Sunday 30 December 2012

Colchester Poetry December Sunday Matinee

Today, I attended and performed at the Colchester Poetry Sunday Matinee performance at FirstSite, Colchester.

There were eight performances in total.

Peter Turner performed three beautiful and amusing songs about life, prehistory and Guantanamo Bay of all things. 

Jonathan King delivered two very touching poems of friendship and absence, ending on a wonderful comedy limerick, which made me chuckle.


Martin Reed told a selection of amusing short stories and fables.

The screening of "Never a Cross Word" directed by David Fox was an interesting homage to the silent movies of the 1920s with a bit of slapstick thrown in.
 
Ashleagh Hat's two poems were interesting critiques of the modern world.

Alex Yeandle sang some thought provoking songs, including a wonderfully touching song of unrequited love.

The matinee closed with Tess Gardener performing three of her poems, which were powerful and expressive as always.


For my own part, I read an abridged version of  'The Mysterious Incident of the Glass Eye' - a short story I wrote earlier this year, following a writing exercise at the Colchester WriteNight meeting.  It tells the humorous tale of two police officers investigating a gruesome and mysterious death. 



To read the story on an earlier post, click on the link below.

The Mysterious Incident of the Glass Eye by Annie Bell

The Colchester Poetry Sunday Matinee takes place around the last Sunday of every month, from 2-4pm at FirstSite Colchester or 15 Queen Street.

Check for dates on the Colchester Poetry Facebook group HERE.


Saturday 29 December 2012

Colchester Poetry Open Mic Night - December 2012

On Saturday 15th December, Colchester Poetry hosted the December Open Mic Night at SlackSpace Colchester.

From the outset it looked destined to be filled with Christmas spirit.  There were mince pies and drinkies galore.  Not only that, within ten minutes of it all kicking off, it became clear that the whole affair would be compered by none other than Santa Claus himself. 

There was a fantastic range of poetry, stories and comedy from the assembled wordsmiths and the evening was very entertaining, even if I did feel like I had wandered through my television set into the middle of a Vic and Bob sketch by the end!  


If you like poetry, you should definitely come along to a Colchester Poetry event.  The next one is the Sunday Matinee on Sunday 30th December 2012 at FirstSite Colchester.

For my own part, I performed six of my poems - 


Elusive Sleep
Infirm
Grecian Liar
My Past Existence
Wilfred Owen
The Ballad of the Chris Hoy Incident

Here is one of them, which was written after my Great Uncle became rather poorly.

Infirm 
by Annie Bell

Life is so simple, when you are young.
There are no aggravations,
No supplications, applications,
No real ramifications in life,
Which can't be fixed with a plaster and a kiss.

An injury to the leg? A plaster and a kiss.
A grazed elbow? A plaster and a kiss.
A bully? A plaster and a kiss.

The longer life progresses, 
The more we are alone;
Expected to cope for ourselves.
Knowledge and truth prevent white lying comfort.
Monsters and imaginary fears in the dark
Remain in the dark,
Remain real and ever present.
There is no kiss and no plaster.
The monsters remain there.
After us.
Terrifying us.
Consuming us.

Older still and even more alone,
Or are we just lonely?
A single glass of dessert wine
In a pool of its own sugary gloop
Leaves a sticky ring on the coffee table.
Why is the Shiraz always gone?
Why are we always wrong?
Where is that comforting song?

At our oldest ... we are utterly alone.
We crave attention and affection
Yet give loved ones deflections.
We crave visitors - desire them
Yet we push them away.
Dismissed as cantankerous old buggers,
Our inner strength concealed by frail bodies.
Our life long worth in question.
No kiss;
No plaster
Can fix that.  

 © Annie Bell 2012

Friday 28 December 2012

Cake ...

Knowing that WriteNight's anniversary meeting was coming up, I decided to bake a cake to celebrate.  

My friend Sonja and I baked two sponges - one vanilla and one chocolate.  We mixed up a vat of chocolate buttercream icing and stashed it in the fridge ready for the next day.

The following day, I carved the cakes into the shape of a book and added a chink of cake for the spine.  I glued it all together with chocolate buttercream and iced it all with fondant icing in blue and ivory.  

Here is the result.  It didn't last long!

Sunday 9 December 2012

Colchester Write Night Meeting

On December 10th, WriteNight celebrated its first anniversary and we decided to celebrate this landmark with a little party.  My friend Sonja Holmes and I made a cake in the shape of a book, as you can see below. 



In addition to many delicious baked foodstuffs and drinkies, we all completed an insane writing exercise, devised by the 'evil genius' Colin Murugiah.  

We each plucked four letters from a hat and came up with words starting with those letters.  All 49 words were then written down and we had to create a story containing all 49 of them.

