Tobar Mhuire – #ThursdayDoors

An open door to a holy well, Tobar Mhuire – Saint Mary’s Well. So it’s not actually a door, but a doorway. I think it still counts for #ThursdayDoors and Dan won’t slap my wrists! (Leave me alone. It’s only January and I’m still waking up to the realisation that it’s 2024.)

We visit this well because it’s a lovely country walk and it’s an interesting place to be.

I wrote a post all about Tobar Mhuire during my #100daysofolddays project. If you’d like to read more about this holy well, read my post HERE.

Thursday Doors is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favourite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join in and create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week, visit nofacilities.com for more information.

Book Club Discussion – Water by John Boyne

Are you a member of a book club? If so, do you meet virtually or in person?

I attend a book club run by Pangur Bán Bookshop in conjunction with Craoibhín Ballina. We meet in person once a month.

At our book club meeting last night we talked about Water by John Boyne. Have you read it? What did you think?

The Blurb:

The first thing Vanessa Carvin does when she arrives on the island is change her name. To the locals, she is Willow Hale, a solitary outsider escaping Dublin to live a hermetic existence in a small cottage, not a notorious woman on the run from her past.

But scandals follow like hunting dogs. And she has some questions of her own to answer. If her ex-husband is really the monster everyone says he is, then how complicit was she in his crimes?

Escaping her old life might seem like a good idea but the choices she has made throughout her marriage have consequences. Here, on the island, Vanessa must reflect on what she did – and did not do. Only then can she discover whether she is worthy of finding peace at all.

Book Club Discussion

Water is a novella; 166 pages.

We had ten readers present at our December meeting and only one out of the ten didn’t like the book. However, she did read it and ‘got ‘it’ by the time she was finished. Starting off, she thought to herself, a woman escaping from her problems to an island, heard it all before. But it’s told from a different perspective than we’re used to.

The main character in the book is a woman, Willow. We praised John Boyne for his ability to get inside a woman’s head. Not too many male writers succeed in writing from a female’s POV as skilfully as John Boyne has done here.

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Fire – #ThursdayDoors

The only door I need these cold winter nights.

The white fluffiness you see in the marble is Cotton’s reflection! Cotton is my dog!

Thursday Doors is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favourite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join in and create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week, visit nofacilities.com for more information.

Blog Tour – Day Five. Story Chat – Short Stories and Ruminations

This is the last day of my blog tour; helping to promote the recently published book, Story Chat Online Literary Conversations: Series of Short Stories and Ruminations.

Read the story behind Story Chat Online Literary Conversations here ➔ Day One – Day Two – Day Three – Day Four

A quick recap;

Marsha Ingrao has taken the stories from her annual online writing programme, Story Chat, and put them together, along with some of the comments made by the Story Chat participants, to create this fabulous and unique book!

During the week, I talked about some of the contributing authors; Marsha Ingrao (United States), Hugh Roberts (England), Geoff le Pard (England), Gary Wilson (United States),  Anne Goodwin (England), Debbie Harris (Australia), and Philip Cumberland (England).

I didn’t get around to mentioning them all, so today I’ll show you where you can grab a taste of their writings and musings.

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