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, 30 November 2013

Our next meeting

My goodness how the year is rapidly drawing to a close! Only two more meetings to go before the festivities begin!

The first of these meetings, our next one, is on Tuesday 3rd December at 7.30pm in The Room at the Top. The subject matter for the homework is a 'Winters Tale.' so hopefully nobody will be copying William Shakespeare's work with the same title! Just a 1,000 word maximum on the subject please.

Meanwhile we have a message from Les who says: "I shall do my best to enjoy my holiday down there, but I won't forget you and the scribblers, Honestly!  Please convey my sincere wishes to them all.  May they  they have the Christmas they wish for and a new year they deserve, bless you all and thank you for putting up with me, love from Nunkie Les. XXXX"

On a sadder note, Caz has been called away to Wiltshire where her brother has had an accident and as you read this is waiting for an operation. Our thoughts are with them at this time.

Hope to see you on Tuesday so until then,

Keep Scribbling!

Friday, 29 November 2013

Grace Dieu Writers' Circle 2014 Tenth Anniversary Writing Competition (Poetry and Prose)

This is the tenth year we have organised a writing competition so a celebratory year for us and we hope that, in a small way, our competitions have supported and promoted creative writing. We also hope that you'll enter our 2014 competition.

Tony Gutteridge
Competition Organiser

Details:


Poetry Competition: A poem on any subject with a maximum of 40 lines

Judge: Sharon Black

1st Prize: £500; 2nd Prize: £200; 3rd Prize: £100; 4th Prize: £75; 5th Prize: £50

Entry Fees: £4 for one poem or £12 for 4, £3 for each additional entry over four



Short Story Competition: A short story on any subject with a maximum of 2000 words.

Judge: George Hawthorn

1st Prize: £500; 2nd Prize: £200; 3rd Prize: £100; 4th Prize: £75; 5th Prize: £50

Entry Fees: £5 for first and £3 for additional stories


Closing date: 28th February, 2014. Entries by post and fees in sterling.

Full details and entry forms can be found on our website at www.gracedieuwriterscircle.co.uk

Alternatively to receive a competition leaflet, please send a SAE to:


The Competition Organiser, 23 Henson Way, Sharnford, Leicestershire, LE10 3PN

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Riverside Writers' free ebook anthology

Love, terror and 21st century life! From the heart of cosmopolitan Liverpool come nine thrilling views of modern living. Blood-drinkers, killers and secrets. Old sorrows and new beginnings. The light and dark of human life set against the glittering backdrop of a reinvigorated city. City Stories. Tales of life today.
Featuring:-
Tim Hulme
William R Jones
Caroline Hubbard
Andy Siddle
Jason Barney
Jack Horne
Adele Cosgrove-Bray
 
Riverside Writers' latest FREE ebook anthology, City Stories, is now available.  You don't need an ereader to read this, as you can choose to download  HTML or PDF versions which can be read on your usual PC. Alternatively, on our website there is a clickable link which will take you to Adobe's site where you can download a free programme which works like an ereader. You will find this link on the page for Seaside Stories, our previous FREE ebook.
 
I do hope you will download a copy for yourself!  Feel free to share news of it via your own websites, social networking sites and emails.  I'll ask you all to encourage others to download their own copies, rather than just share the file, so as to keep our download figures as high as possible.  If you'd like to post a review of it on the site, please do!
 
Pick up your own FREE copy of City Stories here:- https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/375562
 
It will become available from other distribution channels, such as Barnes & Noble, Nook, Kobo, Sony, Apple iTunes, Diesel, Baker & Taylor and Library Direct over the next few weeks.
 
The next meeting of Riverside Writers has been postponed due to West Kirby Library being closed for repairs for approximately eight weeks.  This means we will next meet in 2014.  Keep an eye on our website for news of the next meeting date once it has been confirmed.
 
Meanwhile, on 5th December at Bebington Library, some members will be taking part in an open mic evening hosted by the Friends of Bebington Library.  I think it starts at 6pm but am unsure of this.  If you wish to go along to listen or to read something, I encourage you to do so as the previous similar event was a lot of fun.
 
