How to Build Your Own Record Pressing Plant

Steve Spithray. Butterfly Effect Publishing. (272p) ISBN: 9781739100407
How to Build Your Own Record Pressing Plant

How to Build Your Own Record Pressing Plant

For a while I’d been seeing posts about this book on various social media and out of the blue Steve sent me a copy to read which I’m always grateful for when authors/publishers send me stuff to read.

Written in diary form, “How to Build Your Own Record Pressing Plant” follows the first year of a business start up in Middlebrough where two best friends and music lovers decide to set up their own vinyl printing plant!

Each chapter takes in a ‘day’ in the life of the first year of Press On Vinyl and consists of interviews and discussions, sometimes written exactly as said, sometimes woven into the developing narrative of the presses development.

Each chapter is fascinating and shows a company driven by strong personalities with a passion for music and vinyl in particular, a strong ethos of equity and a need to be as ecologically sound as possible within a notoriously oil-hungry sector.

I really grew to feel for the people involved as they all came across so genuine and passionate, with a drive to change things for the better grassroots and who are really proud of their Middlesbrough heritage and are doing everything they can to make thing better in the town.

This is not only a fascinating look into a new and exciting business opening up in Middlesbrough but a really interesting look at the record business overall, well worth a read if you have any interest in music at all.


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Jólabókaflóð

Jolabokaflod

Jolabokaflod

In Iceland, books are exchanged as Christmas Eve presents, then you spend the rest of the night in bed reading them and eating chocolate. The tradition is part of the season called Jólabókaflóð, or ‘Yule Book Flood’, because Iceland, which publishes more books per capita than any other country, sells most of its books between September and November due to people preparing for the upcoming holiday.

This was a really popular tweet and I thought I could expand it into some recommends for the celebration of Jolabokaflod.

The books I’m going to recommend haver a general wintery or christmasy theme and the chocolate are just bloody gorgeous.

As I mentioned on the thread, The Way Past Winter by Kiran Millwood Hargrave, it’s a lovely wintery story with a Scandi feel to it and the hard back edition is beautiful.

Others have mentioned Northern Lights by Philip Pullman, another wintery delight with lots of snow and armoured polar bears, especially apt for Iceland, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis continues the snowy theme, but the person did want to swap chocolates for Turkish delight, perfectly reasonable in my view.


Others went with books that are their comfort reads or a classic, Lee Child got a few mentions and Kite Runner got a mention.

Others I would recommend as great wintery reads are; The Snow Spider by Jenny Nimmo, The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Anderson, Sky Song by Abi Elphinstone, The Shining by Stephen King, The Snowman by Jo Nesbo, and The Yiddish Policemen’s Union by Michael Chabon

As for chocolate choices there are several, all of them so yummy, but not too dark as to set me buzzing with caffeine 🙂

The first is produced by The Chocolate Society and it is their Blonde Chocolate & Sea Salt Bar, so moreish especially if you liked Caramacs, still light but very tasty.

Next are the Sea Salted Caramel Fudge Discs from our local patisserie, Robineau.

Last but not least are the White Chocolate Pistachios with Cardamon and Rose from Rococo, these are so delicious that we’ve never been able to stop ourselves from eating the whole bag in one sitting.

Have you any recommendations? Whether they are books, chocolates or traditions please let us know.


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The Golden Mole

Katherine Rundell, Talya Baldwin. Faber & Faber. (208p) ISBN: 9780571362509
The Golden Mole

The Golden Mole

I’d had my eye on this since it came out in hardback, it looked lovely and really fascinating.

This is the soon to be released paperback, and it still has all the lovely illustrations by Talya Baldwin.

What Katherine Rundell sets out to achieve here is a small, yet important, survey of some of the world’s varied fauna. Impossible to do many she chooses quite a wide variety to show how different types share a common problem.

Each chapter stands alone in describing a species or family of animals, some of their behaviour, some of the variety within the family, ways they’ve interacted with humans, and some stark facts about vulnerability.

