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January Brings the Snow -- Susan Price

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  If that's the view from the front door, I'm staying in. That Storm Goretti was some storm.    And that's the view from the back door. It weighed down and broke my rose arch.            Still....   The Ghost Drum My story is set (says the cat) in a far-away Czardom, where the winter is a cold half-year of darkness.         In that country the snow falls deep and lies long, lies and freezes until bears can walk on its thick crust of ice. The ice glitters on the snow like white stars in a white sky! In the north of that country all the winter is one long night, and all that long night long, the sky-stars glisten in their darkness, and the snow-stars glitter in their whiteness, and between the two there hangs a shivering curtain of cold twilight.      In winters there, the cold is so fierce the frost can be heard crackling and snapping as it travels through the air. The snow is so deep that...

Ambitious Horse Books by Katherine Roberts

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Twenty years ago, I wrote a rather long novel about Alexander the Great from the point of view of his famous warhorse Bucephalus. At the time, I had a brilliant children's publisher (Chicken House) keen to publish my book in hardcover for the 10+ market who already enjoyed my fantasy novels. Unfortunately, bookshops did not share the same view and rejected the hardcover, so publication was delayed while a more suitable format was found for the book that would please everyone - which, as everyone knows, is impossible. In the end, "I am the Great Horse" (edited down from its original 200,000 words to a modest 150,000) enjoyed its scheduled hardcover publication in the US with Chicken House's partner Scholastic, and hit the UK shelves a year later than planned in paperback. Having missed its publicity slot over here, it sold averagely. Or perhaps my novel, being rather long, historical and written by a horse , was just too quirky for the children's market? Anyway, t...

Approaching the Light by Allison Symes

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Image Credit:  Images created in Book Brush using Pixabay photos. I trust it’s not too late to wish you a Happy New Year. January does seem to go on for ever and ever, amen. There is a wonderful Brian Bilston poem about that ( Mnemonic ), which is worth looking up if you haven’t come across this. It always makes me grin. There is a plus side to January. As the month goes on, we are literally approaching the light. The evenings seem longer (especially noticeable if you are taking the dog out).  I like to write and read a mixture of light and dark stories. In the latter, I want there to be some sense of hope. For light stories, I want some “bite” to them. Humorous stories can make you think while they’re entertaining you.  I prefer my characters to be a mixture of dark and light given nobody is perfect and I don’t like wishy-washy, too good to be true portrayals. I suppose this is why I identify far more with Jo March from Little Women than I do with her sister, Beth. I al...

Education is everything, by Elizabeth Kay

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The Hungry Steppe. The vegetation, such as it is, consists mainly of herbs. Not very nutritious, but a delightful perfume! In these troubling times, with AI blurring the boundaries between the fake and the true, we need to think how we educate the young about the lies that threaten our very existence, both environmentally and politically. My father was Polish, and my mother was English. But it was my father who emphasised education, as do parents in most Eastern European countries as they have long memories and consequently good reason to keep abreast of global issues. He enthusiastically subscribed me to the children’s magazine Knowledge . There were beautifully illustrated articles on everything from ancient history to entomology, and I really looked forward to it popping through the letterbox each week. But then, we didn’t have a television, and the internet was way in the future. Facts were facts, and we didn’t question them. The first time I started to have doubts about the school...

Wintering: Misha Herwin

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  January is not a month for make resolutions. When the sky is grey, the wind shaking the trees, the rain bouncing off the roof, it is time to hunker down and keep warm and safe. Even more so when the ground is covered in snow as it has been in many parts of the country this past week. Under those conditions, we are told to stay at home, if at all possible, and avoid all unnecessary travel. To struggle on, would be crazy. We are not designed to fight winter but to adapt to it. Short days and longer nights cause the level of the hormone melatonin to rise triggering the need to sleep. Lack of sunlight affects the mood, spurs the uptake of comfort food, which in turn leads to weight gain. Is that extra fat protecting us against the cold, or preparing us for hibernation? Humans don’t sleep away the winter, but I think it’s only natural to slow down at this time for year. To practise what some call “Wintering” which I see as going with the rhythm of the season. Waking late, going ...

The New York Times' George Saunders Interview

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  The New York Times today published a fascinating interview with author George Saunders .  Saunders, born December 2, 1958, is an American author known for short stories, essays, novellas, novels, and books for children. His work has appeared in publications such as The New Yorker, Harper’s, McSweeney’s, and GQ . From 2006 to 2008, he also wrote a weekly column titled “American Psyche” for the weekend magazine of The Guardian. Saunders is a professor at Syracuse University and has received multiple National Magazine Awards for fiction, winning in 1994, 1996, 2000, and 2004. He earned second prize in the O. Henry Awards in 1997. His debut collection, CivilWarLand in Bad Decline, was a finalist for the 1996 PEN/Hemingway Award. In 2006, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship and received the World Fantasy Award for his short story “CommComm.” His later collection, In Persuasion Nation , was a finalist for The Story Prize in 2007. Saunders won the PEN/Malamud Award in 2013 and w...

An Editor’s Day Out

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  cover by Claudia Myatt The Deben magazine is a modest publication. Just A5 size, 40 pages (unless it bursts its bounds to 44, potentially upsetting both the treasurer and the envelope stuffers), it appears twice a year and is supplied on subscription to members of the River Deben Association. I am its fortunate editor and sometimes like to think of it as the parish magazine of the river. Except that, unlike a parish mag, it doesn’t carry advertising and local event notices are posted by monthly email. So, almost all of those 40 pocket-sized pages are available for contributor articles and photos. As editor I find it endlessly fascinating to read about the different ways people relate to the river – whether they walk by it, sail on it, swim in it, paint it, observe the birds, beasts, plants, fish, creepy-crawlies that live in it. One of my favourite articles was when someone started identifying what might wriggle out when you pull up a mooring rope that hasn’t been used for ...