Showing posts with label Matt Bates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Bates. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

The RNA's 2018 Goldsboro Books Romantic Novel of the Year Awards Ceremony - Judging Panel and Celebrity Guest Presenter Announced










The Romantic Novelists' Association has announced the judges who will decide the Goldsboro Books Romantic Novel of the Year, and the celebrity guest presenter for the 2018 Awards ceremony.

The judging panel comprises: Matt Bates, the Fiction Buyer for WH Smith Travel, editor Alex Hammond, writer Elizabeth Buchan and Liz Robinson, book reviewer for Lovereading.co.uk. 

The Reverend Richard Coles will present the winner of the award with a trophy and a cheque for £5,000 on Monday 5th March at The Gladstone Library in London. Richard Coles first found fame in the 80s with chart-topping bands Bronski Beat and The Communards, before becoming a Church of England priest. He is a popular media figure, and recently enjoyed a stint on Strictly Come Dancing.

RNA Chair Nicola Cornick said:  ‘We are thrilled to have such an enthusiastic and knowledgeable panel of judges with such a commitment to the romantic fiction genre, and a guest presenter who will ensure the evening is enormous fun.”

There are seven Romantic Novel Awards: Contemporary, Epic, Historical, Paranormal or Speculative Fiction, Romantic Comedy, Young Adult and the RoNA Rose for a shorter romantic novel. The winners of these categories are chosen by a panel of readers.

The four independent judges read each of the category winners to decide the overall winner of the Goldsboro Books Romantic Novel of the Year award.

Matt Bates is the Fiction Buyer for WH Smith Travel. He has been rated in the Evening Standard as one of the Top 1000 most influential Londoners, and has contributed to book-related articles in The Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, and The Bookseller. In 2013 he judged the Historical Novelists' Society International Award, in 2015 he was named Bookseller of the Year by the RNA and in 2016 was one of the judges for both The Costa Book Prize (Novel) and The Booksellers' Association Debut Fiction Category Prize. In 2017 he was named as one of The Bookseller's 100 list.

Elizabeth Buchan worked in publishing before she became a full time writer. Her novel Consider the Lily won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award in 1994, and a subsequent novel, Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman, became an international bestseller and was made into a CBS Primetime Drama. She is a former Chair of the Romantic Novelists’ Association, has chaired the Betty Trask and Desmond Elliot literary prizes and was a judge for the Whitbread First Novel Award and the 2014 Costa Novel Award. She is a patron of the Guildford Book Festival and co-founder of the Clapham Book Festival.

Alex Hammond holds a BA (Hons) in American Literature with Creative Writing, an MA in Creative Writing, and is currently studying for a PhD in Creative Writing. He worked for the literary agency Rogers, Coleridge & White, with authors such as Zadie Smith, Philip Hensher, Nick Hornby, Sandi Toksvig and Joe Dunthorne. He joined Cornerstones Literary Consultancy in 2014, and is now an editor, mentor, and scout. He works directly with authors at the Romantic Novelists’ Association Summer Conferences, and the A Chapter Away writers’ retreats.

Liz Robinson has been on the editorial team writing expert reviews for Lovereading.co.uk since the beginning of 2014. Reading is her passion, and she enjoys all genres, from crime, mysteries and thrillers to romance, family drama and relationship tales.

A total of 300 books were entered for this year’s Romantic Novel of the Year Awards. The shortlisted books will be announced on 8th February, 2018 and the RoNA Awards will be
presented in London on 5th March, 2018.

For more information about the awards, please go to our website.





Tuesday, January 17, 2017

The Romantic Novel of the Year Awards: The judges are...

It’s just three weeks until the RNA announces the books that have been shortlisted for the RoNAs – the Romantic Novel of the Year Awards - and we are now unveiling the judges who will decide on the Goldsboro Books Romantic Novel of the Year 2017.

The RNA gives seven awards for different types of romantic novels. The categories are: Contemporary, Epic, Historical, Paranormal or Speculative Fiction, Romantic Comedy, the RoNA Rose for a shorter romantic novel and Young Adult. In the first two rounds of the contest the entries are judged by a panel of readers who choose the winner in each category.  These seven winners then go forward into the overall Romantic Novel of the Year Award for excellence in romantic fiction.

