"Write what you know" they say.

Even of what you know is benefits advice work and writing stories about it only pays enough to keep your colleagues in biscuits!



Friday, 25 July 2014

A Good Read?


A perfect spot for a summer afternoon

At a loose end and unable to settle to writing after too much screen-gazing at work today, I've just been 'googling' my name and book titles.  It almost seems vain to do any such thing, but I have an occasional check to see whether anything interesting is being said, or whether anyone has reviewed a volume or two.  It was doing this that turned up the very positive review on Occupy London's blog that I mentioned in my post And the winner isn't... last month.

The surprise this time was discovering that my books are listed on Goodreads.  I (being a complete amateur, obviously) assumed that you opted on to this app by setting up an author page, or your publisher put you on if you were successful enough to have one, or too dead to do it yourself. 

Setting up on Goodreads has been on my 'to do' list for a while...

But the books are there already, without a move from me.  There are a mere three ratings so far, allocating 4 and 5 stars to Severe Discomfort (oddly, from the same person - but thanks for both Louise, if you're reading this!) but a mere 2 to Continual Supervision (from a different reader).  

Friends and Facebookers who use Goodreads, you may wish to help The Cause by adding your own rating or review here...
...though, as it links to you Facebook identity, you will have nowhere to hide if you say anything evil!

Ratings, as opposed to reviews, can be a tiny bit frustrating because you don't know what the reader liked or didn't like, and I would quite like to know.  Constructive criticism is helpful, but as it stands I don't know what impressed Louise, or didn't appeal to my two-star rater.  Was the conclusion to the plot too contrived?  The writing style not literary enough?  Disappointly political, when it gets off to quite a saucy start, or vice versa?  I may never know...

After pondering the ratings, I noticed a link to 'similar authors'.  Overcome with curiousity and mild trepidation to see what that would suggest, I clicked the link.

Nothing happened.  

Does this mean there are no similar authors?  Or is it just that there is too little information on me and the books for the Goodreads algorithms to start making suggestions?  If they're as good as the ones Facebook use to target ads and pages at me, I'm almost afraid to add any further data!  FB has been prompting me to like David Cameron's page for most of the last fortnight.  It might suggest Iain Duncan Smith as a 'similar author'.  Perish the thought!

Towards the foot of the author page there's a space for 'Sarah's fans'. 

And then the words 'none yet'.  (Sigh!)

But who needs fans, when you have comrades?



Wednesday, 9 July 2014

Afloat with Daphne Randall

Transcribed from hand-written notes made last Friday...

I'm in a narrowboat, but there's a jellyfish in the water right in front of our bows.  It's definitely a jellyfish rather than a plastic bag - we've seen hundreds of the latter, floating, semi-submerged or wrapped around the propeller shaft - and it's too big to be the discarded aftermath of a moment of passion and family planning either, even an 'oh my!' sized one.  It's moving against the wind and current too: plastic bags and used condoms can't generally do that.

It's unusual to find yourself bobbing about in salt water in a narrowboat, but we've been on a journey via Manchester and the Rochdale Canal into West Yorkshire, along river navigations to Leeds and, via its entire length, along the Leeds and Liverpool Canal to Liverpool, and we're now moored in Salterhouse Dock, facing the famous Albert Dock. 
This trip has provided much thinking time but little writing time.  Long hours of summer daylight tend to encourage a long day's boating and with an average of almost one lock every mile there have been few useful spells of quiet time without a windlass or the tiller in my hand.  Also, being a self-confessed (indeed proud) Luddite, the boat lacks the electrics capable of keeping a laptop happily charged, so when I do write aboard, it's with old-fashioned pen and paper, leaving me at the end of a journey with a notepad of scribbled ideas for new stories, odd scenes to stitch together or amendments to work in progress. 

