Image Credits:-
All images from Pixabay/Pexels unless otherwise stated with many created in Book Brush. Book cover images from Chapeltown Books and Bridge House Publishing. Many thanks to Paula Readman for taking an image of me with From Light to Dark and Back Again. Screenshots taken by me, Allison Symes.
Hope the weekend went well. Not bad here. Looking forward to attending a Zoom social event with the Association of Christian Writers this week. Lady is hoping to catch up with her friends in a different way of course!

Facebook – General
Hope the day has gone well. Looking forward to a lovely online meeting with fellow members of the Association of Christian Writers later on today. Should be fun. Am always up for a good chat with other writers!
That thought makes me smile as I remember going to my first ever writing event many years ago (over on the lovely Isle of Wight too) and being such a nervous newbie. I knew nobody. By the end of the event, that changed! I’ve always found the writing community to be incredibly supportive and continue to appreciate this. It has been a great joy to go to various events over a lot of the country since.
Marketing Tip: I’m a big believer in scheduling mainly because I do blog a lot. But you can do this with aspects of your marketing too. I think ahead a little about themes for my newsletter, for example. I can then start drafting my newsletter a little bit at a time over the month so there is no mad rush to write it right at the end of the month ready for it to go out on the first.
Talking of which, it won’t be long before my next newsletter is due out. To sign up do head over to my landing page at https://allisonsymescollectedworks.com
It won’t be that long before you can find out what the theme for my February newsletter will be!
Hope your week has got off to a good start. Busy one as ever here though Lady did enjoy seeing her Hungarian Vizler pal today.
Writing wise, I’m writing various bits and pieces, some of which I’m preparing ahead of tomorrow when I have a lovely ACW event to go to online. It will save me a great deal of time tomorrow (which I’m looking forward to “spending” chatting with other ACW members!).
Looking forward to going to Camelot The Pantomime which is being staged by The Chameleon Theatre Company. Their pantomimes are always good fun – oh yes they are. It will be interesting to see just how much make up the Dame gets to wear this year. It usually is pretty impressive.
Character Tip: I don’t tend to use how a character looks as a way into getting to know them. Their traits and attitudes are more important to me but that doesn’t mean I only use those. If I have a character, for example, suddenly start using a lot of makeup when they normally wouldn’t, there will be a story idea there for me to follow through on.
I’m delighted to be back on Authors Electric with my first post of the year, Approaching The Light. While it is true January does seem to be the longest month ever (and do check out Brian Bilston’s Mnemonic for more on this), on the plus side as the month goes on we are literally approaching the light(er) evenings.
I also discuss liking (as well as writing) light and dark stories. Life has both elements so I think fiction should do too. Too much dark is too grim for me. Too much light can be sickly sweet for me. Neither option is good! I also look at redemption stories and light and dark in our characters for this post.
Hope you enjoy it.
Hope today has gone well. I cleared up a load of autumn leaves. It makes for a great workout, trust me on this. Lady, naturally, “supervised”.
Will be looking at Spoofs for Chandler’s Ford Today on Friday. I’m fond of a good spoof and you can find them in different art forms too. I’ll look at some of these and discuss what makes for a good spoof in my post. Am looking forward to sharing that. As you can imagine from the title, it was a fun post to write.
Tomorrow, I’ll be sharing my first Authors Electric post for the year and will be looking at Approaching the Light. This topic suggested itself because as January goes on (and doesn’t it just!), you do start to see the lighter evenings and the promise of spring coming again. See above.

