How To Succeed As A Writer


CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

LET'S START AT THE VERY BEGINNING

WHAT PROBLEMS HAUNT THE BEGINNING WRITER?

IDEAS AND WHERE TO GET THEM

READERS' LETTERS AND FILLERS

ARTICLES - THE LARGEST MARKET OF ALL

SHORT STORIES

NOVELS

NON-FICTION BOOKS

POETRY

PLAYS

SUBMITTING ARTICLES AND SHORT STORIES....


INTRODUCTION

Have you heard that little voice inside of you?  The one
that tells you, year in year out, about the book - your
book, waiting to come out.  For many people, the little
voice will never be heard above a whisper, and a potentially
good and satisfying writing career will fail to ever see
the light of day.  But the little voice will keep on, and
on, and on.

That little voice is the one to listen to.  If you feel the
need to write, you owe it to yourself to come out of your
shell, and write.  If it isn't so much an ambition to write
for the satisfaction of committing words to paper, as a need
to ear n your living from your efforts, then again you will
accomplish nothing by ignoring that encouraging little soul
inside of you.

Inertia is the prime reason for the world being robbed of
another brilliant writer - that and the fear of failure. 
And even though so many of us know about that book we owe it
to the world to create, for the vast majority the dream will
never materialise.  The dreamer, and the reading
population, will be so much the poorer.

Now, I'll let you into a secret.  Until that word
'Introduction' at the top of this page was actually typed, I
spent days - no weeks, anguishing over whether I could
actually come up with enough essential information to fill a
book of the type you now are reading.  In addition I
doubted my ability to write it adequately, for I do not
profess to be one of the more brilliant writers of our
times.  My subsequent research, with batteries recharged
from the mere placing of that word 'Introduction' on the
page confronting me, convinced me that not only had I
sufficient information to fill this particular book, but
rather I had so much as to necessitate my selecting only
those pieces of utmost importance.

To allow you the benefit of my remaining research material,
I will do what most writers do, and draw your attention to
the many highly specialised books on the market, most of
them written by experts in the field concerned.  I must
sadly content myself with imparting sufficient information
to convince you that you most certainly do have a future in
writing, and to point you in the direction for success.

Inertia, as we've already discovered, can often be overcome
by committing that first word to paper, thereby starting the
momentum that will gather speed as you discover more things
to say, and better ways to say them, until your work is
finished and ready for flight.

Fear of failure can be defeated before you have time to say:
'rejection slip'.  Rejection, despite what they say, is not
something the beginning writer must learn to accept.  There
are ways to minimise rejection, even to eliminate it
completely, the secret lying primarily in not setting your
sights too highly as you learn your craft.  Write for the
lower paying, lesser known markets, and you won't face
opposition from writers with many years' experience to their
credit.  Market study is of paramount importance to writers
at all levels of creative ability.  Without it, even those
who regularly earn fat cheques from glossy magazines, will
find their income drying up quicker than a prune basking in
the heat of the desert.

Give every piece your best.  Never hope it is saleable -
know it is.  And know in advance of writing it, to which
market it is aimed.  Analyse that market, and tailor your
work towards fitting its exact requirements.  This is market
study - per haps the most important part of the writing
business.

The market for freelance writers is huge and always ready to
receive talented newcomers, particularly those who keep
constantly up-to-date with editorial trends, whilst
maintaining an ongoing vigil of the changing world around
them.  Ideas are everywhere, waiting for you to bring them
to the eyes of the reader.  You owe it to yourself to read
on!


Quotes

'Don't sit around thinking about what you might like to
write someday - just do it.  Right now'.  Bob Greene,
American writer and novelist.

'There is no such thing as genius; anyone can write if they
approach the craft with an open heart and a dedication to
the task.  Even the greatest writers of our time have to
keep at it and at it, and if they don't, their work will
fall short',  E.
Stacy Creamer, Editor and short story writer.


LET'S START AT THE VERY BEGINNING

The beginning writer's world is fraught with difficulties
and obstacles which he must overcome before he is ever to
make a place for himself within it.  Right?  Sorry - Wrong!

These problems he envisages are entirely of his own making,
and perhaps result from the glamorous image accorded to the
successful writer, as he or she sits autographing piles of
new blockbuster novels in a prestigious city centre
bookshop, or is interviewed on breakfast time T.V. about his
or her wonderful new play, the one that had viewers
telephoning in by their thousands to congratulate its
creator.  Now here I must admit that very few writers will
find themselves at the receiving end of such adulation; an
even greater number would cease writing today, or else adopt
an untraceable pseudonym if the chance were ever so much as
to flicker on the horizon.  Some writers you see, work
happily away, in the privacy of their own homes or
libraries, never wanting fame, certainly never courting it,
but all the while carving for themselves careers offering
personal fulfilment, and often highly attractive financial
rewards.

In the very early days, the writer owes it to himself not to
dedicate his efforts to one form of writing, at the risk of
missing out on the very many other writing categories that
might prove more challenging, more financially rewarding,
and at this stage in his career, a more likely proposition
for his longed-for break into print.

None of us know at the beginning of our writing career just
where our talents lie, unless of course only one category of
writing interests us, in which case it is likely that the
writing is more important than the prospect of financial
reward.


That in itself is an admirable philosophy, but we seek here
to analyse the path to earning a living from writing, and we
must always keep that aim in mind.  To accomplish our goal
we must not tie ourselves down to any category, even one
that offers hours, perhaps years of enjoyment, but with no
financial incentive at our labours' end.

There are very many areas open to the beginning freelance
writer, and so initial fears of being blocked by the
professionals who supposedly hog the scene, should be
silenced here and now.  There simply aren't sufficient
so-called professionals to fulfil the requirements of each
and every category, and remember too, that even
professionals were once beginners.  Were they privileged to
more inside information than you?  Did they work for years,
gathering rejection slips, and not a bean to show for their
efforts?  Was each and every one of them just that little
bit more talented or educated than you are.  I doubt it!
But I bet the vast majority didn't restrict their efforts to
one writing project, and I'm sure too that the really
successful ones in terms of the speed with which they broke
into print, and subsequently maintained the flow of
acceptances, prepared for themselves a strategy that
minimised or alleviated  potential rejections.  Later we'll
look at strategies for success, and I hope too to dispel a
great many myths, like the one about writers papering their
walls with rejection slips, and the common misconception
that a great skill with words is a pre-requisite for a
financially rewarding career.  I hope too to prove to some
extent that writer's block either doesn't truly exist, or
else that it's nothing more than an excuse to take a
well-deserved break in an otherwise punishing schedule.

Let us first of all consider a few of the many avenues open
to the writer, that must surely convince even a hardened
cynic that there's more to the wordsmith's world than short
stories and articles:

Advertising copy, articles, audiovisual scripts, books
(fiction and non-fiction), brochures (for products, holiday
firms and many other services), children's books, columns in
magazines and newspapers, comedy, educational and training
literature, feature articles, articles and columns in local
and county magazines and periodicals, ghost writing,
greetings cards, crosswords and other puzzles, readers'
letters, fillers, handbooks for specific organisations,
newsletters, poetry, press releases, public relations
material, advertisement copy, sales letters, short stories,
biographies, speeches, sports commentating, teaching other
would-be writers, business and self-improvement manuals,
writing up material for correspondence courses, journalism,
trade journals, radio and television, comic strips, travel
writing, plays, and of course:

ETC, ETC, ETC!

Now if you can find sufficient 'professionals' to supply the
amount of material that lot requires, then you're a better
man than I am!  It is worthwhile considering what
constitutes a 'professional'.  Is it someone trained in his
field or fields of writing; perhaps someone who never gets a
rejection slip; how about someone who writes from dawn to
dusk?  I think it's unlikely you'll ever come up with an
adequate description of this creature much revered by the
beginning writer.  I would even venture to suggest that such
a species doesn't in fact exist.  He or she will doubtlessly
have broken into print, and will have discovered where his
talents lie in the writing world.  He or she will almost
certainly not seek to make a living in those areas which
offer no intrinsic satisfaction, since a lack of interest in
a chosen subject almost always reveals itself in one's
manuscripts, robbing them of the freshness and enthusiasm
which are required if you are to present the reader with
something which will lead him to read your work to the very
end, hopefully leave him wanting more.  If the writer is
insufficiently interested in the topic concerned, you can
bet your bottom dollar the reader will find the piece
similarly boring, if that is, you can find an editor to
consider printing the manuscript in the first place.

'Stick to writing what you know' is a very good piece of
advice, even if the world and its uncle drum it into you at
every possible opportunity.  But I would qualify the maxim a
little, and suggest that certainly developing writers should
write about what they know; it adds a touch of sparkle and a
freshness to one's work.  But I would add to it: 'or write
about what you would enjoy getting to know, or could get to
know without those demons, 'Stress' and 'Hassle' raising
their ugly heads'.

The beginning writer with no knowledge of how to get to the
coast without a map and compass, should not of course offer
a personally researched analysis of the wonders of the deep,
or seek to photograph the burial sites of ancient wrecks if
in addition to his problems, the art of swimming has long
since proved beyond his capabilities.

But we all like Christmas, don't we?  And even though we
might know absolutely nothing about the origins of the many
traditions behind this most enjoyable festive occasion, I'm
sure few of us would shrink from putting in the necessary
research, to prepare an article for a glossy magazine,
offering a nice fat fee for the privilege of printing our
findings.  As we start our careers in writing, dealing with
what we already know, lessens the time we need spend
undertaking research and leaves more opportunity for
practising the mechanics of actually putting words to paper.

