Category Archives: April A-Z Challenge
M is for… Missing #AtoZChallenge

Missing (or 1-800 Missing as it was known in the US) ran for three seasons 2003-2006
This is about Jess, a girl who, after being struck by lightning, begins having visions that link to missing people cases. After phoning into a tip line she is hired as a ‘consultant’ and is paired up with FBI Agent Brooke who helps interpret what Jess is seeing.
So the show itself isn’t really full on supernatural but Jess has a psychic power. It’s kind of like a young version of Medium.
Top 3 Episodes
Sea of Love – Season 2 Episode 1
A new series and a new partner
Jess trains to be an FBI agent – cue gun training scene at Quantico – and joins a new partner Nicole. Nicole is a lot more brash and out there than Brooke was, a rule breaker.
Lost Sister – Season 1 Episode 16
Jess goes undercover with cocky agent Jack Burgess to bust a drugs ring. They play lovers and might throw their own sexual tension into the ring. Jess’ s vision prove a little tricky at the bust though.
Basic Training – Season 1 Episode 14
This is my favourite episode and the one that I would select if I could only watch one episode again. Jess (not an agent at the time) goes undercover in a Military School to discover why cadets are going missing. Will Jess be a toilet toothbrush scrubber or one of the leaders. Thankfully the training at the academy in my book isn’t as gruelling as this.
This is based on a series of books by Meg Cabot (author of The Princess Diaries which I love) originally writing as Jenny Carroll (I believe they’ve been re-released under MC now). Has anybody read them? Worth a read?
And a quick nod to Merlin 2008-2012
I’ve only just starting watching this (I know late to the party) but I’ve enjoyed the episodes I’ve seen so far. No spoilers please.

L is for… Le Guin on Writing (The Wave in the Mind) (Book) #AtoZChallenge

L is for… Le Guin on Writing (The Wave in the Mind) (Book)
This book has been knocking around on my shelf unread for a while too. The Wave in the Mind by Ursula K. Le Guin has the subtitle: Talks and Essays on The Writer, The Reader and The Imagination.
Once again I am led back to thinking that writers don’t half write about writing. This is one of the things that interests me most. It seems like there is a need to explore why we write.
I had a quick flick through last night and Ursula writes about a variety of topics, reading, writing, feet!!
I’ve decided just to pick a few select quotes and note what I thought when I read them.
‘…I tried to figure out what was troubling me. I did it in writing because I think best in writing.’ (p.152)
I feel this way too and wondered how true this is of writers in general. In fact this was one of my arguments for looking at doing online data collection rather than face to face interviews.
She talks, as others do about multiple meanings in texts and that there is no one way to read something explaining that is depends on who is reading/writing, ‘what their relationship is, what society they live in, their level of education, their relative status, and so on.’ Books aren’t there to simply disseminate information or facts. ‘They are full of meaning and of meanings.’ (p.187).
I wonder if this is true of the writer’s relationship to their writing too?
In an essay called A Matter of Trust she says ‘In order to write a story, you have to trust yourself, you have to trust the story, and you have to trust the reader.’ (p. 223)
• You have to have trust and confidence in yourself as a writer – to do this you need to write.
• You have to be prepared to lose control when in the composition phase (control comes in planning and revision)
• In terms of trusting a reader she talks about dancing with them, not attacking them. Trusting them not to give up if your first line isn’t perfect.
I wondered whether getting to this state of trust links to engaging in writing being better able to support our health and wellbeing. I don’t think I have point one yet. I can definitely lose control in the composition phase but struggle to regain in when editing. I hope I trust the reader.
In The Writer and the Character she talks about characters starting to ‘have a life of their own, sometimes to the extent of escaping from the writer’s control and doing and saying things quite unexpected to the author of their being.’ (p.235)
Oh yes this happens – they do things like get themselves killed when you aren’t expecting it too.
Ursula says the question she gets asked most is where do your ideas come from. A comment I’ve heard lots about books are, I don’t know how they thought of that, how odd. It made me wonder about openness. Are writers just more in tune with their thoughts and feelings, even the dark ones that some people repress?
In Old Body Not Writing Ursula lets out a secret, writing is hard work, it is challenging. She describes being in ‘a kind of trance state that isn’t pleasant or anything else.’ (p.283). To me this is interesting because of discussions about occupational flow and its link to health and wellbeing. This ‘trance state’ doesn’t really sound like flow so there must be something else to explore here. This is one chapter I want to read in detail.
The final chapter is an extended poem The writer on, and at her work – I’m just going to pick a very tiny portion of it to conclude.
‘So if I am
a writer, my work
is words. Unwritten letters.
Words are my way of being
human, woman, me.
That certainly set waves going in my mind, especially the pause on the word being – what about yours?

By MG_FX – from http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1418313 (used with permission)

L is for… Lost #AtoZChallenge

L is for… Lost
Six series (2004-2010) of supernatural – what on earth is happening – goings on. If you haven’t seen or heard about Lost then I reckon you might be stuck on that island somewhere.
The stand out episode has to be the opening one with the plane crash scene. I found a video where someone has mashed up the opening and ending – great parallels/echoes. It doesn’t fully spoil but probably best not to watch unless you’ve seen it.
And a quick nod to The Little Vampire
The 1986 German series which I must have seen dubbed as a kid. Just found it available on amazon for over £50 for 13 episodes. I would like to see it again but not quite that badly.
What TV series from your childhood have you re-discovered and how much did it cost you to do so?









