For our June meeting, our main speaker is Toby Litt — Head of Creative Writing at the University of Southampton.
Writing and Patience
Is impatience holding you back from better writing? Toby Litt took 12 years to write his own novel, Patience – shortlisted for the Republic of Consciousness Prize. The talk will focus on helping you develop your story ideas and your ideas about stories more gradually but with greater confidence.
Toby Litt is a writer, academic and environmental activist based in London. He grew up in Ampthill and went to Bedford Modern School. He has published novels, short story collections and poems. His most recent book is A Writer’s Diary (Galley Beggar, 2023) – and his diary continues to run on Substack. His novel Patience was shortlisted for the Republic of Consciousness Prize. He is a member of English PEN and editor of the Writers Rebel website. The recent Netflix series, Dead Boy Detectives, was based on Toby’s run on the Vertigo/DC comic of the same name.
Our guest speaker is HWS member Sam Christie. Sam was longlisted for the Bridport Prize, Peggy Chapman-Andrews Award 2021, was second place in the Bloomsbury Writers’ and Artists’ Short Story Competition 2022 and was third place in the New Welsh Writers’ Awards 2023. He is prepared to wrestle a polar bear if that might lead to the publication of his novel.
A Right Old Wild Ride
Sam Christie tells the story of his navigation over the summits and into the cols of the writing dream, gives some thoughts on how he survives the tricky times, and encourages members to share their own tips on staying chipper when the going gets hard. His talk will take you from his triumph as Bridport novel longlister, sharing the Hay greenroom with Richard E. Grant and Catherine Zeta Jones, all the way down to his ignominious rejections by Modern Drunkard, Taco Bell Quarterly and sundry other niche publications (yes, they’re real magazines).
For our May meeting, we’re joined by two Portsmouth authors. Our main speaker is author Matt Wingett, who writes non-fiction exploring the strange and interesting history of Portsmouth. He’s also a hypnotist, and has written for TV.
The Southsea Stories and Beyond –How Conan Doyle created Sherlock Holmes in Portsmouth
While working as a GP in Portsmouth’s seaside resort of Southsea between 1882 and 1890, young Arthur Conan Doyle produced short stories and novels at an astonishing rate. Many of his anonymously-published tales were forgotten, only to be rediscovered around a century later.
His early writings included comedies, tragedies, horror, supernatural and earthbound mysteries, unlikely adventures from the outposts of Empire and much more besides. Discover how his life in the town affected his later writing, and how the ideas he first discovered in Southsea became part of his story-telling palette.
While many associate Holmes with London, discover how the detective was conceived in Southsea – and find out why Portsmouth will forever be “Sherlock’s home”.
What happens when your first novel gets published by a traditional publisher, but your local high street book shop won’t stock it? Learn how Loree Westron took matters into her own hands and created the Portsmouth Authors Collective to promote and sell local author books.
American by birth, Loree now lives in Portsmouth where she writes literary and historical fiction. She has an MA and a PhD in Creative Writing from the University of Chichester. Among other things, she has worked as a farm labourer, a bookseller, a bell ringer, and a university lecturer. When not writing, Loree can be found teaching bicycle mechanics, or walking and cycling in the South Downs. Her novella, Missing Words, is set in Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight.
The Hampshire Writers’ Society is pleased to announce the publication of a new volume in its Anthology series.
The first volume in this series appeared as a print publication in 2015: Anthology of the Best of 2011-2014, compiled and edited by Barbara Large and Celia Livesey, with a foreword by Barbara Large. Now in 2025 as an electronic publication we have the following: The Hampshire Writers’ Society: The Best of 2014-2017, edited by Gemma Pulley, with a foreword by Gary Farnell. For his technical advice and support in the preparation of this volume, Gemma and Gary would like to thank Mark Eyles.
This new e-book contains reports on HWS monthly meetings from September 2014 to June 2017, with some of the winning entries in the monthly writing competitions, along with the adjudicators’ comments where available.
Preparations are already underway for The Best of 2017-2020, and comments and remarks on the 2014-2017 volume will be gratefully received as part of these ongoing preparations. Please email inquiries@hampshirewriterssociety.co.uk to contribute.
This new Anthology is freely available as an e-publication: to access your copy, please click on the link here. We are currently investigating a print version. If you are interested then please complete the form here. The price per copy in this case will be dependent on numbers but is not expected to exceed £15 per copy.
The great Justin Nash set and adjudicated for our Feb competition:
Brief: Write a scene from a short story or novel where the protagonist is a literary agent. (300 words)
And the winners were…
First place: ‘Advice Needed’ by Lynn Farley-Rose
“Good afternoon. Thank you for holding. You’re through to the Association of Authors’ Agents.”
“I’m a member,” I said. And faltered. I’m not used to being stuck for words.
“Jolly good,” replied the bright voice at the other end. There was a silence as she waited. “Which department would you like? Legal? International? Film and TV? Maybe AI?,” she suggested. “They’re getting a lot of calls at the moment.”
“I don’t know,” I said limply. “Ghostwriting perhaps?” And I laughed. “Ignore that—just a joke. Maybe it’s a priest I need.”
The voice hesitated and then came back, all clipped efficiency. “Just a moment. Putting you through now. Let’s see if Professional Development can help.”
“Bite the bullet,” I thought, wincing and reminding myself that I try not to work with authors who resort to clichés.
“Hello. Professional Development. How can I help?”
“Well…” I said. “The thing is that…”
“Don’t beat about the bush,” I thought. And I winced again.
“I know this is going to sound a bit off the wall but I really am a paid-up member. I’ve represented a couple of quite successful romantic novelists…”
“Well, Madam,” said the smooth male voice at the other end. “If you could give me some idea of what the problem is…”
“Grasp the nettle.”
“Well the thing is…there’s a woman. I got up on Thursday morning and she’d taken root at my kitchen table.” There. I’ve said it.
“Try the Citizen’s Advice Bureau?” suggested the man.
“Well here’s the other thing…” I said. “She works like a demon. In her long muslin dress. Filling up my A4 notepads with copperplate. She never sleeps.”
“This time I am quite determined to complete it,” she keeps saying. “Quite determined. And
speedily. It must be complete by my 250th anniversary.”
She won’t leave until I agree to represent her. Can you advise?
Runner Up: ‘‘No Gavels’‘by Howard Teece
There are no gavels in a British court, much to the surprise of many writers. Nor are ‘Objections!’ very common, and ‘Order, Order,’ is reserved for the House of Commons. What often exists is a hushed silence, and one had fallen in Court 14 at Chester Crown Court as His Honour Dennis Chambers delivered his verdict.
‘In the civil case of Davids vs Whitehead Publishing et al., I find that Simon Parsons did steal the claimant’s Intellectual Property, wit The Tortured Soul.’ The silence gasped. ‘Therefore, I order the, frankly ludicrous, advance of one million pounds to be paid to the claimant.’
