2012-07-25

Welcome to the four hundred and forty-first of my blog interviews with novelists, poets, short story authors, biographers, agents, publishers and more. A list of interviewees (blogged and scheduled) can be found here. If you like what you read, please do go and investigate further. Today’s is with novelist, poet and publisher Sam Smith, and today we talk about his writing and publishing so I hope you’re sitting comfortably with a large mug or glass of something.

Morgen: Hello, Sam. Please tell us something about yourself, where you’re based, and how you came to be a writer.

Sam: I’m currently based in Maryport, Cumbria, and have just started to receive my state pension. I decided to become a writer though in 1968 when sitting above Breakwater beach in Brixham, Devon, having just read Henry Miller’s ‘Smile at the Foot of a Ladder’. It was his then one work of fiction and I decided that if my own worthless self could create something as wonderful as Henry’s my life would at last be worth something. I became a writer that day. Took a fair while longer to become an author.

Morgen: I’ve not read any Henry Miller but what an inspiration. What genre do you generally write and have you considered other genres?

Sam: First thing I wrote was a poem, but what I most wanted was to create whole worlds, so I got stuck into some novels. Wrote 3 the first year – one mainstream, one fantasy and one SF – all long-since destroyed. And I have since continued switching genres, from crime, SF and mainstream to historical fiction. Also poetry.

Morgen: What a shame you’ve destroyed them. Even if they were dreadful they could have shown you how far you came but then I guess you’ll know that already. What have you had published to-date? Do you write under a pseudonym?

Sam: I write under my own name, Sam Smith, though because of my output I am considering a pseudonym. I’ve had 27 full books published so far. That’s 18 novels, one war memoir, and 9 full poetry collections.

Morgen: Wow. Have you had any rejections? If so, how do you deal with them?

Sam: I had 23 years of rejections. I’ll rephrase that: I had 23 years of not getting published. There were of course many straightforward. “Thanks but no thanks.” But at least once in every one of those 23 years a publisher or an agent expressed an interest. But then the interested editor left that publisher, or the one-man-band publisher went bust or died, or the agent couldn’t find a publisher for that book… The last of those 23 years saw a new publisher getting me to rewrite a whole novel… and when that enterprise too went tits up I decided, desperate to see something of mine in print, to try getting some of my poetry published. I hadn’t up until then. Within months I had magazines accepting my work, some of which had been written 21 years before.

Having become a publisher and publisher’s editor myself I know that some submissions, however well-written, are simply not to my taste or are not what I’m looking for at that moment, and not wanting to enter into a correspondence by giving a specific reason for not taking that work, I return it with a pro forma rejection. I knew that when submitting work such had to be the case, so I looked for somewhere else to submit the work. Or I looked at the work again. Or both.

Morgen: How frustrating but you clearly love writing or you wouldn’t have stuck at it – they say “a successful writer is one who didn’t give up” and I think most of us are still working on that. Have you won or been shortlisted in any competitions?

Sam: I had a poem, ‘Important Information for Canoeists’, longlisted in the 1996 Forward Prize. Even got to read on Radio 3! My SF novel, We Need Madmen, won the 2004 Skrev prize for science fiction. My thriller, Sister Blister, was entered for the 1996 (I think it was) Booker prize. That year’s chair of the judges, Simon Jenkins, however refused to read it as it was the first eBook to be entered for the competition. Sister Blister is now also available in hardback. My SF novel, The End of Science Fiction, was shortlisted for a 2001 Eppie. And my poetry collection, ‘An Atheist’s Alphabetical Approach to Death’, was shortlisted for the 2009 Erbacce Competition.

Morgen: Congratulations (and I love your titles). Do you have an agent? Do you think they’re vital to an author’s success?

