Formed over forty years ago, our Writers Circle is based in Felixstowe, Suffolk. Meetings are held in The Room at the Top in Felixstowe Library, normally on the first and third Tuesday of each month commencing at 7.30pm and finishing by 10.00pm. Check this weblog for details of meetings.

There is an annual November to November fee of £30, April to November is £20 and June to November £15. For members preferring to pay at each meeting the charge is £5 per meeting. To contact Felixstowe Scribblers simply email scribblers.1@btinternet.com or the Secretary, catherine.stafford1@ntlworld.com

Saturday 5 April 2014

Felixstowe Scribblers Meeting Report for 1st April 2014.

In attendance: Caz, Carolyn, Liliane, Tom, Barry, Dick, Beryl, Richard, Tony, Derek, Les, Dave and a new member, Aidan.

Apologies were received from Jane, Linda, Cathy, Katy and Suzy G.

Welcome.
We were privileged to welcome Aidan along to our meeting and sit in to get a flavour of the scribblers in flow. He has moved to Felixstowe for a year to be a volunteer helping to support people with learning difficulties. He wants to be part of a creative writing group to help improve the writing he loves.  Hopefully he will have enjoyed the meeting and will feel inspired to carry on his own creative writing.

News of Angela and a competition.
As you know our friend Angela Petch has moved to the south coast where she has found a new writing group which she enjoys. From them has come the news of a new writing competition that you may be interested in. The competition certainly hits home with something we could all be guilty of. Go to http://shar.es/BcB2c for details.

Angela would also enjoy having a ‘writing buddy’ from Felixstowe. A writing buddy is somebody to read over any writing that might need feedback - a reciprocal arrangement....with a bit of constructive critique included. Any offers?

Fees.
Tonight was the first meeting with increased meeting fees but also means that our membership fees are terrific value for money. For eight months from April to November the cost is £20, whilst six month’s membership from June to November is £15. The annual November to November fee was £25 this year but the cost will be re-evaluated later in the year. The fees are necessary to cover the cost of our room rental.

Tony again requests more stories to be provided for the radio spots, ICR broadcast the Scribblers work on Tuesdays at 15.30 on 105.7FM and Felixstowe Radio Wednesdays at 21.00 on 107.5FM. A number have already been passed to him so we will wait to listen to the results!

The Anthology.
Tonight we took a step closer to our proposed anthology. As you know we have been collecting some quotes for the pricing of an anthology – A5 size, properly bound and with 75 pages. Currently Caz is investigating some funding, and some artwork for the cover. We also have some artwork sent in by our friend Jan who used to organise the online scribblers a number of years ago.

With Ruth having agreed to provide a foreword, it is now down to our members to provide the content, stories or poems that will showcase the obvious talent within our group. That is what this evening’s homework was all about.

Now the homework!

Richard: Good Morning What Can I Do For You? : Richard was so impressed with Suzy’s open verse that he tried it for the first time himself and came up with a gem of an effort. Based on an experience about the smiling girl in the Bank, he wonders what she is thinking as she takes his cheque, perhaps waiting for her payday. And what of the man in the queue, and the girl on the door who was new last Tuesday and doesn’t stop laughing? What will she think if they close her branch, make her redundant then read of the fortunes the bank has amassed?

Liliane: The Cold Wind Blowing: The winter of ’39-’40 was severe. Heavy snow and hordes of hungry blackbirds fighting for crumbs in the back garden. Mother Rosa said they were a bad omen but daughter Mitje tried to ignore it. Mitje was a schoolteacher and though she had mobilisation papers she stayed at the school. Her brother Jan came home from the Congo with his ‘little mistake’, a young son who Mitje took under her wings. As war clouds darkened, Jan decided to take the boy away for safety. Being mixed race would put him in danger when the Germans invaded, Mitje was very upset.

Tom: Time: An interesting and realistic portrayal of a police interview, located in Hillhead. Time 2.15 am Friday 2nd November 2000. Interviewer turned on the tape, recorded those present as himself, D.S. Sam Dennis, Interviewee Robert Peters and D.C. Don Mcullum. In the exchanges between questioning and the sneering responses from Peters, some idea of his character and profile emerged. Initially refusing a brief, after a break for a smoke at 2.55am, Peters then asked for his brief, John Samuels, who always brought expensive tailor made fags earned from washed up plonkers like himself...