He continued with ways the defendant might appeal, but no-one cared. Simon Parsons – THE Simon Parsons – had stolen the work of another unpublished author and claimed it as his own. Discovered, fortunately, before publication.
#
I found Michaela Davids in an espresso bar on the third floor of a nearby hotel. It was Simon’s favourite haunt. I knew this because I was Simon’s agent.
I also knew he hadn’t plagiarised anything.
‘Nice trick,’ I said, sitting opposite Michaela.
‘I don’t know what you mean,’ she said, sipping her Doppio. ‘The court said he stole my work.’
Yeah. That was a problem.
‘You get a million pounds as a court order. There’s no tax on court orders,’ I said.
‘No agent’s fee, either.’ Which was true. I’d be down £150k before translation and film rights. ‘Leech.’
Simon’s favourite word for me. Said in jest, as he knew how I’d supported him throughout his career. The editing, rejections, failed sales, and poorly attended signings. I was always there.
But somehow, Simon and his new lover, Michaela, had colluded to dodge half a million in taxes and fees. Something I would have proved had Michaela not been strangled that evening.
Runner Up: ‘’The Lemon Song’’ by Janey L Foster
Felicity dozed on the 07:12 to Waterloo, half watching her reflection in the window. She faded in and out like her thoughts overnight, she strained to make out the faint shape of her face against the rolling stock. The window shuddered, with the 07:47 from Surbiton shattering her bone structure, shaking her awake.
She couldn’t wait to see Lucy, tell her about last night and yes, she didn’t get much sleep and yes, she felt bleary but how she’d devoured the words, how she stayed propped up against her pillow, chasing the story all through the night. She lay there, tired eyes darting left and right, eager to reach the denouement. Her fine features, illuminated by the softened late-night filter on her screen, glowed against the seeping blackness around her.
This. She smiled to herself. This is why I need this job. These characters, charging around my bloodstream now. This feeling, this writing surging off my screen into my soul.
The predictable train announcement soothed her; she did mind the gap and she took all her belongings with her. She rushed, her mind still whirring over the chapters of The Lemon Song and Gerard, the illusive lead.
Felicity’s black cashmere cape rippled around her like the thoughts she tried to deny. Her ankle gave way and she stumbled, the platform smacked into her face and somewhere outside herself she heard her laptop clatter. Then a hand came, it brushed her hair from the blood,
‘I’ve got you,’ he said. ‘Here, let me help you’ and as tears formed tracks through her foundation, she looked up and saw Gerard looking down at her, the face she’d constructed overnight, his greying stubble, the sweet cloud of blueberry vapour dispersing around him as his concerned eyes met hers.
Runner Up: ‘’One of a Kind’’ by Johnathan Reid
Dave dreaded one-to-one author meetings. But today’s threatened more than disappointment: it might be his last. It had been past midnight when he’d stopped polishing his latest prompt. It remained a haunting, beautiful mess, which he’d tried so hard to force into not creating the prose he still remembered. But, amongst the words which billions of readers now craved, his thoughts and emotions had kept leaking out.
Now, sat alone in the sterile corridor of Authors Central, it was too late to back out. A door opened and the faceless assistant called his name. His posture already betrayed his uncertainty. He should have deleted his effort, but a decision on its viability now sat within something he would never comprehend.
His assigned author, a woman with a perfunctory smile, sat behind a large, unnecessary desk. Dave blurted out, “Look, I know my prompt isn’t perfect. I was hoping an author could be assigned to reduce its… its humanity.”
The author’s voice was smooth, her words deliberate: “Please be reassured, Mr Bennett, not everything we receive fulfils its potential. Even through us. However, your prompt just isn’t right for us at this time.”
Dave’s gaze dropped to the beige carpet. “If you pass on this one, you know I won’t get another shot.”
“Our artificial authors deliver on the prompts our readers demand, and the market is adequately saturated. We must strike a balance between too much, yet not enough. I’m sure you understand, despite your… natural humanity.”
Her emotionless expression told him what he already knew. They didn’t need him to understand. Nothing would make Author Central deviate from the content which catered to next week’s predicted reading trends.
The robotic assistant motioned for him to leave. He turned and walked out, the weight of rejection heavy on his shoulders. Natural intelligence had failed again.
Christine Hammacott was originally scheduled to speak at our December meeting, but had to cancel due to illness, so we’re delighted to have the opportunity to hear her speak at our April meeting.
Christine is a graphic designer and book cover designer who runs the Art of Communication graphic design consultancy, and is herself an indie author, writing psychological suspense.
She’ll be talking about book marketing: your book as a product and creating an author brand — a topic of increasing importance for both indie and traditionally published authors.
Our guest speaker is Natasha Orme.
Natasha is a freelance editor, travel blogger, and author of crime fiction. Her latest book is Travels with my Child — a non-fiction book about her experience of travel with a baby.
She’ll be talking about audience — when writing non-fiction, it is essential to identify who we are writing for and why.
In 2025, Hampshire Writers Society has something new for our members. On Saturday 15th March, 10-12, at the Winchester Arc, we will hold the first of what we hope will be an ongoing programme of writing workshops.
The first workshop is led by Judith Heneghan. Judith Heneghan is programme leader for the MA in Creative Writing at the University of Winchester, and a mentor with Jericho Writers. She has written over 60 books for young people, and her first novel for adults, Snegurochka (Salt, 2019) was shortlisted for the Edward Stanford travel writing awards. Her second novel, Birdeye, was published in 2024.
Her workshop will focus on the power of setting when creating characters. Who are the natives, strangers and returners in your story, and how does this impact what they want and what they do?
If you have a strong setting for a story but need inspiration for the characters and plot — or conversely, you have great characters but aren’t sure where to put them — this is the ideal workshop for you. Suitable for writers of all experience levels.
Places are limited to 10 attendees. Priority will be given to members of the Hampshire Writers Society.
This workshop is now fully booked. You can still email inquiries@hampshirewriterssociety.co.uk to register your interest in case places become available due to cancellations.
For the complete workshops programme and more information on how booking works, see Workshops.
Tuesday 10th December 2024 from 6.30pm followed by talks at 7.30pmat the Tower, King’s School, Winchester.
It’s an opportunity to meet, network and chat to authors and members of HWS.
Authors from the HWS will be displaying their books at the Book Fair along with an indie publisher. Come along, meet them and show support for fellow writers!
Jean G-Owen
Jean G-Owen, our guest speaker on the evening, her talk entitled ‘From Conception to Compilation: Publishing a Poetry Collection’. She will be promoting her new poetry collection, The Pain of Glass.