Whilst doing this she emphasises the natural catastrophe that has been visited on the living world at the hands of humanity, the loss of species and numbers of individuals within those species is astounding. But unfortunately still accelerating.

She does end on words of hope and action, emphasising informed hope is the best way forward and our actions are important.

A brilliant read written in clear yet informative language makes this a very accessible read and the self-contained structure of each chapter means it’s the perfect bedtime read, though I did consume it in a day as I was so engrossed.


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Rowena Aitken – Author Q&A

Rowena Aitken

Rowena Aitken

Rowena is a prolific artist who has worked on a wide variety of projects since she became a freelance illustrator 14 years ago. This includes The Wee Book o’ Scottish Mindfooness – A small illustrated book on mindfulness packed with Scottish colloquialisms, Our Big Box – A reminiscence tool for those with dementia and their families and The Hoots – A monthly comic following the musical adventures of The Brainiacs in Brilliant Brainz magazine.

In her spare time, she writes tutorials for other artists keen to learn digital art skills whatever their age.

Rowena has illustrated two popular children’s books: Ruan The Little Red Squirrel (2016) and The Kilted Coo (2017) before collaborating with Elisa Peacock on The Bum That Barked (2020). Her current projects involve educational illustrations primarily in the Irish language specialism and creating the artwork for Ren Cummins’ debut children’s book Princess Peanut, Be Polite (Coming 2023).

Rowena is represented by D’avila Illustration Agency & António Adrião Artist Representative

Rowena can be found at:
Website: rowenaaitken.com
Email: rowena@rowenaaitken.com
Twitter/X: @rowenaaitken
BlueSky: @rowenaaitken.bsky.social
Instagram: @rowena.aitken.illustration
Etsy: rowenaaitken.etsy.com/
Redbubble: www.redbubble.com/people/roaitken/shop
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/rowena-aitken-illustration/

When did you know you wanted to become an illustrator?

I’ll start off with the stereotypical answer that I have always drawn. I was a nuisance when I was wee & I think drawing was the only thing that made me sit down for 5 minutes. My parents encouraged me & were always my biggest champions. I was forever lavished with pens, pencils, paper and paint.

I always wanted to become an artist but never realised I could become an illustrator – careers advisors at high school were generally stumped if you wanted to go down a non-standard career path. After graduating with a degree in Animation I drew for pleasure & posted on deviantART (now deleted account) until a perfect life storm came along & I thought “Why not try being a professional illustrator? Worst case I need to get a real job!”. That was 14 years ago.

It’s not easy & always a work in progress; developing, learning & evolving. I don’t think I can see myself doing anything else.

How long does it typically take to make a page or cover for a book?

Blimey! How long is a piece of string?

My answer is it takes as long as it needs to be right or good enough for the deadline. Is everything I send off perfect? Of course not. Perfection is a fool’s errand.

What’s your favourite piece of art equipment?

Definitely my Wacom 27QHD Cintiq – It changed the way I work. I was using a Wacom Intuos 4 XL tablet for about 10 years (still got it, still works) but then I started getting wrist issues. A friend of mine sold me their small Cintiq & although the drawing area was smaller than what I was used to, it was a game changer. It turned out the wrist issues were carpal tunnel syndrome in both wrists (which I had surgery for – great success!) so I invested in The Big Wacom that a Twitter pal was selling at the start of the pandemic. My posture & workflow has never been better!

Creatives – look after your body!

Do you have a favourite colour scheme, if so what and why?

I tend towards cooler colours; teal, purple, lime green but also a bit of shocking pink.

Who were your inspirations when starting out?

I’m not sure! I think it was pure pigheaded determination to prove I could do it.

Pixel the Cat

Pixel the Cat

Do you have another job beside being an illustrator, if so what?

On call servant to Pixel the cat.

What do you do to overcome a creative block?

Creative block is very easy to overcome if you have a deadline. It’s also easy to solve if you can bounce ideas around & chat about a problem with someone. My other half Andrew is fantastic for this.

