Omen at Fishponds Junction
Down the central reservation he strode, unbothered by exhaust fumes or concrete, face encased in a leather mask.
Down the central reservation he strode, unbothered by exhaust fumes or concrete, face encased in a leather mask.
Overnight, loam has been churned. A fresh furrowed field before me. footpath now forgotten, land lost thanks to vast machines that chew and crunch, split...
It feel like this year has flown by. April vanished in the blink of an eye. I enjoyed being fully recovered and starting to explore more of my new home. I al...
second hand bright ghosts collide, lighting up our motorways in sparks of emerald and indigo. Disruption in the supply chain is our mantra, repeated often to...
Somewhere, possibly close, the kettle boils. I am waiting for my insides to knit together around an absence, watching petals a shade off clouds emerge on pha...
It’s Easter and all the daffodils are screaming at the awakening ground- “Lazy arsehole!” “Good for nothing useless compost!” Rhubarb cracks fresh bones as i...
For the first couple of weeks in March I was recovering from gallbladder surgery, so had a lot of time to read and reflect and watch things as I let my body ...
I woke up in a thousand different realities simultaneously, head stuffed with cloves/ industrial by-products and waste/ a single sustained tinnitus buzz.
and yes, I still gathered branches, and yes, I still wore my woollen coat, but it was unbuttoned, no scarf
I’ve been meaning to do this for a couple of months, but during that time Christmas has come and gone, then I’ve packed to move house, moved to the countrysi...
The sky and each moment expands as I observe it. I’ve forgotten the season but the single layer of skin on my fingers remembers. I am an uncertain bri...
I maintained the gears of the moon as a university job. On my empty days, I polished the levers, tightened the cranks and ensured there was enough oil to gua...
I am hauling all our rugs, books, house plants, our glasses wrapped in bubble wrap and old duvets , all our memories neatly boxed up, every object we own ...
Fresh frost has visited overnight, morning shudders, barely starts Our fallow fields now writhe with blight. Fresh frost has visited overnight, We have l...
Blackbirds sing from the only tree left standing on land scrubbed clean. I am watching these buildings awake as hidden beaks and wings call to light;
Following on from last week’s year in review post, which was more political in nature, I thought I would take some time to reflect on last year from a person...
Another year of political chaos, with three prime ministers, war in Ukraine and a cost of living crisis. It has been a lot. Instead of returning to relative...
During the second spring, gorse opened exploratory canary buds, lending a perfume of coconut to apathetic winds.
November rattled by. I thought I was going to read more due to the dark days and frost but actually I went to a lot of gigs and generally enjoyed myself. And...
Her morning started with misty adolescent mooncore.
After I got married at the end of September, I went on honeymoon to Croatia. It was bliss- two weeks of lying on the beach, reading books and occasionally sw...
I was on honeymoon in Croatia for the start of October, so I relaxed on a beach and read loads of books. It was great. It got me back into reading a lot more...
Drains are clogged with circuit boards again. Flurries of rust flakes carpet the streets. All the air tastes of wet pennies. Every polished gear and lever is...
I came into office because in my possession was an ancient grimoire, at a time of great economic and international instability from which a few will profit, ...
September was almost entirely dedicated to wedding planning and admin. All our hard work paid off though, as the day was incredibly beautiful and full of imm...
In July I caught covid again, possibly for the third time. I’m not a fan of this illness! But it did mean I suddenly had a lot of time on my hands to consume...
Summer is here and I am wilting. This month I went out to a couple of gigs and loved it. I have missed live music, especially during the pandemic.
Our days are longest now, we hold the light solid between our fingers, like putty, before twirling, once more unstoppable. These are days we dream of deep in...
May went so fast. It was a fallow period creatively for me, I put nothing on this blog and didn’t send any poems out. I hid away from the flags and jingoism....
I can’t believe we are a third of the way through 2022. The tulips have bloomed and died back, warmer days are just around the corner. I haven’t done a lot o...
March was another busy month as I adjusted to my new job and did lots of wedding admin. I also prepped and published a weird little game/ poetry pamphlet abo...
You imagined | a field transmuted | into endless red bricks. You | hammered a sign | into the soil and | walked away. Now we carve | out mud and sand | mix ...
February has flown by on gales and storms. I’ve been really busy, performing two feature sets for Fen Speak and (Sm)art Festival, which were wonderful. I als...