NAKED FIGLEAF PRESS, founded by Jean G-Owen in Summer 2023, is an indie publisher based on the Isle of Wight. They specialise in poetry, novellas, short stories and non-fiction collections. They publish The Figlet, a bi-annual literary magazine showcasing Isle of Wight writers & illustrators. Naked Figleaf Press host Yarnival West Wight WordFest. xhttps://nakedfigleafcollective.co.uk/publications/
Anne Wan
Anne Wan, children’s writer and independent publisher, and author of the Secrets of the Snow Globe trilogy and picture book, Manners Fit for a Queen.
Anne began writing when her middle son became ill. As he convalesced she helped him transform an idea that he had, into a book. This ignited her enthusiasm for writing stories for children. She started writing picture books as a hobby and went on to study creative writing with Barbara Large. Anne is passionate about inspiring children as readers and writers. She enjoys giving talks, craft and storytelling sessions in schools, libraries, and Brownie groups.
Having completed the Snow Globe trilogy, Anne released her debut picture book Manners Fit for the Queen. In this humorous story, Hector causes chaos with his terrible table manners. His sister, Isobel, has found her own way to cope with the mess. But how will she cope when they are both invited to a tea party with the Queen?
Secrets of the Snow Globe – Menacing Magic is the finale to my ‘Secrets in the Snow Globe’ series. Chaos rages in the world inside the snow globe following the theft of seven, magical, diamond snowflakes. In a race against time, Louisa and her brother, Jack, shrink into the globe and embark on a perilous journey to catch the thief. Can they retrieve snowflakes before the snow globe world is destroyed?
Secrets of the Snow Globe – Vanishing Voices Can they succeed in their quest to help their new friends, and find a way back to Grandma’s house? A captivating adventure story of courage and friendship for 7-9 yrs. In a land of magic, snow, and secrets Louisa and her brother, Jack, are flung into a dangerous mountain adventure when they shrink into their Grandma’s snow globe.
Secrets of the Snow Globe – Shooting Star
How much does Grandma know about the snow globe’s magic? Louisa and her brother, Jack, are determined to discover the truth. In this sequel to, Secrets of the Snow Globe – Vanishing Voices, Grandma’s story is revealed. But how much should she tell? After all, some secrets are best left untold…
Martin Kyrle was at Agincourt – not the battle, but at the official opening of the museum. His personal travel anecdotes – all of them true – span seven decades and will take you off the beaten track even if you’re familiar with the countries where they take place.
Islands off the coasts of France, Holland or in Lake Baikal, the world’s deepest lake, castles in Estonia and Latvia, lakes in Lapland, Lithuania and Siberia, Roman amphitheatres in Libya, Neolithic dolmens in Brittany or monastic ruins 8 miles out in the Atlantic off far SW Ireland. Then being hospitalised in intensive care in the Canary Islands or facing a Force 8 gale on the ferry from Hong Kong to Macau and a total blackout in Mongolia when the lights fused..
Finding soldiers bivouacking in his back garden prior to embarking for the Normandy Landings (but who hadn’t been told!), then trying to get to school during the ‘great freeze’ of 1947 contrast with exploring Mycenaean tombs in Cyprus or volunteering in a refugee camp in Austria and a workcamp in Poland. Hitchhiking round North Cape at the top of Norway was quite tricky, too. [Why go? Well, it’s the northern limit of Europe and if you go any further you fall off…].
He had to mind his manners when, as a Sub-Lieutenant in the Special Branch stationed in Malta to decode top secret communications, the Commander-in-Chief, Admiral Lord Mountbatten, invited him to dinner. At university in Southampton a contrasting challenge was singing a duet from La Bohème in front of a couple of hundred disbelieving fellow students who’d sneered that although he and his fellow artistes could sing Gilbert & Sullivan they couldn’t sing ‘real’ opera. After that, getting lost on a train in Western Bosnia, being locked in a church in rural Devon or standing with your school party watching your train from Germany into Denmark depart without you were minor misadventures you took in your stride.
He ascribes his good fortune and possibly survival to having been blessed by the Pope in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican in Rome, by the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Kremlin in Moscow and by an indigenous Buryat shaman in Siberia who gave him a lucky charm, which you might think is hedging your bets for someone who’s a life-long atheist. But perhaps they saved him when he had to overcome vertigo when standing on the top of the leaning tower of Pisa and when, 10,000 feet above the South China Sea on a flight to Beijing with his late wife, the pilot announced that one of his engines was showing signs of failure.
Martin Kyrle’s Little Green Nightbook, Little Blue Nightbook and Little Orange Nightbook each has 25 personal stories to intrigue you, with flags, maps, colour photos and cartoons. His other books, Jottings from the Trans-Siberian Railway and Jottings from Russia and the Baltic States. Part 1: Russia and Estonia.
Page Dalliance
Page Dalliance is a writer, editor and designer who became an author by chance. Having lived in and around the New Forest and the Test Valley in Hampshire for most of her life, where she married and raised her 3 children.
During this time she developed a design career and a thirst for knowledge, not present in her early school days, and consequently put it to good use in her future projects and exploits to improve her lifestyle. Always up for a challenge where an opportunity presented itself, these were probably stepping stones for later adventures as a single woman where choices had to be made and calculated risks undertaken.
This debut novel is based on the experiential events witnessed on her later travels when dipping her toe in to the tepid Greek waters for the first time at the age of 50 plus and then consequently ‘pushing the boat out’.
Further publications are planned featuring design and building challenges both at home and abroad.
Her new book, A Perfectly Respectable Pirate, a novel set in Greece is based on a true story.
Clare Fryer
Clare Fryer, YA author, her book, The Invitation.
Clare grew up in Guildford surrounded by books. She was inspired to write by her father, who was a poet and author himself in his spare time. Clare doodled poetry throughout her life, yet yearned to write novels but never had the time. When Clare took early retirement in 2022, she finally had time to write. The Invitation began as a short story inspired by a writing prompt and won a monthly writing competition. Her mother and several friends asked what happened next, and so she began to write. That short story became the first three chapters of The Invitation.
One invitation changes everything. The arrival of a mysterious invitation on the eve of Millie’s sixteenth birthday sets off a chain of events that will change her life forever. A family linked by secrets discover a darker, more sinister undercurrent of corruption in Anacadair. How far will the ruling High Council go to preserve the old ways? When the family flee, who can they trust? Will they escape from the watchers?
Mark Eyles
Mark Eyles’ science fiction books ‘Icefall Cities’, ‘Firedrift Moon’, and ‘Stellar Megastructure’ (graphic novel) are available on Amazon. A fantasy novel will be available soon.
Previously, he was a hippy, punk, teacher, entrepreneur, freelancer, holographer, videogame designer, company director, lecturer, and researcher. He’s been published in 2000AD, Sonic the Comic, and Fear magazine.
