, Frazer, David and I went back to the pub for dinner. It was less busy and the food was once again terrific. When we got back to the hotel we said our goodbyes to Kevin and Rebecca and they were going home then. I hugged them. A lot. And I was missing them when they went. What a terrific couple.
Afterwards Dean came back to our room with David and Diann Wacks and a lovely couple called Blase and Ellen. Yes we partied ...
On Monday, the con was sadly over but we still had one more day in Colorado Springs and so Stacey Vowell and Christopher M Salas took Frazer, Chase, David and I all western riding at The Stables which was in the Garden of the Gods. I've ridden a lit in the past and wasn't too worried, but the stables were very safety conscious and so we all had a horse suitable for our level of ability. My horse was called Bonita and she was really tall. It must have been hilarious watching me trying to mount her because I did struggle to get my leg over!
David & Sam - Last Evening in Colorado |
The weather was glorious that day and so the trip through the Garden of the Gods was pretty special and fun. Afterwards we went out for a very small snack and a drink on the way back. Then David and Diann Wacks took us all out for dinner at the best restaurant in the area - The Famous. Afterwards we all went on to a local club where Dean Haglund was set to do his X-Files improv show. It was EXCELLENT. We were all laughing so hard that our sides were hurting and Stacey and Diann couldn't breath! So Dean - you nearly killed us all with laughter. You rock!
Tuesday morning and it was time to say goodbye and I have to admit this was a little tearful. I am incredibly grateful to Diann and David Wacks, Stacey Vowell and Christopher Salas for taking such good care of us all weekend. Thanks guys. It was totally awesome and I feel like I have several new and wonderful friends in Colorado Springs and other parts of the USA now thanks to you.
Well that was the end of our adventure to the Rockies. We've been invited back next year and - I hope we get the opportunity to make it again!
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
WHITBY GOTHIC WEEKEND
Getting ready for a fun weekend at the Rifle Club at Whitby .
Steampunk Central is proud to announce' GLADSTONE' will be playing on Friday evening. Doors open 8 pm band on at 8.30 pm.
£5 entry on the door.
Saturday evening' The Major' , and The Cogneys . Doors open 7.30 £5 entry on the door.
Sunday evening Steampunk Pub Quiz and Game Show night, Special Guest 'Mike Stand' free entry.
Steampunk Market from 12.00 - 5.pm Friday. 10.00 - 5 pm Sat and 11.00 - 4.30 Sunday.
See you there.
David J Howe and Sam Stone will be in the rifle club ALL Saturday and until 3 on Sunday. Hope to see you there.
Steampunk Central is proud to announce' GLADSTONE' will be playing on Friday evening. Doors open 8 pm band on at 8.30 pm.
£5 entry on the door.
Saturday evening' The Major' , and The Cogneys . Doors open 7.30 £5 entry on the door.
Sunday evening Steampunk Pub Quiz and Game Show night, Special Guest 'Mike Stand' free entry.
Steampunk Market from 12.00 - 5.pm Friday. 10.00 - 5 pm Sat and 11.00 - 4.30 Sunday.
See you there.
David J Howe and Sam Stone will be in the rifle club ALL Saturday and until 3 on Sunday. Hope to see you there.
Wednesday, 18 April 2012
This week I'll be at ... LLANDUDNO WATERSTONES
LLANDUDNO WATERSTONES, 21st April 2012
Address: Waterstones, 37 Victoria Centre, Mostyn Street, Llandudno, Wales LL30 2NGSam Stone and David Howe will be returning to one of their favourite Waterstones stores. With Frazer Hines who will be selling his autobiography 'Hines Sight'.
Time: 12-3pm
See you there!
Sunday, 15 April 2012
Current Bargains on Kindle
If you haven't tried Zombies in New York and Other Bloody Jottings then you can now download it from Amazon at a bargain price.
Amazon UK £2.05
Amazon USA $3.28
Demon Dance Book 3 The Vampire Gene Series is currently reduced also.
Amazon UK £3.80
Amazon USA $6.03
If you don't have Kindle but have and IPhone/ IPad there is a free Kindle app you can download and connect to your Amazon account. This allows you to buy any kindle book and it will automatically download to your device.
So ... have I tempted you to buy and try ...?
Amazon UK £2.05
Amazon USA $3.28
Demon Dance Book 3 The Vampire Gene Series is currently reduced also.
Amazon UK £3.80
Amazon USA $6.03
If you don't have Kindle but have and IPhone/ IPad there is a free Kindle app you can download and connect to your Amazon account. This allows you to buy any kindle book and it will automatically download to your device.
So ... have I tempted you to buy and try ...?
Thursday, 12 April 2012
This week I'll be at ...