Progress with the new Solent Welfare Rights Project-based story has therefore been sluggish - if anything, there have been a few steps back as I rethink the opening scenes and reshuffle events.  However, there is one character whose voice grows stronger and character clearer in the course of these journeys and, unsurprisingly, that's boat-dwelling Daphne Randall.  Originally conceived only as a walk-on part from Hilary Carrington's rather bleak back-story, Daphne is quietly establishing herself as the potential heroine of at least one tale which I might loosely describe as a 'political thriller', if in the same low-budget, domestic sense as Severe Discomfort et al are 'legal dramas', and possibly a series of waterways-based short(ish) stories picking up some of the time between meeting her in Pots and Locks (see And the winner isn't... a couple of posts back) and our reunion with her in Severe Discomfort.  
Without casting too many spoilers about, I've learnt a lot about Daphne on this journey.  Standing at the tiller of our narrowboat (a cabin shorter than Daphne's Lady Eowyn, so I haven't needed to learn all of her skippering skills) with the drizzle in my face or the sun in my eyes, I've allowed myself to ponder how she might perceive the sights, sounds and smells along the way, as well as who she might travel with, to or from.  I've noted odd things that my camera doesn't see well - like this jellyfish under water dimpled by the rain that I can't get into focus.  I've an idea that while she often speaks somewhat bluntly, Daphne has quite a poetic soul.  She isn't a closet romantic (unlike her friend Hilary), but has an eye for beauty nonetheless, plus some considerable knowledge of both natural and industrial history.  The boating life suits her too, enabling her to balance conflicting tendencies in her nature.  She's been something of a restless Bohemian in her past and the hankering for novelty has never quite left her, though she also craves a snug and familiar home.
So perhaps one day there will be a scene in a story with Daphne Randall looking out across the Albert Dock, watching the coaches depositing flurries of tourists by day and the taxis dropping off their stiletto-heeled hen parties by night.  She might even be moored alongside a little ship called 'Dignity' with a Saltaire emblazoned on the side.
But for now, the story has little more structure or substance than that elusive jellyfish...

Saturday, 21 June 2014

A Day at the Festival

I only bought tickets for a couple of the events at the inaugural Stoke-on-Trent Literary Festival, as I didn't really know what to expect, never having attended a 'literary festival' before.  It would be a shame to spend a lot on tickets, only to find that it was all rather dull.  I also felt I should book cautiously since getting to it might have proved tricky - we are currently spending most of my non-work days travelling by narrowboat along (at present) the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, and I couldn't be sure we would find somewhere that the boat could be left safely unattended for more than a day. 

And, to be totally honest, there was a moment when I felt inclined to sulk in my tent after failing to make the short story shortlist, but having paid for the tickets it seemed silly not to do my sulking in the Festival's tent instead.  Except that something had gone wrong with that - the Hot Air Marquee - the evening before.  I haven't quite got to the bottom of what, but rumour has it that all did not quite go to plan with the stage during David Starkey's appearance and, by the time we arrived for A N Wilson's presentation on his Wedgwood family saga 'A Potter's Hand', the marquee was nowhere to be seen.  It's probably just as well nothing unpredictable happened during SAS man Andy McNab's stint, or things might have turned ugly...

I'd booked the A N Wilson event simply because we were going to be home today whatever for Antony Beevor's lecture during the afternoon, and I thought Jon might enjoy hearing another perspective on Josiah Wedgwood, having studied him at University.  I couldn't recall ever reading anything by A N Wilson, though had a vague idea I might have seen the name at some point in a Guardian Review article.  So it was a great treat to find that Mr Wilson is a witty and engaging speaker, cheerfully undaunted at frequently being out-of-step with his slide-show of Wedgwood-related images and capable of a delightful Alan Bennett impression in the course of describing how he had asked his author friend if he was related to the Potteries author Arnold Bennett, only to be advised that Alan Bennett had a cousin by that name who was a policeman in Leeds.  He also dropped the V&A in the proverbial for (allegedly) breaking a piece of Catherine the Great's 'Frog' dinner service, though restoring it so well the Russians have never noticed (allegedly). 

