My London Book Fair - Day 1

Where to begin? It was a corker of a day! Sipping my glass of wine, I am trying to review the fizzing day. Let me share it in pictures because in my shattered state, it’s going to be easier…

Kobo wallHere I am at the Kobo stand. Thrilled to see INCEPTIO was included in the graphic on the side wall. Of course, I had a copy of the paperback with me so, of course, a photo was mandatory. Next, Kobo invited me to have a professional photo taken by Rebecca Millar, with their compliments.

SilverWood BooksBack to the SilverWood Books stand which was constantly busy. Director Helen Hart declared herself hoarse by the end of the day! The interest in self-publishing is growing exponentially.

I set off to explore Author HQ in EC2, the vast hall behind the main exhibition hall EC1 and ran into many friends.

Some I had met in the flesh for the first time on Sunday such as Jessica Bell, Rohane Quinn and Carole Cooper.

Jessica Bell_Dan Holloway

Jessica Bell and Dan Holloway

Others I met for the first time today: Dan Holloway, Eliza Green, Chele Cooke, Catriona Troth, Roz Morris, Karen Inglis. Too much, too many!

My critique partner, Denise Barnes came up for the day and somehow survived the melee.

A terrific panel ‘What Independent Authors Know About Reaching Readers’ with Orna Ross (ALLi) and Ben Galley (ShelfHelp) chaired by Diego Marano of Kobo was crowded out.

Orna Ross

Orna Ross

Ben Galley

Ben Galley

Diego Marano

Diego Marano

 

 

 

 

 

Evelyn Ryle and Jenny Haddon

 

I spotted two Romantic Novelists’ Association colleagues, Evelyn Ryle and Jenny Haddon, both listening intently to Orna, Ben and Diego.
I did pop over to the Choclit stand and chatted to fellow RNA writers Christina Courtenay and Sue Moorcroft – lovely to see their smiling faces. I forgot my camera…

Open Up launch

 

Then on to the launch of the ALLi ‘Open up to Indies with Dan Holloway, Orna Ross and Debbie Young.

 

 

 

Somehow, I fitted in a terrific workshop on Publicity with Liz Dawson of Harper Collins – practical and very informative; today all authors however published must be proactive in marketing their books by developing and implementing a solidly planned PR campaign of their own.

Mel Sherratt_Alison MortonAnd at the end of the day, I ran into Mel Sherratt on the KDP/Create/Space/ACX stand.
There are two more days to go, but I don’t mind if they’re not as good.This day was wonderful.

Go on to Day 2 and Day 3

 

Alison Morton is the author of Roma Nova thrillers, INCEPTIO, and PERFIDITAS. Third in series, SUCCESSIO, is now out.

Find out about Roma Nova book progress, news, writing tips and info by signing up for my free monthly email newsletter.

 

Scenes from the British Museum

Earls Court  bicyclesOut into the rain this morning on my way to the British Museum to see the Vikings,  I walked down Earls Court Gardens and spotted sets of bicycles chained artistically to the railings. I guess there’s nowhere else to store them.

After fairly mundane ride on the Picadilly Line, I arrived at the British Museum, Montague Place entrance. (I’m  Friend so get free entrance, cloakroom, etc.)

British MuseumThe route to the Viking Exhibition was barred on ‘elf and safety grounds – one of the shutters had partly descended (very uncomfortable). I asked myself what Ragnar the Viking would have done, but we obeyed, more in the vein of Noggin the Nog. However, a jolly museum attendant guided us back to the Sainsbury Gallery off the Great Court and I began a fascinating tour.

Viking tea-towelSadly, photography wasn’t allowed as the lending institutions guarded their intellectual copyright, a room steward explained, so you’ll have to make do with the tea towel I bought. The most impressive big thing was the longship and the best small things were pieces from the Lewis chess set. Read more here.

Lovely sandwich lunch plus chocolate brownie (Oh, sinfulness!) and a chat with stone carver Simon Keeley. Here’s some of his beautiful work. Then on to the (guess what) Romans. Now you can’t sensibly ‘do’ the Romans at the BM. My targets were Etruscans, the shrine of Diana Nemorensis and the translation from late Roman (when my Roma Nova stories start) to early Middle Ages. I’ll be putting some of these pictures online in the next few weeks, but here’s a taster.

