Showing posts with label short story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short story. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 January 2018

Writing...


In recent years I've written short stories mostly about my childhood. Keeping memories alive and colourful. They're true stories with a little added, because a storyteller always adds a little. When I write short stories I am a storyteller, not a historian. 


And now I'm wrestling with a novel I started a few years back. It all began when I was 14 and walking home from school past bullies who gave me a really hard time. This was the 70s when Northern Ireland was in the middle of civil war. So, a girl dressed in a convent girl's uniform was an easy target for lads who 'kicked with the other foot'. I was spat upon, shoved onto the road and had stones thrown at me. I'd had enough. I created in my mind's eye a companion to walk home beside me, an Amazonian warrior. She was built like a brick s**t house, carried a sword and a shield and made me feel not so alone. She was the brave parts of me manifested. She helped me deal with the sectarianism.


The novel is about her, her origin, her life and her adventures. Fiction. Although her history took some shape over 40 years ago I began writing it down in 2016, the words gushing out of me onto paper. Hard copy. I ended up with 70k words which I then cut down to around 40k. The beginning of the story needs work and the end of the story is strong. But the middle is the hardest, trying to pull it all together so that it reads well, so that the story flows. I've been putting off finishing the novel even though it excites me when I'm working on it. It excites me so much that already ideas for 2 subsequent novels have taken form. I just need to sit down and write it, not worry whether it's a good tale or not. I'll leave that up to the publisher.



'Everyone has a book inside them, which is exactly where it should, 
I think, in most cases, remain.' Hitchens


Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.

Tuesday, 13 December 2016

ABADID 13...Writing in 2016...


As well as drawing I also write. My time is not equally split between the two artforms but although I draw most of the time, every other day, the writing comes in waves and then seems to recede. I'm okay with that, I write when I need to or am consumed with a story that must be written down. The words will then tumble from me over the keys onto the screen and are edited again and again until I'm happy with how it reads. I speak them aloud to myself because the sound of them is as important as how they read silently in my head.

illustration and story in 'Bold'

At the beginning of this year I received a copy of an anthology which included a short story of mine - Art & Literary Submissions - and haven't had anything published since then. 
doodle

Three short stories were written for Tenx9 at the Black Box but I didn't get down to the theatre to read any of them aloud. The first, Ageing, covered the life of my father and his personality change after having a series of strokes. And the 2nd, Mental, touched on mental health, raw, uncut and terrifying. There's a cathartic effect when you write about your own life and about the lives of those connected to you. A Cognitive Behavioural Therapist once told me that standing before a group of people to read aloud something about yourself can be a healing release of emotions previously contained or hidden. I found that by reading my stories at Tenx9 I unburdened something, even if that story had humour. The third story entitled Fear did have humour, set at the end of college when my grant had run out and I hadn't yet got a job or claimed benefits.


I then wrote The Crow, a very short story about a vision or imagining I'd had. A powerful unburdening of negative emotions (always good to do). Sometimes the story dictates its length and you just can't extend or shorten it without altering its integrity. I did place this for submission in the Mslexia short story competition.

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image supplied by Sinead O'Donnell

An interesting project, undressing the architrave, which involved me illustrating the writings of another resulted in my artwork being included in the event at The Guesthouse in Cork, Eire. It was interesting to complete work based on Sinead's writing which was very different to mine and which threw up such vivid images in my mind. There's some discussion about a selection of the writings and drawings being included on an Arts website - I'll link that when it happens.


Other bits and pieces I've written since January are for a novel I started two years ago. I had begun the story when I was fourteen and in 2014 I began to knit together a more cohesive tale. My PC wasn't working and I hadn't yet bought a laptop so I wrote it longhand. Later, on a laptop, I began to edit and reduce what I'd written to two-thirds of what I'd had. It totals 40k+ words and there are a few chapters in the middle which although have been planned have yet to be written. This year I haven't spent as much time on it but now and again a scene jumps to mind and I write it up. If I make a conscious effort to make a change next year it'll be to set time aside for this project.

I attach a little from the beginning of the story below, omitting some phrases and descriptions as they paint the setting and the culture of the characters (I'm not ready to share all yet). Unsure of how to publish a 'long' story I've been giving some thought to presenting this tale as a weekly comic strip...


Opening Paragraph from Novel

In a room hewn from rock its crystalline walls sparkled from the many candles. The Official Birthing Sister, Fortura, stood over a woman in a chair whilst calling instructions, demanding obedience. The woman, heavily pregnant and about to give birth, sat in the ornate chair like an uncomfortable queen. Her long red hair, lank with perspiration, shrouded her face as she dropped her head with weariness. The chair was huge, carved with the...stages of woman...The figures, arms entwined with each other, curved along the back and sides of the seat. No cushioning made the hard wood a difficult perch for a woman about to birth. A third woman, Donnia, watched silently. Yet by the gleam in her eyes and the hardness of her lips it was evident what she thought of this foolish ritual.