The four independent judges who will read each of the category winners to decide the overall winner are:

Matt Bates, the Fiction Buyer for WH Smith Travel, writer and journalist Fanny Blake, bookseller and publisher Ron Johns and Caroline Sanderson, writer and books journalist.


 RNA Vice-Chair and Award Organiser, Nicola Cornick said:  ‘We are thrilled to have such an enthusiastic and knowledgeable panel of judges with such a commitment to the romantic fiction genre.”

Matt Bates is the Fiction Buyer for WH Smith Travel. In 2013 he judged the HNS International Award and has contributed to book-related articles in Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, The Bookseller and Writers Forum magazine. In 2015 he was named Bookseller of the Year by the RNA.

Fanny Blake was a publisher for many years before becoming a freelance journalist and writer. She is books editor of Woman & Home and has written five novels including Women of a Dangerous Age and House of Dreams. Her new novel Our Summer Together will be published in in July 2017.

Ron Johns opened his first bookshop in 1974 aged 20. He now owns several bookshops and also created Mabecron Publishing, which publishes books with a West Country flavour and to date has published 23 titles. Ron has been a Costa Prize judge and is a council member of the Booksellers Association and the Independent Booksellers Group.

Caroline Sanderson is a writer and books journalist, and Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the University of Worcester. She is Associate Editor for The Bookseller, and the editor of ALCS News. Caroline is the author of five non-fiction books, and co-hosts a monthly book club on BBC Radio Gloucestershire.

A total of 300 books were entered for this year’s Romantic Novel of the Year Awards.
The shortlisted books will be announced on the RNA website on February 7th and the RoNA Awards will be presented in London on March 13th. For tickets

For more information about the RoNA judges, visit our website news pages

To learn more about the awards, go to http://www.romanticnovelistsassociation.org/awards


For more details on the RoNA Awards event, or to buy tickets, visit our website activities pages.  http://www.romanticnovelistsassociation.org/activities 

Friday, April 8, 2016

London & SE Chapter: One Day Workshop

The RNA London and South East Chapter recently held a one-day workshop. Tammy Lovell and Greta Sykes give us a taste of what a great day was had by all delegates.

Tammy Lovell - Morning Session
The RNA London and SE Chapter were given a taste of what the publishing industry wants from WH
Smith Travel Book Buyer Matt Bates and Choc Lit Managing Director Lyn Vernham.
Matt, who won RNA Bookseller of the Year 2015, said the total market, including fiction, non-fiction, children’s books, travel and academic books. was worth £1.5bn last year and had seen an 8.4% year on year increase. The average selling price has also gone up year on year with sellers such as Waterstones and WH Smiths Travel pulling away from price promotions.

Romance is split across several genres with the ‘modern women’s read’ being the most popular category. Last year it had growth of 8% and took £168m, making it a very large part of the £1.5b market.
Matt examined trends in the industry last year based on Nielsen Bookscan data. EL James’ latest offering Grey, sold £1.07m - making it approximately 23% of the fiction market last year. For this reason, Matt removed it from the statistics, so as not to give an inaccurate picture overall.
Bestselling novels included David Walliams’ Grandpa’s Great Escape which sold 615,000 copies, Paula Hawkins’ The Girl on the Train which sold 646,000 and Emma Healey’s Elizabeth is Missing which sold 380,000.

In the modern women’s category, the biggest author was Marion Keyes, who had 4.9% of sales in the top 100. She was followed by Lesley Pearse with 2.8% and Cecelia Ahern with 2.4% of sales. A rising star was Lucy Diamond, who had 2.1% of sales.
Within titles there was a trend for female names and roles such as girl, woman, friend, widow and sister, for example Marion Keyes’ The Woman Who Stole My Life, Maureen Lee’s The Kelly Sisters and Lisa Jewell’s The Third Wife. Titles with nature in them were also popular such as Lucy Diamond’s Summer at Shell Cottage, Santa Montefiore’s The Beekeeper’s Daughter and Erica James’ The Dandelion Year, all within the top 10 bestsellers in the genre.