So now we know that the market for our work is almost
without bounds, and we hopefully realise that in the
beginning we should seek to deal with topics that at least
hold some degree of interest for us, let us now look at a
few of the other problems seemingly confronting the writer
at the threshold of his career.  I say 'seemingly' because I
hope in the course of this manual to dismiss most of those
'problems' as nothing more than teething troubles, with pain
greatly exaggerated simply because of a lack of some
co-ordinated strategy for success.



WHAT PROBLEMS HAUNT THE BEGINNING WRITER?

First and foremost, must be the fear of failing.  None of us
wants to find our efforts subsequently receive nothing but
an avalanche of rejection slips.  So why do editors send
rejection slips?  Is it because your writing is poor?  Not
always! Is it because there is no room for you in their
organisation?  Almost certainly not, unless of course you've
sent your work to a market which doesn't consider
unsolicited freelance contributions, in which case the fault
lies entirely with your market study, or lack of it!  Is it
because no-one wants a beginner?  Well hardly!  We're all
beginners at some stage and if we let the fear of rejection
get too strong a hold on us, then 'beginners' are what we
will stay.  Remember too, though the newcomer views the
professional as an almost God-like being, they are like the
rest of us, mere mortals, and sadly the day will come when
their names will no longer appear in the publications they
seem to have patronised for so long.  Without beginners who
would fill the subsequent gaps?

'But I don't have time to write' - the claim of many an
apprehensive frustrated writer.  'Then get up an hour
earlier, or put the telly off an hour earlier, or use your
dinner break, etc, etc...'  There's no answer to that excuse
is there?  With the exception of certain stages in our lives
when time is at a premium, perhaps when looking after very
young children, or taking examinations, or starting a
business, we almost always can make a little time in which
to fulfil our ambition of a life time - to become a
published writer!

'But I don't know where to start!'  Great!  Then you'll have
no pre-conceived notions as to what lies in store, no
worries to deter you from picking up your pen or plugging in
the typewriter this minute.  So let me just say, writing is
one of the most rewarding of careers, and yes the first few
months will need to be spent reading, studying, learning,
and above all practising for that career.  After that
induction period you'll wonder why on earth you didn't make
the move years ago.

'I'm afraid no-one will like my work'.  By this you mean
you're afraid of the dreaded rejection slip, and you too
have heard those stories of would-be writers papering their
living rooms with the pesky things.  No-one was ever
overjoyed to receive a rejection slip, unless of course
they'd received a better offer for their work elsewhere. 
Anyone who repeatedly finds themselves at the receiving end
of such rejections must be doing something wrong, and that
something can be corrected.  Please don't let me convince
you that your work will never be rejected; almost no-one can
achieve such excellence.  But a strategy can be devised for
minimising the chance that your work will prove unsuitable.

The methods for safeguarding against rejection include:

*   Prepare a list of potential markets for every piece of
work, arranged in your descending order of priority for
publication.  If the first market rejects it, send it to
market number two, and so on.

*   Start your writing career by submitting to the lower
paying and lesser known markets, which the majority of
experienced writers will long since have abandoned.

*   Write about what your know, or what you will enjoy
getting to know.  Make yourself an authority on your chosen
subject, and the relevant markets will be clamouring for
your work.  BUT writing about what you know is, in itself,
insufficient for any sustained degree of success.  You must
also present your facts or opinions in an interesting
manner.

*   Always make your work a little DIFFERENT.  Even a
subject almost worked to death by your contemporaries can
gain new life if presented from a different angle.  Always
look for the less obvious facts on the topic concerned.

*   When you've 'finished' your work, don't send it off
hoping it is of an acceptable standard, know it is.

*   Think and behave like a writer, and a professional one
at that.  Read as much as you can on the subject of writing. 
Read the work of other writers.  Present your work in a
professional manner.  And above all stop thinking of
yourself as an amateur; if you can't convince yourself you
are a professional writer, you'll stand no chance of
convincing an editor.

*   When you get your 'foot in the door' with a particular
magazine or publisher, keep the relationship alive and
submit work at regular intervals, always making reference to
past dealings.

*   Wherever possible undertake solicited work.  For this
you query the editor or publisher in advance of preparing
your article, story or whatever.  You can save yourself a
lot of time and disappointment if you subsequently find he
or she does not as yet require what it is you propose.
Quotes

'Dabble.  I've published everything from op-ed to verse to
colouring books to fantasy to nonfiction.  If you keep doing
the same things forever.........you may miss your area of
greatest talent'.  Mary Lou Carney, Authoress.

'Don't forget that a magazine or book publisher wants to
publish books and stories: that's what he's in business for. 
And if he can discover a new talent, he is happier than
anything else can make him.  They do not reject manuscripts
they can accept'.  John Steinbeck, Pulitzer Prize winner.


IDEAS AND WHERE TO GET THEM

In this section I hope to prove that writer's block does not
truly exist.  I use the term in this instance to cover that
period when you simply don't know what to write about, now
that one piece of work in winging its way to an editor.

In its other definition, writer's block is that affliction
which strikes you mid-manuscript and you are totally unable
to find words and ideas that allow you to continue.  This
type is usually easily resolved, and often means you are
trying too hard, or else your brain is overworked, or
perhaps more simply you have other things on your mind.  For
me this particular type of problem occurs mid-afternoon, the
reason being that I find the early mornings my best time for
writing.  I'm never stuck for words in the hours before the
children arise!

Try writing at different times of the day and you might find
your creative powers greatly rejuvenated.  Otherwise put
your work away until other problems are resolved, or to give
yourself the opportunity to mull the situation over in your
mind without that blank page in the typewriter to torment
you.  Words often come when you're least expecting them, and
most likely in the middle of washing the dishes, when your
hands are too wet to allow you to make a note on that
writing pad you keep constantly at your side.

But on to the other type of block, the one that taunts you
with the possibility that the manuscript you've just posted
might in all probability be your last.  There simply aren't
enough subjects for you to write about are there?  Aren't
there? Well if that is truly the case you could well be in
the wrong profession here, for ideas are all around you, and
an observant writer should actually find himself, not
wondering what to write next, but how to find time to write
about all of the things he has recorded in his pocket book.


An ideas book is an absolute necessity.  I have mine divided
into sections for all of the types of writing I feel
comfortable with.  I don't like writing short stories so I
have no section for the recording of ideas for such.  I do
like writing articles, fillers and business reports, so I
allocate a third of my book to each.  Every time an idea
strikes me as potentially suitable for either a piece in
itself, or else for inclusion in some other piece, I make a
note of it.  If I don't make a note, that idea is usually
lost to me for ever.

I also keep magazine cuttings which I feel can provide me
with information for a similar article.  I always supplement
these cuttings with original research, usually in the
library.

My reasons for additional research are twofold, the first
being that I want my work to be original and to have a
different angle to the work of others, and secondly, I have
very often found the 'facts' stated in some articles to be
totally inaccurate.  Rely on published articles too heavily
and you risk not only being the one whose errors come to the
editor's attention, but also the possibility that he or she
will in future view your work with suspicion, if he or she
feels inclined to view it at all!

To repeat myself, I emphasise that ideas are all around you. 
If you never did another piece of research, I venture to
suggest that research called 'Living' would provide
sufficient data for a lifetime's writing.  Incidentally, a
useful book on how to use life's experiences for your work
is 'How to Write and Sell your Personal Experiences' by Lois
Duncan.  In 21 chapters, the writer shows many, many markets
she has contributed to, in the vast majority of cases
without the need for any research at all.

Already published articles or books on the subject you wish
to cover can be pulled together, added to, and the resulting
article far from being plagiarised, will be your own work. 
Of course, as a writer, you will always use your own words,
or else you are guilty of plagiarism, or copying the work of
others.  Articles pulled together in this way should always
be checked for accuracy of the facts they contain.  I have
lost count of the inaccuracies I've discovered in even the
bigger magazines.  Supplement the articles with additional
research from your own experience, from other books on the
subject, by interviewing appropriate authorities, and the
result is your piece.

It is essential that you begin a cuttings file of newspaper
and article pieces that strike you as having potential for
your own future work.  A story in the local newspaper might
provide the plot for a short story, novel, or play.  A play
on television might set you thinking of a plot for your next
novel.

Story writers might find inspiration from reading the brief
description or plot on the dustjacket of a published novel,
or the write-up a magazine editor gives of something they
have published.  There is no copyright on plots and so you
can use any plot that takes your fancy, as long of course,
as the resulting story is your own.

In 'The Thirty-Six Dramatic Situations', Polti suggests that
all plots fall within set boundaries which he analyses in
great detail.  He makes mention of some of the World's
greatest novels and identifies their places within the
overall structure of his own invaluable research.

Many writers, myself included, obtain great satisfaction and
inspiration from the writing of articles, fillers, and so
on, set around various anniversaries, seasonal celebrations,
important dates, and so on.  So at Christmas, magazines are
particularly interested in articles spiced with anecdotes
and interesting facts concerning this most enjoyable of
celebrations.  When the one hundredth anniversary of some
eminent personality's birth is approaching, that is the time
to get out all of the facts you can about that person, and
write them up into a personality profile.  Your profile can
be offered to several markets, tailored each time to suit
the individual style of the publication concerned.  This
year (1990) marks the 75th anniversary of the death of the
martyr nurse, Edith Cavell.  To date I have sent profiles to
the 'Picture Postcard Monthly' along with copies of
postcards issued to commemorate her bravery, and to the many
local newspapers in and around the Norwich area where she
was brought up and now is buried.  I might not have been the
only person to submit such articles but I sent them in well
in advance of the date of the anniversary; so that might
influence the editors' decisions.

