No amount of persuasion,
Would awaken a sleepy kid at dawn,
The song of birds,
The colours of dawn,
The lure of school,
Nothing as much as extra minutes of sleep.
Continue reading at Kittysverses
No amount of persuasion,
Would awaken a sleepy kid at dawn,
The song of birds,
The colours of dawn,
The lure of school,
Nothing as much as extra minutes of sleep.
Continue reading at Kittysverses
Robbie continues her series on the Brontë family. Click the links to read about Patrick, the patriarch and Charlotte Brontë.
Emily Brontë was the fifth child of Patrick Bronte and Maria Branwell. She is known for her intense gothic novel, Wuthering Heights, which has remained consistently among the top three best-selling English language classic novels.
Emily’s is reported to have been unsociable and extremely shy. After her death from tuberculosis, Charlotte said the following about her:
“My sister’s disposition was not naturally gregarious; circumstances favoured and fostered her tendency to seclusion; except to go to church or take a walk on the hills, she rarely crossed the threshold of home. Though her feeling for the people round was benevolent, intercourse with them she never sought; nor, with very few exceptions, ever experienced. And yet she knew them: knew their ways, their language, their family histories; she could hear of them with interest, and talk of them with detail, minute, graphic, and accurate; but WITH them, she rarely exchanged a word.”

A family portrait painted by Branwell. You can see where he painted himself out of the picture – taken at the Brontë Museum
Some interesting facts and stories about Emily are as follows:
Emily was good at art, as were her siblings Charlotte, Anne and Branwell. Emily was largely self-taught and learned to draw by copying images from manuals and popular prints of the day. There are 19 surviving illustrations created by Emily and these include a series of pen and ink sketches, some paintings, mainly water colours, a few pencil drawings, some engravings and a geometry exercise.

Emily’s paint box – taken at the Brontë Museum
Emily and her sisters all had portable writing desks. When opened, the lid and bottom formed one continuous sloped surface for writing. They closed up into rectangular cases not much larger than a shoebox. The girls used these desks to store their writing and keep other precious possessions. Emily found pens troublesome and this is apparent from the stained appearance of her writing slope and her ink blotted manuscripts. She dug the nib of her pen into the paper and cleaned it by dragging it along the page. Her blotting paper has holes in it from her hasty clearings of her nib.

Emily’s portable writing desk – taken at the Brontë Museum
Emily was a dog lover and owned a large animal named Keeper. Keeper’s collar is on display at the Brontë Museum in Yorkshire. There is an interesting story told about Emily and her relationship with Keeper: When Keeper first arrived at the parsonage, the dog had a habit of going upstairs and jumping on the bed and stretching out on the clean bedspreads for his naps. Emily cured him of this habit by beating him about the eyes until he was almost blind from the swelling. She then led him into the kitchen and tended to his wounds herself.
Emily featured dogs in her novel, Wuthering Heights. In one instance, Hareton Earnshaw hangs a litter of puppies from a chair back. This was a normal way to kill unwanted dogs on a working farm at this time. Heathcliff also hangs Isabella’s springer, named Fanny, by a handkerchief after they elope together. The dog almost dies as a result.
Emily and her sister, Anne, created an imaginary world called Gondal, a sprawling imaginary island located in the Pacific Ocean that was led by women. The two ladies wrote long poems that described Gondal’s dynasties and political battles. The poems by Emily that were included in the combined poetry book she published with Charlotte and Anne were based on Gondal, but were amended to remove the references to this world and its women-led aspects.
Emily had to pay to have her novel Wuthering Heights published in December 1847 by Thomas Cautley Newby. It appeared as a double volume with Anne’s Agnes Grey and the pair had to pay the publisher £50.
To find out more about the Brontë family, click HERE to read a review by Olga Nunez Miret of The Mother of the Brontës: When Maria Met Patrick by Sharon Wright (@penswordbooks) Highly recommended to Brontës fans and to early XIX century historians.
“They were from different lands, different classes, different worlds almost.
The chances of Cornish gentlewoman Maria Branwell even meeting the poor Irish curate Patrick Brontë in Regency England, let alone falling passionately in love, were remote.
Yet Maria and Patrick did meet, making a life together as devoted lovers and doting parents in the heartland of the industrial revolution.”
About the author
Robbie, short for Roberta, is an author with five published children’s picture books in the Sir Chocolate books series for children aged 2 to 9 years old (co-authored with her son, Michael Cheadle), one published middle grade book in the Silly Willy series and one published preteen/young adult fictionalised biography about her mother’s life as a young girl growing up in an English town in Suffolk during World War II called While the Bombs Fell (co-authored with her mother, Elsie Hancy Eaton).
All of Robbie’s children’s book are written under Robbie Cheadle and are published by TSL Publications. Robbie has recently branched into adult horror and supernatural writing and, in order to clearly differentiate her children’s books from her adult writing, these will be published under Roberta Eaton Cheadle. Robbie has two short stories in the horror/supernatural genre included in Dark Visions, a collection of 34 short stories by 27 different authors and edited by award winning author, Dan Alatorre. These short stories are published under Robbie Cheadle.
Find and follow Roberta Eaton Cheadle
Roberta Writes Blog Amazon Author Page Twitter Facebook
Books by Roberta Eaton Cheadle
Through the Nethergate
Roberta Eaton Cheadle
Margaret, a girl born with second sight, has the unique ability to bring ghosts trapped between Heaven and Hell back to life. When her parents die suddenly, she goes to live with her beloved grandfather, but the cellar of her grandfather’s ancient inn is haunted by an evil spirit of its own. In the town of Bungay, a black dog wanders the streets, enslaving the ghosts of those who have died unnatural deaths. When Margaret arrives, these phantoms congregate at the inn, hoping she can free them from the clutches of Hugh Bigod, the 12th century ghost who has drawn them away from Heaven’s White Light in his canine guise. With the help of her grandfather and the spirits she has befriended, Margaret sets out to defeat Hugh Bigod, only to discover he wants to use her for his own ends – to take over Hell itself.
It is available from Lulu.com here: Lulu.com
It is also available from TSL Publications as a soft copy book here: TSL Publications
While the Bombs Fell
What was it like for children growing up in rural Suffolk during World War 2?
Elsie and her family live in a small double-storey cottage in Bungay, Suffolk. Every night she lies awake listening anxiously for the sound of the German bomber planes. Often they come and the air raid siren sounds signalling that the family must leave their beds and venture out to the air raid shelter in the garden.
Despite the war raging across the English channel, daily life continues with its highlights, such as Christmas and the traditional Boxing Day fox hunt, and its wary moments when Elsie learns the stories of Jack Frost and the ghostly and terrifying Black Shuck that haunts the coastline and countryside of East Anglia.
Includes some authentic World War 2 recipes.
Robbie also writes as Robbie Cheadle
Robbie’s Inspiration Blog Goodreads Facebook YouTube
Amazon author page Twitter: @bakeandwrite
Books by Robbie and Michael Cheadle
The Sir Chocolate books are a delightful marriage of story, verse and cookery
… a perfect recipe for sharing with children. Silly Willy goes to Cape Town tells the adventures of two very different brothers…and includes five party cake ideas.
You can purchase the Sir Chocolate books from:
or you can buy them in South Africa directly from the authors by emailing Robbie Cheadle at sirchoc@outlook.com.

