Showing posts with label lucy cameron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lucy cameron. Show all posts

Friday, January 26, 2018

The Teacosy Of Inspiration



Neil Broadfoot, Gordon Brown, Douglas Skelton, Mark Leggat

"He dropped his trousers, slowly, shamefully to reveal the tea cosy of inspiration."

Not a sentence one hears often in a lifetime. Unlike, 'here’s that tax bill you’ve been waiting for' or 'Yes I do love the book, it's great apart from the end, the beginning and I think the middle could do with some work as well.'

The former sentence was the demouemout of the show ‘Four Men in Search Of A Plot.’  Or four guys in need of a kick up the bahoukie to my mind.  ( A bahoukie is exactly where you would kick four men who should know better.)

It’s a  scary format, four guys on stage, one laptop, one tea cosy of inspiration and no idea what the audience were going to come up with when asked for a protagonist and a murder victim.  Suggestions are shouted out, for sake of fairness it’s normally the first  heard that is accepted. So   at Bloody Scotland the not so fab four were landed with killing Stuart McBride with a potato peeler, and let’s face it, who hasn’t had that thought cross their mind before.

This time, they had to write a story  about Rabbie Burns being killed with a kite. Thinking back now, they didn’t manage that. They killed a bunch of nuns with a mini exocet missile ( you can tell Mark Leggat is a James Bondy type).  The line about 'And they woke up naked in Venice' got lost in the hysteria somewhere. 

                                      

The audience selects the first poor victi…writer and off wee go. The chosen one takes the laptop and has to wear the tea cosy of inspiration, or perspiration if it's a warm venue,  as he batters out the first part of the story. The others take questions from the audience, or chat amongst themselves if nobody else is listening, which is more likely.

When the enthusiastic clatter of the keyboard stops, the writer reads out what he has written and obviously leaves an impossible cliff hanger that the next writer has to sort out. Like Godzilla appearing in  a play park in Dumfries for no reason at all,  allowing/forcing the next writer to say something like ‘Rabbie realised the drugs were now taking effect’ and so it goes on  and on and on...  to the magnificent (?)  reveal which in this case was the smuggling of a tea cosy in a place a tea cosy was never meant to be smuggled.

I like to think that Four Guys was the warm up act for the main event.
This....

                                 


This was going on at the Theatre Royal in Dumfries and as the name suggests it is a proper theatre so it was a big gig for the Carry on Sleuthing squad. We were presenting the second outing of the much lauded 'Murder at the Knickerage'. It's what I like to call dangerous theatre, the jokes are bad for your health.

                                              
                                               Douglas Skelton- a very talented man.
                                                   Nobody knows what at though!

There are times in my life, like when I’m gluing tassles on to a hairy cushion at 3 am,  endeavouring to create a comedy sporran,  standing in the back garden as the spray glue is toxic to lungs, – at times like this I wonder why I even speak to Douglas Skelton. The times when I find myself on stage massaging the buttocks of a pantomime horse called Trump I wonder why I even speak to him at all. 

                                   
           The best actor on this stage is the dead body. At least he didn't bump into the furniture.

Seriously though,  the gang were all at Dumfries which is in that little pocket in the south of Scotland and I was more than a little scared with Letitia’s first outing in a proper theatre with bank seats. And an audience who had paid good money to see both the shows. 

I do have to say that Trump the pantomine horse was a triumph. He stole the show, probably by being the worst presid...sorry pantomime horse that has ever graced a stage. He tried to pee on my leg at one point. He wouldn't get off the stage- cue lots of jokes about how difficult getting rid of Trump can prove to be.

Oh satire.

The jokes were bad, the audience groaned, we lost our place in the script, we drifted onto another script altogether.... somebody came out on stage when they shouldn’t have and vice versa.

                                     
                                              Letitia and Bunny.....upstaged by Silas Bounce the deceased. 

And this is why.....
Dear Bunny....he's a terrible gossip, he's all ears...
Or related to Prince Charles....


 And there was a stand up fight for the spotlight that resulted in one fractured feather duster and one bruised ego. It looked a chaotic mess  that had been flung together with no rehearsal at all. But it was all meticulously planned and rehearsed down to the last, finest detail, believe that if you will ( I am a fiction writer). 

Seriously there is nothing in the world that warms your innerds like making people laugh and I can understand why people torture themselves to do it.
                                    

 Comedy can be dangerous though it can have a long lasting effect. On the night of this performance, my 82 year old aunt was involved in an incident with some very bad people. However even shocked and stunned, she memorised the number plate of the getaway car. The police are now on their trail. 
When I was told,  instead of asking 'do they have anybody in custody yet?'
The repetition of the script somehow took hold of my brain and I said 'Do they have anybody  in custardy yet? 

