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Journeys in Fiction

March 18, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credits: Some images directly from Pixabay. Other images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos and one photo from Allison Symes.

This post is timely because by the time this goes out I will be up in Scotland again for the Scottish Association of Writers’ Conference. I’m running a flash fiction workshop there and have judged one of their competitions (the Margaret McConnell Woman’s Short Story).

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I hope to interrupt my In Fiction series to report back on how things went soon. And yes I loved the train journey (Waterloo, King’s Cross, Edinburgh, Croy) – the scenery on much of the route is amazing. It’s the second time I’ve been up to Scotland in the last few months as I was at the Brechin and Angus Book Festival back in November.

[Read more…] about Journeys in Fiction

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Tags: am reading, am writing, characterisation, creative writing, internal journeys, journeys in fiction, point of change, questions

Imagery In Fiction

March 11, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credit:  Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos. Book cover images supplied by Chapeltown Books and Bridge House Publishing.

They say that a picture is a thousand words but don’t discount those words. For one thing, one thousand words is a flash fiction story! An artist paints with oils, watercolours etc., whereas a writer paints with words. And those words can make a powerful impact on readers.

By inventing characters readers can identify with, we can use those characters to convey deep truths in what we get them to say and how we get them to act. We can also use those characters as representations. Allegorical tales are the classical example of this.

[Read more…] about Imagery In Fiction

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Tags: am reading, am writing, book covers, fiction, imagery, painting with words, red herrings, specific details

Human Behaviour In Fiction

March 4, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Image Credit:  Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos.

One aspect of fiction, whatever its genre or length, is it does reflect on our behaviour. It isn’t flattering either, most of the time. The classic fairytales, for example, call evil out for what it is and the kind of evil shown in them (such as cruelty to step children) is something we see only far too often for real.

Stories tell us what we know. Even in the most fantastical of settings, there will be something we can identify with (otherwise, why would we read such things?).

And human behaviour is the direct reason for any story. We use stories to try to make sense of the world we know (and perhaps more than ever in crisis times such as the one we’re going through now with the situation in Ukraine).

[Read more…] about Human Behaviour In Fiction

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Tags: am writing, big themes, characters, creative writing, fairytales, fiction, heroes, human behaviour in fiction, stories, villains

Geography in Fiction

February 25, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Geography may seem unglamorous but it plays a major role in many great stories. The Lord of the Rings would not work without its geography of The Shire, Rohan, Gondor and, of course, Mordor. (I’ve always loved the map at the start of the book too).

Wuthering Heights wouldn’t be the same without its geography and The Hound of the Baskervilles would not work nearly so well if the story wasn’t set in a bleak setting (to intensify the mystery as to what the hound is given it’s easier to hide something monstrous on a moor!).

[Read more…] about Geography in Fiction

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Tags: am reading, am writing, changing role of geography in fiction, cli-fi. fiction, geographical impact on stories, geography in fiction, implying setting, settings

Frameworks in Fiction

February 18, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Image Credit:  Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos. Some images directly from Pixabay.

The definition of framework is an essential supporting structure of a building, vehicle, or object. Well, that can be extended out to include stories. They need a structure to make them work.

[Read more…] about Frameworks in Fiction

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Tags: am writing, creative writing, fiction, frameworks, planning your writing

Endings in Fiction

February 11, 2022 By Allison Symes 7 Comments

Image Credit:  Most images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos though some are direct from Pixabay.

A story of whatever length has to have an opening which hooks the reader in but the closing line must deliver on the promise of the set-up at the start of the tale. Weak endings leave a reader feeling cheated (aka the “why did I bother reading that” scenario and no writer wants that).

[Read more…] about Endings in Fiction

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Tags: am reading, am writing, circular stories, classic stories, creative writing, fiction, impact on readers, linear stories, story endings, twist endings

Dialogue in Fiction

February 4, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Dialogue is something I love writing though I use it more in short stories (1500 words plus) than in my flash fiction (1000 words maximum).