After such an enjoyable talk, it would have seemed almost rude not to buy the book and join the queue for the author to sign it - which he duly did "To Jon and Sarah, narrow-boat enthusiasts" after Jon gave him a brief account of our travels (relevant, since Wedgwood was the original sponsor of the Trent and Mersey Canal). 

We really will have to get a proper bookshelf sorted out onboard now.    

After a morning of craftsmanship and creation, sprinkled with lively humour, the afternoon session proved a sobering contrast - Antony Beevor discussing his study of the Second World War.  He's a superb historian, combining official facts and figures with personal accounts to bring some of the cruelest days of the 20th century vividly alive, and covering the vast geographical sweep of his narrative expertly, but it wouldn't be accurate to say that I 'enjoyed' it.  Despite his best efforts to remind us of some unexpected acts of compassion, the picture was a bleak one, though it was heartening to hear his opinion that he did not believe such destructive forces would be unleashed again.

More books were bought and signed. 

As for furthering my own literary ambitions, I should have booked a seat to hear a panel discussion on crime fiction (happening about now), as my plans for Daphne Randall include a modest amount of seriously unconventional crime-fighting, but I've picked up some details of writers groups and magazines that may be useful.

So, with hindsight, I probably should have thrown caution to the wind and booked for quite a lot more.  If today's events are anything to judge by, there has been a lot to enjoy so far and there are some fascinating and entertaining sessions ahead too.  I only hope there has been enough enthusiasm about the event as there seemed to be from the people attending today, and we can look forward to another one next year.






Wednesday, 18 June 2014

And the winner isn't...

It was tricky picking a photo for this post that didn't spoil the 'twist' in the tail of my recent 'Hot Air' short story entry (if it works - as you'll see, it may not...), but this one should do the trick.

With the date for the winners to be announced having passed without any news, I have to accept that 'Pots and Locks' hasn't collected any laurels in this competition.  I did hope that the mixture of local references and humour might appeal, along with the outsider's eye view of the City (not my own outsider's eye, but another you'll probably recognise if you've read Severe Discomfort etc), and I deliberately steered clear of politics and controversy.  One friend's observation that perhaps it reads too much like the first chapter of a longer story is fair comment, though if I say more about that now, it will be a complete spoiler for the story that follows.

After making the effort to do something quite different to usual it's disappointing not to have made the shortlist but, honestly, would I really have wanted to win something partly sponsored by The Sun

Well, of course I would!  I write because I enjoy it, but I also write because I want to be read.  Naturally, I hoped that a good showing in this competition might get me a useful spot of publicity for the other books and a chance to trail the forthcoming paperback version of Limited Capability, to put in a good word for my Citizens Advice Bureau colleagues and even manage a mention for a local organisation who misguidedly have me on their committee as 'publicity officer' (if I say who now, that'll also be a major spoiler - tell you after the story).

So this weekend's Literary Festival isn't going to be the springboard I might have hoped, but I am genuinely looking forward to the events I have tickets for and I might still manage to sneak a plug for my books in somewhere among the Sentinel comments and Facebook pages.  Just in case, the Kindle version of Severe Discomfort will be on free download on Saturday and Continual Supervision on Sunday, so hopefully they'll reach at least a few new readers.

I've always said that I don't write my books for political activists, but that doesn't mean I'm not delighted when an activist has something good to say about them, so excuse me if I share a link to this review from 'Occupy London'.  http://occupylondon.org.uk/severe-discomfort-by-sarah-honeysett-a-review/

And here is the short story...

Pots and Locks

An insistent tapping, close to my ear, woke me abruptly: sharp, metallic, rapid but irregular.  Shock knotted my stomach and took my breath as the last snatch of a troubled dream fled.  Opening my eyes, the ceiling above shimmered and rippled with strange, inconsistent light. 
And still there was that unrelenting tapping.
I had been getting used to the strange sounds of my new home for a week.  I didn’t notice them in the day, but at night they were everywhere.  Every new noise set my nerves on edge.  Pattering overhead.  Creaking in the walls.  Sometimes a slow, sinister dripping.
But this was something new.