Sam: I don’t. And I’m not sure that one needs an agent nowadays in order to get published. If anything it’s harder to get a genuine literary agent to read an MS now than it is a publisher. But once published an agent would certainly be helpful in getting promotional bookings and in the negotiating of rights – foreign rights, performing rights, audio rights, film rights, etc. For instance I tried for over a year to get Michael Douglas to read Sister Blister. I thought it was the kind of novel that would really appeal to him. I even tried getting hold of him via Catherine Zeta Jones, via their agents, any name I came across remotely connected to Michael Douglas. Then a review of Sister Blister suggested that the principal character would be well played by the late Pete Postlethwaite. He didn’t get back to me either. An agent could well have opened doors for me then.

Morgen: What a shame. Michael is great but I loved Pete Postlethwaite… very down-to-earth British. Are your books available as eBooks? Were you involved in that process at all? Do you read eBooks or is it paper all the way?

Sam: All of my in-print novels are. Only one of my poetry collections, The Complete Pieces. Although most of my fiction sales now are digital, I’m still not sure about eBooks for poetry, where so much can depend on the appearance of the poem and different e-readers can alter the shape of that poem. Add to that many poetry books being an artwork in themselves, and I think we might well see a divergence here between the publishing of fiction and the publishing of poetry. Especially as most sales for poetry continue to be in paper form and take place at author readings, personal appearances.

When Smashwords started I did look out a couple of my older works and got them converted to eBooks. At the moment I have a logjam of recent works awaiting publication and I could see no likelihood of those older two, ‘2 Bridgwater Days’ and ‘The Eviction from Quarry Cottages’, finding a conventional publisher so I adapted them to eBooks on Smashwords, price per copy up to the reader. And if no-one pays to read them they are at least now being read and not stuck in the bottom of my cupboard.

Morgen: That’s pretty much how I feel and have free eShorts and only charge $1.49 for the eBooks, and I write to be read rather than make a load of money (although both would be nice). How much of the marketing do you do for your published works or indeed for yourself as a ‘brand’?

Sam: With the ease of social networking one can very easily fall prey these days to over-exposure. Especially if all that one does is to promote one’s own work, mention one’s own appearances. On the likes of Facebook and Twitter for instance one very soon scrolls past those authors who mention nothing, yawn, but themselves and their own works.

Having begun my published life as a writer with poetry, and always happy to go along to a reading, I find the face-to-face promotion of my poetry far easier than that of my fiction. Just in the number of poetry venues on offer as opposed to those for fiction. Read a few poems and, with a bit of luck, the audience won’t haven’t lost interest, will want to read more and some in the audience just might buy the collection. How much does one read aloud of a novel, though? And make it entertaining? I shared a platform with Margaret Drabble at the Porlock Literary Festival and it was such hard work that I reverted to reading some of my poetry.

What do I do for Sam Smith the brand? I suppose I try to keep myself in the public eye, as here. But mostly with my other work – publishing The Journal, Original Plus, and as editor for other publishers, my hope is that possible readers are curious enough to look for and try a work of mine.

Morgen: I listen to (and take part in) Radio Litopia every Sunday night (they’re on a break now ’til 26th August) and one of the regular panellists said he gets loads of Twitter followers who follow, he follows back then he gets bombarded with ‘buy my book / feature my book’ requests, bad enough but he says most don’t even build a rapport with him first. Did you have any say in the titles / covers of your books? How important do you think they are?

Sam: Neil Marr of BeWrite Books says that although you can’t judge a book by its cover, a good cover can certainly sell a book. I agree with that. What Neil and I don’t always agree on is the cover itself. My daughter Shelley, for instance, came up with a terrific cover for ‘The Care Vortex’. Neil didn’t like it, and we ended up with one that Shelley and I were none too happy with.

Shelley has come up with some terrific covers for me – for my novel ‘Marks’ and the poetry collection of ‘pieces’. And that’s aside from those she has done for Original Plus. But I’ve been lucky in my book covers.

Tony Szmuk did a great cover for ‘The Secret Report of Friar Otto’ ; and David of dpdotcom came up with an excellent cover for ‘Something’s Wrong’.

