Blogs

Lucy Mangan (2023) Bookworm: A Memoir of Childhood Reading.

Reading is what I do. That’s the explanation I often give for my views. I sometimes add, I also write. But most readers aren’t interested in that. Lucy Mangan does both. She shares her home with her Bookworm husband and child and around 10 000 books. I love books too, but I’m not allowed to love them that much. ‘Books have not isolated me, they have connected me,’ Mangan tells us. Reading is an unnatural act. Think of it in analogous terms of...

Walden (2023) film written and directed by Mick Davis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walden_(2023_film) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walden Walden is a good name for a film. A good name for an American character. Walden (Emile Hirsch) is a court stenographer in a small southern town. The film was shot in Atlanta. Everyone knows each other. Everyone knows Walden. But he’s really not worth knowing. Penny dreadful. I was going to explain the plot. But if you’ve watched as many Scooby Doo cartoons as I...

Nora Okja Keller (1999) Comfort Women

Comfort Women by Nora Okja Keller began as a short story. Keller turned it into an acclaimed debut novel. Comfort Women sounds kind of nice. A pseudonym for mass rape, torture and mass murder by Japanese soldiers who invaded Korea in the same way England invaded Ireland. Japanese Imperialism, claiming to be ‘for the good of Koreans’, failed when atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The roots of genocide remain because some...

Story and Poem of the Week and Inspiration Point

Posted by onemorething: So much wonderful writing this week. It's ALWAYS hard to choose Picks of the Week! Our Poem of the Week is celticman's brilliant and moving Memento Mori. https://www.abctales.com/story/celticman/memento-mori Our Story of the Week is one we've all been following avidly - Ewan's Don't You Step on my Blue-tacked Screws. Excellent writing. https://www.abctales.com/story/ewan/13-dont-you-step-my-blutacked-screws This week's...

Wladyslaw Szpilman (1999) The Pianist.

I don’t usually read books twice. But I was browsing and picked Władysław Szpilman’s autobiography again. He was born in 1911. He had two sisters and a brother. They were taken with his mother and father, East, for resettlement. They were killed by the Nazis. Wladyslaw survived the Warsaw ghetto. The Warsaw uprising. He was almost killed by his Russian saviours. He was one of the few Jews to survive. He needed not just one miracle but many...

Henry Marsh (2022) And Finally. A Neurosurgeon’s Reflections on Life.

Henry Marsh was once part of an elite group of around 200 neurosurgeons in England. Not only that, he’s a Sunday Times Bestseller. His focus here is letting go. With the help of an editor, this is his diary written over a year from the Covid-19 epidemic. His fears and doubts as he moved from being part of the establishment to just another NHS patient. A fearful old man with cancer of the prostrate. ‘Although I was to come to terms fairly quickly...

Story and Poem of the Week and Inspiration Point

Huge Thanks for all the amazing writing this week. The variety and quality is staggering, and I have enjoyed reading pieces again and again, while trying to make this very difficult decision! A late and most welcome arrival is another brilliant, thought provoking instalment of Jane Hyphen's Parcel For You, which I look forward to seeing in print and on screen in the future: https://www.abctales.com/story/jane-hyphen/parcel-youpart-27 Ewan has...

Bill Bryson (1998) Notes from a Big Country.

In the introduction, Bill Bryson explains to the editor of the Mail on Sunday , who is an old friend, the reasons he can’t write a weekly column for the magazine Night & Day . Notes from a Big Country are a collection of these columns published in the Mail on Sunday , 1996-1998. It would be the equivalent of me publishing my blog column. The Big Country Bryson refers to is America. He is a returning citizen taking with him an English wife,...

Carly Phillips (1993 [2006]) Crossing the River.

Crossing the River was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. It’s not one book, but many stories linked to what it means to be human, to be black and bought and sold, to be despised because of your skin colour. I wasn’t paying much attention to the story’s through-line or theme. ‘A desperate foolishness. The crops failed. I sold my children. I remember. I led them (two boys and a girl)…My Nash. My Martha. My Travis. Their lives fractured.’ ‘The...

ABCTales and The General Election

As a Registered Foundation Charity you may (or may not) know that ABCTales isn't permitted to express support for any political party. This doesn't mean however that our wonderful and talented editors can't reflect their own personal views in their writing. We welcome people from across the whole political spectrum so long as they keep to our terms and conditions

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