Barny

  • It’s October and I’m going for the obvious: Halloween. Or All Saints’ Eve or Hallowmas Eve or whatever you prefer. It doesn’t have to be ghostly though if you can give us all the shivers that would be fun.

    Max 400 words, connected to 31st October in some way.

    Deadline midnight 31st October.

  • Thank you, Jill! That was a lovely surprise when I switched on this morning. Such brilliant writing from Knicks and Ath, everything so vivid and pleasurable to read.

  • Janette posted an update 6 months, 3 weeks ago

    So sorry, Jill. I hoped to be of a mindset to join in September’s comp, only this month has thrown up too many mind-scrambling obstacles to facilitate concentration. Seems you already have some excellent stories already and I don’t envy your task.

  • The Artist of Wexton

    A gust of icy wind blew across the beach, and I turned to one side and pulled my coat tighter. Doing so, I realised that something was wrong, but I wasn’t quite sure what. An elderly woman stood about fifty yards to the west looking out to sea. There was something almost mournful about her, and, against my usual inclination I…[Read more]

  • At present it’s only advertising her new novel.

    The ad is fabulous.

    https://www.youtube.com/@emmadarwinwriter/videos

     

  • (Untitled, 394 words)

    The book was finished, the story told. But more importantly, the truth laid bare. Every pocket dimension of past trauma exorcised. Every chapter of his life stamped adult, checked as complete. Every fragment of what it meant to be human sorted and struck through.

    Now was a new time. A beginning time. Time to rejoin the…[Read more]

  • Fiona posted an update 7 months ago

    Hello! I think it’s years since I last dropped in but in switching computers I rediscovered this page. So glad to see some familiar faces and competitions going strong. Fiona (SE 2013)

  • This month I’ve gone for an essay, or at any rate not a story.

    338 words

    Outside my window there’s the small garden and then a field, where a tractor drags a harrow. The harrow’s arms are open and horizontal. Metal discs hang below them, making contact with the ground, and I hear the discs rattling along the soil and bouncing over flints. The…[Read more]

  • Here I am, racked with guilt. I did sit down a couple of times to write an entry, but it just wouldn’t come. I had an idea yesterday that I liked, and it may end up as a scene in the WIP, but I had so much going on I couldn’t manage it. Apologies, it’s a fascinating idea and I should have done something. However, you have two very good entries to…[Read more]

  • RichardB replied to the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 7 months, 3 weeks ago

    I have little nostalgia for the pubs of my earlier days, mainly because the pubs in Sutton, where I spent most of my life, were, and are, a pretty sorry lot. But there is one pub I remember with a certain affection.

    Watling Street, which becomes the Edgware Road, that arterial road that runs in a straight line through North-West London, starts…[Read more]

  • Athelstone replied to the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 7 months, 4 weeks ago

    Pretty much, these days.

    Most of the pubs I’ve loved are long closed now. The Railway Hotel in Newbury where I first tasted Morland bitter at the grand old age of 15 (just). At 12p per pint even I could afford it. Then there was the Cambridge in Cambridge Circus. To be fair, the beer was dreadful – so bad that I drank bottled lager mainly – but…[Read more]

  • Apologies in advance, Sandra. I won’t be doing a story this month. I do enjoy these poetry prompts but a combination of holidays and life admin is swallowing the time.

  • RichardB replied to the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 8 months ago

    Mention of plain-looking pubs reminds me of another pub with a heart-warming story, the Hope in Carshalton, near where I used to live and even nearer to where I grew up. In appearance a nondescript 1930s local, it was going to close down until a bunch of its customers got together and bought the lease, and then a few years later the pub outright.…[Read more]

  • Athelstone replied to the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 8 months ago

    Sounds glorious.

    Just had a short break in France where nearly all the draft beer is lager style, with the exception of a few unpleasantly-sweet dark beers. To be fair, some of the lighter ones are drinkable, especially if it’s a hot day – which it usually is.

    All this talk of real ale reminds me of that magical moment when you enter a…[Read more]

  • RichardB replied to the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 8 months, 1 week ago

    Actually there was a bit of a wobbly phase on the ale front for the first year or two of the new regime, while Nils, who is not himself a real ale drinker, was finding out by trial and error what would sell. There was a heavy emphasis on those light golden bitters that are fashionable these days, but are not much to my taste (unless it’s hot…[Read more]

  • Athelstone replied to the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 8 months, 1 week ago

    Oh for a decent pub nearby. There used to be a decent pub only a few hundred yards away from me. It was always The George as it stood by a roundabout on Worthing’s George V Avenue. A couple of years ago it was acquired by the Toby Carvery group. I see that they claim to serve real ale now, but I did try to beers they offered a few times and I…[Read more]

  • RichardB started the topic Not a Disaster Story in the forum Blogs 8 months, 1 week ago

    I do seem to have this habit of writing about disasters, so I thought it would make a nice change to write about something more cheerful. Something that is very much not a disaster.

    Let me tell you about our local pub. Well, not literally, because there are a couple of pubs nearer our house, but it’s the one we go to, and has our loyalty.

    The…[Read more]

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