Writers Abroad Magazine Issue 5 | Page 23

WRITERS ABROAD MAGAZINE: THE THIRD SPACE After visiting the house, the story intrigued me even more and I did a bit of delving into the tale of the ghost. It’s not difficult to find articles online about it but they can be confusing. Details conflict and the tale seems to have grown as it was re-told over the years. So I went back to earlier sources. I read contemporary local newspaper articles (published in 1913) and Shane Leslie’s Ghost Book (first published in 1955) to get the story more or less as it was originally told. The old newspapers are especially fascinating and entertaining as they really bring alive the county as it was a century ago. As I delved into accounts of the events at the farmhouse, I could see the scenes and the Murphy family in my mind. I couldn’t help wondering about them and what must it have been like to live in their house. And how it felt to have their friends and neighbours withdraw from them in fear. This imagining was the starting point for my fictional short story, An Unbidden Visitor. I would encourage writers to keep your eyes and ears open when you settle in a new place. Learn about the history and legends of the area. If a particular historical event or legend grabs your imagination, delve deeper and learn more about it. Visit the exact place where it happened so you can experience the atmosphere there. Ask local people to tell you what they know about the incident. A combination of historical facts and local anecdotes will give you a wealth of information, allowing you to see the incident from different angles. When you are familiar with the incident, or possibly legend, that has caught your attention, let your imagination have free rein to develop your own story using all the information you have garnered. Your story may become a retelling or interpretation of the past event or it may become a completely new story inspired by what you have learned about the place where you live. Either way, if you take time to learn about the history of your adopted home, it is bound to enrich your own storytelling The Typo Prankster BY LESLEY TRUCHET I have a typo prankster; he squats in my PC, he tampers with my writing, with apparent fiendish glee. No matter how attentively my manuscript I edit, he lays bare some glaring errors, much to my discredit. Though I make a supreme effort to submit my script just right, I fear some luckless editor will deem it total – trite! 22 | November 2016