Author Archives: John Bray

Unknown's avatar

About John Bray

I'm the author of the 'Jack Reusen' series of books. My main website follows my writing adventures. When I'm not writing I'm taking in the countryside around my home in Perthshire, listening to podcasts on history and writing, creating websites for local businesses, or baking and cooking. Thanks for stopping by my profile and please feel free to say hello over on any of my blogs, Cheers, John

Story Ideas: Places

For the past few weeks, I’ve been adding a podcast to my range of content. This post is directly linked to this week’s episode titled “Story Ideas: Places”, where we look at a quick and easy way to jump-start your creative juices.

By the end of the activity, you should have a full story written up, and we’re also encouraging pupils to submit their stories to be read on the podcast (details on how to do that will be available below). With this in mind, I hope you enjoy this writing activity and read to the bottom to find details on how to submit your story to be read on the podcast.

Writing Activity Resources

Teachers

This week’s writing activity is pretty simple, but it should prove useful for those moments when a story simply isn’t coming to you. There are classroom sheets to go along with this activity. You can click here for a direct link to the Canva presentation, or download a PowerPoint version here.

Pupils/ Students

The activity sheets for this writing activity are pretty simple, and are designed with the expectation that there will be additional jotter or digital writing as well. A black and white version is available here, a colour one is available here, or you can get access to a Canva project edition (that you can edit) here.

Play along podcast episode (if you prefer)

You can play the accompanying podcast episode alongside the classroom presentation. I’ll call out the next section so you know when to change slides. (In future episodes, I’ll try to be more direct about this with something like ‘turn to the next slide’ after each section).

You can also pause at the end of the prompt on each slide to leave time for writing. All in, this will probably add up to about a 1-hour classroom activity. You’ll find the Spotify version of the podcast below, and links to it on other podcast platforms in this linktree.

On With the Activity (From here on out, this will match the content of the podcast)

Today, we’ll be looking at a writing exercise that focuses on setting and place in your storytelling. With this in mind, I thought I’d try something a bit different and begin the episode by reading the first chapter of my first book, “Jack Reusen and the Fey Flame”.

In this chapter, I played with the idea of setting. First, we look at how familiar places can become uncomfortable when we notice things that we don’t remember seeing before. Then, we look at what it feels like to feel lost, truly lost, and what our reactions to this feeling can tell us about ourselves.

You’ll see the meaning of the setting change a few times in this chapter. I hope you enjoy listening to the sample chapter, but whilst you listen, keep an eye (or ear) out for any times where the setting is moving the story forward.

(You’ll get the full chapter reading in the podcast episode. If you’d like to read the rest of the story with your class, you can also pick up a Kindle copy by following the links at the bottom of the page for purchasing, or reading for free through Kindle Unlimited, on Kindle in your country.)

The Writing Challenge

You’ll have seen a lot of focus on setting in the little excerpt I’ve just read, and now it’s your turn to experiment with a story setting.

You’ll have a full story by the end of this activity, but the direction we take may be a little different from the way you normally set up a story and I hope you enjoy it.

Story Ideas: Places

Being creative is a really useful skill in life (not just for storytelling) so learning tricks and techniques to get your creative side working is never a bad thing.

Today, we’re going to look at a quick technique that I use. It should help switch on that creative part of your brain and prepare you to create a fantastic story.

We’ll start with place as it’s sometimes neglected a little in storytelling. Starting with the place can sometimes launch you into a new story in unexpected ways.

Part 1: Somewhere different

Think of where you’re writing right now. Is there a place that could be the most opposite you could possibly imagine? Somewhere absolutely nothing like where you are sitting at this moment?

What is that place like?

What’s the weather like there?

Is it a safe place, or is it somewhere perilous?

If you were to sit down and write in this new place, what would you be writing with?

Would it be a scroll of paper with a feather quill and a bottle of ink, or would you be writing on a futuristic tablet with an AI that talks to you as though they’re the cleverest being in the galaxy?

Part 2: A stranger

OK, now you know a lot about this new place, so let’s take a look around and see if there’s anyone there.

Who are they? Are they a human/ an animal/ an alien/ or something else?

What are they doing?

What mood are they in?

You now should have a setting and your main character. This isn’t everything you need for a story, but it’s a good start.

Part 3: Getting to know people

Now ask your character a few questions. What are their interests? What are their skills? What are their main fears? What would they like to be doing this time tomorrow?

Take your time with your character. Ask weird questions, but even ‘boring’ questions can give you ideas for your story. What might your character eat for breakfast? Where do they sleep? You might be surprised at the direction their story takes.

Part 4: Go and write

You now have two out of the three basic parts of a story; the last one is called ‘plot’.

What will happen to your character next?

Will something surprising happen to them?

What will they do as a result?

Will they be happy in the end?

Write your story in a digital format, or in your best handwriting, or draw some amazing pictures to make up a ‘comic book’.

When you feel your story has reached a natural end, please be sure to share your stories on the Celebrating Stories portal.

As the weeks go on, we’ll start reading one or two of your stories on the podcast each week.

You’ll find links to share your story on the classroom slideshow, which you can download over on the website. Alternatively, you’ll find a link to it in the episode notes for this podcast episode.

Your story could be the next one we read on the podcast!

Go here for the Google Form to submit your story (click this link). You can share handwritten stories, digital text versions, or even pictures.

Thanks for popping by

As always, thanks for tuning in to listen to this week’s episode of Lit Up With Green Flame, and for coming here to read the more extended version on the website. If you haven’t already, please don’t forget to subscribe on your favourite podcast platform.

We’re on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Audible, Amazon Music, YouTube Podcasts, and many more. Just go to your favourite podcast app and search for ‘Lit Up With Green Flame’ (click here for the linktree that lists how to find us on your favourite podcast platform, just click on ‘Lit Up With Green Flame Books Podcast’ button to find the link). Subscribing is free, and you’ll be sure to catch the newest episode as soon as it’s live.

I hope you pop back next week when we’ll be looking at the strange world, and wild life of Roald Dahl (since it’ll be his Birthday in just a couple of weeks, he would have been 109 years old this year on the 13th September).

