Joyce Barrass's Blog, page 52
July 29, 2016
POOR RECEPTION
A poem born of an impossibly trying situation.
Nobody was hurt in the forging of this seething cauldron of feelings!
The last line made me laugh. A lot. As it will anyone who knows what an incorrigible peacemaker I am in real life!
Nobody was hurt in the forging of this seething cauldron of feelings!
The last line made me laugh. A lot. As it will anyone who knows what an incorrigible peacemaker I am in real life!
Published on July 29, 2016 12:55
July 27, 2016
LAMMAS
I've been weeding (should that read "wildflowering"?) in my beloved South Yorkshire garden. This captures exactly how I'll remember these sunny summer moments.
Published on July 27, 2016 10:29
July 24, 2016
NIGHT LIGHTS
Stargazers, Moon watchers, insomniacs and anyone living city or suburban life these days will relate to my tongue-in-cheek poet photographer's rant on modern light pollution! Hope this brings you a smile!
Published on July 24, 2016 04:47
Night Lights
Stargazers, Moon watchers, insomniacs and anyone living city or suburban life these days will relate to my tongue-in-cheek poet photographer's rant on modern light pollution! Hope this brings you a smile!
Published on July 24, 2016 04:47
July 20, 2016
BUCK MOON DUSK
Arianrhod's silver wheelCaught in nets of purpled cloudBirch suffused with shiver of steelGlass castle and ring of flame
Keening over the spinning soulsLocked to earth by a chain of tides,Sunset bruised the horizon rolls,Never static and never tame
Now the velvet has bound her eyesKissed her lids with its violet shadeNight's birth is the day that diesWhispered colours her fabric's frame
Speeding on through the radiant darkStarflake piercing insomnia's gloomKirtles herself in rainbow's arcFree of border and without name
(Joyce Barrass 2016)
Photographs of the Full Buck Moon rising over Wickersley Wood, South Yorkshire, UK and sunset in the western sky on the hottest day of the year, taken by the author and viewable in full HD over on Joyce's Flickr where you can always find her photos of the Moon, clouds, birds, wildlife, natural world, passing aircraft, Yorkshire scenery and lots more of her passions and peculiarities. Her historical novel "GOATSUCKER HARVEST" is part of her lifelong lyrical lovesong to her native Yorkshire roots and is available from Amazon in paperback and as a Kindle ebook.
Thanks so much for visiting!
Published on July 20, 2016 07:19
Buck Moon Dusk
Arianrhod's silver wheelCaught in nets of purpled cloudBirch suffused with shiver of steelGlass castle and ring of flame
Keening over the spinning soulsLocked to earth by a chain of tides,Sunset bruised the horizon rolls,Never static and never tame
Now the velvet has bound her eyesKissed her lids with its violet shadeNight's birth is the day that diesWhispered colours her fabric's frame
Speeding on through the radiant darkStarflake piercing insomnia's gloomKirtles herself in rainbow's arcFree of border and without name
(Joyce Barrass 2016)
Photographs of the Full Buck Moon rising over Wickersley Wood, South Yorkshire, UK and sunset in the western sky on the hottest day of the year, taken by the author and viewable in full HD over on Joyce's Flickr where you can always find her photos of the Moon, clouds, birds, wildlife, natural world, passing aircraft, Yorkshire scenery and lots more of her passions and peculiarities. Her historical novel "GOATSUCKER HARVEST" is part of her lifelong lyrical lovesong to her native Yorkshire roots and is available from Amazon in paperback and as a Kindle ebook.
Thanks so much for visiting!
Published on July 20, 2016 07:19
July 13, 2016
Sand castles and rock pools: first draft, second novel - taking the clifftop path towards "Cloudhover Solstice"
Scouting out "Cloudhover Solstice" locations: Flamborough Head 17th century Old Chalk Beacon Tower The first draft of "Cloudhover Solstice" feels to me a bit like a deliciously playful sand castle on the edge of a rockpool of rippling possibilities, hidden depths. The capricious tides of ideas and words are ebbing and flowing, filling things in, knocking bits down, smoothing jutting edges, revealing scary fissures beneath the surface, the story sculpted by sea frets as the wind veers around the compass of plot and pacing.I'm back from my eagerly-anticipated research reconnaissance trip to fairest Flamborough, the setting for the novel, from the chalk cliffs and caves to the haunting hidden hollows of ancient Danes Dyke, cutting off the headland from the rest of these islands, leaving it pointing mysteriously out towards vanished Doggerland off the coast of Holderness.
Selwick Stack, Selwick's Bay, Flamborough HeadI took the opportunity of drinking in every detail, smelling the scents of the sea, tasting the bite of the onshore breezes, listening to the rhythms and colours of the seabirds' crying, so integral to my tale. I stood in Bram's shoes as he hears the unsettling call of the Kittiwakes over the water, stood with Thirza as she teeters, conflicted and determined on the edge of the crumbling cliff. I wandered along the beaches of North and South Landing, watching through the filter of imagination all the local sights and sounds that are the background to my evolving narrative.