The words were as follows:

blank,  fryer, green, prize, queen, golf, vehicle, fresh, orangutan, joy, angry, nodded, Nick, dance, sky, cedar, luscious, old, ugly, transmogrify, drum, excited, saliva, knife, Winter, Yule, usury, zombie, irritate, knickers, zero, pants, xenophobe, migraine, internalise, temperament, umbrella, rampant, existential, herbivore, snow, chocolate, oblivious, anxiety, starfish, jammy, dodgy, mercurial, pedagogical.

It was a very challenging but entertaining task.  Here is what I managed to come up with.  I have coloured the challenge words in green.

Disgruntled Zookeeper 
by Annie Bell 

"Pants!" I yelled as the hot fat spat from the fryer.  The aroma of frying chips filled my nostrils, causing a tsunami of saliva to build up.

As I waited for the fresh sticks of white potato to brown off, I cursed my recently self imposed herbivore diet.  Those chips would have been so much better, if they were enhanced by a tasty piece of fish.  

Working at the zoo had ruined me.  I couldn't bear to stand there at lunchtime, biting into a juicy quarter pounder, only to spot the wounded face of Queen Nick - the orangutan - gazing accusingly at me from behind his wall of glass.  It's not as if I was eating Daisy - the zoo cow!  Anyway, the guilt Queen Nick had imposed had somehow been internalised and I had transmogrified into this green eating zombie with a meat deprived, angry temperament and a zero tolerance approach to those pedagogical bastards with their blank expressions and their hands-on approach to primate development.  I'd show them a thing or two!

So back to my chips.  The tiny red marks from the fat spatters began to irritate.  I thought back to the strange events of that afternoon.

It had been an unfortunate day.  I'd woken up from a full scale, epic anxiety dream - you know - the sort where you realise, far too late, that you forgot to put your knickers on, before leaving the house.

Work had been average.  I'd taken great joy from winding up that mercurial little xenophobe Sergey, with his luscious lips, cedar aroma and bad attitude.  Jammy little git had just been awarded a top notch prize for new approaches to zookeeping.  I had done all the work for it but he, chocolate teapot that he was, had taken the credit for it.  The old witch in charge was utterly oblivious to the entire injustice and I had had enough.

With a migraine cooking my eyes and the fear of the odious usuries frm Barclays Bank coursing through my mind (my overdraft was a bit weighty), I headed for my vehicle.

As I stepped into the Winter chill, I was on the edge of an existential crisis.  The knife in my back was smarting and the sky looked dodgy; sort of grey and heavy.

My Golf sat waiting to carry me home. I climbed into the seat and turned the key.  The engine burst into life and the stereo followed suit.  My favourite band blared out.  'Ugly Starfish' rocked my world.  the beat of the drums entered my blood, aligning my pulse with their beat, until all I could do was to go ahead with that insane dance you can only do when driving.

It did strike me that a passing pedestrian might laugh as I nodded and headbanged my way home.

As I drove, the sky began to unburden itself, throwing feathery flakes of snow at my windscreen. Excited, I beamed.  It was almost Christmas.  Might we end up with a Yuletide blanket of snow and a nice payout for yours truly?  That'd be nice.

I parked my car and headed indoors, dancing rampantly to the noises in my head, my umbrella protecting me from the snow.

Suddenly, a toxic aroma awoke me from my reminiscence.  I'd burnt my damned chips! 

 © Annie Bell 2012

Thursday 6 December 2012

Colchester Poetry December Meeting

On Tuesday night, this week, I attended December's meeting of Colchester Poetry.

It was a fantastic evening, with Baden Prince Junior providing a workshop on performance, which was both entertaining and informative.  I, personally, gained a lot from the workshop, learning how to handle performance anxiety amongst other things.

In the second half of the meeting, everyone read out poems they had prepared on the themes of 'Medusa' and 'Blank'.  As always, it was thoroughly enjoyable and I enjoyed the poems I heard.

I wrote a poem for the occasion, based on the themes, which I have chosen to share below.

Colchester Poetry meets on the second Tuesday of the month at 15 Queen Street.  

Grecian Liar
by Annie Bell

Shall I compare thee to the great Medusa?
Thou art more dangerous and more toxic
Than she could ever be.
Thy head of vicious snakes invisible
Might terrify me to my very soul
But no-one else can see them;
Thou keepest them concealed
Beneath thy veil of pure deceit
And all remain deceived.
But not me.
Thou art my own personal Medusa.
One look at you and my mind goes blank
As my body turns to stone.
Thou art my own personal Medusa.
Thou spakest of me with venomous tongues
That hissed and spat acidic filth.
Thou art my own personal Medusa.
A vile, vicious, cruel and nasty abuser.
Medusa;
A liar, a cheat, a bloody confuser.
Now I have exposed thee, come not near me,
For from today, I will never more fear thee,
For I'll cut off thy snake heads 
With a sword of wisdom; of truth.
So never darken my door again
Or I'll write thee a vicious end with my pen. 

