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Writers' Events Spring 2017 

10/1/2017

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We live in exciting times!

​Check out these workshops, events and competitions.

This Spring, I will be delivering workshops in London and Harwich and participating in a platform event in Norwich. ​I will also be at the Essex Author Day in Chelmsford, celebrating the Launch of 'Essex Belongs To Us': at Essex Book Festival. This  anthology includes an extract from The Art Forger's Daughter.


Next Harwich Writers' session: February 8th at Harwich Library. 10.30 - 12.30
 
Life Writing Workshop
21st January 10.00-4.00 Islington Central Library
Life Writing Workshop with Anita Belli
Places still available at Spread The Word
https://www.spreadtheword.org.uk/events/life-writing-workshop/
 
Life Writing Prize
'For the purposes of this Prize, life writing is ‘intended to be true’, reflects someone’s own life journey or experiences and is not fiction. It is writing from the author’s own personal experience.'
Deadline: 5th February
https://www.spreadtheword.org.uk/projects/life-writing-prize/
 
Essex Author's Day
18th March 10.00 - 3.00
Chelmsford Library
Includes launch of Anthology: Essex Belongs To Us at 2.00
FREE to attend. Booking for workshops and more information about the day, here:
http://essexbookfestival.org.uk/event/essex-authors-day/

Essex Book Festival
Programme Here
http://essexbookfestival.org.uk/
 
Publishing Day School
8th April 10.00 - 4.00
Writer's Centre Norwich
Over the course of the day participants will hear from leading experts and innovators in their field, who will look at changes to traditional print media and the impact of digital publishing.
http://www.writerscentrenorwich.org.uk/course/publishing-day-school/


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Creative Writing Workshops in Harwich

29/9/2014

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I am teaming up with poet Gordon Hoyles and Blossom at The Hotel Continental in Dovercourt for a new series of Writing Workshops and a Writer's Group to stir the restless creativity of Autumn.....

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Conti-Writer's Group
A blank page... an open stage, full of possibilities....
Whatever you love to write - fiction, short stories, poetry, 
life stories, diaries, anecdotes...  join us for an informal 
creative writer's group in Dovercourt.
Thursday 23rd October and monthly
Hotel Continental Dovercourt

More information here

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Introduction to Write Your Life
Would you like to:
Tell your own story, document your family history, 
create a blog for family and friends, write an autobiography, write about your ancestors, write about other family members,  or an incident in your past, a world event which has changed your life, or a personal journey to fulfillment?
October 29th Hotel Continental, Dovercourt
more information here

Introduction to Self Publishing 
Have you dreamed of having your story published?
Whether fiction, short stories or a novel, 
A collection od poetry or your life story
This half day workshop will set you off on the road to making that dream come true
December 4th Hotel Continental, Dovercourt
more information here


Coaching for Writers - one to one Coaching for writers is a private, one to one session with writing tutor, Anita Belli which aims to help you to unlock your potential as a writer. We will talk about you current work, your aims for your work, and any problems, blocks, or challenges you are facing with your writing or publishing
more information here
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Look forward to seeing you at the place to write in Harwich this autumn....  The Hotel Continental Dovercourt

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How many Works In Progress do you have...

26/9/2014

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...and what are you going to do about them?

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If like me you are happier starting a new project than finishing one, you will have a few Works In Progress (WIP's).

At the current count, I have a new historical novel brewing, with a title, a story, themes of love, loss and art, set during the Spanish Civil War with characters shouting at me when I take the dog for a walk, or just before I go to sleep. I need to pin down the plot so that I can start writing it for NaNoWriMo in November. Then there is the lighter contemporary short romcom set in Andalucia with a title, story, characters and plot ready to go....  A Young Adult historical which is also bugging me and tugging at my unconscious; if it shouts much louder I will have a story, and a few more characters with a plot gradually emerging....

The back catalogue, which most of us have collected, comes under the heading of 'Unfinished Business' and needs to be resolved. Four Romantic Novels which will be cannibalised for spares if I don't get them into publication before then. But they need attention; there is a reason they are not published; usually, story related and all are in a queue for the story doctor to diagnose some remedies which will make them more compelling to read.

So the question is this:

Do I work on the new, exciting historical novel, which needs a lot more research? The romcom which I will enjoy and requires less research? Or change tack altogether and go for my first YA historical which will also need research? And when oh when do I get round to healing and making the back catalogue of four novels ready for publication?

Tell me about your WIP's and back catalogue and how you plan to tackle it. 

