Welcome to the relaunch of The Spark. I published a dozen weekly editions last autumn which you can find online. This new incarnation will be monthly, with four sections: an author interview, book recommendations for ravenous readers, resources for wonderful writers, and updates on my meanderings.
π¬ Author interview with Iqbal Hussain
Iqbalβs debut novel, Northern Boy, about being a βbutterfly among the bricksβ, was published in June with Unbound Firsts. He is currently working on edits for his debut middle grade childrenβs novel, The Time Travelling Misadventures of the 7th Son. His work appears in various anthologies, including Mainstream by Inkandescent, and Lancashire Stories by UCLan Publishing. Iqbalβs short stories have won multiple awards, including the Creative Future Writersβ Awards, Writing Magazineβs Grand Flash and the Evening Standard Short Story Competition. You can read Iqbalβs nature writing on sites including The Hopper and Caught by the River.
What inspires you?
Iβm often inspired by things that happened in my childhood. My first novel, Northern Boy, is semi-autobiographical, and draws on a lot of things that happened while growing up in a Northern former mill town. I just think that if I donβt document what happened back then, those stories, characters, and streets will be lost for ever. The neighbourhood I grew up in was razed to the ground after a compulsory purchase order, so my past has literally been wiped out β so itβs so important to preserve it in any way I can.
Do you have a writing routine?
I have a regular job for four days of the week, working in the word-processing department of a City [of London] law firm, so I write on the other three days. I tend to start around 9 in the morning, and then keep going until 5, with breaks to take our labradoodle Milo out for his walks. Iβd love to have a day off, when I can just spend time with my partner, but itβs tricky to build in, especially when there are always deadlines to be met. I tend to say yes to most writing opportunities that come my way, as I canβt bear to miss out! I write directly on the computer β my handwriting is too terrible to sustain an analogue process. I use Word, which Iβm able to manipulate to be the best writing software for my needs. Iβve tried Scrivener, but have found the learning curve too steep, plus the one time I exported back to Word I ended up with section breaks everywhere, which really werenβt helpful.
Writingβs biggest secret isβ¦
β¦itβs not that lonely! I have a good group of writing friends, from various parts of my writing past. It keeps me sane, and you know that they will completely understand what youβre saying when you go into raptures about a scene youβve written, or when youβre banging your head against a wall when the words wonβt flow. I also love a book launch, where Iβm often found to be gossiping around the drinks table with a samosa in one hand and a glass of bubbly in the other, putting the world to rights. I canβt stress the importance of finding your writing community, to exchange views, news, tips, challenges. To share in each otherβs successes β and failures and rejections, as there are plenty of those outside of the curated posts we put on social media.
My worst writing moment
When Northern Boy failed to be picked up on submission. It was incredibly dispiriting. All those years of working on it, only to be told no-one wanted it. Nothing prepares you for it, as you always assume once youβve got your agent the rest is plain sailing. Sadly, it isnβt, and there are many more hoops to pass under and gates to walk through.
My best writing moment
When Northern Boy got picked by Unbound Firsts as one of their two novels by debut writers of colour for publication in 2024. I sent the manuscript to them on an off-chance, not for one second thinking it would be picked β and then it was! I canβt describe how loudly I screamed. Iβm delighted by how gorgeous a job the whole Unbound team have made in bringing my characters to life. I canβt think of a better home for my debut.
What are you reading right now?
Iβm a magpie, and read widely and, often, simultaneously. Currently, Iβm reading Timeline by Michael Crichton, a highly entertaining blend of sci-fi, time travel and historical fiction. Also on the go is The Explorer by Katherine Rundel, a rip-roaring read about four children whose plane crashes in a South American rainforest.
Book recommendation
Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh. This New York-set childrenβs book from the β60s made me laugh and cry when I was a child, and it still does (Iβve read it many times over the years). It tells the story of Harriet, who keeps a notebook in which she makes observations about her friends and neighbours. These arenβt always nice observations, but theyβre always honest. When her friends find her notebook, theyβre understandably annoyed and upset, and Harriet finds herself ostracised. Whatβs extraordinary is that, even when the odds are stacked against her, Harriet remains true to herself β a message that really struck me as a child, and which appears throughout Northern Boy. With the help of her former nanny, Harriet realises you sometimes have to tell a lie to keep the peace, but to always be true to yourself. I spent many hours as a child spying on neighbours, making a spy route like Harriet did, and she inspired me to become a journalist and a writer. Thank you, Harriet!
π Book recommendations for ravenous readers
Spotifyβs decision to include audiobooks for Premium users has been a game-changer for me. I always listen to podcasts on dog walks and often while driving. I think it was on the now-ended (π) podcast Literary Friction where I heard about finding your way into audiobooks with nonfiction.Β
π My first listen was The Salt Path, written and narrated by Raynor Winn. It was disturbing how a middle-class couple could become homeless so quickly due to one bad investment and a lost court case. After the bailiffs claimed their house, they gathered a few things into backpacks and set off on Englandβs 630-mile South West Coast Path. Winn originally wrote the account for the eyes of only one person, her walking companion: her husband. Her writing, particularly about the natural world, is lyrical and evocative.
π€ A more recent listen was Echo Boy by Matt Haig. Itβs a young adult thriller romance set in 2115. Because Iβm toying with a near-future thriller concept for my second book, I appreciated the characters, pace, and world of Echo Boy. Also, I havenβt read much YA (young adult) since I was a YA myself, and I do enjoy the definition of oneβs identity and coming to know the world that are typical of that age category.
βοΈ Resources for wonderful writers
ποΈ The Write Now with Scrivener podcast features interviews with authors in all genres. It was a fun surprise to hear Natasha Bell, a thriller author who taught a one-day course I took at City Lit on writing autofiction. (My affiliate link for the Scrivener writing software is here.)
π Lisa Cronβs Story Genius: How to Use Brain Science to Go Beyond Outlining and Write a Riveting Novel focuses on charactersβ backstories and psychology: their βlive wireβ that is the root of their expectations and desires. The plot is there to serve that third (electrified) rail. Using her scene card format has strengthened my writing.
π» Iβm on Chill Subs most writing days, to look for magazines and contests, and to track my submissions. The team there also runs the weekly Sub Club newsletter with listings of agents, small presses, contests, and magazines open to submissions and pitches.
π£ Updates on my moseying
Since the last edition of The Spark, Iβve been rewriting my 93k-work creative nonfiction manuscript as standalone short stories. The collection links memoir with my family's intergenerational tale: the tragedies and triumphs of Chinese and Eastern European Jewish immigrants who converged in California.
Itβs quite handy having a bunch of short stories to submit to contests and magazines. In the spring, two of my stories, βHis Bonesβ and βThings My Dad Told Me,β were longlisted in Flash 500 Short Stories 2024. In April, βData Doubleβ was produced and critiqued on The Failing Writersβ podcast. (ββ¦we take a look at another listener's bit o' writing they've kindly sent in to share with the class. This week we try and make Madelyn Postman cry...β)
And in June, I almost gave my family a heart attack with my screaming when I found out that βThings My Dad Told Meβ was shortlisted for The Hope Prize and will be published in an anthology by Simon & Schuster Australia this December. All royalties will go to mental health charity Beyond Blue.
Submissions stats β tracked on Chill Subs π
π 4 accepted
β±οΈ 15 pending
π
ββοΈ 4 withdrawn (accepted elsewhere)
π« 31 rejected
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