Friday, 28 June 2013

'BURST' Competition Winner - 'Cold Tea' by Roger Woodcock

                                                                                                                                                 

COLD TEA

Amanda woke with a start, the pain low down in her groin. She turned onto her back, sweat sticking like a limpet to her nightdress. It would pass, all she had to do was lie still, and wait.

In the fetid blackness she listened to the thump of her heart beating against her ribcage. A white light traced across the ceiling, the muffled sound of a car engine impinging momentarily on her brain as it sped along the street. Instinctively she put out her arm, her hand seeking the familiar humped shape lying beside her. Then she remembered and tears clouded her eyes.

He had gone without a word, his wardrobe emptied of the familiar jackets and trousers, old cardigans she`d been threatening to throw out for years. Ken. Good, old fashioned, stick-in-the-mud Ken with his weekly ounce of tobacco and worn-out slippers. How could she have misjudged him so badly. What pent-up passions had lain behind the screen of Old Holborn smoke, what desires and frustrations festered deep inside him as he sat watching David Attenborough and his copulating Rhinos?

She pushed back the duvet and sat on the edge of the bed, the pain now a dull ache. Slipping her feet into her slippers she gingerly felt her way around the end of the bed, her hand feeling for the familiar fluffiness of her dressing gown. On the landing she paused as another wave of pain shot across her stomach. She clutched the banister, beads of sweat pricking her forehead. Outside, the familiar drone of the night mail plane passed overhead. She only knew about the night mail because Ken had told her. He knew everything about everything did Ken. He`d once won a Brain of Britain contest, had his picture blazoned all over the local rag and been interviewed by some skinny crop-haired feminist on breakfast TV.

Slowly she began to descend the stairs. Why hadn`t she put the light on? After all there was no Ken to chastise her any more, tell her how the sudden brightness had disturbed the equilibrium of his brain cells..or some such pompous observation.

She reached the bottom of the stairs and felt for the light switch. The glow threw shadows across the cracked ceiling, showed up the faded wallpaper and the stained and threadbare carpet. Was that why he had gone, she wondered, thinking their relationship was cracked and faded, like the fabric of the old house.

She opened the kitchen door and switched on the light. Another wave of pain hit her, bile rising in her throat. She hung her head over the sink, the smell of disinfectant making the nausea worse. Ken had always insisted on her using disinfectant after every washing-up session. `Can`t be too careful when it comes to germs` he`d said, the stink of his pipe tobacco filling the tiny kitchen.

Gradually the nausea subsided. Clutching her side she lowered herself gently onto a kitchen chair. Why wasn`t he here, making her a drink, fussing over her, telling her she ought to go and see a doctor. Because Ken didn`t do that sort of thing, that`s why. `One has to be stoical about these things`, he`d told her last time she`d had one of her `turns.`

She had no idea where he had gone. And the more she`d thought about it the more she realized she didn`t really care. No, that wasn`t quite true. His salary from the Accountants where he worked would be missed, there was no denying that. But she would get herself a job, something her husband had never allowed her to do. `So demeaning to have people seeing ones wife going out to work`, he had pontificated or more than one occasion. She had trained as a social worker before her marriage. Maybe she would call into their office on the High Street and see if there were any vacancies. She filled up the kettle and set it on the gas ring. No more taking him a cup up to bed only for him to say it wasn`t quite hot enough. Why then had she felt a sudden sadness when she`d reached out for him in the bedroom? Was it the familiar cosiness of their marriage? After all they had been together for nearly half a century. Inertia. Isn`t that what they called it. Like not changing your bank even though you knew you could get a better deal elsewhere. Perhaps if there`d been children.... 

She snatched the boiling kettle from the hob and poured the water into the teapot. As she slipped the cosy over the pot the pain returned, so sharp that she swept her tea cup on to the floor. Doubling up she sank to her knees, cold sweat engulfing her. She had never had pain like this before, her whole body shaking uncontrollably. Slowly she crawled into the hallway, her hand reaching for the telephone table. Pulling herself up she dialled 999 and asked for an ambulance, the pain now so severe she began to sob. Through the tears she managed to give the operator her address. The soothing voice on the other end of the phone said the ambulance would be there in a few minutes and could she make sure the door was left unlocked. It was as she was crawling to the door that she passed out...

She opened her eyes, the face gradually coming into focus.

