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

Sunday 30 June 2013

Our Next Meeting

Tuesday 2nd July, 7.30pm in The Room at the Top, Felixstowe Library is where it's at! This is a 'four word' creative writing evening - simply bring along four words each on a separate small slip of  paper and, of course, pen/pencil and paper.

Creative writing evenings are always fun with the challenge of writing  a short story incorporating four words which will be drawn out of a hat. The results are often quite brilliant.

The Suffolk Magazine this month carries a photo and article on our group whilst last Friday Dave was grilled interviewed live on Felixstowe TV! Watch the interview here.

Hope to see you Tuesday...

Keep Scribbling!!!

New members always welcome.

Charity Quiz Night

Our charity is organising a quiz night to help underprivileged children in the Philippines and we wish to invite you.  Details as follows:

EVENT: Charity Quiz Night
DATE: Sunday 7 July 2013
TIME: 7:00 PM for 7:30 start
ENTRANCE FEE: £5.00 maximum 4 in a team
VENUE: Norbridge Social Club, Norwich Road Ipswich IP1 4HA
PRIZES: 1st Prize £100.00 plus cash for 2nd & 3rd
Food is provided!!!

Monies raised will help underprivileged children in the Philippines
CONTACT: Gordon 01473 273500 or 01473 729103 Robin 07899987540
 
Regards

Rita Coulson
Events Manager

website:www.thechildrenofpulilanfoundation.co.uk
email:childrenofpulilanfoundation@hotmail.com

‘The 1st Liverpool International Poetry, Prose and Playwriting Competition 2013’

I have previously run five very successful international writing competitions in the past, and managed to generate the amount of £2,448-00 for the Macmillan Cancer Support, by making a £1 donation from each and every competition entry I received. This year our chosen charity is the Alzheimer’s Society, and we are trying to raise a similar amount of money, by again making a £1 donation from each and every entry I receive. We can only realistically achieve this with your help by entering our international writing competition.
  
Thank you for taking the time to read my message, and I would really appreciate it if you could possibly forward this information onto your writer friends, your fellow group members, and again if possible, your writers websites. If you or your writing group, or writing circle need me to advertise any writing competitions for you, then please don't hesitate to ask and I shall gladly oblige.



Please reply to all correspondence to Tommy McBride


The University of Liverpool
Creative Writing Society for Lifelong Learning
Associated Group Members Of
The National Association of Writers’ Groups

Is to Commemorate

‘The 1st Liverpool International, Open Short Story,
Poetry and Playwriting Competition 2013’

Winners to be decided by our International Competition Judge: Linda Walters

During 2013: the City of Liverpool’s ‘Year of Dementia’


We will donate £1 from each and every short story, poem and play entered into these 3 x competitions to the Alzheimer’s Society: our chosen charity for 2013


Entry Form and Rules of Competition are available at



Friday 28 June 2013

About the Scribblers...

Maybe the worst interviewee ever... but hopefully Dave got the message across...watch http://www.felixstowetv.co.uk/...

Thursday 27 June 2013

Aesthetica Creative Writing Competition 2013: Open for Entries


I’m Alexandra, and I’m writing with an exciting opportunity for Felixstowe Scribblers. The Creative Writing Competition is open for entries so please spread the word!

The Aesthetica Creative Writing Competition offers both existing and aspiring writers the chance to showcase their work to a wider, international audience. Now in its sixth year, the competition celebrates and nurtures creative talent, inviting writers to submit imaginative and original work in either category for entry: Poetry or Short Fiction.

Prizes include £500 prize money, publication in the Aesthetica Creative Writing Annual and a selection of books from partner organisations. Submissions previously published elsewhere are accepted and the deadline for entries is 31 August 2013. For more information please visit www.aestheticamagazine.com/creativewriting.