November 5th - yes, Guy Fawkes night!  Halloween!  Mother's
Day! Read magazines at the appropriate time of year and you
will find dozens of articles, stories and fillers, about
nothing else but those particular themes.  The secret of
acceptance is:  Get in first!  Submit your manuscripts six
months in advance of time if possible, and you might be the
first to deliver the goods - always a good way of catching
the editor's attention!

A good dictionary of dates can lead you in the direction of
the oddest and little known happenings of years gone by.  If
the event is still of interest to the reading population,
it's highly probable you could be the only writer to submit
a piece on the subject.  Look for these less well-known
events, try to cover them from a different angle, and send
individually prepared manuscripts to your chosen markets.

You should never be at a loss for ideas.  Even everyday
items and occurrences can be the starting point for a
brilliant piece.  Look around you.  Do you have a car?  Ask
yourself the writer's watchwords:  Why?, When?, Who?, What?,
Where?, How?, What if?....  If you haven't found material
for a mass of articles or stories then I'd be more than
surprised.  When for instance, was the first car built, and
where?  Do you remember the famous Ford saying 'You can have
it in any colour as long as it's black'?  What would Henry
Ford think of some of the bizarre colours we see flying
around on our roads today?  What do the senior citizens of
your village or town feel about the advent of the motor car
- has it changed their lives much - if so, was it for the
better?  For your short story, could a car bring together
your hero and heroine?  Is he a racing driver, or a
mechanic?  Has she crashed her car?  Is she buying one?  Is
he the doctor who brings her back from near death after a
car accident?  Is he the car salesman she starts off
disliking intensely, then finds to be not so overpowering
once his sales patter is dropped?  What 'Do you know facts'
could you come up with to create fillers for all manner of
publications? Have you seen an odd car number plate you
could use as the subject for a reader's letter?  And what
about a photograph of the said vehicle to support your
letter?  Phew!  I'm absolutely exhausted, but not on the
subject of cars - I could go on for a long time yet.

So you see, you never really should be stuck for an idea,
especially if you maintain an interest in the world around
you.

Shall we continue?


Quotes

"I'll never forget this idea" is the devil's whisper.  Catch
everything that matters in your notebook',  Richard Bach,
Writer and novelist.

'Translate the stuff of headlines into fictionalized yarns. 
Any daily small-town newspaper in the U.S. has the stuffings
of at least one smashing bestseller buried in its pages',
Catherine Breslin, Novelist.

'Remember that there is a good deal of real life going on
around you waiting to be transmuted into dramatic narrative,
and that it is better to draw on this source than on what
you hear and see in movies, on television shows, or in
someone else's fiction.  This way you present to the world
what is truly unique in you', Stanley Ellin,  Mystery
writer.


READERS' LETTERS AND FILLERS

Readers' Letters and Fillers are ideal pieces with which to
start your career in writing.  A larger volume of work will
quite naturally find you earning regular, albeit smaller
sums, than might be the case with larger articles and
stories.  You will doubtlessly  also find it easier and
quicker to break into print.  For me though, the biggest
advantage of starting with letters and fillers is the
opportunity to learn the process of stringing words together
in as compact and interesting a fashion as possible, whilst
at the same time not restricting oneself to any particular
writing form.  None of us as starting writers, are fully
aware as to what writing form our abilities are best suited,
and this is something best learnt by the process of trial
and error, which requires time that hopefully the writing of
these smaller pieces will provide for us.  How nice then to
earn a little something whilst we undertake this
all-important decision-making process.

There are some writers who make their entire living from
these small pieces, but I venture to suggest they are either
exceptionally talented, highly prolific letter writers, or
else don't seek to make a fortune for themselves.  Smaller
pieces will usually yield smaller rewards, the most obvious
exceptions being such as the Readers' Digest, with its offer
of Å“150 for some of the many letters and fillers it uses in
each issue.

My own opinion is that letters and fillers should be viewed
as the 'icing on the cake'; a lucrative avenue for the
supplementing of your income from more traditional writing
forms.  Many a professional writer of articles, stories,
even novels, takes an occasional sojourn into this field
when his or her normal sources of income are a little dry,
or during periods when they are unable for whatever reason
to apply themselves to their normal field of work.

Letters and fillers mustn't be considered an easy option
however, since the usual extensive market research must be
undertaken before you even put pen to paper to create your
manuscript.  Look at the very many publications to offer
incentives for readers' letters.  Study them and you will
find the type and standard of letters vary dramatically. 
The length too will differ; some will accept only
intelligent comments on world issues, whilst others have a
penchant for anything that can be said in as few a number of
words as possible, and if that offering were in rhyme, so
much the better.  Some print a fair percentage of pieces
devoted to the things kids' say and to other anecdotal
family happenings.  Most of the magazines for  career women
are likely to run a mile from this type of letter,
preferring instead contributions that speak of career
advancement, opportunities open for women in a once
male-dominated sector of the business world, and many other
issues which the hard-working mother and housewife simply
hasn't the time to consider.

A gardening magazine is almost certain to want nothing to do
with accounts of your last holiday in Barbados, or a photo
of that funny road sign along the way, unless of course the
details have some bearing upon the gardeners' world.

Study the length and style of letters in your target
magazine, and try to offer something similar in format, but
different in content - different that is in the provision of
a variation upon a favourite theme, not something completely
unrelated to the magazine's general slant.

Your letter can be written neatly, or else typed. 
Personally I prefer to handwrite my 'letters to the editor',
primarily since they are eliciting letters from readers,
some of whom will almost certainly also be freelance
writers, but the editor will hardly want to convey the
impression of professional wordsmiths being allowed to
dominate the scene.  Incidentally, it is generally accepted
that you begin your letter 'Dear  Editor' as opposed to
'Dear Miss/Ms/Mr/Mrs, etc'.

Sometimes a letter supported by a photograph will greatly
increase its chances of publication, as is often the case
for those funny things kids say, and those heart-rending
pieces of readers winning through in the face of tremendous
opposition, disability, or hardship.  Sometimes a photograph
in itself is sufficient to win you a place on the letters'
page.  Think of those silly signs we see dotted along the
road and in the countryside, and the odd names some
professional people have.  My local undertaker, for
instance, Mr Death, being the subject of many an unkind
jest, hastily made a minute amendment to his name.  He is
now Mr De'Ath - much more acceptable indeed, but think how
useful would have been a photograph of his funeral parlour,
tools of the trade in the window, and the original 'DEATH'
signposted overhead.

Many magazines prefer to include comments on features in
previous issues.  Of course you will have to read a magazine
regularly to make any useful comment, but this is an avenue
well worth exploring.  From the editors' point of view, this
type of contribution shows that the writer has actually
taken the trouble to read previous issues  (not all letter

writers actually do), and also allows them to ensure at
least some of the rewards go to their dedicated readership.

Fillers are those pieces used to fill spaces in magazines
and other publications when a main article, feature or
story, falls short of a full page.  Instead of an ugly gap,
in goes an amusing anecdote, a readers' recipe, a joke, an
amusing photo, a 'did you know that?' piece, a historical
fact, a cartoon, puzzle or newspaper misprint, and so on.

Fillers are more suitable for typed submission, since they
are an accepted string to the professional writer's bow. 
Your manuscript should follow the normal letter format, with
name and address in the top right-hand corner, and the date
a few spaces below on the left.  A few spaces beneath the
date, type in the name and address of the market to which
you are making your submission.  A few spaces further down
type in what you are offering, eg anecdote, joke, silly
place name etc. and indicate the number of words the actual
piece contains.  Underneath that type in 'by', then below
add your actual, or if you prefer, your pen name.  A few
lines further down, now typing in double spacing, insert the
text.  Always leave wide margins for editorial notes, and
indent the beginning of your paragraphs by five spaces, with
an extra line between paragraphs, in much the same way as
you would type a business letter.  When the text is complete
type a line of dots and the word 'END' thus:


                 ......................END


The following list contains but a few of the many fillers
magazines use.  Again nothing will suffice for a
comprehensive market study of the many markets to use
fillers.  Some for instance use jokes, others don't; some
rely heavily on anecdotes, others prefer cartoons:

Misprints - simply cut out the appropriate piece with
sufficient wording to illustrate its context, paste it onto
a postcard with the source, add your name and address, and
post it.

Amusing sayings - often those from the lips of kids, and in
the case of some magazines those odd things we adults say,
you know the ones: 'we heard what they said but we knew what
they meant'.  Malapropisms are extremely effective here, as
are those where the unfortunate and inappropriate use of a
double meaning word or phrase changes the context of our
statement to one of near ridicule.



Verse  Some magazines rely heavily on light verse, sometimes
in the letters' page, sometimes as fillers in their own
right.  Some prefer humorous verse, some serious, some both. 
Market study again is of paramount importance.

Anecdotes  These are usually amusing incidents in the course
of our everyday lives. Silly things we see, odd names,
people with the oddest of hobbies, ridiculous signs. In the
'ridiculous signs' category, I recently saw a sign at the
edge of a cliff, stating that children are in danger of
falling from such spots. The message itself is one of grave
importance, but at the end of it, the sign stated: 'All
children must be accompanied by adults' - right beside the
stick diagram of a child falling from the cliff!

Stranger than Fiction  A lot of 'did you know?' pieces fall
into this category, and the less well-known the fact,
obviously the better.  For example, did you know that
Catherine Cookson is reputed to have been told by a
professional critic to take up another career - she would
never make a writer?   OUCH!

Household Hints  These are used in almost every woman's
magazine and often they are paid for quite handsomely. If
the hint is one your granny taught you, and you've never
come by it elsewhere, it could be just the one to submit.