Damon Wakes will have his collection of published books available, includingTen Little Astronauts – An Agatha Christie-inspired murder mystery novella set on board an interstellar spacecraft.
Damon writes everything from humour to horror and produces a brand new work of flash fiction every day during July each year. Damon also writes interactive fiction and games, and provided the story and dialogue for Game of the Year nominated virtual reality title Craft Keep VR.
Order and Chaos, an anthology from Breakthrough Books that opens with one of his flash fiction pieces. That story is “Songbird and Statue,” which also provided the anthology’s theme.
Ancient gods in conflict and a zombie on welfare, a disappearing boyfriend and AI with daddy issues, a balloon bound for icy danger and a mysterious theft at the museum, a sinister woodland cabin and a pleasure house that’ll cost much more than you can afford.
Raiding parties in dystopia, art classes in the city, opposites attracting and love catching fire. Separations and siblings, life and death decisions, flying into trouble and traveling to self-discovery…Which comes first, chaos or order? The cycles between may seem inevitable, and change may be the only constant, but what does that mean for the human experience?Sixteen authors from the Breakthrough Books collective explore our relationships with nature and technology, science and the sacred, each other and ourselves, offering an array of stories as individual as every reader.Ten Little Astronauts— a novella published by Unbound.
RED HOUSE TO EXODUS is a memoir by Di Castle who was born at Harpenden Memorial Hospital (The Red House). Set in Harpenden, it spans the 1950s and 1960s – a time of great social change following the Second World War. It includes her home experience, early schooldays – the local infant school’s undesirable outside toilets, and the headmistress travelled by bus bringing her cocker spaniel Andy, who slept in a basket under her desk. Grammar school was followed by secretarial training. She then worked as a medical secretary at Luton and Dunstable Hospital and later at St Albans City Hospital. The author has used research of the 1950s and 1960s to place her life in context. From starting school, the Festival of Britain in 1951, the Coronation in 1953, milk and coal delivered by horse and cart, moving house, numerous pets – rabbits, a tortoise, budgies, even a mouse! She and her sister entertained themselves with skipping ropes, Jokari, hopscotch, a den made out of runner bean canes and hessian sacks used for coal delivery. She left Harpenden after her marriage (Exodus)
Author of 31 Treats And A Marriage and The Interview Chain
Lynn Farley-Rose spent her childhood by the sea in Devon and then went to university in London. She spent some years working as a research psychologist before a move to East Sussex resulted in a complete change of lifestyle. At one point she was responsible for the welfare of thirty-two animals and eight species including her four children. 31 Treats And A Marriage was her first book and arose out of an interest in ways to cope when life throws up challenges. Her second book The Interview Chain is an exploration of connections between people. She now lives in Hampshire, has no animals and is working on her third book. In her regular blog at treatsandmore.com she writes about topics of general interest from a popular psychological perspective.
31 Treats And A Marriage
From Austen to Brown—a giant table in Liverpool to hidden churches in London— New York to Edinburgh—and cannibalistic spiders to a horse named Twilight—
When Lynn’s family seemed finally to have overcome a series of disasters, and her husband was at last in recovery from cancer, she thought it was time to focus on recovering herself. She decided to have some treats—not frivolous material things but exploratory, enriching experiences. Then life threw up a new obstacle and she found that the problems weren’t over. In fact they were about to get much worse—and suddenly the treats became something far more; they became a lifeline.
The Interview Chain
Everyone has something interesting to say if you take the time to listen. The Interview Chain is a series of conversations—each interviewee was asked to nominate someone they admire as the next link. Starting from a casual conversation on a boat on the Thames, the chain wended its way for over 23,000 miles, alighting on three continents and gathering up personal perspectives on issues that really matter in the world today. The interviewees include a theatre director, a rabbi, a philanthropist, a sculptor, a New York Mayoral candidate, a pioneering documentary maker, and a man who rescues giant trees. Some have worked in challenging places—Kabul under the Taliban, a Romanian orphanage, immigration detention centres, remote Indian villages—while others have found themselves caught up in extraordinary situations such as the Rwandan genocide, the Ferguson uprising, and the UN Climate Change Negotiations.
Sally Howard & Maggie Farran
Three writing friends, Sally Howard, Maggie Farran and Catherine Griffin from Chandlers Ford collaborated on a new project in lockdown, culminating with publication of Winchester Actually. Unravel the intrigue of the great train robbery. Witness the thrills and spills of rioting through the streets. Wonder at sacrifices made to save the cathedral and defend the city. Enjoy gentler tales of romance and motherhood set in and around Winchester.
Dai Henley
Dai retired in 2004 following the sale of his local businesses in Southampton and Winchester. He joined a Creative Writing class which he still attends weekly. He is also a regular visitor to the Hampshire Writers’ Society.
He writes crime dramas with the themes of obsession, revenge and justice. He’s attended many murder trials at the Old Bailey. The capacity of ‘ordinary’ people who become motivated to carry out extraordinary acts never ceases to amaze him.
He received wonderful reviews and won several awards for his debut novel, Blazing Obsession: a silver medal from The Wishing Shelf and a Top Ten place in Bookbag’s self-published novels in 2014.
His novels: Endless Obsession; Reckless Obsession; and Blazing Obsession will be available at the book fair and are also available in paperback and eBook on Amazon. To find out more visit his website: http://www.daihenley.co.uk
Stephen Hodgson
Stephen Hodgson, children’s writer with his book Tales of Helen and Lysander: A Spartan Girl and Boy. Stephen was born in Yorkshire but have lived most of his life in London and Hampshire. He worked in the Civil Service for 35 years but left in 2022 to try his hand at writing. He also works part-time in a local school. The Tales of Helen and Lysander is his first novel. It is the first in a series of novels which will follow the characters on their journey into adulthood.
Welcome to the world of Helen and Lysander, a brother and sister in ancient Sparta. It is the eve of their 7th birthdays and the following morning they are set to enter one of the world’s harshest training programmes – the famous Spartan agoge. Helen and Lysander will have to overcome hunger, pain and injury in a series of extreme challenges to survive in their new world. But Helen and Lysander do not face these challenges alone. They have help from Pylos, a helot or slave boy, who considers Lysander to be his only friend and who quietly helps them at key moments. He does this at great risk to himself and to Lysander and Helen; for it is forbidden for Spartans and helots to be friends.
With 25 years experience in the publishing industry as a prolific author, ghostwriter, editor, bookseller, and teacher, Tom Bromley inspired members by delving in great detail about ideas and imagination. The competition brief aligned to this, which was to:
Write a 300 word piece about a moment of inspiration: this can be either a real figure/event, something from your own life, or something entirely fictional.