Alexandra Beresford
Aesthetica Magazine
PO Box 371
York
YO23 1WL

Wednesday 26 June 2013

Alma Classics

Alma Classics E-Newsletter

As well as bringing you a selection of great new titles we
are delighted to announce that we have received the
National Prize for Translation from the Italian 
Ministry
of Culture. We are the first British publisher to have won
the prize since it was first started in 1989 to celebrate
the promotion of Italian culture abroad.
Prize for Translation
Alessandro Gallenzi and Elisabetta MinerviniNational Prize for Translation






JULY HIGHLIGHT: CHILDHOOD MEMORIES AND
OTHER STORIES

BY GIUSEPPE TOMASI DI LAMPEDUSA
TRANSLATED BY STEPHEN PARKIN
Childhood Memories and Other Stories

 We are proud to present Childhood Memories and Other Stories by
Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa – an extraordinary book, for many
reasons. This is the first complete and unexpurgated version of all
the uncollected fiction by Lampedusa. 

Childhood Memories was written at around the same time as The 
Leopard and shows the same emotional and psychological 
background as Lampedusa's masterpiece. Many sentences 
and details from Childhood Memories have been lifted into The 
Leopard: this autobiographical piece is without doubt the most 
personal and intimate work written by the Sicilian master.

'Joy and the Law' and 'The Siren' are wonderful literary stories, 
while 'The Blind Kittens' -- a complete story in itself -- it's the 
beginning of a sequel to The Leopard, and an extraordinary 
piece of writing. These four gems have been all newly translated 
by Stephen Parkin and annotated by our publisher Alessandro 
Gallenzi. This edition also includes an introduction by Ian Thomson.
HARDBACK WAS £14.99, NOW £11.99 FROM OUR WEBSITE
ISBN:  9781847493057 - 224 pp. - Available from 5th July 2013
EBOOK £9.99 + VAT, ISBN: 9781847493392


F YOU ENJOY LAMPEDUSA'S WORK WHY NOT TRY
LETTERS FROM LONDON AND EUROPE


Letters from London and Europe














"The correspondence of a Sicilian writer-prince charts aristocratic 

decay and the evolution of the modern Mafia." The Financial Times

"[These letters show] Lampedusa’s ability to turn the most banal 
of events into a riveting story.' The Daily Telegraph
WAS £9.99, NOW £7.99 ONLINE
ISBN: 
9781846881374 - 288 pp. - PAPERBACK


I
ALSO NEW THIS MONTH
Pleasures and Days

 PLEASURES AND DAYS BY MARCEL PROUST
TRANSLATION BY ANDREW BROWN
Proust’s only other work of fiction published in his lifetime apart from 
the monumental novel cycle In Search of Lost TimePleasures and 
Days takes the reader on a journey through the high-society circles 
of fin-de-siècle Paris, presenting the lives, loves and attitudes of a
 host of unforgettable characters.

Rich in language and detail, and by turns satirical and moving, 
Proust’s stories – presented here in Andrew Brown’s nuanced 
translation, the only edition currently in print – are layered with 
imagery and feeling and foreshadow the themes and psychological 
atmosphere of his later masterpiece.
Pleasure and Days yields the earliest blooms from [Proust’s]
emerging, lifelong fascination with the labyrinths of snobbery 
and sexuality in Parisian high society.”The Independent
WAS £7.99, NOW £6.39 ONLINE - Available from 28th June 2013
ISBN: 9781847493170 - 240 pp. - PAPERBACK 
The Last Tycoon 

 A NEW ADDITION TO OUR FITZGERALD
COLLECTION 
THE LAST TYCOON BY
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD

Monroe Stahr is a film producer at the height of his career, revered 
by the industry and in control of every aspect of his business 
empire. In his ruthless rise to the top, the young widower has
 had little time for sentiment, until he meets the beguiling Kathleen
 Moore, and the two embark on an intense but ill-fated relationship.

Told in parts from the perspective of Cecelia Brady, the witty and 
perceptive daughter of Stahr’s business partner, The Last Tycoon 
is a sophisticated, gripping tale of love and intrigue in the Golden 
Age of Hollywood, containing what many critics have claimed are 
Fitzgerald’s most modern and engaging characters.
WAS £6.99, NOW £5.59 ONLINE
ISBN: 9781847493187 - 208 pp. - PAPERBACK

 Carmen

NEW FROM OVERTURE PUBLISHING
CARMEN BY GEORGES BIZET

Carmen is one of the most enduringly popular of all operas 
and the most successful of Georges Bizet’s works. 
Following its premiere at the Opéra- Comique in Paris 
in 1875, it went on to be performed at all the major opera 
houses in the world. With its searing depictions of passion, 
obsession and jealousy, it has never lost its hold on the 
opera-going public.