Yessa, tired of obedience, got up awkwardly, turned around and leaned over the seat with her legs bent. The long finely woven garment she was wearing trailed upon the stone floor, its embroidery trodden. Fortura spoke sharply.
'Sister, you must be seated until the moment of birth.'
'No!' the red haired woman replied, her voice hoarse with pain, ' I will stand.'
'You act like a Half Sister from the villages, Yessa. Be seated! Bear your birthing with dignity. Your offspring may well swell the numbers of our sacred...lines.'
Yessa had had enough. Heavily pregnant and uncomfortable with crampings she'd needed to stand. Turning to seek help with this truculent sister the enraged Fortura left. Once she was out of earshot the Half Sister whispered,
'Quick, Yessa, you are ready. Squat and push before the old harridan returns. It is how any woman with sense gives birth.'

© copyright Roisin O'Hagan




Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.

May blogpost - Short Stories

Tuesday, 24 May 2016

Short Stories

'Pear Tree' 2015


I by no means refer myself as 'an author' but in between creating art I write short stories. From about the age of 6 after being handed a copy of 'Those Dreadful Children' (Enid Blyton) by my big sister which I devoured, unhearing my mother's call for dinner, I wanted a typewriter so I could write stories. I think I had the impression that stories unfolded themselves when the keys were hit. Yeah. 

So, I'm going to share a short story I wrote last year. Most of the stories I've written in recent years have been about my life, as a child in the heart of the Co.Tyrone countryside or in the nearby town. The stories have my perspective of life and I'm sure my siblings, if they were to write about the same events, would write from a very different perspective. That's the beauty of a story, it can have many facets.

The stories were written to be recited before an audience at the Black Box theatre in Belfast as part of the tenx9 events and at the Lyric Theatre as part of Bounce! festival. I feel something is lost unless you hear the sounds of a soft Co.Tyrone accent which I'm told I lapse into when reading them aloud. I hope to attach a recording of them to my blog but that's something I need to work out how to do. But for you and my friends in the Deaf community, I hope my written words convey some of what I feel.




The Gift
performed at the Black Box 

I had 2 good parents. My mother hailed from Ireland, my father from Australia.

My mother told us tales of growing up near a border town. Of walking dusty roads to school barefoot in the Summer and of making butter in the churn. My father told us stories of plucking ripe oranges from the trees and of seeing flocks of brightly coloured budgerigars. Our mother's stories might have been from a different time yet they seemed familiar. But my father's tales to the imagination of a Northern Irish child were nothing short of wondrous. Any other colour than the usual crow black and speckled brown thrush was exotic. Like hearing picture books coming to life.

My brother, five years older, spent time with me as close siblings do, making up games, squabbling and also sharing. He had a big red trike with a bell and a storage box at the back. He was kind enough to wheel it up to the top of the rise of our country road, encourage me to climb up, to hold on tight before he let go. Off I went, my legs sticking out at either side, too short to control the pedals, my knuckles white around the handlebars and my screech trailing behind me in the air like a loosened ribbon. The big hedge beside the henhouse saved me.

I was 6 years old and Christmas was coming. I could expect a generous gift plus some smaller surprises. And I believed in Santy with all my heart and soul. The purveyor of children's dreams. I had been very good for the previous few weeks, doing what I was told with determined steadfastness. No one had to tell me twice to bring my plate to the sink, I was offering to do chores, I had tried my hardest not to quarrel with my brother. A light shone from around my head. I was an angel. I wasn't being left a lump of coal in my sock.

Thanks to my big sister's encouragement I had begun to read Enid Blyton books. Engrossed, often beyond hearing my name being called, I became lost in tales of families different to mine. I wanted to write stories. Someone must have mentioned I would need a typewriter. Imagining my stories would unfold as I pressed the lettered buttons, I would ask Santy for a typewriter.

I talked and talked about how I was getting a typewriter for Christmas. I had seen one and explained how it needed paper and an 'inked ribbon'. The latter I wasn't sure about as the only ink I knew of came in a bottle. Liquid blue. The typewriter would have a handle and knobs that turned. And a bell that dinged, a bit like my brother's tricycle. To this day I believe that I talked to my parents about the typewriter for weeks on end, if not months. That's what I remember. In reality I probably mentioned it in a flurry of excitement amongst a list of other perfect Christmas presents. I was a child and flitted from one idea to the next like a sparrow.

It was my mother's task to take me to see Santy. She drove me into Omagh where he could be found waiting in Andersons Hardware shop. On the way she asked me what I would say. Did I know what I wanted for Christmas? Once again I talked about the typewriter, for hadn't I been telling her about it for weeks. She heard me out and then said,
"Remember to say 'and if you haven't any typewriters I'll take a budgie.' " 
Startled, I protested, for I hadn't realised that Santy could possibly run out of things. But she insisted, rehearsing me as we drove along the road to town.

Past the shovels and the lawnmowers there sat Santy in his ruby red regalia. In the most magnificent wooden sleigh, painted blue and with white swirls along its side. The joy of climbing into it and sitting beside this bestower of gifts. Strands of tinsel twinkling and fairy lights glowing, Christmas tunes playing in the background. Assuring him I had been very good I told him what I would like for Christmas. I promised to leave the obligatory glass of sherry and mince pie. But out of the corner of my eye the magic wavered a little. I saw my mother nodding her head in encouragement and being the good child that I was I added 'and if you don't have a typewriter I'll take a budgie'. In hindsight, Santy must have looked at me askance. Many girls my age might have been satisfied with a doll.

