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Mungrisdale Writers News

This page, from time to time, will be populated with news items about our group

HOMEWORK

Homework will be posted on the Forum under the topic 'Homework' in future.   This will enable discussion and clarification if needed about the topic between members.   It will also enable any member to post it which will help share the jobs round the group.  

Dates for your Diary

dating@60

and other tribulations

ISBN No 978-0-9550249-5-5

Now featuring as one of the Best Sellers in Cumbria and reprinted in time for Christmas sales! 

Order through Amazon - see home page - or purchase through good booksellers including Waterstones, Bookends, The Bluebell Bookshop and On The Shelf, Caldbeck

Stop Press:   Angela, live, on BBC 2 last Friday - well done!

 

John Bagness

A much loved member and committee member of Mungrisdale Writers, John Bagness, died during February. John was a very quiet unassuming person who had great depths of insight and knowledge. He was a Quaker. Members of the group are privileged to have known him and his poetry was appreciated by all of us. Five members of the group were able to attend his funeral at the Quaker Meeting House in Penrith. We send our good wishes to his family

Dates for your diary

25th March and 1st April at Mungrisdale Village Hall from 10.30 am to 1.30 pm and then Happy Easter!

After Easter, we meet on 29th Apil, 20th May, 10th June with Angela - please note that this is not fortnightly and then our summer programme kicks into action with meetings on 24th June, 8th and 22nd July and 5th and 19th August.   Sue is organising this programme - watch the forum and this space to find out more.

Congratulations

To Dorothy Crowther and John Fryer

Dorothy for winning first prize in the Society of Medical Writers non fiction section in the autumn competition with her article entitled  'Peace in Africa. Vain Hope or Work in Progress?'    
Dorothy also won the non fiction section of the Cumbria Literary Group annual competition with an article.  A City Walk.. A Walk Around Newcastle.
John Fryer was second in the same section with his Walk Around Edinburgh.

Landscape and Inspiration - Iona

7th-12th May

Angela will be running her Iona course again next year.   She says it is for the last time .........?    But, just in case, that's so, you need to book your place soon to be sure of securing it.   Go to http://www.angelalocke.co.uk/iona.htm for further details.
The New Writing Cumbria website is now up and running: find it at www.newwritingcumbria.org.uk. It’s still in its infancy, with a lot more information still to go up there. In due course I hope it will be linked closely into the newsletter, which will include links directly to the website, but we’re not quite there yet with it.
 
One of the things the site will include in the near future - under the ‘New Writing’ tab at the top - is the opportunity to publish your own poetry and (very) short fiction. We’ll set a theme every three or four months for submissions,  and selection will be by guest editors who are published writers themselves who will, hopefully, add a few lines of critique about each piece published too. I’m working on submission guidelines at the moment, so next month I look forward to receiving your works!
 
In addition, there’s a forum where you can post your own writing link to your website if you have one, as well as discuss matters literary to your hearts’ content. To get you started I’ve posted a question: If there were a CUMBRIAN Man Booker Prize - for any sort of book, be it poetry, fiction or even non-fiction published by a writer living and working in Cumbria - who would you shortlist?  (title just says ‘What Book Would Win Your Cumbria …’ as it seems there’s a limit on number of characters in a title  - so beware of that!) You’ll need to register to use the forum – just your user name and password.
 
The next e-Update will be at the end of October. Any news from you that I receive in the interim will go up on the website.
 
Sue Allan
Project Officer – Eden Arts


One we have been waiting for ...... and still some time to go ....

Out May 28th 2010

On Juniper Mountain by Angela Locke 

O Books   ISBN 978-1-84694 -301-0
Forward by Sir Chris Bonington, CBE
'For every journey there has to be a first step. When, in 1992, Angela Locke travelled to Nepal for the first time, she had never been anywhere in the Developing World. This first journey would be a life-changing experience which would culminate in the founding of the charity Juniper Trust, of which I am the Patron, which now works to provide basic facilities for the poorest and most disadvantaged communities across the world. This is a book about an inner journey, not an adventure in a conventional sense, but a journey of discovery nonetheless. No mountains were summitted, but there is real adventure, told against a background of the sublime beauty of the Himalayas and of the gentle people who inhabit the foothills of Nepal.
 
And a bit about the book:
Leaving her isolated Lake District valley, writer Angela Locke finds herself on a life-changing journey in the Himalayas.
 
Angela travelled to Nepal in the early 90's to research a new book, and found herself on a journey of discovery which would change her life. Meeting a Tibetan monk in the supermarket before she left, he told her that 'the book is not important, but the journey is...' She would find herself going back and back to Nepal, becoming immersed in the life of the country, and experiencing a deep spiritual awakening. Her experiences would lead to the founding of the charity Juniper Trust which now works in Education and Health with the poorest communities all over the world.

Making Changes

Pam Pottinger, writing as Annie Bates, has contributed a short story to an anthology 'Making Changes' published by Bridge House Publishing at £8.99, buy it through our Amazon link or  at The Bluebell Bookshop, Penrith.   It is about an ordinary working family who decide to leave their homeland and uproot to the UK told through the eyes of the 16 year old daughter of a glassmaker who is upset about having to leave behind her home in Bohemia and her elderley Grandma.   A short extract of her story can be found in Pam's showcase.

