Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Woking Writers’ Week – Special Feature

As we know, Woking is a town of huge historical interest. Two authors in particular have recorded much of its heritage with their own titles. Check out these excellent books by Alan Crosby and Marion Field.

Read on to find out more...




A History of Woking by Alan Crosby


Woking, though the largest town in Surrey, is known to many only as a railway junction and might seem to be the archetype of suburban dormitories with no past or any interest. However, this first comprehensive account of its origins and growth shows that Woking, with its associated villages of Byfleet, Horsell and Pyrford, can trace its varied history back over fourteen centuries. Inevitably, the book concentrates on the period since 1800, during which the present town has evolved. The landscape and character of the area at the end of the 18th century are described as a prelude to a fascinating account of the unique new town of the 1870s and its bizarre origin as the speculation of a cemetery company. The author paints a vivid and detailed picture of the conditions that prevailed, often primitive and even squalid, during the vigorous expansion of the late 19th century. A series of institutions, prominent in the development of Woking included Britain's largest cemetery and oldest crematorium, the first mosque in Western Europe and an abortive university. All are given full attention in the author's compelling narrative which carries the history up to the present day.

 

Buy the book from Amazon HERE




 

Secret Woking by Marion Field


Woking is a rather strange place. The Saxon village of ‘Old Woking’ appears in the Domesday Book but ‘new’ Woking is a nineteenth-century town. Over the years, the town has continually reinvented itself. Demolished buildings have been rebuilt and new roads streak across the countryside. However, the names of roads are often a reminder of Woking’s past inhabitants. Woking has become a popular place to work, and nowadays many people travel from London to work while others reverse the journey to work in the city. Secret Woking contains a collection of lesser-known facts about the town and ‘secrets’ that will be brought into the open – from owing its existence to a cemetery, something few towns can claim, to a Nazi spy, gruesome murders, royal visitors, a horse’s cremation, and a look at a number of colourful eccentrics. Join Marion Field as she delves into all of these stories and others, and learn more about Woking’s hidden past.
 

* Marion has written a number of other books about Woking and its rich history, all of which can be found on Amazon and elsewhere on the internet.

 

Buy the book from Amazon HERE

 


Note: The renowned local historian, Iain Wakeford has written a number of booklets and guides about Woking and its surrounding villages across the years. Other books such as his early work, Bygone Woking appear to be currently out of print. You can find out more about Iain's writing and his many informative booklet publications from his website at: https://wokinghistory.org/

 

*     *     *



Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Woking Writers’ Week - Special Feature

It’s a dog’s life ~ Check out the 'Bertie and Winnie' book series… as two authors, who have never physically met, come up with this enchanting creation. Dylan H. Beckett represents the Woking half of the duo.

Read on to find out more...



 About the books…
 

One unlikely friendship, many transatlantic letters, and just as many adventures later, Bertie and Winnie return in this latest book with nothing to lose and the world to see!

In the latest book in the series, 'The Journeys of Bertie and Winnie', adventure abounds as Bertie and Winnie, their long-lost romance rekindled, embark on a grand tour of Europe—but little goes quite as planned. And change is afoot in America, prompting a restless Winnie and her friend Lottie to escape to the UK on holiday. Both pairs make new friends and stumble into some tricky situations, whilst solving a historic mystery and discovering a hidden past.

Bertie & Winnie reminds us that detours may be just as meaningful as destinations, and that love and friendship will weather all storms along the way.

"There are snippets of things related to Woking, given I’ve lived here a long time," writes co-author, Dylan. "A reference to St John’s albeit in London (book 1), where there is a real park named that. Many of the places in MA are real too, the whisper bench on the coast, for example, these references are generally in all books. We had great fun researching the real places and adding them to the books. There are numerous references, which have been annotated and we liked to add in little hints to things that happened at later dates. The books are set in 1978-79 and the letters show more specific dates. For example, Bertie was watching TV in his flat in Dolphin Square, London and up popped a funny little character called Morph, I added a line that Bertie said that Morph could do with a friend to banter with, Chas, who hadn't appeared on the show yet, or the incident with the VW badge in Germany when one fell off Bertie's van when he was searching for the filler cap. He ended up putting a chain on it and giving it to a young pup who wore it around his neck, in reference to the Beastie Boys phenomena."