Recipes Another favourite in the women's magazines, and the
more unusual the better.  Those catering for particular
groups are useful, for instance vegetarians, and those on
sugar-free or milk-free diets.  Recipes peculiar to certain
parts of the country or areas of the world are extremely
useful, if only due to the fact they are unlikely to be in
the minds of many of your writing colleagues.

Puzzles  Crosswords and other puzzles or brainteasers, are
often included as a means of lightening even the most staid
of publications.  A good book on the subject of, amongst
other things, fillers and crosswords is: 'How to Make Money
out of Writing' by Graham R Stevenson, and published by the
Gower Publishing Group.  This book offers many tips to make
the life of the puzzle writer so much easier.

Jokes  Again, many magazines request jokes from readers. 
Jokes of course can vary from the childish, to bluer than
blue, and obviously the joke you send must be entirely
appropriate to the readership of your target market.  Who
would send a naughty pub joke to the kiddies' page of a
magazine with a religious bias? Exaggerated, I know, but the
wrong joke, however funny, to the wrong market, is doomed to
failure.


Cartoons  Most markets will accept cartoons from freelance
sources although this is not always obvious.  Strangely, the
contributor need not possess great skill with a drawing
implement to make his or her mark.  If the basic idea and
the caption are right on course, the rest will follow
through.  Editors will make arrangements for the drawing to
be retouched or else completely re-done by a staff artist.

Seasonal Pieces  Christmas, Bonfire Night, Halloween,
Mothers' Day, and holidays present great opportunities for
the filler writer.  'Did You Know That?' pieces, Strange
Incidents, and Traditions relating to the season concerned,
are much in demand as the appropriate time of year nears. 
Always submit your pieces well in advance - six months in
advance if possible.

Anniversary Pieces  Similar to seasonal pieces, the filler
writer here submits items relating to things that have
happened on particular dates in years gone by.  For
instance, you might write of the 100th anniversary of the
birth or death of a famous celebrity, or relate the fact
that the electric chair was first used in the U.S.A. 100
years ago, in 1890.  'Firsts' are a favourite with filler
writers, as incidentally are 'Records', such as those that
might inform us of the world's tallest, or fattest, man, or
the Siamese twins who each fathered more children than most
men could ever hope to.  The Guinness books of Records and
Answers are a boon to filler writers of this type.

You really could go on writing letters and fillers for ever,
but only a short step away is the more lucrative field of
article writing.  Read on!


ARTICLES - THE LARGEST MARKET OF ALL

As this chapter's title hopefully implies, the market for
articles is greater than for any of the other traditional
writing forms, for instance short stories, novels, books of
non-fiction, and therefore really is one the new writer
should investigate.

You might argue the market for Readers' Letters is larger,
and I for one would not dispute it, but these smaller pieces
are not universally accepted as true writing forms, and will
not always provide the writer with a steady living.  There
are many people who will disagree vehemently on both counts,
and I recognise that some people do seem to devote their
entire writing lives, and profitably so, to creating letters
and fillers.  They will no doubt argue their work no less a
part of the writing world than the article, short story or
novel.  The debate is one your must judge for yourself. 
Certainly there is the chance of an income for the more
prolific and proficient letter writer, and trying your hand
at letters and fillers is an excellent way to learn your
craft, as well as to supplement your income from other
writing sources.

Look through the many publications on newsagents' stands and
you will find the proportion of short stories to articles is
for the most part, extremely low.  Some publications carry
one story, some two or three, whilst some provide no
opportunities at all for the story writer.

The beginning writer is consequently advised to concentrate
his efforts on the writing of articles, where his chances of
breaking into print are greatly increased.  He or she is
further advised to aim his work towards the lower paying and
lesser known publications where success is easier to
achieve.  This is good advice, and though the new writer
will have to put in more hours for less reward than
contemporaries of many years standing, there is no finer way
to establish a track record for yourself as you grow in
confidence and ability.

There are very many excellent books on the subject of
article writing, and I suggest your read as many as time and
opportunity allow.  Those I find particularly useful are
listed at the end of this manual.

Many writers' magazines carry pieces on the craft of article
writing, mostly written by highly experienced writers,
notably Gordon Wells and John Hines, both of whom have also
written books on the subject.  I personally try never to
miss out on anything they write.

Articles take many forms, including:

Informative

How-To-Do-It

Self-Help

Controversial

Art of Living

Personality Profile

Personal Experience

Nostalgia

Humour

This summary is not however, conclusive.  A great deal of
overlap can occur between the different types.  A
personality profile can be serious or humorous, and a
nostalgia piece can often come entirely from the personal
experiences of its author.

The various basic article forms are discussed in great
detail in the best book I ever read on the subject of
article writing.  In 'Article Techniques That Sell', Louise
Boggess analyses each type, and presents her findings in an
easy to read manner.  She writes with great authority.  She
also offers the best advice I have ever come by on how to
develop one's article, in a manner that will maintain the
reader's interest from beginning to end.  It's a brilliant
book, so full of information that at first it left me
hopelessly confused, and completely disheartened.  So I read
it again, and found it made a little more sense.  On the
third reading everything fell completely into place.  I have
read many other books and articles since, but nothing
compares with Boggess on the techniques of article writing. 
A MUST for the aspiring article writer.

Considering the many types of article on our magazine and
newspaper stands, it is perhaps stating the obvious to
suggest that your market study must be at least as thorough
as the research you put into gathering the facts for your
article itself.

Try the wrong market with an otherwise brilliant,
well-structured article, containing newly unearthed details,
and you'll unfortunately get what you deserve. Yes. A
rejection slip!

Before we go any further with the actual writing of an
article, we must consider what market research is all about,
and decide for ourselves just why such importance is
accorded to it.  Gordon Wells is, for me, the foremost
authority on market research.  With a fine tooth comb he
unpicks the articles in his target publication to such a
degree, that at first I thought he was mad.  My first few
rejection slips convinced me otherwise of the reasons for
his almost terrier-like tearing apart of an article, as he
discovers for himself what sentence and paragraph lengths a
market prefers, what style of writing predominates, what
subjects they choose, and on what level the writer generally
relates to the reader.  His book 'The Craft of Writing
Articles' is another essential tool for those less
experienced than Mr Wells.

For advice on gathering facts and information, and deciding
upon the appropriateness of such for the article existing as
yet only in your mind's eye, John Hines is the man to read. 
In 'The Way to Write Magazine Articles' he lets us in on a
method of collecting and recording data which he calls
'Non-Linear Thought Patterns'.  He and his wife, another
successful writer of articles, use this diagrammatical
method, which enables them to see their collected
information at a glance, usually on one page, and allows
them to decide which are the most salient points, and
whether in fact they have sufficient data for further
articles.  Highly recommended!

Because space is so limited, I have pulled together those
pieces of advice I consider of most use to the writer in the
early stages of his development.  Nothing will beat reading
the many excellent books available, as you undergo the
vitally important challenge of improving and refining your
article writing abilities, essential for your entry into the
higher paying markets.

When considering how an article is put together, there are
many who would suggest it has three components only: a
beginning, a middle, and an end.  This in itself is an
adequate breakdown, but I would venture to suggest that it
can be expanded upon.  I say this purely as a result of the
Boggess' book to which I am so heavily indebted, and as such
I make no apologies for now going into a little extra detail
of the shape of an article as seen through Boggess' eyes.

For Boggess the article is broken down into:

THE HOOK  This is a device employed at the beginning of the
article, intended to draw in the reader and make him or her
want to keep on reading.  Boggess outlines many types of
hook, each with its own particular characteristics and
advantages.  The most startling or interesting fact to
emerge from your research is usually the one to use here.

THE CAPSULE SENTENCE  Here we sum up as briefly as possible,
what it is we are going to tell or show the reader in the
paragraphs that follow.  It is that part in which you
convince the reader what follows will be of such interest,
that setting aside the article is the very last thing he or
she must do.

DEVELOPMENT  This is the main body of the article, in which
you assemble, in a logical way, the points you wish to make. 
Boggess, as do most authorities, suggests counting the
number of development points in published articles in your
target market.  Five strong points, she says, work better
than ten weak ones, so there's no advantage to be gained by
throwing in all the facts at your disposal. Weaker facts,
she suggests, should be eliminated, restated, or combined,
until you have a number appropriate to that preferred by
your target market.  She also gives advice on the order in
which to present your points.

Development points must not be presented as a mere catalogue
of facts.  They must make interesting reading, or else even
the most startling of information can become boring to the
reader and you will soon lose his interest, that is, if your
manuscript ever gets past the critical eye of the editor.

Boggess goes into an elaborate discussion of other
techniques by which to hold the reader's interest from
beginning to end.  She covers what are termed Transitions,
Expansion Devices, methods of Overlapping the Breaks, and
Erasing the Paragraphs.  Sounds confusing, and at first
reading it most certainly is just that; on second and third
reading it becomes unbelievably simple and extremely useful.

CONCLUSION Here the writer sums up what has gone before as
briefly and informatively as possible.

THE TWIST  This is a short statement or anecdote that
emphasizes the purpose of the article.  Boggess suggests it
encourages the reader:

To Think

To Act

To Chuckle

To Sob

The final paragraph should preferably be as startling as the
hook, but if the most interesting or shocking fact has been
used at the beginning of the article, then most authorities
suggest reserving the second such fact for the end.

The title you give your article can play an extremely
significant part in its chances of acceptance.  A good title
can attract the eye of a busy editor, and encourage him or
her to read on, when the reverse might have been true had
you presented even an excellent article with a mundane
title.  The title you choose might not appear on the
published article, but it still can be the one that gets it
to be considered for publication in the first place.  Look
at the titles in your target publication and fashion yours
to suit.  Does the editor seem to favour wacky titles, those
perhaps resulting from a neat play on words, or do they
instead go for straight-to-the-point titles?

