I’m Nina Milton, and this blog is all about getting out the laptop or the pen and pad to get writing. My blogposts are focused on advice and suggestions and news for writers, but also on a love reading with plenty of reviews, and a look at my pagan life, plus arts and culture. Get all my posts as they appear by becoming a subscriber. Click below right...

Sunday 23 September 2012

Kelly Smith, Quote of the Month SEPTEMBER


...A definitive moment. A reader downloading a book in real time, while the author talked about it, tells us something about what the trade is calling the 'digital revolution' in publishing...the ebook is now part of the landscape of normal, (but) this doesn't imply the death of the physical book, as the Jeremiahs suggest...  Kelly Smith, Mslexia 2011.
photo of Kindle from
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/articles/385563/20120918/ebook-sales-up-uk-2012-physical-independent.htm
I first decided to throw my instinctive, Luddite dislike of e-books to one side when my children bought Jim and me a Kindle for Christmas. I found it surprisingly pleasant to use, and although I would still rather hold a book in my hands, there are sufficient reasons (cost of downloads, size of print, lightweight packing) to use the Kindle quite a lot. So I was excited when the publisher of my most recent children's book Tough Luck, told me that they are hoping to get the e-version of the book out and into Kindle before Christmas.
It was recently reported in The Telegraph that sales of children’s e-books nearly tripled over the first six months of 2012 ... 2.6 million  were sold over the first half of this year, compared to 1 million the previous year. They've taken off in an “explosive” way partly because kids are techofiles and partly because advances in technology have meant that e-books with  pictures are easier and cheaper to produce.
This does suggest that the next generation will grow up reading more from Kindle screens than from real books, and I can't pretend that doesn't raise a shudder in me, but then I stopped shuddering and got to thinking. Kids spend a lot of time - an inordinate amount of time - at their computer screens now. I would rather they were holding a Kindle in their hands than an Xbox and I would rather they were reading good fiction (my fiction, actually!) than mindlessly surfing the net. And for parents, once they've costed out the initial price of the e-reader, downloading children's stories is going to be cheaper for them than buying from Waterstones. So, if a lightweight Kindle gets kids reading, and the cost of the books gets parents buying, then I'm absolutely all for it. Kindles have one further  advantage over paper books for kids, and that is the facility to 'search and find' within the text; and to quickly move to 'dictionary' and 'thesaurus'. Kids aren't known to put their books down and flip through a heavy tome to find a word they don't know or reference something mildly interesting, but when this turns electronic, it's fun. 
However, the odd thing is that there's not bad news for the paper book. The Times recently reported that while e-book sales are up, it seems as if the market for physical books has not been affected, as of yet. Kate Double, from Mr B's Emporium of Reading Delights, an independent bookstore in Bath, was positive about the stores' sales - "E-book sales haven't affected our business. Our customers do own e-readers, but while they purchase e-books, they still see value in physical books. It's not uncommon to have customers come in and request books that they already have on their Kindle, because they would like a copy to put on their bookshelf." I think that might especially be true of picture books and illustrated story books for children; it's wonderful to turn the pages. 
Caxton need not roll in his grave just yet, methinks.

Monday 17 September 2012

TOUGH LUCK HAS GREAT LUCK!


I’m delighted to announce that my next children’s novel for 9+ readers will be published in time for Christmas 2012. 

TOUGH LUCK is the story of two 13 year olds living in Bristol, Brandon and Helen, who are involved in a quest to find out about  a nine year-old Jamaican slave, Jake Silver, sold in Bristol as a Georgian pageboy in the 18th Century. 
But right now, Brandon thinks he’s the unluckiest thing on legs. How could anyone get into deep tough luck trouble at school because a conker fell on their head?  Only Brandon, of course!

Nina
At the ice rink with Helen, a racist gang threatens them. Brandon insists Helen goes home, telling her they’ve been targeted because he is black and she is white, but he knows this isn’t the real reason. It’s his tough luck. 
He gets trapped in the ancient lanes in the centre of Bristol – the gang race behind him, their footsteps ringing on the cobblestones. They catch him and kick him to the ground. Helen and her father arrive in the nick of time.
When Brandon’s mates start a fire on waste ground, leaving Brandon to deal with it, suddenly he’s in trouble with the law…and his parents...and Helen. He’s terrified of reporting his attack, but Helen has an ancient family wedding photo and together they begin a quest to find Jake Silver. They discover that he escaped in a bid to gain his freedom, and unearth a startling link between Jake and the present day – Helen is his great-great-great-great granddaughter.
My previous book for confident readers

Central to the story is an examination of the continuing problems of race hate and racial attacks. This is linked and compared to the theme of mingled populations, especially how people of differing colours often settle, marry and fade into the dominant population. 
At the start of the story, Helen has no idea she has an Afro-Caribbean ancestor, and Brandon, who is Afro-Caribbean, is trying to ignore the prejudice he’s experiencing. The theme of luck, chance and Synchronicity – those strange coincidences that make us stop and wonder about the way life takes us – are also explored. Brandon’s tough luck often has fortunate consequences, although he doesn’t always see things that way!
my book for younger readers


TOUGH LUCK will be published by Thornberry Publishing 
an innovative independent publisher in December 2012 
and will be available on Kindle for all those techno-kids.
(http://www.thornberrypublishing.com