`Hi,` The voice was soft, reassuring. `You`re in hospital. I`m afraid your appendix burst but we got to you in time and everything is fine. Lucky your husband was there to let us in.`

Amanda stared at the nurse. `My husband..he`s..I don`t understand.`

The nurse smiled. `He was on the drive when the ambulance turned up. He seemed a little upset, mumbled something about a new start before he let the paramedics in. He`s in the corridor now if you want to see him.

Amanda slumped back onto her pillow. `Later....maybe.`

                                                                


 

 

 

 




Sunday, 2 June 2013

Winning stories to be showcased on Facebook

Hello, welcome to the first blog post for June 2013.

The 'BURST' competition results will be known next week.  In the meantime, I have created a Facebook page and will be trying over the next week or two, to copy the winning stories to this page.

This is with a view to showcase your winning stories.

Regards,
Debbie

Friday, 19 April 2013

RESULT for 'START' Flash Fiction Competition 2013


This information will also be posted to the competition website as soon as I am able to access it.  http://www.erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/
Problems with Weebly at present.

Our thanks to Dan Purdue  http://lies-ink.blogspot.co.uk/  for judging the competition entries and providing his book as part of the first prize Somewhere To Start From and you can find this on Amazon http://tinyurl.com/SoToStFr

You can read Dan's report for the three final entries on the competition website (will be posted there soon).

Winning entry - The Castle by Tony Oswick

Second Place   - The Weight of Stones by Jenny Long

The competition was to have provided first and second places only, but I'm pleased to say an
Honourable Mention has been awarded to You Start by Fiona Faith Ross.

SHORTLIST                                                                                                   

Bonds by Jane Connop
Bubby by Gail Aldwin
Caught Unawares by Jan McGeachie
Descending and Ascending by Tim Craig
Don’t Start by Brian Webster
Fresh Start by Barbara Hill
It Started with a Kiss by Keith Havers
Judgement Day by Jilly Gardiner
Room Nineteen by Jim Hamilton
Start by Steve Clough
Start by Esther Doel
Start by Joan Phillipps
Starting Over by Ros Collins
The Castle by Tony Oswick
The Darkness, Waiting by Sinead O'Hart
The Fright of their Lives by Rob Tye
The Leather-Clad Phoenix by Heather Price
The Portrait by Cathy Lennon
The Weight of Stones by Jenny Long
You Start by Fiona Faith Ross

LONGLIST

Don’t you Start by Lyndsay Fisher
Follow Me by Sadie Wikiel
 Fresh Start by Linda Hardy
Incendiary by Renay Allen
Over the Brink by Devika Rajeev
Riot by Lyndsay Warner
Start from Scratch by Julie Kilpatrick


Remember, you may not have won this competition but by entering it you have gained a complete story. I suggest you read Dan's report, read the winning entries and read your entry with a critical eye.  Ask yourself if your entry could be improved then either send it somewhere else, or expand on the idea to make a longer piece of work. 

We are currently inviting entries to the following competitions and would be pleased to receive your work.  Please see the links for full details, rules of entry and entry form:

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-burst-flash-fiction-competition.html

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-open-short-story-competition---maria-smith.html

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-full-stop-short-story-competition---helen-baggott.html

Entry form  http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/entry-form1.html

Thanks to all who entered this competition.

Kind regards,
Debbie

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Shortlist and longlist for START Flash Fiction competition

Shortlist and longlist is below. 

Names have not been included in order to keep the final part of the judging process anonymous.

Names will be added to these titles when the results are known.

I am in the process of emailing you all to confirm if your story is shortlisted, longlisted or not on either list.

As per my email, you are all eligible to be in a December draw. I've organised a draw which is a free-entry, no writing necessary, name-picked-out-of-a-hat draw. Prize will either be a book about writing or one free entry to one of our competitions in 2014 (not decided yet). Two names will be picked out and each will receive a prize. I can only enter you for this if you reply to my email. Don't panic if you've not had an email to reply to yet, I am still working through the list. I'll let you know at a later date on this blog when I've finished working through the list and if you've not been contacted by that time, then is the time to contact me about it.

Thanks to all for sending your entries and do keep writing. Remember, you now have a complete story of approx 500 words. Don't waste the idea you have there, see if you can still use it, perhaps tweak it, improve it or expand it into a longer piece of work. Once you've re-worked the idea, you may find you could submit it again to another of our competitions, or to another market.