Etruscan gold bracelets

 

Gold Etruscan bracelets with embossed female heads.palmettes and the figure of Eros 300-200BC

 

Lycurgus Cup

 

The Lycurgus Cup, Late Roman Empire, AD 300s. This very rare cage cup’s glass contains tiny amounts of gold abad silver which cause it to turn from opaque green to translucent red when light is shone through it. The gilded silver rim and foot were probably added in the 1700s.

 

Morton HotelOn the way back, I couldn’t help noticing this interestingly named hotel. Am I  staying in the wrong place?

And just when you thought nothing was relevant to the book fair, I can report that publishing director Helen Hart and fellow SilverWood Books author Sandy Osborne  have arrived. I bumped into them in the hotel lobby as I arrived back., footsore and gasping for tea. Tomorrow, we start in earnest (whoever he is).

 

 

Alison Morton is the author of Roma Nova thrillers, INCEPTIO, and PERFIDITAS. Third in series, SUCCESSIO, is now out.

Find out about Roma Nova book progress, news, writing tips and info by signing up for my free monthly email newsletter.

A pre-London Book Fair meet-up

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Glynis Smy, Jessica Bell, me, Talli Roland

Energised by meeting a terrific group of other writers last night. No, ‘energised’ is not a euphemism for hangover. The atmosphere really did fizz. Writers are used to listening, observing and absorbing, and they are genuinely interested in each others’ progress. And, of course, their problems and successes.

And as lonely creatures, musing and tapping away at our keyboards we like to get out sometimes…

We are never at a loss for a subject, whether the hard work and mess of combining motherhood with book deadlines, time distortion, revising and editing work, talking genres, comparing pies in front of us, uploading books, ALLi’s Open Up to Indies launch, the pull between writing and promoting, our book fair schedule, flights, SilverWood Books, comparing cameras on phones – you see how it goes…

 

Alison Morton is the author of Roma Nova thrillers, INCEPTIO, and PERFIDITAS. Third in series, SUCCESSIO, is now out.

Find out about Roma Nova book progress, news, writing tips and info by signing up for my free monthly email newsletter.

On the way to the 2014 London Book Fair

Although I have a guest as usual on Thursday, I’m going to be posting pictures when I can of my trip this week to LBF. It’s going to be a mix, but this is posting ‘on the hoof’ or if you want to be arty, ‘performance posting’.

Liverpool Street StationI flew in today on Ryanair from Poitiers. I’m actually quite a fan of RA; although definitely in the ‘no frills’ category, they get you there. I treat the flight as a bus trip and it works fine. So, a smooth journey on the Stansted Express and I arrived at Liverpool Street Station – alas no dancers! But the Marks & Spencer was open and they do a mighty fine chocolate raisin…

Delighted to discover that the Central Line was closed when I was pulling ‘The Beast’ (my stalwart Antler suitcase) behind me and heaving it over footbridges on the antiquated stations of the District Line… However, a couple of charming, jolly and slightly sloshed East Europeans (I think) were lovely and helped me on the train and insisted on singing Happy Birthday in full baritone. (It wasn’t my birthday.) That frightened the rest of the passengers.

Morton MewsEmerged in Earls Court station, and on the way to the hotel, I spotted a sign to warm the heart. Note the street name – if only!

I’m meeting up this evening with some fellow writers (in the flesh instead of virtually) at a local pub, so wine, food and shouted conversation will be the order of the day.

Oh, yes.

 

 

Alison Morton is the author of Roma Nova thrillers, INCEPTIO, and PERFIDITAS. Third in series, SUCCESSIO, is now out.

Find out about Roma Nova book progress, news, writing tips and info by signing up for my free monthly email newsletter.

Victoria Lamb - amo, amas, amat: Latin in Tudor England

250KB medium colour photo victoria lamb copyToday, I’m delighted to welcome Victoria Lamb, historical novelist of some repute as well as fun-loving person. Her exciting Tudor series for adults beginning with The Queen’s Secret is centred around the enigma of Shakespeare’s ‘Dark Lady’ while her Tudor Witch series for Young Adults has been described as ‘Twilight meets The Other Boleyn Girl’. Her knowledge of Tudor England is vast and, like me, she has a penchant for Latin…

Beyond the level of peasants labouring in the fields, Latin was omnipresent in Tudor society. Before the Reformation, Latin was the language of church services and biblical readings – so if you could not understand Latin, you just sat and picked your nose. It was used in legal, state and municipal documents, with English a poor second choice when it came to anything even remotely important. But after Henry VIII made the Catholics personae non gratae, Latin dropped out of use in church – except for a last hoorah under Bloody Mary. It was replaced by the Book of Common Prayer, and English translations of the Bible courtesy of early reformers like Thomas Cranmer and William Tyndedale, who reportedly said he wanted ‘the boy that driveth the plow’ to know as much scripture as the clergy.