Nostalgic fiction had seen a resurgence. Matt said: “There is always an appetite for wonderful books that have endured.”  WHSmiths Travel sold 150,000 copies of modern classics across 35 titles in 2015 with popular books including To Kill a Mocking Bird and Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

Place names work well in a title. Last Train from Liguria, Train to Trieste and Night Train to Lisbon, have all over-indexed in WHSmiths Travel market.  Matt said that adding a place name, something "exotic or curious” into your title can be very helpful. He also suggested setting novels in a fashion setting. One of the biggest sellers across the past 10 years at WHSmiths Travel was the Devil Wears Prada. Television dating shows and revenge porn are possible sources of inspirations for authors, according to Matt. “There are so many modern dilemmas that we can draw on,” he concluded.

Choc Lit Managing Director Lyn Vernham focused her talk on digital books. She said there had been a decline in print with our genre readers switching to digital eReaders. She said: “Our market has been saturated over the last three years with all the new digital imprints and the fact it’s so much easier to release digital content. It’s much harder to get noticed. ”
Thrillers and mysteries are currently the best-selling category within fiction in both the UK and the US. She suggested that if you self-publish a book, look at your category and sub tag it as a mystery, thriller or a crime, if appropriate.
Choc Lit use software to follow what happens on the market on a daily basis. Lyn recommended changing your metadata to reflect the current key words being used on Amazon’s bestsellers lists. She said: “Look at what’s selling, that’s what everyone else is doing to try and climb charts.”
Lyn expressed frustration with books retailing for 99p on Kindle, less than the price of a coffee. However she said that they were forced to “play along with the game”. All the other platforms have had to follow kindle in order to compete.  Choc Lit have found that their own loyal readers wait for them to drop the price of books in promotion rather than pay the full price on release.
This situation was exacerbated by Kindle constantly driving sales towards promotions for the past couple of years.  Lyn said that in the US, Amazon’s own imprints heavily dominate the charts pushing out the big publishers.
Another trend was that Choc Lit were being constantly asked for series with four or five books in. “It’s tough for us to see sales with just one book which is why we’re cutting back on the number of debut authors we take on.” Choc Lit’s current Search for a Star competition will be the last year this year.
Choc Lit uses a ‘tasting panel’ of 100 plus readers to research new books. Of these, 98% read contemporary fiction but only 70% read historical. However, historical does do better in print and Choc Lit’s readers are predominantly digital.   62% read sagas, 44% fantasy, 41% paranormal and 38% young adult.
Catchy titles are selling well online with the words ‘Girl’ and ‘Lost’ doing really well. Within the America market the word ‘Billionaire’ is popular as a keyword.

Lyn concluded that in a world with so many other distractions, it was more important than ever to grab the reader in any way possible and to think outside of the box at new ways of doing so.


Greta Sykes - Afternoon Session
After the very lively morning session Julie Cohen held us in awe with her verve and enthusiasm. Her most recent book ‘Where love lies’  was shortlisted for this year’s RNA award. She runs a fiction consultancy, has taught creative writing for the Guardian. She has an agony aunt position at ‘Noveliscious’ and wants us to send her interesting questions Julie.cohen.author@gmail.com.

Julie gave us a short piece of writing which we had to check out against a set of rules which she has worked out to help authors pitch their story right from the beginning. Her rules are as follows:
First impressions count when you meet people.
What will the reader think about your character(s) from the very first words of your novel? What do you want the m to think?
Start with a grabber
Try not to start with the heroine waking up, or going to sleep or driving somewhere, walking about thinking about something, or sitting with her best friend having a cup of coffee. Start as late as you possibly can.
Put conflict on the page.
What is the purpose of these events? Is there a problem to hook your reader in? Does your hook event link to the main body of the story? Does your main character’s emotional conflict inform the story right from the start?
Shrink your back story
Start with now whenever you can. Bring the reader right into the world of your novel.
Do you really need that prologue?
If you put it in it should be there for a reason. Think about whether the reader needs your prologue.
Look at your language
Is it interesting? Does it show your voice? Have you used active verbs and specific detail? Are you showing or telling?
There is an exception to every rule on this page.
The key is to know what you are doing and why you made a choice.

