Showing posts with label albatross. Show all posts
Showing posts with label albatross. Show all posts

Monday, 10 February 2014

Publishing in the south

Like Ratty below, we've been heading south over the last week, pulling onto the roadside as needed to attend to Rosa Mira business. Yesterday we reached Dunedin. It's good to have the new 10k books out in the world and if you've missed them by any chance, they're summed up here: yes, here.

The first reader review is in for Albatross. Dusty Sandison from New Brunswick writes: "Three thoughtful stories that share the pained thread of grief, regret, remorse — and hope. The writer delves into relationships with friends, strangers, family and self that are touching, even heartbreaking, and make you look inward and examine your own journey in life."

Ratty drives south. I used to have a VW this colour — hand painted with roof paint. I miss it. Let me know if you have a Beetle for sale.
This month, I have my head down preparing Rosa Mira's next exceptional publication, Fields of Gold, subtitled: Celebrating Life in the Face of Cancer, A story of two sisters. It's the journal, written over the course of a year, of two remarkable women, one of whom is dying. Pam Morrison wrote for both herself and sister Annie McGregor, recording their shock, love, bafflement, humour, deep respect, grief  — the rich life that flowed between them. I'll be saying more about it in the coming weeks, and introducing you to Pam who lives here in Dunedin.

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Patterns of dissonance and harmony: Q & A with Carolyn McCurdie

Before we start, though, I'd like to thank my allies-in-publishing: besides friends, supporters and family without whom the whole venture would be absurd and far too lonely, I'm ongoingly grateful to Caroline Pope who designs RMB's books, covers, and this week the newsletter. No job is too tricky; she's smart, quick and design-savvy. Doug Lilly of Arts Net is another gem: fixing up the website pages for each new arrival, fielding (often last-minute) requests from me with never a complaint, and doing a fine job of it all.

Now. It's a great pleasure to publish Albatross, three stories by Carolyn McCurdie of Dunedin. She's a fine writer of poetry and prose — a national award-winning poet and author of YA novel The Unquiet, one of the works I most admired as editor for Longace Press, for its persuasive and original storyline, it's credible characters and lyricism. Another of Dunedin's gems, hers is a voice worth listening to. Besides all this she's known as a staunch advocate for imprisoned writers.


Carolyn, can you tell us a little about how these stories came about: the place or circumstance, the experience of writing them?

‘Albatross’ was sparked by a news report many years ago. A young tourist from Europe had gone into Fiordland with minimal equipment or preparation. It seemed that she wanted an encounter with wilderness, to be tested in some deep part of herself. She was alone, inexperienced and her chances of surviving seemed slim, so a local search and rescue team went in after her and pulled her out. She was furious. So were they. And I found that I agreed wholeheartedly with both of them. So my first idea was to explore those different points of view. However 'Albatross' doesn’t do this in the way I’d originally envisaged, because, as always, the characters take over. I love that about story-making. I always begin with something quite vague, an emotion, an idea, a question, but then the characters take form, become solid. Then they step forward and say, ‘Yes, but …’

It was a sleepless night that gave me ‘Collision’. I was visiting my niece Jo in Wellington.  At the time she was a student, her flatmates all students and it was summer, so nights were for music and other entertainments. And it was hot. Sleep being impossible, I decided to use the time to create a story. I lay there thinking of other nights of no sleep, in particular a night in a block of flats in Auckland’s Mt Eden. My story was firstly about sound, perceptions of sound. Then, who are these story characters who can’t sleep? So the patterns of dissonance and harmony became those within human lives.

In the 1970s I was in a violent marriage, which I walked away from after eight years. Such an experience has many repercussions, among them, long years of self-questioning: how? why? Answering is an ongoing process and, for me, writing has been an important part of looking for some clarity, using poetry and fiction to take a sideways step beyond myself. In ‘Wings of Stone’ there are two unhappy marriages. Neither is mine, none of the characters is me or any other real person. And yet they are all me. Here, I try to look at questions of blame, the way everyone has their own version of events, the unreliability of memory. How does a person try to be true?

Who has inspired you as a writer?

How to name them all? At the moment I’m inspired by Eleanor Catton as I read The Luminaries. I’m awed by the complexity of the story. You have to pay attention with this one or you’ll lose your grip on the bafflingly tangled strands. I’m loving the solid reality of her characters, enjoying their company. I also loved her previous book, the brilliant originality of The Rehearsal.