Words, being your prime tool, must of course be chosen with
care, but you should always write in as plain a fashion as
possible.  Seek to impress the reader with a brilliant
display of vocabulary that sends him running for his
dictionary, and you may find you've lost him.  He wants to
know what it is you have to say, not be bombarded with
complicated words that rarely enter his everyday vocabulary. 
But your choice of these everyday words is of paramount
importance and you should seek the exact word to convey your
message.  A great book on the topic of word selection is
Gary Provost's 'Make Every Word Count'.  It is equally
useful for fiction writers, and a book I heartily recommend
you to have on your bookshelf.

In appropriate cases the inclusion of photos to illustrate
your article can make all of the difference between
rejection and publication.  You don't have to be a brilliant
photographer, you don't even need to take the photos
yourself, since many photographic libraries can provide the
illustrations you require - though usually at a price.  To
save expense it is worthwhile learning how to take the
photographs yourself, and I would point you towards the John
Hines' book mentioned earlier, which includes an excellent
chapter on the subject of photography.

A distinction must be made between unsolicited writing and
solicited writing.  Basically unsolicited writing is that
which is sent to a target market without that market's prior
knowledge, and because you are not likely to be fully aware
of the requirements of the editor concerned, you risk a
rejection, not because your work is unsound, but simply
because it doesn't fit into the editor's overall plan for
future publications.  With solicited writing however, you
query the editor in advance, informing him or her of what
you have in mind for a particular article, requesting that
he or she advises you as to whether the opportunity to
inspect your manuscript would be welcome.

Solicited writing allows the editor to make comments he or
she feels appropriate to the article you propose.  The
problem here for the beginning article writer, is the lack
of a track record which would convince the editor of his
ability to produce the article in a professional manner, and
one appropriate to the publication concerned.  So what you
lack in previous acceptances, you must make up for in the
professionalism you put into your work.  You must of course,
always give your work your best, but never more so than when
you are starting out.  First impressions count, and once you
have made a successful sale, that editor will be more
inclined to accept work from you, whether solicited or
otherwise.  Working to commission, that is solicited
writing, will always have the advantage of saving you time
in preparing work, which though extremely good, is not what
your editor currently requires.  Wherever you can approach
an editor in advance.
Remember the market for articles is vast, and editors are
forever on the lookout for new contributors.  Read as many
books on the subject as you can.  Don't seek to hit the big
time in the early days; there's plenty of time for that when
you have established a track record with which to impress
the editors of those slick magazines and much-revered Fleet
Street newspapers.

Strive for professionalism in everything you write, and
success will come sooner than you think.


Quote

'Use killer leads (Hooks).  They're hard to come up with but
they'll set you apart from most of the slush that editors
see'.  John Wood, Editor.


SHORT STORIES

An exact definition of 'short' in the context of stories is
almost impossible to give; in some publications several
hundred words are the norm; in others several thousand words
are required.  Again it's all a question of careful market
research.


Market study will also reveal the type of short story a
publication favours; I know of one for instance where almost
every story must be set in Scotland, and have a certain
breed of heroine who possesses certain characteristics, as
laid down in the magazine's notes for the guidance for
contributors.  I'll leave it for you to discover which
magazine it is, for the short story market being so small,
there is no place for the writer who knocks out his story
and then looks for someone to buy it.

Short stories must almost always be tailored for an
individual market.  Some allow promiscuity to enter the
realms of their pages, some allow the odd naughty word, some
allow slang, whilst others prefer their characters to be
whiter than white, with equally commendable family
backgrounds.  Some publications favour historical short
stories, others want them set in modern times, with
characters and events bang up to the minute. Market
research, remember!

All short stories have a beginning, a middle, and an end;
perhaps stating the obvious, but how you handle each section
is of paramount importance to the success or otherwise of
your work.  The short story illustrates a moment in time, a
moment of change, the essence of that change arising from
some element of conflict, whether of a physical or emotional
nature.   There must be a direct link between that conflict
and the moment of change.

To illustrate this point of conflict and change a little,
let's take a heroine, having spent her entire life in a
small village, and being engaged to a local teacher,
receives a once-in-a-lifetime offer to work in America.  She
is tempted, so much so, she starts packing.  Her thoughts
are racing, filled with visions of New York's bustling
streets and life in a high-rise apartment block.  New York -
the city that never sleeps! She can hardly wait.  Sorting
out her possessions she comes by her fiance's letters to her
while he was away at college, and she remembers how she
missed him then (CONFLICT).  Cases packed, her fiance and
family informed of her decision, a week or so later she is
on her way to the airport.  The CONFLICT is mounting as her
thoughts run riot - New York or Him?  She sees couples, hand
in hand, as she passes through the villages and towns along
the way.  She watches families playing in parks and standing
in cinema queues.  They're giggling and laughing.  Have they
even heard of New York?  (MOMENT OF CHANGE)  Michael, her
fiance, wants marriage and a family, and at this point she
realises she doesn't really know what it is she wants, but
she's sure that whatever it is, Michael is an essential part
of it.  She asks the taxi driver to turn around!

The basic design of the short story is as follows:

CHARACTER/S  -  PROBLEM  -  COMPLICATIONS  -  CLIMAX  -
SOLUTION

All short stories have certain essential components:

A Plot  'Plot' is the story line.  It is that component
which causes something to happen and leads to the events
that follow.  In the story of the girl tempted to go to New
York, basically the plot consists of that temptation which
is then forced into near insignificance when she sees around
her the things that really are important, and to have those
things she must return home.  Polti's 'The Thirty-six
Dramatic Situations' will help you plot your stories, as
will the simple art of observing everyday situations, and
stories in newspapers, and asking yourself the question:
'what if...?  This is guaranteed to start the creative
juices flowing.

Theme  The theme is the underlying meaning of the story. It
is our message to the reader.  We might want to imply that
there's more to life than the accumulation of vast sums of
money; love and concern for our fellow man are two such
examples.

In our example story we might say the theme is, for want of
a better description, 'Better the devil you know' or to
suggest 'The grass isn't always greener on the other side'.

Setting  The setting is the backdrop against which the story
is enacted.  It might take place in the past, in modern
times, or it may be set in the future.  Your story may be
set in a sleepy English village or in a war-torn foreign
city.  The events may be seen through the eyes of the main
character, or told in the words of a bystander.  The
character chosen to relate the story is extremely important. 
Thoughts known only to the main character cannot for
instance, be divulged by the bystander.  Equally the
bystander can relate events not obvious to the central
characters, for instance, events taking place elsewhere
which are crucial to the plot, but of necessity must not be
known, yet, to the characters.  In a romantic story, we
might not want the heroine to know that her new love has
been married before, yet making the reader aware of this is
important to the development of the story.

Character/s  Characters bring your story to life.  They
should be believable, as should their dialogue.  Certain
magazines prefer a particular type of character, of a
certain age, from a certain part of the country, and so on. 
Always study your target publication carefully and obtain
what contributor's guidelines they have.  Don't make your
characters superhuman, unless you are actually writing a
fantasy story.  Characters can have faults like the rest of
us, so don't strive too much to make them perfect. 
Characters to be believed, should be like the people you
meet everyday. In this way the reader is able to identify
with the people in your story.  The reader gets close to
them if their dialogue also is believable.  Go over what it
is you want them to say and ask yourself if, in real life,
people would use those words, and always keep your dialogue
meaningful - in a short story there isn't room for the
continual passing of pleasantries.  Everything that is said
must move the story along.  Give them suitable names; Kylie
and Jason might be inappropriate for characters in a Western
story, but entirely appropriate to a modern day story
concerning two small children.

Style  This is your own particular trademark; your way of
saying something; the manner in which you string together
your thoughts and ideas; the mood you create for your
readers; the atmosphere of the story; and much more besides. 
Another concept almost impossible to define, it is
unfortunately something that can't really be taught, but
style can be acquired through practice and determination. 
Style is something that should never be copied, much as you
admire the work of another author.

It will anyway, be almost impossible to reproduce another's
style, but if you could accomplish such, would you find much
personal satisfaction in doing so?  I truly doubt it!
Reading the work of others is an excellent way of improving
your own style, but not with the intention of creating
carbon-copy versions of their latest award-winning short
stories.  Be yourself - it's fresh talent editors are
constantly on the lookout for!

In our short story then, we present our characters with a
problem, as the story progresses it increases in complexity
until the point of our story's climax, as near to the end as
possible, when we provide the solution - and wind it all up
as quickly as possible.  After the climax, there is little
point in dragging out a short story; it's disappointing to
the reader, who having been led speedily through the earlier
part of the story, and now gripped by the intensity of the
climax, we require a speedy ending that leaves him still
deeply moved by the event of the last few paragraphs.

To recap on some of the main features of a good short story:

The essence is conflict.

Plot comes from your characters and the situations you put
them into, and the subsequent solution you provide them
with.

Start as near the end of the story as possible.  Don't drag
out the preliminaries to the climax.  Time is short and the
end result can bore the reader - if it hasn't already bored
the editor.

As in all forms of writing you must grab the reader in the
first paragraph, and lead him or her through a
tightly-constructed story, one that offers no temptation to
cease reading until that last word has been devoured.

Keep the middle going with the suspense that increases in
line with the problem, or problems, you have set for your
characters.  If you offer more than one problem, the second
should be related to the first, or you risk the chance of
losing your readers.  An irrelevant problem belongs to
another story.  The second and subsequent problems should be
greater, in order to maintain the suspense, as opposed to
deflating it somewhat mid-story.

Make characters as interesting as possible, by getting to
know them intimately.  Express them to your reader in the
same manner and he or she will need to know what happens to
them, and your story will be read until that need is
fulfilled.  Use mannerisms and speech to make them as
interesting as possible.