If you're looking for great gift ideas for writers, take a look at Spooky Cute Designs very own 'For Writers' range - see link below.
 
Keep an eye on our website for further news!
 
Kind regards,
Adele Cosgrove-Bray.

Thursday, 21 November 2013

Meeting Report

FELIXSTOWE SCRIBBLERS MEETING: TUESDAY 19th NOVEMBER 2013

Apologies were received from Katy, Barry D, Jane, Martin and Caz.

Those present for the evening were Clive, Susie H, Carolyn, Suzi G, Tony, Liliane, Beryl, Barry M, Les, Dick and Dave

News:
Good news, Ally has given birth to a bouncy 8lb plus baby boy, Noah, Jack.

Morag has now started writing her ‘Coach Trip’ again after a long spell away from it.

Beryl is now on the last chapter of her book.

Dave has just 15 more pages to edit to complete the biography of a 91 year old, Clifford Newton, which covers from birth through to the end of the Second World War. This is not for publication but a personal account for Cliff’s family.

Clive brought two packets of biscuits. Thank you!

Not so good news from Katy. She has been ill, has had an accident when her car was ripped open like a tin opener by a lorry. Glad she was unhurt but she is taking time to chill out. Our thoughts are with her.

Angela A has been in touch to say she hopes to get back to Scribblers again in the near future, after a change in work routines.

Ray has been in contact and wishes to say thanks for all the messages he received after his move. 

Last Saturday’s author talk by local Tim Voelcker on Saturday on “Broke of the Shannon and the War of 1812” was extremely interesting as have been all author talks at the Library. It was nice to be able to support the library in this way and learn a bit more history to boot.

The group was pleased with the article in the Felixstowe Supplement of the East Anglian Daily Times that appeared on 6th November

Welcome Back:
There was a welcome back for Susie tonight after missing a few meetings due to moving home and work commitments.

Now for the results of our ‘Place’ homework assignment which was quite surprising as most were based in this country and very true stories.

Tony: Brighton Road:
Tony met Lesley at college and she had a major effect on his life. He was engaged to her best friend Jacque who had a blood disorder, was pregnant and died in childbirth moments before the baby also passed away. Lesley saved him from committing suicide but she married Roland moving into Brighton Road. However Roland disappeared without trace. At the same time Tony’s mother fell ill and went into a convalescent home in Brighton Road, Clacton. Free again Lesley fell for Tony and became pregnant just before Roland re-appeared. She gave birth to Suki but Tony was left in the cold. Rebuilding his life he took an office job in Brighton Road, Surbiton. Roland disappeared again. Meanwhile Tony met Angie and they gave Lesley and her daughter refuge until she flew to Australia where she met someone else and was to be married but the relationship broke up. She took Suki for a drive and was speeding along Brighton Road, Melbourne when she crashed into a stationary container truck.   

Suzi: The Path:
The train was packed, a crush of passengers some of whom she knew. Mothers, sisters, brothers. Anxious fathers outside the delivery room. Doreen treasured every birth. Now it was about to end. Only three weeks to go. Rain poured down as she started her walk home longing for that nice hot cup of tea. But first there was the path that her home, a path that was her dread of abduction or murder. A tin dropped from her bag and she stooped to pick it up. Quickening footsteps followed her then a hand grabbed her shoulder. One of the three youths said, ‘You dropped this.’ But she began to fall and they saved her, walked her home, opened her door, made a cup of tea, lit her fire and returned the purse she had accidentally dropped. The path held no fears after that.

Carolyn: 'The Last Apartment':
A tale about the first time she saw the apartment in Paris which she would eventually own. The agent met her and her husband and son on the footpath and led them through a peaceful courtyard, then up a set of curving wooden stairs to the first floor. Inside the apartment, the two rooms were small but contained classic French features she'd always dreamt about -- tall double windows with lacy iron balconies, parquet floors, high ceilings with lovely mouldings, and marble fireplaces. After a lifetime of dreaming and days of viewing everything from run-down dumps to modern, characterless spaces, she felt a strange but wonderful sense of having arrived home.

