Welcome to The Garret, Joanne. Let me find you a quiet seat by the window. My Muses can be flighty. Continue reading
Sleeper: #WritersReviews
Sleeper written by J. D. Fennell
Cover by kid-ethic.com
Published by Dome Press 2017
256 pages in hardback & paperback, also available in Kindle format
pacy war-time exploits with added weird
Wed Wabbit: #WritersReviews
Wed Wabbit written by Lissa Evans
Cover by Sarah McIntyre
Map by Tomislav Tomic
Published by David Fickling Books in 2017
244 pages in paperback (2018)
Adventure, hypochondria and belly laughs.
Change of scene, change of mind
The Box of Delights: #WritersReviews
The Box of Delights
Novel John Masefield 1935
Stage adaptation by Piers Torday 2017
Production at Wilton’s Music Hall December 1st 2017 – January 6th 2018
midwinter magic & mystery Continue reading
St Lucy’s Home: #WritersReviews
St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves
written by Karen Russell
published by Vintage Press in 2008
(cover image by Antonio Pisanello)
246 pages in paperback from Big Green Books
a tiny atlas of strange destinations
A Pocketful of Crows: #WritersReviews
A Pocketful of Crows written by Joanne M. Harris
Cover by Sue Gent
Illustrations by Bonnie Helen Hawkins
Published by Gollancz in October 2017
233 pages in hardback
a fierce story of love, death and natural magic
A Skinful of Shadows: #WritersReviews
Seven Swans from the North
The Pilgrim Woman sat by the fire with a single white feather in her hand. Her listeners came and sat inside the Lost Chapel. The last of the sunset striped their faces through the lancet windows. She smoothed the long vanes till the waterproof barbs locked together, and no more callers swished through the dunes. Then she twirled the feather in her fingers and began . . . Continue reading
Swept Along
A storm came and left the hedges ragged and slit. Its hot breath burned the edges of leaves. Scumbled clouds cast grey marbled light on all the broken things. The Pilgrim Woman pulled her scarf tight and walked on.
Then a splash of blue appeared; no more than a puddle’s worth of clear sky. Her eyes widened at that shade. It pooled in her unblinking gaze. Reminded her of the sea and sky blended in the windows of the Lone Chapel.
Did it still stand among the dunes? Had the shape-changing sand swallowed it?
A frond of hair whipped across her lashes. Grey as that old spray-worn oak door. It wasn’t much – the dusty garret upstairs. A neglected place till she came. An unwanted inheritance.
But it had been a kind of home.
She grasped the straps on her rucksack and turned toward the coast. It would not be the same: any more than the sandbanks in the estuary remained as they had been drawn upon the hopeful charts.
And she was different too. Tired of shouting into thronged marketplaces. Tired of voices proclaiming that this was The Way. And having altered her steps, tired of finding that the narrow alleys were stopped by walls too tall to climb. Too many sellers. Too many welcoming faces with fingers outstretched. So little jingled in her purse now.
The clouds thinned. Gusts pinked her cheeks. Her pack might be lighter – but her hoard of stories bulged. Time to share her treaures.