Barny

  • Two fabulous stories and still half of the month to try your hand. What luck!

  • The First Steps and the Last

     

    ‘Come on, Mum, two more steps and you’re there. I’ve got you …’

    Why was she raising her voice? I wasn’t deaf.

    My mind wasn’t the disabled part of me. And what was the rush?

    Hold your tongue, old lass. It’s all said through care, not to mention a familiar tone of worry that she might slip or let go.

    It took me…[Read more]

  • You’re not actually the person I was referring to when I said I knew I was preaching to the converted. Quite often people reply to these Literary Byways blogs saying they’re going to read the book concerned on my recommendation, but this is the first time I’ve had feedback on that, and I’m delighted that you share my enthusiasm for Pavane.

    As for…[Read more]

  • It was, and still is, a very good blog indeed. I remember it well, and on the strength of your recommendation I bought Pavane. It is a unique book, with an extraordinary atmosphere. Since reading it I’ve returned many times to check on parts and to reread. It really is remarkable that it isn’t better known. It’s somewhat depressing that a book so…[Read more]

  • It has occurred to me that this occasional series is incomplete without the piece that started it all off, which was posted back in the old days on the Word Cloud. Some may remember it; some may not. And in one case I know I’m preaching to the converted…

    In 1983, on a commission from a Japanese publisher, the novelist and critic Anthony (A…[Read more]

  • Congratulations, Ath. Delightfully creative tale!
    Thanks to Janette for the prompt and to Sandra, Libby and Terrie for a selection of wonderful stories x

  • Congratulations, Ath,  for your interpretation with a twist  and well done  Sandra, Sea and Libby as well.

    I enjoyed everyone’s entries.

    Its always interesting to  see others  take on  a challenge prompt.

  • It’s been on my mind that during this month I will begin the last year of my sixth decade. The topic this month is the last of something. So, whatever that suggests to you, good, bad, indifferent, in a maximum of 500 words.

  • When I say that I seriously didn’t think I’d win – I mean it. There was a fistful of really great entries. Thanks to Janette for the prompt and to my co-entrants for some great entertainment.

  • Ps, yes, thank you all for your brilliant entries, I meant to say- sorry if this didn’t come across in my summary.

  • Congratulations, Ath. I love your story. Very well deserved win.

    Thank you Janette for setting the competition and for everyone’s entries. They are a very enjoyable selection of stories.

  • Five great stories this month, making my decision oh-so difficult and changeable.

    Sandra – Lyrical Determination (thin on legend)
    Smartly-penned descriptives throughout, giving vivid imagery of Fran lying prose on the attic bed, having decided to give her virginity to Ivo (having been inspired by the words of John Martyn).  Love that she bathes…[Read more]

  • PS 495 words including title

     

  • Somewhere to Bloom

    The cottage on the lane had a garden of pink, blue and mauve flowers on plants she couldn’t name. They faced her in clumps and drifts. On the lane she considered the pretty cottages, each one wearing its garden like a skirt, patterned, pastel – standardised, or something. And, even more annoying, they coped with the early May…[Read more]

  • Janette posted an update 1 year ago

    Time passes so quickly. Would you believe there are only six days left to enter the May competition? Already four stunning entries but, go on, please make my job to pick out a winner even more difficult – I like a challenge. Give me an essence of May.

    • Libby replied 1 year ago

      I started a story but life has been busy. Let’s see if I can a) finish it and b) it’s not too embarrassingly draft-like to share.

  • May

    The cactus on the table, out there on the decking, it’s gone mad. Look there are four new paddle things growing off it. Mr Hoskins from next door says they’re called “cladodes”. He should know, seeing as he’s a botanist or something at the college. It’s a modified stem, apparently, which serves the function of a leaf. He came over for a cup o…[Read more]

  • Renewal Dance

    Below a patchy canopy of leaves, sunlight falls in dusted shafts of light, highlighting small tufts of fluffy-winged seeds, spiralling and soaring in the breeze and somewhere, within the cool, dark, caverns of under-earth, the chime of rock, root and soil begins its soft, ceaseless, song of renewal.

    Stirred from slumber beneath the…[Read more]

  • Princes Street, Edinburgh, in early May. The morning is bright, the sky opaque with a promise of blue, and there’s enough chill in the air to warrant the cardigan I left on the back of the chair in the kitchen. I’m walking on the sunny side of the street – the side across from the gardens – with measured, purposeful steps as I head to a train…[Read more]

  • Libby posted an update 1 year, 1 month ago

    Among all the relentless bad news in the world, something today which made me laugh, courtesy of Tom Cox on Substack https://substack.com/@tomcox/note/c-115447202

    “In 1996 two neighbours in Devon spent an entire year hooting at each other while believing they were communicating with owls.”

    Is this true? Who knows. It doesn’t matter.

  • Today’s walk gave me the inspiration I needed, while I hummed away to May Day songs. I’d like you to write a story with a May (Day) theme.

    It could be goings-on at a festival or fair while Maypole and Morris Dancers dance in the May. Or a nod to the Green Man (Jack-in-the-Green) defeating the Holly King of winter. Perhaps be inspired by the lines…[Read more]

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