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Book Launch: The Art Forger's Daughter

23/9/2014

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A group of close friends. My family. A fabulous venue. Food and drink and a pile of books. All the ingredients for a great Sunday lunchtime. Thanks to everyone who came to support me. The 'Name a Character' Raffle was won by SAM RITCHIE, who will appear as a character in my next book. I will begin to write The Ties That Bind in NaNoWriMo this year.I had the opportunity to talk  about the background to The Art Forger's Daughter. This is a summary of what I said, some of what I intended to say and forgot (speaking without reference to notes is a hazardous approach) and some of what I would have said had I thought of it at the time. Hindsight is a wonderful thing.

Author's Notes: The Art Forger's Daughter

Art Forgery in World War Two
The starting point for this book was the remarkable true story of Artist Hans Van Meegeren who was arrested after WW11 in Amsterdam for Collaboration. He was charged with selling the nation’s art treasures to the Nazis when a small Vermeer painting was found in Herman Goerring’s collection of looted art and was traced back to Van Meegeren. Collaboration was a hanging offence, so in his defense, Van Meegeren claimed that he had painted the picture. He was not immediately believed – nobody could paint like Vermeer - and the painting had provenance and authentication.  He said that he could prove it by painting another and so he set about literally painting for his life. He proved his case and was sentenced to one year imprisonment for forgery, a light sentence which reflected public opinion; he had become a national hero for fooling the Nazi’s. Sadly he died in prison before his sentence was completed.

This story has been told in many books and even a film, so I was not intending to recreate it – but I wondered about the other ways in which Art can play a part in all areas of our life and even be used to save lives. Picasso’s now infamous painting ‘Guernica’ for example raised awareness and support across a  largely non interventionist Europe of the atrocities of the Spanish Civil War.

THEMES
This book is a love story, dealing with the reckless passion of first love, and a deeper, more lasting maternal / paternal love which echoes down the centuries. It tells the story of the unintended consequences of actions, memory truth and lies. How the past ripples through the generations to impact on the lives of those who come after.

The effects of trauma 
It is well documented that trauma casts a long shadows after any war. What I am interested in is the trauma suffered by the women and children of war and the impact that trauma has on those who come after. There is much documentation about the Hunger Winter and the physical effects of starvation, which also rippled down the years causing both physical and emotional ill health throughout the lives of those who endured it.

Mental Health
The 1950’s was another planet and looking back even over such a short time, we can see the social changes in attitude and life styles, but none so much as in the treatment of Mental Health patients. Thanks to my brother, John Belli for his support in researching this aspect of the book and answering my unusual questions.

Art Forgery:
Learning how to forge pictures in the 1940’s and 50’s hasn’t made me rich! Detection techniques have improved dramatically and these forgeries of old masters would be harder to make today. Modern masters became easier to forge but fakes and forgeries are still prolific and continue to keep the law busy

PLACES
Some of the places in the book are real, some are fictional and for the purposes of this book, I have taken a few liberties.

Severalls Mental Hospital in Colchester is a real place and was closed in 1997. Opened in 1913 and did indeed have extremely long, previously unglazed corridors. It’s gardens were documented as being amongst the best in the area.

The suburb of Shrub End in Colchester was built in the post war era, in common with many towns and cities around the UK.

The old Dutch quarter of Colchester still exists and is now much sought after. The Little House on Stockwell Street is fictional but is typical of houses in that area at the time. Stockwell Street doesn’t exist: East and West Stockell do, as does ‘Stockwell’.

The George Hotel has stood on the same spot for 500 years and I thought it an appropriate venue for Dr. Felix to stay.

Wrabness  just along the tracks on the branch line between Manningtree and Harwich:  I have taken a few liberties to suit the story but mostly thought it would be a great setting for these two ‘babes on the wood...’

The Port of Harwich remained busy during the war and passenger ferries resumed in 1946. It was the port which received the Kinder Transport, the Jewish children evacuated from Nazi occupied Europe, who were housed temporarily in a caravan park in nearby Dovercourt, Essex, being transported on to London Liverpool Street where a statue commemorates their journey. At the time of writing, there are still people living in Colchester and the surrounding area who first came to Britain on the Kinder transport.

Amsterdam as a setting because it is more likely that Dr. Van Gelder would live and work there. Following conversations with Johanna Brown, who lived in Holland as a child during the Nazi occupation and now lives in Manningtree, I set a scene in the more remote tree nurseries of Boskoop.  