Kittiwakes, High Stacks, Flamborough
Cave arch, North Landing, FlamboroughI took photographs and emotional mental snapshots, too, of those dominant sentinels of the headland, the 1806 Lighthouse and the Old Beacon Tower, built in chalk in the seventeen century. They must play their part, with their own tales interweaving into the lives of my characters and impacting on their fictional journey.
I took panorama sweeps to judge distances between landmarks, from Filey Brigg in the north, to Bridlington to the south. I explored Chatterthrow, formerly "Chattertrove" beyond Little Thornwick Bay, named for the racket made by the seabirds that thronged the cliffs as they nested, before humankind impacted their paradise, a central theme in my book.
Flamborough panorama from Chatterthrow back towards the LighthouseFlamborough did me good, as it always does, not only as a writer, but as a human being. Chronic illness has meant four years of not being able to manage a holiday, and Flamborough has haunted my dreams with glimpses of joy throughout those life-limiting days. Flamborough more than made up for it. Flamborough wouldn't know how to disappoint me if it tried!
Flamborough Head LighthouseSo the chipping and carving at the sand castle goes on, as "Cloudhover Solstice" takes its own unique shape under my scribbling fingers, recreating and restoring me along the way. I hope when it's ready to reveal itself to the world, you will enjoy reading it and that you'll be enchanted too by this magical place!
Danes Dyke Beach, Flamborough
Published on July 13, 2016 08:15
June 17, 2016
ALL HER FAULT
ALL HER FAULT
--a poem inspired by a glimpse of Thirza, heroine of my WIP "Cloudhover Solstice"--
Tries to standSoles ripplingBeneath the boil Basso profundo boomInching purchaseOn sea stamped sand
Plunge forgottenNow razor balancedBetween sink and scullSpray rainbow haloStinging eye and tongueFrothing sodden
Tries to breatheLess and lowerLower to muteHer eye discerns the heartBetween two swan necksAs breakers seethe
Molten goldIn the eye of the tideBreaks her buoyancyIn the undetowShe grasps for his handThe earthed root hold
Tries to riseWings wrung with saltDrag to inertiaAnchor to haltThe cliffs' billed cries
Are all her fault
© 2016 Joyce Barrass
Published on June 17, 2016 13:23
ALL HER FAULT - a poem inspired by a glimpse of Thirza, heroine of my WIP "Cloudhover Solstice"
ALL HER FAULT
--a poem inspired by a glimpse of Thirza, heroine of my WIP "Cloudhover Solstice"--
Tries to standSoles ripplingBeneath the boil Basso profundo boomInching purchaseOn sea stamped sand
Plunge forgottenNow razor balancedBetween sink and scullSpray rainbow haloStinging eye and tongueFrothing sodden
Tries to breatheLess and lowerLower to muteHer eye discerns the heartBetween two swan necksAs breakers seethe
Molten goldIn the eye of the tideBreaks her buoyancyIn the undetowShe grasps for his handThe earthed root hold
Tries to riseWings wrung with saltDrag to inertiaAnchor to haltThe cliffs' billed cries
Are all her fault
© 2016 Joyce Barrass
Published on June 17, 2016 13:23
June 16, 2016
"CLOUDHOVER SOLSTICE" - the tide is about to turn...
It's been four heart-yearning years since my health let me off the leash with enough energy to let me anywhere near fantabulous fair Flamborough, one of my favourite spots on the planet.
But this year, come gannets, guillemots, gust or gale, I'm going back to stay awhile.
This summer, armed with the first draft, plot outlines, character studies, orphaned scenes, midnight notes, scribbles, dreams and delirious delight, I'm heading back to the headland, the heartland of the East Yorkshire coast.
I'm off to reimagine those chalk cliffs, beloved from childhood, to plumb the landscape for its secret drama, its lighthouse and beacon, its hidden sea caves, stacks and scars, the Kittiwakes crying over the ocean ledges, the spray flinging itself against those craggy gorges and rockpools. I'm going to revisit it all through the eyes of my characters, Thirza, Bram and their friends and foes old and new.
Is that Piper I hear barking from South Landing?
"Cloudhover Solstice" is coming. The tide is slowly turning, dragging all that's familiar beneath the swilkering foam.
In the spirit of serendipity, my arrival on the East Coast coincides with this year's Summer Solstice, with the full Moon poised to shine down on the shimmering North Sea (if the forecast clouds, sea frets and mists deign to clear her a path over Holderness!)
Wishing calm seas and joyful summer voyages of imagination to all my lovely readers!
My first novel "Goatsucker Harvest" is available for Kindle and in Paperback here.
For news of my authorial shenanigans, and for updates on my progress with the sequel, "Cloudhover Solstice," you can always like my Author Page on Facebook or follow me on Twitter or Goodreads.
If you've enjoyed my writing, please would you take a moment to leave me a quick review on Amazon or Goodreads to let others know and spread the word? Thank you so much!
Published on June 16, 2016 07:10


