
Listen up guys,
I haven’t been entirely honest with you and I want to come clean.
I didn’t share everything I had.
I kept back some of the good stuff.
I gave them to other people, and guess what?
They liked them. So much so that a couple of my original stories were chosen for anthologies, and the book launches were coincidentally about a week apart!
Wednesday 30th October 2019.
Prana Vegan Cafe, Leicester, UK.

Photo by Matt Seymour on Unsplash
Brexit had been temporarily banished and Halloween was still too far away to think about. I felt like a comedian given their first 10-minute slot. I spent ages that morning, wringing my hands, choosing which 8-minute segment to read from my story, ‘May Settle in Transit’. I couldn’t do the bit about gentrification, nor the bit about a different coffee shop. They didn’t feel right.
When I had settled on the most perfect chunk of prose, I read it out loud, recorded it, listened back, recorded it again, slowing my speech down, once more with feeling, enunciated, realised I hated the sound of my own voice and accent, tried not to fidget, remembered to smile, made notes in the book, and then did it again. I think I recorded it about 8 times in total. I wanted to take my time and not rush through to get it over with. I knew I would regret it if I did that. I kept telling myself that this was all practice for when I do my own book tour for my own novel. It’s little steps towards a future goal.
To get me into the zone, I tried listening to Eminem, like Obama used to before he went on stage, but the ‘Villains’ album by Queens of the Stone Age did the trick brilliantly. I went out for a pizza and large glass of Malbec with my super-positive friend for distraction, gossip and support, and continued to practice my deep breathing to calm my nerves.
It had been almost 30 years, since I had spoken in public (with the advance knowledge that I was expected to speak) and reading aloud something I had written heightened the nerves. Why does knowing beforehand make the fear greater? That time around, I was a singer in a local band, and I now have no idea how the 16-year-old me ever did it. I suppose acting in school plays were still fresh in my mind.
As a local sweet shop got a mention in my story, I bought “a quarter of spice” (100g of boiled sweets – rhubarb and custards) for the audience to pass around. That morning’s practice helped me to pace myself, and I looked up at the audience every few seconds, how I’ve seen professional public speakers do. To stop myself being overwhelmed, I bought myself time by handing over my business card to anyone who spoke to me. A “thank you” and a smile covered my panic.
My friend said it didn’t look like I was nervous, but I felt it. I think it’s obvious from my social media names I am well aware how my social anxiety manifests itself as uncontrollable babbling.

(Not actually giant cards, but mini play food)
It felt strange to read out something that was written a year ago, but now may be the first time someone else has heard it. It was great to meet some of the other contributors and hear their stories. I still have the original flyer seeking contributions.


Me and the Editor Jon Wilkins

Jon organised loads of events around Leicestershire to promote the book during the annual Leicester Literary Festival, ‘Everybody’s Reading’, culminating with this one at De Montfort University, Leicester on 25th February 2020.

You can buy a copy of the anthology, “An Attempt At Exhausting a Place in Leicester” here
Thursday 7th November 2019.
Nomad Books, Fulham Road, London, UK

The book NO GOOD DEED gets its title from the quote
“No good deed goes unpunished.” Clare Boothe Luce
When I first started this blog, I obviously didn’t have much content to share, so I created a page of quotes I like, called ‘these things I know’, and this one was the first on that list. Fate eh?
So, I now know the London village I want to move to when I win the lottery or have a best seller. I won’t get much change from a million quid though.
I did a recce via Parson’s Green tube to get my bearings a few weeks ago and had a little nosy around Nomad Books. This little indie bookshop has a wonderful vibe. It’s not just the big name bookshops that get the big names. Anthony Horowitz had his launch here this very week! Their massive children’s section is a great place to hold a book launch.
This was the first time most of us had even seen the book, let along held it, so it was quite a special evening. I wasn’t doing a reading (thank goodness) and my head is still buzzing trying to remember names to faces I know from social media, to bookmark their websites. I could get used to this little world of super-supportive writers, editors, and proofreaders!
No Good Deed is the latest charity anthology by Retreat West Books The theme for contributions was ‘help’ and Indigo Volunteers is this book’s chosen charity. £2.99 on kindle or £8.99 in paperback. It makes a great stocking filler!
If you like the direction some of my more recent stories have taken, then I think you would enjoy ‘Say When’. A little bit darker, grittier with hints of past violence…
Amanda Saint – Publisher at Retreat West Books said of my contribution, ‘Say When’
“Very clever twist we didn’t see coming and great distortion of time.”

Amanda Saint from Retreat West Books and me. Sorry, to Sophie Duffy (my editor) as I unfortunately forgot to take a picture of us two.
‘Say When’ is published in the anthology, ‘No Good Deed’ by Retreat West Books, available here

*****update*****


You can vote for it here!
It’s never easy reading in public so well done. I was so nervous when I did my first comedy stand duo years ago (blog about that later).
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Congratulations 😁😁
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It was clever of you to practice the read by taping and listening. I suspect there is a theater background influencing you or perhaps, forensic debates? I never thought I had a hard time public speaking. (As I’ve often said, it’s getting me to shut up that is the trick.) But I recently did a public singing where I was recorded. (No one asked me, I apparently do not wait for an invitation.) It was more nervous doing that than anything else–and at the time, I was going through cancer treatment. Kudos for overcoming social anxiety, for getting your writing out, and for celebrating your wins! Now, if only they sold little candies that helped everybody do that!
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Thank you. I work somewhere where people do a lot of public speaking and the colleague/friend I know is not the same person as the one up there giving the talk. I also know someone who was on the radio and they had to do their ‘posh voice’ for radio, for a mass audience.
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Congratulations!!!
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Congratulations! Wonderful to hear of your success (and of your visit to the sweet shop).
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Good job! Take care.
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Congratulations!
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Thank you!
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Congratulations 💐
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A success story for sure! So happy for you and best wishes for what will come next.😊
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Thank you! 📖
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Congratulations! How exciting (and it would be anxiety-producing for anyone) – it sounds like you handled everything just fine!
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Thank you.
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Well done!! Hope this is just the beginning of greater things!!
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I hope so. Who knows? Two years ago I didn’t even have this blog!
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That’s exciting!
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Congrats! Keep on truckin’.
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Thank you! Will do!
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Well done!
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Thank you.
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🤔
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Ab Fab! As they say in your part of the world, or at least some do.
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Congratulations! 🙂
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Dammit – stepped in not steppingstones.
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Hmm. I’ve steppingstones this trap before. Not fiction? Big week.
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Well done!!
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Thank you.
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