                               
Oh yes it’s a dangerous business. This is some dangerous DNA experiment in twinning from Grantown On Spey.


                                 

Next month, Carry On Sleuthing is back fundraising for victims of abuse for the Break The Silence charity.

There is a rumour that Carry on Sleuthing is doing some big gigs next year. Alan was musing if Americans would understand it?  Would they sit mouth agape, bemused beyond comprehension and probably thinking that if this is the way the Brits behave maybe the EU, given the choice, would have voted to get rid of them.  Have Americans ever witnessed the wonder of Binky Huckaback and my personal favourite, Dame Celia Molestrangler........ I bet you go and google them right now!
    
                                             
                                                      Gasp In Amazement!  We got off the stage alive!



Applause, applause

Dame Caro Ramsay, Theatrical lovey,  26 01 2018






Sunday, March 13, 2016

Noir At The Bar: Carlisle - Noir At The Bar Comes to the UK

Zoë Sharp

Last week I had the pleasure of being invited to the first Noir At The Bar event held in England. It wasn’t the first one in the UK – that honour was nabbed by Glasgow in June last year.


The inaugural English event took place in Carlisle, at the quirky Moo Bar on Devonshire Street, which is a real-ale-drinker’s dream location. The organisers were three local crime authors – Matt Hilton, Graham Smith and Mike Craven, collectively known as Crime Ink-Corporated.

l to r Matt Hilton, Graham Smith, Mike Craven
When Matt first emailed me about taking part I said yes right away, and only then started to think about what I was actually going to read out. We were each allowed between five and seven minutes, although I’ve always found short and sweet tends to go down better than going on again, on again, on again.

In the end I plumped for part of my Charlie Fox short story ‘Kill Me Again Slowly’, which I wrote for the Bouchercon 2015 anthology, MURDER UNDER THE OAKS. This story had enough of a bizarre setup to be (I hope) both intriguing and entertaining. Seemed to go down well on the night, anyway.

Of course, while the idea of N@tB may be a new one in the UK, such events have been going on in the States since 2008. Crime reviewer, critic and blogger, Peter Rozovsky of Detectives Beyond Borders came up with the original idea, which was held at a bar tended by a friend in Philadelphia, where the décor happened to be all black.

Peter Rozovsky (right) with Ali Karim of Shots eZine
(pic by Ali Karim)
The format for those first evenings was for a single author to read and take questions, but since then – and with more authors wanting to take part – there can be quite a number, reading out short extracts either from a current work or, in some cases, from something experimental that might or might not otherwise see the light of … night.

great pic for N@tB, created by illustrator Brent Schoonover
Dozens of N@tB evenings have now sprung up from New York to LA and all points in between. And then last year two Brit authors decided to bring it over here. The organisers for the Glasgow event were Jay Stringer and Russel D McLean. Jay made it down to Carlisle for last week’s event, and very entertaining he is, too.

As were the other writers on the bill, including Lucy Cameron, Paul Finch, James Hilton, Tess Makovesky, David Mark, Jay Stringer, Neil White and myself. A wildcard name was pulled from a hat on the night – Linda Wright. Some read parts of short stories, work-in-progress novels, current novels and even a great poem. And all with that dark kind of humour that marks out this particular corner of the genre.

thanks to Noir at the Bar for the pic
The place was packed, and by the end of the evening Graham was able to announced that the Moo Bar had happily invited N@tB back again for a return match. I hope I’m lucky enough to be there for it.

l to r Matt Hilton, Lucy Cameron, Graham Smith, Tess Makovesky, Paul Finch, Linda Wright, Neil White, David Mark, Jay Stringer, ZS, Jim Hilton (Matt's brother) and Mike Craven
This week’s Word of the Week comes courtesy of Lucy Cameron’s blog, and is pleonasm, meaning the use of more words or parts of words than are strictly necessary for clear expression. It comes from the Greek pleonasmos (pleon) meaning more or too much. One common example is ‘safe haven’, as if it wasn’t safe it wouldn’t be a haven, so ‘safe’ can be left out. However, sometimes pleonasm is employed for additional emphasis, in case certain words are lost during communication.

Friday, March 27, 2015

Crime and Publishment And the Skinny Pigs

                            


I'd like you to meet Graham Smith.  He's the Crime writer who runs the Crime and Publishment weekend that I did some work for recently, but more about that later. Graham is a very busy man, one of those chaps that always has a pen stuck behind his ear and a thousand things going on on his mind, all in the right order. I think he began life as a builder so this could well be true but I  think all writers should be caught up in the imaginative affray and not that well behaved really.  You know, vast of mind and rampant creative processes  which leads to terrible handwriting among other traits of marvelous.
However to his credit, he does have
                       a) terrible handwriting
                       b) the ability to tell a good story, short and sharp.
                       c) a very quick sense of humour
                       d) a pen behind his ear that I borrowed on many occasions ( I can never find mine!)

