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Matthew Brown wrote a new blog post Writing dare: Spelling errors FTW in the group The Muse of Last Resort: 3 years, 1 month ago
Due to a spelling error, one of your characters gets entirely the wrong idea about something. However, while following up on the false lead they stumble upon new information – they just don’t understand how it […]
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Blog: I Read Books: Lore And Disorder from Night of the Hats in the group Night of the Hats 3 years, 1 month ago
Lore And Disorder An anthology of folk fiction stories, taking folk in a broad sense and fiction in an even broader. To pick some highlights: George Sandison’s The […]
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Blog: The Books of Jacob by Olga Tokarczuk review – a messiah’s story from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
The Nobel laureate’s visionary epic about 18th-century religious leader Jacob Frank takes on the biggest philosophical themes During the 18th century, in the b […]
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Matthew Brown edited the blog post Writing dare: Add flu season to your story in the group The Muse of Last Resort: 3 years, 1 month ago
Your main or supporting character is significantly hampered by catching a nasty bug. With a high temperature, sore throat, and aches and pains they find they can do a lot less but think significantly more […]
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Blog: John Agard becomes first poet to win BookTrust lifetime achievement award from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
Reading charity pays tribute to ‘incredible words’ of Afro-Guyanese author, who came to Britain in 1977 where he has become a staple of English lessonsThe Afr […]
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Blog: The Waiting by Keum Suk Gendry-Kim review – heartbreaking Korean war tale from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
The author of Grass works another miracle with this semi-autobiographical tale of a family separated by conflictThanks to the pandemic, most of us now know what […]
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Blog: Monster Of The Week 97: LaBelleFrance from Night of the Hats in the group Night of the Hats 3 years, 1 month ago
Monster Of The Week 97 is LaBelleFrance, likes a glass of wine, some cheese, arguing outside the cafe, maybe some boules later, chic, things aren’t hot now, but […]
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Blog: Where You Come From by Saša Stanišić review – memory in the wake of war from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
Past and present are in a constant state of flux in the Bosnian-German writer’s third novel – part autofiction, part Choose Your Own AdventureThe German word Her […]
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Blog: I love that God is a woman in good omens but why and what did you think Terry whould think about that from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
If you’re going to have a human being play God, you should get a good actor, and Frances McDormand is as good as they come. Do you mean, would Terry have thought t […]
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Blog: hullo mr. gaiman! i recently rewatched good omens recently and i just remembered how amazing the performance was during when aziraphale possessed madame tracy. just wondering though, how was it filmed? did msheen record his lines first and then miranda richardson had to memorise them? from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
No, Miranda did the acting first, and then Michael lipsynched his lines to her lips.
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Blog: from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
That has more to do with the scenes with the male angels with gold and silver on their faces being mostly (but not, I think actually, entirely) cut.
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Blog: What if someone doesn’t have a purpose to write a story beyond writing the story? As, no message, no deep meanings, just a story. As someone who took a career in literature, all my teachers had said that kind of stuff is trash literature, so , would it worth write like that? from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
I don’t think there can be a story that doesn’t say more than just the story, because it’s in the world, and it’s written by someone, and the person brings themsel […]
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Blog: Hello! I’m applying to creative writing masters programs right now. All of my writing profs have warned us bébé authors to be prepared for rejection at every point in writerly life, including rejection from every single program we apply to. Do you have any words of wisdom or encouragement for the potential scenario of all the schools saying “no thanks”? from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
I don’t have any qualifications as a writer whatsoever. Or at least, I’ve got a bunch of medals, honourary doctorates, awards and suchlike, but they all turned up […]
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Blog: How do you know if you have good taste? I always worry my writing isn’t going to be good because I don’t like works that people consider masterpieces, or people that are universally liked for their writing/storytelling I’ve started to see things I consider flaws. from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
I’m now old enough that books that I was championing as good because I loved them 40 years ago, that were disliked, ignored, or dismissed, have now been r […]
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Blog: Hello Mr Gaiman! In GO only angels played by actreSSES have golden patches on their faces. They also have golden lips. Why? Is this sort of makeup? from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
That has more to do with the scenes with the male angels with gold and silver on their faces being mostly (but not, I think actually, entirely) cut.
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Blog: isn’t “good omens” technically an oxymoron? if one were to use the antiquated meaning of omens, specifically from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
No, an omen, in any definitition going back to the first recorded use of omen as a word, in the 15th century, has meant “something that is believed to be a sign o […]
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Blog: Hi mr. gamin! You might not remember, but in 2005 you were asked to present for a speaker series at university of Chicago. Afterwards, the woman that ran the series and her husband asked you to sign a copy of the wolves in the walls for their unborn child. In the inscription they invented you to name the girl they were going to have. You didn’t, but you dedicated the book to “whoever she may become”. My name is Penelope now, in case you were wondering. Although I’m happy to change it if you have any very belated ideas! from Neil Gaiman in the group Fans of Neil Gaiman 3 years, 1 month ago
I am so glad I didn’t name you, and that they did. I think Penelope is a perfectly splendid name!
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Blog: ‘Delicious caper’ by Jesse Sutanto wins Comedy women in print award from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
Dial A for Aunties takes prize for comic novels by women with story about woman who turns to her relatives after accidentally killing her blind dateJesse Sutanto […]
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Blog: Poem of the week: Musings by William Barnes from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
Regret over the passage of time is delivered with reticence but powerful emotional authenticityMusingsBefore the falling summer sunThe boughs are shining all as […]
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Blog: The big idea: Should we leave the classroom behind? from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
The pandemic has driven a great leap forward in digital learning. Is there any point in looking back?My 21-year-old goddaughter, a second-year undergraduate, […]
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Blog: I Read Stories: Seven Kinds Of Baked Good by Maria Haskins from Night of the Hats in the group Night of the Hats 3 years, 1 month ago
Seven Kinds Of Baked Good by Maria Haskins in Luna Station Quarterly Disa is a dwarf, the descendant of ten generations of smiths, and she made one sword and one […]
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Blog: The Every by Dave Eggers review – scathing big-tech satire sequel from Books | The Guardian in the group The Guardian book reviews 3 years, 1 month ago
The writer’s follow-up to The Circle is longer and baggier, but still fuelled by rage at the power of Silicon Valley and its numbing effect on the human r […]
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Matthew Brown wrote a new blog post Add in an assassin too in the group The Muse of Last Resort: 3 years, 1 month ago
You or your protagonist makes a phone call. A pair of numbers got accidentally swapped. The call connects to an assassin that has been hired to kill you/them.
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Blog: I Watch Movies: She Wore A Yellow Ribbon from Night of the Hats in the group Night of the Hats 3 years, 1 month ago
She Wore A Yellow Ribbon General Custer and his men have been killed at Little Bighorn. The Native Americans have risen and the narrator tells us that ten […]