In the early days of this blog (5 years and almost 400 posts ago) I used to do monthly roundups. I’ve fallen out of the practice but have decided to revive i...
Last year I got through 65 books. (I’ve kept a list here) Because I’m not really using GoodReads anymore, I thought I would curate a few of my highlights:
Yet again, I sit down to summarize the year gone by and yet again I find myself struggling for words. It has been another year of chaos and contradiction, of...
I’ve been thinking about The Green Knight ever since I saw it a month ago. The film is a hypnotic blend of English myth, dream like strangeness and stiking i...
I draw a square, to represent a former tobacco warehouse, converted by the council into offices, where I worked for a charity. On my desk, a spider plant st...
I’ve spent a lot of this year consciously learning what was previously unconscious. I lost faith in my writing, so I took a lot of workshops and attempted to...
It starts with a whisper, muttered half phrases and small slanders shaking leaves, pushing wind chimes into gentle collisions.
There’s a certain section of the population who tend to get furious when a tv show or film casts anyone but straight white dudes. These people tend to be rig...
https://youtu.be/yIHC-ZMhmHM
This was written in a slow single waltz before the next one
CW: Very brief allusion to suicidal thoughts
In a recent post, Austin Kleon writes about how other writers sort through their work:
This is a series where I interview poets about their process in regards to a single poem. Today we have the exceptional Stuart Buck, a brilliant poet, illust...
I enjoyed Cory Doctorow writing about the lessons he has learned over twenty years of blogging. He describes how quickly the writing practise adds up and how...
you ask me, sitting on the smashed roof tiles and concrete slabs that used to be our home. We are drinking rainwater and petrol from a puddle, drying our t-...
we teach the AI how we scream feed it all our voices alone release all our agony our grief our childhood trauma ...
This is a series where I interview poets about their process in regards to a single poem. Today we have the fantastic Elizabeth McGeown, who I have been luck...
I spin each morning from dream silk allow soft light to pour in a torrent from my ears out into the aether.
This is a series where I interview poets about their process in regards to a single poem. Today I am honoured to have the incredible Ankh Spice, whose poetry...
This is a bit late because of Easter. Spring is in the air, the tulips have taken over from the daffodils and freedom feels tantalisingly close.
I’m working front desk at the Hilbert Hotel. A queue of guests stretches to the horizon, each person sighing, waiting to check out. Some lea...
After Kay Ryan
At the end of this month there was a burst of sunshine and the daffodils we buried in November erupted in their pots. This sudden explosion of sun and colour...
Some advice I hear repeated often is to write every single day. Like all advice, it’s a bit more complicated than it sounds. I think it is generally a good t...
We’ve done everything we possibly can they proclaim on nightly broadcasts, shaking their fists for emphasis as if describing ineffective ancient magic runes ...
This is a series where I interview poets about their process in regards to a single poem. Today I am honoured to have the fantastic Liam Bates, whose pamphle...
This January has been more miserable than most, grey and cold with a lockdown over us. It feels like a lifetime since further restrictions were announced. So...
This a series where I interview poets about their process and writing in reference to a single poem. Today we have Pascal Vine, an excellent poet, a captivat...
I cannot look away from the whorl of galaxies tucked into each curled petal, the supermassive black hole that sits on top of a stamen, dragging all...
I’m going to be featured in an upcoming anthology from Fevers of the Mind. The editor, David L O’Nan, asked for suggestions for a playlist of the music of 20...
Due to the sickening events of yesterday in the USA, I found myself thinking back to when I was studying Weimar Germany in A level history. My main question ...
Usually at the end of the year I write a little summary of what happened in the world at large. (2016, 2017, 2018, 2019.) This year I really struggled. How d...
We were meant to be children of the stars now, Richard thought to himself as he buttoned up his coat. Humans were meant to have escaped this lonely planet an...
This a series where I interview poets about their process and writing in reference to a single poem. Today we have Damien Donnelly, who kindly invited me ont...
We are unified euphoria, one organism joined together, twitching, harmonising, swaying.
This a new series where I interview poets about their process and writing in reference to a single poem. Today we have Amanda Miller, an amazing poet who sha...
Connecting…
This a new series where I interview poets about their process and writing in reference to a single poem. Today we have Pauline Sewards, a fantastic poet I me...
