Roz Morris's Blog, page 40
October 9, 2017
Inspiration from travel and why you always have to visit your host’s bathroom – guest post at Vivienne Tuffnell’s blog
There’s no doubt that travel is good for creativity, but travel doesn’t have to mean going to new places. There’s also the other sense – the act of being in motion, of making a journey. Journeying is one of my favourite creative times. I look forward to getting in my car and daydreaming while I […]

Published on October 09, 2017 01:46
October 8, 2017
Doing NaNoWriMo? Nail it with this resource kit
Originally posted on Nail Your Novel:
I can’t believe it’s already October. And that means it’s just a month until NaNoWriMo. For the uninitiated, it’s a worldwide writing lockdown where scribblers of all levels undertake to write a 50,000-word draft in just 30 days. So here’s a list of NaNoWriMo resources I’ve written on this…
I can’t believe it’s already October. And that means it’s just a month until NaNoWriMo. For the uninitiated, it’s a worldwide writing lockdown where scribblers of all levels undertake to write a 50,000-word draft in just 30 days. So here’s a list of NaNoWriMo resources I’ve written on this…

Published on October 08, 2017 02:49
October 6, 2017
Writing, social media and other authorly tips – guest spot at Damyanti Biswas
Another guest post! You might be forgiven for thinking I’m using this blog as a hotel, dropping in to leave signposts instead of staying put and giving you something to read without another click. I’m sure this is just an artefact of launch time and the giddy whirl will slow down soon. In the meantime […]

Published on October 06, 2017 04:04
October 3, 2017
‘The dull rage of Sundays, the relief of good friendships’ – The Undercover Soundtrack, Heidi James
My guest this week says she usually finds music a distraction. She lives with music makers, and finds ‘other people’s sounds’ are too intrusive. But that changed when she started writing a crime novel about a teenage friendship in the 1980s/1990s. Listening to the music of the time helped her re-understand what life was like […]

Published on October 03, 2017 01:05
October 2, 2017
Not Quite Lost is launched! And making-of interview with Henry Hyde
Oh my heavens, it’s publication day. Not Quite Lost: Travels Without A Sense of Direction is no longer a tease in a tweet or a blogpost. It’s a real thing. A paperback book. A hunk of Kindle estate, or Kobo, or whatever other ebook format floats your boat. (Though there are no boats in the […]

Published on October 02, 2017 00:15
September 28, 2017
Ruinlust and where ideas come from – guest post at Davida Chazan aka The Chocolate Lady
Ruinlust. It’s a word that means ‘the unseemly feeling of attraction to abandoned places and crumbling buildings’. At least, that’s what Robert Macfarlane said when I had a chat with him about it on Twitter. And if anyone would know, he would. (Here’s why.) I don’t understand the ‘unseemly’ part, though I suspect Husband Dave […]

Published on September 28, 2017 23:42
September 18, 2017
Personal journeys: 2 posts about writing Not Quite Lost and memoir – Joanna Penn and Clare Flynn
Well that headline was a mouthful, but these two posts share a common theme. I’m at The Creative Penn today talking about the process of turning a set of personal diaries into a book for outside readers. We cover the thorny topics of writing about real people, staying faithful to the truth, organising material – […]

Published on September 18, 2017 05:42
September 17, 2017
‘Intense mystical dreams, an obsession with TS Eliot, and music’ – The Undercover Soundtrack, Vivienne Tuffnell
My guest this week has been here before, in the relatively young days of the blog. And it seems appropriate to introduce her with that slightly mystical flavour because her novel is about a woman who sees an alternate life. She wrote it in a creative blast, fuelled by dreams, TS Eliot’s Four Quartets and […]

Published on September 17, 2017 02:47
September 14, 2017
Editing as creative development – guest post at Ingram Spark
Good developmental editing is one of the cornerstones of book production, but indie authors have a special advantage over the traditionally published. Indies can use the editing process to nurture their potential and perhaps find talents they didn’t suspect. I’m talking about this role of the editor at the IngramSpark blog today. And if you’re […]

Published on September 14, 2017 12:41
September 7, 2017
Bill Bryson, Lewis Carroll logic and cryonics – interview about Not Quite Lost at Andrea Darby’s blog
I’m thrilled to be at Andrea Darby’s blog today, talking about Not Quite Lost. You might recognise her name because she was a recent guest on The Undercover Soundtrack with her novel The Husband Who Refused to Die. Andrea and I discovered we had a certain chilly, chilling interest in common – cryonics, the daring […]

Published on September 07, 2017 11:51