                                            
                                                  Graham behind the bar


The Crime And Publishment folk are a very friendly on-line bunch who seem to meet up every now and again to eat, drink and drink some more. As a bit of an outsider I was struck by the support and generosity they have for each other's writing, and was wondering if that was because many of them live in places ( I'm refusing to type the words 'the middle of no where'!)  that are more rural, a little off the beaten track and lack the  physical local writers group that we enjoy in the mid belt. 

I bet they all live in perfectly normal places  but I'm not letting that spoil the blog..

Here's what Graham had to say....

Who and what is Crime and Publishment?
Crime & Publishment is a weekend of crime writing masterclasses. It is held at the hotel I manage on the outskirts of Gretna Green.

                                                   
                                                   The marvelous reviewer Chris.
                                           A well known face from Harrogate and Bristol

What does that location lend to the crime writing.... it struck me how close the motorway was--- for quick get away if I had murdered Chris Simmonds and stuck him in your wheely bin?
Being close to the motorway is great for quick getaways and the fact Gretna Green is a tourist town means there is a constant stream of visitors to the area and therefore lots of stories to be overheard.

Do you meet online? How often do you meet in person?
We have a group on the book of faces (Facebook) It’s a secret group complete with passwords, funny handshakes and a rather bizarre initiation ceremony involving The Da Vinci Code, self-flagellation and the words “I can write better than this”. To supplement this online activity we meet up for a meal and a natter about all things relevant to crime fiction every couple of months or so.
                                                         
Why was it set up and whose idea was it?
I founded Crime & Publishment along with Inga McVicar as a way to help aspiring writers achieve their aim of securing a publishing contract.
                                                               
Can anybody join?
We are open to all writers who are looking to learn more about their craft and improve their writing. We’ve had attendees from all over the country with varied levels of experience and previous successes.
                                              
Many of you seemed very well informed, did C and P stem from any review website?
Thank you for the compliment. Crime and Publishment was only made possible by the contacts I’ve established as a reviewer for Crimesquad.com. Not only have I been able to attract talented authors as speakers, I’ve been lucky enough have attendees who know a certain amount of writing crime fiction.

And what is WCW?
WCW is the shortened from of Word Count Wednesday. This is a regular feature (weekly believe it or not) on our Facebook group. The idea is that you post the number of new words written towards a crime fiction story. It acts as a prompt for everyone and engenders a collective support system. Depending upon everyone’s commitments away from writing and where they are in their novel, the non-existent trophy can pass back and forth between any member.

How long has the C and P weekend been going?
2015 was our third year and I am already starting to plan for 2016.
                                              
      This is Mike Craven, a man who wears Spiderman socks... do not ask me how I know this....


Biggest success, apart from Ms Ramsay and Mr Malone's Jaws oscar winning performance?
I didn’t witness that performance myself, therefore under the mygaff / myrules jurisdiction it cannot be included. In all seriousness, the fact Mike Craven, Lucy Cameron and myself have all earned publishing contracts because of C&P is undoubtedly the greatest success. I never dared to imagine that after running the event twice I would have such a batting average.
                                                 
        Lucy Cameron's pie chart to the great novel.
 I think the orange bit might stand for googling oneself!

Biggest Disaster?
There hasn’t been a disaster as such, but when David Thomas contacted me a week before the event with news of unforeseen family circumstance. I did see rather a large wave approaching my little boat. I was very fortunate that Neil White was able to step in and rescue me.

How do you split writing time with what must be a very consuming job?
It’s a struggle at times but when a story is burning inside me I have to get it out. My shifts at work get me three weekdays a fortnight when my son is at school and I tend to try and get at least an hour’s writing done after 9.00pm every night.

What book are you on now and how is it going?
I’m working on my own edits of a novel provisionally titled “The Watcher” and I’m really enjoying the discovery of all the stupid mistakes I’ve made. I hate the whole editing process but I know how much of a difference it can make. The way this one is going I may have to invest in a larger swear box.
                                        
                                                         And that is a Skinny Pig!


Tell us about the naked guinea pigs....
My wife breeds a rare kind of hairless guinea pig known as “skinny pigs”. I have as little to do with them as possible because of a firm belief they are nothing more than tail-less rats. However, I have writing as my hobby and she has her skinny pigs. With the bald wee buggers selling at over £100 apiece I’m gonna have to shift a lot of books to compete with her financially.

Caro Ramsay 27/03/2015