And the winners were…
First place: Petrarch upon seeing Laura by Rosie Mercer
“A combination of enjoying the writing and the author capturing the brief made this my winner. I liked the use of language, the description of writing (the lines nearly curl together) and how the end matches up with the start with the protagonist in shadows. A short but powerfully written piece.”
Second place: ‘Come Play My Game, I’ll Test Ya’ by Johnathan Reid
“An intriguing interpretation of the theme and a great piece of action writing regarding the competition in the school pool. I thought this well was well described and with a nice ripple of tension as to what was going to happen, which gives the piece a satisfying edge.”
Third Place: An Empty Day by Sarah King
“I liked the idea of this piece being written in the second person and the way the writer captures the sense of shift; the clouds being dark and oppressive in the beginning, the rain offering renewal, the day being empty in the title and full in the final line. I would have a little more on the actual moment of inspiration – what there was in the advert that caused the change – but the sentiment again captured the brief.”
First Place: Petrarch Upon Seeing Laura by Rosie Mercer
You did not notice me. I sat in the shadows during matins. It was without a thought that you turned your cheek and, like a vision, resembled the Blessed Virgin. You did not see me. I prowled down the aisle until I was close enough to hear your name whispered.
Laura: a name as sweet as summer wine on my lips and I say it again just to feel you linger there. Laura. How should I praise you? Psalms are too dull. Hymns, too severe. I must find the words, tame them, and they must submit to my will. My little songs will be a piece of you, until you live upon the page and I might close my book and keep you there.
I will write a poem of my own design, a shape of my own choosing. It must be brief, as our time together has been fleeting. It must roll along like the unstoppable drum of a human heart until it hits a clanging note: an alarum bell. It will evolve, bounding, slipping here and there, only falling into place with each final syllable until, at the end, the lines nearly curl together, reaching for each other, each sound an echo of the other, like a longed-for meeting.
When I next see you, head bent in prayer, it is you I will worship. But do not let me disturb you, no. I will not impress myself upon you. I am content to linger in the shadows of my laurel tree, my Laura, and my prayer will be my poetry.
Second Place: ‘Come Play My Game, I’ll Test Ya‘ by Johnathan Reid
Holding your breath is hard and today’s competition is intense. The nominated judges peer into the school pool, looking for bubbles. The first sign of weakness, they signal an ascent into jeering defeat. Only a complete lack of inspiration will baptise you as this week’s winner. Achieve the longest pause between breaths and be a hero for at least today.
Earlier, your chest heaved with ill-advised hyperventilation. Now the drive to respire fills your head like an expanding bladder in the post-lunch lesson. It mustn’t overwhelm your conscious control, even as your hindbrain begs for release from forbidden tomfoolery. You gulp Gollum-like on the exhausted air trapped inside your desperate lungs. The primitive reflex barely dampens the urge to release your pressure-cooker of carbon dioxide. You aren’t a whale. Your inspirations are meagre, your expirations only visible on fog-chilled days. But your hopes are high. Premature inhalation is for wimps lacking lung capacity and willpower.
You somersault from glisten-backed mushroom to upturned turtle, pinching your nose as wayward bubbles tickle your nostrils. Through the liquid layer dividing success from failure, there’s an unexpected dash of motivation: a refracted splash of polka-dot blue. The girl in year five you watch from afar. Your starved brain decides she’s waiting with bated breath for her breathless champion. A wavering halo forms around her head, a tunnel of bliss connecting your…
Its edges darken and she’s gone in a flash of startled quicksilver – along with the judges. A hairy hand intrudes into your watery womb and a vice encloses your arm. You breach the surface like a sub-sea missile into the poolside clamour. A puce face expels their own lungful of air in a flood of detention-laden expletives. But you can breathe again, and your surging, death-defying gasps are all the inspiration you need.
Third Place: An Empty Day by Sarah King
You sit in your kitchen, cup of tea in hand, listening to the monotonous hammering of the rain. The clouds outside are dark and oppressive. Your eyes strain against the gloom. You know you should turn a light on, but you don’t, just as you haven’t showered, or brushed your teeth. You simply do not have the energy.
It is 10am and the day stretches out before you. There are no plans. No new shows to watch, no books to read, no friends to meet with, just a yawning void of nothingness. You absentmindedly reach for my phone, scrolling through images of beautiful places and adorable kittens, but your mood remains the same. You put you phone down, only to pick it up and scroll again. Again you put it down, and again you pick it up, scrolling out of habit.
Something catches your eye. It’s just an advert, but it is enough to get you to shower. To brush your teeth. To put on clothes. You pick up your phone again, but this time with purpose. A quick web search and you find what you need. The rain is still falling, but that won’t stop you.
Outside the scent of the rain envelopes you. It brings the promise of change and renewal. The rain trickles down the back of your inadequate coat, but it feels invigorating. You walk with your head held high. You know where you are going.
The small shop is dimly lit, not helped by the heavy clouds outside. You nod shyly at the attendant, but you don’t want to approach her. What if she sees your ignorance. The choice of stock is overwhelming and you know nothing. Your mouth goes dry and your heart starts to race. You inhale deeply, close your eyes, and remember, everyone has to start somewhere.
You leave the shop with the materials to create something new. Suddenly your day is full.
6.30pm – 7.30pm followed by talks 7.30pm – 9pm Main Speaker, author and tutor, Tom Bromley and special guest, travel writer, Martin Kyrle.
The Tower, King’s School, Romsey Road, Winchester, SO22 5PN
Authors from the HWS will be displaying their books at the Summer Book Fair along with an indie publisher. It’s an excellent opportunity to meet, network and chat to authors and members of HWS…and maybe buy a book…or two!
It’s always an interesting, inspiring and fascinating occasion. You never know who you’ll meet or where that chat might lead. Not to be missed!
Appearing at the Summer Book Fair:
Jean G-Owen from Naked Figleaf Press
NAKED FIGLEAF PRESS, founded by Jean G-Owen in Summer 2023, is an indie publisher based on the Isle of Wight. They specialise in poetry, novellas, short stories and non-fiction collections. They publish The Figlet, a bi-annual literary magazine showcasing Isle of Wight writers & illustrators. Naked Figleaf Press host Yarnival West Wight WordFest, which will take place from 27 to 28 September 2024 in Yarmouth, Isle of Wight. https://nakedfigleafcollective.co.uk/publications
Jean G-Owen from Naked Figleaf Press
Anne Wan
Anne is a children’s writer and independent publisher. With three books in her Secrets of the Snow Globe series and a picture book, Manners Fit for a Queen.
Anne started writing picture books as a hobby and went on to study creative writing with Barbara Large. She is passionate about inspiring children as readers and writers. She enjoys giving talks, craft and storytelling sessions in schools, libraries, and Brownie groups.