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She could see them in the distance, just a spec on the horizon, instinct calling them home.
Every year she watched for them from afar, knowing they would come in their hundreds to the breeding grounds of their ancestors and future offspring.
Continue reading at pensitivity101

Reblogged from Art, Photography and Poetry
It has been an interesting week. Having just published Ani’s latest collection, ‘Doggerel‘, reissued her ‘Notes from a Small Dog‘ and published a new edition of my fantasy, ‘Swords of Destiny‘, I did something I seldom think to do, I checked my Amazon Author Page…
… to be met with an utterly appalling mess.
Stuart’s page was the same when I checked, and he too had just published another book.
It is not going to inspire confidence in your work if the ‘storefront’ is a mess and the customer can’t find what is supposed to be on offer!
While a few books on the author banner were correctly listed, the rest were either:
Any and all of which mean that the books cannot or will not be bought… even though they are all available, directly from Amazon, most of them in both Kindle and Paperback… but only if you know where to look. And how many people are going to know they are there, take time to trawl through or check when a book is listed as unavailable?
I rolled up my sleeves, headed to Amazon Author Central and started typing.
To be fair to Amazon, their operatives are always helpful and, once I had managed to make it clear what the problem actually was, the issues were immediately rectified. I did find that I had to do the same for some, though not all, of the problems by contacting both Amazon UK and US though.
If you do not have an Amazon Author Page… you should. It groups all your books together, allows you to add detail and make changes to book listings as well as making it easier for readers to find your work, follow you and be notified of new releases.
Whether you publish your books through Amazon UK or US, you need to set up separate Author Pages for both and can also add Author Pages for other countries too, such as Amazon France and Germany… both of which have English language sections. The most useful one though is undoubtedly Author Central.com, the US site as it has more functionality. Once your account is set up there, you can ‘claim’ your books and add them to your author page, alter details and… crucially… contact Amazon’s staff from each book listing at need.
After several days of emailing, all was orderly at last and correctly linked.

Meanwhile, I took the opportunity of updating book descriptions compressed by Amazon’s display… I miss the white space we once had. I also updated the author bio, that had been neglected for a while and realised you can tailor your bio for each book, to reflect its mood.
Though it would be nice if Amazon left in the spaces you had typed between the words…
Having done all that and sat back finally with a celebratory cuppa, I bethought myself of my Goodreads author page… and that was almost as bad.
It didn’t take long to update what I could and the Goodreads Librarians did the rest in no time at all.
Not a bad bout of housekeeping in the end!
“Thus, what you are saying is that for years the government has had this beautiful valley reserved to store nuclear stuff?”
“Well, first of all, none of this is to reach the media, do you understand? This is highly sensitive material, and everything would be denied anyway…”
“Okay, but you said there were several wells drilled, in the valley and atop these hills, didn’t you?”
“Yes, we want you to understand why your proposal is not acceptable.”
“Well, what was the purpose of those wells?”
Continue reading at Of Glass and Paper

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Colourless landscapes
Life and laughter left behind
Winter of the heart
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Reblogged from Helen Jones:

Earlier this month I was lucky enough to have an impromptu mini-break. My husband had to visit Denmark for work and the stars aligned in terms of child- and dog-care to allow me to go with him for a long weekend away, something we’ve not done together since before the gorgeous girl was born.
And our destination? Aarhus, Denmark.
Continue reading at Helen Jones
strokes of black
on pretty landscapes
shocks artist’s spear
Is the Maker
frozen in snow
Continue reading at Reena Saxena

Continue reading at The Silent Eye