Morgen: They are striking and that’s what you want, isn’t it. What are you working on at the moment / next?

Sam: I’m in the process of building up a couple of poetry collections, provisionally titled ‘Changes to Your Terms and Conditions’ and ‘Scenes from a Country Life’. And I’m working on a novel provisionally titled ‘Trees’.

Morgen: How intriguing. Do you manage to write every day? Do you ever suffer from writer’s block?

Sam: Whatever day job I’ve had I’ve always snuck in at least a couple of hours writing a day. Often it’s a rewriting, but whatever its nature I’ve made sure that if only for 10 minutes I’ve been sat at my desk.

And no, Morgen, I have never suffered from writer’s block. Does such a thing truly exist? I’ll admit to dry periods. But, if uninspired, I have simply ploughed on putting pen to paper; and when I have worked out what I was trying to say, chucked the draft away.

Morgen: My interviewees’ opinion of writer’s block I’d say is about half:half but as you say putting pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard) does the trick for me… even just a keyword can set something going. Do you plot your stories or do you just get an idea and run with it?

Sam: Both. Start off with a loose plot, a plot outline, and then run with ideas as they arise.

Morgen: I love that. Do you have a method for creating your characters, their names and what do you think makes them believable?

Sam: I have no formula as such. Don’t like the Dickensian trait of names that fit the characters. If anything I prefer to write against name type – create a soft character with a hard G name. And what, and I speak now as an editor, renders characters readily unbelievable is poor dialogue. So many novels’ credibility collapse because of clunking dialogue.

Morgen: You sound like a prolific poet, why do you think it’s such a difficult market to break into?

Sam: Is poetry a difficult market to break into? I suppose it depends what you mean by market. I can’t think of anyone, aside from stand-ups, who got rich writing poetry. Or publishing poetry.

If you mean, Morgen, that poetry is difficult to get published then I’d say the opposite. It’s very easy to place most kinds of poetry somewhere – from klunking end rhymes to off the wall free verse. And I notice that now self-publishing poetry on the web is being seen for what it is, lacking any form of quality control, that paper poetry magazines are making a comeback. The Journal is certainly picking up subscribers by the issue. And in a recession!

Morgen: That’s really encouraging. I’ve been surprised how many people write. I’ve ‘spoken’ to over 1,000 authors (I have another 200 interviews booked in with another 700+ questionnaires sent out) and I’m sure I’ve only seen the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Are there any tips you could give to someone wishing to write poetry?

Sam: Read poetry. Check out the poetry libraries, see what magazines are publishing what. And if you can’t get physically get along to any of the libraries check out the sample magazines they have on their websites. And once written don’t waste your time or the editors’ sending to inappropriate magazines.

Morgen: Not reading the guidelines is the biggest bugbear I’ve heard of… and you’d think it would be so simple. Do you write any non-fiction or short stories?

Sam: I’ve written short stories as exercises; a one WW2 memoir, Vera & Eddy’s War, and articles and reviews, most of which are on my website under the heading of Hate Mail on my website.

Morgen: Do you do a lot of editing or do you find that as time goes on your writing is more fully-formed?

Sam: I write draft after draft after draft… and still find that the wastepaper basket is this writer’s best friend.

Morgen: Do you have to do much research?

Sam: For fiction, yes. Nothing worse than the book being published and then you discover the one piece of information… collapse of hitherto stout fictional edifice.

Morgen: Someone will find it if there is one. What point of view do you find most to your liking: first person or third person? Have you ever tried second person?

Sam: Depends on the book. Often I’ll find third person too restrictive, doesn’t allow for inner dialogues, and switch to third. And sometimes I’ll find the first person too restrictive, the narrative being confined to only what they know, so I’ll switch to the third. The second person can come across with either a fake intimacy or as hectoring. Can sometimes work in a poem, possibly in an epistolary novel.

Morgen: Second person is like writer’s block… it has a split ‘audience’. Personally I love it but most editors (and many readers) don’t so I write it for pleasure more than to submit anywhere. Do you have pieces of work that you think will never see light of day?