Susie: Every Place is a Journey:
This place is my sanctuary, provides protection, allows reflection, rest and healing. It is the tin temple to my tired soul. It has a heart helping provide the courage to a new path. Growing through the Bowie and punk years, transition to University digs full of the young escaping the constraints of parents. Alter egos and hedonistic escapism. Sit-ins, marches, Greenham Common, the miners’ strike. Flat shares, coupledom, marriage and babies. Wild parties gave way to children’s parties, then to dinner and garden parties. Children move on. Downsize to our idyllic cottage by the sea, living aboard a yacht, shrinking places, expanding horizons. Now my pikie nest brought tears the day I moved in. Smelly and dirty but will power, disinfectant a steam cleaner cleansed my temple. Flowers, furniture; a transformation. Now my space, a place to recover my balance, where I return after work to my soothing peaceful sanctuary. My tin pikie nest. Home is where the heart is.


Clive: N10, London:
It was cold... extremely cold. Rob stood there at quarter to seven on the freezing February morning, suited with Wellingtons, a Gortex lined raincoat and chunky scarf. The place was starkly beautiful, a haven for wildlife and as peaceful as anywhere so close to London. Peter arrived, stomping feet for warmth until Saf the superintendant arrived to drive them along the rough private roadway in his untaxed, unroadworthy black cab. They reached the appointed place and launched themselves into the cold. The others were there, all in black, looking professional. Rob peered into the majestic ethereal misty dawn and wondered why they were all there. The hole was dug, its sides shored up. Water was slopping about the bottom of the pit as they struggled to raise the coffin at the behest of relatives thence to move it to a better place. Soon Rob and Peter would be in the greasy cafe just outside Kensall Green Cemetery. 

Dave: My Heaven...Their Hell:
A favourite place, situated on the northern Cornish coast facing the Atlantic Ocean. A place with a dramatic rocky coast line, coves and caves, miles of sandy beaches, beautiful, peaceful and near deserted on a summers day. Carnewas and the Bedruthan Steps accessible only by a walk down a steep gradient to the steep steps leading down to the beach. Their Hell was a follow on story of two silly teenagers ignorant to the dangers of the tide and storm. Trapped in a cave by the storm driven sea, they try to make their escape but it was left to the search and rescue helicopter to scour the area for them.  

Les: Close as always:
This is a poem celebrating his Les’s life with his beloved Joanie. For all the times they had together as ‘Two old romantics, my Joanie and me,’ ‘Two old lovers, true lovers still,’ even after 58 years. Yet it begins making plans, moving on through their ‘own touch of heaven’. Contentment, then the arrival of their boys, to brighten their days. When the boys flew the nest then off they went ‘to see the world’. In times of illness Joan remained his lover, his carer, his nurse but now she has gone she remains in his heart, loving memories they’ll never be apart, Her portrait looks down and, says Les, ‘I know for sure she is close, she is near.’

Dick: Three poems:
Rhine Images, (a Magi sequence poem): Three words to a line, three lines to a verse, bringing the journey from Holland to Switzerland to life, absorbing rivers, cruise and cargo ships, cruising palaces taking in pastoral beauty and dowdy industrialisation from the Rhine. 
The Rocky Mountaineer, (straight verse): A majestic journey across the Canadian Rockies, written in such a way that you feel the completion motion, the poetry of the railway between Jasper and Whistler all within a gentle absorbing 24 hours.
Salcombe Summer, (rhyming verse): A delightful poem providing postcard images of Salcombe in a Devonshire summer. Sun, sand, birds, boats on mud flats. Private swimming pools, narrow streets and shops aplenty, cheerful inns, Salcombe a Summer Treat.