[Read more…] about Dialogue in Fiction

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Tags: am writing, characterisation, creative writing, dialogue, internal dialogue, use of swearing by characters

Updates to the Highway Code

January 28, 2022 By chippy minton 2 Comments

highway code updates

The latest version of The Highway Code is being published tomorrow (29 January).  There are (depending on which report you read), 8 new rules and 49 updated rules – but some of these updates are to clarify wording and/or where one underlying principle affects more than one rule.

highway code updates

Of course, much of the Highway Code is a guide rather than prescriptive.  However, to paraphrase the opening paragraph of the first Highway Code: “although breaking any of these rules is not in itself an offence, it will make it so hot for you that you won’t know the difference.” [Read more…] about Updates to the Highway Code

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Tags: cycling, driving, highway code, Traffic

Character Types in Fiction

January 28, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credit:  Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos. Some images direct from Pixabay.

I’m sure this topic could go on for several weeks but I thought a whistlestop tour of some of the major character types you’re likely to come across would be fun.

[Read more…] about Character Types in Fiction

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Tags: am reading, am writing, author take, books, character types, creative writing, fiction, genre fiction, heroes, minor characters, stories, villains

Should Real Tigers be Used as Props?

January 24, 2022 By Janet Williams 2 Comments

Should real tigers be used in commercial adverts?

Gucci has used real tigers in their recent adverts celebrating the Year of the Tiger. It seems the tigers have been trained or tamed to be used as props, accessories, and friendly pets. These adverts really have reminded me of the adorable tiger and his friendship with the little girl Sophie, in The Tiger Who Came to Tea by Judith Kerr.

Should real tigers be used in commercial adverts?
Should real tigers be used in commercial adverts?

In the commercial adverts, actual tigers roamed the scenes, and joined a group of friends for high tea, in various spaces of a luxurious, retro-style hotel. See this report. [Read more…] about Should Real Tigers be Used as Props?

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Tags: Chinese, Chinese New Year, community, culture, entertainment, event, history, tradition

A Story about Tiger

January 23, 2022 By Janet Williams 7 Comments

Image of a tiger by JL G from Pixabay.

As the Lunar New Year (Tuesday, 1 February 2022) is just around the corner, I thought I would share little stories about tiger as it’s going to the the Year of the Tiger.

In the west, the tigers I’m most familiar with are Tigger from Winnie the Pooh, and Hobbes, Calvin’s stuffed tiger and best friend. These are friendly tigers.

The tigers in the Chinese context seem to be mighty and ferocious. They are not there to ‘be kind’ or friendly.

Image of a tiger by JL G from Pixabay.
Image credit: Image of a tiger by JL G from Pixabay.

Here is a widely known story between a fox and a tiger in the idiom 狐假虎威(hú jiǎ hǔ wēi): [Read more…] about A Story about Tiger

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Tags: Chinese, Chinese New Year, community, culture, entertainment, event, history, tradition

2022 Chinese New Year Celebration in Southampton – Sunday 30/1/2022 at Westquay Shopping Centre

January 22, 2022 By SO53 News 5 Comments

The 2022 Chinese New Year Celebration in Southampton will be on Sunday 30/1/2022 at Westquay Shopping Centre, from 11am to 3pm.

The Chinese Association of Southampton and the University of Southampton Confucius Institute once again bring the traditional Chinese New Year celebration to Southampton to welcome the Year of the Tiger 2022.

Chinese New Year 2022 falls on Tuesday, the 1st of February 2022. The celebrations culminate with the Lantern Festival on the 15th of February.

Southampton Celebrating Chinese New Year 2022
Southampton Celebrating Chinese New Year 2022

Year of the Tiger – from 01.02.2022 – 21.01.2023

[Read more…] about 2022 Chinese New Year Celebration in Southampton – Sunday 30/1/2022 at Westquay Shopping Centre

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Tags: Chinese, Chinese New Year, community, culture, entertainment, event, history, music, Southampton, tradition

Best Friends in Fiction

January 21, 2022 By Allison Symes Leave a Comment

Image Credits:    Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos.

Best friends, often otherwise known as sidekicks, have an invaluable role to play in fiction. They shore up, sometimes literally, the lead character who is struggling with their task. The most famous example of this is Sam Gamgee from Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings who did carry both Frodo Baggins and the Ring of Power for a while as the story progressed.

Best friends are there for moral support too and to be a sounding ground for the lead character. Well, we all need someone to sound off with at times, right? And characters in stories reflect us and our behaviour and attitudes (for good and ill), so this aspect is important.