Sam: Some I hope don’t. At least in their present form.

Morgen: You’re a publisher as well as a writer, can you please briefly explain the structure of your publishing house… perhaps who’s involved along the process of an acceptance to the book / story being published.

Sam: My publishing house – actually it’s a small garret room – is a poetry press, and like the room, Original Plus is a very small press; and, like my room, the press has only enough room for me in it.

Morgen: Compact and bijoux (as an advert a few years ago). You’re a writer yourself, does this help with deciding which projects to take on?

Sam: I started the press having been published by Odyssey Press, then based in Coleridge Cottage. Derrick Woolf, who ran the press, showed me the nuts and bolts of how it was done. His enthusiasm was infectious. I began with The Journal of Contemporary Anglo-Scandinavian Poetry – all then A5 and perfect bound. It wasn’t until 2000 then I switched to the A4 (A3 folded) version.

But, yes, being a writer myself definitely influences what work I take both for The Journal and for Original Plus. Often it is the kind of work that I know better than to even attempt myself.

Morgen: The $64,000 question: out of all the submissions you receive, what makes a book / story stand out for all the right reasons?

Sam: I can go beyond poetry here as, once I’d been published, I got taken on by a few publishers as reader and / or fiction editor. And what makes a book stand out is a feel for language. By which I don’t mean flowery, but that it both engages and cheers – in that one wants to applaud its use. Even if that is pared-to-the-bone narrative.

Morgen: For me, flowery just means a writer is trying too hard (a polite way of saying “showing off”)… ‘purple prose’ as the phrase goes. And then, without naming names, what makes a book proposal / story stand out for all the wrong reasons?

Sam: Sloppy self-editing. Over-selling, by which I mean their claims for their own work are excessive. Immediate evidence that their concept of good writing is an over-use of adjectives. A tin ear for dialogue. A belief that sex alone / violence alone / sentiment alone sells. And what is guaranteed to put any editor off – being told in the introductory letter that here is an opportunity to make loads of money.

Morgen: I’m one of the judges of the H.E. Bates Short Story Competition and the last couple of years I’ve been really surprised (and if I’m honest, disappointed) at how unnecessarily vile some of the content of the submissions has been. I like, and write, dark (and this year the Head Judge is crime writer Stephen Booth so we’ll probably have plenty of those) but you wouldn’t want to read some of them while eating. What genres do you accept? What would you suggest an author do with a cross-genre piece of writing?

Sam: Poetry aside, for those publishers I’ve worked for the only genre they seemed to draw the line at has been erotica. As for anything cross-genre I’d suggest the author decide which is the dominant genre and present it as such. My novel, The End of Science Fiction, for instance is a crime novel set at the end of the world, the title though categorises it as SF.

Morgen: Is there a genre that you haven’t published and would like to?

Sam: No.

Morgen: Is there a genre that sells better than others or that you can’t get enough of?

Sam: Poetry is a hard sell. As for what in fiction sells better than others … the publishers I work for know better than I.

Morgen: How can an author submit to you?

Sam: Through the BeWrite Books website, and for The Journal and Original Plus.

Morgen: Can you suggest some do’s and don’t’s when submitting to you.

Sam: If you haven’t had poetry published by The Journal, or if I have had no other contact with you, I very much doubt if I’d consider publishing a collection. And certainly not outside the UK. I work on a covering costs basis and postal charges make publishing a collection for anyone outside of the UK a non-starter. Best always to try a sample of your poetry at The Journal first.

Morgen: Are there authors that you deal with on a regular basis and / or perhaps represent directly?

Sam: Running the magazine and the press, as well as all my other hats, yes there are many authors I deal with on a regular basis, indeed far too many to pick out and name here.

Morgen: This is a question that I ask authors but I think is just as relevant to you as a publisher: what was the first book / story you published?

