Post Marked: Piper’s Reach Blog Tour – Alan Baxter

Today’s stop on the Post Marked: Piper’s Reach Blog Tour is at the wonderful home of British-born, Australian based dark fantasy, sci-fi & horror writer, Alan Baxter. He teaches Kung Fu and loves his heavy metal.

Jodi and I are going to rifle through his CD collection while we’re here talking about the role music plays in the lives of ourselves, and our characters Ella-Louise and Jude.

Jude’s preference for songs from the past is perhaps an indication of his inability to grasp the present situation with Ella-Louise. Even though they have different musical tastes, the music they share amplifies their emotional connection – Adam

Ella-Louise uses music as a mirror to her past, and later the changing dynamic of her relationship with Jude. The lyrics she shares are tiny glimpses inside her, but for every answer they illuminate, twice as many questions are spawned – Jodi

You can read the rest of the interview here.

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach Blog Tour – Tuesday Serial

Pull up a comfy chair, grab a cup of tea and your favourite cardigan as we stop the Piper’s Reach blog tour at Tuesday Serial.

Tuesday Serial is the place to go to link your serialised web fiction.

Today, the lovely PJ Kaiser has opened the fridge and declared the cupboard a free for all, and has asked us a bunch of questions about the new project.

It was Adam’s idea for the characters to be two long-lost friends getting back in touch with each other and Adam later sent me a text message asking if I thought perhaps these two had harboured crushes but they’d never synced up to let them hook up… and hey presto… my character appeared – Jodi

With no real idea who our characters were, we continued to toss ideas back and forth. We had no endpoint in mind when the first letter was written, a bit like a shot in the dark, a character hoping, trying, wanting to reconnect with the past, but not sure if there will be reciprocation – Adam

To read the full interview, click here.

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach Blog Tour – Tim VanSant

The third stop over for the Post Marked: Piper’s Reach blog tour finds us in the comfy armchairs of Tim VanSant @TimVanSant

Today we are discussing the difference between the microwaveable nature of our society where we want everything now, now, NOW! compared to the delayed gratification of having to wait for the postman to arrive.

In this day and age of hyperconnectivity, we get flustered and frustrated when we do not receive instant gratification, notification, response, call back or feedback. Writing letters tempers the need for instantaneous gratification. I live on my computer for work, hunch over it at night talking to people on Twitter and Facebook, and get annoyed when my connectivity drops out – Adam

There is absolutely no shortage of high tension… Ella-Louise is recovering from her own personal battles, which Jude is swept into. She is a bit like a bull in a china shop… crashing through revelation after revelation, but all the time hiding the big things from Jude – Jodi

You can read the full interview here.

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach Blog Tour – Paul Anderson

Today sees Paul Anderson, co-foudner of eMergent Publishing, host the second of our blog tour before the release on April 10.

We talk today about the organic nature of our project (and what it means) and the vagaries of handwriting letters. And he taunts us from the sidelines about keeping secrets.

This narrative lives and breathes under its own impetus, in the pause and nuance between what is said and what remains unsaid. – Jodi Cleghorn

…putting forward possible narrative arcs are contrary to the keeping of the organic nature of the story telling. How it all ends, ultimately, is up to Jude and Ella-Louise. – Adam Byatt

You can read the rest of the interview here.

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach Blog Tour – Laura Meyer

The organic, collaborative project has been under wraps since January and we are pleased to announce its launch on April 10.

The wonderful Laura Meyer is the first stop in our blog tour to get you behind the scenes and into our brains of Post Marked: Piper’s Reach.

Jodi and I talk about the project, the challenges of a collaborative project and why we chose letters as our form.

“I was attracted to exploring the relationship of two characters reconnecting from a distance of twenty years while sorting through the carousel of emotional baggage” – Adam

You can read the whole interview here.

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach

POST MARKED: PIPER’S REACH

In December 1992 Ella-Louise Wilson boarded the Greyhound Coach for Sydney leaving behind the small coastal town of Piper’s Reach and her best friend and soulmate, Jude Smith. After twenty years of silence, a letter arrives at Piper’s Reach reopening wounds that never really healed. When the past reaches into the future, is it worth risking a second chance?

Yesterday marked the beginning of the unveiling of #thesecretproject between Jodi Cleghorn and myself.

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach will launch Tuesday 10th April and will roll out one letter a week. Each week one letter will be available on the website (sshhh… it’s still a secret) as a downloadable PDF handwritten letter. See if you can guess whose handwriting it is and who wrote which character.

But we need your help. We’re looking for some lovely friends to invite us over (between Monday 2nd – Monday 9th April) for a cuppa (we’ll bring the scones and jam and cream) and a chat about Post Marked: Piper’s Reach.

To help foster the conversation (because we’ve been keeping it a secret), we’ve assembled a few points of focus so we don’t have rely on religion, sex and politics as conversation starters. If we get really stuck, we can talk about the weather (Piper’s Reach is known for its epic storms and some really lovely scenery).

Break out the fine china (for Jodi) and the tin mug for me.