Also, if you’d like another writing activity to try, you could look at the one we did on Magical Realism a few weeks ago. You’ll find a link to that here.

Thanks again for listening in, and I hope you don’t mind the slightly longer episode this week.

All the best, John

Illustration of a child learning empathy through reading, symbolised by a thought bubble with diverse characters.

Reading Fiction is Reading Minds

How Shared Stories Make Children More Empathetic Writers

(If you’d prefer to listen to this post you can find the corresponding podcast episode below)

Imagine I told you that there’s an activity that increases a child’s empathy, whilst enriching their job prospects and life satisfaction, and that this same activity can even positively influence their earnings later in life. Most parents would want to sign them up straight away.

It turns out that there is an activity like this. It has more impact than playing a musical instrument, or playing sports, and it’s probably easier to access than either of these: reading fiction.

In 2013, Claire Crawford and Jonathan Cribb analysed four decades of data following children from their early reading habits all the way into adulthood.

The data came from following those individuals as they grew and entered the workforce, all the while tracking their reading habits and their life experiences. (“The Link between Childhood Reading Skills and Adult Outcomes: Analysis of a Cohort of British Children”, Crawford & Cribb, The Institute for Fiscal Studies, April 2015)

Basically, they found that those who read fiction as children (and beyond) get statistically more out of life than those who don’t. Readers of fiction end up in better jobs, have better relationships, and feel generally better about their lives than those who don’t read fiction. This result is actually even more noticeable in fiction readers from lower-income backgrounds.

The results of the study are pretty interesting. I’ll try to avoid getting too into the weeds about the data here, but their findings could help inform the way that educators and parents look at reading, and the reading of fiction in particular.

The study found that children who read fiction regularly tended to show noticeably higher empathy and social intelligence than those who rarely picked up a story. Changes in soft skills like these don’t just impact school life, they can ripple through a child’s friendships, social confidence, and even their overall happiness as they grow. As the children aged, their answers showed that this was definitely true.

And it wasn’t just any kind of reading that resulted in this change either. It was the reading of fiction in particular that had the strongest and most consistent effect. An effect that exceeded that of reading non-fiction.

In 2018 two other researchers (Dodell-Feder & Tamir 2018) pulled together the results of fourteen separate psychology studies to get a more detailed view of the effects of reading fiction. Their results further confirmed that reading fiction has a noticeable effect on empathy scores. (Dodell-Feder & Tamir 2018, you can find a link to this paper here).

So what does this mean for young readers? A couple of weeks ago, in the podcast, we looked at  the multitude of benefits of reading (beyond simple test scores). Combining this with the data just discussed, I thought that this time, we could hone in on two interrelated benefits of reading fiction: empathy and community.

What do we learn from our reading journeys?

Teaching empathy through stories that challenge expectation, like a sad ogreIn what follows, you’ll see that writing from different perspectives typically comes more easily to those of us who read fiction. Possibly more than any other factor, reading has a huge ripple effect on both your ability as a writer, and on you as a person.

One skill that’s of vital importance to writers (young and old) is the ability to understand the lives of your characters. This is a lot easier when you’ve ventured into reading stories with a diverse group of characters first.

This is supported by the research as well. ‘Soft skills’ are one of the most noticeable gains from reading fiction. All of the research found links between reading and key soft skills like communication, teamwork, and creative problem-solving. These skills will make you into a better writer as well. The added bonus is that they give children tools they can use in every area of life, from conflict resolution to collaborative projects.

So, does being empathetic make you a better writer?

This is where I’ll have to become more anecdotal because it’s too hard to get people to agree on what makes someone a ‘good writer’.

What I can tell you, as a writer myself, is that the more you can empathise with other people, the easier you’ll find it to write your characters. What’s more, you’ll have the confidence to try telling the stories of people who may be quite different from yourself.

I love to people watch, and apparently, I’m not alone. It’s probably one of the most common shared traits that other authors have noted in conversations with me.

People-watching is a real-world behaviour that feeds into an author’s fictional ‘cast list’. You might see an authoritative mother at the supermarket with a crowd of high-energy kids to pull into order. The next thing you know, you’re picturing her as a magical part-polar-bear person. Mother to a brood of little part-bear-part-human kids rolling around and playing on a forest floor.

A stylised version of a reader connecting with characters through books.Reading fiction takes this love of people-watching and turns it up to eleven! You get right inside another person’s head. You follow them on a life-changing adventure. You share their sorrow and their success, and you both come out the other side, changed by the experience.

“All the arts depend upon telepathy to some degree, but I believe that writing offers the purest distillation.” (Stephen King, ‘On Writing’)

It doesn’t surprise me that reading leads to more empathy because reading an author’s work puts you inside their mind. They may speak through characters, but they are also telling you some of their deepest secrets and sharing some of their most private ideas.

Stephen King is an interesting case. He grew up in a low-income home, where his mother was left to care for King and his big brother David. Stephen and David were keen readers and eventually aspiring writers who actually printed their own local newspaper as children (when Stephen was around 12 years old).

The studies described at the start of this post seem to underscore Stephen and his brother David’s entrepreneurial tendencies. Children from lower-income households demonstrated the most clear and profound positive effects from reading fiction out of all the groups in the Crawford & Cribb study.

A Therapeutic Twist on Reading

In fact, there’s even growing interest in the therapeutic use of fiction (though it’s still a developing field). Some clinicians are exploring how reading about characters who work through challenges and traumas might support those facing similar struggles. A recent Times article takes a closer look at these story-driven therapy techniques. You can read that piece here.

The basic idea is that the therapist, in effect, prescribes a book based on your own particular emotional and behavioural needs. I can’t claim any more detailed knowledge about whether this sort of therapy is effective, but it does sound intriguing.

The Crawford & Cribb study notes that children who read fiction had higher life satisfaction, stronger resilience in the face of challenges, and better mental well-being well into adulthood. With this in mind, it’s relatively easy to see how reading a more prescribed list of fiction might help with specific problems.

Stephen King wasn’t wrong when he compared the exchange of ideas in fiction to telepathy. However, the telepathy stretches further than the author and the reader.

