Emily’s Blog

A selection of Emily’s thoughts, interviews, and video links…

Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

My First Publisher Rejection

When I was 10 or 11 years old I wrote a collection of stories for children, featuring farmyard animals. They cover hilariously heavy subjects for the target audience, which I think was one of the many reasons behind the polite rejections I received from the top publishers I submitted to!

In this video I read the standout story in the collection, Wayne.

Watch, enjoy, and have a giggle or two on me!

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

A Conversation With Dr. Allen Stroud

I first met Allen after publishing a general call-out on twitter and facebook asking for possible soundtracks for The Dex Legacy audio drama. I had a number of interested parties respond, which was completely unexpected, among them this really nice guy who shared a love of audio drama in general, a penchant for Vangelis, and an academic angle into sci-fi and fantasy that was fascinating and refreshing in equal measure.

It was after myself and producer, Chris Gregory, agreed Allen’s musical entry hit the mark, that I noticed Allen’s email signature carried the words: “Dr Allen Stroud, Chair of the British Science Fiction Association”. I almost spat out my tea.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Emily Inkpen's 11,000 Twitter Followers Q&A Special

11,000 Twitter followers is immense and honestly I never thought I’d make it to 10,000, so this is just amazing. The least I can do to show my gratitude is answer your questions.

In this one I talk a lot about finishing my trilogy, the editing process and using real-life elements in my stories... I also chat about Star Trek and reveal details about my struggles with epilepsy. There's a lot in there and I hope some of it is useful!

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

A Conversation with Gareth L. Powell

Gareth Powell is an author who needs no introduction. His works include Silversands, The Recollection, and the highly acclaimed trilogies; Ack Ack Macaque and Embers of War. He’s won the BSFA award for Best Novel, twice, and he’s been nominated for the Locus, British Fantasy and Seiun Awards.

Recently, Gareth announced his second Seiun Award nomination in the category of Best Translated Novel. The translation of novels isn’t something we talk much about in the Writing Community, and I decided to ask a few questions.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Building and Developing Characters

In my 10,000 Twitter Followers Q&A there was one question I didn't answer as well as I probably should. After some follow-up conversations I decided to do a separate video on building and developing characters. I hope you find it useful!

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Emily Inkpen's 10,000 Twitter Followers Q&A Special

Reaching 10,000 Twitter followers has caught me a bit by surprise. It feels like I published the 9000 Twitter Followers Q&A five minutes ago, and here we are again! I hope you enjoy it and find some nuggets of gold in there! I ramble a little, have two unexpected rants on semi-controversial subjects, and get interrupted by Alexa only once. All in all it went well!

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Matthew Ward and The InkWalker Collective

I met Matthew Ward last year, when John Jarrold offered me representation. While waiting for other Agents to get back to me, I asked John if I could talk to any of his clients, and he put me in touch with Matthew. It was a Thursday when the request went out and he got back straight away, offering a zoom call the next evening. We chatted for, I think, over an hour, and meandered through a series of subjects, mostly literary and heavily nerdy.

Naturally, I wanted that nerdiness for the I.W.C, and his contributions have been excellent.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

A Conversation With Ida Keogh

Ida Keogh is a jeweller and metal sculptor, an aerial acrobat, model, and now a BSFA Award winning writer.
I first met Ida in person when we, and a few other wonderful people, kidnapped Gareth Powell from his Light of Impossible Stars signing at the Forbidden Planet just off Leicester Square. I was delighted to hear that Ida had won the award, and I thought I’d make the most of my friendly privileges by asking a few questions!

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

The Story Behind My First Tattoo

I didn’t think too long about my first tattoo. I needed it at the time, it was a solution to a particular problem. This is the story behind my “yes”.

- This is a very personal blog post and I talk about the realities of losing my dad to cancer while at University. If you’re going through something similar or feeling raw it might not be for you -

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

A Conversation with Chris Beckett

I first met Chris Beckett over email when our Literary Agent, John Jarrold, offered me representation. I asked John if I could chat to any of his existing clients, and he introduced us. Some time passed, and a few months ago, I was listed alongside Chris as the Sci-Fi offering for Season 4 of The Alternative Stories and Fake Realities podcast. This provided an excellent excuse to get back in touch, and obviously I used the opportunity to ask some questions…

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Why You Should Always Read With a Pencil in Your Hand

TRIGGER WARNING: will contain graphic descriptions of annotations in books.

As a writer, every book I pick up, regardless of genre, is a tool for learning.

How writers structure their work, build characters, interweave foreshadowing into the early narrative, all of these things are there, within the pages, to be unlocked, noticed and noted.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Tim Hardie and The InkWalker Collective

The InkWalker Collective was born when Adrian Walker (The End of the World Running Club, The Human Son, etc) and myself got talking about how music influences our writing. We set out on a writer’s side quest, gathered a group of fellow authors, and collaborated on a series of playlists.

I managed to catch up with Tim Hardie a few weeks ago...

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Emily Inkpen’s 9000 Twitter Followers Q&A Special

Reaching 9000 twitter followers has highlighted a few things. The first is how much I love and value the Twitter Writing Community, and the second is how much I’ve learned since starting out there about eighteen months ago.

To mark this crazy milestone I never thought I’d reach, I decided to offer a Q&A session. My biggest fear was that I’d put the offer out and I’d get no questions! But once again, my friends came through.

So here it is, my clumsy, yet genuine, response to the questions asked.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Adrian Walker and the InkWalker Collective

Since launching The InkWalker Collective, Adrian Walker and I have gathered a gang of talented and wonderful wordy friends to contribute, and we’ve released some great playlists. Out of pure curiosity I sent my co-conspirator some specific questions about just how much of an influence music has been on his writing.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Why Context is Key in Character-Driven Narratives

Readers play an active role in the process of making a book. The characters are being presented to the reader and the reader will ultimately judge whether or not they pass the test. The test being plausibility; does the character stand true and consistent in the face of what’s thrown at them throughout the narrative?

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Introducing the InkWalker Collective

Welcome to the InkWalker Collective, a Spotify playlist project by writers, for writers. A group of us have got together and created playlists to suit most moods, providing you with soundtracks to fuel your creativity!

So far contributors include Adrian Walker, Derek Künsken, Daniel Soule, Tim Hardy, Matthew Ward, Rod Duncan, Ida Keogh, Emma Leadley and Madeleine White, with more to come!

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

How Does World Relate to Character?

The truth is that with a book, or story, the centre of your creation is character. If you write good enough characters, you could stick them in a giant cardboard box and I'd still want to know what happens between them. In writing a book or story, any kind of book or story, setting is secondary.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Heat-Mapping Your Book

If you’re like me, you pants your way through writing a book.
Afterwards I always retrospectively apply certain frameworks to help gain some outside perspective on what I’ve written. These usually centre on where the action occurs and how it builds throughout the narrative. I call this “heat mapping”.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Building a World out of Walls

You know what a world looks like. You live in one. It is complex and dysfunctional and implausible and glorious. Creating a world as rich and diverse as the one we currently live in is impossible. At least, there is far too much to include in a book that anyone would want to read.

As a result, I have found that building a world is also an exercise in building the walls that contain it.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

The Warp And The Weft

…So here I will say that copywriting is the art of isolating and communicating one single idea, whereas novel writing is about weaving together a whole ragged bunch of them. And more than that, the idea being communicated in copy, needs to be upfront, laid bare and said quickly… In a novel, ideas have space to move around and to grow and to form slowly in the reader’s mind. Crucially, there’s often more than one, they can be complex and they can also be up for interpretation.

Read More