Barry M: Sunday Morning:
Tina made her way downstairs feeling decidedly unsexy. Harry hid behind the Sunday broadsheet as she waited for the kettle to boil. He said he’d have a cup but continued reading. No please or thank you not even when she put the cup down in front of the paper. He just read on. Tina read a discarded Sunday magazine when an advert caught her eye. For £2,300 she could have breast, arm or face surgery and for another £400 she could have six nights recuperation in a luxury hotel. All she had to do was book a flight to the Ukraine. Harry went off to golf, Tina’s friend Judy came round for a Jacuzzi. They needed money to get to the Ukraine; pretend they’d been kidnapped and being held to ransom. Or divorce? Out of the question. Divine intervention was needed. Harry bought a gym and demonstrating the new fitness machine his legs slowed, the machine did not. He was flung off and died. Judy whispered in Tina’s ear, ‘Divine intervention!’

Beryl: Dunston Houses:
Sam is taking me to the Rockers who live in Dunstan Houses in Stepney Green. It is a huge Victorian monolith five storeys high. Susie a work colleague has a single room which has a cooker but no sink or toilet. They are communal on landings or hallways. The smell is unpleasant. The Rockers have an ever-open door and their flat is different. On the top floor it has three rooms even its own lavatory. The views across the smoky air are panoramic. The room is untidy with overfull bookshelves spilling onto the floor. Pictures hang higgledy-piggledy on the walls. The welcome is warm and soon the food is served to the many and followed by boisterous songs. How I enjoy myself. 

Liliane: Last Day in Paris:
A letter from Kitty to Elly relating her very last day in la Ville Lumiere before heading home. No more visits to nightclubs or the Moulin Rouge, nor going up the Eiffel Tower. Just a nice quiet day. The girls wanted to do some last minute shopping, Grandma wanted another hat and Paul was buying an outfit for his wife Imelda. Grandpa moaned that he would be bankrupted. Everyone was short of money but those who could afford to shop did so whilst the others looked on. Elaine thought the trip had been unwise but her husband promised just the two of them would return next year. The evening meal was the usual gathering, everyone round the table faced with critical Aunt Ida complaining about the way the children were being brought up... Eventually peace was restored at the end of the day and it was goodbye to la Ville Lumiere...

I will again thank everyone for ‘loaning’ copies of their homework to enable an easier reporting process – just hope I have done justice to your work. In truth I can again savour all the stories! Thanks everyone!

Finally just to wish Les a Happy Christmas as he makes his way down to his relations in Australia once again. Have a great time and see you in the New Year!

Our next meeting is in two week’s time, Tuesday 3rd December at 7.30pm when the homework assignment of up to 1,000 words is on “A Winters Tale”.
Until the next time...
Keep Scribbling,
Dave



                                                                                                   

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Tonight's meeting...

What an evening of fantastic stories tonight, many of them true and some very, very sad. Altogether a really good evening with words that kept interest flowing through to the very end.

Christmas is creeping up so quickly that it is hard to believe our next gathering will be in December! The year has slid by so quickly hasn't it? The place to be will be on 3rd December at 7.30pm in The Room at the Top, Felixstowe Library when the results of the 1,000 word homework assignment on a "Winters Tale" will be shared.

Looking forward to it already!

Keep Scribbling!

Don't forget, new members are always welcome.




Friday, 15 November 2013

Our Next Meeting and news...

Here is a reminder about our forthcoming meeting in The Room at the Top, Felixstowe Library at 7.30pm on Tuesday next, 19th November . The homework assignment is for up to 1,000 words on 'PLACE', that is, anywhere in the world, even your home or garden. It can be a story of course, or just fond memories of your favourite place . It gives us something to look forward to on these far darker and cooler nights.

We have heard from our friend Ray who had to return suddenly to London with his wife to care for their daughter. It has taken some time for him to get onto the Internet again but has, at last, managed it. He sends his belated thanks for all the good wishes from the Scribblers and individual members. Here's hoping everything works out for Ray and his family.

Some really good news has filtered though via Facebook; our friend Ally gave birth to a bouncing 8lb 12oz baby boy at Ipswich Hospital. Noah Jack arrived at 1.15pm yesterday. Father. mother and baby are doing well. Congratulations from all the Scribblers and every good wish for the future!

Now we must look forward to Tuesday and hope we will see you there.

Until then,
Keep Scribbling!