This is the start of a new series where I interview poets about their process and writing in reference to a single poem. I’m delighted to start with Barry Ho...
I’ve been lucky to get lots of stuff out in various places so this is a collection of links to my words elsewhere on the internets:
this winter will be a distant memory but the cold will have set into our bones, the marrow deep in our femurs will have wires of frost running through it.
I’m moving house this month and I released a pamphlet, so it’s all been a bit frantic. Still, here are some things I’ve enjoyed engaging with this month.
‘Welcome to C-Mart. I hope you have a wonderful visit. My name is Cindy. If you need any assistance, you can just call my name and I will do my best to help ...
This website’s domain is my name, it’s my face on the front and I type the words. It lives to promote my work and is essentially a a massive ego trip. But I ...
In an effort to make something positive come out of this year, I have created a small pamphlet of poetry called Refraction. It features ten poems about swimm...
We have seen millions of years stacked upon another in sediment history etched into the stone, outlines and skeletons of creatures beyond imagination who us...
When I ported this site over and recoded it, I looked through old posts. In 2016 I made monthly link posts where I recommended things I enjoyed. Later, I mov...
Surrounded by the long grass swaying in the breeze, the office seemed forever away. Helen could hear the gentle babbling of a stream somewhere nearby. Far up...
From the always excellent Laurie Penny writing in Wired:
shot into
Miss Morris asked us to bring something special in and talk about it in front of the class for everyone else to share and enjoy and so in this cardboard box ...
Were you the stranger dressed in electricity who floated above the tarmac without contact, who smiled in morse code, smelled of lavender and engine oil, who ...
The opening shot is a still lake, first thing in the morning. The sun has just started to beam down on the water. It is a mirror, reflecting the perfect blue...
Drunk dancers stumbling over earth, we expect to leave no trace behind.
There was no sun. The news was full of theories about what had happened but there were no facts, just wild speculation. The government told people not to pan...
I’ve had lots of time to read poetry books, so here are a few I have enjoyed recently that I would recommend:
When the earth was correcting our cabled bodies were sprawled irreparable, most sensory inputs disconnected, transmissions down, smashed by careless hands wi...
CW: Body harm
Do you remember the first time you saw those mountains? How they towered above you? Do you remember your unbounded freedom, how paths lay before you, infinit...
Don’t climb up those ancient stone steps carved into the slope of our tallest mountain up to that egg that sits on the summit, the size of a temple. You don’...
Hello, here is where you can find me elsewhere on the internet:
After yesterday’s post, I happened to be reading The People’s History of the United States by Howard Zinn. He writes about the reaction to the protests about...
Every country is deluded in how they narrate the past. No history is complete and each history is a story shaped to make the narrators feel better. But I thi...
From her vantage point of the second highest branch, Cassie saw it first, growing over the horizon like a bruise. She often spent afternoons by herself in th...
You may notice my website looks a little different. I have moved it from Wordpress to Jekyll, teaching myself rudimentary HTML and CSS in the process. I chan...
What good is this scattering over the grass, this gold and white confetti, these eyes opening at dawn and closing in the twilight? These are Freya’s flowers ...
Echoes and edges were kind enough to set my poem How to hear the hills to an incredible deep soundtrack as part of their live stream collaboration. You can w...
Taken from the review pages of Crack magazine, March 2020
PhaethonOfficial: We are here at the tenth Future of Computational Intelligence conference (#FCIC10). We sponsor a number of PhD students, excited to see the...
I’m very grateful to have a poem up on Nine Muses Poetry called Imposter. It’s a strange little piece and I’m glad it’s found a good home. Check it out he...
I joined a virtual poetry workshop yesterday run by the wonderful Tonic and wrote this: Fading
These radishes distilled the sun, turning it deep scarlet.
I expect these days to fade like photographs left on a windowsill. That’s the hope. The numbers will blur, the weeks will drain of detail and colour...
I turned my poem from NaPoWriMo Day 27 into a little zine.
Today my mind is like confetti thrown to the wind, like a website with every space filled with adverts, all flashing for my attention, like a river delta as ...
The sky is a confusion of clouds whereas just yesterday you could see the galaxy spin. We are out of coffee once again, the internet is often on the blink an...