Creative block on personal projects is an entirely different animal. I feel giving yourself constraints helps – if you can draw anything then you invariably end up drawing nothing. A short brief is usually all I need.

Do you have a favourite piece in your portfolio, if so could you share it and talk about it?

Yes it’s the Space Dinosaurs! I don’t recall why I thought “yes, dinosaurs in space” but I’m glad I acted on that whim.

Space Age Dinosaur

Space Age Dinosaur

What was your first book related project?

My first children’s book was Ruan The Little Red Squirrel which came out in 2016. I have a lot of mixed feelings about this book – the day I got the contract for this book I found out my Dad had cancer. Sadly he passed away before I could show him the finished printed result but I shared updates with him during the process. I’m incredibly proud of the book – I feel though it’s not my best work but given the circumstances it’s testament to how I can produce something even in the toughest of life’s situations.

Ruan, The Little Red Squirrel

Ruan, The Little Red Squirrel

My second book The Kilted Coo (written by Rachel McGaw & published by Forth Books) was dedicated to my late Dad. I felt I did this one justice & he’d be proud.

The Kilted Coo

The Kilted Coo

What type of media do you prefer to work in and why?

These days I work 100% digital – I use Photoshop & a Wacom 27QHD Cintiq. I do enjoy working with pencils however I don’t have the space at the moment.

Do you have a playlist you like working to? If so do you want to share it?

It really depends on what I’m working on – if it’s the sketch/planning stage it’s ambient music. Right now it’s the Death Stranding soundtrack, Aphex Twin, Leftfield, Radiohead, Hans Zimmer soundtracks. If it’s the refining & rendering stage I listen to audiobooks, Metallica, Prodigy, Chemical Brothers.

Do you have any rituals when working?

I try & use the Pomodoro technique where I work in 45min blocks then get up, go to the little illustrators’ room, make a coffee/get a drink/snack & have a bit of a stretch.

I also have either a mug of strong black coffee &/or a pint of ice cold water.

Did the books you read as a child influence your work?

I suppose they must have, however my love was cartoons. So much that I ended up studying Animation at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design, University of Dundee.

I love Chuck Jones’ work – the expressions & dynamic poses are incredible & I try to pay homage to those factors in my work.

Has your illustration/art style changed over time?

Absolutely! I started off working in tabletop RPG art (despite the fact I have never played it in my life). The art was predominantly black & white because it was cheaper for publishers who tended to be self-pubs & paying out of their own pocket. I was more rigid back then – probably because I was starting off with digital art as a job. I had been using a tiny Wacom Graphire 4 A5 for a couple of years but I hadn’t loosened up yet. My “real” art was the opposite; very loose, flowing, scribbly. Now my digital art is fluid as heck. It’s now cute, round, soft, gently textured with popping colours.

How closely do you work with the author on developing the illustrations for a book?

For all my books I’ve worked very closely – my current project Princess Peanut, Be Polite I speak with Ren (Cummins) every couple of weeks. I have been known to randomly message him with an idea. I love that way of working because I can really get inside the author’s mind (plus we get to add in little details/inside jokes/fun references).

If you can please tell us about your latest project and if not your last project

I’ve been working with the fab & lovely Ren Cummins on his debut children’s book Princess Peanut, Be Polite. This is the story of a fussy princess who is implored by her governess to try new food. The artwork is almost complete & we hope to have the book out in Q4 of this year!

Princess Peanut, Be Polite

Princess Peanut, Be Polite


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Tony Williams – Author Q&A

Tony Williams

Tony Williams

Tony Williams is a poet and fiction writer based in rural Northumberland. His first novel Nutcase (2017) is a rewriting of a medieval saga set in Sheffield, while Cole the Magnificent (2023) dreams up the early life of Old King Cole. His most recent poetry collection is Hawthorn City (2019). He is Professor of Creative Writing at Northumbria University.