It turned out that the piece of writing Julie gave us was the beginning of her novel. She showed us how she had followed her own rules. It was impressive! We had all brought the first 100 words of our new novels (her request). Some had brought longer pieces, which she said the publisher would throw straight in the bin.

Julie then read each piece to us, and we worked together with her on checking whether the writer had crossed any of her rules. This was a very enjoyable experience, especially as it was anonymous. It was good to learn from all the examples which were as varied as the group of women and men who were present. We experienced the value of her ideas  and clarity in assessing how good a beginning was. She told us that she rewrote the beginning of her last novel 100 times!
Writers fail constantly! Was one of her lines, which encourages not to give up when things seem difficult. Rewrite your beginning when you have finished your novel was another advice she gave us.
She told us that a character in a romance novel has to go through an emotional journey which changes them somewhat. There was much laughter throughout the session and the atmosphere was as ever productive and supportive.

Thank you ladies for reminding us what a great day was had by all!

The RNA blog is brought to you by

Elaine Everest & Natalie Kleinman


If you would like to write for the blog please contact us on elaineeverest@aol.com

Thursday, November 19, 2015

It’s The Most Wonderful Time of The Year...

It takes a special RNA member to not only enjoy our party but to go home and write about it for our blog. Thank you, Nikki Moore for your words and images.

If there is one thing I look forward to attending every year just before Christmas, it’s the RNA Winter Party - and this one didn’t disappoint. There may have been gusts of wind shaking the trees outside, but inside the Royal Overseas League it was warm, lively and fun. The wine flowed and everyone chatted, laughed and caught up with friends old and new while staff circulated with delightful tasty mini-canapés.
Welcome!

What made this Winter Party even better were the first Industry Awards superbly presented by Adrienne Vaughan, accompanied by glasses of champagne generously paid for by our lovely RNA President Katie Fforde (we thank you Katie!)

The runner-up for Bookseller of the Year was Michael Cole, who sadly couldn’t attend but whose bookshop always has a corner dedicated to romantic fiction. The winner was the marvellous Matt Bates of WH Smith Travel. What a great day Wednesday was for him! Giving a very touching speech about his long love affair with romantic fiction, he praised the RNA for their dedication, solidarity and passion and gave special thanks to Jenny Haddon and his mum.

Best Adaptation of a Novel runner-up Jamie Patterson (who directed Cally Taylor’s Home for Christmas) gave a witty, sincere speech and explained how he fell in love with his leading lady. The winner of the award was Debbie Horsfield for her adaptation of the Poldark series. Sadly she couldn’t be there due to ill health but her vibrant dialogue and feisty heroines received praise as well as rousing applause (and cheers for the gorgeous Aidan, star of the series).

The Romaniacs
Radio Gorgeous, champions of the romantic fiction genre and a station who regularly feature the RNA and its authors, were runners up for the Media Star award. However, it was a very special moment when the wonderful, hard working ladies of The Romaniacs were presented with the winning trophy. Described as a ‘Tour de Force’ they looked delighted with their win – and well deserved too.

Katie Fforde made the exciting announcement that next year the Romance Novel of The Year award in the RoNAs will be
New sponsor
sponsored by bookshop Goldsboro Books.  So thank you to them for getting on board and providing sponsorship.

Tracy & Elaine
A massive thank you and recognition has to go to Sally Quilford/Tracy Hartshorn who organised the party so brilliantly and tirelessly (truly something to be proud of) who was assisted by Elaine Everest on the door.

There wasn’t a single person I spoke to on Wednesday – be it author, agent or editor – who wasn’t having a great time. As I walked to the tube with aching feet from standing for hours on end and a sore throat from too much chatter, the only thought in my head was I can’t wait for the next RNA party...


I hope you can join us!

Thank you, Nikki, for your wonderful words. We too can't wait until the next RNA event. 

Would you like to write for the RNA blog? Contact us on elaineeverest@aol.com