After Solmaz Sharif
As we tumbled through the void, everything was calm and peaceful if you ignored the constant drone of spycraft. The air was pink electric and crackled with p...
I wouldn’t open that door if I were you. Last year I stored the Atlantic ocean behind it, stuffed it into every corner. I only just managed to close the latc...
“It’s been a while,” the water whispers as I enter, inch by inch, “but what’s a few million years between friends? I know why you abandoned me for land. I fo...
“I know how this goes!” I say to no-one as light starts to intensify, obliterating all detail. Trees will become indistinct shapes in the mist, never coalesc...
The sky sulks. Fresh insults rumble, shadows hide, small drops fall, before the clouds start shouting curses, throwing rain.
I know they have secrets to spill, given everything they’ve witnessed. I’ve tried different approaches, asking “How are you?” directly or “Did you see the ga...
Thick mists and darkness linger. Crows try listlessly to call the day into being, to dissipate the vapour and somehow praise the unknown. One plummets, arrow...
One night last week, I thought I had a breakthrough. I was fiddling with a new set of code in the middle section of the input. I don’t work with the programm...
Given the kindness and cruelty of time, a majority forgot those years where the tilt of the earth increased. Only a degree. Or more. Scientists spoke, we did...
Malaka Gharib shared how to create a little 8-page zine about the whole COVID 19 situation, so I joined in last week. It came out surprisingly sincere. It re...
When I landed I felt the weight of myself rush back into my body like water through an open dam. I was thankful for no longer being a raindrop. I saw the sky...
My former body is discarded over a plastic chair, abandoned to numbness. Now I am these walls, the vending machine in the corner humming its constant mantra,...
Between worlds the shine of the sea, the light that marks the dividing line between our world and our neighbours.
CW: death
Purple clouds transform and jitter over the emerald sky. My limbs are sprawled over silicone grass as I observe butterflies flit in and out of existence. Eve...
After Sei Shonagon
You will need a clear night, far from the city’s illuminated fears, when the dust from the milky way almost floats down around you.
Potential pervades- the message of every saturated Saturday morning American import, a call to action to try and fix a world held together by outlines and ac...
Pious parsons pass pyres, proclaim pretty prayers, preach possessed portents.
The destination displays are corrupted again. Carriages and corridors converge on the horizon, a lifetime’s walk away.
What is going on? I ask the walls every sixteen minutes. The plasterboard doesn’t reply but without checking headlines
As one, blades of grass sharpen, becoming fields of swaying razors.
Marigolds bloom geometrically, thriving under this square sun. Dodecagon pupils dilate.
Seemingly infinite, the night sky is the most consistent falsehood. The moon is nothing more than a hologram, the stars just dead pixels in the screen constr...
On this day, a room darkened by a flash, unfamiliar faces are made abstract by developing camera technology. One is probably mine, now a stranger.
On this day, a room darkened by a flash, unfamiliar faces are made abstract by developing camera technology. One is probably mine, now a stranger.
It’s still magic. The emergence of green from damp soil, adder head coiling up, before unfurling, saluting the sun.
Lost to the comfort of burnt sage and bergamot, I do not remember entering or paying so I arrive to myself already sat in silks.
I've made a couple of my self published books free to download.There's Amber Stars: One Night of Stories, which is my first book of linked stories and Remain...
We the spin, the shimmer. We the sway, the light, the contagion and the cure We the anointing and sometimes the penance.
Forgive me, I have lost my lexicon of the future. Now I search the tangled entropy of brambles and bindweed. Nothing useful emerges, only woodlice.
From Warren Ellis’ excellent newsletter1 Which I highly recommend and you should all be subscribed to. ↩
I joined a Facebook group 1 which has daily prompts. This one was written in response to the prompt: “How do you click: Write a poem filled with noise” poem....
I have a fancy new profile picture thanks to Sam Cavender and his restored Mayima. Oooh medium format expired film. It makes me want to dig out my film camer...
This is the third story in a series I’m publishing monthly throughout 2020. More details here.
So we’re socially isolated for the foreseeable. It’s a weird time, but I’ve been amazed by how people are being incredibly generous. There is so much kindnes...
It’s always nice getting a contributor copy, especially for something you would have purchased anyway. This little book flew over the Atlantic for me, I’m lo...
Social isolation means I’m working through the backlog of things I have to do. So I uploaded this video of my poem Encrypted, which was kindly shot by Chris ...