End the story as soon as possible after the climax, or
moment of change.

Never tell your reader what is happening by using straight
narrative.  Show them what happens by the use of action,
dialogue, and vivid descriptions of the characters'
reactions.

MAKE EVERY WORD COUNT - Don't waffle.  Refer to the Gary
Provost book at the end of this manual.

Grab the reader by the senses - let him smell that coffee
the heroine makes to occupy hands that otherwise would lash
out in temper!  Let him see the trees and smell the flowers
in the garden where that first romantic encounter takes
place.  Let him hear the jet that suddenly flies overhead
bringing the encounter to a maddening end!


Quotes

'Don't think of what's in your head that you want to get on
paper, but what kind of effect you want to have at any given
moment on the readers' minds and emotions'. S Stein, Author.

'It helps to have a detailed resume for each major
character, along with a ten-or-so page bio (biography).  For
every fact about a character that is revealed in your pages,
at least ten or twenty more should be vividly present in
your head'. C Breslin, Authoress.



NOVELS

In the world of writing it is the novelist who is most
likely to earn the really big-time rewards.  But though
rewards for some are unbelievably high, extending to perhaps
world publication, and offers from film companies to buy the
rights,  it must be said that the chance of a first novel
being accepted is extremely low, some experts judge it to be
as low as 1 in 2000.  If however, you are already a
well-known celebrity in some other field, your chances are
vastly improved.  But if you're not in this privileged
category, and you want to write a novel for profit, then the
bitter edge of potential rejection can be somewhat offset by
keeping your novel as only one part of your overall writing
plan.  Practice other forms of writing: articles, fillers,
short stories, and you will at least have some income as you
embark on your more ambitious project.


The trend today is for large novels, very large indeed in
some cases.  A novel can be anything from 40,000 words
upwards, although shorter pieces, novelettes, are sometimes
published in flimsy paperback form, for sale on newsagents'
stands.

It is often said that a novel is easier to write than a
short story, and I must confess I find an element of truth
in this theory.  A short story must be tightly structured
and what is to be said must be said in a very short space of
time.  The novel allows much more to be said, and also
affords the novelist the opportunity to make lengthy
descriptions, and to include some dialogue which might be
wasted in the shorter story.

Tastes in novels change; the person most likely to succeed,
it seems, is the one who can predict what the reader will
want next year, at the exact time his or her prospective
manuscript reaches completion.  Study trends and read as
many new best sellers as you can; there's no substitute for
reading the work of those who have already 'made it'.

You will hear much about the word 'genre', or what many
people would simply call 'type'.  So what types of novel can
you consider adding to?   The main categories are:

Crime   Mystery   Thriller   Espionage   Adventure
Westerns   Science Fiction   Fantasy and Horror
Romantic   Historical   Romance

Each category presents different requirements to its writer. 
Research and the structure of the novel will be individual
to the category you have chosen to contribute to.  Research
for a crime, espionage, or war novel must be extremely
thorough; if you make any mistakes, someone out there will
notice them and be quick to point them out to your
publishers!  Take heed!  These novels must also be tightly
structured, and more often than not they proceed at a fast
pace,  involving lots of action scenes.  Romantic fiction on
the other hand can be comparatively less tightly structured,
and might need less research, unless of course your novel is
set in years long gone by.

Your work must be well-thought out and planned before you
proceed to write.  Some start with a basic outline of events
in the form of very sketchy notes; others advocate doing a
synopsis of each and every chapter before writing in earnest
begins.  You are the one to decide which way suits you best. 
I read recently of a highly successful female novelist who
analysed many bestsellers before writing her own.  She
worked out the frequency with which something approaching a
climax appeared in each book.  She discovered that every two
pages something must happen within the context of the
overall story that makes the reader sit up and take notice,
and most of all, prevents him or her from putting the book
down.  She also put on her wall, the history of her
fictitious family, with relevant dates and incidents
carefully built into its structure.  She was rewarded with
one of the biggest bestsellers of recent times.

As was the case for the writer of articles, the novelist
should always seek to sell his work, or at the very least,
the basic idea, before he or she begins a lengthy piece of
writing.  Novels can take years to write, and if the dreaded
rejection slip rears its ugly head, that's a long time
without earnings for your pains.  In the same way as the
article writer, you should contact publishers, outlining
your proposals, and asking whether they are interested in
publishing your work.  Choose your publisher with care,
since some deal with only certain types of novel, and your
work, however wonderful, will be of no use to them.  The
'Writers' and Artists' Yearbook' will help you to choose a
suitable publisher.  When you have done that send a synopsis
of your novel and a few sample chapters, already written,
and properly presented.

There are many excellent books on the market to help with
the structure and writing of novels, and you should
endeavour to read as many as possible.  Remember too, if you
seek to earn a living from your writing, to view your novel
as only one part of your work.  If your novel is published -
great!  Be persistent with your manuscript; if one publisher
turns it down, send it to another, and another, and ....


Quotes

'I've never begun a book that I didn't finish, because I
haven't started writing a book until I knew the beginning
and the ending, felt that they matched, and felt they
associated with enough of a middle.  The journey from the
opening paragraph to the end would have to  make interesting
fiction'. J. Heller, Novelist.

'When I decide where the settings of my book are going to
be, I will travel to the location and that will give me an
awful lot of ideas about what's going to happen where.  I'll
come back with all these crazy pictures that I've taken, and
they help me keep the details, the feelings of the
locations'. R. Ludlum, Novelist.

NON FICTION BOOKS

Writing non-fiction books is somewhat of a natural
progression for many article writers.  The subjects covered
by both are closely related; many would say identical, with
the only difference existing in the volume of work to be
included.  Non-fiction books may be seen as works too long
to be considered for article status, although sometimes the
book is the combination of a writer's previously written
articles, suitably restyled for their new method of
presentation to the reading populace.

A great many non-fiction books come within the 'How to Do
It' category. 'How To Sell Your House Without an Estate
Agent', and 'How to Trace Your Ancestors', are two such
recent examples.  Other types are those dealing with local
history, biographical accounts of famous people, studies of
parts of the world or its peoples, and a host of topics
which do not fall within the realms of the more
fantasy-based world of fiction writing.

Obviously, in starting out in this area of writing, it is
preferable to begin with a topic in which you have
specialised knowledge, perhaps one forming the basis of many
of your articles, or a pet hobby or subject you might not
necessarily  have written much about, but with which you
have kept constantly up-to-date.

Consider first whether you do in fact have sufficient
material to fill a book, by writing an overall synopsis and
a brief description for each individual chapter.  If you
feel confident that what you have is worthy of a book, now
is the time to look for a publisher.  Look through the
'Writers' and Artists' Yearbook', and study the requirements
of the individual publishers.  Then make a list of those
that seem suitable for your proposed venture and send
details to one of them, outlining your proposals in letter
form, with a brief synopsis of the book, details of the
chapters you propose including, and a few sample chapters
you have already written.  Enclosing sample chapters is
particularly important for writers new to this field, and is
necessary to convince the publisher of your writing ability.

Send a stamped addressed envelope for the return of your
documents in the event the publisher isn't interested, and
then continue to approach other publishers in the same way,
until you find one who does want what it is you have to
offer.  Remember, as always, a refusal does not mean your
work is inadequate.  It may be the publisher has something
similar already planned, or else has completed his quota of
books in the category to which yours belongs.  Don't be
disheartened, for once you have one non-fiction book behind
you the road ahead is infinitely easier to travel, and many
article writers become almost exclusively, writers of
non-fiction books and manuals.


POETRY

Sadly, though poetry is one of the most difficult writing
forms to master, it is not the area in which many writers
will find fame and fortune, unless of course they are
amongst the talented and prolific who find a particular slot
ideally suited to their talents.  As I write, my local paper
conveys news of the death of Patience Strong, whose
inspirational verses graced greetings cards and many, many
magazines, and other publications, for over fifty years. 
Writers of her calibre are in very short supply, but if one
person has carved a career in the way she did, it can be
done again.  Just don't seek an early fortune in this way.

If we include light verse within this category, then we are
able to suggest a possible opener for the 'poet' in the
letters' pages of magazines, and in the writing of fillers
for many publications.

Poetry competitions are perhaps the best way to earn from
your talents in poetry.  There are many publications aimed
solely at writers of poetry, many paying, albeit small fees,
for inclusion of suitable works.  But some  also carry
competitions on a regular basis, prizes for which can often
be extremely attractive.  Keep your eyes open for such
competitions in the pages of poetry or general writing
magazines, or in the competitions pages of the excellent
Freelance Press Services bulletins.


PLAYS

Plays are needed on a constant basis by Television
Companies, Radio Stations and of course, Theatre Companies. 
The individual requirements of each vary greatly,
particularly due to the manner of their conveyance to
respective audiences.  A radio play for instance, must of
necessity rely heavily on sound effects to keep the listener
aware of happenings which cannot be related in terms of
speech.  We might for instance, want to have our subject
observe a passing car, as he or she stands alone waiting for
visitors.  That person cannot talk constantly to him or
herself, and so the listener must in some other way be made
aware of the cars that pass by.  So the writer must remember
that what the listener can't be made aware of by dialogue,
must be conveyed in some other manner.

Television is a different matter entirely.  In so visual a
medium, the sound becomes of less importance, and action
comes to the fore.  The theatre is much more restrictive
with no availability for outdoors scenes, and budgets often
inadequate to accommodate more than a few scenery and
costume changes.