Meeting a fan of a certain book is like meeting a fellow traveller

Now comes the weird and wonderful bit about fictional worlds. Imagine a fairly common occurrence: meeting someone who has read the same book as you, and then really think about what that means (if Stephen King is right).

Two readers dressed as Katniss Everdeen smiling at each other, representing shared fictional experience.If you’ve ‘visited’ a fictional world and someone else has also visited that fictional world, then you have something odd in common, and with it, you both share a novel way to connect and understand one another that those who haven’t read that book lack.

If this stranger goes on to tell you that they feel a connection to a certain character, you can already start to understand what sort of person they are. Purely by knowing what it would mean to like that character, you can unpack some ideas about who this stranger is at their core.

Here’s a simple example: say someone strongly identifies with Katniss Everdeen from the Hunger Games series. You might infer that this individual feels inclined towards taking on responsibility; they may have a very serious, practical, grounded view of the world.

If they reference particularly telling scenes from the book, you might learn even more about them and update your view of them accordingly.

Shared experiences like these help you connect in quick and comfortable ways. It feels safe and natural to communicate with someone we see as like-minded. The Crawford & Cribb study describes this as a form of ‘cultural capital’.

It’s strange to think, but a shared interest in Michael Crighton’s Sci Fi, or Bridget Jones’ diary for example could be the difference between making a connection with a superior at work and blending into the rest of the workforce.

Mind-reading using alien worlds

This ‘cultural capital’ is really unusual but sort of amazing. At no point have either of you talked about any ‘real’ place or any events that ‘really’ happened, but still, you can gain a qualitative understanding of the person you are speaking to.

You’ve both ventured through the same world, with the same characters, on the same adventures. When you talk with someone about these things, their reactions to these people and events let you know real things about this stranger. You might get a feel for subtle things like their moral code, their sense of humour, their values, and their tastes. All in a comfortable and surprisingly fast exchange (it could be as simple as “What Hogwarts house would you be in?”)

In short, the fictional world you both share increased your empathy but also gave you an instant shortcut in the way you can get to know others who have visited the same fictional place.

A whimsical image of a reader with glowing eyes, symbolising how reading fiction gives you 'telepathy'.Not everyone is an extensive reader, but you could be, and in visiting more worlds, you increase the odds of having read a book that another stranger regards as their favourite. You increase your mind-reading power with every fictional world tour. With every strange adventure, you open up the possibility of making a connection with someone at lightning speed.

With such a powerful key to so many different minds, why wouldn’t you read all the fiction you could? (If access to fiction is tricky, this post shows you how to get free books on almost any device.)

Applying the Mind-reading to yourself

When you turn the lens in on the strange worlds that appear in your daydreams, your imaginings, and even when you play out a different way that you would have liked an uncomfortable situation to have gone, you create a tiny fictional world. When you expand it and try to tell that story, you open up the same mind-reading power on yourself.

Writing like this will make you much more aware of yourself, and if you’re lucky, much more comfortable with yourself. What’s more, if you read more fictional worlds, and meet more fictional characters, you furnish your own imagination with even more scenes and characters to blend together and create a new place, a new character. You give yourself the chance to make even better stories.

The evidence is pretty clear, and my own personal experience backs this up; read more (and write more) and your life gets better. Visiting all of those imaginary worlds is like a literal golden ticket to a happier, more fulfilled version of yourself.

Know a few young people who might enjoy an in-class writing workshop or a free book talk?

John Bray leading a school author talk in Perthshire with engaged children.I run free school author talks that aim to unpack the empathy, imagination, and big ideas that help make the best stories.

If you’re a teacher looking for a fresh way to open creative conversations in class, I’d love to help. Simply click this link for details about my free author talks and writing workshops, as well as contact details.

Thanks, as always, for stopping by.

All the best, John

*Enjoyed this post? You can subscribe for updates using the box below, or check out my books for young readers by clicking this link.*

Guten Abend Deutschland: Woher kommt ihr?

Hallo Deutschland!🇩🇪
Warum sind heute so viele Leute aus
Deutschland hier?
Ich freue mich sehr. Danke fürs
Vorbeischauen und willkommen!😃

(My German isn’t great, so sorry if the above is a bit basic)

I had a 3000% jump in reader stats tonight. Most visitors are coming from Germany so I thought I’d pop up a quick post to see if any of you would be able to let me know what brought you here this evening.

Thanks for visiting, what a nice surprise to see so many new visitors appear all of a sudden.

Hope you stick around, subscribe and come back again soon. The podcast is just getting started so hopefully you’ll enjoy that too.

All the best, Alles Gute,

Guten Abend,

John

Green Flame Books: The Power of Reading Week long discussion

Is reading for 20 minutes a day the ‘magic ticket’?

Reading for 20 minutes a day is often linked to better academic results, but what’s the science behind it?

Is there more to the story than test scores? And how big a deal is book ownership when it comes to childhood literacy?

This week’s Green Flame Books discussion dives into the power of reading and why access to books really matters. We’ll start tonight with a focus on “What Reading can do for you”: a post about the power of reading and why it’s not all about test scores.

You can also watch this post as a vlog on YouTube or watch or listen to it on the podcast on Spotify, listen here or click through to watch/listen on your app of choice:

Scroll down for a quick overview of the other topics we’ll explore together this week. Then join the chat on the blog and Instagram to share your thoughts.

Never Miss a Moment

Love a topic below? Tap the button to add ‘Green Flame Books: Literacy Discussions’ to your calendar.

You’ll get gentle reminders all week so you can join the conversation when it suits you best.

Click here to add the Green Flame Books calendar

Mon, 28 July

📖 Blog: Is 20 minutes the magic number?
Do test scores tell the full story about reading?

Tue, 29 July

📸 Instagram: Who Gets to Own a Book?
Let’s talk about book access—past and present.

Instagram posts page

Wed, 30 July

📸 Instagram: Book-rich or Book-poor?
Can digital books close the literacy gap?

Instagram posts page

📖 Blog: 1 in 5 UK kids don’t own a book
Could buying a book change a life?
📸 Instagram: Reading Lets You Share Worlds…
Which stories built your closest bonds?