More about the authors… 

Britt L. Gourley hails from Swampscott, MA, in the USA and Dylan H. Beckett is from Woking, England. Both authors write using pseudonyms. Britt has a Master’s degree in English Literature and Dylan is a designer. They met online during the first UK lockdown of 2020 and have collaborated on three books in the Bertie & Winnie series. Their work has helped sustain them through the challenges of the global pandemic and by having a common aim of publishing a book they got to know each other better. Their hope is that the stories will give their readers something to smile about.


All titles are available from Lulu.com HERE





 A brief interview with Dylan…

 

When did you start writing your new book?

December 2020


What was the inspiration behind the book?

We were exchanging snippets of family lore and sharing stories of our own and other people’s pets when we hit upon the notion of transatlantic tales incorporating these ideas. The Journeys of Bertie & Winnie is the third book in the series that was thus inspired.


Can you describe your route to publication from concept to completed novel?

Lots of talking via What’s App, lots of brainstorming, and an abundance of positivity, along with plenty of multicoloured text in various Google docs as we added, suggested, commented, and edited.


What ideas do you have for any future books?

We are already working on a fourth book, which is going to contain a number of short stories, with some of the familiar characters from the Bertie & Winnie series making cameo appearances. It’s full of humour and hijinks.


Which publishing services (if any) would you recommend?

Lulu, self-publishing. There was a learning curve in getting the book artwork and content in the correct format and some teething problems with the system, but overall, it is a useful free service to use. 


*   *   *

 


Submit Your Book

If you would like your book showcased - See the Submit Your Book page for full details. 

Monday, May 31, 2021

Woking Writers’ Week – Special Feature

Thirty-three years ago, in May 1988, Woking celebrated 150 years of the railway coming to the town with a weekend of festivities set in the down yard sidings at Woking’s railway station.

Two former train drivers who were based at Woking’s Mixed Traction Depot in the 1980s, Geoff Burch from Worplesdon and Jim Lester from Horsell, have since become respected authors in their own right, both recollecting their prolific railway careers.

Read on to find out more...


 

Geoff Burch – Ramblings of a Railwayman 

A superbly self-written and published 236-page book lavishly illustrated with mainly previously unseen colour photographs accompanied by informative and often amusing stories from the authors former railway colleagues from Guildford, Eastleigh, Salisbury and Weymouth engine sheds. There are some rare photographs from driver Jim Wattleworth"s collection on his sojourn at St Johns Road shed in Ryde, Isle of Wight during the sunset of steam on the island and if you are a fan of Southern steam, Geoff Burch"s books are an essential read, as are his regular railway talks in the Surrey area. Altogether a remarkable achievement from Geoff who left school aged 15 to become a cleaner, fireman, driver then instructor with a long and varied career on the railway. – Amazon Review by Ben Darnton

Buy from Amazon HERE



Geoff Burch at a book signing event


Other books by Geoff are Further
Ramblings of a Railwayman and Rambling Railwayman’s Recollections. All books are rated as five-star reads.