This guide has articles which describe the genesis of the 
opera, its initial failure at its premiere and the various 
versions in which it went on to conquer the opera stages 
of Europe and the USA. There are also articles which
 analyse its appeal, which explore its music and which 
detail its extensive performance history. The guide has 
sixteen pages of illustrations, a musical thematic guide, 
the full libretto and English translation (in both the 
dialogue and recitative versions), a discography, 
bibliography, DVD and website guides.
WAS £12.00, NOW £9.60 ONLINE
ISBN: 9781847495525 - 384 pp. - PAPERBACK

  
Bloggerel

Tuesday 25 June 2013

Deadlines...

DEADLINES June 30th -  Submit and be a part of the Monthly FEEDBACK Film, Screenplay and Writing Festival.

Submit your TV PILOT or SPEC screenplay - FULL FEEDBACK on all entries
http://www.wildsound.ca/tvscreenplaycontest.html

FEATURE or SHORT screenplay contest - Get FULL FEEDBACK on your script.
http://www.wildsound.ca/screenplaycontest.html

FIRST SCENE (first 10pgs) SCREENPLAY CONTEST - Submit the first stages of your film and get full feedback!
http://www.wildsound.ca/firstscenescreenplaycontest.html

WATCH and READ last month's TV Screenplay Winning Reading.
www.wildsoundfestival.com/gotham_nights.html

WILDsound Writing and Screenplay Festival Reviews - Hear testimonials
http://www.wildsound.ca/wildsound_festival_review.html


Winners get their works read and shown online by professional actors!

ALSO.....

1st CHAPTER or FULL NOVEL CONTEST - Get FULL FEEDBACK on your book. Winners get their 1st chapter read and shown online by a professional actor!
http://www.wildsound.ca/book_contest.html

READ last's month's winning 1st chapter NOVEL:
http://www.wildsound.ca/THE%20RABBIT'S%20MAN%20-%20CHPT%20ONE.pdf

SHORT STORY CONTEST - Get FULL FEEDBACK on your short story. Winners get their short story read and shown online by a professional actor!
http://www.wildsound.ca/short_story_contest.html

READ last's month's winning Short Story:
http://www.wildsound.ca/short_story_winner.html

1st ACT or FULL PLAY CONTEST - Get FULL FEEDBACK on your essay. Winners get their plays read and shown online by a professional actor!
http://www.wildsound.ca/play_contest.html

ESSAY CONTEST - Get FULL FEEDBACK on your essay. Winners get their essay read and shown online by a professional actor!
http://www.wildsound.ca/essay_contest.html

POETRY CONTEST - All entries win and get their poem showcased on this popular website. Winners get their poem made into a film!
http://www.wildsound.ca/poetrycontest.html

Last's months list of finalists:
http://www.wildsound.ca/screenplayfinalists.html


Submit your SHORT FILM - feedback on all entries!
http://www.wildsound.ca/submityourfilm.html

Get your film showcased.

Monday 24 June 2013

Felixstowe TV and the Scribblers

For those expecting Dave to be interviewed by Felixstowe TV this morning, the appointment was cancelled and has been re-arranged for Friday of this week. Keep viewing!

Friday 21 June 2013

MEETING REPORT FOR TUESDAY 18th JUNE 2012

MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF THE FELIXSTOWE SCRIBBLERS ON TUESDAY 18th JUNE 2012 AT THE ROOM AT THE TOP FELIXSTOWE LIBRARY

Apologies were received from Martin, Ray and Beryl.
Those in attendance this evening were Dave, Barry, Dick, Liliane, Tony, Carolyn, Les, Barry, Rani and myself.
After the successful Writing Festival, Dave felt that the various workshops over the weekend had been a great success and the sponsorship that the Scribblers had paid was very worthwhile.
There is to be a Creative Writing Workshop commencing on the 5th September at Arlington’s Brassiere in Ipswich run by Mai Black details on our weblog..
Our Homework theme this week was on geographical places .....

