01/11/2013
09/10/2013
14/09/2013
Peilis Kindle Giveaway 25th October - 29th October
"Peilis" will be free to Kindle users between Friday the 25th of October and Tuesday the 29th.
That's right, an awesome half term read!
You can of course get it now for only two pound!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Peilis-ebook/dp/B00E9WQY9G
Shortly after the giveaway Peilis will be available across a number of platforms, and available in paperback in December.
Please, leave a review!
For now an Apollo Butterfly!
Best
That's right, an awesome half term read!
You can of course get it now for only two pound!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Peilis-ebook/dp/B00E9WQY9G
Shortly after the giveaway Peilis will be available across a number of platforms, and available in paperback in December.
Please, leave a review!
For now an Apollo Butterfly!
Best
07/09/2013
Peilis review - 5 Stars!
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/712484059
See the review at goodreads!
Thanks much to Christina!
See the review at goodreads!
Thanks much to Christina!
27/08/2013
Rūta - available on smashwords
Very pleased to be able to offer Rūta on Smashwords, in many different eBook formats... and you can set the price!
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/351595
Enjoy and leave a review!
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/351595
Enjoy and leave a review!
Peilis Review - Tricia Lomax
"Peilis - A modern day version of 'Lord of the Flies', where kids rule.
The school trapped inside a cage becomes a fortress, a battleground, a playground for chasing boundaries which are never set.
The teachers appear detached and powerless bystanders, limp and insignificant, without purpose skirting the perimeter fence.
This is a story about growing up and moving on, leaving seeds of destruction and enlightenment planted everywhere, which can with time perennially sprout or lay dormant beneath the soil. A lesson in life and living, this shows how it is for all of us to be human."
Couldn't be more pleased with that, thanks Tricia!
The school trapped inside a cage becomes a fortress, a battleground, a playground for chasing boundaries which are never set.
The teachers appear detached and powerless bystanders, limp and insignificant, without purpose skirting the perimeter fence.
This is a story about growing up and moving on, leaving seeds of destruction and enlightenment planted everywhere, which can with time perennially sprout or lay dormant beneath the soil. A lesson in life and living, this shows how it is for all of us to be human."
Couldn't be more pleased with that, thanks Tricia!
31/07/2013
Peilis
Finished writing Peilis today.
Working on the cover and blurb tomorrow.
Will be looking for advance readers now, so any interest let me know!
K
Working on the cover and blurb tomorrow.
Will be looking for advance readers now, so any interest let me know!
K
29/05/2013
31/03/2013
Rūta – Kit Masters
Free on kindle 03/31/2013 – 04/01/2013
You should read Rūta because
it is like nothing you have read before.
Grab your copy here!
28/03/2013
Jackson, I’m Sorry
I told myself at the time that our school just wasn’t right
for you.
But neither was where you went.
I told myself at the time that I wasn’t the right person to
deal with your problems.
But there was no one else for you.
I told myself at the time that you really didn’t want my
help.
But you did, you just couldn’t say it right.
As your science teacher it was fine, but I couldn’t do that
and be your tutor.
It was fine because in the class we had the boundaries, and
you towed that line.
It was fine because I was strict with everyone, and not
personal, you managed with that.
It was fine because science was practical, and you could do
that type of thing.
It was fine because your enthusiasm helped you with the
reading and writing too.
It was fine because we didn’t have a large class, and you
could sit on your own, at the back.
But then they realised I was the only teacher at the school
you had a positive relationship with.
And that you couldn’t manage with your tutor, you were
getting out of hand.
So they moved you.
It didn’t work because the tutor’s relationship is a
personal one.
It didn’t work because the activities were about discussion.
It didn’t work because you couldn’t empathise like other
kids.
It didn’t work because you would show unwanted behaviours when
you weren’t given attention.
It fell apart when you said no to me.
And I felt like I couldn’t have that in my classroom.
And I removed everyone from the classroom because you wouldn’t
move.
And I couldn’t give an inch because everyone, including you,
would take a mile.
