Bella

  • Apologies to anybody who had a problem logging in to the Den in the last couple of days. Our hosting company jumped the gun (by a day or so) and turned off SSL (Secure Socket Layer which provides us with some of our site security) prior to the bill falling due.

  • Well done Libby! And well done to Sandra, too. Made me smile!

    I didn’t read the other entries until after I’d posted mine, but I have to say 1) I was struck by the way we all had some common themes 2) I thought at once that Libby’s piece was a bit special.

    Thanks for the competition, Terrie.

     

  • Congratulations Libby – what an interesting exercise, one I’d like to attempt sometime and which you managed so smoothly. Thanks to Ath for another entertaining  Teabreak episode. And to Terrie for both the challenge and the summing up. The being stretched into a maybe new direction is so good for my writing, shame more Denizens can’t find time to enter.

  • Only three entries but what a selection!

    All expertly written and cleverly presented is evidence that Den of Writers contains a wealth of experienced and skilled writers.

     

    1. Wow Libby what a wonderfully executed piece of verb-less writing; plus a well-crafted opening sentence as well.

    Richly descriptive but without verbs, the shorter…[Read more]

  • Don’t ever cross a crocodile.

     

    Back when Chubby was chubby and not six inches taller than me and good looking, his nan died, and he went to the funeral. Afterwards, we met up near his gaff and he was in a bit of a moody with me.

    ‘All your fault, Teabreak, you twat!’ he goes.

    ‘Woss that then,’ I say, and I offer him a Number 6 to make up f…[Read more]

  • “Season to taste”

    I could say it started as a joke, except I knew, at that age, Suze and I were, a bit self-consciously, aiming to bridge the gap between our schoolgirl selves and the mysterious, scary-but-enticing grown-up world we were bracing ourselves to enter.

    Both of us were in top English. Read our homework to each other, critiqued (a mor…[Read more]

  • I thought July’s challenge could be a free choice of subject matter and genre, but to add a little twist to the  task your entry must contain a reference to a cooking pot of your choice (saucepan, frying pan etc.) and the words,

    Shadow

    Bridge

    Trinket

    Word variants of the above are also ok.

    Be funny, be scary, be mysterious, be whatever takes…[Read more]

  • This was such a good challenge producing three different  perspectives .

    I agree with Sandra picking a winner is  always difficult  at the best of times and I think we all did brilliantly. So well done Ath and  Sandra and thanks for passing the baton over to me, Libby.

    I will be posting  next months challenge shortly .

  • Thank you for the challenge, Libby. And very well done to Terrie for another powerful piece of story telling.

  • Wow. Thank you Libby for this at-first-sight innocuous challenge. (I tried to resist the autobiographical, but in the end it was the only way for me to go) so thank you Terrie and Ath for such impactful alternatives; I’m glad I didn’t have the task of choosing between them.

  • Energy and shame

    Understanding is a difficult word sometimes. We say, ‘I understand her,’ meaning that we know her reasons for doing something or other. It was as expected. Electricity feels rather different. Do I understand it? I mean, what is it? I was taught a load of rubbish at school about the movement of charged electrons. That isn’t elect…[Read more]

  • Electricity and us

    Electricity has played a considerable part in directing  the path our lives have travelled, from the instant (if only sensory) flash of knowledge, at the end of our first date, that “This man is who I can safely be ME with!” to our fifty years of living in the North East.

    At that time (5th April 1963) he worked for a comp…[Read more]

  • Hunting The Children of Electric

    You may think we’ve harnessed electricity but don’t be fooled by its compliance, it’s merely an angry beast straining at its leash, longing to be free.

    If you’ve stood watching for the crackle-flash of its untamed brother, then counted and listened for the rumble, you’ll know what I mean when I say, the effec…[Read more]

  • Athelstone posted an update 2 years ago

    Sorry for any oddities and issues with the site. I had a bumper crop of major updates to install and although I did my best to slip these in seemlessly, there are one or two niggles. In particular, Buddypress, which gives the site many of its social networking features had a complete rewrite. I did check all the prerequisites and tried it out on…[Read more]

  • A most enjoyable writing challenge for May, Ath.
    Well done Libby, Sandra and Sea for creating such powerfully expressive reading.
    Looking forward to Libby’s June challenge.

  • Thank you Ath, both for the competition and for your encouraging summing up. I certainly would’ve been hard-pressed to choose a winner, so congratulations and thanks to Libby, and also to Terrie and Seagreen.

  • Why do you always insist on making this difficult?

    Terrie’s Plant Song is almost a poem to the language of flowers. Rich and ancient with a deadly heart. The melody, she writes, is intoxicating, and I can’t think of a better word for the whole piece. I said “anything floral” and it’s hard to imagine something more floral than this. A wonderfully…[Read more]

  • (This may well be missing the point)

    The language of flowers not always sweet

    Only after finding, (months later)  photographs other than the ones taken by fourteen-year-old schoolgirl Kally Logan that caused all the trouble did Luke Darbyshere register flowers had twice been fleetingly present on his wedding day. Much of the time he’d been su…[Read more]

  • Plant-Song

    Nepenthes, the watcher, teaches us to listen for murmurs along the grapevine because the scent of those words is strong and always carry seeds of the truth. They whisper tales of creation that began beneath woody crowns of ancient cycad trees and of cerebral vines, trailing and probing in thickly netted curls upon the loamy earth.

    The…[Read more]

  • Sea, thank you for the useful challenge, especially because it helped me formulate my character as well as sparking such a brilliant range of responses; I wouldn’t’ve liked to choose a winner.

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