Carolyn: Fathers and Sons at the Transport Museum: A moving story with Carolyn taking a picture of her partner, Clive, and his 89 year old father, Jack, beside the tram tracks at the East Anglia Transport Museum. It reminded her of the hundreds of hours she’d spent at the Seashore Trolley Museum in Kennebunkport, Maine, on the US Atlantic coast when her son, GR, was growing up. She took scores of pictures of husband Gary and GR beside the collections or riding to the end of the line. Then that September day in East Anglia, Clive and Jack and Carolyn rode trams until late afternoon. Gary lost his battle with cancer before Clive entered her life. Now a double picture frame stands on her desk and chose a picture both fathers and sons from the US and England.

Dick: Game for a Laugh: Seven year old Dick’s childhood adventures with his mates. What was Operation Sealion they wondered? British or German? Was the navy strapping explosives to the creatures to attack U-Boats? Or a German plot to flood the English Channel with sealions?  As the children watched the Home Guard’s weekly training in full kit trying to crawl over a suspended rope between island and shore. Virtually every one of the old codgers dropped into the muddy waters creasing the boys with laughter. If the Germans could use sealions against us, we could use laughter against them!  

Derek: For Better Life: Prague 2012. I am walking along the Charles Bridge along with the Tourists. He sits slumped against the 15th century stonework eyes heavy, unshaven and unkempt hair. Stained shirt, torn jeans. An old coffee cup between his legs catching a few odd coins. She is elegant, well dressed and crossing the bridge but stops and opens her purse, places two coins in his cup which he acknowledges by lifting his head. She asks where he is from and he replies, ‘Chechnya.’ Why are you here she continues. ‘I come for better life...’

Caz: Man’s Best Friend: Always in fear of owning a dog, the day came after Jack’s eight courses of radiotherapy and before major surgery, that he needed something to focus on and that something was a dog. A lady on a farm had three golden Labrador puppies, and Jack fell in love with the male which he named Kai. When they collected Kai there was not a dry eye in the place and at home they enjoyed all the playfulness of the puppy.  Kai helped with so many things, mainly giving Jack so much happiness.

Dave: The Happening: An eerie arrival at Alice’s family home that is in complete and unusual darkness. Nothing seems right. Spooky owls hooting, a kamikaze cat tripping her up, and then the open front door. The missing light switch, the wrongly textured wallpaper. Scared witless Alice slips to the floor in absolute blackness before a tiny prick of light appears and grows into an enveloping brightness. She sees her welcoming parents appear...

Beryl: Over My Dead Body: “Over my dead body!” It was the old man's instant response to the doctor's tentative suggestion that he might consider going into a home once he was discharged from hospital. Philip looked down at the frail figure of Denis with pity. “And I'm not going into any bloody home! Frank would never have agreed.” Frank was Denis's only child and Philip's partner for 27 years but had died suddenly, shortly after his wife had died. In spite of everything Philip had cared for the feisty Denis. Only now did he admit that helping Denis back on to his feet had to some extent assuaged his own grief. Denis was discharged, a care package in place. But it was some time before Denis conceded that Philip was his son-in-law.

Tony: A Walk in the Green Forest: Hunions goes off in search of Blind Eye MacPherson. He managed to survive an unsuccessful attack on his life by Lieto and Uriah. Eventually he met Knott and told him he was looking for Blind Eye MacPherson who had a female companion. Knott gave directions in strides, left turns and right that eventually took him to his quest but after discussion, Blind Eye MacPherson shut the door in his face.

Les: The Evacuee: A true story from Les, at nine, in wartime England. Bombs falling on London where his father continued singing, unaffected by the nearby explosion. Life carried on despite the war. Les was home from evacuation in March, Cambs.for his sister’s wedding and party in the Queen Victoria – Victoria Crescent not Albert Square. Then down to Cornwall where Les’s brothers and sister were billeted at The Lizard and Coverack for two week’s holiday away from the war. Then it was back to March and his loving and sympathetic evacuation landlady.   

Barry and Aidan did not read.

It is always appreciated when copies of your homework assignments can be loaned to enable a précis of content to be included in the notes so thank you all.

Thanks to Liliane for collecting the key and thanks to Caz for providing the biscuits for the meeting.

Our next meeting is on Tuesday 15th April, usual time, usual place with our annual historical themed homework assignment. Up to a maximum 1,000 words on any event, either fact or fiction, from past times. Should be interesting!

Hope to see you next time,
Keep Scribbling!