[Read more…] about Best Friends in Fiction

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Tags: best friends in fiction, characteristics of lead and sidekick characters, classic detective fiction, Frodo Baggins and Sam Gamgee, Hastings and Poirot, Holmes and Watson, Jeeves and Wooster, Morse and Lewis, P.G. Wodehouse, sidekick characters, spotting the sidekick character, The Lord of the Rings

Animals in Fiction

January 14, 2022 By Allison Symes 4 Comments

Image Credits: Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay images. Book cover images from Chapeltown Books.

Some of my favourite childhood books involved animals. Think about Timmy from The Famous Five by Enid Blyton. I suspect he was the most intelligent of the lot of them.

I am an asthmatic, it was worse when I was a child and there was no question then of being able to have a dog of my own. But I could read about them and loved doing so. Ironically now I have no problems with having a dog as a companion and I still love reading. Neither do I mind animal characters as long as they are realistically portrayed.

[Read more…] about Animals in Fiction

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Tags: Allison Symes, am reading, am writing, animals in fiction, Black Beauty, books, childhood stories, fairytales, flash fiction, Jaws, Puss in Boots, The Famous Five, The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe, Tripping the Flash Fantastic, Winnie the Pooh, writing from an animal viewpoint

Brickmaking in Chandler’s Ford

January 9, 2022 By Christine Clark 5 Comments

Brickmaking in Chandler's Ford

It won’t come as a surprise to any local gardener that brickmaking was a big industry round here 100-150 years ago. Our heavy clay soil, as well as the local chalk downland, made this area an obvious site for several brickfields over the centuries. In fact, in the late nineteenth century in Hampshire there were 100-150 works producing clay products such as bricks, tiles and pipes.

Chandler's Ford Community Halls, Hursley Road.
Chandler’s Ford Community Halls, Hursley Road.

It was in around 1870 that it was discovered that our clay soil was particularly suitable for brickmaking. There were three brickfields in Chandler’s Ford. The biggest, which was also one of the largest in the country, was Bell’s, which occupied the land now taken by Chandler’s Ford industrial estate. The position of the railway no doubt helped its success as this was the main means of transporting the finished bricks. A short single-track branch line ran through the brickfield, joining the Eastleigh-Romsey line at the station near the signal box. The whole process of clay extraction, moulding to shape and firing was done on site. This last was not always popular with local residents due to the fumes emanating from the kilns. This brickfield had the honour of providing 35,000 bricks for the construction of the Royal Courts of Justice in the 1870s.

Brickmaking in Chandler's Ford
Brickmaking in Chandler’s Ford

[Read more…] about Brickmaking in Chandler’s Ford

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Tags: Chandler's Ford, community, culture, Eastleigh, education, history, local history, local interest, memory, storytelling, war memorial, writing

The Itchen Navigation Allbrook to Brambridge

January 8, 2022 By SO53 News 5 Comments

Nature photo by Steve Allen

By Steve Allen and Derek Johnson

We have been walking this part of the navigation for many years and in our opinion this 30-minute stroll has capture the river and canal in it entirety.

After making your way to Twyford Road and finding the track down to the canal you turn left, which takes you down past properties on the left bank, which dip their toes into the water edge. Look out for the signs of the kingfisher as they look for food. These bird are very elusive so you must have a keen eye to catch them perched on branches as they fish. Or you may see the distinctive turquoise rear as they fly past you at great speed.

Nature photo by Steve Allen
Nature photo by Steve Allen

The view opens out on the right. At this stage, just pause a while to see if you can watch many spices of birds going about their daily life. Some say a small blot on the landscape is Nuttall Construction but I feel this gives a sense of what the canal was used for in years gone by.

Passing under the railway bridge you emerge to meadow land on the right. High on the first pylon it has been known to see up to seven cormorants surveying their territory. In the meadows deer and geese can be seen grazing.

Cormorant image by winterseitler via Pixabay
Cormorant image by winterseitler via Pixabay

After crossing the road, stop a while to look at the lock, check the depth by looking at the ledge on the other bank. At this time the water is high above and we encounter flooding as we progress. As we wonder through the canopy of trees, just be aware of the river and watch for ripples on the waters edge, as this is a sure sign of the water vole as she make her way through the reed beds to her riverbank home.