Tony can be found at:
Website (Salt): Cole the Magnificent
Twitter: @TonyWilliams9

Tell me what inspired you to write your novel?
Cole the Magnificent really came about because I had unfinished business after my first novel, Nutcase, was published. Nutcase is a very different book – it’s a retelling of the Saga of Grettir the Strong, set on a modern-day housing estate in Sheffield. I was trying to write in a medieval style but with modern subject matter. It’s very violent and bleak (although it’s also supposed to be a black comedy). But it also ended up being basically realist in approach. The sagas have trolls and ghosts and magic halberds and stuff like that, but that didn’t translate into contemporary Sheffield very well. So after I’d finished Nutcase, I wanted to write something that took on the more fantastical elements of medieval saga – something which wasn’t just trying to be realistic but which was a bit more playful and out-there.

What came first the characters or the world?
It was the world really. I knew I wanted to do a kind of quest or pilgrimage narrative, where the characters started in a basically realistic home setting, and as they travelled further, things would get more and more outrageous and weird. That’s how it is in the Icelandic sagas – once they leave Iceland and go to, say, northern Norway, you know something outlandish is on the way. And other medieval travelogues are the same. It’s that orientalist thing where the traveller goes off to terra incognita and then comes back with all sorts of tall tales. Only I also like the way that medieval stories always come in different variants, and I wanted my narrator to be always telling us these other versions and casting doubt on the story, and going off on preposterous digressions. So the whole thing would also be a kind of shaggy-dog story. All that pointed to the idea of a picaresque, where you’d have this feckless knave wandering the world having ludicrous adventures. And the figure of Old King Cole seemed perfect for that. I’ve always loved nursery rhymes, and if you look up Old King Cole the scholarship basically says, ‘nothing else is know about him,’ so I decided to werite the story of Cole’s life before he grew old.

Cole the Magnificent

Cole the Magnificent

How long did it take to write?
About six years! It was meant to be a novella. I was just amusing myself while I waited to see if anyone would publish the other novel. But then I got caught up in it, and tinkered away with it for years. Wrote loads. Deleted loads. Got distracted writing poems and so on and so forth. I sort of envy those writers who can reel off a novel in a year and then get on with the next one, but what seems to happen with me is that I write a big chunk, don’t know what the hell I’m doing, and then gradually work away at it until, very late, it starts to come into focus. It’s agony at times, but I think you need the agony. That’s what makes it worth doing, what makes it so satisfying when it falls into place.

Do you have a writing playlist? If so do you want to share it?
No, I write in complete silence, preferably with no one else in the room!

What kind of reactions have you had to your book?
I’ve been a bit nervous about how readers might respond, partly because the book sits between a few genres – is it literary fiction, historical fiction, fantasy, or all three? I’m also well aware that it’s kind of overflowing with stuff, and doesn’t quite play by all the traditional story rules. It’s early days, but it’s been brilliant to see how generously readers have approached it. They’ve embraced the world of the book and got pleasure out of it, and that’s all I can ask.

What’s the favourite reaction you’ve had to your book?
Bernard Hughes reviewed Cole for The Arts Desk, and said it was ‘in its way, brilliant, but may not be for everyone’ – that seemed to me a thrilling summary because I think it won’t be for all readers and I’m OK with that, but I hope that it will really speak to some.

Do you take notice of online reviews?
I’m deeply grateful for any review, because what I want is for people to read my book, and a review shows that someone has done that and then taken the time to write about it. A review says, ‘Yes, this book exists’ – even if they hated it. As for taking any notice, I’ve been writing and publishing for long enough that I know you should not pay too much attention to either good reviews or bad ones, but I’m human and also an anxious parent, wanting my little book to bring pleasure to people. So looking at online reviews can be a way of gambling on your own vanity, as long as you never get too invested. Some reviewers might totally get what a book is doing, and then even if they give an ambivalent review, you don’t mind at all because at least they saw it clearly, it just wasn’t for them. Others might not seems to get it and those you just have to accept because there’s no guarantee a book will connect with any given reader. The dangerous reviews are the very positive ones – of course you want to believe they are perceptive and judicious!