 


 Jim Lester – Southern Region Engineman

Jim Lester started his career as a cleaner at Nine Elms in 1957, later being based at Woking before moving on to Eurostar in the 1990s. As would be expected he passed through the ranks, becoming fireman, and then passed fireman by the very end of the steam age. Ordinarily this would be both a story and a path trod by countless others before, but Jim s tale is exceptional as he was chosen to be the fireman on perhaps the most famous of all steam workings out of Waterloo in the closing days of steam, that of the funeral train for Sir Winston Churchill. A born raconteur, he ensures that this is no ordinary book of reminiscences. Instead it is the story of the last years of steam from someone who was 'inside the fence', not simply viewing it from the end of the platform. We are treated to the intimate details of the men he worked with and the many locomotives he worked on. The routes, the trains and the experiences are all revealed providing a complete portrait of life on the railway. Supplemented by many unpublished illustrations taken from the footplate and of the men who formed the Nine Elms and Feltham workforce, here is the true story of a Southern Region Engineman.

Buy from Amazon HERE

 

Jim Lester - Pic: Courtesy Yorkshire Post


 *     *     *



Sunday, May 30, 2021

Woking Writers' Week : 30 May - 5 June 2021

Welcome to the very first Woking Writer’s Week, hosted by Writers at the Gate. Woking is a Surrey town famous for producing some great talent and attracting some notorious residents from the world of art, literature and music. Everyone knows about The Jam and H.G. Wells et al, but what about our current writers, many of whom have enjoyed various levels of success, but could do with a bit more exposure?



One of Sean Henry’s Woking statues gets a friendly make-over for Writers' Week


Woking Writer’s Week is all about showcasing the work of our local authors. Just click on the links below to find out more... you won’t be disappointed! 


Support Your Local Authors



Sunny Angel 
author of 'Wings'



Lelita Baldock author of 'Widow's Lace'



AlanDale author of 'Theta Double Dot'



Mal Foster 
author of  'Jude & Bliss'


Jacquelynn Luben 
author of 'Lost Innocents'



Sue Mackender 
author of  'Girl on the Hill'



Harriet Steel 
author of 'High Wire in Nuala'



*     *     *


WOKING'S SLIGHTLY MORE FAMOUS AUTHORS



H.G.Wells


Woking is a town already famous for its writing inhabitants, not least of all, one Herbert George Wells (1866-1946) who of course is famous for his classic novels The War of the Worlds and The Time Machine.

 

Wells in Woking




Dame Hilary Mantel MBE 


Dame Hilary Mantel MBE, the twice Man Booker Prize winner is said to have penned much of her famous novel, Wolf Hall, whilst residing in her penthouse suite at the former Brookwood Asylum/Hospital in Knaphill.

 

Check out Woking’s The Light Box, to find out much more about the town's many other famous authors including Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of Henry V11 and owner of Woking Palace and amongst others, Alfred Bestall, famous for the Rupert the Bear comic books who is buried at Brookwood Cemetery.


Woking Writers Circle

 

Woking also has a vibrant writing circle, Alan Dale (pictured above) is an active member. You can find out more about the group at https://wokingwriters.wordpress.com or by email from Peter Morley at morleypg@gmail.com


Note: Writers at the Gate is not affiliated with the above writers' group.




*     *     *


Tuesday, May 25, 2021

By Invitation : Marilyn Messik and her novel, 'Witch Dust'

 

I’m delighted to welcome Marilyn Messik and her brilliant paranormal thriller ‘Witch Dust’ to Writers at the Gate.

Read on to find out more...


 

About the book…

‘When your Father spends most nights cutting your Mother in half, life’s not exactly  run of the mill.’

As the daughter of Adam Adamovitch and the lovely Ophelia, purveyors of illusion, delusion, sparkling eyes, flashing teeth, little-left-to-the-imagination costumes, and death-defying stunts, Sandra’s accustomed to the unusual. But when Adam’s eye lights on yet another conquest, it’s a chorus girl too far for Ophelia, and Sandra’s coerced into restoring her distraught mother to a family nobody knew existed. It’s a situation that even for her - and she’s had years of bizarre – is unnerving, but one thing’s clear, the sooner she puts distance between herself, the newfound nearest and dearest, their alarming tendencies and failing hotel business, the happier she’ll be!