Humans are worth more than the contents of their bank accounts. That should not be the only criteria we judge them on. Humans are part of society. Humans ar...
I’m delighted to have a poem included in an anthology of poems inspired by Twin Peaks, called These Poems are Not What They Seem, published by APEP publicati...
This is the second story in a series I’m publishing monthly throughout 2020. More details here.
This essay from Jack Underwood blew me away, because he nails down thoughts I’ve had before but have struggled to put into words. He describes poetry as a ne...
Night falls so quickly it breaks apart on impact. Dark shrapnel scatters.
I was very lucky to have a poem on BBC Radio Bristol’s Upload show. The poem is called Encrypted and was written for Tonic, which is an amazing night. You ge...
Theres a new poem of mine up on Fevers of the Mind. Its called Failed Hypothesis, go here to read it.
Just before the door swung open, Amber was certain she could hear voices. When she walked into the small office, they had lapsed into silence. It had sounded...
Blimey, it's the year Twenty Twenty, a year that sounds incredibly futuristic. We're past the setting of Blade Runner. The world is different and weirder in ...
It’s my 200th post on this here website! Hurrah!
In 2019, I read 66 books, but a lot were poetry chapbooks or graphic novels. You can see most of the list on my GoodReads page if you want.
I’m late to the party with my year wrap up. It’s already the roaring twenties. 1 But I still think it is worth looking at where we have been so we can look t...
John Green’s podcast The Anthropocence Reviewed has been a consistent highlight this year, but the latest episode on Auld Lang Syne is particularly moving. T...
Come sip the festive juice. It tastes of cinnamon, cloves, something strange you can’t discern. Join us in the circle as we chant, Tis the Season, Tis the Se...
-and the clouds gather above your head, darker than you thought possible, bringing sudden night and you are now aware this field is too exposed and how you s...
Recently on Twitter, I replied to this tweet about keeping a private anthology.
I’ve been avoiding the election cycle because its just so depressing. Lies after misinformation after racist dogwhistles after lies. It’s disheartening to se...
We’ve found a way to monetize breath.It’s simply a game changer. Can you feelthe paradigms shifting under your feet?We are shaking up the world like a snowgl...
I read a poem at an open mic a couple of months back. I was quite pleased with it. Only recently did I realise the central image was almost the same as anoth...
Pauline Seawards shared this and I just had to share it as well.
The cold makes a home deep inside your weary bones. Frost glimmers and grins.
Hello, I’m really pleased to have a new poem at Highland Park Poetry called Fluvial Dreams. All the poems are water themed. Check it out here.
Be active on social media. Don’t just endlessly spam your book, engage with different conversations. Make book marketing personal! Get a professional t...
I’m really excited to announce my debut chapbook is being published by the fine folks over at Selcouth Station. It’s called Our Voices in the Chaos and is a ...
There is a persistent view that refuses to be shaken that science fiction and fantasy are pure escapism. Usually, this view is from people with limited exper...
we are just hear to tell the truth / tell the good as well as the bad / counteract all the lies / get our message out there / provide some much needed perspe...
Draw a line before your flat door. Put up a sign saying Do Not Cross. Disconnect your phone, gas, the broadband, electricity. Tear up the quarterly newslette...
to: Computersciences@bru.ac.uk
Open mic nights are wonderful spaces. They are brilliant places to try new work in front of audiences and get instant feedback. But more than that, they are ...
I’ve done NaPoWriMo for the last three years. I’ve found it hugely useful to create new poetry and improve my craft. The process of writing thirty poems in t...
Faster Than Light
Rewritten
An Invitation
Emergency Protocol
Conversion Rate
Tempest
The Kite Festival
Ordinary Omens
Thread
Seduction
Spinning
Liminal
Unmoored
Language
Always More
Oblivion
Thirteen
Aeolus
Observations in the Dark
Sequence
Demolition
Remnants of Shock
Playback
Möbius
Dissonance
Below
Downpour
Seeds
For the last couple of years I've taken part in NaPoWriMo, where I try to write a poem every day in April. I've really enjoyed the process. It's got me back ...
I slipped off the viewing platform, slid under the flimsy handrail fell down or forwards or up towards the black hole.I cursed flimsy safety measures but k...
