Have you ever wanted to write a picture book (or any other
book) about a subject that you believe there’s a genuine need for but that you
also know would be really difficult to sell to a traditional publisher?
And what if the book would take time and resources to
research in order to make it as authentic as possible?
I am currently working on a project for which I received
funding from The Arts Council, England. The project involves writing a picture
book about a subject that would have been very difficult to sell to a
traditional publisher –namely, child bereavement.
I am not going down the route of every book I write using
alternative routes to publication. I am still using the traditional method for
the majority of the time. But I've had a big rethink about what I really want to be doing over the past couple of years. Previously, if there was a certain topic that I was really interested in writing about but I knew the resulting manuscript was highly unlikely to be picked up by
a traditional publisher, then I decided against writing it. And then I decided that that wasn't going to work for me any more. I decided that I'd look for different ways to make those books happen. And that different way -in this instance, funding from the Arts Council- has worked. And it's something I definitely plan to do again. From now on, if what I most want to write about is going
to be a really difficult sell and is going to take research to do it, then I’m
going to look for funding to create that book.
In this post, I'm going to talk about hints for getting an Arts Council grant for writing/creating a book, but it's worth thinking about other charities that might support you instead (or as well as). And having been commissioned to write one picture book by Bournville Village Trust
It was fun... (with Jess Mikhail, who illustrated the book)
(and here's the front cover, by Jess)
and another for Birmingham Children's Hospital in the past couple of years,
Dave Gray (the illustrator) and me, with some of the children involved in the project -(L-R) Calum, Aaron, Charlie and Dan, and Jess Wilkes-Reading who coordinated the project. With Dave's amazing book bench
I'd also suggest thinking really creatively about who might fund the book you're itching to create. The questions I've outlined below are with Arts Council funding in mind but a lot of them would apply to any potential funder...
So, if you’re interested in the
possibility of applying for funding from the Arts Council for writing a difficult to sell book, but you're about as sure of what to do as when you are confronted with your first ever candyfloss...
(Genuinely first ever exposure to candyfloss...)
here are some questions that might be good to think
about carefully…
- [1] Do you have a great idea for a fictional book (the Arts Council is not as interested in nonfiction, I believe) that’s going to require research? Are you keen to get funded so you can afford to start the project in the first place and so you can do the subject justice? Can you say why it’s such a great idea?
- [2] Is there a genuine gap in the market for the book you want to write? Can you really state your case for the need for this book?
- [3] Is your great idea one that tackles a subject that would be really hard to get a traditional publisher interested in (or, given what it will take to do the research, will it be hard to get a publisher to commission you to write the book so that you can afford to write it)?
- [4] Are you the right person to write it/illustrate it? Can you outline why you’re the right person to write/illustrate it?
- [5] Can you come up with relevant creative work with individuals who might typically have less access to the arts that will add to the project and help you with coming up with the most authentic book you can write?
- [6] Can you find organisations/charities/individuals that would agree with your answers above and want to champion the book, either during the research/writing process, or once it’s released?
- [7] Can you articulate how this grant would help you as an artist in terms of your future as a writer or writer/illustrator?
- [8] Can you articulate how this grant would help you as an artist in terms of your future as a writer or writer/illustrator?
- [9] Can you come up with ways to promote your book so that it will have the widest (and most relevant) audience reasonably possible?
If your answer to all the above questions is yes, then you
might be in a strong position to get Arts Council funding for your project –if
you write your application well, and ask for the appropriate amount of money
(grants fall into two categories –up to £15,000, and over; my guess is that for
most projects including writing a picture book, you’d probably want to apply
for the up to £15,000 grant as I did. And with these grants, you find out
within six weeks if you’re successful, which is extremely helpful).
In case it is of use to people thinking about applying, I’ll
answer the questions above, below, for our project which was successful.
[1] Do you have a great idea for a fictional book… and you are keen to get funded so you can afford
to start the project in the first place and so you can do the subject justice?
Can you say why it’s such a great idea?