Sam: From the poets published in the original Journal of Contemporary Anglo-Scandinavian Poetry came the first Original Plus collection, Don Ammons’ Andetsteds. Don is an American exile living in Denmark; and we published a dual text collection, his wife Betty Søndergaard having made the translations into Danish.

Morgen: Do you run competitions, do you think they help with a writer’s success?

Sam: Although I’ve been asked to judge competitions before this is the first year I’ve run a competition – the Silversmith Poetry Competition. It’s a collaborative effort with my daughter’s Maison Vee company, first prize publication in The Journal and choice this year of a pair of Maison Vee earrings.

As to competitions in general, how helpful to the writer they are depends on the competition, the publicity it gets, and its purpose. If its purpose is solely to raise funds for the organisers then it’s best to give it a miss. And one also has to be wary for how long the competition might hang onto the winner’s copyright, meaning that’s the one limited outing that piece of writing might get.

Morgen: I spotted a conversation on LinkedIn only this week where a publisher had announced a new romance short story competition with a prize fund of $1,000 but a fee of $39. I queried this and gave some example comparisons of established competitions and after some discussions with myself and a couple of other LinkedIn members, they reduced it to $15. To your knowledge, have any of your published books / stories won or been shortlisted in any competitions?

Sam: Not that I’m aware. Can’t remember. I’m of that age….

Morgen: Oh dear. Well, I’m going to be 45 in just under a month and my memory has always been fairly shocking(ly bad). What do you feel about an author writing under a pseudonym? Do you think they make a difference to their profile? And would you recommend an author writing under different names for different genres?

Sam: I suppose if a writer is slumming it, churning out predictable commercial work for the sake of the pennies, then probably a pseudonym for that genre is probably a good idea and must needs be kept secret. Other than that I don’t see the point. The result gets publicised as ‘Stephen King writing crime under the name of ….’

Morgen: It does indeed: Stephen King writing as Richard Bachman, and Joanna Trollope writing as Caroline Harvey. Another semi-priceless question: do you think an agent is vital to an author’s success? How would you suggest an author gets one?

Sam: Seems that the only way to get an agent these days is to enrol on an expensive writing course that guarantees that the participants’ works will be seen by a visiting literary agent. As to their being vital, that more than a few literary agents are becoming publishers now suggests that even they are questioning their role.

Morgen: I’ve noticed that too. Now for, in theory, a simple question: what’s your opinion of eBooks, do you publish them and do you read them?

Sam: Original Plus doesn’t publish ebooks.  As I’ve said elsewhere poetry doesn’t lend itself to eReaders ability to change typeface, size, etc. But the publishers I work for have all enthusiastically embraced eBook publications. From my own royalty statements I know that digital sales are now well in excess of paper.

I have eReader downloads on my PC, but haven’t yet got around to reading any books on them. Oh, apart from those I’ve reviewed. Meanwhile I have shelves of paperbacks waiting to be read and have felt no need yet to acquire an eReader.

Morgen: I have one (a Kindle Touch) but still read both, most people do. Poetry and short stories are, in my opinion anyway, the two most hard done by genres… what do you see as the future for them? Do you think the eBook revolution will help given that eBooks seem to be getting shorter?

Sam: I think eBooks might well be the saving of the short story, but believe that this is where printed poetry returns to being an art form. Not that types of poetry won’t find themselves in an eBook, but for sales it will still be paper.

Morgen: Is there a plot that’s written about too often?

Sam: No. Always a new twist to an old tale.

Morgen: I like that. Do you have to do a lot of editing to the stories you accept or is the writing usually more or less fully-formed?

Sam: Some submissions arrive needing but an occasional tweak. Some require being returned to the author for substantial rewriting, and which then – the central concept being attractive – require editing aplenty.

Morgen: I’ve heard mixed reports of Dan Brown’s and EL James’ (Fifty Shades of Grey) writing but they’re so popular because they tell a good story (I guess ). Have you had any surprising feedback about any of your published works?