 

And another one -  Annie Bates, alias Pam Pottinger, has done it again.   This time she has a short story in this collection

OUT MAY 13th £8.99

In The Shadow Of The Red Queen...

"We hope you will enjoy this collection of short stories. They have been selected because we hoped that each one of them would either make you laugh or cry or at least muse a little about the glorious game that is life.

 

One of our authors introduced the Red Queen and it became apparent that she is a little like Jung's goddess. If we use our imagination a little we can plot her trajectory in most of our stories. Hence our title. She can be bitterly cruel but also has a wicked sense of humour."

Perhaps you would like to have a look at Bridge House Publishing and see if you can get a story published!

The Church of the Sunday Jazz
Geoffrey Smith

.

Geoffrey has published a booklet of poems, which you can get from him direct
Geoffrey Smith

Available now from Wilde Words:
30 Waters Meet, Warwick  Bridge, Carlisle, CA4 8RT
At £5 00 post free

Congratulations

 

To Vi Taylor.   Vi, who is one of the backbones of our group, has published a collection of her work under the title

Words

are Thoughts

are Pictures

these poems reflect on a long life and show the changing face of events and landscapes through the perspectives of age.  They are full of insight and show a keen observation and sense of humour.

To Dorothy Chalk, one of our founder members who has just published a collection of her poetry under the title "Listen" (ISBN 0-9550249-4-4). Dorothy's book is full of images of Cumbria, the hills, lakes, weather, flora and fauna and of her faith in God as her, and their creator.

To Sally Dalglish whose poems which have been published under the title "Winter" (ISBN 0-9550249-3-5) have been inspired by changes in seasonal weather and man's behaviour.  

Reflections from Mungrisdale Our second collection of prose and poetry in our Reflections series is out now.   The theme is Travel and it contains some of the poems members submitted for the Words by the Water competition earlier this year.   This, and our first collection on Water, is available at 50p each.  

Congratulations

 

To Fenella Davies, writing as Fenella Madoc whose book "La Saison des Mangoustans" has been published by Presses de la Cite.   We wait for it to be published in English! - the language in which it is written - but in the meantime congratulations to Fenella and her agent for securing publication (and a very good advance!).

Rhythm

Sue Banister led a session on rhythm for us.  She kept us hard at work writing poetry and looking at rhythm.   We learnt about commonly used rhythms including the iamb - short, long (di dum) the trochee - long, short (only), the dactyl - long, short, short (tenderly), the anapaest - short, short long (interrupt) and the spondee - long, long (browbeat).   We learnt that most of Shakespeare and much English poetry is written in Iambic pentameters ie a collection of five iambs on each line which essentially mirrors the way we talk.  For example "The curfew tolls the knell of parting day"  However, anything goes and it is good to experiment with different rhythms in order to emphasise words and ideas "To be or not to be, that is the question".
The Wag's Tail

Look out for our Publication

The Wag's Tail and Other Stories from Mungrisdale Writers

This is our first book of short stories.   Copies are now available price £4.00 per copy.   Click here to order any of our publications.  Click here to read a review of The Wag's Tail  

June 2005

Kaleidoscope Reviewed

Glynn Matthews, local poet and President of the Cumbrian Literary Group, has reviewed A Cumbrian Kaleidoscope.   Click here for full details.

 
A Cumbrian Kaleidoscope our book published in May 2005 is a collection of prose and poetry which has been inspired by living in Cumbria. It costs £3.00 and is available from the Bluebell Bookshop, Penrith, the Post Office Caldbeck and Book Ends, Keswick.
Royal Visit
Prince Charles opened our new home in May 2005, The Village Hall and Recreation Rooms at Mungrisdale, Here he is seen talking to our tutor, Angela Locke with Dorothy Chalk, Treasurer and Secretary, in the background.   Prince Charles expressed great interest in our work and took a copy of Murrain, a collection of our poetry and prose inspired by the dreadful food and mouth epidemic.
Picture by Derek Horn (click picture to enlarge)

All Write

All Write - The newsletter for writers and readers in Cumbria always has a comprehensive list of competitions and local events.   It is available free of charge and is published regularly throughout the year.   It is supplemented by monthly email updates.  To get your copy email sue.allan@edenarts.co.uk with your name and address. 

 

 

The Mungrisdale Village Hall
   
 

Annual General Meeting

Our 2008 AGM elected the following:

Chair: Dorothy Crowther   Treasurer:  Paula Lawrence;    Secretary: Jill Faux;  Committee Members: Sue Banister, Dorothy Chalk, John Bagness and Sheila Simey. Angela Locke was coopted under the new constitution   Dorothy Chalk is Publications Co-ordinator and Sue Banister is Performance Co-ordinator.

 
Haiku The Haiku has 17 syllables. The first line has 5, the second has 7 and the third has 5 syllables. It should in a very few words paint a complete picture.