Acorns Children's Hospice -who first asked about the possibility of writing the book
I wanted to write a picture book about the death of a child (because I'd been approached about it by a charity who didn't have the funding for it and once I'd started thinking about it, the idea wouldn't go away). It would require spending time with bereaved families and young people with
life-limiting conditions in order to make it as authentic as possible. I couldn’t
afford to do the project (which would spend months of liaising with different
charities and meeting families) if I wasn’t going to get funded, or if there
was no guarantee that the book would go ahead.
[2] Is there a genuine gap in the market for the book you
want to write? Can you really state your case for the need for this book?
I’d already written a manuscript about the death of a
grandmother after the death of my own mother. It’s not a story about my mother (whose life and death
was very different from the grandmother in the book) but the emotional truth of
love and death in the story came straight from my own experience and my
relationship with my mother. And although it’s one of my agent’s favourite
things I’ve written and still remains my own, it’s been a very hard sell
because it’s about death, and because it is sad (though hopeful).
In late 2015, I was contacted by someone from a children’s
hospice who’d seen an early copy of The Unstoppable Maggie McGee (illustrated
by Dave Gray, which I’d been commissioned to write for Birmingham Children’s
Hospital).
She asked if I’d consider writing a picture book about sibling
bereavement. From the research I’d done for Maggie
McGee, I already knew that there were very few picture books about death in
children (far fewer than the relatively small number there are about death in
adults) and it was clear that it would be an extremely hard book to sell to a
traditional publisher. Also, and I think this is really important, in order to
write a picture book about such a sensitive subject as child bereavement, I’d
need to take my time and do some proper research. So I’d need to find funding.
And to make sure there was a genuine need for such a book,
in addition to looking for other picture books about death, I spoke with a
child bereavement counsellor from Edward's Trust (the local bereavement charity),
a palliative care consultant, someone from a
children’s hospice and some librarians. They all confirmed that they felt there
was a genuine need. (And I used some of their quotes about that need in the
accompanying document that goes with the application.)
If you have a book in mind, do some basic research to make sure there really is a gap in the market and then think about the most relevant people in that area that you could ask in terms of whether there would be a genuine need for the book.
An awesome picture of librarians from 1896. Librarians these days come in full techni-colour and generally know everything and are generous enough to share their knowledge. Hooray for librarians....
Hooray for librarians!
Librarians are brilliant for this, as are experts in the area, and most people are pretty nice about being contacted I have found...
[3] Is your great idea one that tackles a subject that would
be really hard to get a traditional publisher interested in (or, given what it
will take to do the research, will it be hard to get a publisher to commission you to write the book so that
you can afford to write it)?
Yes, see above.
[4] Are you the right person to write it/illustrate it? Can
you outline why you’re the right person to write/illustrate it?
In 2015, I was very lucky to be commissioned to write a
picture book set in a children’s hospital (partly to raise money for Birmingham
Children’s Hospital). The characters Dave Gray (the illustrator) and I created
have major disabilities and some are extremely sick. In order to make the book
as authentic as possible, I did creative sessions in the hospital school with
inpatients and siblings of very sick children. I also spent time on the wards
with children with chronic conditions, and then with children with long term
disabilities or chronic conditions who use the hospital frequently.
I’ve also worked with other vulnerable people creating
books, including teenagers from a pupil referral unit. Dave and I worked
together on the hospital book and the structure for the project I was going to
apply for funding for would be partly based on what worked really well from the
hospital project, and Dave had also done creative work with vulnerable groups
of young people. We could show that we had worked well as a team before –as we’d
created a book that had sold over 8000 copies within nine months. And we had an
excellent relationship with the printer (who was also the printer on another
book I’d been commissioned to write, previously). I have also done lots of
author visits and could put a series of launch/post launch events into the application.
[5] Can you come up with relevant creative work with
individuals who might typically have less access to the arts that will add to
the project and help you with coming up with the most authentic book you can
write?
Working with the children or families that are most relevant
to the book you want to write works really well in two ways –it helps you
create the most authentic story/book that you can create, and it also means
that children/young people who may have less access to the arts get to do some
really interesting projects they might otherwise not get to do.