Sam: The majority of critical responses thus far have been positive.

Morgen: Excellent. Is there a story, section or theme of a book that you’ve printed, or yet to print, that you’re particularly fond of? And why?

Sam: I loved the shaped poetry in Carol Thistlethwaite’s ‘The Field Book’ (BeWrite Books); and I loved the narrative prose that accompanied the poetry and drawings in Siobhan Logan’s ‘Firebridge to Skyshore’ (Original Plus)

Morgen: What advice would you give aspiring writers?

Sam: Persist!

Morgen: A successful writer is one who didn’t give up. Are there any writing-related websites and/or books that you could recommend?

Sam: BeWrite Books’ submission guidelines lay out pretty starkly the state of publishing today.

Morgen: Ooh interesting… given that more emphasis these days is put on the author to market their published works or indeed themselves as a ‘brand’, how involved are you generally with your authors post-publication?

Sam: Aside from press releases and publicity I try to get along to their launches, push their books to sympathetic reviewers, enter their books for competitions and generally help where I can. Where the authors are not in the UK then generally all I can offer is moral support.

Morgen: Apart from your website, how do you market yourselves? Are your authors involved in marketing for you / themselves?

Sam: You said before how involved authors have to get involved in the promoting of their books. If they don’t the book dies and I’m left with boxes of books crowding me out of my garret room. Once an author overcomes their stage fright and gets stuck in, the books tend to sell themselves. Always though they require the author doing something, even if it’s only going through their address book, joining every conceivable forum, while still staying in their garret. Going beyond their garret or garden shed, if they can wangle themselves some air time on their local radio, TV, some space in their local paper… a piece of mine in a local paper once got picked up by Reuters… Who knows where it all ends up? I took to organising a festival for several years, its one purpose the selling of books. That worked. The hope is that all these efforts take on a life of their own. But if one doesn’t even get out there and try the certainty is that nothing will happen.

Morgen: Absolutely. Like me with this blog, you get out what you put in. You’re based in the UK, do you find this a help or hindrance with letting people know about, or distributing, your publications?

Sam: I’ve never had any problems letting people know. Distribution however relies on our mismanaged and now very expensive postal service.

Morgen: It is, isn’t it? Now they’ve hiked their prices (and I mean really hiked; a first class stamp going from 46p to 60p in April), I do wonder if they’ll start making a profit. They certainly won’t from me, I send very little by post. What do you think of social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter, and more business-related such as LinkedIn? Do you think they’re invaluable or too time-consuming?

Sam: It really is hard to estimate the sales generated by such sites; and I’m sure that too much exposure on them can be counter-productive. They can certainly be time-consuming. For the moment though the jury’s still out….

Morgen: I’ve heard that no-one should tout more than 10% of the time (vs 90% informative) but I’d say less than that would be good… 5% maximum). Apart from the stories in your publications, what do you like to read? Any authors (including those you’ve published) that you’d like to recommend?

Sam: At the moment I’m working through the entire ouvre of Haruki Murakami. Interspersed with heavier doses of A S Byatt. Dannie Abse is top of my poetry reading stack, Christopher Pilling’s translations of Catullus next…

Morgen: What’s your favourite / least favourite aspect of your writing life? Has anything surprised you?

Sam: Robert Schumann, when describing how it was when he composed, said that it was like touching moments as they passed. Beyond that simple exhilaration what has given me the most pleasure has been people getting in touch with me from different parts of the globe and saying what my words have meant to them.

I don’t think there is a least favourite. Maybe that’s the surprise. No, I know what the surprise was, and it was a real treat, being asked to read my poetry at the Nunney Jazz Café. To be up on stage with some excellent jazz musicians exceeded my wildest expectations. And they invited me back! Twice!

Morgen: How exciting! If you could invite three people from any era to dinner, who would you choose and what would you cook (or hide the takeaway containers)?

Sam: I’ve met a few of my literary heroes, and have invariably found myself tongue-tied, or blurting out something I blush about years after. Writers should stay each in their rooms and communicate sparingly with one another.

