D G Moody

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I have 98 stories published in 9 collections on the site.
My stories have been read 153460 times and 53 of my stories have been cherry picked.
166 of my 744 comments have been voted Great Feedback with a total of 171 votes

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Douglas Moody

I live in a village near Cambridge and close to St Ives where my wife and I (with our Spaniel) enjoy country walking. When we can get away it is to the coast or up north and to Scotland, where I find my ancestral roots. I have dual Aussie and British nationality, from when I lived in Oz; and I’ve been fortunate (when younger) to have travelled through Asia to Europe; I’ve also spent time in Canada and the USA.

I’ve worked for the Aussie and local British governments, now gladly retired. My inner journey has taken me via the Jehovah’s Witnesses, Quakers, a Buddhist Monk, Christian monasticism, then a Catholic, finally to end up at our local Anglican church; now I’m content to let the mystery be!

I’ve been writing poetry for more than thirty years, so there is hope for me yet. My influences are from the lyrical tradition with some attempt at metre and rhyme. I don’t compose anything quickly, preferring to slowly craft my lines, the result being my own style and not what I’d consider to be in the contemporary fashion. What skill I possess seems to be more in shorter poems.

My stories

Grasshopper

Image courtesy of Wikemedia Commons.
1 likes

A Soldier Remembers

I wrote this eleven years ago, as part of a Stations of the Cross writers group; and I wanted to give it a more unviversal relevance
Cherry

Slava Ukraini!

I jotted this down as a relief from the constant news reports; and I hope it strikes a chord. And while we cannot directly help, we can donate to the Red Cross

Swifts

Swifts Swirling high in the blue sky their yachting wings bringing them across Africa and Spain; Swifts will soon be returning; homing back to our...
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Auschwitz from the Air

In 1944 an allied reconnaissance flight took a series of photographs over Auschwitz, while also photographing the nearby factory complex at Monowitz. It was only years later that it was discovered that these pictures were of the extermination camp, during the final frenzy of the murder of 437,000 Hungarian Jewish men, women, and children.

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