Instagram posts page

Thu, 31 July

📸 Instagram: What Stories Do You Carry?
What tale from childhood has stayed with you?

Instagram posts page

Fri, 1st August

📸 Instagram: Which Story Opened Your Eyes?
What book helped you understand others?

Instagram posts page

📝 Instagram Prompt: Write about someone who loves what you hate
Can a character change your mind?

Instagram posts page

Sat, 2nd August

📖 Blog: Reading Fiction is Reading Minds
How shared stories build empathy in writers.

Sun, 3rd Aug

📸 Instagram: Why Do We Want Kids to Write?
What motivates young writers today?

Instagram posts page

To add the calendar to your own and join the discussion

Join the Green Flame Books Literacy Discussions Calendar

Alternative link to download an ical file if the one above link isn’t working

Good Gracious it HAS Been a While!

Jack Reusen and the Chilren of Fate sneak peek cover 2I have been away from here for far too long. The perfect proof of this occurred to me a few weeks ago when someone who had attended one of my first-ever school talks (as a pupil) drove past me in Crieff High Street in a learner car.

Not only does that make me feel ridiculously old but it also highlights just how long I’ve been working on getting book three of the Jack Reusen series done. So I thought it was time for a very frank and honest update.

As of this afternoon, I am editing p167 of 202 of the final (post-editor, so it better be final) draft of Jack Reusen and the Children of Fate.

Karen, the illustrator has created a stunning cover for the book as well, and I’ve been in communication with the printers regarding pricing and print times for the first run (the first run of prints unfortunately always costs more and takes longer).

(Spoilers for book 2 ahead…)

This new addition to the Jack Reusen world follows Jack after he, his family, and his uncle’s cottage and garden landed in the heart of an ancient magical woodland within the world of Fey.

You’ll get to spend longer in Fey than you have in any previous Jack Reusen book. You’ll meet a strange new character who seems to be following Jack from inside his own mind. What’s more, you’ll get to learn more about Fey and how it’s connected to the Matter World. It’s a big story without being too big a read and I hope you enjoy it.

(…Book 2 Spoilers END)

There are twenty-one chapters in this new book (if you include the epilogue) and I’m currently editing chapter sixteen. I’m getting through about a chapter per day and I have some time off work so I may even get through more than that.

So, with only five chapters to go, I think it’s safe to say that I should be finished editing by the end of this week.

After literally years of plodding through drafts, I can’t believe I can say that the book will be ready in a week!

Jack Reusen and the Chilren of Fate sneak peek coverPrint turnaround can be as much as a month. However, as soon as I can get it uploaded, the book will be available digitally to read via Amazon Kindle (you can either read this on a Kindle reader or you could download the app and read it on any Android or Apple device).

I’ll obviously be back on here at each step of the process to keep people updated (especially once there are print copies available too). However, I promised myself that today’s post would be brief and to the point so that I could get back to work on the editing.

Wait What’s Happening?!

In brief:

The final draft of Jack Reusen and the Children of Fate will be done by the end of this week.

The digital edition should be available sometime next week.

And finally, at long last, the paperback edition should be available to buy in late April.

More to come…

fey-flameExtra Note: I also have plans to get an audiobook version of the first book out. This would take the form of either a podcast or an Audible audiobook, to be released sometime in the next few months. This is dependent on getting my office/ recording space in proper order so expect updates on that too.

For now, thank you so much for stopping by and please accept my apologies for the long (long long long…) wait for this next book in the series.

I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I have enjoyed writing it. It’s been a labour of love. The first version was very long. The delay has mainly come from trimming it into the reader-accessible version we now have.

I always want to create books that are as accessible to as many sorts of readers as possible, and I am really happy with the story we have now.

Thanks for stopping by, below you’ll find the mandatory self-promotional book plugs but you can skip these if you’ve already read the stories so far.

Thanks for stopping by and I’ll be much quicker to get back on here again next time,

All the best, John

***

Read my books digitally for FREE

reading reader kindle female

Photo by freestocks.org on Pexels.com

If you’d like to catch up on the first two books in the series you’ll find details on where to get these digitally (and potentially read them for free) below.

As always, you can get hold of print versions of the first two books from Fun Junction Toy stores, as well as by buying directly on this site (I’ll even sign a copy for you before it’s posted out). To buy from this site using PayPal, follow this link and click on the buttons for the books you’d like to buy.

Kindle Unlimited

All of my books are free to read for those with an Amazon Kindle Unlimited membership.

Kindle Unlimited currently offers a free trial for two months so you can see if you like their service.

After that, your membership would cost just £7.99 per month and you can cancel any time you like (including before the end of your two-month trial membership.

You said I could read your books for free?

Both of my main children’s fantasy books (The ‘Jack Reusen’ books, for 6 and up) are available on Kindle Unlimited. Here are the links for Amazon UK for ‘…Fey Flame‘ and for ‘…Spark of Dreams‘. On top of this, you can also find a short Christmas story I wrote a few years back, as well as my dark fantasy book (10-12+) ‘Marcus‘ (set in and around the old abandoned Victorian school in my home town of Crieff).

These are all available to read for free (even as part of your free trial) with Kindle Unlimited. What’s more, it’s always good to know that people are reading (and hopefully enjoying) my books.

If you’re in the USA, Kindle Unlimited has a similar free trial and you can find all of my books on my Amazon Author page.

A little more about my own books:

Once you’ve signed up to Kindle Unlimited, you’ll see that both of the Jack Reusen books come up as ‘free’, so you can read the whole adventure so far, for nothing.

Jack Reusen and The Fey Flame‘ introduces you to the land of Fey, as creatures (and other things) make their way through to the ‘matter-world’ (basically our world). Jack and his family have to discover a way of closing a collection of ‘breaches’ between the two worlds to make their world safe again.

*

cover with blurb and barcode 2 trimmed‘Jack Reusen and the Spark of Dreams‘ is a slightly different kind of adventure. People are losing their ability to dream. Every night more and more people lose the certain something that makes human beings so good at solving problems and creating things; the spark of dreams. Jack discovers that he could be the key to understanding what’s causing this change, and he may even be the only person who can solve it and bring back the dreams and imaginations of hundreds of people.