With apologies to Emily Dickinson
I though I was a good typist. I’ve written on computers all my life. I type fast. But the truth is half my time is spent correcting errors. I write fast but ...
Genre fiction is often used to describe science fiction and fantasy, but everything fits into a genre. People tend to dismiss sci-fi as not belonging to the ...
Towards the end of last year, I finished two major projects I had been working on for ages, a short story collection and a poetry collection. I finished them...
For my first book of the year, I sped through Jeff Vandermeer’s Annihilation, the first in the Southern Reach Trilogy. It is classified as science fiction, b...
I’ll finally tidy up this place and keep it neat. It’s too dark! Too many cobwebs and not enough flaming torches. I’ll stop leaving tomes half opened on the ...
It’s that time again when I examine what media I’ve consumed over the past twelve months and pick my favourites. Defining the best of anything is an entirely...
In previous years I’ve written rambly, angry blog posts that tried to make sense of the world around me and mostly failed. This year I’ve given up trying to ...
The problem of writing is that you spend too much time in your own head. Even if you do it as a side hobby as I do, you can spend a lot of time imagining fut...
Some funky spiral stairs in Oxford. Irrelevant to my writing but they looked cool.
My food tastes of rubbish. Every day, I am brought the most sumptuous feasts imaginable, the finest Kobe beef, caviar and gold encrusted truffles. All of ...
Like the rest of the UK, I’ve been steadfastly ignoring anything to do with Brexit. It’s like there’s a ticking time-bomb hanging over our heads and we are d...
Soft wind and raindrops play a tune on dying leaves. I have all I need
I was inspired to write this post when I saw this image by artist Sean Landers:
Houses have faded to grey. Colour slumbers. We drag our feet down monochrome streets, blinded by persistent monotony, unable to see the edge of the pavement ...
A couple of weeks ago, I went to a Quaker wedding. 1 As part of the ceremony, we sat in silence for close to an hour, punctuated now and then by someone spea...
16 AWFUL THINGS HEADS OF STATE HAVE TWEETED TODAY THAT YOU WON'T BELIEVE! GLOBAL WARMING WILL BE 'FANTASTIC FOR BUSINESS' SAYS POWERFUL SOCIOPATH! SOMEONE DI...
There’s a magical tool that allows you to focus right in on any problem. Or you can broaden it out and use it to explore the inner workings of your mind. It ...
Spoilers lie ahead.
Astonishing
Mountain
Dance
Dubious
Chemical
Pinch
Gratitude
Desert
Ethereal
Dizzy
Found
Escape
Spiders
Wilderness
Parallel
Garrulous
Scattered
Unwritten
Control
Aquatic
Gleaming
Boundary
Discovery
Apologise
Grey
I’m doing this again. Last year I quite enjoyed the process of creating a brand new poem every day in April so have decided to do it again.
This blog post is late. I was meant to write it last week, but life got it the way, as it always seems to do. It's not just this week's though; the self-impo...
There’s a certain kind of article you stumble across now and then which consists of important things people have learnt about life. Usually these are linked ...
Spoilers ahead
At the start of the year, we tend to set goals and resolutions. This year is going to be the year I start eating healthy, the year I finally learn guitar or ...
Much like I did last year, I thought I’d take some time to linger on what I enjoyed this year. I’ve already written up my thoughts on the terrible events in ...
So the year isn’t technically over yet. There’s still a good couple of weeks for things to go completely south. I’m travelling first thing next year so I tho...
Hello? This is Frank. I came in yesterday to pick up the keys for flat 65. OK? I don’t see why you have to look it up on the computer, it was only yesterday....
It’s been a while, hasn’t it? How are you? Are you still doing that thing with them and everything else? Oh really? Good to hear.
I’m delighted to feature again on the latest Lies, Dreaming podcast from the brilliant people at Poetry as Fuck. It’s a small little story about lost treasur...
I’m currently in the business of moving across the country. I’m packing up my whole life into boxes. Every time I move I forget how all consuming and stressf...
A quick flash fiction written from a prompt from Chuck Wendig once again. This time, the prompt was ‘There is no exit.
Posts on this blog have been a bit scarce for the last couple of weeks, mostly because I spent a several days in a field in Somerset. I listened to music, wa...
A story written from a prompt by Chuck Wendig at Terrible Minds. This week we had to pick a title, so I chose the Thief of Moons. Enjoy!