MancMonCon
If you are in the Manchester area, this Saturday Sam Stone and David J Howe will be appearing at MancMonCon (Manchester Monster Convention!)
Programme includes Reading & Q & A from 12.30pm and signings thereafter.
Address: Sachas Hotel, Tib Street , Piccadilly, Manchester, M4 1SH
For further information of and the programme click HERE
If you are in the Manchester area, this Saturday Sam Stone and David J Howe will be appearing at MancMonCon (Manchester Monster Convention!)
Programme includes Reading & Q & A from 12.30pm and signings thereafter.
Address: Sachas Hotel, Tib Street , Piccadilly, Manchester, M4 1SH
For further information of and the programme click HERE
Wednesday, 11 April 2012
New Appearances Update
I've recently added some more dates to my appearance calender :
WIGAN WATERSTONES, 30th June 2012.
Address: 6 The Grand Arcade,Wigan, WN1 1BH
Time: 12-4pm
THE ASYLUM. 6th-9th September 2012
Address: Lincoln town centre
Time: all weekend
For further information : THE ASYLUM
WALES COMIC CON
Address: Glyndwr University, Wrexham
Time: 10am-5pm
For Further Information: WALES COMIC CON
Hope to see some of you there :)
More dates to follow...
Monday, 9 April 2012
G. R. YEATES - Guest Blog
A Light in the Black
"So, you don't write stories with happy endings, then?"
Someone said that to me a few years ago when I mentioned that I write horror fiction. I have also been involved in discussions before and since about happy or redemptive endings and whether this is something a writer should or should not aim for. My responses often argued for the story to dictate the nature of the ending or something else writerly, and though I still stand by those responses, I wasn't being entirely honest.

The short answer as to why I do not write happy endings is that I would need to have experienced something that I consider to be a happy ending in my own life in order to be able to write one. As much as I believe myself to be capable of writing for an audience and their expectations as any other writer, I think there are certain things, certain experiences that, if we do not go through them, then we have no reference point to then convincingly write from, and this is why the endings I write for my stories tend to be fatalistic at worst and ambiguous at best.
However, that being said, I was recently moved to write a very short story as a coda to the Vetala Cycle. It is called The End of War and without spoiling it for readers, there is a small mote of hope present there, and I wonder if it was this that was my motivation for writing such a piece, as the Vetala Cycle did not feel, to me, fully complete until I typed the last line of The End of War. Even though I had already thought that I was done, something was still missing. So, when there was that weird, indefinable sensation in my gut that the last piece of the story was now finally in place with The End of War, after six long years of hard work, this suggested to me that even though I do not write happy endings, there is still space in my work for a little light in the black.
You can find out more about G.R. Yeates, Hell's Teeth and the Vetala Cycle at: http://www.gryeates.co.uk
Monday, 2 April 2012
'Zombies in New York' Does Kindle
Okay, I know quite a few of you have been asking me about the digital edition for Zombies in New York and Other Bloody Jottings and so here it is!
The paperback price for this book is £12.99
You can now buy this on Amazon Kindle at the following sites:
Amazon .co.uk Price: £2.91
Amazon .com Price: $4.66
Amazon.de Price EUR 3,48
Amazon.fr Price EUR 3,48
Amazon.es Price EUR 3,48
Amazon.it Price EUR 3,48
Don't you just love the far reach of Amazon?

You can now buy this on Amazon Kindle at the following sites:
Amazon .co.uk Price: £2.91
Amazon .com Price: $4.66
Amazon.de Price EUR 3,48
Amazon.fr Price EUR 3,48
Amazon.es Price EUR 3,48
Amazon.it Price EUR 3,48
Don't you just love the far reach of Amazon?
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Weight Matters
I have been struggling with my weight for some time now and have had to come to terms with the fact that no one is going to wave a magic wand to make it all better for me. It's something I have to face and deal with myself.
In order to shed the pounds I have been training 3 times a week, swimming 2 times, and walking whenever I can for the last 3 months. I have also been watching what I eat and had previously cut the worst things from my diet - like crisps - which I really like. Despite doing all this I've barely lost any weight.
On the plus side though I'm definitely toning up, my clothes are fitting better, my stomach is flatter and I feel thinner. Even so, us women are obsessed with poundage aren't we? And despite the obvious results I wasn't completely satisfied. And I'm not sure that many women would be because the media has brainwashed us to be obsessed with size 'zero' figures.
The high street stores don't help one little bit on this score. They have a lot to answer for. If I go to buy clothes I can be a different size in every shop. Matalan are the worst for this ... a size 14 in M&S would be an 18 or 20 there. When I was genuinely a size 8-10 I used to have to buy 12's in New Look. There doesn't seem to be a really universal size anymore and I'm no longer sure what size I actually am. In one store my bottom half will be a 10 another a 14. Believe me that kind of thing messes with your head.