VOICES
1st person alternating Beatrix and T’Ash. 3rd person other characters; multiple viewpoints give more scope for story telling.  I love to hear a character's ‘real’ voice

CHARACTERS
All fictitious and like most of us a flawed bunch who are trying to survive and thrive; who share a common humanity and I have tried to give them all some redeeming features. Their task is to learn and grow through the challenges which have been chucked at them..... So in reality, based pretty much on all of us.... 

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Ten Creative Nudges....

15/9/2014

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... from The Creative Casa

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These are a few techniques which I developed at The Creative Casa. I use these every day in my writing practice and workshop teaching.  

Endnotes from: 'Tales from the Creative Casa' by Anita Belli

1. Morning pages is based on an exercise from Julia Cameron’s ‘The Artist’s Way’  (A Course in Discovering and Recovering Your Creative Self). As soon as I get out of bed; after putting the dog out, feeding the cat and putting on  the coffee, I write. Whatever comes into my head gets put into words. You capture all the unconscious thoughts, ideas and dreams which you didn’t even know were there and which evaporate like mist as the morning dawns and life gets in the way. I fill a notebook every three or four weeks with this process and now I cannot start my day without it. I write on a computer the rest of the time but my Morning Pages are hand written. There is something magical about waking up and taking a pen and making marks on paper. It is primitive and spontaneous. I use this as a warm up to develop fluency between feeling, thought and words. It has become my scales and arpeggios, or ballet barre.

2. Develop a reflective practice: sieve the morning pages and the memory banks looking for connections, themes, links and ironies: all fertile ground to grow ideas. All sorts of things come up and writing them down gives tangible form, like water from mist, which can be bottled and stored, distilled and explored, to find an essence which you can process later and use in your fiction.

3. Get the Notebook Habit: Carry it around with you. Write everything down: snippets overheard can spark a short story. Observing people can spark an idea for a character. Write down how you feel. How the world is treating you. How you are treating the world. Your interaction with others. Even if it doesn’t spark an idea for a story setting or character, it will at least get it out of your system so that personal rants don’t make it into the pages of your fiction.

4. Warm up the body: greet the day with feathered wings not feet of clay: Get in touch with your body; shake it up and wake it up; alert the senses to the day; through gentle stretches, or a walk. Dogs are great companions and motivators; they get you out of the house in all weathers. Breathe. The ‘inspiration’ of breath is taken for granted. Connect with it consciously.

5. People matter. Refresh the pool of ideas and resources through interaction with interesting people thus creating flow and sustaining the process. Populating your creative life adds value to the seeds and ideas.

6 Play games; borrow a child if necessary. You can have fun and liberate the locked-in creative soul of the curious child who is willing to play and hasn’t yet learned the inhibitions and fears of the adult. Be playful and bring joy back into your life and work.

7. Location and environment are also important. Try a different place, a new space, a refreshing view. Recharge the spirit; do something different or go somewhere you haven’t been before. Vary the morning walk, or shop in a different town. Visit someone who lives in a very different environment to your – urban or countryside, village or metropolis; it is all grist to the mill.

8. Learn through doing; experience it. Doing is where the meaning is and if you find the meaning you learn more; another small step on the creative journey. It sounds obvious, but the more you write and reflect, the more you will learn about yourself and your writing.

9. Be present in your life: explore the boundaries of being present in your life; of turning up and experiencing it; and translating those experiences into creative thought and insights.

10. Use all of the senses as you write, paint, create, make, sing, play. Feel it. taste it; hear it; look again; see the layers. Experience it. Go on a treasure hunt to a market, or a village or an urban street or an empty beach and gather notes or images for each of the five senses. Review your notes and images and notice connections, links themes and ironies.

Creativity requires trust and imagination and placing yourself in the moment and exploring the whole world with the whole self. And having fun along the way and sharing it with like minded fellow travelers.

Contact me if you wish to continue the conversation or participate in workshops.


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Tales From The Creative Casa

31/8/2014

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Available today on Kindle 
and in paperback from Monday 8th September

Introduction to this collection

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The Creative Casa is a farmhouse in Andalucia where, for a while, we ran workshops and explored how to find the creative spark in ourselves; to discover where it sits, nudging us all the time, wanting to be let out to add fulfilment to our lives.

This collection of short stories was edited at The Creative Casa and the stories have been selected from a large number written over a period of years. The themes I have chosen here are universal themes of love and loss, secrets and lies; the unintended consequences of past actions on the present; and young women at that threshold in their lives where they discover that they are carrying new life. 

