Letting go as a writer

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Any kind of creative work has a part of the creator in it. That is how I feel and it took me a long time to let go and allow other people to read my writing. Firstly I tried people I trusted and then took a bold step and read things out to strangers. It is one of the trickiest things to know when to stop fiddling with the text or story and just say to oneself, ‘It is done’, then let it go.

It helped me when I took a watercolour painting class and the excellent teacher, kindly and gently said, ‘Know when to leave it alone’ as she took the paint brush from my hovering hand and made me stand back and view my efforts. It wasn’t perfect but it was all I could achieve at that moment with that painting.  Ultimately it was very satisfying because whatever flaws are contained within the creation they are sometimes integral to the outcome and message, and one persons perceived flaw could seem to another as a stroke of genius.

Denny Bradbury

Bloomsbury reports big rise in e-book sales

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The publisher of the Harry Potter books has recorded a massive jump in the sales of e-books.

Bloomsbury reports it sold 1-point-1 million pounds’ worth of electronic literature in the first three months of this year.

That’s compared to 1-point-5 million for the whole of 2010.

The majority of those sales were in America but the company says demand is increasing in the UK.

Denny Bradbury Reflects on the feedback she’s received on her writing.

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Denny Bradury looks back on the feedback she’s received on her book The Reunion and explains why writing can be such a personal experience.  Good feedback is always appreciated and useful when it comes to spurring on the writing process.

Denny is now working on her new book Borvo, which details the life of a Pagan healer during King Alfred’s reign in the 9th Century.

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

How they lived in King Alfred’s Time- Part II

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PagansAnglo-Saxon England at the time of King Alfred’s reign was the epitome of a country paralysed by fear.  The constant battles with the Pagan Danes meant that England was not only losing men who were fighters but also losing valuable farmers, which in turn had a detrimental effect on the country’s ability to sustain itself as a thriving nation.

King Alfred’s biographer, and also his friend, Asser, writes that in the spring of 871 when Alfred was crowned “he did not think that he alone could ever withstand such great harshness from the pagans unless strengthened by divine help, since he had already sustained great losses of many men while his brothers were alive.” 

For much of Alfred’s reign he was doing battle with the heathen Viking King Guthrum, yet England in this period, despite being Christianised, still had many pagan tendencies.  Although Alfred was a Christian King who ultimately converted a pagan ruler such as Guthrum to Christianity through the ritual of Baptism at his final defeat, Alfred did commit a pagan act of vengeance against his defeated opponent by such a conversion.

Denny Bradbury’s latest novel, Borvo, due for release in July, draws upon a combination of Christianity, represented by King Alfred himself, and Paganism represented by the young healer boy who utilises the pagan rituals of healing through nature.  Just as Alfred himself lived for a time as a peasant in the marshes of Athelney , when he was in hiding from the Danes – a humbled and appreciative King living with his wife and children alongside his own people – so too in Borvo does the King form a friendship with a young boy of no social standing but remarkable skill and eventual vital necessity to the King.Marshes

When Alfred came to the throne of Wesssex as a young boy aged twenty one, his kingdom lay in ruins.  Pagan Vikings, led by Guthrum, had destroyed the country’s crop, torn down and looted churches and monasteries and burned whole towns to the ground.  Through Alfred’s sheer determination, applied knowledge and skill, and his unwavering faith in God, he began to slowly rebuild his kingdom for his people, making it his mission to rescue and restore the culture of England that the Pagans had all but destroyed.  Alfred not only trained and taught the next generation to stand firm in their belief in the Christian faith, resisting what he saw to be the influences of paganism such as fame, fate and vengeance, he also worked extremely hard to promote and grow a cultural vision steeped in Christianity through many mediums such as art, literature and education, teaching men how to read and creating his own written law code.

His time spent in hiding, learning to live like one of his own people, meant he developed a strong bond with those of humble origins who later helped him to fight for, and reclaim, his crown.

In Denny Bradbury’s “A Denagerie Of Poems” there is a poem entitled “Heathland” where she writes:

“Heathland calls and pulls my heart,
This is not where I made my start,
I came to view on journey wild,
And found my place, as though a child.”

As in Borvo, and during the reign of King Alfred, the land and those who worked the land were vital in sustaining the country’s growth.  Denny explores this theme by mixing in both the elements of Paganism and Christianity at a time of great change and unrest, illustrating the plight of a pagan folk healer in the wake of Christian dominance and how common ground can be found between the two.

To read more about Paganism versus Christianity, please click here.

Elizabeth Bridgefield

 

To purchase one of Denny’s books please click on the images below or contact Denny directly at email denisebradbury@btinternet.com.
The Reunion Denagerie of Poems by Denny Bradbury

The Three Little Pigs is your favourite fairytale

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The Three Little Pigs have huffed and puffed and stolen the vote for favourite fairytale!

A staggering 89% of you who voted chose The Three Little Pigs as their favourite fairytale.

The story first came to be in 1843 in Nursery Rhymes and Nursery Tales by James Orchard Halliwell-Phillips.  With its original title being The Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf.

The story starts off with three pigs being set loose on the world to fend for themselves and “seek their fortune” by their mother.  The first pig builds a house of straw, with the wolf “huffing and puffing” and blowing the house down, only to eat the pig.  The second pig builds his house out of sticks and the same thing happens.

The third pig builds his house out of bricks, to which the wolf cannot blow down the house.  But the wolf doesn’t give up. He tries to persuade the pig out of the house, eventually giving up and climbs down the chimney.  Unfortunately for the wolf, the third pig was waiting with a pot of boiling water to capture the wolf.  The wolf ended up in the blender only to be eaten by the pig.

In retellings of the story, the first two pigs lodge with the third to eliminate the harsh reality of death from the story.

Little Red Riding Hood and Rapunzel both came a joint second gaining 5% percent of the votes, only by the hairs of their chinny chin chin.

And quite interestingly Goldi-Locks and her three bears, and Hansel and Gretel didn’t get any votes at all.