Having completed the Snow Globe trilogy, Anne has published her debut picture book Manners Fit for the Queen. In this humorous story, Hector causes chaos with his terrible table manners. His sister, Isobel, has found her own way to cope with the mess. But how will she cope when they are both invited to a tea party with the Queen?
Secrets of the Snow Globe – Vanishing Voices Can they succeed in their quest to help their new friends, and find a way back to Grandma’s house? A captivating adventure story of courage and friendship for 7-9 yrs. In a land of magic, snow, and secrets Louisa and her brother, Jack, are flung into a dangerous mountain adventure when they shrink into their Grandma’s snow globe.
Secrets of the Snow Globe – Shooting Star How much does Grandma know about the snow globe’s magic? Louisa and her brother, Jack, are determined to discover the truth. In this sequel to, Secrets of the Snow Globe – Vanishing Voices, Grandma’s story is revealed. But how much should she tell? After all, some secrets are best left untold…
Secrets of the Snow Globe – Menacing Magicis the finale to the ‘Secrets in the Snow Globe’ series. Chaos rages in the world inside the snow globe following the theft of seven, magical, diamond snowflakes. In a race against time, Louisa and her brother, Jack, shrink into the globe and embark on a perilous journey to catch the thief. Can they retrieve the snowflakes before the snow globe world is destroyed?
Are you ready for the magic? You can purchase the books from http://anne-wan.com/
Martin Kyrle
Martin Kyrle, travel writer.
Martin Kyrle was at Agincourt – not the battle, but at the official opening of the museum. His personal travel anecdotes – all of them true – span seven decades and will take you off the beaten track even if you’re familiar with the countries where they take place.
Islands off the coasts of France, Holland or in Lake Baikal, the world’s deepest lake, castles in Estonia and Latvia, lakes in Lapland, Lithuania and Siberia, Roman amphitheatres in Libya, Neolithic dolmens in Brittany or monastic ruins 8 miles out in the Atlantic off far SW Ireland. Then being hospitalised in intensive care in the Canary Islands or facing a Force 8 gale on the ferry from Hong Kong to Macau and a total blackout in Mongolia when the lights fused..
Finding soldiers bivouacking in his back garden prior to embarking for the Normandy Landings (but who hadn’t been told!), then trying to get to school during the ‘great freeze’ of 1947 contrast with exploring Mycenaean tombs in Cyprus or volunteering in a refugee camp in Austria and a workcamp in Poland. Hitchhiking round North Cape at the top of Norway was quite tricky, too. [Why go? Well, it’s the northern limit of Europe and if you go any further you fall off…].
He had to mind his manners when, as a Sub-Lieutenant in the Special Branch stationed in Malta to decode top secret communications, the Commander-in-Chief, Admiral Lord Mountbatten, invited him to dinner. At university in Southampton a contrasting challenge was singing a duet from La Bohème in front of a couple of hundred disbelieving fellow students who’d sneered that although he and his fellow artistes could sing Gilbert & Sullivan they couldn’t sing ‘real’ opera. After that, getting lost on a train in Western Bosnia, being locked in a church in rural Devon or standing with your school party watching your train from Germany into Denmark depart without you were minor misadventures you took in your stride.
He ascribes his good fortune and possibly survival to having been blessed by the Pope in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican in Rome, by the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Kremlin in Moscow and by an indigenous Buryat shaman in Siberia who gave him a lucky charm, which you might think is hedging your bets for someone who’s a life-long atheist. But perhaps they saved him when he had to overcome vertigo when standing on the top of the leaning tower of Pisa and when, 10,000 feet above the South China Sea on a flight to Beijing with his late wife, the pilot announced that one of his engines was showing signs of failure.
Martin Kyrle’s Little Green Nightbook, Little Blue Nightbook and Little Orange Nightbook each has 25 personal stories to intrigue you, with flags, maps, colour photos and cartoons. His other books, Jottings from the Trans-Siberian Railway and Jottings from Russia and the Baltic States. Part1: Russia and Estonia.
Stephen Hodgson
Stephen Hodgson, children’s writer with his book Tales of Helen and Lysander: A Spartan Girl and Boy. Stephen was born in Yorkshire but have lived most of his life in London and Hampshire. He worked in the Civil Service for 35 years but left in 2022 to try his hand at writing. He also works part-time in a local school. The Tales of Helen and Lysander is his first novel. It is the first in a series of novels which will follow the characters on their journey into adulthood.
Stephen Hodgson
Welcome to the world of Helen and Lysander, a brother and sister in ancient Sparta. It is the eve of their 7th birthdays and the following morning they are set to enter one of the world’s harshest training programmes – the famous Spartan agoge. Helen and Lysander will have to overcome hunger, pain and injury in a series of extreme challenges to survive in their new world. But Helen and Lysander do not face these challenges alone. They have help from Pylos, a helot or slave boy, who considers Lysander to be his only friend and who quietly helps them at key moments. He does this at great risk to himself and to Lysander and Helen; for it is forbidden for Spartans and helots to be friends.
Page Dalliance
Page Dalliance is a writer, editor and designer who became an author by chance. Having lived in and around the New Forest and the Test Valley in Hampshire for most of her life, where she married and raised her 3 children.
During this time she developed a design career and a thirst for knowledge, not present in her early school days, and consequently put it to good use in her future projects and exploits to improve her lifestyle. Always up for a challenge where an opportunity presented itself, these were probably stepping stones for later adventures as a single woman where choices had to be made and calculated risks undertaken.
This debut novel is based on the experiential events witnessed on her later travels when dipping her toe in to the tepid Greek waters for the first time at the age of 50 plus and then consequently ‘pushing the boat out’.
Further publications are planned featuring design and building challenges both at home and abroad.
Her new book, A Perfectly Respectable Pirate, a novel set in Greece is based on a true story.
Clare Fryer
Clare Fryer, YA author, her book, The Invitation
Clare grew up in Guildford surrounded by books. She was inspired to write by her father, who was a poet and author himself in his spare time. Clare doodled poetry throughout her life, yet yearned to write novels but never had the time. When Clare took early retirement in 2022, she finally had time to write. The Invitation began as a short story inspired by a writing prompt and won a monthly writing competition. Her mother and several friends asked what happened next, and so she began to write. That short story became the first three chapters of The Invitation.
One invitation changes everything. The arrival of a mysterious invitation on the eve of Millie’s sixteenth birthday sets off a chain of events that will change her life forever. A family linked by secrets discover a darker, more sinister undercurrent of corruption in Anacadair. How far will the ruling High Council go to preserve the old ways? When the family flee, who can they trust? Will they escape from the watchers?
Mark Eyles
Mark Eyles, a science fiction and fantasy author with his ‘Vast Alien Crisis’ duology, ‘Icefall Cities’ and ‘Firedrift Moon’.