We have three further competitions for 2013:
http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-burst-flash-fiction-competition.html

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-open-short-story-competition---maria-smith.html

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-full-stop-short-story-competition---helen-baggott.html


SHORTLIST                                              LONG LIST

                                                                   Don’t you Start
Bonds                                                         Follow Me
Bubby                                                        Incendiary
Caught Unawares                                      Riot
Descending and Ascending                       Over the Brink
Don’t Start                                                 Start from Scratch
Fresh Start                                                  Fresh Start
It Started with a Kiss
Judgement Day
Room Nineteen
Start
Start
Start
Starting Over
The Castle
The Darkness, Waiting
The Fright of their Lives
The Leather-Clad Phoenix
The Portrait
The Weight of Stones
You Start


Best wishes,
Debbie


Monday, 15 April 2013

Swimming the shortlist

You may have noticed I've had a break from the A-Z Blogging Challenge.  I'm still on that break, that's why this blog doesn't start with whatever letter of the alphabet the blogging challenge is at.

If it was an 'S' letter day I'd be well ahead of everyone else and sitting here all smug and pleased with myself. This is because a) the sun shone today so I went to the pool and swam and b) I'm in the final stage of contacting those not on the shortlist for the START competition that Dan Purdue is judging.  You can read Dan's words about the judging process at http://lies-ink.blogspot.co.uk/

For those of you not on the shortlist, I am pleased to say I've organised a free-entry December Draw.  Details of this are in the email you will receive either today or tomorrow.

More soon.




Wednesday, 10 April 2013

I is for I

I have decided I won't be posting in the A-Z Blogging Challenge anymore.

It's a fab idea, but I prefer to post once a week only.

Thanks to everyone who is following me, has commented and please keep visiting as I will be posting soon with some tips about entering competitions and other useful/interesting information. Hopefully I will also have learned how to post to my blog to offer some pictures too.

Cheery bye for now.

Monday, 8 April 2013

G is for Growth

Growth

Hello. 

As you can see, my blogs are still following the A-Z Blogging Challenge for the time being.
This is while I find my feet in the blogging community with my first blog site.

I've decided today to grace you all with my thoughts about growth.  No, don't worry. We'll not be taking an in-depth look at the blistering, itchy, pus seeping, lump on end of my nose but if you want me to discuss how much taller than myself my children have become then like any other proud parent I could go on and on and on.

Yesterday I packed my sandwiches and a drink and took myself on a trip down to the end of my garden.  It was there I rediscovered the allotment. It's not really a grand thing, just a few boxes made out of other stuff that had been left over from something else.  It was our veggie patch, is our veggie patch I should say, and once I master how to post a photo to this blog, I'll keep you posted of our progress in this area.

Our progress means myself and my youngest son who enjoys gardening.

Btw, if you're looking to grow in your expertise of writing flash fiction and short stories, why not pop over to the writing competition website http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/
and choose one to enter.  We're currently accepting entries for these competitions:

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-burst-flash-fiction-competition.html


http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-open-short-story-competition---maria-smith.html


http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-full-stop-short-story-competition---helen-baggott.html


Do you like gardening?

Goodbye and see you tomorrow.

Friday, 5 April 2013

F is for Fun

Earlier today I began thinking about which 'f' word I wanted to choose.

Fabulous, I thought, and I was fuelled into a furiously frisky frenzy. So many flipping fantastic words flying around inside my noddle.

After frittering away fifty minutes frequenting my dictionary, I became frightened this activity would simply leave me a fraught, frustrated and fruitless figure.  I felt I had come to a full stop and considered fetching my friend, Helen Baggott, who is the judge for the free-entry Full Stop competition
http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-full-stop-short-story-competition---helen-baggott.html

Then I remembered it was Friday.  Helen would be at the fish and chip shop where she chats up the fella with the frier in his fingers.

It was then I realised fear was holding me back from making a decision.

I chose freedom by forcing myself to face up to it. 

I'd had fun in making a selection but once the final countdown had begun, that was it.

Finito.


What would you usually be doing on a Friday if you weren't busy with the A-Z challenge?
















Thursday, 4 April 2013

E is for Entry


Entry

Despite the bitter cold I noted the sun shone during this evening and it struck me what a wonderful event evenings are when they stay brighter for longer.

