Our Blogs

The Tyranny of History

FARAH AHAMED, runner-up in the 2018 Feature Writing Competition, explores the shifting nature of political and historical events in short stories by R.K. Narayan and Ivan Vladislavic: ‘Every society feels it has evolved a greater understanding of a truth and seeks to entrench this belief, forgetting that in time new realisations will lead to a new dismantling, discarding and repositioning to find a hard-won balance that will also prove temporary…’

The Playboy and The Bog Man

ERINNA METTLER, runner-up in the 2018 Feature Writing Competition, recommends Margaret Atwood’s short story, ‘The Bog Man.’: ‘I believe the key to Atwood’s pact with the horny old devil lies in the notion of the ideal reader; the persona all writers have in mind when they commit pen to paper…’

Seriously, Don’t Look Now

BRENDAN O’DEA takes us to Venice for a closer look at Daphne du Maurier’s spine-chilling short story, ‘Don’t Look Now’: ‘The ensuing action throws John, and the reader, into confusion. The denouement is delivered with panache, and is so devastating that it looks inevitable, almost predestined, permitting everything which preceded it to fall neatly into place…’