Morgen: Oh dear. Some writers I know are quite shy and would be happy to be locked away for time immemorial but I love going to writers’ conferences etc. (I’m booking two today – one over my birthday weekend and another a couple of weeks later… probably my only ‘holidays’ for the rest of this year). Is there a word, phrase or quote you like?

Sam: Dear Sam… (You wouldn’t believe, Morgen, how many people submitting call me Sir or Madam, even after being previously published by The Journal. And sometimes the discourtesy of no introductory letter at all. Such abruptness does not generate a positive response to the submission.)

Morgen: Needless to say I get ‘Morgan’ all the time (even ‘Morgan with an E’!). I get ‘Sir’ or ‘Mr’ too despite my caricature being splattered everywhere… being called that shows me that they’ve not even opened my website before contacting me… not a great first impression. Are you involved in anything else writing-related other than actual writing or marketing of your writing?

Sam: I’ve been editing The Journal (once ‘of Contemporary Anglo-Scandinavian Poetry’) for almost 2 decades now, and publishing Original Plus poetry collections. I also act as publisher’s reader for one publisher and have been editor for a couple others. I also started and ran the Taunton Poetry Festival, we called it the Brewhouse Bash, for 3 years; and I’ve organised one-off events since. I suppose what takes up most of my time now, beyond the above, is being one of the fiction editors for BeWrite Books as well as their poetry editor

Morgen: How lovely. I’ve volunteered at three literature festivals (Oundle, Chorleywood, Chipping Norton) and had a wonderful time. What do you do when you’re not writing?

Sam: I walk, cycle and clamber up the fells here.

Morgen: You mentioned forums earlier, are you on any forums or networking sites? If so, how valuable do you find them?

Sam: I’m on a few, but find them as much a distraction as a help.

Morgen: Oh me too but sometimes I just have to ignore that ‘ping’ (hard to do). What do you think the future holds for a writer?

Sam: The great majority of writers will need day jobs. Which is no bad thing. Which I would not have relished being told when younger and having to go from one day job to another, all of which took me away from my writing. Some of the experiences those jobs gave me though proved invaluable to me as a writer.

If someone needs to write then they will write. Getting read will be another matter all together.

Morgen: Isn’t it just. I gave up my day job in March and turned to having lodgers to pay for it but now can’t imagine having a proper job again. I’m living many authors’ dream. Is there anything else you’d like to mention?

Sam: My friend, the poet Paul Lee, died last year. Here is a short poem of his from ‘The Light Forecast’ (Original Plus).

‘The voice goes dumb’

The voice goes dumb

in the crackling mobile

I edge forward

in the nervous dark

hear the waves launch

from the harbour walls

adding the words of centuries

to the swell of sadness

Morgen: That’s really moving, thank you Sam. Where can we find out about you and your work?

Sam: My website – http://thesamsmith.webs.com.

Morgen: Is there anything you’d like to ask me?

Sam: Yes. How did you come by all those stars on your Smashwords books. Mine have been up there for ages and got not one review yet.

Morgen: Really? That’s a shame. Well, as you can tell I blog a lot so I talk to a lot of people. I have my eBooks as links at the end of each post and am fairly prolific on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. I occasionally tweet about the free ones hoping that it will lead people to buy the $1.49 ones and it works on the odd occasion. They say that you get out what you put in and with over 1,100 posts on this blog it certainly feels like I’ve put in plenty. Thank you, Sam.

I then invited Sam to include an extract of his writing and this is the opening poem of ‘pieces’. Sam says… “and probably one of the best things that happened to me as a writer. I read extracts from the unpublished ‘pieces’ at the Purple Patch Poetry Convention in Birmingham. Kevin Troop was in the audience and offered there and then to publish the whole collection.”

Love is love: a tenderness shown, fingertips

brushing at specks on a beloved’s shoulder;

unconscious acts of familiarity, hand or wrist

taken when walking, and the whole body turning

in towards and touching the other, hip to chest. Love.