They are sometimes humorous with a light heart, real life with a little magic, and occasionally, real life which doesn’t end so well. I also like to write short stories where the possibilities begin as the story ends.

Some have previously been published in magazines whilst others are openings and jumping off points for longer works of fiction. They vary in length, motivation and inspiration.

In the end, all fiction draws from the well of creativity which needs to be nurtured. It springs from our experiences, observations, snippets overheard, and a life lived.....and we can all draw from that spring if we are nudged towards it.

Coming soon on Amazon and Kindle

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Write Here in Raynes Park

20/3/2014

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Creative Writing Workshop. Another full house. Book early for next time

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WRITE HERE in Raynes Park, London SW20 8BA
If you have always wanted to have a go at Creative Writing or if you like to write and want to meet others like you, then you will love this series of free creative writing workshops

Through a series of creative writing exercises, we will explore where we are WRITE HERE; based on your surroundings we will develop descriptive writing about where we live, and have the opportunity to share work and get some feedback.

Raynes Park  Library on Friday 21st March from 2.00 - 4.00.

Next time: Morden:  24th April; Deptford: 29th April

These courses are managed by Spread The Word in partnership with The Library Press Project
Contact www.spreadtheword.org.uk:  020 8692 0231

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Write Here

3/3/2014

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WRITE HERE workshop sold out. Book early for next time.

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This week's Write Here workshop will take place tomorrow Tuesday 4th March at
Wood Street Library Forest Road
Walthamstow E17 4AA
6.30 -8.00
We will be discovering 5 key elements to creating convincing characters through word sketches. 

It is now FULLY BOOKED but get in early to book the next one: Raynes Park: 2.00 - 4.00
Friday 21st March
Book now at www.spreadtheword.org
Tel: 020 8692 0231


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FREE creative writing workshops

5/2/2014

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The Spring season of Spread The Word's WRITE HERE kicked off, appropriately, in the shadow of Wembley Stadium

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Thanks to the writers who joined me at Wembley Library yesterday and contributed to an exhilarating start to the new season. For those wanting more, and those who haven't joined in yet, there are more workshops to come, which will excite and inspire your writing with sessions of word play, writing from everyday life and character sketches. Please remember to book as places are limited.
If you have always wanted to have a go at creative writing or you are looking to write and you want to take part in a friendly group writing session, then join me for the writing workshops listed below.

TO BOOK
online at:
www.spreadtheword.org.uk
email: info@spreadtheword.org.uk
call: 020 8692 0231 ext 249

The next sessions will be:

WRITE START: CANADA WATER CULTURE SPACE
Thursday 13th February
6.00pm - 7.45pm
THERE IS A FEE OF £10 /£8 Concessions for this session: book here
Canada Water Cultural Space, 21 Surrey Quays Road London SE16 7AR

Looking for a writing session that will trigger something new in your writing and your voice? Join us for this popular WRITE START workshop and find new energy and inspiration for your writing.
 
Through exercises, reading and discussion, you will explore ways of writing that bring a story alive in the reader's mind, and approaches to creating characters and writing dialogue. In a small group, in a relaxed but focussed setting, you will have time to ask questions, get to know fellow participants and WRITE!

Suitable for beginner / intermediate writers
WRITE HERE IN WALTHAM FOREST
Tuesday 4th March
7.00pm - 8.45pm
FREE: book in advance 
Wood Street Library, Forest Road Walthamstow: E17 4AA

WRITE HERE IN DEPTFORD
Tuesday 29th April
6.00pm - 7.45pm
FREE: book in advance
The Library at Deptford Lounge, 9 Giffin Street, Deptford London SE8 4RJ

Fun and imaginative practical writing activities. Use your creativity to explore the local area in a new and imaginative way, and find some inspiration
to write from your everyday life. You will be guided through a series of interesting exercises to get your imagination flowing.

Suitable for all writers

Programme developed by Spread The Word in partnership with Brent, Lewisham, and Waltham Forest. Delivered by Anita Belli
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    Check out my BLOG here: The stories behind the stories. 
    This is where I explore the themes and ideas behind my novels.
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    I am a compulsive writer and I want to share some of my writing with you as well as thoughts and ideas about writing and some useful techniques. Welcome and please leave a message.

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    Available from October 11th 2018 on Amazon
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    February 17th 2020
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    Available on Amazon
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    Made with the children of Wix and Wrabness Primary School
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