Adverts follow...

I contacted you some time ago about my website www.myperfectpitch.com  My site uniquely contains a free database of about 1000 traditional book publishers who are accepting submissions. You were kind enough to help me by mentioning it to your authors.
Just wanted to say thanks for your support. The site is doing well, and I’m constantly updating and improving it. I hope you can continue to mention my website whenever appropriate. It’s an overused cliche, but I genuinely couldn’t have done it without your help.
Best regards,
Brian Grove.

I just want to bring to the attention of your group an ezine called ‘Broken The Fable’ which aims to showcase short stories and poems from around the World. There is no financial angle – there is no advertising, no spam, no passing on of details to other companies or concerns, the ezine is free to subscribe to and free for writers and poets to submit their work for consideration.
The first edition is currently online and I would like to invite your members to read it and, more importantly, to consider sending me material for possible inclusion in subsequent issues. Full details are given on the website which iswww.brokenthefable.com
Thank you for your time,
All the best, 
Kern Robinson, editor, Broken The Fable

Saturday, 9 November 2013

We will remember them



They shall grow not old,
As we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them,
Nor the years condemn,
At the going down of the sun
And in the morning
We will remember them.

Laurence Binyon (1869-1943)



Thursday, 7 November 2013

Report of our meeting

FELIXSTOWE SCRIBBLERS MEETING: TUESDAY 5th NOVEMBER 2013

Apologies were received from Barry D, Caz, Martin and Katy.

Those present for the evening were Tony, Barry M, Beryl, Liliane, Carolyn, Dick, Jane, Suzi G, Clive and Dave.

The meeting began with the collection of fees from those wishing to pay for the year until November 2014. Anyone still wishing to pay for the year may still do so of course, cheques payable to “Felixstowe Scribblers” please. Meeting by meeting fees stay at £3.

Whilst we have paid up until the end of the year, 2014 will see us making two six monthly payments which will give us a slightly better discount than we currently have.

Clive, as a relatively new writer, has asked if the more ‘experienced’ members of the group could discuss how they write their stories and plays etc. perhaps with planning and outlining plots etc. It sounds a good idea and this is something we include in at a meeting in the very near future.

Barry M suggested a Facebook page at the last meeting and we are pleased to report the page is now up and running so if you are on Facebook then have a look at it. Regular and up to date information will be posted regularly. Thanks to Barry for offering to create the page and maintain it.

Dick reported on the recent Fright Friday at Landguard Fort though he was in the View Point Cafe for most of the time scaring each group with his ghost tales from around Suffolk.

A reminder that the Library’s next author talk features local author Tim Voelcker on Saturday 16th November at 2pm in The Room at the Top.  Tim, did his much of his research at the Suffolk Record Office and contributed to and edited the book, “Broke of the Shannon and the War of 1812”. Captain Philip Broke was born in Nacton and had a distinguished career in the Royal Navy becoming a national hero after he famously captured the USS Chesapeake with his HMS Shannon in 1813, during the war with the United States of America. Copies of Tim’s book will be available on the day at the special price of £15. Tickets cost £3 (available at the Library counter), to include refreshments.  Phone or email Debra to reserve places at debra.rowe@suffolklibraries.co.uk

Now for the fun! The results of our homework assignment.

Beryl: Billy Finds a Friend:
Billy West was a schoolboy, a loner who didn’t fit in with other children at Whitechapel Boys’ School. He couldn’t play football, learnt not to put his hand up too quickly in class and at seven had not a single friend. He hated playtime, spent it scuffing his feet in the dirt. When the Blitz came the whole school evacuated to Buckingham where his mother rented a room. At his new school, Billy found a friend named Charlie East. They played together and soon Billy was invited to have tea at Charlie’s on three occasions. All the food was homemade and Charlie’s mother was beautiful but old fashioned. Billy’s mum invited Charlie to tea. The next morning she saw the headmaster and said how happy Billy was at his new school and explained about his friend. When Charlie had come to tea Billy played with him except... there was no Charlie. An imaginary friend. Charlie East, the headmaster said, had never fitted in, was bullied then killed himself in 1922...  


