Thursday 16 June 2022

The casual vacancy by J.K. Rowling

 

Image from bookriot.com   and  irishtimes.com       

A big novel about a small town, The Casual Vacancy is J.K. Rowling's first novel for adults. It is the work of a storyteller like no other.

About the Author
J.K. Rowling is the author of the bestselling Harry Potter series of seven books, published between 1997 and 2007, which have sold over 450 million copies worldwide, are distributed in more than 200 territories, translated into 74 languages, and have been turned into eight blockbuster films. She has also written two small volumes, which appear as the titles of Harry's schoolbooks within the novels. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them and Quidditch Through The Ages were published by Bloomsbury Children's Books in March 2001 in aid of Comic Relief. In December 2008, The Tales of Beedle the Bard was published in aid of the Children's High Level Group, and quickly became the fastest selling book of the year

For further information about J.K. Rowling, please visit her new website: www.jkrowling.com

Book Description
When Barry Fairbrother dies in his early forties, the town of Pagford is left in shock.  
Pagford is, seemingly, an English idyll, with a cobbled market square and an ancient abbey, but what lies behind the pretty facade is a town at war.

Rich at war with poor, teenagers at war with their parents, wives at war with their husbands, teachers at war with their pupils... Pagford is not what it first seems.  
And the empty seat left by Barry on the parish council soon becomes the catalyst for the biggest war the town has yet seen. Who will triumph in an election fraught with passion, duplicity and unexpected revelations?

Prologue
Barry Fairbrother did not want to go out to dinner. He had
endured a thumping headache for most of the weekend
and was struggling to make a deadline for the local
newspaper.
However, his wife had been a little stiff and
uncommunicative over lunch, and Barry deduced that his
anniversary card had not mitigated the crime of shutting
himself away in the study all morning. It did not help that
he had been writing about Krystal, whom Mary disliked,
although she pretended otherwise.
“Mary, I want to take you out to dinner,” he had lied, to
break the frost. “Nineteen years, kids! Nineteen years, and
your mother’s never looked lovelier.”
Mary had softened and smiled, so Barry had telephoned
the golf club, because it was nearby and they were sure of
getting a table. He tried to give his wife pleasure in little
ways, because he had come to realize, after nearly two
decades together, how often he disappointed her in the big
things. It was never intentional. They simply had very
different notions of what ought to take up most space in
life.
Barry and Mary’s four children were past the age of
needing a babysitter. They were watching television when
he said good-bye to them for the last time, and only
Declan, the youngest, turned to look at him, and raised his
hand in farewell.
Barry’s headache continued to thump behind his ear as
he reversed out of the drive and set off through the pretty
little town of Pagford, where they had lived as long as they
had been married. They drove down Church Row, the
steeply sloping street where the most expensive houses
stood in all their Victorian extravagance and solidity,
around the corner by the mock-Gothic church, where he
had once watched his twin girls perform Joseph and the
Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, and across the Square,
where they had a clear view of the dark skeleton of the
ruined abbey that dominated the town’s skyline, set high
on a hill, melding with the violet sky.
All Barry could think of as he twiddled the steering
wheel, navigating the familiar turns, were the mistakes he
was sure he had made, rushing to finish the article he had
just emailed to the Yarvil and District Gazette. Garrulous
and engaging in person, he found it difficult to carry his
personality onto paper.
The golf club lay a mere four minutes away from the
Square, a little beyond the point where the town petered
out in a final wheeze of old cottages. Barry parked the
people carrier outside the club restaurant, the Birdie, and
stood for a moment beside the car, while Mary reapplied
her lipstick. The cool evening air was pleasant on his face.
As he watched the contours of the golf course
disintegrating into the dusk, Barry wondered why he kept
up his membership. He was a bad golfer: his swing was
erratic and his handicap was high. He had so many other
calls on his time. His head throbbed worse than ever.
Mary switched off the mirror light and closed the
passenger side door. Barry pressed the auto lock on the
key ring in his hand; his wife’s high heels clacked on the
tarmac, the car’s locking system beeped, and Barry
wondered whether his nausea might abate once he had
eaten.
Then pain such as he had never experienced sliced
through his brain like a demolition ball. He barely noticed
the smarting of his knees as they smacked onto the cold
tarmac; his skull was awash with fire and blood; the agony
was excruciating beyond endurance, except that endure it
he must, for oblivion was still a minute away.
xxxxx

Click here to buy Paperback or Kindle Edition 






Thursday 9 June 2022

About a Girl by Lindsey Kelk

 

The brand new summer bestseller from the immensely popular Lindsey Kelk

About the Author
Lindsey Kelk was a children’s book editor and is now a magazine columnist and author of I Heart New York, I Heart Hollywood, I Heart Paris, I Heart Vegas, I Heart London and The Single Girl’s To-Do List. When she isn't writing or watching more TV than is healthy, Lindsey likes to wear shoes, shop for shoes and judge the shoes of others. She loves living in New York but misses Sherbet Fountains, London, and drinking Gin & Elder-flower cocktails with her friends. Not necessarily in that order.