New growth is starting to show along the edges of the canal; new life is about to begin.

On the left the meadow land opens out in the foreground; the reeds are growing. If you just stand awhile you may hear the distinctive sound of the reed warblers as he tries to encourage a mate to his domain. He loves to climb up the reeds to have a look at you before he flies away. Most odd.

View from the Brambridge walk
View from the Brambridge walk

Depending upon the rainfall, the canal can be clear as crystal. ThIs is a good time to watch the water surface as life is in great abundance on or below the surface.

Many a time I have stopped for a while to take in the peace and tranquility of the canal with its changing moods. Once you are up by the sliuce gates you will see the canal and river side by side, both trying to race one another as they make their through the Itchen Valley.

 Nature image by Steve Allen

Lurking in the deep waters is a predator the river barracuda the pike – we have named her Jaws and have seen her in action taking a grayling or two. The heron and egret find this stretch of the river good hunting grounds. As we cross a wooden footbridge we come to the end of our stroll at Brambridge garden centre on the right. We can be found sitting outside under the canopy having a pot of tea and medium cappuccino and a nice ice buns.

THIS IS THE LIFE – ENJOY ONE OF GOD’S PIECE OF HEAVEN.

Brambridge Itchen walk nature

Brambridge walk (Image by Janet)
Brambridge walk (Image by Janet)

By Steve Allen and Derek Johnson

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Tags: adventure, days out, Eastleigh, family, health, Itchen, leisure, memories, travel, walking

J is for January

January 7, 2022 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Image Credit:  Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay/Pexels photos.

Is January your favourite time of the year? It isn’t mine. If I had to choose, I would be torn between March and September as I love spring and autumn equally.

[Read more…] about J is for January

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Tags: Blue Monday, creative writing, January, National Days, New Year resolutions, planning ahead, signs of spring, winter weather

Out with the Old?

December 31, 2021 By Allison Symes 2 Comments

Image Credits:- Video and  most photos created in Book Brush using Pixabay images. Other photos from Pixabay/Pexels. Screenshots taken by me, Allison Symes. Images of Wendy H Jones and Creativity Matters: Find Your Passion for Writing kindly supplied by Wendy H Jones for an earlier CFT post.

Happy New Year!

https://chandlersfordtoday.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Happy-New-Year-2022.mp4

[Read more…] about Out with the Old?

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Tags: am writing, auditing your year, creative writing, embracing change, old ways of doing things, remembering the positives, reviewing, technology, The Writing and Marketing Show, the writing journey, Wendy H Jones

Merry Christmas!

December 24, 2021 By Allison Symes 3 Comments

Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay images. Screenshots taken by me, Allison Symes.

Have a lovely Christmas, everyone. I thought I’d share some festive flash fiction for this post.

 

[Read more…] about Merry Christmas!

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Tags: A Christmas Carol, am reading, am writing, books, Charles Dickens, Christmas stories, festive flash fiction, Hannah Kate, North Manchester FM, stories, Three Minute Santas flash fiction show

The Animals’ Christmas

December 18, 2021 By Christine Clark Leave a Comment

The Animals' Christmas - by Aileen Urquhart (Author), Emma Repetti (Illustrator)

Imagine you’re a bystander, just happening to be there, watching the nativity story unfold. Not a convenient passer-by but … an animal. The Christmas story is full of animals, from donkeys and oxen to sheep and camels, so – why not?

Sarah the spider, resident of Mary’s home in Nazareth (note: Mary doesn’t sweep away Sarah’s web because it catches the flies) observes Gabriel and the Annunciation. Daniel the donkey carries Mary and Joseph to the stable in Bethlehem where he also finds rest. Obadiah the ox, who lives in this stable, grudgingly makes room for the interloper and then is present at Jesus’ birth. Lilah the lamb comes with the shepherds, having seen the angel with the amazing news, and Khalid the camel, along with his mates Kanika and Keb, are the transport for the wise men as they follow the star.

The Animals' Christmas - by Aileen Urquhart (Author), Emma Repetti (Illustrator)
The Animals’ Christmas – by Aileen Urquhart (Author), Emma Repetti (Illustrator)
[Read more…] about The Animals’ Christmas

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Tags: books, Christianity, Christmas, creative writing, reading, stories, storytelling
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