Wow, I never thought I would get to a point where I see one finished book by me never mind starting my fourth - well, fifth if you count A Gurumapa in the Wood - full length story. Anybody who has supported, encouraged or read my works to date I'm eternally grateful to you for getting me this far.
Now obviously I won't be dishing all the plot details right here and now because, to be honest, I don't even know all the details but that's part of the fun and adventure of writing a story. All I will say is this will be the first story I've written to be set in my home city of Belfast. I've always wanted to write a Belfast story rich in magic and myth but could never quite find the right hook or starting point until recently.
And I thought just to shake my own process up a bit, as well as make a point to blog on this thing more, I would document some of the journey in a way I haven't with my previous works. For me this book will be as much about telling a particular story, adding a bit of myth and mystery, as it is educating myself about a particular period of Belfast history I don't really know much about. It's a tale of fantasy but in some ways it also serves as a love letter to the beautifully flawed city I'm fiercely proud to have grown up in.
It might not see the light of day for a long time but every story has to start somewhere and mine begins in 1911...
Tuesday, 15 October 2013
Tuesday, 24 September 2013
Back to blogging. 2013 and beyond...
To say I've been neglectful of this blog over the course of 2013 is something of an understatement. I apologise for that. Many of you reading this have probably kept track of my movements through Twitters and Facebook and for the continued support I'm genuinely thankful.
I've decided to start blogging again for a few reasons, the main one being the need to write itself. I won't bore you with the whimsical nature of it all, I'm just out of practice writing text which isn't 140 characters or status updates. So I'll start with a few announcements to get the ball rolling again...
The amazing staff at Ryan's Bar have asked me back for the second year in a row to host a family reading event as part of Belfast Restaurant Week 2013. It's next Saturday, October 6th 2013, it should be kicking off at 3pm and I'll be reading from my free short e-book (still available to download folks!) I released earlier in the year, A Gurumapa in the Wood, and will be giving away a limited number of printed copies to any reader interested in taking it home as a bedtime story.
All the details are at this link here... http://visit-belfast.com/whats-on/event/lunch-book-reading-with-local-author-agr-moore-1 Bring the kids and come on down, if nothing else the food in Ryan's is terrific.
I've decided to start blogging again for a few reasons, the main one being the need to write itself. I won't bore you with the whimsical nature of it all, I'm just out of practice writing text which isn't 140 characters or status updates. So I'll start with a few announcements to get the ball rolling again...
- INTERVIEW!
I sat down with my dear friend Heather McGarrigle on her Patchwork Quill blog a week or so ago to chat about writing and self publishing. To read what I had to say on the subject as well as talking about Amelia Black and Sebastian Hogg and also to visit her brilliant blog just click here... http://thepatchworkquill.com/2013/09/13/the-pq-qa-agr-moore/
- READING EVENT!
The amazing staff at Ryan's Bar have asked me back for the second year in a row to host a family reading event as part of Belfast Restaurant Week 2013. It's next Saturday, October 6th 2013, it should be kicking off at 3pm and I'll be reading from my free short e-book (still available to download folks!) I released earlier in the year, A Gurumapa in the Wood, and will be giving away a limited number of printed copies to any reader interested in taking it home as a bedtime story.
All the details are at this link here... http://visit-belfast.com/whats-on/event/lunch-book-reading-with-local-author-agr-moore-1 Bring the kids and come on down, if nothing else the food in Ryan's is terrific.
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Free books! |
- HIGHLIGHTS OF 2013...SO FAR...
I've had a lot of really proud moments this year in regards to my writing, with hopefully more to come, but I thought I would highlight two particular moments which stand above the rest. First was being asked to take part in a huge family reading event during the 2013 Belfast Book Festival. Huge thank you to Hugh Odling-Smee and his team for asking me to do it, was a real honour as it's not something I think I particular deserve yet. Huge thanks to the children and parents on the day who lent me their ears to hear Amelia Black's story were fantastic.
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Photo taken by Alana Fraser |
The only thing that could top that happened around a month ago. I got an e-mail from the mother of a girl who attended my first reading in Ryan's Bar last year, who loved The Unseen Chronicles of Amelia Black so much she asked her mum to make her an Amelia Black birthday cake. An...Amelia...Black...birthday cake.
I still have trouble trying to comprehend how that makes me feel. All I know is it makes me very proud.
You know it's funny, I've written three books (we'll get to the third in a moment) yet I've never truly thought that the stories have made that much of an impression on anyone - through a mixture of muddled self confidence and light hearted self-deprecation. Of all the amazing literary creations there are in the world, the Harry Potters, Percy Jacksons, Katniss Everdeens, Hungry Caterpillars, Spot the Dogs, Cats in the Hat, she chose my Amelia Black. That's just unbelievable.
All I can say is I hope she had a fantastic birthday and the cake tasted as amazing as it looks.