And I could see that anger that other teachers had told me
all about.
The anger that I know eats you, under your skin.
And then we moved you science class because, well, I could
only do one of the roles.
And then the exclusions started.
And then the special treatment started.
And then the skiving started.
And then we lowered our expectations.
And I felt sick at the thought of dealing with you.
And then the anger started and you shouted at me, “I don’t
want you near me.”
And then you avoided me every time you saw me.
And then I went to the head of year.
And I said “if we can’t handle him now, at eleven, how are
we going to handle him at fifteen.”
And then we found you another place at another school.
And I was relieved.
I’m sorry because of my part in this.
I’m sorry because I really didn’t have the skills to help
you.
I’m sorry because at the time you were too much.
I’m sorry because moving the problem on was the easy way
out.
I’m sorry because I put my reputation for discipline before
you.
I’m sorry because I didn’t find the time to help you.
I’m sorry because I was afraid to.
23/03/2013
02/03/2013
Bookkus March Reviews
I think of England, Scotland and Ireland was written together with Rachelsarah Glasgow last year.
It is in the March review selection at Bookkus publishing.
Please go read and leave a comment, I can't wait to hear what you think of it and continue the project!
Go to the page here.
It is in the March review selection at Bookkus publishing.
Please go read and leave a comment, I can't wait to hear what you think of it and continue the project!
Go to the page here.
27/02/2013
Mrs Grumpy
I was asked to write something for a book project about my hometown.
Here it is in full, please comment if you've anything to say on the matter!
Kind ones and thanks for stopping by, do check out the other pages!
Here it is in full, please comment if you've anything to say on the matter!
Kind ones and thanks for stopping by, do check out the other pages!
Mrs Grumpy
I still think about this a lot.
It’s an event that happened to me which taught me to feel
ashamed.
It is the memory I come back to whenever I feel I have done
something wrong, that I have acted in an immoral way.
Shame is what you feel when you know you are in the wrong.
It is not what you feel when you are given a punishment, not
because someone else looking at you thinks ill of you, but because when you
look at yourself, you don’t like what you see.
Bretton is really well planned out, in a lot of ways.
It was award winning town planning when it was new.
And I was lucky to grow up there.
Just about every house has a wee field outside it, all the
pavements are well away from the roads, there are big gardens, trees and
bushes, and there are loads of woods.
Did you know that Bretton Woods, those woods that line the
roads, and separate some of the housing estates were around when Henry the
Eighth was king.
He made a book of all taxable areas in England, and there
they are “Bretton Woods,” they’re that old.
It was a fine place to grow up.
When you’re a kid, your world gets steadily bigger every
year.
At first all you see is your house and your garden.
Then you are allowed out on your own, maybe to a neighbours
or just where they can see you, but not across the road.
Then maybe, with a certain friend you are allowed across the
road, but make sure you are back in time for dinner.
Then “ok, you can go in those woods, but not the Westhawe
woods.”
Then, “can I got to the centre with Jacob;” then town on the
bus; then London for a gig with your brother; then Amsterdam for new year; then
Barcelona on your own; then wherever you can afford.
So I couldn’t see, within my world when I was nine, in my
world of Barnstock, Eyrescroft, Essendyke, Benland, why anyone would want to stick
a “NO BALL GAMES” sign up on the field in front of Kevin’s house.
“What do they think this field is for?”
Well a lot of people seemed to think it was for parking
their cars, girls seemed to think it was for daisy chains, but me and my mates,
obviously, thought it was for football, and that wall, backing right on to the
field, “that’s for playing spot against ain’t it.”
“That’s Mrs Grumpy’s wall,” Kevin said.
“Mrs Grumpy, why’s she called that?”
“Because she’s grumpy, of course, she’s got three of my
balls that went over her fence.
“She’s just a mean old bat, she hates children, she’s the
one that had the sign put up out here.”
Sure enough next time we were playing, over the ball goes.
