The eclectic mix of short stories, With Love, is now on sale!
Contributing authors and stories...
A Chemical Mystery by Pad.A
Pad.A is a Creative writing graduate who will be publishing his first two books 'UTOPIA maybe' ( A philosophical study of an island where everything is 'perfect' ) and BARE BREASTED BRITISH ( A romantic comedy about a man going through his mid life crisis and trying to regain his youth through travel ) in late 2011. Follow his blog : http://bit.ly/fGL2Yw
It’s a pity we are not more aware of the strengths of dyslexia. Consider the lists of famous dyslexics hereunder. Those famous people are great examples. Their stories can improve self-esteem, belief in one-self, and pride. They can motivate everyone with a learning disability.
"Setting an example is not the main means of influencing another; it is the only means" – Albert Einstein.
Sarah Turton describes herself as a "dyslexic doodler".
When Sarah was diagnosed as dyslexic in 2001, at the age of 32, all those years of not being able to put her thoughts into written words suddenly made sense.
But rather then a hindrance, she says her condition is a creative tool which she can use in her books.
"The one comment I get is that my writing is vivid and alive," said Sarah. "I just chuck things down and somehow it works, I think."
Sarah, from Plymouth, has just written her second book, Aporia, and with her husband Szymon has set up a publishing house, Selchie Print.
![]() Aporia is Sarah's second book |
Her first book, Beyond the Lemon Tree, was published in 2008. It was, she says, "her reality".
Publishers stand accused of "nonsensical" policies on e-book lending to libraries. So, with nearly $1bn spent on e-books last year in the US alone, what does this mean for the institutions already at risk of closure?
When publishers "declared war on libraries" last October - according to Luton's head of libraries - there was uproar.
The Publishers' Association (PA) in the UK has agreed with the major publishing houses to restrict e-lending by either geographical location or the number of readers using an e-book at any one time.