There are just a few issues she thinks she should sort first  - a possessed chef, hanged housemaid, fly-on-the-wall documentary. Then there’s a doppelgänger, crazed shape-shifter, and an age-old grudge. Things slide swiftly from bad to farce, then turn a whole lot darker. One minute Sandra’s trying to shore up the family business, the next trying to keep them all alive - honestly, you couldn’t make it up!

 

·         Publisher : Matador (27 Jun. 2017)

·         Genre : Paranormal Thriller

·         Language : English

·         Paperback : 288 pages

·         ISBN-10 : 1788033728

·         ISBN-13 : 978-1788033725

·         Dimensions : 23.3 x 2.4 x 32.2 cm

 

 'Witch Dust' is available from Amazon HERE




About the author…
 

Marilyn Messik is a: Wife, Mother, Grandmother, Book Lover, Housework Hater.

Professional: Author of Paranormal Thrillers… Default Setting: Mild hysteria. 

A feature and fiction writer for various national magazines, and a regular columnist in Mother & Baby. Marilyn’s first business was setting up teams to sell children’s party goods, she subsequently opened two shops, adding books and educational toys to the mix. 

When she sold the shops, she moved into the travel market, creating tailor-made, of-the-beaten-track trips to America. Based on the success of her U.S. Welcome booking & planning service, she set up a Publishing Company and created U.S. Welcome, Selected Hotels & Inns, a full-colour annual publication. When several years later she sold the business to an FTSE 100 company, she launched her copywriting consultancy.

As well as writing for businesses, Marilyn has continued writing fiction, features and editorials, she’s blogged for The Telegraph Online, created and published the Vintage Ladies Collection, written four business books, and four paranormal novels - taking care not to mix the two.

Follow Marilyn on Twitter


Brief Interview…
 

When did you start writing your new book? 

'Witch Dust' was started around 2016 and is the first of the 'Witch' series.
 
 

What was the inspiration behind the book?

Watching various brilliant magicians and illusionists through the years and concluding the simplest and most logical explanation was ‘real magic.’ 

Can you describe your route to publication from concept to completed novel?

When I first started a few years ago writing full-length fiction as opposed to short stories, I submitted to a few agents and was delighted to get a positive response from three of them. However, one wanted me to change my story one way, the second wanted to change it in another direction, and the third had yet another set of ideas. Weighing up one against the others gave me a dreadful headache, a whole heap of indecision as to which one might be right, and the conviction I was probably  too obstinate to listen to any of them. 

What ideas do you have for any future books?

Well, Book 2 of the Witch Series will be started as soon as I’ve finished Book 4 of my  Strange Series. When I first started writing it was very much seat of the pants but now I tend to at least have a rough idea of where I’m going when I start. Naturally, I suffer from all the usual writer’s distractions and procrastinations – another cup of coffee, maybe a chocolate biscuit? If I put a quick wash on now I won’t have to do it later, and hey there’s a bird sitting on the fence. 

Which publishing services would you recommend?

Definitely print on demand which at the moment I do with Amazon. It makes so much more sense than having a print run which is either too small, meaning you have to have more done - or too large in which case you have excess books lying around reproachfully. 


*   *   *



Submit Your Book

If you would like your book showcased - See the Submit Your Book page for full details. 


 

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

By Invitation: Carol Hedges and her novel, 'Fame & Fortune'

I’m delighted to welcome the highly successful author, Carol Hedges and her superb Victorian detective novel, ‘Fame & Fortune’ to Writers at the Gate.  

Read on to find out more…




 About the book… 

London, 1867. When the body of a man is discovered hanging from a Thames bridge, Detectives Greig and Cully, two of Scotland Yard's finest crime-solvers, are called in to investigate the mysterious circumstances of his death. Their inquiry will lead them into a world of extortion, robbery and human trafficking, and at its centre, the Black brothers, Munro and Herbert, London's most evil and ruthless individuals, who will stop at nothing to keep their position at the top of London's criminal underworld.