I’ve made lots of books with children in schools (after I’ve
done author visits at the schools, usually) and with my own students where I
teach for Writing West Midlands. I use lulu, the self-publishing print on
demand company and it means that we can make the books and then the students
can buy as many or as few copies as they like and they’re really cheap to buy. They’re
usually collections of writing done by the children with some black and white
pictures added, though with my own students, it’s more often their own short
novels that they’ve written. And when I was doing the hospital project, one of
the children asked that we create a picture book together. Because the quickly
created picture book worked really well (even though I’d not planned on doing
it at all in that project) and the children involved loved doing it, I wanted
to do it again for the project I was applying for.
Our first picture book made with the children at Birmingham Children's Hospital
Pictures from inside the book, The Hungry Skinny Hairy Lion
More pictures from inside the book
So I said that Dave (the
illustrator) and I would help the children and young people to come up with
stories and characters and then we’d turn them into simply put together picture
books for the children/young people involved. And then later on in the project
(during the months whilst Dave would be illustrating our picture book), I would
also put together compilations of stories and other writings from the families
involved in the project (again, using lulu).
Here's one we made with the older children from Edward's Trust, in October 2016: George and the Vault of Bananas
And here's a spread from the book
And another...
And here's The Hungry Crocodile which we made with the younger children...
and one of the more gruesome pictures from inside (but not the most gruesome)... But fear not, the naughty crocodile ends up spitting out the shark and becoming a vegetarian (thanks to Superhero Guinea Pig)...
If you’re thinking about doing a
project anything like this and don’t know how to put books together, they’re
pretty straightforward. I wrote a blog post on how to do it, which you can read here, and for the picture books, it’s even simpler as I’ve just used the photo
album template and uploaded our illustrations as if they’re photos. If I can do
it, then pretty much anyone can as I’m not massively technical –if you can use
cut and paste and word, and you know how to upload pictures then you should be
fine.
[6] Can you find organisations/charities/individuals that
would agree with your answers above and want to champion the book, either
during the research/writing process, or once it’s released?
I spoke with a bereavement counsellor at Edward’s Trust, a
local child bereavement charity about the potential project and they were
really enthusiastic. I also remained in touch with the person from Acorns, the
children’s hospice who’d brought up the idea originally. And then someone else
connected us up with Child Bereavement UK. All the charities were really
interested in the project as they believed that there was a real need for the
book. Whilst only one of them could put up some money towards the project, they
all said they’d support it in various ways which were extremely helpful –putting
on events, inviting families to participate, helping arrange meetings with individuals,
families and groups, hosting the meetings, etc. And, critically, they all
wanted to support the book once it came out. In addition, I met with other
health professionals and people doing research into palliative care who agreed
to support me (and meet with me) and to support the application. And I got
librarians to support the application, too.
There is a supporting document (that
can be about five pages long) which you attach to your application and it can
be anything you want it to be. I got quotes from librarians (about the need for
such a book and about previous library events I’d done and saying that they’d
like me to do launch events for this one) and bereavement professionals
(talking about the need for the book and how they’d support it).
The Arts Council wants to fund projects that will reach a
large audience –and which will actually happen. You need to convince them that
you’re a good bet to make the project work, and that you can reach an audience
who will really benefit from your work. Use all your contacts so that you can
make the project reach as many (relevant) people as possible –which might
include blogging on other writers’ sites, visiting people’s schools, libraries,
etc.
[7] Can you articulate how this grant would help you as an
artist in terms of your future as a writer or writer/illustrator?
After writing a book on a sensitive issue for the local
children’s hospital and working with vulnerable people in and out of hospital,
I was able to say that by doing another book tackling a sensitive issue and
working with vulnerable people, Dave and I were creating a niche for ourselves
as an author-illustrator team who were comfortable and keen to work in areas
that some people would choose not to work in and create books that children who
may feel they’re not reflected in books can really relate to. We have two other
projects that we’re really keen to apply for funding after this one where there
is a clear gap in the market but where traditional publishers are less likely
to back financially.
The Arts Council doesn’t want you to do a single project
and then never work in the arts again. It wants to fund projects that will
really help with your artistic career, so you need to show how gaining the
grant and doing the project will help you.