© Annie Bell 2012


Tuesday 4 December 2012

NaNoWriMo - Extract from 'Midnight' by Annie Bell

Following on from yesterday's post about my NaNoWriMo novel, I thought I would post an extract.  It is a first draft but would love to hear any feedback on it. 

The next day, June 1st, was an interesting one. The boys all came down for their breakfast. As Cecil and Ivan chewed through their porridge, they seemed a bit too quiet and I was troubled by it.

“What are you two up to?” I asked.

“Nothing,” said Cecil, angelically.

“We were thinking of going out for the afternoon. We want to go fishing in Brightlingsea and build forts.” Ivan blurted out, unchecked. Cecil scowled at him.
 
“It is summer,” Cecil added. “and we always go to the beach.”
 
“If I've told you once, I've told you a thousand times.” I told them. “Steer clear of Brightlingsea beach. I've heard some horrendous stories about that place and besides that, all beaches are off limits because of the war.” I was really worried about my mischievous youngsters. They had been nagging me for ages to go back to the beach. We hadn't had our annual outing since Reg's departure. It didn't seem right to have our family outing without our fort building champions and it was now completely forbidden to go near any beach on the east or south coast due to the dangerous coastal defences which had been put up.
 
“Mum...” they both whined. I threw them a stern look as they both stood there in the kitchen, hands behind their backs, their faces painted with innocent smiles, looking as though butter would never soften in their mouths, let alone melt. They made me seem ridiculous, clucking around them like an old mother hen.
 
“No. I will not say it again. You can go to play with your friends as you normally do,” I put on my cross voice. “If you mention it again, you will not go out and you will have your father to answer to.”
 
“Humph. Ok … but can we go and play with Dennis and the others instead?” asked Cecil.
 
“Yes. That would be fun instead,” agreed Ivan. “We're not stupid enough to go to the beach after what you just said, Mum.”
 
I continued peeling potatoes for dinner and, despite my better judgement, I nodded, giving the boys permission to go out and see their friends.
 
I had my misgivings regarding what they might be up to, but I was in absolute shock when I found out what they actually ended up doing.
 
One hour after leaving the house, my naughty, disobedient boys scampered along the train tracks, following the slow train through the marshland to Brightlingsea. They were beyond excited as their naughty plan drew towards its climax. They even raced onto the swing bridge, risking being tipped headfirst into the horrible estuary mud as they balanced behind the train. How they weren't caught sooner, I will never know.
 
As soon as the lads arrived in Brightlingsea, they headed straight for the beach, the salty sea air reassuringly familiar to them as their adventure progressed.
 
As they approached the beach, the changes since their last visit were stark. The waterline was marked with dense structures of scaffolding, barbed wire and other sorts of spiky and unfriendly looking apparatus. Unfortunately, to these two, excited boys, these defences did not really represent a warning as perhaps they should have done.
 
“Let's go crabbing!” cried Cecil joyfully, heading onto the sand. “And we can practise building forts too. Then we can beat the others next time we come to the beach, when the war is over!” Ivan stood back for a moment, pondering the tremendous defeat he and Cecil had suffered against their brothers just last year. As his more adventurous brother sped across the smooth, golden and worryingly empty sand towards the sea, his mother's warnings rang in his ears. “Come on Ivan!” yelled Cecil with excitement. “You have the scraps and I want to catch a massive crab.” With that, Ivan forgot his concerns and ran over to his brother, giggling naughtily.
 
Suddenly, the boys' voices were drowned out by the roar of a Lancaster bomber passing overhead. They looked up, their mouths hanging open as they watched the elegant machine making its way to fight the enemy. Unfortunately, the clattering roar of the Rolls Royce engine prevented them hearing the voice of a man in forces uniform, who stood on the sea wall, having just come out of a bunker near to Bateman's Tower. Too late, they heard his cries.
 
“STOP!” he yelled urgently. “You're walking through a minefield! Don't you lads know there's a war on and the beaches are off limits?”
 
Both boys froze on the spot, fear creeping its fickle way up their spines. Their mother's words were now ringing in their ears louder than ever but it was too late.
Ivan glanced at his younger brother, regret stabbing him in the stomach. Cecil glanced back at him, his lip quivering and tears welling up in his eyes. How would they get out of this scrape?
 