Liliane: The Black Rabbit:
The Australian artist critically viewed his own painting and wondered what others would think. It was a gloomy, sinister painting of a totally grey decorated room. In the corner cowered a skeletal man and facing him was a black rabbit with a blood red tongue protruding from its mouth. He sat in front of the painting when something happened. The rabbit was growing and protruding from the picture becoming real. Its fur was real, its fiery eyes stared into his and it snarled. It stepped out, elephant sized and pushed him into the corner enveloping and suffocating him. The cleaner discovered his body but the rabbit? It was back in the picture. A collector who bought the painting was found dead in the corner of his room where he had hung the work and it remains there today. It is said that a burglar tried to make off with it but was found dead at the bottom of the stairs with a broken neck.

Dick: Not Alone: (Eerily read by torchlight.)
Wartime, Landguard Fort. 20.00hrs (8.00pm) the Sergeant Major burst into Barrack Room 6 and assigned four men to all night guard duty, each being assigned to a Bastion, Corporal Tim MacDonald to the Holland Bastion. Orders were to stay alert, watch and listen for the Luftwaffe so that we can be ready with the anti-aircraft guns. Kitted out in weather proof clothing, tin helmet and with his .303 rifle on his shoulder he patrolled slowly, back and forth, stamping his feet from time to time to keep them warm. Then the mist swept in, sure to keep the Luftwaffe away. Suddenly he was aware of company on the bastion, a shadowy figure not of this world. It appeared to wear a Cromwellian puritan’s hat, one long yellow tunic coat and carrying a musket. When his report went in he was called to see the Captain and explain the nonsense. Major Harrison said the description matched The Duke of York and Albany’s Marine Regiment of Foot. Yes, the Fort was haunted.         

Jane: The Hell Factor:
The hilariously dark side of Jane’s writing! How on earth can I report that Satan was so angry that the walls of hell quaked with mass murderers running for cover? Myra Hindley soothed his worried brow whilst Stalin declared Satan must reduce his numbers. With Saddam Hussein in limbo and Charles Manson and Rasputin outside plotting something as bewildered suicide bombers lurked, Oscar Wilde took notes. Poor Guy hated November and kept his head down but Queen Lizzie told him of the rehab scheme. He had to write to Simon Cowell who had sold his soul. Guy wanted to know where forgiveness had gone, all the teasing he got despite paying his protection money to the Kray twins. Normally Simon enjoyed a challenge but this was a regrettable case just as Max Clifford’s in plugging for Robert Maxwell. Simon didn’t want to be known as ‘The Man Who Stole Bonfire Night’ so plumped for the Spanish Inquisition instead.  

Suzi: Fire Works:
The Mighty God leaned back on his cloud with a smile of satisfaction. ‘Learning to be God’ Part 6 had instructed; ‘Now that you know the basic principles of how to create a world, it is time to put your own character on it. We expect to see a world that is uniquely yours.’ He provided the rain that poured down on the earth, and saw the people dressed in dark rain cloaks looking wet, cold and miserable and praying for the perpetual rain to cease. Preparing for his final exam he re-evaluated his answers. Yes, he had earth, air and water but no fire so he created the enormous ball of fire, the sun. It dried up the rain made his people warm and happy. He passed the test with 98%. Yes, he thought, fire works.   

Clive: Goodbye Guido Fawkes:
The 50s. Tom knew he had been lucky. As a child he recalled the mythical figure Guy Fawkes and the effigies of straw filled guys that helped children beg for money to buy fireworks. Bonfire night, a time of smoke, of mist and mystery that surrounded a mountainous creation. The whoosh of rockets, the woomph and crump of bangers. That was then. Now masses of fireworks are launched electronically, all heads turn skywards to watch the multicoloured panorama yet Tom was drawn to the bonfire. He peered into the smoky flames and watched the macabre spectacle reveal itself. Someone, or something, stood amid the inferno, then danced around, arms outstretched. Others screamed in horror as they witnessed the mystery. The one flaming body became a wavering family just above the flames, rising slowly as if giving some kind of message to those present. 