I hope that both of the Jack Reusen books give you and/or your kids something to enjoy as you read them. Let me know what you think.

As always, thanks for stopping by my site, and I can’t wait to share even more details of my newest book,

All the best, John

Half a million words

Are you an ‘expert’ at 100 hours, or 500 hours or is it more like 1000 hours before you can wear the title?

A ‘master’ of a craft can only call themselves that after hours of practical application. However, there’s always debate on just how many hours that is.

Writing is an odd craft. On the surface it might not seem like a craft at all. Writing may seem cerebral, the exact sum total of ‘book learning’ but the truth is that writing is just as nuanced and as practical as any physical craft (though obviously with less cuts, bruises, or blisters to show for it). You learn writing by doing it and it takes a lot of writing before you feel like you know what you’re doing.

I’ve been ‘taking my writing seriously’ for about seven or eight years now. Each year entering another NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in November. I’ve written a lot now and this year I’m on my tenth NaNo project.

This means that at some point tonight I’ll have written half a million words (combining all my writing projects to date). I can’t figure out whether this means I’m a better writer now or if it simply means that my imposter syndrome is less forceful now.

It has been an amazing experience and I genuinely do feel like I’ve improved my ability to get my ideas/stories across.

In November of 2014 I sat down and wrote this opening paragraph:

“Jack pulled his old coat close but it wasn’t doing much against the drizzling rain, it wasn’t waterproof, it was really thin, and the wind was whistling in at him no matter how tight he pulled the zip up.”

My first ever NaNoWriMo word was ‘Jack’. Tonight I’ll find out my five-hundred-thousandth word will be.

Wish me luck!

As always, thanks for stopping by my site,

All the best, John

5 Huge Benefits of Using Google Docs for Writers

wp-16647885873378466379242986409189

I have a feeling you might scroll past this but if you’re a writer who has trouble finding time to write then please don’t! I used to be pretty dedicated to my ‘old faithful’ word processing software too I get it, but please read on.

Like me, you’ve probably been using the same application for years. After all; it’s familiar, your previous work is all formatted that way, and you can’t be bothered learning a new thing when inspiration hits. You just want to write.

I’m not going to try and convince you to switch permanently but I want to briefly highlight how useful Google Docs can be for writers. Over the past couple of months, I’ve been able to get a surprising amount of extra work done and this is thanks, in no small part, to Google Docs.

Quick Disclaimer (By the way, I haven’t received any payment or any other benefit from Google for this post. I genuinely find it useful and thought that other writers may find it useful too)

Before I start the proper list I’d be foolish to skip one of the most obvious benefits; it’s free. I’m not going to list this as one of the ‘real’ benefits, mainly because so many other excellent word processing programs/ apps are available for free as well.

My all-time favourite free word processing program/ app is still OpenOffice. It has a layout similar to a very early Microsoft Word and also comes with the added benefit of customisable predictive text. This means that a suggested word will come up from your custom dictionary and you simply hit enter to have the word typed into the document for you (a massive time-saver and writing-speed boost).

However, recently I’ve come to realise that there are some clear and distinct features of Google docs which combine to offer a really unique and useful writing experience for me (and, I would imagine, any writer). Here’s the list:

1. Access anywhere

Munro perthshire scotland green hills mountains write anywhereI used to text myself notes whenever I was out and about and had a flash of inspiration. This was my simplest way of keeping track of my writing when I couldn’t access the actual document.

Notebooks didn’t work for me as I would always forget to bring them with me when I left the house. I have a drawer of lovely, special notebooks with attractive covers and a comfortable feel. All of which were purchased whilst out and about, only to be filled with a page or two of notes and then forgotten the next time I left the house.

Google Docs are in the cloud, I can access them using any device (including my phone) at any time. I have separate folders for different projects. Inside these folders are various documents with notes on the plot, characters, etc.

If I have an idea now, I can open the relevant document on my phone and add the note to the correct place. This saves me wasting time hunting through text messages or handwritten notes for that idea I had last Thursday or, worse still, losing ideas completely.

Losing ideas completely!? That brings me to the next brilliant feature…

2. Always saved

polar bear and cub scotland highland safariWhether your PC goes on fire, you drop your phone in the toilet, or your tablet is stolen by a rampaging bear. All your work is still safe.

When I was working on my master’s degree we were all given MacBooks by the university. They were great, (and, you know, free), so I fired it up and got on working on my thesis, saving everything I did in that one portable, easy-to-use device. Then it died…

Three months of notes, saved sources, and around a chapter of my written thesis were on that hard drive and apparently (according to the university tech guys and the Apple folk they spoke to), no force on this earth could bring them back to me.

For a month I looked for options. Then for another month, I learned a lot more about how laptops (and hard drives) work. With the help of online message boards and hints and tips from a few really nice computer experts, we managed to discover a way to hack into the hard drive and get some of my files back using a different operating system running from a USB drive.

Overall, (even with the online help) it was a nightmare to fix and it used up a significant portion of my time and energy, only for me to retrieve a fraction of what I had. I never looked at saving my work in quite the same way after that.

From that point onwards I was meticulous about saving copies of work. My work is now saved in multiple places and in multiple ways (I also vowed to myself that I would never use another Apple product, but that’s a whole different thing).

For many years I’ve saved a copy of all my books (and draft projects) in a Google Drive folder, a Dropbox folder, on my personal PC, on a backup hard drive, and on a USB stick. I also have at least one full printed copy of the first draft kicking about the house for beta reading and editing. It seems like overkill, I know it’s overkill, but I don’t care.

However, the one downside of all these copies was that, despite all the different storage locations, I could only edit the document on my home PC as the format was for OpenOffice.

Fast forward to my switch to Google Docs: I now save a copy of each book in the Google Doc format as well. It’s a little slower to load for reading but the upside is that it’s fully accessible for editing on any device (as I said above). This means that I have a safely stored copy of my current work in progress that automatically gets saved the second I make a change to it.

So long as I’m connected to the internet I can edit on the go. If I close my device my work is still saved right up to the moment I last edited it.

