Bella

  • Seven stories already in this month’s competition – and seven days to go, so if you’re dreaming up a dialogue please don’t leave it too long. And if you are in need of inspiration, you’ll get it by reading those already posted.

  • I dreamt about you last night.

    Really? I haven’t thought about you for ages.

    Ooh! Harsh.

    Aha – Sorry, Jack. That sounded terrible. I didn’t mean it like that. It’s just, well, you know – the kids and all that. I don’t have much time for myself.

    How old are they now?

    Callum’s ten and Orla will be seven on Saturday. Most of this shopping is…[Read more]

  • The Sanctum of Dreams

    “I dreamt about you last night. You were in the sanctum.”
    “Well, that’s hardly surprising, is it? Given what’s about to happen.”
    “No. I suppose not. It was just so…”
    “So…what? Are you going to share? Or just sit there looking worried? I’m not a mind reader.”
    “Yet.”
    “Ha! True. Well, tell me about it. I don’t like to see y…[Read more]

  • Good question @Seagreen. I checked with the story that inspired it (A L Kennedy’s ‘Sympathy’) and the answer’s pure dialogue, please. The difficulty of it is part of the challenge.

  • Sandra posted an update 5 years, 8 months ago

    I doubt there’s a single person in the Den who has not said, at one time in their life, ‘I dreamt about you last night –’
    November’s competition asks that you continue the conversation for up to further 354 words.

  • Opening with ‘I dreamt about you last night –’ I’d like you to write an all-dialogue piece between two people in no more than 350 words, at the end of which we have an understanding of each of them as individuals and the state of their relationship.
    Deadline 10 p.m. Monday 30th November.

  • Thank you Sea, not least for the challenge itself, which forced me to face and write a scene I had been putting off; I look forward to the time that bottle of wine is anything but virtual. And yes, I was glad not to be the judge this month, so many differing emotions to choose from. I’ll be back in the morning with a challenge for November.

  • OK all. Did you miss out on your chance to join the “Things that go bump” writing challenge? Well, just like Brigadoon, we have appeared again – just briefly – to give you one last, brief, opportunity to join your fellow Denizens. To grab the opportunity send me a Direct Message and I’ll tell you what to do. ACT FAST! This offer expires on 1…[Read more]

  • There’s a monster inside of me.

    It was born when Noellia moved into number 14.

    The car started it. A shiny new Fiat 500. Electric. In powder blue. Parked on the drive. I looked at my own clapped out Fiesta and felt the first stirrings of new life, deep in my chest.

    She fed the monster well, did Noellia.

    Had an open house, she did. Invited…[Read more]

  • 0815 Wednesday 12 December (350 words, 1 an expletive)

    I assumed … God help me, I assumed McCallan had come with news of arrests, of mitigation. Or at least reassurance of progress
    Instead –
    Instead – Rob.
    Robbie my son, my first-born.
    Dead.
    Dead in her car.
    She the driver. No blame … no blame for Robbie, McCallan said.

    Robbie, who Moira r…[Read more]

  • Well done, Sea – and also for the theme of next month’s competition.
    Thanks Janette, for an opportunity to rehearse a scene, and for feedback.

  • Well done, @seagreen, excellent story.

  • Great stuff @seagreen. Super story.

  • Red Sun

    Sunsets are very different here. Everything is different, but it was the sunset that I was staring at last night. Or rather, the absence of a sunset.

    OK. No sunset. Tell you what, there aren’t any asthmatics here on Grissom’s planet either. I’m not blaming anybody; when a 300-mile-wide asteroid drew a bead on Earth at twenty-five miles…[Read more]

  • Barny replied to the topic Choices in the forum Group logo of Things that go bumpThings that go bump 5 years, 9 months ago

    Oh ok then Believer. Justin time 😉

  • Barny replied to the topic Choices in the forum Group logo of Things that go bumpThings that go bump 5 years, 9 months ago

    Home, Belieber, Spoon

  • OK – at the risk of badgering people, three and a bit days left to enter “Things that go bump”. Also – 18 members at present, but only 16 sets of choices. If you’re intending to take part, don’t forget!

  • The marking of a life, or two.

    This the second funeral in six days and the mourning very different.

    Last week’s was of a mother. Not his, not biologically, but one who had nevertheless mothered him. Had generously included him, enabled him to share in the love she gave her natural sons. Much needed when his own family had been hard and spiky, s…[Read more]

  • “I don’t care where you’ve been, You ain’t been nowhere till you’ve been in – the Things that go Bump writing challenge.”

    Find the group. Join. Enjoy.

  • Just wondering how you are all dealing with the Covid pandemic within your writing. I’m in the planning stages of a new novel and can’t decide. Do I set my novel pre-pandemic? Which feels like a bit of a cop-out. Do I ignore it completely? Same comment. Or do I try to set it in the current situation with the problems and concerns of the pandemic…[Read more]

    • I think it depends how optimistic or pessimistic you are about the pandemic. Considering how long it takes between drafting a novel and seeing it in print (if it gets that far), if you take the optimistic view the whole thing will be over by then, it’ll no longer be a part of contemporary life, and nobody will worry much whether you’ve included it…[Read more]

    • Not answering your question, exactly, but I’ve read a number of short stories which include reference to Covid and in general I find them offputting, a bit bandwagon, which might be because we’re in the middle of it. I think if your novel is set at the time, a passing reference to its restrictions might be enough. But the same (to include or…[Read more]

      • Personally, I’d leave it out. So many people now must be writing pandemic stories, that the mention of it alone might put readers on guard. Also, optimistically speaking, by the time your novel comes out, life may have returned to normal and your story would be dated.

    • Interesting. I wasn’t planning on writing a story about the pandemic but was thinking about whether the story I had planned to write should acknowledge the pandemic. For example there is quite a lot of travel in it and it feels weird to have someone just hop on a plane given what’s going on. Have to think a bit more.

      • Best of luck!

        • Yes, best of luck, Jane. FWIW, I don’t think ignoring the pandemic is anything of a cop-out. I’m choosing to ignore it in my next one for similar reasons to some remarks above, that a) it risks becoming band-wagon and, if it does (hopefully) pass, Covid might age the novel by the time it comes to print. Mostly b) that books are commonly escapism,…[Read more]

          • I agree there’s a risk of bandwagon. I think it can be hard, too, to think of something interesting to say about a situation when we’re still in it. Hard for me, anyway.

      • Yeah, its a tricky one isn’t it? To ignore it completely, or assume that a book based two years from now can still ignore it completely seems a bit unbelievable to me. This is a world changing event, ignoring it for present/near-future settings would be odd imo. BUT I have absolutely zero interest in novels *about* it. I do think the shifting,…[Read more]

        • Thanks @raine. You expressed my quandary much better than I could. Still not sure which way to go!!

          • I’m veering towards thinking that a contemporary book which ignores covid is going to date far faster than one which has it/its aftershocks in the background.

            • I think I agree and, in any case, I’m finding hard to impossible to plan without the realities of Covid19 informing the action. It is the current reality.

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