That led me to idle for a while and I stared out to the lawn as the light began to fade. A blackbird and a robin made the last call to eat from the bird table in my garden before flitting off to their nests.

To maintain the strict rules of entry to my garden I’ve erected signs in strategic points around my garden. Signs stating ‘NO ENTRY CATS’ and ‘CATS KEEP OUT’ convince me the neighbourhood cat patrol is being kept at several paws length from my feathered friends, as I rarely see any cats. It’s not that I don’t like cats. It’s simply a fact birds have always ruled the roost in my garden.

The competitions I organise also have Rules of Entry. You can find them if you follow these links:

BURST http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-burst-flash-fiction-competition.html

OPEN http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-open-short-story-competition---maria-smith.html

FULL STOP http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-full-stop-short-story-competition---helen-baggott.html


Good evening to you.

Debbie



Wednesday, 3 April 2013

D is for Dither

Aah, it's that time of day again and today I am mostly having a dither.

A ditherer with desperation am I during a frantic flap through the pages of my dictionary
to ensure the D word I decide to choose today doesn't simply deliver nowt but a dribble of doo doo all over the screen.

I think I have something in my dictionary that will do the deed.  It's the word donation,
because a donation is to be provided by EWG Competitions at the close of the Open Competition
later this year.  http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-open-short-story-competition---maria-smith.html

These competitions provided a £100 donation to charity in 2012.

See my blog post November 12th, 2012 for more info.
http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/blog.html

Thanks for reading.

C is for Chortle

Mornin' all.

Now I am the type who'd rather the day didn't pass with out a good chortle.  This morning was no different as I whiled away a few minutes to consider what to write during my newly- aquired displacement activity of the A-Z challenge thingy.

Many an idea popped around inside my head and gave it a right good tickle.  I was sitting here having a chortle or two about these ideas when I remembered the theme to the current competition is the word 'BURST'  http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/2013-burst-flash-fiction-competition.html

so I'm off now to read a few other A-Zedding blogathoners before I do myself an injury.  

Cheery bye till next time.

Monday, 1 April 2013

B is for befuddled

(this posted on Tuesday 2nd April 0015)

Befuddled.  That was me earlier today as I have only just started this blog and it was starting to lose me.  Not particularly difficult as I am one who can easily become lost, in fact when I was a wee lad it used to be a mission of mine to visit unfamiliar places with a view to doing nowt else except get lost.

Ah well.  Perhaps if you look at the competition website the last thing you will think I am is befuddled as I have listed out all the competitions there for you and if you do have any difficulties, you can email me anytime.

http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/

I'm off now to seek out some other happy A-Zedders.

See you tomorrow.

Sunday, 31 March 2013

A-Z Blogging Challenge (posted at 01.25 am on Monday 4th April)

I've decided to join in with the A-Z Blogging Challenge.  Here is my first post for letter A.

Accessible to All - one aim of the competitions I organise is to make them accessible to all, as far as is possible to do.  This means the competitions are usually open to entrants inside and outside the UK, and to all ages.  There will be times when this is not suitable or appropriate but generally that is the aim.

The fees to the competitions will be kept as reasonable as possible in relation to the prize, and in some cases will be free-entry. This is with a view to keep the competitions accessible to all.

Have you ever experienced a barrier when entering competitions? 

Saturday, 30 March 2013

Welcome to Writing Workshops and Competitions

Hello, my name is Debbie Wilkinson and welcome to my blog.

One reason I chose to create this blog is in order to provide information about the competitions I organise.  I also intend to share details about activities I become involved in, mostly in relation to the competitions although I can't rule out there may be a rogue posting or two discussing  matters about writing with no connection to the competitions I organise.   That's not to say I am admitting to be a rogue and neither am I suggesting I will knowingly allow a rogue to access my blog to make a post. 

Also, as I cannot programme the blog on the competition website to accept followers, namely
http://erewashwriterscompetition.weebly.com/  another reason I have created this site is to ensure I am able to communicate with all you lovely bloggers out there.  Over some considerable time I've read many an interesting and useful blog and I've finally decided I'd like to join the blogging community.

If you like to enter writing competitions you'll be pleased to know the aims of Erewash Writers' Competitions is to encourage and reward writing through means of competitions with free-entry and others which ask for a reasonable entry fee.

Thanks for reading my first blog post.