Weight and size matter to women, even if you look okay in your clothes. We don't want to believe we are obese (and believe me the British Medical Board charts say that someone of my height and weight is obese ...), and I don't want to buy clothing that is labelled several sizes bigger than they should be. That certainly doesn't help anyone's ego or sense of worth.
My quest for answers on the weight loss problem led me to my doctor. The weight gain was initially caused by a variety of things. Change in lifestyle and then serious health problems resulting in major surgery last year didn't help. All of this not withstanding, with my current good health and increasingly improving level of fitness even my doctor thought I should have lost a significant amount of weight by now. Blood tests ensued and I'm relieved that they have all come back fine (even my liver! Though that is very hard to believe!!!).
After taking dietary advice, I've been under the impression for some time that the problem might be that I just don't eat enough and that my metabolism is shutting down and storing the food. This is entirely possible because if your body goes into starvation mode it stores everything it can, making it even harder to lose weight. I've monitored it, tried to add things like fruit, but most of the time I struggle with this because I don't feel hungry. I was always brought up to believe that you don't eat if you aren't hungry too, so this goes against everything I've been conditioned to believe. Food should, in today's health terms, be consumed little and often. So basically 5 small meals a day is healthier than two.
Over the last three months I've forced down breakfast (mostly feeling nauseated), and tried to eat regularly to combat the state of my metabolism. It hasn't really worked though, and I'm beginning to understand why. I think I've been deluding myself all along.
Yesterday I was told about this app: My Fitness Pal which you can use on your IPhone, or on your computer. The clever little gadget actually scans bar codes on your food as well. It's an easy way of keeping a food diary and it helps you calculate how many calories you need to eat that day as well as in what combinations of carbs, fat, protein, sugars and so on.
I started using it yesterday and I've already dropped 2lbs although the jury is still out on that one - will have to see if those pounds stay off and I continue to lose more as I tend to fluctuate around the same weight by a pound or two anyway!
Even so, I think this new app may be useful in making me more aware of my food intake - or indeed lack of if that is the case. Maybe foods I thought were OK, just weren't, or maybe it was the portions. Having this gadget is also making me think about sizes of those portions as I don't want to go over my daily limit.
Maybe I have been cheating but just kidding myself that I hadn't.
So why will this new fangled gadget stop me from deluding myself again? Who's going to know if I eat something and then don't add it?
Well ... I will. If I cheat and don't add everything then I am just fooling myself and really what is the point of that?
The other thing I have discovered is that My Fitness Pal calculates how much you've burnt in your exercise and that gives you back more calories which means you possibly still could have your glass of wine (I've cut mine out completely for now though). I think knowing how much my hard work is burning is a real help and might just encourage me to work even harder!
But don't take everything it does as 100% accurate. I was advised that it isn't, but if it helps me gain a modicum of control over my food intake, makes me think twice about making unhealthy choices, then I think I'm going to be on a winner anyway.
It's time for a healthy snack ... and a walk ...

On the plus side though I'm definitely toning up, my clothes are fitting better, my stomach is flatter and I feel thinner. Even so, us women are obsessed with poundage aren't we? And despite the obvious results I wasn't completely satisfied. And I'm not sure that many women would be because the media has brainwashed us to be obsessed with size 'zero' figures.
The high street stores don't help one little bit on this score. They have a lot to answer for. If I go to buy clothes I can be a different size in every shop. Matalan are the worst for this ... a size 14 in M&S would be an 18 or 20 there. When I was genuinely a size 8-10 I used to have to buy 12's in New Look. There doesn't seem to be a really universal size anymore and I'm no longer sure what size I actually am. In one store my bottom half will be a 10 another a 14. Believe me that kind of thing messes with your head.
Weight and size matter to women, even if you look okay in your clothes. We don't want to believe we are obese (and believe me the British Medical Board charts say that someone of my height and weight is obese ...), and I don't want to buy clothing that is labelled several sizes bigger than they should be. That certainly doesn't help anyone's ego or sense of worth.

After taking dietary advice, I've been under the impression for some time that the problem might be that I just don't eat enough and that my metabolism is shutting down and storing the food. This is entirely possible because if your body goes into starvation mode it stores everything it can, making it even harder to lose weight. I've monitored it, tried to add things like fruit, but most of the time I struggle with this because I don't feel hungry. I was always brought up to believe that you don't eat if you aren't hungry too, so this goes against everything I've been conditioned to believe. Food should, in today's health terms, be consumed little and often. So basically 5 small meals a day is healthier than two.