‘What brought you to the Potteries then, duck?’
Mrs Bromley topped up my teacup from a dainty pot with a familiar blue and white chintzy pattern.  I hadn’t meant to stay once I’d decided this wasn’t the house for me, but she was lonely and my company was welcome, sale or no sale.
‘We lost my mother here,’ I said.
‘Oh duck, I am sorry!’ 
She patted my hand.
‘It’s all right.  We found her again.’
Of course Dad and I should have kept a closer eye on her when we stopped at the motorway service station.  I’d taken my parents on holiday to Devon and, after enough cream teas and scenic greenery for one summer, we were heading for home up the M5.  Dad was on lookout, in case Mam left the loos before me, but he failed to spot her, hidden in a huddle of ladies with matching silver perms and pastel raincoats. 
The bus was heading for the slip road when I sighted her, waving a cheerfully goodbye to us from a window towards the back.  Mam’s fond of coach tours, but she had never actually stowed away on one before.. 
‘Aw hell, Daphne!  What’ll we do na?’ said Dad.
‘Get in the car and get after them!’  I opened the driver’s door. 
‘But I haven’ had me lasagne!  It were one of them meal deals, with a free cuppa an’ a cookie.’ 
Dad’s always had an eye for a bargain.
‘Just get in, will you!’
We had the coach in sight by the intersection.  It was a distinctive sickly purple, splashed with turquoise.  Though I’d spotted its base was Gloucester and scribbled down the first half of the number, we couldn’t guess its destination and as there was no safe way to stop it or get the driver’s attention on the move, we tailed it north up the M6. 
‘It‘d be a piece o’ luck if they wa’ headed t’ Newcastle!’ said Dad.
The coach left the motorway at junction 15.
‘Wrong Newcastle, Dad…’ I said, braking for an unexpectedly steep curve.
‘Mebbe it’s Alton Toowers they’re after visitin’?’ he suggested.
‘I doubt it.  There wasn’t one of them looked under eighty.’
Not even the driver.
I had an idea we might catch them at a set of lights on road to Stoke-on-Trent, but we found the traffic against us at a roundabout and watched helplessly as Mam sped away along the A500 with her newfound friends.  We followed when we could, but they were out of sight.
‘Now what, Daffers?  They could be anywheres!’
I knew next to nothing about the Potteries except that there were, well, potteries.  That would have been another draw for our Mam; she loves her china knick-knacks.
‘Tourist information!’ 
I had this daft idea that the City Centre would be called ‘Stoke’.  We ended up at a big Sainsburys, where I got an explanation of why I was wrong and directions to where it really was.  I did three circuits of a convoluted one-way system, cursing the planning officers of this fair city to the fiery pits of hell throughout, before I found the real City Centre – and tourist office - in a place called Hanley.  I left Dad napping in the multi-storey.
‘Have you a coach party up from Gloucester today?’
Not at Wedgwood: not at Portmeirion.  Not at Emma Bridgwater and, mercifully for the parental credit card, not at Moorcroft either.  We were almost through the list and I was wondering whether to widen the search to stately homes and gardens…
‘You have?’  Eureka!  ‘I don’t suppose you could see if there’s a Mrs Randall from Newcastle with them.  Upon Tyne, that is…’
They promised not to let her out of the tearoom before we arrived.  After a journey up hill and down, up again to the architectural glories of the Mother Town and down through what they called a ‘renewal area’, we found her. 
She was in a pretty pottery time warp, surrounded by chintzy china. 
‘There you go, Daffy love!’ 
She’d bought me a blue and white teapot. 
‘Have you nothing else, pet?’ 
Dad, who was still peckish, was after a bite to eat.  He had hoped for a change of fare once we’d reach the Midlands, but had to make do with a scone and jam again.
I wandered outside.  With a steady chug of its engine and a quiet plashing of water, a rusty narrowboat glided past.  The hippy skipper looked faintly piratical.  He waved and winked.  I suppose I looked like a kindred spirit.  I waved back, and then returned to see how the parents were doing.