“I know!” yelled Ivan, wanting to calm his brother down and reach safety. “There's a stick next to me. I'll make my way to you and we'll go back to the sea wall together. With that, Ivan began tentatively poking the stick into the sand and inched slowly forward. Cecil visibly flinched each time the stick pierced the sandy surface.
 
After several painful minutes, during which, time seemed to stop, Ivan reached Cecil. He then instructed his brother to stand directly behind him and walk in his footsteps. He continued prodding the ground, scarcely breathing as they made their painstakingly slow way back to the safety of the sea wall.
 
Around three feet from the sea wall, Ivan stopped in his tracks. Cecil nearly knocked him over, he stopped so abruptly.
 
“Oh my God!” Ivan uttered under his breath, shrinking backwards and knocking his brother slightly off balance.
 
“What? What?” whispered Cecil loudly.
 
"Mine. In front of us.”
 
“Oh my God!” whispered Cecil. “What do we do?
 
“Look behind you, Cecil.” Cecil turned his head round delicately.
 
“See the footprints?”
 
“Yes Ivan.”
 
“Step back into them but be really careful.” Cecil stepped back three paces, treading exactly into the marks on the beach. Ivan followed him carefully. He prodded the ground a foot to the right of the mine, which he had marked with a large stone. The coast was clear and, finally, after a few more minutes with no more dramas, they reached the sea wall.
The soldier, who had shouted at them looked livid. He grabbed the two boys by their ears and dragged them kicking and screaming to the local police station, where he deposited them with the local constable.
 
“I found these two playing in the minefield, Constable.” he said. “I don't know what you want to do with them. I'd personally lock them up and throw away the key.” Ivan and Cecil were terrified at this prospect. They both burst into tears, apologising profusely for their stupid behaviour and begging for forgiveness.
 
Evidently, the constable felt sorry for them. Very kindly, he placed them in his police car and drove them home, none the worse for their ordeal but eating humble pie like there was no tomorrow.
 
When the constable knocked on my door, my first thought was that something terrible had happened but as soon as I opened the door, it was obvious that there was nothing wrong at all.
 
“Mrs Bell?” the tall constable asked.
 
“Yes.”
 
“Are these two young scoundrels your children?” he asked with more than a hint of judgement.
“They are, Constable,” I answered, dreading what he might be about to tell me.
 
“Well,” the constable shook his head. “A soldier just found these two running about on a mined beach in Brightlingsea. Did you allow them to do this?”
 
“Absolutely not!” I retorted. “I specifically told them to stay away from the beaches.” I was truly angry now but also terrified. My boys? In a minefield? It didn't bear thinking about.
Having accepted that the boys would be suitable punished for their foolish behaviour, the constable decided to leave them to me rather than taking any further action but he gave them a very stern warning implying that they would be put into prison if they ever did anything so stupid again.
 
I was too angry and disappointed to talk to the boys and so I sent them to their room until their father returned home. 
 
© Annie Bell 2012

Monday 3 December 2012

NaNoWriMo 2012

It's been over a month since I last posted on here.  I decided to take myself off the radar a little bit so I could devote my writing time to the great challenge of participating in NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) 2012.  

NaNoWriMo is a challenge, in which people undertake the commitment to write 50,000 words towards the first draft of a novel, during the thirty days of November.  

For my own NaNo project, I decided to add 50,000 words to my existing novel - an historical epic about my family during World War II.  Prior to NaNo starting, I had produced 33,000 words but most of these consisted of rather random odd sections.  My big challenge for November was to work on producing the central narrative. 

I am pleased to say that I found NaNoWriMo to be a thoroughly rewarding experience.  I was successful in 'winning', completing my 50,000 words a full week before the end of the month.  Even better than that, I carried on to the end of the month, producing 67,000 words altogether, which brings my overall word count to 100,000!  I have a long, long way to go still but I am happy with what I have achieved.  

There was a feed on the NaNoWriMo website, in which members were discussing what they had learned from the experience.  Many of them had similar experiences to me.  If I had to pick three things out, they would be as follows.

1.  I definitely have the self discipline to write every day.  More than that, I absolutely loved that I had to write every day.  It was wonderful to give myself permission to make my writing a priority like that.

2.  I can definitely finish this novel.  It has been puzzling me for years now and I have finally reached a point where I know exactly what I am doing with it.

3.  It helps to have company.  The entire process of writing is massively enhanced by the company of like minded people.  This was where WriteNight came in.  As regular readers will know from previous entries, I am a member of WriteNight Colchester.  Throughout November, we met every Monday night and worked on our respective novels.  Not only that, we encouraged one another via Facebook so there was a good support network between meetings.

So, as you can see, the entire NaNoWriMo process has been fantastic for me. 

Should you wish to take part next year, the website is available here and is well worth a look.