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One among millions

18/8/2018

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​    I find that now I'm one among millions, rather than one in a million.
​    ​When I started my professional writing career – it’s a long time ago – there were few of us who could call themselves fulltime writers. I started in radio as a copywriter, and since then have been a freelance writer, contract writer, editor, education writer, playwright, then an academic writer during the years I was an academic. 
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​​    Apart from my salaried years in academia, it was a low and intermittently paid career. The stereotype of writers and artists starving in garrets contains some truth.
​    The picture is different now, though for most the low financial return remains the same. 
​    Storytelling is now in vogue in a big way – everyone, it seems, has a story they want to tell. At the same time, technology has opened the publishing business to anyone who wants to see their by-line on a cover, be it paper or digital. 
​    Figures on how many books are currently being published per year seem to agree it’s around the 2.2 million mark. Yes, that’s millions! More than 6,000 every day.
​    Despite the fact that the majority of these books will sell very few copies, sometimes only a couple of dozen, and comparatively few will pass the 200 mark, the number of hopeful new authors is also increasing by the day.
​    A recent poll in UK revealed that the most popular choice of most desired job was that of an author, with 60% of respondents choosing it from a given list. 
​    It seems all these wannabe writers aren’t readers. If they were, they’d know that almost every author who’s made any sort of name for him or herself has said what an exceptionally hard job they find it. For all but a handful there’s no glamour attached to it, and most probably almost no pay. Apparently that’s not a deterrent.
​    I guess it’s human nature that most people believe they’ll be the one among millions who is the exception to the rule.

 😊 Bronwyn Elsmore

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NZ National Poetry Day

14/8/2018

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    Phantom Billstickers National Poetry Day #NZPoetryDay announces its largest ever celebration of poetry today, with more than 130 events programmed to take place around New Zealand.
    Held annually on the fourth Friday in August, National Poetry Day sees award-winning poets join poetry enthusiasts from all over the country in a marathon programme of poetry readings, performances, workshops and competitions. 
    On August 24, poetry will be making news – and noise – in dozens of cities, towns and rural areas across New Zealand. Expect to encounter poetry in expected and unusual places – on public transport, street posters and footpaths; in cafés, bars, bookshops, and libraries; and at schools, university campuses, retirement villages, marae, theatres and community centres.

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   The day will include appearances by 2018 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards poetry category finalists Briar Wood and Sue Wootton in Auckland and a workshop with winner Elizabeth Smither in Christchurch. All four 2018 Ockham poets, including Tony Beyer, feature in Phantom Billstickers’ countrywide super-size Poetry on Posters campaign and will also be filmed for a social media campaign celebrating poetry.
    New Zealand Books Awards past poetry winners Jenny Bornholdt, Kevin Ireland, Anne Kennedy, Bill Manhire, Greg O’Brien and Brian Turner will also take part in events around New Zealand. Alongside established poets, emerging voices and student poets will take part in open mic sessions and spoken-word performances. There will be a host of poetry contests for writers of all ages and many of the programmed events will be open to the public and free admission.
    Among the scores of events taking place from the far north to the deep south are: Rodney District’s live human art/poetry installations and poems written on the sand, to be captured by drone and made into a movie; the ‘love letters to Auckland’ event – a multimedia performance by poets, rappers, storytellers and dancers; Taranaki’s ‘Pop Up Poetry’ exhibition of poems on sticky notes; Wellington’s ‘Where the Wild Words Are’, in the company of local poets who promise to bewitch, berate, busk and bewilder; Nelson’s ‘Poetry Fridge Door and Poetry Generator’; Christchurch’s ‘Speed Date an Editor’; Dunedin’s gala poetry evening; and Central Otago’s evening of poetry on the theme of rivers with Brian Turner, Michael Harlow, Jenny Bornholdt, Gregory O’Brien and Liz Breslin. There will even be an international poetry event at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
    For full details about all the events taking place on Phantom Billstickers National Poetry Day, including places, venues, times, tickets and more, go to: http://www.nzbookawards.nz/nationalpoetry-day/calendar-of-events/.
    Established in 1997, National Poetry Day is a popular fixture on the nation’s cultural calendar and one that celebrates discovery, diversity and community. For the third year in a row, Phantom Billstickers support National Poetry Day through their naming rights sponsorship. In the lead up to August 24, they will bring poetry to New Zealand communities with a mighty street poster campaign.
​    
#NZPoetryDay | facebook.com/NZPoetryDay | twitter.com/NZPoetryDay

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