Would you ever consider writing outside your current genre?
I don’t really think of myself as writing in specific genres at all. Maybe that comes from writing poetry, which is generally less commercial than fiction so it tends not to get parcelled up into marketable genres. In my prose fiction I’ve written flash fiction, a realist/comedy novel and then this (a mash-up of fantasy, picaresque, historical fiction, folklore, faux-scholarship, fairy tale, and so on and so forth). I suppose I did make a conscious decision to go beyond realism when I started Cole. In general I always want to do something that’s different in some way to what I’ve done before. That’s what makes it interesting. And I like to work across genres, taking a bit of this and a bit of that. But what you’re doing then is to try to put together a frankenbook, something never yet seen before that scares the townfolk a little. That’s maybe one thing that takes the time – you get some ingredients and fool about with them and try to create something which is alive, a vision, which you hope other people can see as well.

Which author(s) inspire you?
For this book, the anonymous authors of Icelandic saga, which is a literature of the highest order and which I’ve learned so much from. The sagas are mind-expanding for a modern writer – they operate like novels but also completely differently. I can’t recommend them strongly enough. Also the Mabinogion and other medieval tales for their amazing elastic whimsical treatment of the world. Umberto Eco’s Baudolino and Grimmelshausen’s Simplicius Simplicissimus are both medieval picaresques I love. Italo Calvino for the variety of his work and the way he just gets us to accept whatever he’s telling us. Jane Smiley for her monumental masterpiece The Greenlanders. And weirdly George Perec’s novel Life: A User’s Manual, which is about a Paris apartment building but was instrumental in showing me how richly you can stuff a novel and still not have it come apart at the seams. And then something like Martha Sanders’ Alexander and the Magic Mouse, a children’s book I vividly remember reading as a child (and then, a little bit older, going back to when I was off school ill). That book’s world is conjured so perfectly (partly by the illustrations) that it stayed alive somewhere inside me all these years. I read it again recently and it was still there, alive, waiting for me to find it again. It’s amazing that a book can do that. It’s what I aspire to with Cole – that someone should read it, and then find years afterwards that Cole has taken up residence in their imagination.

What is your biggest motivator?
Writing makes me happy. When I spend part of the day writing, and make some headway, I feel good. When I don’t write, I’m often glum. It’s a no-brainer, really, that I should write every day, although I don’t always.

What will always distract you?
Everything, and especially the internet. I think the important thing is to get started, because it’s easier to keep going than to start. And it’s easier if you’re in the habit. I know that things go much easier if I’m writing a bit every day. I aim for about 300 words, which you can reel off if 15 minutes, at a push, and if I can do more, great, but I don’t beat myself up about it. If I’ve hit that target every day for a week, I’m flying. It’s easy. Then I miss a day, which turns into a week. I can’t get going again.

Were you a big reader as a child?
Yes, I read a lot as a child and I think that was mainly because I loved it, but also perhaps because reading was a way of engaging with the world I felt confident in. I read Tolkein extensively and a lot of classics and Ed McBain and Commando and the Beano and Dandy, and War and Peace at an age when I could tell it was something else but didn’t get as much from it as when I read it again in me 20s. Also Emil and the Detectives – again, I have a very vivid memory of reading it when I was ill. Lying on a bed reading in the daytime – that’s paradise, isn’t it?

Do you have a favourite bookshop? If so, which?
I have conflicting feelings here because I grew up on the other side of the hill from Scarthin Books, a famous bookshop in Derbyshire that’s split over three or four floors and was always amazingly ramshackle and full of the most wonderful finds. But now I live just up the road from Barter Books, also famous and perhaps with a better café but a less esoteric selection. More and more I go to bookshops for the happy accidents, the books I didn’t know I wanted.

