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  • RichardB posted an update 3 years, 11 months ago

    Our holiday cottage on Skye – in a tiny scattered hamlet in the shadow of the Cuillin Mountains, accessible only along seven miles of a twisty single-track road with jaywalking sheep, through wild and beautiful scenery. And no phone signal. Now that’s what I call back of beyond.

    • Sounds wonderful!
      Although, if I’m honest, no phone signal. Hmmm. I know myself. That said, if you’re posting this then there’s internet.
      Sounds wonderful!

      • Yes, it’s a bit odd. No phone signal, and even radio reception is dodgy, but the wi-fi is really good.
        The cottage itself is a bit lovely too, though if you’re tall (I’m not) you have to watch your head in the bedrooms. The Scots are heavily addicted to low roofs with dormer windows.

        • Apparently, dormer windows only appeared throughout the UK in the C16th, which suggests that they may have been a way to make more use of storage space and mezzanines. They became a popular architectural feature in their own right soon after. We added a roof-length dormer to our chalet-style house a few years back. I would have liked an “eyebrow”…[Read more]

          • Ah, I feel like an old man. Don’t have a smartphone, never used any messaging apps. Guess I’m stuck in a twenty-or-so-years- ago time-warp.

    • Sounds perfect

      • At almost the last gasp (home tomorrow) I saw what was probably an eagle this afternoon from the cottage garden. But it was a long way off, over the mountain on the other side of the loch wot you just can’t quite see from the cottage, and I didn’t have my binoculars with me. Almost sure it was a white-tailed eagle though.

  • This Isn’t About Elvis

    “Number two?” I clutched the edge of the cold table.  “Still?”

    “That’s nothing to be scoffed at,” the coward behind the newspaper said. “For fourteen straight weeks too.”

    “That makes it worse.”

    Gold vinyl records pumped life into the drab wooden wall behind him. Reserved for those who kissed the summit of number one.…[Read more]

  • Fine writing. Compact and perfect!

  • I’m chuffed to say that Fairfield Scribes have published one of my micros, ‘The Darkness Has a Damp Bite’, in their latest issue

    Issue 17 – Fairfield Scribes

     

  • [TW for an F-Bomb 💣]

    And Your Flesh Shall Be A Wild Night and A New Road

    The wild scream of the guitar ripped down his spine, surging like power in his veins. Dominion, utter and absolute electricity, was what their music held over the night.

    .  . . 1984.

    That was the last time he saw her, and all he could recall were a few, sparse details of…[Read more]

  • Libby replied to the topic It sounds wrong. But is that enough? in the forum Blogs 4 years ago

    Sorting out my formatting before I post would be another nice thing…

  • Libby replied to the topic It sounds wrong. But is that enough? in the forum Blogs 4 years ago

     I spotted my MC thinking about something I knew she was going to know, but she didn’t actually know yet

    That’s the kind of thing I try to see in my own writing though often it’s only after leaving the piece as long as possible that I notice what I’ve done.

    My main reason for leaving drafts a long time – apart from life getting in the way – is…

    [Read more]

  • Oh yes, I remember that gent, and his habit of taking other people’s writing and, unasked for, eviscerating the piece, stripping it of every possible nuance and subtlety to leave a lifeless skeleton. You mean he once actually admitted he was wrong?

    I’ve just edited out the opposite problem (sort of) to the one you mention in your first para. I…[Read more]

  • The trouble is, it’s easy to get used to odd phrasing or vocabulary when I’ve produced it myself.

    There’s definitely something in that. It’s a similar issue to writing something which doesn’t make sense on its own because you know all the back story that your audience is missing. You know what a turn of phrase means and it’s something of a sur…[Read more]

  • I’m emotionally excited over this!! haha. We’ll see what I get up to 😊✨

  • Libby replied to the topic It sounds wrong. But is that enough? in the forum Blogs 4 years ago

    No worries, Ath. I absolutely agree with you. For me, rules are interesting in a meta way for people’s reactions to them, either for or against. I like to think I’m relaxed but my bonnet bees show my uptightness 🙂 The truth is, I’m fascinated by ‘rules’ and the improvements or failures that can happen when they’re ‘broken’ – though most of the…[Read more]

  • Re the bee in your bonnet. My comments about commas were not directed at you. Commas are wonderfully useful and under-used.

  • No, I don’t worry too much about rules. Most of the rules are inventions of  over-educated elites designed to reinforce the idea that how the aristocracy spoke and wrote was the correct way*. That’s how we end up with such nonsense as split-infinitives and pointless debates about whether there should be a comma prior to and in a list. Seeing as…[Read more]

  • Confusingly, I have asked for two metaphors (mixed) while giving an example using a proverb 😂

    So, let’s try this again:

    Take two well-known sayings.
    Mix well.
    Write the story inspired by the result.

    400 words or less.

  • Libby replied to the topic It sounds wrong. But is that enough? in the forum Blogs 4 years ago

    I’ve learned a new word: ambitransitive. Thanks, Ath. It’s a helpful one.

    Like you I think probably no rules are broken. I have a small bee in my bonnet about contemporary UK English abandoning commas and that may be why I thought a comma would help.

    Your list, Ath –  avoidance of ambiguity; awareness of how things sound; comprehensibility; and…[Read more]

  • Hmm, crossed with everything after Libby’s post. Hence my repetition of the point about the transitivity (Is that a word? Sod it, it ought to be…) of those speech tags.

  • I think part of the problem here is that the author is concentrating very hard on the laudable aim of putting as much as possible – that he is comforting her, that he is speaking with his mouth close to her hair – into as few words as possible. Which can be very effective and satisfying when it works, but unfortunately this doesn’t.

    It’s also a…[Read more]

  • Crossed with your reply Kate.

    Yes! It is creepy. I have been discussing it offline with another member of the circle. We thought that ‘against her hair’ was perhaps one of the worst possible adjectival phrases.

  • I did think of a comma and I agree that it helps. What still interests me is whether the construction actually breaches any commonly agreed grammatical rules.

    I take your point about common speech tags being transitive, although several are actually ambitransitive e.g.

    It was necessary to answer. John answered.

    I agree that ‘against’ is a poor…[Read more]

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