After working in the games industry, writing for comics (2000AD & Sonic the Comic) and spending time as an academic running videogame courses, Mark finally settled down to writing books at the start of 2019. His writing draws on his love of science fiction, creating a slightly quirky, but grim and gritty story set on a colony world where everything’s gone nightmarishly wrong.
Damon Wakes will have his vast collection of published books available, including Ten Little Astronauts – an Agatha Christie-inspired murder mystery novella set on board an interstellar spacecraft.
Damon writes everything from humour to horror and produces a brand new work of flash fiction every day during July each year. Damon also writes interactive fiction and games, and provided the story and dialogue for Game of the Year nominated virtual reality title Craft Keep VR.
Order and Chaos, an anthology from Breakthrough Books that opens with one of his flash fiction pieces. That story is “Songbird and Statue,” which also provided the anthology’s theme.
Ancient gods in conflict and a zombie on welfare, a disappearing boyfriend and AI with daddy issues, a balloon bound for icy danger and a mysterious theft at the museum, a sinister woodland cabin and a pleasure house that’ll cost much more than you can afford.
Raiding parties in dystopia, art classes in the city, opposites attracting and love catching fire. Separations and siblings, life and death decisions, flying into trouble and traveling to self-discovery…
Which comes first, chaos or order? The cycles between may seem inevitable, and change may be the only constant, but what does that mean for the human experience?
Sixteen authors from the Breakthrough Books collective explore our relationships with nature and technology, science and the sacred, each other and ourselves, offering an array of stories as individual as every reader.
Ten Little Astronauts— a novella published by Unbound
Di Castle will have her poetry books available, Should I Wear Floral and other poems on life, love and leaving; Grandma’s Poetry Book, ‘makes you laugh, makes you cry’.
Maggie, Catherine and Sally are three writing friends from Chandlers Ford who collaborated on a new project in lockdown, culminating with publication of Winchester Actually. Unravel the intrigue of the great train robbery. Witness the thrills and spills of rioting through the streets. Wonder at sacrifices made to save the cathedral and defend the city. Enjoy gentler tales of romance and motherhood set in and around Winchester.
After an evening of literary agent, Becky Bagnell, and historical fiction author, Louise Morrish, regaling members with information and stories from their extensive experience, Louise announced her chosen winners of our May competition:
Taking inspiration from a real person’s past life (famous, infamous, or non-famous) and combine it with your own creativity and imagination to write an historical fiction piece. 300 words
I was truly astounded by the entries. Not only the high standard of writing, but also the inventiveness and sheer breadth of history covered – from AD 33 and the last breaths of Jesus on the cross, through Tudor history, the 17th century, the Second World War, and into the 1960s and 1970s.
It was a very difficult challenge to choose a winner, and I know judges say this all the time, but it genuinely was a very close run thing between the top three pieces.
And the winners were…
First place: Hope by Jo Agrell
“This piece recounted Jane Austen’s final journey to Winchester, before her untimely death. Every word was precise, every sentence crafted with care. The love between Jane and her sister Cassandra was palpable, but not over-explained or mawkish. The period was authentically evoked. The ending was hopeful, and also heartbreaking, an achievement that Jane Austen herself would have been proud of.”
Second place: The Mismaze by Dave Sinclair
“This was a hauntingly poetic piece, that beautifully evoked how the past remains with us, always. Sometimes it’s even carved into the very ground beneath our feet, as in the case of this historic turf labyrinth which I’ve walked along myself.”
Third Place: “I am come hither to die,” by Lesley Bungay
“This piece truly sent a shiver down my spine, as I accompanied Ann Boleyn on her final 101 steps to the scaffold. A fantastic first line: ‘I count the stone steps as they spiral upwards, my mind a turmoil of false accusations. One hundred and one steps, cold and unyielding, like his heart. A heart once filled with love, now hardened by suspicion, and whispered lies from those men who would do me ill.’ “
Highly Commended:
Diamond in a Rough Overcoat by Eugene McCann
“It was the dialogue in this piece that gripped me. ‘Just so’s you know, though, if we did find you were a tout, we’d cut the flute off you an’ stick it in your feckin’ gob…Not that you’d get much of a tune from it.’ It conjured a time in Ireland’s history with a confident authenticity. Very well done.”
Burn by Francesco Sarti
“The writer took me straight into the heart of ancient Rome, as witness to a devastating fire. I thought the piece was extremely well executed, and painted a visceral picture in my mind. I particularly loved the lines: ‘I love him like a drowning bee loves the floating twig. I need him to breathe, to let my wings dry in the wind, and I’m so incredibly grateful, but I can’t fly if he’s with me. I can only die.’ “
From L to R: Francesco Sarti (HC), Adjudicator Louise Morrish, Lesley Bungay (3rd)
First Place: Hope by Jane Agrell
Jane lies along the seat, her head pillowed in my lap.
‘Try to sleep,’ I say, lifting a stray curl from her face, tucking it under her cap. Her cheek is cold, her skin, mottled and grey. This is a symptom of her illness, along with severe pain, bilious attacks, fever and fatigue. Cruel fate that my sister, the author of seven novels including the most popular Pride and Prejudice, a writer at the height of her powers, is reduced to this.
My mind turns to our lodgings in College Street. I am told that number eight is a pleasant property, however, with only the first floor at our disposal, I fear we may be cramped. I smile when Jane asks about our rooms, marvelling at how often our thoughts run along similar lines like cartwheels following ruts in the road. I tell her the drawing room has a large window where, as soon as she is stronger, she may sit and finish The Brothers.
‘Dear Cass,’ she says. ‘I shall be perfectly content with your company and the possession of the sofa.’
This is one small mercy; there will be no Mama taking ownership of the couch leaving poor Jane to manage the best she can lying along three chairs.
At last she sleeps. I glance outside. Relentless rain. A dreary landscape, dark dripping woods, rain-swept fields, a straggle of cottages and a church, its gravestones forlornly scattered in the long grass. Our brother and nephew accompanying us on horseback look quite drowned. There is something pitiful about the sight, something both dutiful and tragic that reminds me of a funeral procession.
At last Winchester appears, a ghost town in the rain. The carriage draws up outside a dark house. My stomach roils. I pray to God this is not a fool’s errand. Mr Lyford says he can cure her. We put our trust in him.
Jane Austen died eight weeks later, aged 41.
Second Place: The Mismaze by Dave Sinclair
While fields submit to winter’s white campaign, clouds kiss and bruise the hills with grey. The wind pins the sky to earth’s window frame and I flee the town to climb my favourite way. Atop the hill, the hard and frosty sward is cut by dark and winding lines. I ask what strange, mad maze is this, with only but a single path? No answer comes – just winter’s wild refrain. You could not know whose feet would trace your craft. But now my steps between the frigid turf decode your labyrinthine cryptograph and bring me to the centre of your work. And though you’re gone, I still remain, a mourner To your death below, in cold and tender water.