[8] Can you frame the project in terms of art, even if the
outcomes may well also be social ones? (The Arts Council is an arts organisation
so you can’t just say ‘this project will improve mental health in this group of
people’. It needs to address an artistic purpose, for example, providing a
certain group of people with less access to the arts with relevant
literature/art that they can engage in. Although the project may well have
social benefits, the funding will be given where they see a genuine artistic
purpose being met.)
If the book you want to write will be good art (as you would
hope any book would be!) and can show that lots of people will get to read it,
then you can frame that in terms of art. If you can show that the group of
people who will benefit from it are people who may have less access to
appropriate art, all the better. If you can also do some creative work with the
people for whom your book is aimed (like a project making joint books with them
where they get to create something that they can keep and you get to know them
and are consequently better able to write your own authentic book as a result),
then that is great, too. By spending time with young people who were bereaved
or soon to be bereaved, or with young people with life limiting conditions,
Dave and I are in a much stronger position to write and illustrate the most
authentic book we can about child bereavement.
[9] Can you come up with ways to promote your book so that
it will have the widest (and most relevant) audience reasonably possible?
You are expected to put in a marketing budget for Arts
Council projects, so work out from everyone you know what the best way to
promote your book will be. I asked staff at bookshops where I’ve done events
before if they’d be happy for me to do a launch there and they were. I arranged
to do four or five different library events (and we discussed how we can target
the advertising for the events so that the right people get access to the
book). We will have a launch for each of the three charities involved in the
project –and this is where charities are incredibly helpful because they will invite
the people for whom the book will be most relevant. I’m going to do a blog tour
of different blog sites –bereavement sites, teacher sites and writing sites to
talk about the book and the subject. A lot of children’s writers, especially if
you’re in organisations like the Society of Children’s Book Writers and
Illustrators (SCBWI) or the Society of Authors, will know lots of other writers
with a collective wealth of knowledge about how to do events, blog, get your
book seen by the most relevant people. Ask people questions. I asked loads of
people loads of questions before sending off my application.
The application did require a lot of preparation since it was my first Arts Council application (it would be massively quicker to do another one now I’ve done one). I had to be pretty specific about what I’d do and when, but that’s been
incredibly helpful now I’m actually managing the project. And it’s taught me a
new way of working which I’ve found extremely helpful. Since part of the
funding for a project like this is for project managing it, I had to break down
where I was being an artist and where I was being a project manager for the application...
...And I’ve
found that it’s really affected how I work. Now, I am boss for about two hours
a week where I work out what I need to get done the following week and write
myself a weekly plan. And the rest of the week, I do as I am told (by boss me,
on my plan), and I don’t have to make decisions. This might be really obvious to some writers/freelancers but it's taken me a long time to work out -an unexpected and happy consequence of writing the grant application
(my new way of working may be obvious to many, but to someone who struggles with organising her week, the realisation has been as joyful as finding an acorn when you weren't expecting one)
It frees up loads of thinking
time for me to write in my head and to do what I really love to do –write books.
Have you ever applied for funding to write a book –either to
the Arts Council or any other funding body? How have you found the process? Or
do you have a book in mind that funding might be extremely useful for? It would
be great to hear from you, below. And if you’re a writer in the States, are
there equivalent bodies you can apply to?
Thank you.
www.julietclarebell.com
5 comments:
Incredibly useful and inspiring. Thank you.
Thanks, Olivia.
I found this article very inspiring and informative. Last year I self published my first collection of short stories THE ZONE for teenagers and reluctant readers and was asked to take part in a workshop at Leeds Jail to create bonding and communication between prisoners and their teenage children, using my book. It was an amazing experience and as a result I am collaborating with a development prison officer on a further collection of short stories for teenagers to inform them about the dangers that can befall them such as sexual grooming and emotional abuse. We are going to apply for an Arts Council Grant, so this will be very helpful.
How exciting, Morag! Books and prisons is something very close to my heart -I hope you're successful. Let me know how you get on. x
Congratulations, Clare, on getting the grant and on producing such a worthwhile book x
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