Kevin, was all for climbing over, saying that she’d never
give us it back, it was pointless to knock.
“You can’t just climb over, that’s not allowed, I’ll knock
if you’re too scared to.”
I knocked on the front door and Kevin stayed away down the
path, but where he could watch.
There was a huge amount of shouting from within, I couldn’t
believe how much.
And then I could see her, through the kitchen window, she
was shouting, hurling abuse at someone, throwing her arms around, she really
was a grumpy.
I was starting to wish that I hadn’t knocked now.
After a minute or two, the shouting calming down a little, a
man, grey, tall and thin, but friendly enough looking, opened the door.
I tried, in a stuttering and quiet voice, to explain that
we’d accidently kicked our ball over.
He asked what colour it was, and then the lady burst past
him.
She shouted at me:
“You can’t have your ball back, you shouldn’t play ball
games on there, can’t you....”
Then she saw Kevin, “and you, you... I’ll bet you can’t
read!
“But I’ve told you, you better just stay away, you little brat,
you.”
She hurried back inside waving her arms around, her white
fluffy dressing gown flailing behind her as she went.
Her husband, looking forlorn, slowly closed the door,
nodding his head slightly as he did so.
Kevin and I burst into laughter, although we both knew this
woman had frightened us more than a little; it was nervous laughter, fake
laughter.
“Next time you can climb over, Kevin.”
We could hear more shouting through the brick walls of the
house.
“I think that’s why she hates me so much.”
About twenty minutes later, the man, who we called Mr Grumpy
of course, appeared in his back garden, raked the ball out of his bushes and
lobbed it over, giving a very small, almost imperceptible wave as he did so.
“Old cow,” said Kevin.
I asked Jacob’s mum why she was like that.
“Does she hate kids?”
Jacob’s father talked occasionally with the old man, who we
occasionally saw riding his bike from the back gate.
“No she’s just very old.
“She’s got Alzheimer’s disease, it means she’s very
confused.
“It’s something that old people sometimes get, and for her
it means she get’s very upset by loud noises.
“That’s why she doesn’t want people kicking the ball against
their wall, and why she makes such a fuss when anyone knocks.
“It must be really distressing and upsetting for her
husband, all she can do is to sit in that chair.”
I always tried to take a look in their window when I rode
past after that.
Sure enough, she was always sitting in her arm chair, the
big sliding doors to her garden behind her, looking out the window at you.
I thought, probably best I just try and leave them alone.
This is the memory that I think causes me to feel guilt; it
is a senseless, aimless, indefinable guilt that I feel.
At least I think it is this memory.
It is a guilt that only comes on me when I am alone, or if it’s
been quiet for a long time.
And it comes in with my breath, all I can hear is my breath,
and it gets louder until it is the only sound I could possibly hear.
I know when I get this feeling that I can snap out of it at
any moment, I know if someone calls me, or if the phone buzzes, or anything,
that I will lose the feeling straight away, and I’ll manage whatever I am
called to do, but I don’t want to snap out of it.
Each time it comes I want to indulge in it; I want to
explore it, to find out more about it.
I want to pinpoint it, is it this memory that causes this
guilt, or is it another thing I have done, maybe that I have repressed?
Maybe I have forgotten something worse than this, something
which is too bad to remember, too horrific to recall.
When you are young you do really stupid things, and you
really try to impress the most stupid, insignificant people.
We were hanging round with some slightly older boys, and
they told us about knock-down-ginger, or knock and run, didn’t sound like much
fun to me.
Mostly, I’ve found that the people who seem the most
confident often are the least; the people who seem the most together when you
first meet them often have the most messy lives; and that anyone who tries to
make you feel bad, or feel small, probably has someone who treats them in that
same way.
But still, because there was a little pack of us, and
because they seemed to us so grown up to us, seemed like the games that older
boys played, we played it too.
I don’t suppose it really bothered most adults, and anyway,
we had always run away, so we never saw their reactions.
But I guess there must’ve been some excitement in it,
running around, pretending to be scared, in being naughty.