Tony -  THE DAY I TAUGHT OLA

This was a day for a perfect beach on a perfect island in the Caribbean.  Totally undisturbed, isolated, away from the crowds. There were two more other bays Truck Bay ad Brewer’s Bay that had been suggested but this was perfect for contemplating my latest novel. Taking the scenic route I decided to stroll over to the harbour to JW Kingdom Hall in Shangri-La. There was not a soul on the beach again and I sat down and placed my cards on the sand to take a tarot reading.  Suddenly there was a movement and I looked up to see the vision of the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen.  Long golden hair, long, slim, legs that went on forever.  Where had she come from? Was she just a mirage or was I dreaming.  With a smile as broad as the Pacific Ocean she asked, “Am I real or part of your over active imagination”.  Then this beauty asked with a voice like silk, please teach me to play Bridge. It was so strange playing Bridge for one and a half hours and when I relaxed back exhausted I looked up and she had completely disappeared.  I will always be thankful for the lesson from Ola, a story not in my own hand.

 LILIANE – SEARCHING FOR THE HAMPTONS
  
On the underground ten minutes walk from Preston Road there is Hampton Jewish Cultural Centre. Tricycle Theatre. Redcar Shopping Centre in Barnet. Hampton – Tam and Tong from Anglo Saxon times. Hampton Court in Richmond.  USA has two Hamptons one in Virginia and the other in New Hampshire.  Is renowned to be the cleanest beach in the USA.  1938 Rev Stephen Blackchild . The Railway came in 1850 making it popular for visitors.  Doomsday Book shows Hampton Manor with 35 households approximately £39,00 to purchase.  Teddington, Hounslow, Saxon Eldsgar.  Warwickshire Hampton. The Hamptons multiplying like rabbits.


RANI – SHORT STORY

A woman travels from India to England. we then move to 1930. Little Raj hopes to go to  England to meet King Arthur and the knights of the round table.  This is in fact a reference to the first of the round table conferences held in England and relating to the bid for Indian independence. ( not that this would be clear from the opening part of the story)!
 
Drama! Minnie the Minah Bird has found a body in the bushes! Minnie shrieks " Murder, rape! Pillage!" Little Raj is horrified! He fears that his trip to England will be delayed. Is the body alive or dead? Little Raj is assured that he will go to England as Ghandi leads little Raj away to the safety of the villa..
  
DICK – DIAMONDS ARE FOR NEVER

Ray Coulson had a murder to his name with or without help and many other misdemeanours.   Stretched out on a sun lounger, with Passion flowers all around and lots of cobbles.  It was all about gold and Sexy Stacy and the Amsterdam Diamond Parade, Diamond Merchants and their gem stones.  Always moving small amounts of gem stones, inside a tea or coffee maker.  Streets were narrow.  Phil Collingwood investigated the long time theft of stones Herbie told Stacy to “Piss Off”  Charming but then left Cole and Macey to their conversations.  You must use the instructions to the letter.  A very worthwhile investment but I need all the facts.  This is a big job Herbie retorted.  We’ll need a high powered speed boat.  Accountant was shocked at the potential cost to getting these Diamonds from Amsterdam...

BARRY M - ISLE OF WIGHT (GODSHILL)

There have always been many visitors to Shanklin Village with its famous figurines.  There are many favourite parts where you can just sit and enjoy the view with scones and cream or ice cream.  There is Margaret the Manager always there to oblige. Face-booking, balloonist, achery – Then maybe take yourself off to the Village’s only Pub ‘The Griffin’. There is even a topless streaker for all the dirty old men. Wedding Parties can be catered too..  There is a Scout Camp behind the train station, where you will find  the ‘Isle of Wight’s Borstal Exhibit’.  The boys having taken over the miniature train and were throwing coal at the windows, then the train ploughs through Farmer Giles’s Barn. After another long day Margaret finds the cricket team in the pub, along with slouching musicians. Then Mary the Stripper found naked with the Conductor, Margaret the Manager at the end of another very long day wishing she was a figurine as they had much more fun than she ever did. Before she managed to get her lips to her well earned cup of tea, Margaret turned into a figurine.  Be careful what you wish for.   