So how did most people in the educated classes learn Latin in the first place?

tudorchildren3Girls and boys learned to read and write in ‘petty’ schools from age 4 to 7, but those families who could afford it then sent their sons to grammar school until the age of 14. (Girls were either privately tutored after the age of 7, or had no further formal education.) Latin was what boys learnt at grammar school – as the name suggests – along with Greek, religion, arithmetic and some history. To distinguish between an ablative and a dative, they studied William Lily’s famous Rudimenta Grammatices, authorized by Henry VIII in 1542. Lily’s Grammar was so well-known that Shakespeare referenced it in several plays, and it continued to be used in schools until Kennedy’s Primer took its place in the early nineteenth century. (I used Kennedy’s at school in the 1980s, which shows how long-lived these grammars can be!)

423px-Holbein-erasmus

Erasmus

Some early Tudor humanists like Erasmus and his followers – including Thomas More – believed Latin had become corrupted during the Middle Ages. Latin was still a living language at that point, so had absorbed many neologisms and changes in pronunciation and usage that they disliked, just as some disdain ‘text speak’ today, so they wanted to purify the way it was spoken and written. They advocated new writings in this purer Latin, along with strictly classical loan-words: this move eventually become known as Neo-Latin. Unfortunately, the Great Vowel Shift which took place in Tudor England – and incidentally paved the way for Modern English – also affected the ‘received pronunciation’ championed by Erasmus and Co. – so their neo-classical Latin came through a little less pure than intended.

Elizabeth1- ermine portait

Elizabeth I

After the Reformation, Latin continued to be used in legal and state documents such as the Charter Rolls and Patent Rolls. But increasingly English became more popular in official documents, either as an expression of nationalism, or as a way of cocking a snoot at Catholics and their Latinate church services. By the time of Elizabeth’s death – a keen classical scholar who translated a number of Latin texts as a child – the English were more than ready for King James’ authorized English Bible. The great age of Latin reform was over, and it was all downhill from thereon.

Tibi gratias maximas agimus Victoria Agna!

HER LAST ASSASSIN small cover photoVictoria Lamb writes historical fiction for Random House. Read her latest novel, set in the reign of Elizabeth I, is Her Last Assassin.

Lady-in-waiting Lucy Morgan is once again torn between her dangerous attraction to William Shakespeare and her loyalty to Queen Elizabeth I. England is facing its gravest threat yet. The Spanish have declared war, and Elizabeth finds herself attacked by sea – and by Catholic conspiracy from within her own court. Master Goodluck goes undercover, tasked with discovering the identity of this secret assassin, leaving his ward Lucy not knowing if the spy is alive or dead. Meanwhile, Queen Elizabeth is growing old in a court of troublesome young noblemen, while Lucy is struggling to love a man whose duties lie elsewhere. When the final challenge comes, these two women must be ready to face it. But there is one last surprise in store for both of them.

About Victoria…
Victoria Lamb is a novelist with two historical series from Random House set in the Tudor era, one for adults (Bantam) and one for Young Adult readers (Corgi). She also writes poetry and literary fiction as Jane Holland, and adult romance as Elizabeth Moss.

Born in Essex in the mid-sixties, Victoria is the middle daughter of bestselling novelist Charlotte Lamb and the classical biographer Richard Holland. When the family later moved to the peaceful Isle of Man, Victoria was brought up in rural surroundings in a home full of books.

She returned to England for her education as an adult, and married there. While living in Warwickshire, affectionately known as Shakespeare Country, she began writing The Queen’s Secret, a novel set at nearby Kenilworth Castle during an epic visit by Queen Elizabeth I in 1575.

Victoria now lives in Cornwall with her husband, four of her five children, and a highly energetic Irish Red Setter. In her leisure time, she has been known to write poetry and go for long walks across the moors. She writes other kinds of fiction under various names, and as a former Warwick Poet Laureate, her poetry is published under the name Jane Holland.

Website: http://www.victorialambbooks.com/

Twitter: @VictoriaLamb1

Alison Morton is the author of Roma Nova thrillers, INCEPTIO, and PERFIDITAS. Third in series, SUCCESSIO, is out early summer 2014.