  • The original Concept/Pitch
  • Creating a location by text message
  • Organic writing process
  • Characters & authors’ emotional involvement in the writing
  • Back story
  • Instantaneous vs delayed gratification in the digital age
  • The music

If you are interested in having us over, please leave a comment. Our minions will talk to your minions and there will be plenty of cake to go around.

The Secret Project

Back in January, Jodi Cleghorn sent me a cryptic text asking if I wrote letters when I was a teenager. I was prolific. A friend once joked she could make an inspirational calendar from my writing.

Jodi fished for a bit more information before telling me she had a pitch, but would give nothing away. I was on a camping holiday a little south of where Jodi lived, in the first week of January, so she dropped in.

We sat in the ocean with our children splashing around us and after finding out we had a similar writing background as teenagers, she pitched an idea. It’s one that traverses an odd path between old and new forms of communication, differing modalities of storytelling and mixed media, all played out in real and suspended time. It incorporates our love of letter writing and music.

A succession of rapid-fire text messages over the next two or three days brainstormed the concept into a feasible project. We established a setting and our characters. I kept scribbling ideas and suggestions in my notebook as we bounced ideas backwards and forwards. My phone bill was ridiculous that month.

Since then our characters have taken on a life of their own and we are constantly surprised at the emotional investment we have given these fictional people.

For months we wrote in private, dropped cryptic notes and photos on twitter and thought about a launch. Now, the launch of #thesecretproject is imminent and we want to spread the word.

Launching on April 10, 2012, is our collaborative project, Post Marked: Piper’s Reach.

Post Marked: Piper's Reach

Post Marked: Piper’s Reach – The Blurb

In December 1992 Ella-Louise Wilson boarded the Greyhound coach for Sydney leaving behind the small coastal town of Piper’s Reach and her best friend and soulmate, Jude Smith. After twenty years of silence, a letter arrives at Piper’s Reach reopening wounds that never really healed. When the past reaches into the future, is it worth risking a second chance?

Before the launch, would you be interested in hosting an interview with Jodi and myself?

If you do, drop some details in the comments box and our minions will talk to your minions and we’ll bring the cupcakes and tea.

What Am I Doing?

Yesterday, in a moment of sheer, blind, unreasoning panic I questioned whether I was doing the right thing. On the eve of taking a long service leave, a 3 month break from my job, I doubted myself.

I am taking leave to write a novel, my first. Every negative idea ran through like the after effects of a bad curry: I can’t do this. You’re a fool to think you can write a novel. What if you get stuck? Will you ever finish it? No one’s going to read it.

This is something I am passionate about and want to succeed in. The journey of a thousand miles might begin with a single step, but it requires a hell of a lot of planning and a large supply of Band Aids for the blisters. In the same way, the finishing of a novel begins with the setting down of a single word. Then another. And another until The End is reached.

I am in this for the long haul. I have a dream to write novels. This time off is the first step to achieving that dream. I have plans in place to help make this dream a reality. I will learn a lot in the time it takes to write my first novel and I can translate this to the next, then the next and so on.

Following a conversation on twitter between Alan Baxter (@AlanBaxter) and Tom Dullemond (@Cacotopus) yielded this gem of thought: Those who maintain their focus and diligence in the face of rejection and disappointment will find it easier to sustain themselves than those who find success comes easily.

I know I have a cheer squad who will shake their virtual pom poms if I get stuck.

Hand me my cardigan and tracky dacks; I have a novel to write.

When There’s Nothing in the Pen

 

I am about to launch on a new adventure: write my first novel. In a little over 3 weeks, I get to take leave from my work and focus on writing a literary work.

There are two things I think of when it comes to the act of committing to write a novel.

The first comes from Seinfeld.

The other comes courtesy of Family Guy and the conflict between Brian and Stewie.

Each day when I sit down to write, these will be repeated as mantras. Please note the placement of my tongue is stuck firmly in my cheek.

I’ll let you know how it’s all going.

 

[FGC #5] The Slap

Writing #twitfic is hard. You need to construct a convincing narrative and engage the reader’s emotions, all in the space of 140 characters. (That’s 140 characters, bang on).

Jodi Cleghorn described them as breaths, a snapshot. She likened them to photographs. This inspired a spool of ideas, developed into an album I called Polaroid Memories. Click for the link to read.

But to encapsulate a narrative and create a emotional response is difficult. I threw a lot of them down, but here is the one I ended up going with.

The Slap

She watched the welts on his cheek rise like loaves of bread as tears filled the corner of her eyes. Her finger stabbed. “Never again.”

Word Count: 140 characters

Actual Count: 135 characters

Off Cuts and Throwaways

Couldn’t let some good words go to waste, so I’ve included some of them here. You can see if I was right in my choice.

* In the silent dark she kissed his cheek and rose from the bed. She took the suitcase from under the bed and lingered at the door. “I’m sorry.”

* Sneaking into his brother’s room, he dropped the stylus into the grooves and put the headphones in place. Air guitar never sounded so good.

* Rubbing the stone between his thumb and forefinger, he weighed it carefully before the glass walls surrendered to his actions.