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Photo from the Eclectic Cake-Box |
- BOOK STUFF
I find it's always best to think ahead. I currently have two projects in the pipeline I'm not ready to talk about yet but besides that, I finished the first draft of my third book earlier this year. It's still not how I would like it to be but should be here around Summer 2014. If you follow me on Twitter or Facebook you'll know what it's called but if not here is a rough, rather botched Photoshop, mock up of the logo by me...
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This is why I employ outside illustrators... |
Not much else to report for now but I hope to get back into the way of blogging nonsensical ramblings once again. Thank you for reading as always.
A.G.R.
Friday, 7 December 2012
Come one and all and hear the tale...
It's here! It's finally here!
“Come one and all and hear the tale of a little boy named Hogg...”
On the dullest day since records began, there was a birth. The birth of a boy named Sebastian Hogg. An unfortunate child born into a home deprived of hope and full of bitte
rness.
All this changes when he meets a mysterious stranger who takes him on a road trip full of wonder and excitement. From folky musicians to vaudeville tricksters, Sebastian is opened up to a rich and vibrant world he had never thought possible with a real sense of danger lurking around every corner, and where the consequences of actions could impact on the very fibre of existence.
At its core this picturesque fable tells of the power of an unbreakable friendship between two innocent beings and its impact on their lives and those around them.
Moving, uplifting, at times dark and macabre, a tale where magic and science collide in the most marvellous way. Come with me and hear the tale of A Boy Named Hogg.
Thank you,
Sincerely, A.G.R. Moore.
Available to buy on Amazon Kindle and related Kindle apps for £2.06 :: HERE!
And for non e-book lovers, you aren't left out, here it is in glorious paperback for £6.99 :: HERE!
Monday, 19 November 2012
Sunday, 18 November 2012
A Boy Named Hogg - Cover, Synopsis and Release Date revealed
After teasing and occasionally dropping it into many conversations over the past six months, I'm finally at the closing stages of readying the release of my second book titled A Boy Named Hogg. A story that started with nothing but one single name and spun off into something completely removed from what I originally envisaged, but as a result became something far more personal than I had ever imagined also.
Huge thanks to Anna and Caoimhe for their help in making this stage of my writing adventure a reality with the beautiful cover art and proof reading/editing duties this time round. Forever grateful for their help.
So ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, whimsical dreamers and ever so keen readers, for better or worse, I present to you all you need to know about A Boy Named Hogg...
Huge thanks to Anna and Caoimhe for their help in making this stage of my writing adventure a reality with the beautiful cover art and proof reading/editing duties this time round. Forever grateful for their help.
So ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, whimsical dreamers and ever so keen readers, for better or worse, I present to you all you need to know about A Boy Named Hogg...
Cover art by Anna Henderson
“Come one and all and hear the tale of a little boy named Hogg...”
On the dullest day since records began, there was a birth.
The birth of a boy named Sebastian Hogg. An unfortunate child born into a home deprived
of hope and full of bitterness.
All this changes when he meets a mysterious stranger who
takes him on a road trip full of wonder and excitement. From folky musicians to
vaudeville tricksters, Sebastian is opened up to a rich and vibrant world he
had never thought possible with a real sense of danger lurking around every
corner, and where the consequences of actions could impact on the very fibre of
existence.
At its core this picturesque fable tells of the power of an unbreakable friendship between two innocent beings and its impact on their
lives and those around them.
Moving, uplifting, at times dark and macabre, a tale where
magic and science collide in the most marvellous way. Come with me and hear the
tale of A Boy Named Hogg.
Sincerely, A.G.R. Moore.
Release date: Friday December 7th, 2012
Formats: Kindle (and Kindle app) & Paperback
Price: TBA
Opening chapter can be read from an earlier blog post right...HERE.
Wednesday, 26 September 2012
My first reading event!
Yes, through some act of insanity and the lovely persuasive words of the people at Ryan's Bar I'm giving my first ever public reading in Belfast next Saturday, October 6th. On the day I'll be reading three or four chapters from The Unseen Chronicles of Amelia Black, as well as judging a short story competition and colouring in on a few of the illustrations. I'll be giving away copies of the book in paperback and other bits and pieces as prizes.
Huge thank you to Gerrie from Ryan's Bar for asking me to do it. Should be a great day! Come one and all, if not for hearing me ramble then for the lovely food!
More details found here... http://www.gotobelfast.com/whats-on/event/book-reading-with-agr-moore-
Hopefully see you all there on the day.
Sunday, 5 August 2012
One year on...
And what a year it's been.
On this day one year ago I self-published The Unseen Chronicles of Amelia Black, on the internet for the first time. What originally started as an experiment, an ambitious project, eventually, by the time of its completion became an obsession, a passion, something I've started to revolve my life around. When jobs are few and far between and personal tragedies engulf the world around me, this kind, curious, wonderful soul kept me going, gave me hope. Been the cause of many a sleepless night and many times screaming in frustration at the computer, but what you going to do...