In fact, Google Docs even helps me with my edits:

3. Google Docs has Grammarly built-in

There’s a streamlined, free, beta-test version of Grammarly built into Google docs.

It catches basic spelling errors and also gives you hints about four key measures in your writing.

google docs grammarly colour color coded writing suggestionsIt will tell you whether what you have written would score high on correctness, clarity, engagement, and delivery. Each hint they give you is colour-coded to highlight which area will improve with the suggested change.

I haven’t yet, but you can also go ‘premium’ with Grammarly (for an additional charge). Those premium features will also be added to your Google Docs experience. This would offer you more comprehensive insights into your writing, along with deeper explanations regarding grammar and style suggestions.

As I say, I haven’t subscribed to Grammarly’s premium features. I feel that what you get is just enough to help without getting in the way of your writing.

After all, I use a real-life, human editor for my books who can help me fix much (much) more than the issues that Grammarly premium would spot.

Importantly, I also prefer to have a pair of human eyes take a look at my text (computers will always miss something) so I would be paying for an editor anyway.

4. Notes

google docs contributors adding comments to your workThere are multiple ways to utilise the ‘notes’ feature on Google docs but one of the most useful is the collaborative option.

So far I haven’t used it this way with my books but I have used it on copy with my copywriting clients multiple times. You can invite multiple users to access your document and add notes.

The editor for my books prefers to work with a paper copy. I understand her thinking, paper copies offer a distraction-free reading experience. On top of this, a paper copy allows you to write notes on top of the text itself.

However, if you were working with someone who is happy to work digitally the notes option is a fantastic real-time resource for suggesting and tracking changes to your document.

5. Compatibility

google docs text file formats available to export or downloadSpeaking of collaboration, if you need to have multiple people access your document Google Docs is a great option. You don’t need them to download software, they simply go to the document link you provide them and log into their Google account to access it.

From here anyone with an internet browser can read, comment on, or edit your document (depending on what level of access you give them).

This said, there will always be a stickler out there who prefers a particular document format. Fortunately, you can cater to them as well, as Google Docs allows you to save your work in a number of different formats.

This means that you can easily turn your text into (most) recognised document formats, as well as save your document into epub format (meaning it could be read on an e-reader such as a Kindle).

That’s pretty much it!

I’ve had great experiences so far using Google Docs for parts of my day job (the copywriting bits at least), and this year I’m starting to make use of the benefits of using it for bigger projects like my books.

Limits! (It can get a… bit… slow…)

Snail Race

‘Snail race’ by Noj Han at Flickr

There is one drawback which I’ve already hinted at. Currently, Google Docs is a bit slow and clunky with larger documents.

Once I pass around a hundred pages I definitely see a slow-down in what Google Docs can handle. However, it still works and still offers all the features I’ve mentioned above.

For the most part, I write children’s books. Most of my books are fifty thousand words or less. However, even at this, I can see some slowing. If your work is longer than this I might suggest saving your book as separate chapters and editing each one individually.

Having a newer device with a faster processor and more memory for your web browser to use will apparently help.

However, in my case, the problem seems to persist to a certain degree on all of my devices (no matter how new and/or powerful) so some of the problems are likely on Google’s end. I like to hope that any server-side issues will eventually be improved by Google as well.

As I said at the start, I don’t expect anyone to change from their favoured software. Nonetheless, I’m also all about helping make it easier to write (for myself and other writers), so I hope you give Google Docs a try. If you do, please pop back and leave a comment about your experiences.

As always, thanks for stopping by my site,

All the best, John

Fantasy and Adventure FREE on any device

Photo credit: Shoe Lane library via Flickr

Do you love leaping into strange new worlds with just a glimpse at words on a page? Then read on…

As I said in a previous post, a lot of children in the UK report not owning a single book. Whilst I love an old-fashioned physical book, sometimes the digital equivalent can offer space-saving and cost-reducing components.

The average ebook tends to be considerably cheaper than its paper equivalent. In fact, many classic books which have fallen into the public domain are actually entirely free to download to your device. (Are the classics more important than contemporary fiction? Pop over here to join in the debate). Whether you have a Kindle e-reader or not you can read any book in Amazon’s digital Kindle book catalogue.

Basically, if you have the equipment to view this blog post, you have the equipment to read a kindle e-book.

I’m not the biggest fan of every aspect of Amazon but their Kindle library is one thing that they’ve done remarkably well.

Don’t have a Kindle e-reader?

Kindle_UnlimitedIf you don’t have a kindle it’s no problem. So long as you have something that can run the kindle reader app (click on the link for a list of devices and how to use the app on them) then you can get hold of any book in their library.

Just the classics?

As I say, many classic works are free to read already but on top of this, you can also read thousands of contemporary books for free as well using a Kindle Unlimited membership.

They currently offer a free trial for two months so you can see if you like their service. After that, your membership would cost just £7.99 per month and you can cancel any time you like.

That doesn’t make sense, how do the Authors and Publishers make money if I read the book for free?

Kindle Unlimited doesn’t pay the Author the same as a digital purchase but it will pay them a small percentage of the pool of all Unlimited membership fees, depending on how many pages someone reads from your book.

For example (with a shameless self-plug for my books) all of my books are on Kindle Unlimited. (You’ll find proper descriptions of these at the bottom of this post).

Both of my main children’s fantasy books (‘Jack Reusen and the…’, for 6 and up) are available on Kindle Unlimited. Here are the links for Amazon UK for ‘…Fey Flame‘ and for ‘…Spark of Dreams‘. On top of this, you can also find a short Christmas story I wrote a few years back, as well as my dark fantasy book (10-12+) ‘Marcus‘ (set in and around the old abandoned Victorian school in my home town of Crieff).

These are all available to read for free (even as part of your free trial) with Kindle Unlimited. I get a fraction of a pence for every page of one of my books which is read. This definitely adds up and is 100% better than if someone didn’t buy any of my books at all. What’s more, it’s always good to know that people are reading (and hopefully enjoying) my books.

If you’re in the USA, Kindle Unlimited has a similar free trial and you can find all of my books on my Amazon Author page.

