Tuesday, 18 November 2025

I talk to Jim Bates about his collection 'Where the heart is'


 

Why did you decide to collect these particular stories together? What is the overriding theme here for you

I hope this doesn’t sound too weird, but I chose these stories with my dear departed mother in mind. Mom passed away in 2011. We were very close. She knew how much I loved to write, yet had been putting off jumping in and making even the tiniest of beginnings due to many reasons (family, career, the usual suspects). In one of the last conversations we had, she counseled me to ‘Start following your dream, Jim. Before it’s too late.’ You know what? She was right. I took her advice. The night after that conversation, I took the leap and committed to start writing every day with the idea in mind of trying to be the best writer I could be. I’m glad I did! This was back in 2011, and it was the best thing I've ever done. I love writing, and this collection of stories, “Where the Heart Is,” is a book I’m sure Mom would have liked. The stories are character-driven and have a positive message, both themes that my mom enjoyed in the books she read. Mom, these are for you!

I love the cover.  Why was this particular picture important?


 

I’m so glad you like the cover. I do, too! The inspiration came from one of the photos on the calendar that hangs in the small room that is my writing space. I have an appreciation for lakes, and I love to sit and look out over them and enjoy their beauty. Being on a lakeshore is also a nice time to contemplate life. The cover represents both of those quiet pastimes. Thank you to Martin James for helping me select the cover image and also for the final great design. It’s perfect!

You worked with our intern, Fatima, on this collection.  Can you tell us a little about that process

Heartfelt kudos go out to Fatima! She was wonderful to work with. I appreciated that she was conscientious, thorough, and she also gave me some great input. I’d love to use her again if that were ever possible!

Jim, you’re a prolific writer of short stories. How do you manage to keep finding inspiration?

That’s a very kind comment, Gill. Thank you very much. I’ll answer by reiterating that I love to write, and that I’ve always wanted to be a writer. Seven years after dedicating myself to writing in 2011, I started sending my work out for publication. You published my first story, “Remembrance Day,” in 2018, and it gave me a huge boost in confidence. Thank you so much for that! I am a very quiet person. I do not mind being by myself at all. I love to go for walks and read. Throughout my day, I’m always thinking about possibilities for stories or poems. When the idea comes to me, I’ll write it down. Today, for example, I was playing with my yo-yo. (Yes, you heard me right, my yo-yo. It’s part of my morning routine LOL!) The idea of a poem came to me as I was doing an “Around the World” move. I went upstairs and jotted the poem down in my notebook. I went over that first draft and liked it. I then wrote the poem. I still liked it. It will be added to my new poetry collection, “Quantum Moments.” Ideas like that happen to me all the time, and I’m glad that they do! It helps to keep writing interesting, challenging, and fun.

 Do you have any advice for those who are new to writing short stories? 

Yes. Try to write every day. If you have a story you are working on, keep at it. Once you finish, review it, make sure it’s the way you want it, and then write another one. Stay with it! Ray Bradbury said, “If you write a story a week for a year, you’ll have 52 stories at the end of that year. I’ll guarantee at least one of them will be good.” To that I’ll add, probably more than one. The point is, keep writing. You only get better by writing. I’ll also add this: write for yourself. Write stories that you would want to read. If you like what you’ve written, that’s the main thing. You can never please everyone, so you have to please yourself. At the end of the day, you can say, “You know what? I don’t care what others say, I think my story is pretty good.” When you get to that point, when you like your own work, it’s a great place to be.

Are you working on any new projects?

Yes. Right now, I’m doing the final edits for “The Rebels,” which is Book 5 of my Creekside Chronicles YA (and older) dystopian/adventure series. It’s almost ready to be published. I’m also in the process of publishing “Periodic Haiku,” a collection of 5-7-5 syllable haiku poems based on the first 118 elements of the periodic table. And I’m also working on a collection of poems to be published in 2026 entitled “Quantum Memories.”

Do you have any events planned?

No events planned at this time except for ‘soft releases’ on FB and my blog.

Note: Thank you so much, Gill, for the opportunity to be on your blog. Your continual support of my writing efforts is stupendous and means the world to me! Again, thank you so much. 

See Jim's web site here:  https://theviewfromlonglake.com  

Find your copy of the book here  

 

Friday, 14 November 2025

Book Club Guide for 140 x 140



  1. Open the book randomly at three different places.  Which is your favourite of these three stories? Why?
  2. Read through the stories for the month in which your birthday occurs. Can you find one story that makes you laugh, one that makes you think and one that disturbs?
  3. Thumb through the book and find a story that includes: colour, politics or class distinction
  4. Have you an overall favourite? Explain what you like about this story.
  5. Random reading. Get your group to sit in a circle. The first person opens the book at a random page, reads the story out loud and passes it to the next person in the group. Continue until everyone has read a story.
  6. Pick three stories randomly and analyse them. Is this a story, a vignette, a commentary, a mini-essay?
  7. Identify themes in the book. Chose a favourite theme and comment on all of the stories that fit that theme.
  8. Analyse one entry in depth. What is it? How is the content structured? How is language used to get the main points across? Can you find any poetic devices such as personification, metaphor, similes, alliteration etc.?
  9. Use the contents page to identify three stories that appeal. Which of the three is your favourite and why?
  10. Pick an entry randomly and try to work out which picture may have inspired it.        

Find your copy here     

 

Thursday, 13 November 2025

Twenty Great Things about Being a Writer

 


 
  1. I get to be exactly who I want to be.  
  2. I get to invent lots of worlds. 
  3. I have a lot of friends in my writing world.
  4. Book events are fun. 
  5. Watching TV, going to the cinema or theatre and reading fiction count as work.
  6. Even listening to gossip at the pub feeds the hunger for stories.  
  7. It’s perfectly okay that I go clothes shopping and come back with books.
  8. Who needs lots of fancy clothes, anyway, if you're a writer?  
  9. All the time I spend writing just makes me a better writer.
  10. We change as writers all the time - you never know what's coming next.  
  11. I’m in incredibly good company: Shakespeare, Dickens, Maeve Binchy. 
  12. And of course Michael Morpurgo, Philip Pullman  and Jacqueline Wilson.   
  13. I work from home. Remind me: what’s a rush hour?
  14. And when I do venture out I find lots of stories. Journeys on busses are particularly good.  
  15. Everything is interesting and tells me a story. 
  16. We frame a series of events into a story.  
  17. I earn money while I’m on holiday. 
  18. I still earn money from work I did years ago.   
  19. I don’t mind being snowed in.
  20. I enjoy writing so much I even write when I'm on holiday.  

Sunday, 9 November 2025

Buy these three writing craft books for £5.00