Denny Bradbury talks about her inspirations as a writer

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Denny Bradbury has been speaking her inspirations as a writer and what she finds a good read.  Thomas Hardy still takes pride of place as Denny’s hero, along with Jane Austen and Anthony Trollop.  When Denny was younger she was interested in Russian writers such as Leo Tolstoy who made his fame with War and Peace and Fyodor Dostoyvesky who wrote Crime and Punishment.  Charles Dickens, who in his own right is a literay titan also makes and appearence as one of Denny’s inspirations.

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

A Study Of Fairytales – Part I

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A study of FairytalesFairytales. In their most literal form they are imagined to be tales about fairies but in truth are so much more. Watching the Royal Wedding, a nation was united in experiencing a modern day fairy tale come true, where a handsome prince marries a young girl of a lesser standing and they live happily ever after.  I know I, for one, like to believe that such a fairy tale of perfect, unconditional and reciprocated love and happiness is possible.

Yet no fairytale is complete without the magical battle of good versus evil; where ultimately good triumphs but not before much suffering has taken place.  In our most popular fairy tales of today – Cinderella, Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs and Sleeping Beauty to name but a few – we find innocent, beautiful young creatures exploited by wicked step-mothers or relations, calling upon their friends for help before they can find true happiness.

Fairytales are not always just that – in fact, for the most part fairy tales do not contain fairies. Instead they stem as far back as c 1300 BC in Egpyt to The Tale of Two Brothers when the first recorded folklore began – and continues to be – grounded in historical truth as it is passed down throughout the ages. Over the years, such folk tales span centuries, generations and cultures, with fairy tales today often being a way to teach young children the difference between right and wrong, the risk of danger and the beauty of love – colourful, magical characters set in idyllic surroundings looking for the happy ever after. Rather than fairies, the magic is provided by talking animals, wizardry, and the forces of nature doing battle with those of human nature. Just as in Denny Bradbury’s The Water Sprite & the Waterfall, where the water sprite meets an orphaned little girl, Terpsichoria, so too do many fairy tales talk of woodland creatures joining forces to help a damsel in distress. Just as in the folk lore of thousands of years gone past, Denny’s fairytales talk of how “they all lived very happily together and no one was frightened or lonely again” – Denny Bradbury The Dryad and the Seahorse.

Often fairytales will highlight the complexities that may exist within families; the older men are found to be weak and unable to cope with the required emotions needed to bring joy and stability to their family unit – the fathers in Hansel & Gretel, Cinderella, & Snow White to name but a few.  In contrast, the women are shown to be strong, powerful creatures – for the older women it often manifests itself in the form of evil, whilst the younger generation are the heroines who battle such hostility to ultimately be rewarded with true happiness. Denny Bradbury draws upon this theme in her book The Reunion, where five women demonstrate their resilience and strength to the various challenging life experiences they encounter and in her new book Borvo where she harks back to the fairy tale time of Kings and Queens.

If you would like to know more, please listen to Denny discussing what motivates her to write her fairytales at Fairytales and in Part II I will discuss the origins of fairytales and how, once upon a time, it all began…

Elizabeth Bridgefield

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

Digital books sales increase in UK

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Sales of digital books in the UK are have quadrupled.

That’s according to new figures out from the Publishers Association.

Last year sales increased from four million pounds to sixteen million pounds.

Despite the big rise the sales still remain a small percentage of total book sales in the UK, which was just over three billion pounds.

Stephen the King of Writing

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“The Greatest Popular Novelist of Our Day, Comparable to Dickens” – The Guardian on Stephen King

As of this year, at least one book written by Stephen King can be found in over 350 million book shelves across the world.  Stephen King has cemented himself as a pillar of numerous genres including horror, suspense, science fiction, thriller and fiction.

Stephen King was born in Maine in 1947.  When Stephen King was just two years old, his father left the family under the excuse “He was just going out for cigarettes.” His writing career was jumpstarted when he won a scholarship award to the University of Maine and in 1971 he later taught English, while his wife studied for her degree.

It was the publication of books such as Carrie and The Shinning and their adaptation into motion pictures which spring boarded King into his current position as one of the most prolific writers of the past 4 decades.  Carrie was followed by a host of best sellers including Hearts of Atlantis, Misery (which again was transformed into a film), Bag of Bones, The Dark Half, and the infamous Dark Tower Series, which has been transformed into a graphic novel headed by Marvel.  His books have given an opportunity for some of cinemas most revered actors to tread the boards and participate in the very art of story telling.  Jack Nicholson brought the role of Jack Torrance alive and gave cinema a line for the history books… “Heeres, Johnny.”  And Morgan Freeman took the role of Red from the Shawshank Redemption in what was arguably one of the best films of a generation.  Alas, Shawshank Redemption missed out on an Oscar.  Currently, Stephen King lives in Bangor, Maine with his wife Tabitha who too is a novelist.

Over the last 4 decades Stephen King has been involved in writing throughout his whole life, writing articles, talking at seminars, writing short stories and also full novels.

When doing research for this article I went on YouTube to find interviews with Stephen King, and to find out what makes him tick, what his style of writing is and how he gets his ideas.  One video detailed the very essence needed to be good writer, which is too read.  In one he quotes “If you can’t make time to read everything then how can you expect to write…All of a sudden a real wake up call is when you read something and say, that sucked…I can do better, and this guy got published!” Words of wisdom, which I myself have taken heed.

Stephen King has also dabbled in writing short stories, and putting together a collection after a few stories have been built up, much like Denny Bradbury’s Denagerie of Poems.   In Stephen King’s Different Seasons, he states, “It is the Tale, not he who tells it.”  That phrase sums up the entity of fiction in my opinion.

Eddie Fox

The World’s First Book

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There are many claims for the World’s First Book – and what can actually be defined as a book. So I will be looking at the world’s first printed books.

Again, this throws up different arguments, as texts have been found with no certainty of when and how they were created.

There is a book in the British Library, ‘Diamond Sutra’ which is considered one of the earliest viable printed books, viable because it has a date, unlike others. It’s a Buddhist text, containing teachings. It was produced using the woodblock method, which requires carving every word of every page into wood, then printing it. Towards the end, it says “Reverently made for universal free distribution by Wang Jie on behalf of his two parents on the 15th of the 4th moon of the 9th year of Xiantong (11th of May 868).”

However, the Gutenberg Bible is considered by many to be the world’s first printed book. It was the first book printed with the movable printing press, kick starting a printing revolution. Johannes Guttenberg invented the moveable printing press, using oil based ink and experimented with different processes. In 1455 he printed his Guttenberg bible. This style of printing ushered in the period of modernity. We can thank Johannes Guttenberg when reading books today as his ideas form the basis of modern day printing presses. With a little help from computers and digital technology of course . Denny Bradbury’s new book Borvo, available in June, will be printed using Guttenberg’s foundation ideas.

It’s thought 180 copies of the Guttenberg bible were printed, 45 of them on Vellum and the rest on paper. 47 of these are thought to still exist, but only 21 of them are complete. The rest have pages or whole volumes missing. The British Library holds 2 complete copies, one in paper and one in Vellum. The price of a completed copy today is estimated to be in the region of £25 million pounds.

Learn about the history of poetry here.