It came to my turn, and I don’t know who suggested it, but
it was obviously going to happen; Mrs Grumpy’s house.
I didn’t know whether I should do it, I didn’t know that I
would.
Until I was there, standing in front of that textured glass
and aluminium door, and gave it three sharp knocks.
We ran, and this time maybe I was scared.
I already knew that this was bad, I expected her to kick
off, to shout and shout, to come out of the door and wave her fists around.
We couldn’t resist having a look after a minute or so.
We peaked around the corner.
Nothing, no dressing gown, no shouting, nothing.
As quiet as it had been before I had knocked.
The next couple of days I found out that Mrs Grumpy had
died.
She’d died of a heart attack, during one of her panics.
I knew immediately why, and I knew that I had caused it.
I felt something worse than any shame I had been made to
feel, I felt guilt, I felt irreparable guilt.
And nothing I could say to myself would rid me of that
feeling.
She was old, yes, she didn’t have much of a life anyway,
yes, she was a grumpy old cow, yes.
But I killed her.
I felt my breath rise and fall at night and I felt mortality
weighing heavily on my chest.
I felt for the first time that one thing leads to another
and that actions cannot be undone.
I rationalised it as an accident, but I knew ultimately I
was responsible for it.
Kevin, Jacob and I talked about it a little afterwards.
We didn’t blame each other, and we all concluded that
although it was probably that which caused her panic and then death it could
have been something else, and that it would’ve happened sooner or later anyway.
I concluded, after those discussions, that it wasn’t murder,
but it was manslaughter.
I knew I didn’t have to tell my parents about it, I didn’t
have to have all my friends and teachers at school find out, but I knew that
none of this mattered, that I knew, and that was bad enough.
I felt so stupid; I’d gone along with something, just so
that other people thought I wasn’t scared, just to look good to some kids I
didn’t really like.
No one else knew how I felt about it.
The next few months we started to see more and more of Mr
Grumpy.
He spent afternoons in his garden now.
And he smiled at us as he rode his bike past.
As he grew up Jacob even got to know him, found out his real
name.
And we rationalised that he must’ve been in some way
relieved that his wife had died, that an ordeal was over, and he could have a
new lease of life.
But let’s face it, that’s just nonsense I told myself so
that I could forget about it.
20/02/2013
Some Short Writing and a Review
Thanks so much to the Book Geek for reviewing my book, she's done an amazing job in getting to the core themes in the book.
And finding this completely made my day.
Thanks to you and all bloggers who support authors in this way.
Read it here.
Also, for some brand new, american folk inspired short literature go to the Dylan Tales page, or here.
Leave a comment if you get time!
Kit
And finding this completely made my day.
Thanks to you and all bloggers who support authors in this way.
Read it here.
Also, for some brand new, american folk inspired short literature go to the Dylan Tales page, or here.
Leave a comment if you get time!
Kit
02/01/2013
Welcome to the Blog
Hello, thanks for stopping by.
On this blog you'll find information on my writing and artwork.
I am the author of the novella Rūta, which is available on amazon via the links to theleft right.
The book also contains a great deal of my artwork which compliments the text.
My books are not exactly like much else you read, and I hope that you will find a theme within it to engage with.
My second book Peilis is on the way and you can watch it develop here.
Also you'll find writing inspired by Bob Dylan, and various artwork which perhaps doesn't have a more specific place elsewhere.
I'd like to hear your comments either here, or on facebook or twitter!
Cheers,
Kit
On this blog you'll find information on my writing and artwork.
I am the author of the novella Rūta, which is available on amazon via the links to the
The book also contains a great deal of my artwork which compliments the text.
My books are not exactly like much else you read, and I hope that you will find a theme within it to engage with.
My second book Peilis is on the way and you can watch it develop here.
Also you'll find writing inspired by Bob Dylan, and various artwork which perhaps doesn't have a more specific place elsewhere.
I'd like to hear your comments either here, or on facebook or twitter!
Cheers,
Kit
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