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RichardB replied to the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
Ah. Forgot to check for new posts (not often necessary here, sad to say), hence the duplication with Ath’s post.
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RichardB replied to the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
That’s four Denizens now on the longlist, a 20% hit rate. Impressive. Or is anyone else going to come out of the woodwork?
Wot I said to Ath, Daeds: making the longlist is an achievement, so congrats on that.
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RichardB replied to the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
Well yes, obviously. But making the longlist is quite an achievement too.
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RichardB replied to the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
Congratulations to you too, Kate. We may be a small group of people here on the Den, but we’re talented…
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RichardB replied to the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
Thank you, Ath. I’ve only just this minute found out myself, and I’m still taking it in. Oh, and thanks too for your challenge, without which it would never have been written.
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RichardB replied to the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
And congratulations to you too, Ath. Which story is yours? It did strike me that at least one of the titles had your ring to it, but I might have been completely off-beam so I ain’t sayin’.
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RichardB started the topic CAS longlist in the forum Podium 3 years, 9 months ago
A slightly longer version of the story I entered for last winter’s challenge, The Girl Who Came to Stay, has been longlisted in the CAS Short Story Competition, wot Daedalus alerted us to a couple of months ago. Only the longlist (and of course I have no idea how many entries there were), but since this is effectively the first recognition of any…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic I've seen fiction written in present tense described as potentially static in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
I too fail to understand what ‘static’ is supposed to mean in this context, or why it should apply to present tense. I have no problem whatever with reading present tense stories: sometimes I think I even prefer them. With past tense you’re always at one remove, as if listening to someone tell a story. Present tense is immersive, immediate. After…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic Not Such a Literary Byway: The Ten Thousand Doors of January, by Alix E. Harrow in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
I discussed that last point with the person who recommended the series to me, and we agreed that that’s actually one of its strengths. In real-life situations of war, revolution, unrest etc good people are just as likely, or even more likely, to get killed as bad people. The atrocities that occur at regular intervals are paralleled in real life…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic Not Such a Literary Byway: The Ten Thousand Doors of January, by Alix E. Harrow in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
I’m not sure that I’d call The Ten Thousand Doors urban fantasy, exactly, as I understand it (yes, I did go and look it up). it has some of the tropes, like fantastical elements intruding into our world, but the setting is neither urban nor contemporary.
I take your point about some modern fantasy being more original (I’ve sampled George R R…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic Wildlife in the Kitchen in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
It only occurred to me after posting to do a bit of investigating, and it turns out this must have been a female golden-ringed dragonfly, which is the longest British dragonfly and is often found quite some way from water.
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RichardB started the topic Wildlife in the Kitchen in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
Yesterday I was in the kitchen around midday when I heard a mysterious and quite loud noise. It sounded a bit like a half-speed football rattle, and it seemed to be coming from the window above the sink. On closer inspection it was coming from behind the food recycling bin we keep on the windowsill, handy for scraping the plates into before…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic Not Such a Literary Byway: The Ten Thousand Doors of January, by Alix E. Harrow in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
‘…Every book back I read seemed to involve a magic sword or a ring and sorting the good from the bad became impossible…’ Yes, Kate, that was exactly my experience.
By contrast, to take a selection of the Ballantine books I read in my youth, The Well at the World’s End (William Morris), The Worm Ouroboros (E R Edison), The Night Land (William…[Read more]
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RichardB started the topic Not Such a Literary Byway: The Ten Thousand Doors of January, by Alix E. Harrow in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
I can’t in all conscience call this a literary byway, since the subject of this blog isn’t some dusty, half-forgotten relic but a book that’s very much alive and kicking, having been published only three years ago and even been nominated for awards. But I’ve enjoyed it so much that I’d like to share that enjoyment with you, so here goes.
Looking…[Read more]
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RichardB replied to the topic The Future of the Den (again) in the forum Blogs 3 years, 10 months ago
I’m in the same position as I was in last year: the Den is normally the only place I interact with anybody on-line, so I would be very sad to see it go. I’m a bit more up-beat about it, though, because since the ‘members’ side-bar on the home page has been changed from ‘most recent’ to ‘most active’ (good idea) it shows that quite a few people do…[Read more]
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RichardB posted a new activity comment 3 years, 11 months ago
I did ask MrsB, who used to be a Beaver Scout Leader, and she said there was no set amount handed down from above (that is, the Scouting Association) but that each group decided how much to charge, so you’ve got some latitude. Unfortunately, she couldn’t remember how much her own group used to charge thirty years ago.
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RichardB posted a new activity comment 3 years, 12 months ago
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.
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RichardB posted a new activity comment 3 years, 12 months ago
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.
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RichardB posted a new activity comment 3 years, 12 months ago
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]
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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.
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RichardB posted an update 3 years, 12 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.
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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]
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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.
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Sounds perfect
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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.
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