Book Description
Tess Brookes has always been a Girl with a Plan. But when the Plan goes belly up, she’s forced to reconsider.
After accidentally answering her flatmate Vanessa’s phone, she decides that since being Tess isn’t going so well, she might try being Vanessa. With nothing left to lose, she accepts Vanessa’s photography assignment to Hawaii – she used to be an amateur snapper, how hard can it be? Right?

But Tess is soon in big trouble. And the gorgeous journalist on the shoot with her, who is making it very clear he’d like to get into her pants, is an egotistical monster. Far from home and in someone else’s shoes, Tess must decide whether to fight on through, or ‘fess up and run…

Prologue
I never meant for things to get so out of hand.
I’d lost my job. I’d lost the love of my life. My mum
wasn’t talking to me. My best friend was epically pissed
off. My flatmate probably had a hit out on me by now, and
in twenty-four hours I would likely be homeless.
But, you know, swings and roundabouts.
Considering how incredibly cocked up my life was, I felt
surprisingly chipper. Happy even. Stretching out as far as I
could, I curled the tips of my fingers around the
headboard and scrunched my toes up in the crisp white
cotton sheets that had found their way to the foot of the
bed. Everything was still, everything was calm, and I was
smiling. Somewhere across the room, I heard a phone
beep. Instead of jumping up to see who needed what and
just how quickly I could get it for them, I concentrated on
the sound of the shower running in the bathroom and
pressed my lips together to refresh the tingling sensation
before it faded away. The stubble burn that tickled my
cheeks was altogether more stubborn. I was so happy.
My best friend had been wrong. Everything was going to
be OK. Probably. Not that there hadn’t been some sketchy
moments over the past week. Not that I hadn’t considered
having myself committed. More than once. But now it was
almost over. I’d survived. This afternoon I would get on a
plane back home. I would call everyone who needed
calling, and instead of behaving like a jabbering shell of a
human, I would be cool, calm and collected and make
things right. If I could get through this past week, I could
get through anything.
Seven days ago, if anyone had even given me a hint of
what was ahead, I would have crawled underneath my
desk and refused to come out. But as I had learned from
every television show I had ever watched and every book I
had thought about reading, you never knew how strong
you were until you had to find out. I was definitely
stronger than anyone had reckoned. Either that or I was
clinically insane. It was a fine line.
xxxxx

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Journey Home

 

True Story

After a lovely weekend. ..I ended it with a crazy Monday and Tuesday. First the stupid storm that hit the south east left me enjoying the country side in two different buses for hours. I'd nvr seen so many sheep and wind turbines in my life...plus light green coloured river.

Finally, I made it to Ashford International. ...nobody on the darn train knew if it was going to St Pancras or somewhere else - it was too freezing cold outside the train so we all sat on the train which was waiting for minutes on end at the platform.  I couldn't be bothered either to go find out. 

Image:chatelaine.com

After logging a suitcase that had a mind of it's own plus a heavy backpack on my back in the freezing cold for hours - I was ready to follow the train wherever it was going rather than come off to check where it was going. Besides, this was the only train on the platform. It doesn't seem like any other was coming and it was toe curling - freezing cold. I guess everyone on board was feeling the same. By the way why are buses in the country so expensive. 

On getting home,  I spent the rest of Monday and the whole of Tuesday hugging my radiator, figuratively speaking, as it was very hot. Then the whole of Wednesday attacking my computer....it's Thursday, am looking forward to what today will be like. 
I can't stop sneezing, I think I caught cold!!!!

By OGN Okafor
Copyright (first edition publishef on 31/10/14  04:04am  FB) 

Monday 11 November 2019

Poems and Comics










image from cyacartoonist and lizzlizz



Themes of a story


Theme: this is the main idea that stretches through an entire story/ or the message the author wants you to take away from the story – usually an understanding of life or human nature.

Why not pick one of the themes below and write a short story around the it....don't forget to send us your short story to post her for you.
Here are some examples of themes:

Picture source: hil.troy.k12.mi.us


Picture source: hil.troy.k12.mi.us

cooperation


Picture source: hil.troy.k12.mi.us



All Images from "blogs.socsd.org/kchristieblick/ "