'Get Writing' by George Evans and Vince Powell, published by
B.B.C Books, offers excellent advice on the writing of plays
for radio, television and theatre, and is written by
professionals with many years of experience in this field. 
The book also covers other forms of writing, including the
highly lucrative fields of situation comedy, gags and
sketches, documentaries and serials.  I highly recommend
this book if you feel your talents lie in other than
providing for the reading population.


SUBMITTING ARTICLES AND SHORT STORIES TO EDITORS

It is essential that your manuscript be presented in a
professional manner, if you hope to make a place for
yourself in the writing of articles and short stories for
the many hundreds of publications requiring the services of
the freelance writer.  A well-produced manuscript will
immediately gain you an edge in the eyes of the busy editor;
a sloppy submission might well not even be read, though its
content is of exceptional value.  First impressions are, as
always, of vital importance.

With the exception of readers' letters and some fillers,
e.g. reader's recipes and other items solicited from
'readers' who are not necessarily expected to have access to
sophisticated machinery, your work must always be typed
before sending it to an editor.

Whether you use a manual typewriter, or the more
sophisticated electrical models, or whether you can stretch
to purchasing one of those most wonderful of inventions - a
word processor, is entirely for you, and your finances, to
decide.  All I would say is, with word processors now
available for less than Å“500, many advantages are
immediately gained.  Your work need never be completely
retyped for subsequent submissions, since all amendments can
be made to the original document whilst still in the
machine's memory banks.  There also is no need for typing
errors to mar your manuscript, since all changes can be made
before the manuscript is ever committed to paper.  These
advantages and many others can greatly increase your actual
turnout rate, and such a machine could pay for itself in a
relatively short time.  But don't commit yourself to one
unless you are sure your future lies in writing - it's too
up-market a typewriter to be relegated to creating everyday
correspondence!

Your work must be typed on A4 size white typing paper of a
good quality; not the stuff you use for carbon copies of
original work.  About 70-80 gsm weight is adequate.  Type on
one side of the paper only.  When your ribbon provides less
than a crisp black copy then discard it in favour of a new
one, or have the old ribbon reinked, where appropriate.

Margins should be approximately 2" on the left and 1" on the
right.

On the first page of your manuscript, about one-third of the
way down the page, type your title, centrally, in capitals,
and underline it.  About 5 lines down type 'by' again
centrally, and a similar number of lines further down type -
centrally, your real name or pen name.  Only the title
requires capital letters.

About half way down the page start your actual text.  Indent
each paragraph by five spaces and type in double-spacing
throughout.

Leave margins of approximately 25mm at the top and bottom of
each page.

Pages should be numbered and identified in the event of them
coming adrift.  At the top of subsequent pages you should
give your name, a brief title, and the page number.  Page
two for my article on writing articles might start as
follows:

HARPER               ARTICLES              PAGE 2

A line should be left free before re-commencing text.

At the end of your article or story, leave a few lines and
type, centrally:

                         .............END

At the bottom left-hand side of your last page type your
name and address in single spacing.

Manuscripts should preferably  bear a cover sheet giving
brief details of what it is on offer.  On your cover page
approximately half way down, the title of your manuscript is
typed in capitals and centred.  A few lines further down
type 'by' in lower case, and a similar number of lines down
in lower case lettering type your real or pen name, i.e. the
one you want to appear on your published work.  Then about
an inch below type 'An article/short story with
approximately ... words' underlined and in lower case
lettering.  If you are submitting illustrations, state a few
lines further down how many photographs/line
drawings/illustrations there are.  Type your real name and
address at the bottom in single spacing.

Always send a covering letter stating simply that you are
enclosing an article or short story for the editor's
consideration, and saying you hope it might be suitable for
publication in  his or her magazine, newspaper, etc. 
Provide a suitable size Stamped Addressed Envelope for
return of unsuitable manuscripts.  Then wait!  Don't bug an
editor for an answer unless several weeks have passed in
respect of a piece with limited time interest, such as an
anniversary piece for which the deadline is looming.  For
other pieces, though some editors reply very quickly, it is
not unknown to have to wait several months for a reply.

After submitting your manuscript, start on your next.  Don't
dwell too long on the fate of the first!

RECOMMENDED READING

ARTICLE TECHNIQUES THAT SELL  by Louise Boggess.  Published
by B & B Press and available through Freelance Press
Services.

THE CRAFT OF WRITING ARTICLES by Gordon Wells.  Published by
Allison & Busby.

THE WAY TO WRITE MAGAZINE ARTICLES by John Hines.  Published
by Elm Tree Books.

MAKE EVERY WORD COUNT by Gary Provost.  Published by
Writer's Digest Books and available through Freelance Press
Services.

THE WAY TO WRITE FOR CHILDREN by Joan Aiken.  Published by
Elm Tree Books.

THE WAY TO WRITE RADIO DRAMA by William Ash.  Published by
Elm Tree Books.

HOW TO WRITE STORIES FOR MAGAZINES by Donna Baker. 
Published by Allison & Busby.

WRITING A NOVEL by John Braine.  Published by Methuen.

THE CRAFT OF WRITING ROMANCE by Jean Saunders.  Published by
Allison & Busby.

THE MAGAZINE WRITER'S HANDBOOK by Gordon Wells.  Published
by Allison & Busby.

TO WRITERS WITH LOVE by Mary Wibberley.  Published by Buchan
& Enright.

GET WRITING by George Evans and Vince Powell.  Published by
B.B.C.Books.

HOW TO WRITE AND SELL YOUR PERSONAL EXPERIENCES by Lois
Duncan.  Published by Writer's Digest Books and available
through Freelance Press Services.

HOW TO WRITE FOR PUBLICATION by Chriss McCallum.  Published
by Northcote House Publishers Ltd.

HOW TO MAKE MONEY OUT OF WRITING by Graham R Stevenson. 
Published by Gower Publishing Group.

ESSENTIALS FOR YOUR BOOKSHELF

THE WRITER'S HANDBOOK  Published by Macmillan.

THE WRITERS' AND ARTISTS' YEARBOOK  Published by A & C
Black.

THE CONCISE OXFORD DICTIONARY Published by Oxford University
Press.

ROGET'S THESAURUS OF SYNONYMS AND ANTONYMS. Obtainable at
all good bookshops.


WRITERS' MAGAZINES

WRITERS' MONTHLY  The Writer Ltd., 18-20 High Road, London,
N22 6DN

FREELANCE WRITING AND PHOTOGRAPHY  Tregeraint House, Zennor,
St Ives, Cornwall, TR26 3DB

WRITER'S DIGEST Published monthly and available through
Freelance Press Services.

THE WRITER  Available through Freelance Press Services.

WRITERS' NEWS  P.O.Box 4, Nairn, Scotland, lV12 4HU
Subscriptions: Stonehart Subscription Services, Writers
News, Hainhault Road, Little Heath, Romford, RM6 5NP

WRITING TODAY 109 Redlam, Blackburn, BB1 1UB

WRITERS' GUIDE  Venture Publications, 11 Shirley Street,
Hove, East Sussex, BN3 3WJ  (First issue due early 1991)

RECOMMENDED REFERENCE BOOKS

DICTIONARY OF DATES  Published by J M Dent and Sons Ltd.

ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF DATES AND EVENTS Published by English
University Press.

THE BOOK OF DAYS Compiled by Bob Monkhouse.  Arrow Books.

THE BOOK OF DAYS By Anthony Frewin.  PUBLISHED BY William
Collins and Co.

THE SHELL BOOK OF FIRSTS  Published by Ebury Press and
Michael Joseph Ltd.

THE THIRTY-SIX DRAMATIC SITUATIONS compiled by George Polti. 
Available through Freelance Press Services.

RESEARCH FOR WRITERS by Ann Hoffman.  Published by A & C
Black.

THE PENGUIN DICTIONARY OF QUOTATIONS Available at all good
bookshops.

USEFUL ADDRESSES

FREELANCE PRESS SERVICES, Cumberland House, Lissadell
Street, Salford, Manchester, M6 6GG

DIRECTORY OF WRITERS' CIRCLES  available from:  Jill Dick,
'Oldacre', Horderns Park Road, Chapel-en-le-Frith,
Derbyshire, SK12 6SY

BRITISH AMATEUR PRESS ASSOCIATION, Mr L E Lindord, 78
Tennyson Road, Stratford, London, E15 4DR

ASSOCIATION OF LITTLE PRESSES. Bob Cobbing, Coordinator,
Association of Little Presses, 89A Petherton Road, London,
N5 2QT

THE PENMAN CLUB 175 Pall Mall, Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, SS9 1RE

RADAR (Royal Association for Disability and Rehabilitation),
25 Mortimer Street, London W1N 8AB.  Publish 'All Write
Now'.

GREETING CARD AND CALENDAR ASSOCIATION  6 Wimpole Street,
London, W1M 8AS




MARKETS SUPPLEMENT


This is but a very small selection of magazines and
newspapers in the United Kingdom.  The Writers' and Artists'
Yearbook gives a comprehensive list of markets available as
well as some indication of payment rates.  Writers are
advised to always check in advance that payment is made for
contributions, and that freelance contributions are welcome. 
Intending contributors should also obtain several copies of
the publication concerned to assess the type of stories,
articles, fillers, etc. required.  Many publications offer
notes for the guidance of contributors;  where available you
should obtain a copy before submitting material.

F I C T I O N

AMBIT
17 Priory Gardens, Highgate, London, N6 5QY

ANIMAL WORLD (RSPCA)
Causeway, Horsham, Sussex, RH12 1HG

ANNABEL
80 Kingsway East, Dundee, DD4 8SL

BELLA
Shirley House, 25 Camden Road, London NW1 9LL

BEST
10th Floor, Portland House, Stag Place, London SW1E 5AU

THE BROWNIE
17-19 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0PT

ESSENTIALS
31-39 Earlham Street, London WC2H 9LD

LOVING
King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street, London SE1 9LS
Articles and confession stories.