Christmas morning arrived in a cold snowfall. I hardly took the time to pull on my dressing gown and slippers before running along the cold lino towards the warm kitchen. I scurried through the door and knelt down below the crib and the tree, the space around them piled with presents. And I looked and looked but the shape was wrong. It didn't look like a typewriter. Instead it looked like a cage and there was a small green bird inside that was cheeping at me.

Unbeknownst to me during one of our father's childhood stories, when I had exclaimed how much I wanted to see a budgerigar, a seed was planted in my father's mind. It involved him, 3 weeks before Christmas, driving 70 miles to a pet shop in Belfast and 70 miles home again. All for me. The gift was hidden in my father's workshop, away from my sight and hearing. The fun my parents and siblings must have had on Christmas Eve, encouraging me to go to sleep so that the gift could be brought into the big kitchen. With what joy they must have anticipated the look on my face when I would see the surprise the next morning. Roisin's wish was coming true.

No matter how long you stare at a bird in a cage it will not turn into a typewriter.

Our parents had brought the three of us up to be respectful. We were polite and well mannered. If you received a gift you said 'thank you'. So there were no tears or tantrums. It would be explained to me later that day what it was and where it hailed from and I would feel happier. It would become, over the next few years, a bone of contention between my mother and me, how often to feed it and clean its cage.

But then, that Christmas morning, I saw it clearly. My visit to Santy and the deal I had struck. At that moment some other little boy or girl had my typewriter and I had a green bird in a cage. With all the disappointment of a 6 year old I sighed heavily and declared aloud, 
'I wish I'd never mentioned the aule budgie'.
© Roisin O'Hagan

Tomorrow's blogpost: 'Artwork process'

Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.

Sunday, 1 May 2016

Art & Literary Submissions...



'Sax' & 'Piano' Feb/March 2016

I set myself the task in February that each month I'd make at least one submission, either a piece of art or a short story I'd written. I thought it'd be an achievable goal, not too demanding, with up to 4 weeks every month to prepare something. And in March I met the challenge, sent off some artworks to Bennigans Bar Gallery in Derry. The theme given was 'chromatic' and as Bennigans is a music pub I could see the parallel between chromatic colour and chromatic scales. 

Working towards a theme has pros and cons. It can be helpful to have a narrow framework from which to create. Or it can result in something forced if an image/storyline doesn't jump to mind. With the given theme I knew what I wanted to draw, had been looking at saxophones and was intrigued with the complication of their construction as well as the beauty of their shape. The piano is something dear to me as I learned to play it as a child and have recently started practising again. (love Bach, love Ravel, love Debussy)

I completed the artworks within three weeks and sent them, wrapped in a bubblewrap factory's entire stock of bubblewrap inside a large forest's worth of cardboard, overland by Ulsterbus all the way to Derry where the lovely Rebecca picked up the parcel. I didn't get to preview the exhibition but saw photos posted on facebook. I didn't sell anything - perhaps a more traditional approach might have fared better there. It's still worth testing a gallery space to get the feel of it. It is all part of the process of submission.


A short story I submitted in March 2015 took, understandably, a much longer process from submission to publication. It involved an initial acceptance with an agreement from me to allow some editing. Very little was changed, some grammar and two sentences that really didn't add anything to the story. A good editor is priceless, honing the story yet retaining the essence given to it by its author. I was entirely happy about the few changes made. 

I'd also sent in some artworks to support my writing and although it was great to see my story illustrated the quality of printing wasn't wonderful. This is in part down to me sending in lower resolution images than desired, something to be wary of in the world of digital art. Every submission brings some learning.

The submission deadlines were extended which would affect the publication date but again, this is was a very acceptable delay as without the extension I might not have been included. By January 2016 I received a copy of the book containing my story and I felt jubilant. Plus, the book's compiler said some very decent remarks about my story and art in his press releases. 

However...although I received a copy of the book I did not receive a fee. And this is a bone of contention among creative people. There's a saying 'you'll get great exposure' which at the end of the day really isn't worth much. You'd need to be moving in very high circles for that to have a positive effect on your earnings but those who are are in high places within the art or literary worlds have got there by charging for their work and being valued for doing so. By only accepting a hardbacked copy of the publication I not only did myself a disservice but did a disservice to others. The art worlds are being financially supported less and less every year. Each time we agree to do something for nothing we add to that lack of support. Next time I'll be asking for a fee.

Regardless of mistakes made it's important to get out there and seek opportunities in which to submit work. I've found by signing up for newsletters and blogs as well as reading national magazines on art & literature I keep abreast of what's happening. There have been times I've missed a submission deadline but the work I did for that gets sent elsewhere. Try not to take personally any rejections, it's not about you as a person, it's more likely it's that your work doesn't fit that particular gallery/publisher. Good Luck!!

Links:

Tomorrow's blog: 'Decorative Planning'