Over the last three months I've forced down breakfast (mostly feeling nauseated), and tried to eat regularly to combat the state of my metabolism. It hasn't really worked though, and I'm beginning to understand why. I think I've been deluding myself all along.
Yesterday I was told about this app: My Fitness Pal which you can use on your IPhone, or on your computer. The clever little gadget actually scans bar codes on your food as well. It's an easy way of keeping a food diary and it helps you calculate how many calories you need to eat that day as well as in what combinations of carbs, fat, protein, sugars and so on.
I started using it yesterday and I've already dropped 2lbs although the jury is still out on that one - will have to see if those pounds stay off and I continue to lose more as I tend to fluctuate around the same weight by a pound or two anyway!
Even so, I think this new app may be useful in making me more aware of my food intake - or indeed lack of if that is the case. Maybe foods I thought were OK, just weren't, or maybe it was the portions. Having this gadget is also making me think about sizes of those portions as I don't want to go over my daily limit.
Maybe I have been cheating but just kidding myself that I hadn't.
So why will this new fangled gadget stop me from deluding myself again? Who's going to know if I eat something and then don't add it?
Well ... I will. If I cheat and don't add everything then I am just fooling myself and really what is the point of that?
The other thing I have discovered is that My Fitness Pal calculates how much you've burnt in your exercise and that gives you back more calories which means you possibly still could have your glass of wine (I've cut mine out completely for now though). I think knowing how much my hard work is burning is a real help and might just encourage me to work even harder!
But don't take everything it does as 100% accurate. I was advised that it isn't, but if it helps me gain a modicum of control over my food intake, makes me think twice about making unhealthy choices, then I think I'm going to be on a winner anyway.
It's time for a healthy snack ... and a walk ...
Wednesday, 7 March 2012
BRITSCIFI - The National Space Centre
Slight Change of plan due to double-booking. Arndale Centre Waterstones to be re-arranged shortly ...
I'm now very pleased to announce our activities for this weekend because we will be joining this fabulous line-up at The National Space Centre for BRITSCIFI Weekend!
A celebration of all things science fiction and British! From the amazing puppets that brought the mind of Gerry Anderson to life, through the years of hiding behind the sofa from the Daleks and on to a journey with the crew of Red Dwarf, British Science Fiction has a lot to shout about, so come along and join in the fun.
Join me on SATURDAY with David J Howe, Frazer Hines, Colin Baker, Terry Malloy and many more.
The event takes place as follows: Saturday and Sunday 10th-11th March 10am-5pm.
At:
National Space Centre
Exploration Drive
Leicester
LE4 5NS
Website Info here:
Space Centre
Call or fax for more details:
Switchboard: 0116 261 0261
Group Bookings: 0116 258 2111
Education/School Bookings: 0116 258 2111
Corporate Bookings: 0116 261 0261
Fax: 0116 258 2100
SO IF YOU'RE IN LEICESTER OR NOT TOO FAR AWAY WHY NOT COME AND JOIN US!
I'm now very pleased to announce our activities for this weekend because we will be joining this fabulous line-up at The National Space Centre for BRITSCIFI Weekend!
A celebration of all things science fiction and British! From the amazing puppets that brought the mind of Gerry Anderson to life, through the years of hiding behind the sofa from the Daleks and on to a journey with the crew of Red Dwarf, British Science Fiction has a lot to shout about, so come along and join in the fun.
Join me on SATURDAY with David J Howe, Frazer Hines, Colin Baker, Terry Malloy and many more.
The event takes place as follows: Saturday and Sunday 10th-11th March 10am-5pm.
At:
National Space Centre
Exploration Drive
Leicester
LE4 5NS
Website Info here:
Space Centre
Call or fax for more details:
Switchboard: 0116 261 0261
Group Bookings: 0116 258 2111
Education/School Bookings: 0116 258 2111
Corporate Bookings: 0116 261 0261
Fax: 0116 258 2100
SO IF YOU'RE IN LEICESTER OR NOT TOO FAR AWAY WHY NOT COME AND JOIN US!
Sunday, 4 March 2012
This week I'll be at ... Waterstones Arndale Manchester
WATERSTONES, Arndale Centre, Manchester, 10th March 2012.
Sam Stone will be signing copies of her new book, Hateful Heart, Book 4 The Vampire Gene Series, at this very popular store. David J Howe will also be there with his new collection talespinning.
Time: 12-4pm Date: Saturday 10th March 2012.
Address:Waterstones, Arndale Centre, Manchester, M4 3AQ
Sam Stone will be signing copies of her new book, Hateful Heart, Book 4 The Vampire Gene Series, at this very popular store. David J Howe will also be there with his new collection talespinning.
Time: 12-4pm Date: Saturday 10th March 2012.
Address:Waterstones, Arndale Centre, Manchester, M4 3AQ
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