When I was writing short stories, the writer that inspired me the most was probably Patricia Grace. Short stories often leave me dissatisfied, wanting more but I found hers completely satisfying. No matter how short the story, she is never shallow. I wondered how she did this when others' stories  often feel insubstantial, and I concluded that it was because of the way she treats her characters. They are ordinary, often flawed people, but they are drawn with such tenderness and compassion that empathy is easy. You care about them and what happens to them. With delicacy and humour, Patricia Grace takes you into the life of someone else, deepens your experience of people and the world. And more than anything, I read for that.

Another very positive influence on my stories was Sue McCauley. Her stories impressed me with their honesty. She was another writer who drew me in, made me care about her characters. When I was lucky enough to be accepted on the 2002 mentorship programme of the NZ Society of Authors, Sue’s name was on the list of mentors. She was my first choice and, wonder of wonders, I was assigned to her. She was a most generous mentor, and with kindness and perceptiveness worked with me through my stories. She also gave me much needed confidence in my own writing abilities. I had been at the point of wondering whether the idea that I could be a writer was a bit self-deluding.

What's delighting you at present (make that two months ago ;-)?

At the moment I’m delighted almost to the point of drunkenness with the intensity of springtime growth. And its beauty. At this time of year nothing has been chewed or frosted or succumbed to mould. Perfection. I’m loving the smell and blackness of the soil in my vegetable garden as I work it. All my little seedlings look so hopeful. Exhilarating.

What's ahead in 2014?

The writing I plan for 2014 is equal parts poetry and fiction. I have accumulated enough poems for a first collection and will continue to try to find a publisher. Read more poems, write more poems – I hope that will always be essential. The fiction that I’m writing is a children’s science fiction trilogy which I seem to have been writing for a million years. That's because the story keeps getting more complex, more interesting to write, so I’ll just follow it even if it takes another million years. We are a long-lived family. But it would be really good if 2014 brought the completion of at least a part of it. So far, this is looking possible.

 Thanks and felicitations, Carolyn. Lucky readers; lucky Rosa Mira Books, having Albatross on board.

Albatross is available here for USD 3.

Monday, 20 January 2014

Almost afloat

Also to be published next week in 10k format are three short stories by the very fine Dunedin writer, Carolyn McCurdie. Albatross is also the title of the first story in which elderly 'Miss Flockton' heads out to sea with a storm threatening. Local policeman Evan Brody feels duty-bound to follow but their eventual meeting is not quite as he expects — it is more fraught and more tender. Carolyn specialises in these moments of 'Collision' (another title) where expectations are quietly overturned and understanding of the other — and the self — is made possible.

Ratty is very taken with the kauri trees of the Waitakere ranges however is turning his attention to the launch of three terrific new 10,000-word ebooks.
 Carolyn is also a poet who won first prize and commended in the 2013 NZ Poetry Society International Poetry Competition, judged by Vincent O’Sullivan.


Saturday, 2 June 2012

"a good south wind sprung up behind"

This week albatrosses galore have flown between Buenos Aires and Dunedin. You'll see some of them in due course but the beautiful birds are the work of talented cartoonist and animator Pablo Accame who is putting together the cover image for Amigas. Pablo happens to be Elena's son. Elena Bossi is my co-writer.



As I hinted last week, it's not an entirely comfortable decision, to publish one's own work. It's definitely been seen as the second cousin three times removed to meticulous trade publishing, and all too often the home-grown product is immediately recognisable. However, with the current turmoil of publishing, the scene is changing. Knowledge is available to anyone with an internet connection; there's no reason why the diligent author shouldn't put her work through the same stringent processes that a publisher would, and establish his own sales and marketing base. And I think that's the key: stringent processes. If an author is prepared to seek and pay for assessment/s and editing (their writing apprenticeship is another topic), then find designers who know what they're doing, and oversee the final product, then they can produce a book – hard copy or digital – worthy of their writing efforts.

So, am I apologising or what? I'm very proud of Elena's work and I'm prepared to say that mine is happy in the company of hers. We certainly had a great time working together, and continue to do so. Anyway, we have a publisher: Rosa Mira Books.

The decision to publish with Rosa Mira means that we can produce an edition in which English and Spanish versions sit side by side. Not page for page (most devices are more comfortably read with a single page open, and anyway, our translations are not word for word) but with links at the end  – and possibly the start – of each chapter so that the reader can switch between the two versions if they wish to.

Okay, that's enough for now. It's Saturday morning: the garden beckons, so I'll leave Ratty contending with the bird. More soon. Suggestions, questions and comments are welcomed.