I’ve been listening to the Sonnets this morning, while following along with the text, and finding inspiration in Shakespeare’s metaphor for a section of the Raven King’s story in Magic & Malice.
Magic & Malice
First take on a summary of Magic & Malice
When the Raven King hurls a precious Moonstone into the sea surrounding his country, he sets off a chain of events in a different world, a thousand years later. In 1842, Jasper Silverthorne gives his youngest daughter a Moonstone he found on his travels, unaware there is magic in the Moonstone’s incandescent light.

Ode to my story
The true identity of The Invisible Man

Channelling J.K. Rowling
Twelve-step programme to channel the success of J.K. Rowling
1 Believe in your ability to tell a story.
2 Believe in the story that comes to you (and stays).
3 Be inspired by your characters’ history and internal logic.
4. Throw caution to the wind: don’t censor yourself until the story requires it.
5. Plan meticulously, eliminate all loopholes.
6. Get the entire plot from the history–past, present and future–of your main character(s).
7. Never cheat the reader.
8. Know how you write, leave everyone else’s process at the door.
9. Write what you would love to read, now, and at the age of the reader for whom the story is written.
10. Write for your first reader: you.
11. Tell the truth without preaching it.
12. Trust the agenda of the creative process. Abandon your own.
Believe it or not, these twelve points are the exact criteria J.K.Rowling followed to write Harry Potter.
BONUS
Check out Sue Grafton’s essay on keeping a journal.
Read Meg Rosoff’s blog for levity in a world gone mad.
