Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland poster by Spineless
Birthday present 2 from my wife - the entire Alice In Wonderland on a poster! This is amazing! Amazing!

Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland poster by Spineless

Birthday present 2 from my wife - the entire Alice In Wonderland on a poster! This is amazing! Amazing!

Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland - 1927 1st Edition Hardcover by Appleton & Co, New York
This was birthday present 1 from Mrs. Dalton. She’s the best! High-res

Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland - 1927 1st Edition Hardcover by Appleton & Co, New York

This was birthday present 1 from Mrs. Dalton. She’s the best!

A Writer By Any Other Pseudonym…

As long as there have been writers, there have been writers using pseudonyms.

In the 19th century, female authors such as Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot), Amandine Aurore Lucile Dupin (George Sands) and Emily Bronte (Ellis Bell) used nom de plumes in order to traverse the male-dominated publishing world.

Some female authors have chosen to abreviate their full names to make them more gender neutral, such Catherine Lucille Moore, who wrote in the 1930s male-dominated science fiction genre as C.L. Moore, and Susan Eloise Hinton, who published her famous novel The Outsiders as S.E. Hinton.

A more recent example of this is Joanna Rowling, who felt her book about a boy wizard were more likely to be published is she wrote as J.K. Rowling.

Some authors who write in both fiction and non-fiction, or across several genres, choose a pseudonym to avoid confusing readers about their work. For this reason, noted mathematician Charles Dodgson chose to write his fantasy novels Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland and Alice Through The Looking Glass as Lewis Carroll.

Stephen King, frustrated by the publishing industry’s view that an author should only publish one book every year, created the pseudonym Richard Bachman in order to allow him to release more books and avoid reader fatigue.

A pair or group of writers collaborating on a work may choose a colllective name to publish under. Thriller writer Nicci French for example, is actually a husband and wife team; Nicci Gerrard and Sean French.

I make no secret about the fact I write under a pseudonym.

From day one I’ve been candid about the existence of other me. I also told you that I’d explain my reasons for doing so. So here we go.

I’ve always wanted to publish under a pseudonym, and have tried a few out over the years. Part of the reason is to distance myself from the work. Once it is published, I no longer own it. You, the reader, do.

A pseudonym helps people who know other me separate any preconceptions or prejudices from the work. It helps separate my life as a journalist and as a social media strategist from my life as a writer of literature.

But why Daniel Dalton?

Daniel is my real first name. I go by Dan as preference, but Daniel is on my birth certificate.

As you may know I recently got married. My wife is an established web designer in Australia and her name holds professional currency, so we decided she wouldn’t change it to mine. (I’ve never been much bothered about that particular tradition - she turned up at the wedding and said yes, that’s good enough for me!)

But she also suggested that when we go to dinner, or events, or on holiday, that she would use my last name. A nice gesture I thought, makes us feel like a team when we’re out and about.

We were talking before the wedding and I happened to mention that Jack White, of The White Stripes fame, wasn’t originally Jack White. When he married first wife and fellow White Stripe Meg White, he took her last name. Pretty cool I thought. Very modern.

My wife looked at me and said it out loud, “Daniel Dalton”. She smiled.

I decided then that although I won’t be legally changing my name either, I’d very much like to borrow her surname for my literature. She agreed.

And shortly thereafter, Daniel Dalton was born.

Do any of you write under a pseudonym? Let me know in the comments…

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7 Ways You’re Better Than Other Writers

The assholes are always trying to tell you what you’re doing wrong. Fuck them. Here are a list of things you already do better than anyone;

1) You write like no-on else

Your voice is unique. Every word, every sentence, every phrase; used and connected in a way that is singular to you and you alone.

I’ve written about it before but here it is again; you are the best in the world at writing like you.

2) Your passion for your story is unmatched

Your story is the best story in the world. You live with it, sleep with it, eat with it and fuck with it. You breathe it, nurture it, raise it from a fledgling idea to a fully formed concept.

Your passion and love for the stories you create can not be rivaled by readers or weathered by critics.

3) You have the best experience for the job

Everything you’ve done in life makes you the most qualified person on the planet to write your story. No other writer knows exactly what you know because none of them have lived your life.

Your insight is impossible to replicate, your perspective entirely your own. You are the only you there is, and only you can tell your story.

4) You are an expert in your field

You’ve read books that no-one else has heard of, stayed home while everyone else went out so you could immerse yourself in your passions.

Whether it is zombies, romance, or zombie romance, your genre is your life’s study, and your novel is your thesis.

5) You can motivate yourself like no-one else

No amount of reading about how other writers motivate themselves will make a difference, because no other writer can motivate you the way you motivate yourself.

It is only when you decide to write that you actually start - and when you start there is no stopping - you’ll do everything you can to sit down and write. Only you know how to do that. You’re very good at it.

6) You are your best worst critic

No other writer could ever criticise your work the way you do. They could tear your words apart, rip them from the page and slap you across the face with them, but it would only be light relief compared to the pain and suffering you put yourself through.

If nothing else, you may take solace in the fact that no-one will ever be able to make you feel as utterly in despair and full of hatred for your own work than you will.

7) You are the best salesman you know

There is no writer alive, no matter how much of a champion of your work, who could sell it the way you do, because none of them have taken your journey.

Be the champion of your words. Get out there and tell everyone. Tell the world. And don’t stop until the world listens. Writing is only half the journey, getting people to read it is the other half, and no one else can sell your story quite like you can.

You write and sell your stories better than any other writer. Start now.

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