Dave: Halloween Train Delay:
A train is severely delayed, its passengers then transported by coach except one is sent the wrong way and ends up in an old hotel. There he is confronted by a friendly female who he befriends and they have their evil way together in bed until the Witching hour when she turns into an evil haggard witch. Mysteriously he lands on a sacrificial alter and sees her approaching with a knife. Meanwhile his wife, frantic with worry over Halloween, seeks help from the railway company, the police and the press. A knock at the door reveals two grim faced police officers that a charred body has been found in the dying embers of a bonfire. 

Tony: Mistakes in the Night:
Stephen Cook was over the legal limit so drove carefully along the A12. As he approached Colchester a thick fog descended impairing his visibility. He slowed his BMW to a crawl but decided he had to stop. As he did so, the car engine spluttered to a stop. Leaving the vehicle he tried to find a garage or nearby house. Eventually he reached a building, felt his way round to a door. The light switch was dead. Suddenly Stephen heard the slow, heavy, shuffling footsteps approaching and the maniacal laughter of witches. He tried retracing his steps, brushed against something furry that screamed and growled. He tripped and fell cracking his head and was found dead next morning in the sound effects department of Anglia TV.   

Barry M: Two Tears: (A two character play, assisted by Carolyn):
Emma, a modern day woman is pregnant and is startled by the strange tramp like figure that appeared from nowhere. He is Albert, the ghost of the keeper of the Castle that fell 400 years earlier and she is on the site of the Chapel. He warned that it was All Hallows night and she was close to the witches’ coven. Emma thought him a weirdo, even a pervert spying on her and her lover, Tears fell from her eyes. He asked her help to redress the sins of his past and asked for two tears in exchange for his bejewelled cloak so he could return to the spirit world and Emma could buy a house for her and her child.   

I will thank everyone for ‘loaning’ copies of their homework to enable an easier reporting process – in truth I get to read them all the stories again! Thanks everyone!

Our next meeting is in two week’s time, Tuesday 19th November at 7.30pm when the homework assignment of up to 1,000 words is on “PLACE”. This can be anywhere in the world, or just your own home or garden. The choice is yours.

Until the next time,

Keep Scribbling!



                                                                                                   

Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Tonight's meeting

A scary old evening with plenty of written tales of Halloween, of ghosts and ghouls, not to mention stories associated with Guy Fawkes. Add to that a tea and coffee break discussing sighted ghosts and paranormal activities... wonder if I will sleep tonight?

Next meeting is in two weeks time, Tuesday 19th November, when the 1,000 word homework theme will be 'PLACE', which can be anywhere in the world, perhaps even your own home or garden... the choice is yours to make.

I have just learned that the East Anglian Daily Times Felixstowe Supplement tomorrow (Wednesday) will feature the Scribblers...

Keep Scribbling!

 

Saturday, 2 November 2013

Our Next Meeting...

Hope you are all well and safe after St Jude's storm earlier in the week and that you all survived the Halloween 'festivities'. With more high winds expected and also the forthcoming Bonfire night please be safe.

Our next meeting actually falls on the 5th November and am sure it will produce another collection of stories. As you will remember the 1,000 word homework surrounds either a Halloween or ghostly story or even one connected to Guy Fawkes night... it's your choice. So if you are coming along, and we really hope you do, be prepared for a  scary story or two...

A reminder that annual membership of £25 is due at this meeting. Cheques should be made payable to Felixstowe Scribblers. For others normal meeting by meeting cost of £3.00 still applies. Charges have to be raised to pay for the hire of the room.  

Talking of all things scary... Mr Cobbler, aka Scott,  sent us this:

"For the month of November I will be growing a moustache (hopefully).
If you would like to sponsor my efforts and donate to men's health and
the fight against cancer then please follow the link.
http://uk.movember.com/mospace/7354941
Totally understand if you can't what with Christmas e.t.c. on the way,
but thought I would ask for your help.
Cheers
Scott"

Until Tuesday in The Room at the Top

Keep Scribbilng