So there’s an election on Thursday. You might have heard of it. You probably have your own opinions one way or another. Maybe you don’t care. But either way,...
Kodomoroid communication android by Osaka University and ATR Laboratories, Japan, c. 2014. Photo by Melissa Wiseman
Hi,
KATIE NEWSINGTON: Welcome back. A new study suggests the moon has a more abundant mineral content than previously realised. Interesting stuff. Joining us to ...
Another story from a prompt at Terrible Minds. This week was a mash-up of genres. I got ‘Haunted House’ and ‘Body Horror’. Enjoy!
One of the things reading a lot of fiction teaches you is that everything we rely on in the real world is made up. We are narrative beings and we rely on the...
I wrote a bit about the process halfway through, but I’ve finally finished NaPoWriMo, where you write a poem every single day in April. I had foolishly thoug...
It’s taken me three and a half months, but I finally finished Alan Moore’s magnum opus Jerusalem. Made of a number of interlinked short stories set in North...
For the month of April, I have tried to write a poem a day for NaPoWriMo (National Poetry Writing Month.) It’s been surprisingly difficult to find a differen...
Flash fiction created in response to Chuck Wendig’s prompts. Enjoy!
I accidentally wrote a novel. Well, it certainly started that way. I started working on a short story in December, setting out a really basic outline and run...
Inspired by Poetry as Fuck and Imaginary Advice, I spent a morning remixing* Jabberwocky* by Lewis Carrol. Because…? I’m not really sure why. Anyway, here ar...
Over three years ago, I stopped watching TV. I didn’t have one in the house I was in, so I just stopped. At first, it was strange to not constantly have nois...
Finally, after 9 months of legal battles and back and forth in parliament, it looks like Article 50 is about to be triggered and the UK can start its negotia...
[Prompt from here]http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2017/03/03/flash-fiction-challenge-right-vs-wrong/
If you are a woolly liberal like me, someone who believes in compassion for all and the importance of civil liberties, then these are dark times. The prevale...
I wrote this from a Story prompt given by Chuck Wendig, over at Terrible Minds I hope you enjoy!*
In these days of increasing insanity in the world of politics, I find myself thinking more and more about the fiction of George Saunders. He understands that...
Every few months or so, an article comes around that reminds me I’m spending too much time on the internet, looking at pointless things and wasting time. Thi...
Bloody hell, what a terrible phrase ‘Alternative facts’ is. Similar to last years ‘post-truth’ that the UK media were so fond of last year, it seems the Amer...
I am here today to announce there is nothing wrong. Nothing at all. Everything is fine. Rumours you may have heard to the contrary are simply that- rumours. ...
I was listening to the rather excellent Book Shambles podcast the other day. It is a rambling discussion about books and literature, usually with a guest to ...
In another example of running a controversial story to get clicks, the Huffington Post published an article by Laurie Gough that argues that self-publishing ...
2016 was a curious year. Politics ate itself and the internet took over all discourse. But personally, it was pretty good. I published two books, one a colle...
What a year. It started with David Bowie dying and somehow went downhill from there. A rabid media stirring up hate forced the British people to shoot themse...
On a long coach journey back from Leeds a couple of weekends ago, I listened to Chris Gethard’s podcast Beautiful Stories from Anonymous People. I was recomm...
Now the nights are drawing in and daylight is a distant memory. We surrender ourselves to the dark and cold, waiting and hibernating until spring.
Hello
Last week, I published a new ebook. Called Remain Vigilant, it consists of two linked one act plays set in the same fictional government agency that deals wi...
I have a new ebook available. It’s called Remain Vigilant: Two Linked One- Act Plays. It’s available from Amazon or Smashwords. Smashwords is pay what you li...
Science fiction is an escape from our mundane reality to another shinier, brighter alternate world. There’s a whole universe of unusual aliens to discover. I...
In the shock generated in the wake of the US election, one refrain I keep hearing from people was what does it matter to us? Sure, people feel bad for the US...
Summer is a distant memory now. We huddle around the fire for warmth and watch the leaves slowly drift to the ground. It’s chilly outside. Best to draw up th...
One of the most important changes I have implemented in the last couple of years has been a creative routine. I find it helpful to work regularly towards a g...