DAVE – FIGHTING OPRESSION 
Living in terror and mayhem.  Austerity Communist regimes, while leaders live in luxury in Romania, the people live with malnutrition, with Secret Police making it into a Police State. Informers making it an organised dissent.  Leaders bending the people to the State’s will. Students rally against oppression and propaganda. Dissidents see a transformation when unexpectedly Parishioners, religious students also joined in fighting for their rights.  TÅ‘kés. The police beating rioters but demonstrators re-group to riot.  Writings were thrown from Communist building and protestors started more fires.  The Army presence was to establish good order.  Tanks were employed to stop protestors.  In the aftermath of apparent war the next morning the City Mayor declared martial law. In orthodox Cathedral they sang a National song. ‘Wake Up Romania’. City Workers put down their tools and  train loads joined the protestors.  The situation worsened when Ceausescu addressed 100,000 people in downtown areas.  There were many deaths, people crushed, stabbed, even clubbed to death.  The crowds worked hard and managed to swamp the barricades

.BARRY D – AN EASY RIDE

The trip to Barcelona.  a thousand miles of motorway driving with views of beautiful architecture.  The crossing was calm and uneventful.  I slipped into the longest part of the journey. Two rest stops, a meal, drink, customs, then, my head down for the night. Unfortunately all not well in Barcelona.  The Customs Officer barely raised his head. “There is a strike on – park in a field”.  There were no facilities, all in a bad state of repair. A night’s sleep and then I woke to the smell of bacon frying in a lorry from Stoke on Trent.  I was invited to share and we ate our rolls in silence.  “Two days I’ve been here in this bloody customs compound”.  No doubt another two days, right oh mate.  My neighbour, our breakfast chef. dropped his trailer and we headed off to a bar.  We ended up in a long, narrow tapas bar with snacks on the counter. Then we went up this rambling street with sex shops.  Full of transvestites, who were better looking than the prostitutes.  We eventually went to sleep at four.  At Nine o’clock we were awoken to shouting.  A driver had had his cab broken into and we all helped the Dutchman find his belongings – which were scattered all over the bushes.  What a trip!

CAZ – WHERE IN THE WORLD – AMERICA – INDIA AND PORTUGAL

My homework was inspired by news articles about children.  One Father had left his baby nine month old son on the doorstep, while he walked around the back to get in the house. When he came out the baby was gone.  Then it took him two weeks to report the abduction to the police, that’s if it really was an abduction.
Another part of my homework was a woman who went into hospital age 60 with stomache cramps and had a baby. The article suggesting that all women should carry on taking contraception well after menopause!
 Finally I observed that the case of missing Madeleine McCann is to be re-opened. I was originally shocked by parents who would go out to dinner and leave their children alone in their holiday apartment.  So much time was spent by the police because they were accused of abducting their daughter that all the evidence was gone by the time they decided they were not involved. I’ll be interested to know what evidence can now be found to help find their beautiful Madeleine.  I pray that she is found safe and well.
Having only had one son in my fortieth year (some said at the time I was too old then!). I would never have missed the chance to have spent that time with Jack, I would do it all again in a heartbeat but never would I have left him unattended, under any circumstances. He was just too precious. My point in my piece was just that.

Dave asks that anyone who attended any event at the Book Festival and was impressed and found them to be helpful to their writing to send details to him (or direct to Meg Reid the festival organiser) as positive comments will aid funding applications for next year’s festival.  
Also Dave is being interviewed by Felixstowe TV on Monday next so we’ll have to see what he has to say about the Scribblers!
Our next meeting will be held on 2nd July 2013 in The Room At The Top in the library. There is no homework as it will be a short writing exercise next time.
Hope to see you all there, in the meantime ‘Keep Dancing’ sorry Writing...!!
Caz Wilkinson
Joint Secretary