Though my journey with Amelia Black is far from over - the sequel is currently in the works - I just wanted to take the time to say, from the bottom of my heart, thank you to anyone who has supported me. It's been an bizarre and overwhelming experience. If you've bought the book, enjoyed the book, tried the Kindle sample, wrote reviews, interviewed me, had me on the radio, stocked the paperback, marvelled at Gillian's incredible illustrations. Thank you.
And so the journey continues.
I've mentioned this a few times over the past few months but I have been preparing my second book, A Boy Named Hogg for publication. Eventually. Possibly late September. Possibly earlier. Possibly slightly later. Either way it's finished and is definitely coming. Like Amelia Black before it I've decided, for at least one more time, to self-publish the book.
Providing where you go on the internet, the concept of e-publishing is understandably a very prickly subject. If you use it as a get rich quick scheme then you probably deserve to fall flat on your face. I originally did it because it felt like the best option available to me at the time, yes I probably jumped on a bandwagon, my sales are humble at best. I don't like to get involved in the politics. I just love to write, how it gets out into the world is the last thing on my mind.
It's a hard slog, sometimes insanely frustrating but so far it's been incredibly rewarding also. I wouldn't have traded the experiences I've had, the people I've met, the bizarre opportunities that's been presented to me for anything. From here on it's up to me how I take them and move forward. I'm not going to gush and say dreams come true or stay positive and it'll all turn out for the best. I'm just saying, by my own admission, it's a slow process but I'm in it for the long haul because somewhere along the way I've had a lot of people put their faith in me and one day I hope I can repay that.
And to you readers, both old and new, I finally present the first chapter of my upcoming fantastical folk tale, A Boy Named Hogg. I hope you welcome these characters and their stories into your hearts the same way you did with the ones which populate the world of Amelia Black.
Thank you,
A.G.R. Moore.
***
ONE
A BEGINNING
Was
it love?
“Nothing more than empty lovers
through a window,” she replied.
Some people may tell the tale
differently but rarely with the level of truth as it was through my own eyes.
Who am I you ask? My role in this story is not important. Think of me as a
curious observer, nothing more.
In the beginning, William Arthur
Hogg was a shipbuilder’s son. And like his father before him he too became a
shipbuilder, living modestly in a small house in a rough part of an old town on
an old street called Willow Lane.
He married at the age of twenty four
to a young woman by the name of Rosamund Duffy, or simply Rosie for short. How
they met doesn’t matter, nor whether it was really true love. Regrettably their
honeymoon period lasted approximately two days, sixteen hours, twenty five
minutes and forty three seconds. This was the moment William found out the
famous shipyard was closing, and he was now without a job.
William tried and tried, and with all
the good intentions in the world he could not find another job. Nobody wanted
to employ a young man of limited schooling for anything of real substance and a
decent wage. Those good intentions and positive feelings became increasingly
bitter and increasingly darker as the months went by.
This feeling of misery was compounded
by the news his fearful, beautiful wife departed upon him one dreary and
dejected afternoon. A piece of news normally received with gleeful joy and unrivalled
happiness. Yet for William, this news was met with dread, resentment and an
unsurpassable amount of anxiety.
He was soon to be a father.
It was the morning of April 11th.
It’s often remembered as a date which echoed through history as the most
unremarkable day, since records began. The records were wrong.
The hospital was St. Raphael’s. The
midwife’s name was Mildred Warbler. The
timeless smell of disinfectant still echoes through time as potent as it was
the day the baby was born.
“Steady now deary,” said the midwife,
calmly. “You’re now mother to a healthy baby boy.” Rosie cried with joy upon
seeing the baby’s face. “Isn’t he a cute one,” said the Midwife, earnestly. “Now
don’t think I say that about all the newborns, ‘cause I don’t. He looks like a
special ‘un. I’ll go get the father. I’m sure he’ll be utterly thrilled!’”
“No, don’t...” said Rosie.
“Oh...?”
“He’s not here,” she explained,
steadily. “He’s...working.”
“Well he’s got to pay the bills I
suppose, after all there’s an extra mouth to feed now isn’t there?” said the
midwife, with a hearty chuckle.
Rosie said nothing to correct her.
Instead she gazed upon the baby once
more, which gazed straight back at her, barely able to open his eyes. She
smiled profusely, yet sadness prevailed at the sobering realisation William was
not present to share the momentous occasion. The woman knew well the child was
conceived on a night, shrouded in desperation. He was just born into a
mess. The child’s name was Sebastian
Hogg. Being just a tiny newborn, right now, he doesn’t quite know this but this
is his story.
This is the story about how he saved
the world.
***
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