I finally got round to listening to the new Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds album Skeleton Tree. It is an incredible listen, but also quite harrowing. After tw...
Oh boy. If ever there was a book that was designed to make you furious about the current state of the world, this is it. Although The Shock Doctrine was publ...
So I was going to write about something else entirely, but then the I stumbled on The Daily Mail on Twitter. I try to avoid it when I can because it is alway...
Summer has flown away, the trees are turning and autumn has hit with a punch overnight. All of a sudden it’s a bit grim outside and we hunker down, gather st...
When I was a teenager, I wrote poetry. Well, maybe that’s the wrong word. It was half-baked doggerel chopped up into lines that showed how really angsty I wa...
Thank you all for attending in such trying circumstances. Dobson sends her apologies.
Captain Fantastic is a brilliant film. Sensitive and compassionate, it tells the story of a family isolated from society, who are forced to go cross country ...
I was away for a large portion of August, with my phone deliberately turned off. I was in the Isle of Skye and saw amazing things, like the sunset above. As ...
I’m just back from a week in Scotland. I spent a couple of days at the Edinburgh Fringe, then onto the incredibly beautiful Isle of Skye.Then back to Edinbur...
So this is a post on freewriting and i am carrying on writing without stopping and i can’t stop i just have to keep writing writing got to keep writing and-
There be spoilers ahead
I’ve been really busy this month with all good things. I went to three music festivals, canoed down the Thames and generally had lots of good times.. But in ...
I was at Tramlines music festival in Sheffield at the weekend. There was sunshine, there was music, there was booze. Lots of good times were had. One of the ...
Free speech is hard, especially on the internet. You should have the ability to say almost anything without fear of legal repercussion. Other than words that...
Ponyo is a joyous film, a celebration of childhood and youth with beautiful visuals. It’s pure joy from start to finish, with inventive twists and a unique s...
https://www.youtube.com/embed/nKF_0dEY2Oc
I’ve finished reading Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction by Jeff Vandermeer. It’s a great read, full of useful information and...
I wrote this for More in Common from the Royal Court, which is well worth checking out. It was written fairly quickly so it’s not perfect.
Given the clusterfuck that is happening in the UK at the moment, I’m probably going to be doing a few more political posts in the future. Just a heads up as ...
On Saturday, some wanker walked into a nightclub in Orlando and killed 50 people with a rifle, injuring many others. It was an act of hate against the LGBTQ ...
I wrote this in response to a prompt over at Terribleminds.com. It’s a bit rough, but I hope you enjoy Shake-Up
About a year ago, I got frustrated with my writing and decided to mess around with my first drafts and discarded attempts at stories. They had been languishi...
Another month gone already. It feels like no time at all since I wrote my last link roundup, but here we are again. This month I’ve mostly been reading The B...
I’ve been a fan of David Mitchell since reading Cloud Atlas in my early twenties. Since then, I have enjoyed almost everything he has written, so I was excit...
I mentioned in a previous post how I was inspired to share more of my writing byShow Your Work! by Austin Kleon. This little book has been surprisingly helpf...
I’ve been hugely excited to listen to the new Radiohead album A Moon Shaped Pool. It’s really good, thankfully. There’s lush, layered sounds and a strange ty...
Here, in no particular order, are some things I enjoyed over the last month:
Riggan: How about Jeremy Renner? Jake: Who? Riggan: Jeremy Renner. He was nominated. He was the Hurt Locker guy. Jake: Oh, okay. He's an Av...
I picked this short novella up recently and devoured it in about a day. Having previously read some of Ian McEwan’s later novels such as Saturday and On Ches...
After I published my first book of short stories, Amber Stars, I took a week off writing. I enjoyed the achievement of actually finishing a project and publi...
In the past month, I’ve been messing around with a strange form of ‘writing’ called blackout poems. I was inspired by Austin Kleon, who helped popularise the...
The live music experience is still thriving, even as CD sales fall. For many bands, it is the primary way of making a living. It seems odd that even as we de...
Last Saturday, somewhat spontaneously, I went to see High Rise, the newest film by Ben Wheatley. I’d previously seen Sightseers and A Field in England and en...
Last Good Friday, I found myself hunched over the computer, fiddling with styles and formatting while outside was bright sunshine. It was all in aid of getti...
Why not take five minutes out of your day to watch this: