|
By:
I've just written a children's book. I hope to self publish it in the new year.
|
|
By:
I was writing a book about the different gasses in the Universe. As I was finishing the chapter on Helium the doorbell rang. I put the book down to go and answer the door, and wWhen I came back I saw it floating away over the garden fence.
|
|
By:
I wrote a book about gambling called "THE MUG PUNTER'In it I said that the next time you are going well at the gambling look at the car you are driving and then look at the bookies car and ask yourself whos car is the best.The problem is you paid for both of them
![]() |
|
By:
I've never been tempted as my autobiography would end up in the fiction department as nobody would believe it was a true story. My boss in Spain did exactly that and it made for very hard reading. He had more demons than anyone I've ever known.
|
|
By:
im planning on writing a book next year, with a view to doing it as a new career. will be interesting cos i dont really read books, certainly not novels. no idea how to even set it out. in my mind it will be like a movie script. so not sure how to "think" in book form. but thats just details i spose.
|
|
By:
I would like to write a book about thoroughbred horse pedigrees.
|
|
By:
Wrote a radio play. Sent it to the BBC.
They kept it for 5 months before informing me they weren't going to use it! bob, there's loads of site giving advice on writing books, scripts, etc. |
|
By:
im sure i will look into it. its not like i expect to just jump in and get it right. i will research different styles of writing. knowing me i will probably write three or for at the same time. so i can skip between them depending on my mood. then pick the one i like the most and rewrite it until im happy with it. i wonder if many writers have several books on the go at once?
|
|
By:
The reason I asked was because I bumped into an old mucker who I hadn't seen for years.
I asked him what he was doing these days, and he said he was writing a book about his life, and he was hoping to get it published soon. He is one of many I've met over the years who have either written or hoping to write a book. None of them have ever gone to print as far as I know. |
|
By:
Don`t like to brag, but since you ask, I`ve had work published by HarperCollins and also in USA.
|
|
By:
^^however he was upbeat and optimistic, so maybe writing is a form of therapy for some? It's a though some people feel they have a book in them?
|
|
By:
Don`t like to brag, but since you ask, I`ve had work published by HarperCollins and also in USA.
wd mate care to tell us what it was about? |
|
By:
Emden, I wish your friend well, but unless he is a well known personality, he has no chance of getting a publisher. He can self publish but these companies refuse no one as they don`t care on the content or quality of the book, they are just in it to make money out of people`s dreams. That`s why they call it Vanity Publishing. His best option is to self publish it on Amazon Kindle. It costs nothing and is easy to do.
|
|
By:
If you write a page per night you have a 365 page book ready this day next year
![]() |
|
By:
Thanks Emden. It was about Sport but I don`t want to elaborate for obvious reasons which I`m sure you will understand.
|
|
By:
Best advice that I can give anybody thinking about writing a book is - "DO IT". Have faith in yourself and go for it. However, like I said earlier, writing a book about your own life is a waste of time unless you are well known. Fiction is the best money spinner and if your book catches on, then you can hit the jackpot. Avoid "Vanity" publishers though, as you will be well out of pocket. Get an agent or self publish on Amazon Kindle. Look at the woman who wrote that Shades Of Grey or whatever you call it, multi millionaire now. Don`t tell friends, they`ll just laugh at you and destroy your confidence. Just do it and tell them when it is a success.
|
|
By:
I would love to write a book one day. I regularly have ideas but don't seem to have the time or energy to see them through. Got a few pages into a cheesy maverick cop short story a year or two ago, but oddly, the only projects I've actually completed in recent times are a couple of short stories in Spanish.
Coincidentally though, when this thread hit the forum, I'd just planned to take a couple of days off next week to go to a quiet, sunny retreat, sit by the pool with my laptop and get started on my latest project - a science fiction, vaguely Matrixy affair about beings who can skip between worlds. One of them is drawn to this one... Um, the ... is supposed to look mysterious, but tbh I'm not really sure what's going to happen next so I had to put ... |
|
By:
i would defo self-publish. if i write a book, i would only want it published if i thought it was really good. no idea how you would self-publish in proper print form, but i probably have the finances to do it if i had confidence in it. no idea how you get shops to stock it, presumably would need to get a decent amount of online interest in it first.
im very self-critical, if i think ive written something good you can pretty much be sure it is good. im not concerned about it being a success, im concerned about actully being able to write something good. under no illusions, i know it wiil be difficult to do that. lots of hard work and imagination. whether im up to it i dont know, i think the main thing is being up for it. if you arent up for it, you just give up before you make it happen. like most things in life. its funny when people get into stuff expecting it to be quick and easy, if i properly try my hand at this i wouldn't expect to have any finished work for at least a year, maybe 2 years. nothing worthwhile ever comes easy. |
|
By:
themightymac
How long did it take you to write the book? Did you do many re-writes? I read On Writing by Stephen King, and writing a book is a tough gig. But I loved the bit in On Writing when he came home one day from his job as a schoolteacher(?) and opened a letter from his agent. He had got $2,500 for Carrie, but the letter said he the agent had sold the paperback rights for $100,000(?) (Wiki says he got $400,000). He sank to the floor when he read the letter, and when his wife got home from her job as a waitress(?) and he told her she started crying. |
|
By:
I wrote a book in primary school, it was called Inspector Gadget and the Case of the Pink Money. It was quite a story.
Mills and Boon even approached me to publish it, but I declined. |
|
By:
However, like I said earlier, writing a book about your own life is a waste of time unless you are well known. Fiction is the best money spinner and if your book catches on, then you can hit the jackpot.
But some peoples real life stories are so unbelievable they're like fiction, fact is usually stranger than fiction and harder to make up to, if you know what I mean. |
|
By:
My mate had a sort of autobiography (basically a string of anecdotes) published by Spire Publishing. Just google it. I think he had a few hundred printed and has managed to sell them. His book is teetering around number 8 million on the Amazon bestsellers list.
|
|
By:
It seems remarkably cheap to get your own book printed - if I have read it correctly.
|
|
By:
I once reached the final shortlist for young playright's award at Liverpool playhouse, but being honest, the winner was fantastic compared to my effort and was even made into a tv play.
I've also written an unpublished novella. Re-reading it now, it's little wonder it wasn't published; one excerpt reads: 'Did you see those two comedians on telly last night? What were they called now...they were really bad, oh yeah, they were called ''**** and shyte.''' |
|
By:
t y for making me laugh btw squeeze, very good.
|
|
By:
I think the writer(s) of birds of a feather must've had a relation working at the bbc, they must surely have passed round the script and thought ' well this is some of the worst non-comedic shyte I've ever read, but we have an obligation to our relation to consider.'
|
|
By:
SqueezeFirmly 10 Oct 13 22:47
I was writing a book about the different gasses in the Universe. As I was finishing the chapter on Helium the doorbell rang. (I GUESSED THE PUNCHLINE HERE)I put the book down to go and answer the door, and wWhen I came back I saw it floating away over the garden fence. That must be the most laboured joke ever on here, have you been given access to SDKs joke book? |
|
By:
I like it, rob!
|
|
By:
I got about 17,000 words into a novel then got stuck.
That was years ago. Might try to pick it up again now. ![]() |
|
By:
was it about glue, raspberry?
|
|
By:
There you go, 'dear mr tarbuck....'
|
|
By:
Wouldlike to visit every test cricket ground in the world and write a book about it, to my knowledge no one has done this yet, would need about twenty grand a year off work. reckon it would be a best seller. Dont think I could write fiction, not enough imagination. Would love to write a travel/cricket book.
|
|
By:
I also once wrote a short story for my English class when aged 13 or so. It was called 'the lonely house in the countryside,' still remember the spooky lettering technique for the title!
|
|
By:
A guy I know wrote a book that was successful, and could well be up many a betfairian's street. I wouldn't be surprised if he manages a sequel and a film out of it - he's already done a documentary.
In a way he got very lucky, and was in the right place at the right time, but he did also sort of make his own luck. He quit his job, got accredited as a journalist and went to Afghanistan in search of adventure, and a story. Wasn't getting anywhere but happened to fall in with the Afghan cricket team somehow, and they went on to qualify for the T20 World Cup. Wrote a book about it. Given that they've just qualified for the One-Day World Cup too, and will play England and Australia, he could be quids in, Cool Runnings style. It's called Out of the Ashes, by Tim Albone, if anyone's interested. Later editions have an introduction by Mike Atherton. |
|
By:
Yep.
Wrote a book of poetry that was published 15 years ago, contributed to a few punting books and am a contributor to a book about Oasis that's being published in a couple of weeks, Supersonic - Personal Situations with Oasis by Stuart Deabil and Ian Snowball |
|
By:
what did you say about Oasis roger, are you a fan? people seem to love them or loathe them
|
|
By:
Probably their biggest fan in the early years. I lost count after seeing them 50 times in the UK and all over the world. Amazing times, amazing stories.
Lost interest when the music became sh1t (album 3), because it was always all about the music for me. |
|
By:
yep, first two were classics, be here now had no direction,
|
|
By:
I too have written several books – that is not to say they are any good of course, and I have also read Steven King’s “On Writing” which I found quite inspirational. I don’t like his books at all, but I admire the man greatly.
I started about ten years ago and did what everyone else does, sent loads of copies and stuff around publishers and agents, and of course like so many others I have enough rejection letters to paper a couple of large rooms. Someone told me that the big publishers reject something like 2,000 manuscripts per month, and would sign up on average 2 new unknown writers per year, so the odds of being accepted are infinitesimal. I finished a book about 5 years ago about a philandering man who had never been in love – sound familiar, chaps? – and tried the usual avenues without success, so I just threw it under the bed. Last year I dug it out and edited it down from 550 pages to 450 and showed it to 3 or 4 people (all women btw) and they all said it was good and I should publish it – they were probably just being kind to me – so as it is now so easy to publish and so inexpensive – just publish on Kindle almost for free – and see where it takes you, I did release it. It’s called “The Life and Loves of Gringo Greene” if you are interested, and while I am on a shameless self-publicity tack, I have also written a series of detective novels featuring my detective, Inspector Walter Darriteau, who operates in and around Chester. “The Murder Diaries – Seven Times Over” is out now, while “The Sound of Sirens” will be released at the end of this month and features as part of the plot, a contract out to murder the England centre-forward!! So if you feel there is a book inside you, just get on and write it. You’ll enjoy it, never regret it, and get a real kick out of finishing it. I certainly do, but don’t expect to earn a fortune, because you won’t. And one last thought on editing and spell checking – all very important of course, but you are in good company if the odd typo/mistake gets through. Last month I read a Harper Collins book that was riddled with spelling mistakes including five on one page, and don’t mention my horrendous DOE instead of DOUGH in Gringo Greene – DOH! |