To the east of Winchester, on the top of St Catherine’s Hill, there is an area of narrow paths that expose the chalk under the downland turf. This is the Winchester Mismaze, one of eight historic turf mazes remaining in England. It is not a maze in the modern sense but a labyrinth, cut into the chalk, with no junctions or crossings. It is laid out in nine nested squares, similar to those used for the traditional game of Nine Men’s Morris. Although mediaeval in design, its origins are obscure. A local legend suggests it was carved one summer in the 17th century by a boy from Winchester College who had been banished to the hill for bad behaviour. To occupy his time, he recalled a lesson on classical maze design and carried out the lonely task of laying out and cutting the maze. It is said that the winding paths so disordered the boy’s mind that he threw himself off the hill and drowned in the river below.
Third Place: “I am come hither to die,” by Lesley Bungay
I count the stone steps as they spiral upwards, my mind a turmoil of false accusations. One hundred and one steps, cold and unyielding, like his heart. A heart once filled with love, now hardened by suspicion, and whispered lies from those men who would do me ill.
Upwards I climb to the top of the tower, to gaze over London. A city full of anticipation, as I was, not three years past when I stood within these same chambers eagerly awaiting my coronation. After seven long years my faith was strong. I would provide my King with a longed for son, where my predecessor had failed. I weep for those babes since lost and for my one surviving child, Elizabeth. What hope for her now.
For seventeen days I have climbed this tower alone, praying he will dismiss the trial. I write, entreating him to attend that I may plead my innocence, prove my loyalty. He does not come. Now, I sense the city’s unease. Those men who declared me guilty of vial and unspeakable acts know their own heads may face the executioner’s block at his whim. The sunrise signals a new day, my last. They gather in the Great Hall to bear witness. The guards come and I must descend, spiralling downwards, my mind now resolved.
My silk slippers slip, but I must not stumble. I lift my skirts, feet treading lightly, keeping my pace steady. I count to hide the shortness of my breathe, the pounding of my heart. One hundred and one cold, hard, shards of stone. I will not fall. I hold my head high as they lead me to the scaffold. The eyes of those men upon me. I will not falter. I am Anne Boleyn. I am the Queen of England. Those who would have me dead will not see my fear.
Highly Commended: Never Give Up by Shirley Jackson
Margaret Ryan is eighteen, Irish and pregnant. Her family banish her to England to have the baby adopted. Despite her relentless fight to keep her son, the harsh reality of raising a child single-handedly in the 1970s forces her to relinquish him.
Forty-five years later, she’s a widow on a mission to track down the son she lost. Having inveigled herself into his family, she risks losing him again for ever.
NEVER GIVE UP is a Commercial Fiction novel about a woman’s fight to reclaim the life stolen from her and will appeal both to those horrified by the scandal of forced adoption and to fans of psychological thriller writers like T.M. Logan. As a social worker during that period, I am acutely aware of the life-long pain faced by women like Margaret.
Highly Commended: Diamond in a Rough Overcoat by Eugene McCann
The voice cut cleanly through the musky-sweet air, piercing the gloom. ‘So, you’re the cock o’ the North I’ve been hearing about.’ The intelligent face under the Homburg was instantly likeable –quizzical, though– as its owner filled the doorway of the cramped tobacconist’s Patrick had been ordered to.
‘Why should I trust you…? Isn’t the place awash with informers?’ The man’s musical accent suddenly belied menace. He came closer, gliding clear of the door, two others visible to Patrick now, all three wearing similar grey-brown overcoats. Patrick could almost feel the roughness of their cloth as he looked into the man’s eyes, holding ground as the powerful frame angled towards him
‘Plenty girls asked me the same. Didn’t have a killer answer for any of them, either.’
The man glowered silently, then threw his head back, clapped Patrick’s shoulder, and roared like an elephant.
‘You’ll do, young fella…The cut-glass accent… come in handy enough, too.’
Chairs scraped bare floorboards as the men drew them into a circle.
‘Just so’s you know, though, if we did find you were a tout, we’d cut the flute off you an’ stick it in your feckin’ gob…Not that you’d get much of a tune from it.’
Patrick glanced at the other two. One, tall, hair wavy, reminded him of an American singer he’d seen photographs of; the other a youth, slight –thin-faced– the baby-like features making him seem younger still.
‘Let me introduce Paddy and Charlie’ said the man, removing the Homburg. ‘Paddy here’s your new commanding officer. And young Charlie’ –Charlie grinned cadaverously– ‘will teach you the stealthy art of slitting throats. Of the Dublin Met. Cairo Gang, too –under-cover boys– though not quite as invisible as the Brits think…Oh, and the odd mole, for good measure.’ He smiled, faintly.
Patrick drew breath involuntarily, in no doubt now who his unnamed inquisitor was: Mick Collins, an exquisite, rare diamond, must surely have a fault. All diamonds did. Patrick, though, couldn’t see one.
The true-life person in the piece is Michael Collins (1890-1922), seen by some as Ireland’s most famous patriot (though branded a terrorist by the British government for most of his life). Paddy and Charlie are, incidentally, also based on real characters, two of Collins‘ IRA lieutenants – Paddy Daly (1888-1957) and Charles Dalton (1903-1974).
Highly Commended: Burn by Francesco Sarti
I believed my adulterous love for Publius would burn my milk-bathed skin from the inside, from loins to lips, just like he believes in his resurrected Messiah.
I thought our passion would consume us like bark in a pyre, reducing our bodies to a fleeting spark of pleasure, too bright for any pain to remain.
I was wrong.
It’s so clear now, as I watch the leader of his congregation kissing Publius’ feet, blackened by dirt and mud, on the top floor of this Esquiline Hill hovel. I love him, I can’t deny it, but not like a flower loves the sun. Rather, I love him like a drowning bee loves the floating twig. I need him to breathe, to let my wings dry in the wind, and I’m so incredibly grateful, but I can’t fly if he’s with me. I can only die.
A part of me must have always known. That’s why I sat next to the window, so that my thick pallium would hide the orange glow rising like dawn from the plebeian districts. I wear it on my naked shoulders, over my silky robe even if it itches like a disease, even if it smells like dust and manure, even if this is going to be the hottest night in Rome’s history.
The same savoury odour that made Publius’ neck so irresistible is now unbearable in my nostrils, and as I sip the acidic wine that’s supposed to be their Messiah’s blood, I realise I wouldn’t have drunk it for love. I wouldn’t have eaten the mouldy bread, rock solid, and I wouldn’t have gulped the scent of human secretion if it wasn’t for hatred.
I can’t go back to my husband, and I can’t live like this.
What I can do, is sit here as the flames swell, and let Nero’s laugh slowly become mine.