MY STORY
Trie, St Romain, 16210 Chalais, France.
Confession stories.

PEOPLE'S FRIEND
80 Kingsway East, Dundee DD4 8SL

RATTLER'S TALE
Anthony North Enterprises, BCM Keyhole, London WC1N 3XX
Mystery and horror stories.

REALITY
Redemptorist Publications, 75 Orwell Road, Rathgar, Dublin 6
Magazine dedicated to Christian living, requires poems.

ROMANCE
Trie, St Romain, 16210 Chalais, France.
Confession stories.

WOMAN'S REALM
IPC Magazines Ltd., King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street,
London, SE1 9LS

WOMAN'S WEEKLY
IPC Magazines Ltd., King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street,
London, SE1 9LS
A R T I C L E S

ABERDEEN JOURNAL
PO Box 43, Langstracht, Mastrick, Aberdeen, AB9 8AF
Material relating to North East Scotland.

ACTIVITY DIGEST
6 Angel Drive, Sutton, Surrey SM1 3BX
Aimed at youth leaders and teachers.

AMATEUR GARDENING
Westover House, West Quay Road, Poole, Dorset, BH15 1JG

AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER
Prospect House, 9-13 Ewell Road, Cheam, Surrey, SM1 4QQ

ANGLER'S MAIL
IPC Magazines Ltd., King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street,
London SE1 9LS

THE ANTIQUE DEALER AND COLLECTORS GUIDE
IPC Magazines Ltd., King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street,
London SE1 9LS

AUSTRALIA TODAY
Brandonpark Publishing Ltd., 35 Gresse Street, Rathbone
Place, London W1P 1PN

BABY MAGAZINE
21 Cross Street, Islington, London W1K 2BH
Articles relating to bringing up children from birth to
about six years.  Articles concerned with beauty, fashion,
craftwork, housework, health and cooking.

BIRMINGHAM POST
P.O.Box 18, 28 Colmore Circus, Birmingham, B4 A6AX
Articles of relevance to the Midlands.

BOLTON EVENING NEWS
Newspaper House, Churchgate, Bolton, Greater Manchester, BL1
1DE
Particularly articles with South Lancashire appeal.

BUSES
Ian Allen Ltd., Terminal House, Shepperton, TW17 8AS
Articles, letters, photographs always wanted.

CAT WORLD
10 Western Road, Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex, BN43 5WD
Articles on any aspect of cat ownership.



CATHOLIC GAZETTE
114 West Heath Road, London NW3 7TX
Articles concerned with evangelisation and the Christian
life.

CHESHIRE LIFE
Town and Country Magazines, The Custom House, 70 Watergate
Street, Chester CH1 2LF
Articles of county interest only.

CHILDSPLAY
Greater London House, Hampstead Road, London NW1 7OQ
Articles on all aspects of bringing up a child.

COIN MONTHLY
Sovereign House, Brentwood, Essex, CM14 4SE
Articles on all aspects of numismatics.

COLLECTING SCALE MODELS
Argus House, Boundary Way, Hemel Hempstead, Herts HP2 7ST
Articles concerning wide range of collectable models.

COLLECTORS FAYRE
Pinder Market Communications, Browcom House, Brodwell Lane,
Feltham Middx TW13 7EQ

COMPANY
72 Broadwick Street, London W1V 2BP
Aimed at modern, sophisticated women and uses articles on
life style, health, sexual problems, finance, food and
drink, etc.

COTSWOLD COUNTY
Bigger and Co (Publishing), 4 Trafalgar Street, Cheltenham
Glos, GL50 1UH

COUNTRY LIFE
King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street, London SE1 9LS
Articles concerned with British country life, social
history, architecture and the fine arts, natural history,
agriculture, gardening and sport.

COUNTRYMAN
Sheep Street, Burford, Oxford OX8 4LH
Articles concerned with life in the country, wildlife and
conservation, but opposed to blood sports.

CUMBRIA
Dalesman Publishing Company Ltd., Clapham, via Lancaster LA2
8EB
Articles of genuine rural interest concerning Lakeland.


DOGS TODAY
141/143 Drury Lane, London WC2B 5YB
Articles on dogs but check magazine well, since style is a
little different to other magazines devoted to pets.

GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
National Magazine House, 72 Broadwick Street, London W1V 2BP
Accepts U.K. travel articles.

GOOD HUMOUR
57 Comiston Road, Edinburgh, EH10 6AG
Humour of fact, fiction and fantasy, in prose, verse and
cartoons.

HERITAGE
2 The Courtyard, Denmark Street, Wokingham, Berkshire RG11
2LW

I TO I
92 Prince of Wales Road, London NW5 2NE
Concerned with environmental issues in the very broadest
sense.

IRISH POST
Lexs House, 77 South Road, Southall, Middlesex, UB1 1SQ
Aimed at Irish people living in the U.K.

LEGION
48 Pall Mall, London SW1Y 5JY
News items and articles of interest to ex-service men and
women and war widows.

PET DOGS
Shires-Mace Ltd., P.O.Box 26F, Chessington, Surrey, KT3 1DN
Articles concerning the pet dog ... whether funny, sad or
brave ... but fact not fiction.

PROFESSIONAL FUNDRAISING
Greenhouse Publishing, 56 Portland Road, Bishop's Stortford,
Herts CM23 3SJ
Articles aimed at groups and individuals involved in
fundraising.

SCOTS MAGAZINE
7-25 Bank Street, Dundee DD1 9HU
Articles on various aspects of Scottish life, past and
present.

SMALLHOLDER
Hook House, Hook Road, Wimblington, March, Cambs PE15 0QL
Articles on crop growing, marketing, and the rearing of
rabbits, goats, sheep, pigs and bees etc.

STAMP AND COIN MART INTERNATIONAL
Castle House, 97 High Street, Colchester, CO1 1TH
Articles on philately, coin collecting, medals, bank notes
and postcards.

VINTAGE ROADSCENE
40 Fairfields Way, Ewell, Epsom, Surrey, KT19 OEF
Articles relating to the history of road transport including
trams, steam rollers, buses, cattle waggons, and road
vehicles used by railways.

WILD ABOUT ANIMALS
Kingsgate Business Centre, 12-50 Kingsgate Road, Kingston,
Surrey, KT2 5AA
Articles concerning domestic and wild animals, fishes,
birds, etc. from U.K. and abroad.

90 MINUTES
Left Field Publishing Co., P.O.Box 696, London SE3 7ET
Articles of interest to football fans.  Not confined to main
clubs but requires all news items and stories which escape
the usual news agencies.

F I L L E R S

BELLA
25 Camden Road, London, NW1 9LL
Overheard Conversations, Jokes, Practical Hints, Strange and
Unusual Photos, 'Precious Moments'.

BEST
10th Floor, Portland House, Stag Place, London, SW1E 5AU
Strange Photos, Household Tips, Personal Experiences.

CHAT
195, Knightsbridge, London, SW7 1RE
Household Tips, Poets' Corner, Kids' Sayings, Readers'
Recipes, Mini-Articles.

EVERGREEN
P.O. Box 52, Cheltenham, Glos, GL50 1YQ
Specialises in Nostalgia.

FAMILY CIRCLE
King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street, London SE1 9LS
'Mrs Angry', Tips, Moments of Truth.

HOME AND FREEZER DIGEST
Glenthorne House, Hammersmith Grove, London W6 OLG
'Soapbox'

PUNCH
245 Ludgate House, Blackfriars Road, London, SE1 9UZ
Printing Errors.

READER'S DIGEST
25 Berkeley Square, London, W1X 6AB
Several types of filler used.

SPORT AND LEISURE
16 Upper Woburn Place, London, WC1H 0QP

SUNDAY SUN
Thomson House, Groat Market, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, NE1 1ED

TAKE A BREAK
25-27 Camden Road, London, NW1 9LL.
Household Tips

TREASURE HUNTING
Sovereign House, Brentwood, Essex, CM14 4SE

UNDER FIVE
71 Newcomen Street, London SE1 1YT
'Soapbox'

VEGAN
The Vegan Society, 33-35 George Street, Oxford, OX1 2AY

WEEKLY NEWS
185 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HS
Family and Marriage anecdotes, Household Hints, Jokes.

WOMAN
King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street, London, SE1 9LS
Tips, Children's Sayings, Letters Page.

WRITERS' MONTHLY
18-20 High Road, Wood Green, London N22 6DN

YORKSHIRE POST
Wellington Street, Leeds, LS1 1RF

R E A D E R S'   L E T T E R S

ALMOST ALL PUBLICATIONS HAVE A LETTERS PAGE - NOT ALL OFFER
PAYMENT.  MAKE SURE FIRST IF YOU WILL BE PAID FOR
ACCEPTANCES.

LIVING
IPC Magazines Ltd., King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street,
London, SE1 9LS

ME
Garden House, 57-59 Long Acre, London, WC2 9JL

NEW WOMAN
King's House, 10 Haymarket, London SW1Y 4BP

SAGA MAGAZINE
P.O. Box 65, Folkestone, Kent

SHE
National Magazine House, 72 Broadwick Street, London, W1V
2BP

SLIMMER
Magazines International, Ward House, 5-7
Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, KT2 7PW

TAKE A BREAK
25-27 Camden Road, London NW1 9LL

WINNER
Winner Enterprise Co., Tregaron, Dyfed, SY25 6LW

WOMAN/ WOMAN'S OWN/ WOMAN'S WEEKLY
King's Reach Tower, Stamford Street, London, SE1 9LS

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