What books can you not resist buying?
I have conflicting feelings here because I The ones I don’t resist are the things I’ve never heard of, that someone recommends or that I suddenly read about, and I think, if I don’t buy this now, I’ll never remember it or hear about it again. So I order them then and there. With things I know I want, or the next book by a favourite author, I can be a bit more hesitant, because I know it’s there and I can always go back to it. Of course that means there are some authors whose work I love – Gwendoline Riley, Alice Munro, Russell Hoban – where I’ve not read everything they’ve written, because I’m complacently thinking, not yet, there’s still time.

Do you have any rituals when writing?
No, I’m reasonably flexible. I have to feel I’m alone, so I usually can’t write if a family member is in the same room, but I can write on a busy train if the people around me are strangers. (Most of my first novel was written on an ipad on the train to and from work.) I don’t usually write longhand, except brief notes when planning or editing. I need a computer on a tablet or sometimes just a phone, and I tap away, stopping often, and if I’m in the flow I’ll keep going to squeeze the last bit of juice out of the session. And then – try to write more the next day.

Nutcase

Nutcase

How many books are in your own physical TBR pile?
At the moment, six: Robert Irwin’s Wonders Will Never Cease, poetry by Antony Rowland, Kris Johnson and Jacob Polley, a history of early Christianity, and Gormenghast, which I’ve never read despite loving Titus Groan. There are others that were in there very recently, but the other day I faced facts and put them back on the shelves for another time. It can get oppressive, feeling that your reading is stacked up for weeks or months to come, and I sometimes like it better if I suddenly find something tucked away on a bookshelf and start reading it, rather than planning things too much.

What is your current or latest read?
I’m reading Ibn Fadlan’s account of his travels in the north, and travel writing by other medieval Arab writers, in a brilliant Penguin Classics edition. It’s mind-expanding, seeing the Viking and Arab worlds connecting with each other (and the West being a faraway afterthought). Plus we hear about the Khazars, a Jewish empire of the steppe which dominated the region and then vanished, and which is also incidentally the subject of a bizarre novel by Milorad Pavic, The Dictionary of the Khazars, which tells the same story three times from three different perspectives, in alphabetical order.

Any books that you’re looking forward to in the next 12 months?
I’m looking forward to reading M John Harrison’s ‘anti-memoir’ Wish I Was Here. I first got into Harrison by reading his novel Climbers, and then discovered his fantasy and science fiction work. The Kefahuchi Tract trilogy, starting with Light, is completely dazzling and showed me what’s possible in science fiction. Wish I Was Here has been out a little while but today I listened to a podcast of Harrison talking about it and looking back on his career, and it’s reminded me I need to read it. He’s a complete master.

Any plans or projects in the near future you can tell us about?
The next thing for me (well, the thing I’ve been working on for two years now) is a novel about magic rituals and war and trauma and family. I’m at the stage where you have a load of broken crockery and despair of ever fitting it together into a vase, let alone one that looks nice and has actual flowers in it. All you can do is keep going. Maybe you’ll end up with a half-decent ashtray.


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The November Witches

Jennifer Claessen. UCLan Publishing. (322p) ISBN: 9781915235701
The November Witches

The November Witches

The November Witches picks up from where The October Witches leaves off with all the magic left and November being a non-magic month.

We follow Clemmie and the Merlyn coven into a month where there shouldn’t be any magic, especially since the magic escaped and disappeared at the end of October.

We see how the two Morgans, Kerra and Senara fit into Merlyn house and human world. Though not for very long as something has gone wrong and there must be magic around that hasn’t returned to the stars as witch-hunting glory-questing knights start to show up in larger and larger quantities.

When the young hags find that the Morgan coven is not responsible for the knights, they also find out that the Morgans are also being plagued by wild magic.

Can the Merlyns and Morgans team up to find out what is causing this surge of uncontrolled magic or is there something more sinister afoot? Is there an old enemy (or a new one) planing the downfall of the witches? Can Clemmie figure out what is happening and put a stop to it before it is too late for all the witches?

Another great magical adventure full of witches, knights, dragon, a mystical forest, and lots of growing up and what an ending! If you loved The October Witches this if perfect for you. If you’ve not read The October Witches yet, hurry up so you can read this!


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