A Few Fantastic FREE Books to get you started

Some real favourites of mine which appear to still be available to read as part of your Kindle Unlimited membership are (Click the images below for the links):

ALL of the Harry Potter books: I don’t really need to describe these do I? World-famous fantasy books about a boy wizard and his adventures at a secret wizarding school.

*

Skulduggery Pleasant (by Derek Landy): These books are phenomenal. A bit grittier and more violent that Harry Potter (Landy is a black belt and a screenwriter so his action scenes are superb, yet intense). NOT for younger readers. As far as I can see you can read the whole series FREE on Kindle Unlimited.

*

The Lord of the Rings series by J R R Tolkien: An absolute classic and (probably) the core of most modern fantasy stories. An absolutely epic adventure. A famous Sunday Times quote is often cited about Lord of the Rings “‘The English-speaking world is divided into those who have read The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit and those who are going to read them.”

The Hobbit: OK, this is almost the same but it’s worth stating that there are a heap of digital editions of The Hobbit by J R R Tolkien but this is the only one I can see that is free on Kindle Unlimited. A total fantasy classic and suitable for a (slightly) younger audience than the Lord of the Rings books.

*

The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling: A very different story than the one put together by Disney but very much worth a look. It includes lessons on life and has a general fable-like quality that you don’t often see in modern fiction anymore. Another great book you can read for free on Kindle Unlimited.

*

Jane Austen’s Complete novels, all in one book: These aren’t really for kids but they are some of my favourite books of all time. Austen is an absolute genius when it comes to dry wit and establishing character. Reading her works is an utter masterclass in writing characters and dialogue. I’m so happy to see her novels in one digital volume to read for free on Kindle Unlimited.

*

You can also access an amazing collection of comic books and graphic novels for free with your Kindle Unlimited membership. My only warning would be that parents of younger children supervise what their child downloads.

Comic books and graphic novels may look like they are for kids but some are wildly inappropriate for younger ages so be sure to read the description before downloading to your app (or to your kindle).

It’s also worth noting that many actual Amazon Kindle devices can only display in greyscale so you may not be able to properly use colour copies this way.

And, of course, you can access my own books FREE too:

Once you’ve signed up to Kindle Unlimited, you’ll see that both of the Jack Reusen books come up as ‘free’, so you can read the whole adventure so far, for nothing.

Jack Reusen and The Fey Flame‘ introduces you to the land of Fey, as creatures (and other things) make their way through to the ‘matter-world’ (basically our world). Jack and his family have to discover a way of closing a collection of ‘breaches’ between the two worlds to make their world safe again.

*

cover with blurb and barcode 2 trimmed‘Jack Reusen and the Spark of Dreams‘ is a slightly different kind of adventure. People are losing their ability to dream. Every night more and more people lose the certain something that makes human beings so good at solving problems and creating things; the spark of dreams. Jack discovers that he could be the key to understanding what’s causing this change, and he may even be the only person who can solve it and bring back the dreams and imaginations of hundreds of people.

I hope that both of the Jack Reusen books give you and/or your kids something to enjoy as you read them. Let me know what you think.

I also hope that my other Kindle Unlimited reading hints are useful to you too. If you know of other great books available free through Kindle Unlimited please feel free to post them in the comments below.

As always, thanks for stopping by my site,

All the best, John

Writers? Teachers? Everyone Else?: To read the classics or not read the classics?

Library traditional wooden bookshelves classic fiction

Which is more ‘important’ reading material for a budding writer, classics or contemporary fiction? It’s a matter of more debate than I expected because I thought the answer was obvious; the classics. I was a book buyer for a small book shop and I’m now a writer, I can’t help seeing it this way.

This isn’t because the classics are objectively ‘better written’. It isn’t even to do with gaining an understanding of more ‘traditional’ narrative structures (as an apprentice carpenter might start with more simplistic wood joins and carving techniques). Though the latter is definitely worth mentioning.

For me the reason that the classics are, by far, a better use of reading time for an aspiring author comes down to natural selection.

Won’t knowing what’s ‘in’ help you get published?

Coffee shop contemporary trends

Contemporary fiction is the driving operation of modern publishing. It characterises who we currently are (or at least it captures our contemporary literary culture). If an aspiring author wants to aim at being published then getting a feel for the current zeitgeist from contemporary fiction feels like the way to go.

However, maybe aiming to get published is less important than telling a good story. Connecting to the zeitgeist is great but what is it that you want to say? What place is your take on the world coming from?

About a decade back vampires became the ‘in thing’ for teen readers. I lost count of the number of vampire tales available in the ‘teen reads’ section of our book traders magazines. This went on for a few years.

However, if you were a teen author at this time there was no way for you to know how long this trend would last. To be frank it crashed hard after the release of the last Twilight book.

Wasting time being ‘trendy’

Imagine you were a ‘teen reads’ author in 2008 (the year that ‘Twilight: Breaking Dawn’ was published). You are so excited about your new book. You had the idea to jump on the vampire love train and write a great new twist on this where the girl is the vampire (breaking from Twilight, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Vampire Diaries).

Vampire contemporary teen romance

It can easily take two to three years to get a book into a ready state and by 2010/2011 the catalogues looked very different. The vampire bubble had burst.

The writer with the vampire story in hand was me and I had put so little thought into what I was actually doing (focusing on the goal rather than my book) that my creativity suffered.

I’ve since gone back and fixed this manuscript and one day it may see the light of day. However, the thing that helped me was not reading more contemporary work, it was returning to the core works in the genre (the classics).

It was only by knowing the typical format that I could hope to rearrange it for my own purposes. It was only by becoming more aware of the expectations of this sort of book that I could hope to usurp them. In short, I needed to see what vampires really were in our culture in order to play with the concept properly.

Fiction by Natural Selection

I feel that every creative work creates forks in the literary road. The classics aren’t necessarily ‘classic’ because they’re good (though a lot of them are thoroughly engaging, well crafted works). Instead they are examples of where our literary culture has travelled.

With some degree of certainty, you can still reference great works of the past and know that the reference will make sense to a contemporary audience. Shakespeare, Austen, Dickens, even ‘newer’ works by the likes of Arthur C. Clark, Stephen King, or JRR Tolkein have reached this stage of cultural significance. Reading their work helps a writer hone in on where we’ve been and experiment with where our literary world may go next.