Facebook – From Light to Dark and Back Again
Flash is great fun to write as you can set your characters anywhere you want and in any period of time. I try to take full advantage of that, though inevitably, certain favourite genres of mine do crop up regularly in my writing. I will always have a soft spot for humorous fairytales/fantasy tales.
I like to mix up the moods of what I write too. I do write light and dark tales which inspired the title of my first book, From Light to Dark and Back Again. It reflects life, my tastes in fiction etc.
Characters, like us, do have to work for their success, in whichever form that comes so their stories should reflect this. It inevitably won’t be all sweetness and light (which to me is far too twee to read yet alone write. I want my stories to have some bite to them).
Certain issues you care deeply across are likely to surface in your fiction too. It’s no coincidence that in most of my tales some sort of justice is always seen to be done for those characters deserving that.
It’s Monday. It’s still January. It’s definitely time for a story. Hope you like my latest on YouTube – Nicknames.
The receptionist of an exclusive club where nobody gets in without an invite with their name and nickname on it is confronted by someone without this. The character is forceful but will the receptionist stand her ground? Find out here.
Flash encourages focus, as I was discussing yesterday, simply due to its word count restriction. You haven’t got the word count room to go on at length. Over time and with practice, you become better at leaving out wasted words, finding better ways of phrasing things etc., and all of that tightens your writing considerably.
Even better, learning all of this is useful for whatever other writing you do. I’ve found it helps me with my blogs and articles. Plus it is an excellent warm up writing exercise ahead of your main work. You can always use the random generators to trigger a prompt to get started.
And if you are writing longer works, you might, later, want to write some short pieces to share with readers of your newsletter, website etc. A scene with a favourite character which you had to cut from the main work might be turned into a short, stand alone piece. It can act as wonderful additional marketing material and your readers will feel as if they are getting extra from you too.
Hope you enjoyed my Changing My Life 100 words story I shared here yesterday. See previous round up post. The 100 words flash format (also called drabbles) is a great challenge but it is wonderful for twist and punchline endings especially.
It is also long enough to let you think something about a character with the ending either confirming what you thought or surprising you. I do know I wouldn’t want to cross my character from yesterday (whom I deliberately didn’t name – it’s more chilling that way sometimes).
Often with the drabble, I do know the ending first. I can work out the details leading up to that ending and focus only on what you need to know to make sense of the story. I’ve often talked about flash fiction making you focus. The shorter the word count, the more intense that focus is, but it can lead to powerful, emotional storytelling. You’re not diluting the impact basically. It is “in your face” so to speak.

Goodreads Author Blog – What Makes A Story “Real”
What makes a story real for me, regardless of its genre, is when I believe in the characters. They have come to life to me on the page (or via the screen or via audio etc) and so I want to find out more about them and what happens. If I don’t “get” the characters, I’m unlikely to read on.
Now those characters don’t have to be nice but even with the villains, I still have to see why they are being the way they are. I don’t have to agree with them though! But I don’t believe in any character who does something or says something “just because”.
Every story, even the shortest flash fiction such as the ones I write, has to have a logic about it, even if it is set in a fantasy land. There have to be characters and situations readers will “get” even though we can never be part of the fictional world the author has created.
A story also feels real for me when it “plays out” properly. Even in flash fiction, you can have the Three Act Structure. The acts just aren’t so long, that’s all! But there does have to be a proper beginning, middle, and end. I have to feel as if the characters ended up in a situation which was appropriate and satisfying.
I do prefer happy endings but have read stories where the endings are open to question on that front. Frodo, from The Lord of the Rings, doesn’t get the happy ending Sam did. Rightly so too. It was apt for Sam, not for Frodo but that’s the point. The two characters are realistic. Their story arc is right for them.
I like to see a “right” story arc, regardless of the length of story. Stories fall flat otherwise, for me. What do you think?

MailerLite – Allison Symes – Newsletter Sign Up

WRITERS’ NARRATIVE SUBSCRIBER LINK
AMAZON AUTHOR CENTRAL – ALLISON SYMES
- A very special book in my memory! My first printed story, A Helping Hand, was in here!
- Six of the seven books my stories have appeared in (okay in the case of Limerick Nation, one limerick!). Baubles is the other book. Image taken by me.
- My latest published story is in The Best of Cafelit 6.
- Where my stories are in print. Image by Allison Symes
- My tale Evergreen – Never Old and Good to Go – is in this collection from Bridge House Publishing
- Many of the Cafelit, Bridge House, and Chapeltown authors contributed to this book by Gill James. There is a prompt for every day of the year.
- Lovely to see my books on a bookshop shelf!
- Image from Bridge House Publishing
- I contributed to this. Image from Bridge House Publishing
- Image from Bridge House Publishing
- Transforming Being. Image by Bridge House Publishing.
- I was in this Bridge House anthology. Picture taken by Allison Symes
- Books are the gateway to other worlds – image via Pixabay

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsliked Allison Symes's blog post: What Makes A Story "Real" https://t.co/yVlNspEUyN via @goodreads I look at what makes a story real for me for Goodreads this week, regardless of where and when the tale is set. Believable characters is a must for a start. Hope you enjoy the post. pic.twitter.com/hzNeGmMyud
— Allison Symes (@AllisonSymes1) January 17, 2026
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsAuthors Electric: Approaching the Light by Allison Symes https://t.co/RZdTEkZxMw
— Allison Symes (@AllisonSymes1) January 18, 2026
Pleased to be on AE with Approaching The Light. While January does drag, as it goes on we literally approach the light(er) evenings. I discuss light & dark stories & light & dark in our characters. pic.twitter.com/Awhyyjkprh
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsIt’s Monday. Time for my new YouTube tale – Nicknames.
— Allison Symes (@AllisonSymes1) January 19, 2026
The receptionist of a club where nobody gets in without an invite with their name and nickname on is confronted by a forceful character without this. Will the receptionist stand her ground? https://t.co/sKdWEhm2bo
















