The eighth outing for the Victorian Detectives entices the reader once more along the shadowy gas-lit streets of a city peopled with endearing and eccentric characters, where vice and virtue rub shoulders, and rich and poor find themselves unexpectedly thrust into the limelight. 

·         Publisher : Independently published (21 Aug. 2020)

·         Language : English

·         Genre : Historical Fiction

·         Paperback : 242 pages

·         ISBN-13 : 979-8676496197

·         Dimensions : 15.24 x 1.4 x 22.86 cm

 

'Fame & Fortune' is available from Amazon HERE 

 


 About the author…

Carol Hedges is the successful UK writer of 18 books for Teenagers/Young Adults and Adults. Her writing has received much critical acclaim, and her novel Jigsaw was long-listed for the Carnegie Medal.

Her YA ebook Jigsaw Pieces, which deals unflinchingly with many of the problems that beset today's teens, is available on Amazon as is her Dystopic Fantasy The Last Virus

Carol is also the writer of 'The Victorian Detectives' - a series of novels set in 1860s London and featuring Detective Inspector Leo Stride and his side-kick Detective Sergeant Jack Cully.
 

All eight books in the series and her other novels can be found on Amazon HERE

Carol's Blogsite

Carol on Twitter @caroljhedges



Brief Interview… 

When did you start writing your new book?  

As I write a series, I aim to produce a book a year, published in book/Ebook formats, and uploaded in August.  The ninth book is currently out for editing. I generally start panicking about it in the first quarter of the following year, having spent the previous months publicising the new one, resting and telling myself I probably won't manage to produce another one. By June, I am writing, with the previous caveats still in place. I try to get the first draft finished by Christmas, mainly to convince myself that I am able to write a whole novel. It is HARD work, mainly mentally! Imposter syndrome lurks around every corner. Plus, I get lured into doing *research* on the internet and can spend days down various rabbit holes that are not germane to the plot, but very interesting. 

The Victorian Detectives came from my love of Victorian literature (especially Dickens and Wilkie Collins). I studied the period extensively at university.  By the time I moved genres, I'd given up writing YA - the market was saturated and many publishers were focused on 'celebs' who needed little publicity to sell lots of copies. Meanwhile, I noticed that the mid-Victorian period wasn't covered - Conan Doyle and Ripper-lit focused on the late 1870s; Dickens etc on the 1830s. Thus the idea of setting a book (it was only meant to be one book originally) in 1860 London seemed commercially as well as historically achievable.
 

Can you describe your route to publication from concept to completed novel 

So, I write the first draft, which takes about 6 - 8 months. Then I leave it for a couple of weeks, before re-reading and drafting. Then it goes to my first editor, who does amazing plot charts to make sure there are no holes (there frequently are). After working on his changes, it goes to a second editor for a final check. A re-read and tweak, and then we're into formatting for Amazon. And that's the path.
 

Which publishing services (if any) would you recommend?

I have experienced many forms of publishing. From big mainstream publishers (OUP/Usborne) to small ones (Crooked Cat). I have had an agent, and not had an agent. When I started out, the ONLY way to avoid being ripped off by the publishing industry (because it does, believe me) was to pay for publishing. It was called 'vanity publishing. There was no Amazon when I started out, no Ebooks and no way to self publish professionally. Now, there is. For me, (or Little G Books, as my imprint calls itself) I prefer self-publishing. I like the control, the ability to work with a cover artist, the choice over platforms, and I love fiddling around behind the scenes with keywords and categories.

I emphasise that this is a personal choice, and if you, my fellow writer, want to take a punt at a mainstream or small publisher, or an agent, then go for it. Be prepared for rejection, be prepared to fight your corner, but be happy in your choice. I have made mine. And ALWAYS, remember: you are the writer; you are the creator and you are the master of the words. Good luck!



Submit Your Book

If you would like your book showcased - See the Submit Your Book page for full details.