Contemporary fiction just doesn’t ‘fit in’ yet

Contemporary fiction hasn’t had time to catch the public consciousness. Long term success isn’t even something we can predict with awards or other honours placed on these works by peers. Contemporary fiction, by its very nature, is still in the throws of cultural natural selection.

The boy who lived

Take the Harry Potter series for example. These books are still wildly popular. We might assume that they will go on to become markers to the culture we’ll come to be part of, but they have also received backlash from two very vocal cultural camps.

On the liberal side JK Rowling has received backlash for her views on trans women. On the conservative side (small ‘c’, small ‘l’ for both, these aren’t necessarily political concepts, more ideological) the Harry Potter books have received criticism and hatred because they depict sorcery, witches, and wizards in a positive light. This can be extremely concerning for those with a belief system that regards these things as ‘sinful’ or ‘the devil’s work’. To put books like these in the hands of children must seem truly abhorrent to those who feel this way.

We don’t yet know if there will be an ideological ‘winner’ in regards to these (not exactly overlapping) groups. If one or the other takes a leading role in the direction our literary culture may go, then there’s a chance that the Harry Potter books may be pushed aside in favour of something else when that new generation is choosing books for their children.

Instead of being cemented in cultural significance, they could slowly disappear into the margins in the same way that Enid Blyton’s Famous Five and Secret Seven books have.

Admittedly some children may still know the names of Enid Blyton’s (arguably) most famous books (including her ‘Noddy’ series). However, as someone who bought books for an independant toy/book shop for over ten years, children just aren’t reading them any more.

In another generation I find it highly unlikely that the Famous Five and their antics catching smugglers and other ‘criminal sorts’ in and around Cornwall and beyond will be remembered or known. As much as I enjoyed them as a child it’s when watching my own children read them that I see how culturally removed the Famous Five have become. Enid Blyton’s works have become too distant from modern culture to become ‘classics’.

The ‘classics’ are the works that are left once the culturally insignificant is worn away. This process is as unintentional and unpredictable as biological evolution (though it happens much more quickly). We don’t choose which things become culturally significant, history will decide that for us.

Contemporary fiction can be extremely enjoyable. It can also, obviously, teach us a great deal about the craft of writing. However, from a writer’s perspective, at best, it may help us see which things are currently proving popular with publishers.

That’s the blessing and the curse of concentrating solely on contemporary fiction; all it takes is a tidal shift and we hear things like ‘no one is reading vampire books any more’ or ‘post-apocalyptic wasteland has been overdone’.

Contemporary fiction is modern craft at it’s best (sometimes) but it hasn’t yet felt the harsh winds of cultural change. The very same winds which have tested the mettle of the classics and shown them as pillars and markers of who we are and where we’ve been.

I would never suggest skipping over contemporary fiction. There’s a lot to be gained from seeing writers rearrange expectations and norms to create something new. However, if any reading experience is to be truly useful to an aspiring author then it will come from the works that show them where our writing culture comes from.

Please feel free to debate this out in the comments below. I welcome any and all takes on this topic.

As always, thanks for reading, all the best, John

I’m now officially looking for a literary agent (but it’s not for the reason I expected)

Green glowing test tube Creative commons licence image by PRHaney

I’ve been (fairly) proudly self-published for a few years now. The overal experiences seem similar to those of a ‘traditionally published’ author (even though self publishing is arguably the more ‘traditional’ of the two routes). I have hosted book talks and writing workshops, participated in author events with other authors, I’ve also been a judge on the panel of a large-scale writing competition.

More than these I have come to find that my books are read (and enjoyed) by hundreds of readers.

For a while these were the primary experiences I associated with being an author. However, recently I’ve come to see that in some cases a book may need more behind it, and with this additional backing it might be able to do more.

Two years ago I wrote a science-fiction story aimed at teen readers. The story came to me of it’s own accord, and I enjoyed the process of helping it grow and take shape. However, on my first editing pass I came to realise that the book may be a means to showing the usefulness, excitement, and wonder of scientific knowledge.

At its core it’s a story about a young girl dealing with the long-term truth of grief. However, it also uses this emotional journey to draw her through axperiences which highlight how useful (and powerful) scientific knowledge and exploration can be.

It’s a perspective that I think could resonate well with a lot of young people, at a time when misinformation and ignorance gain huge viewership online (with channels like ‘5 minute crafts’ and others sharing sometimes wildly dangerous fake ‘hacks’ and experiments).

It’s good to know objective, undeniable truths. In fact it can be helpful as a means of grounding your thoughts. This sense of solidity can also offer something stable and unyielding, an objective fixed point on which to one can draw emotional stability.

The book is complete and is currently running through a first full edit. However, I feel that it could gain more with more eyes on it. It’s the first time that I’ve really felt that something I’ve written has a big enough message to require a bigger team behind it.

I used to imagine that an agent and a publisher were there to help promote your book. After all, with their investment of time (and, in the case of publishers, money) it’s more than just you who has a vested interest in your book’s success.

This always sounded nice but if additional promotion was all they brought to the table I often felt it was better to simply publish myself and be my own book promoter.

However, I’ve learned a lot about the publishing industry over the past few years. Sometimes from reading things, but mainly from conversations with other authors.

I’ve come to realise that the literary industry is more than simply a book selling machine. It’s also a space filled with people who value a really good book. They want a book to be it’s best.

Whilst I’ve been happy in the past to simply self publish my books. I’m becoming more aware of the strain to be found in attempting to be a Jack of all trades.

With this newest project I’m realising that my core story could be improved greatly if I were to see it from more perspectives.

I have a few agents in mind already (courtesy of an author friend who took time to give me some insight). Many of these agents open their inbox to unsolicited submissions in November, so I have just over a month to get this manuscript to my editor and tidy it up.

It’s a weird new experience for me and, as I say, my motivation for it has changed over the past few years. Fingers crossed that someone out there will look at this story and see what I see in the emotional and intellectual journey that ‘Lisa’ goes through. Wish me luck!

As always, thanks for reading, all the best, John