The scheme helping new authors get into bookshops

The founders of a scheme to help new authors get their work into bookshops have said they want "to keep people's passion for writing going".
Writers Colin Wade, from Headington in Oxford, and Laury Conn, from Abingdon, launched 1in200 on 1 April.
Mr Wade said they chose the title after Mr Conn had been told he had "only a one in 200 chance" of getting a literary agent.
The pair said they wanted to act as a "conduit" into participating independent bookshops, which would display new writers' books on branded 1in200 shelf space.

Mr Wade writes crime and murder mystery thrillers and said he ended up having to self-publish when he could not find an agent.
He said he met Mr Conn after a community group talk, adding: "I was just really talking about my author career and some of the frustrations that I had, for example trying to find an agent when I first started writing."
His story "resonated" with Mr Conn, who told him about his idea of a service to help new authors get their books into local independent bookshops.
Mr Wade said he suggested the service to "pretty much every independent book store" in the county, and Mostly Books in Abingdon, The Wallingford Bookshop and Madhatter Bookshop in Burford had signed up.

One of the authors they are supporting is Amanda Roberts, from Islip, whose book The Woman in the Painting is in the scheme.
She said she hoped more independents stores saw "the potential of supporting Oxfordshire authors" and the project would continue to grow.
"It's a really exciting time for independent authors," she said.
"Because you really can take control of what you're doing yourself.
"It's really difficult to sell books, it's difficult to reach readers when you're on your own, which is another reason why the 1in200 scheme is so good.
"If you're on a table in a bookshop with another dozen books from local authors, it makes more of an impact than just your book sitting there on a shelf."

Mr Wade said he had also spoken to the owner of the Il Botanico coffee shop in Headington, who thought it was "a great idea".
He said: "We hope to expand in across Oxfordshire into other bookstores and maybe other coffee shops."
He said there were "lots and lots of talented authors out there" who faced "a lot of hurdles" such as getting into majors chains.
"I felt that the scheme was just a way of trying to keep people's passion for writing going," he added. "It's certainly what drives me on."
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