Tower guards fire bursts down at the dogs

that disturb the graves beyond the fence.

Gate sentries have been seen to follow,

with their gunsights, a highflying crow

or gull, say “Bang.” The dogs are left unburied,

grave rags and pink bones partially uncovered.

Bartering morsels for medicines, attentive to

the other’s every breath, this one man advertises

his love, beams his pleasure in his lover’s recovery.

Other prisoners look on this enactment of love’s gestures

with dumb wonder, recall themselves being fathers,

that same gentling kiss upon a son’s sharp hair,

headslant smile of companionship to a beside-them wife.

and the synopsis of Sam’s book ‘Something’s Wrong’…

The tale entire presents itself as the transcript of 18 double-sided tapes, all of which have been recorded by a 50+ paranoid schizophrenic.

The making of these tapes began as his attempt — an aide memoir and thus a means of bringing some order to his fragmented thoughts — to discover the ‘something wrong’ that he feels is hiding away somewhere within his mind.

Cataloguing all that he feels might be important he describes his day-to-day life in a residential home in a seedy seaside town. He reports too on the puzzling behaviour of the town’s inhabitants, along with that of the staff and the other residents of the home.

While he tries to work out what it is that is wrong there is a robbery, arson, and a local girl is murdered. All of which he initially suspects himself being responsible for. Then he helps an evicted girl move into a stone hut, and this action on behalf of another frees him from his self-suspicion.

The ‘something wrong’ that he had subconsciously registered, but belatedly realises with the arrival of this year’s statement, is that the trust fund that his late father created for his welfare is being used to pay for his enforced stay in the for-profit residential home.

Editor of The Journal (once ‘of Contemporary Anglo-Scandinavian Poetry’), publisher of Original Plus books, Sam is also proud to be Poetry Editor of BeWrite Books.  Born Blackpool, England 1946, now living in Maryport, Cumbria, freelance writer, Sam has been a psychiatric nurse, residential social worker, milkman, plumber, laboratory analyst, groundsman, sailor, computer operator, scaffolder, gardener, painter & decorator… working at anything, in fact, which paid the rent, enabling him to raise his three daughters and which hasn’t got too much in the way of his writing. He now has several poetry collections and novels to his name.

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If you are reading this and you write, in whatever genre, and are thinking “ooh, I’d like to do this” then you can… just email me and I’ll send you the questions. You complete them, I tweak them where appropriate (if necessary to reflect the blog ‘clean and light’ rating) and then they get posted. When that’s done, I email you with the link so you can share it with your corner of the literary world. And if you have a writing-related blog / podcast and would like to interview me… let me know.

You can sign up to receive these blog posts daily or weekly so you don’t miss anything… and follow me on Twitter where each new posting is automatically announced. You can also read / download my eBooks and free eShorts at Smashwords, Sony Reader Store, Barnes & Noble, iTunes Bookstore, Kobo and Amazon, with more to follow. I have a new forum, friend me on Facebook, like me on Facebook, connect with me on LinkedIn, find me on Tumblr, complete my website’s Contact me page or plain and simple, email me.  I also now have a new blog creation service especially for, but not limited to, writers.

Unfortunately, as I post an interview a day (amongst other things) I can’t review books but I have a feature called ‘Short Story Saturdays’ where I review stories of up to 2,500 words. Alternatively if you have a short story or self-contained novel extract / short chapter (ideally up to 1000 words) that you’d like critiqued and don’t mind me reading it / talking about and critiquing it (I send you the transcription afterwards so you can use the comments or ignore them)  on my ‘Bailey’s Writing Tips’ podcast, then do email me. They are weekly episodes, usually released Monday mornings UK time, interweaving the recordings between the red pen sessions with the hints & tips episodes. I am now also looking for flash fiction (<1000 words) for Flash Fiction Fridays and poetry for Post-weekend Poetry.

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