A discarded newspaper lay on the next table, so while Mam waited for her friends to return from their factory tour and Dad munched his scone, I browsed the news, the jobs and the property pages. 
The paper was two weeks old, but gave me a feel for this city in the way that only local stories and letters do.  I cannot say why, but I felt drawn to it.  It shared some of its past with home; I felt I understood it.  I was restless, reconciled to the fact that my life in London with the lovely Bruno was behind me (don’t ask), but not settling back at Mam and Dad’s.  I was after pastures new - not that there were any in Middleport.  There were open spaces, wild flowers blooming where rows of terraced houses once stood, but they weren’t pastures by any means.
A job vacancy caught my eye: the closing date was only a day away. 
I shepherded the parents towards the car.
‘Cheerio Hilda!  Bye-bye, Jean!’  Mam said her farewells to her accomplices, and we headed back to the M6 and a long night’s drive north by northeast.
I cannot imagine that the application I flung together online after that was my finest, so I guess there was little competition.  Assistant manager of a women’s refuge isn’t everyone’s dream job, after all.  But a week later I came back for a surprisingly brief interview and a month after that, started work in Stoke-on-Trent.
At first I rented a flat, as my contract relied on short-term funding.  It was a nice enough place and if it was small that suited me; I needed to put less in it to make it home.  I could have been happy there, I’m sure, but Andy the landlord gave me notice after a year.  He needed to move back in.  It seems she wasn’t ‘the one’ after all - or he wasn’t.
‘Stay at mine, shug!’ offered Josie.  She’s a fantastic colleague and fun friend for a girls’ night out, but before three months were up I knew that if I didn’t move out soon, I’d be hacking her to pieces and hiding the dismembered remains under the waxed and sanded floorboards of her immaculate semi.  I couldn’t cook so much as a boiled egg without her cleaning up, right behind me.  If I draped my coat over the back of a chair, she’d swoop at once to hang it in the lobby.  I’d get off the settee and she’d be there, plumping up the cushions.  She re-sorted the recycling after me.  Sometimes, she re-washed my laundry. 
She even tidied my room. 
I know it was her house, but nobody had tidied my room since I was eight.  Fortunately, her life was saved - we got funding for another five years, so I could buy a home of my own. 
I couldn’t see myself managing a mortgage unless I settled for somewhere in need of major renovation or high security fencing.  Mrs Bromley’s place required neither, but it would never feel like home.  A weasel-faced woman had glowered at me from next door’s kitchen window as Mrs B showed me around her gnome-infested garden.  I couldn’t find it in my heart to make an offer for the ‘repossession’ either.  The views across the city to the Moorlands beyond were dramatic, but I could almost sense the anguish in the empty rooms.  I got ‘gazumped’ out of the Victorian cottage overlooking the Cheshire Plain, but it was at the limit of my budget anyway, and would have no cash left to replace the carpets, which reeked of wet dog.
On the night that everything changed, Josie was ‘entertaining’.  The house was excruciatingly pristine, a classy dinner for two was in preparation and Jo was done up to the nines.  I had foolishly offered to run errands for her, so she could put the finishing touches to the perfect evening with her beau. 
‘You were meant to buy beans!’
‘And I did…’
‘Not baked beans!  I conner do baked beans with lemon sole!‘
‘The list just said “beans”...’ 
I never did have sophisticated tastes.
I was to get myself off to the pub and stay there until closing time, but come home before midnight, in case he turned out to be a ‘weirdo’.
‘I could pop back in half an hour?’ I offered, as an extra safeguard.  ‘With the right beans?’
The look said not.  She would rather take her chances than have the man of her dreams confronted by a squat, middle-aged Geordie with a bag of legumes.
‘They won’t be done in time.  I’ll have to use frozen ones!’
The relationship was doomed before it started, and it was all my fault.
It was a clear spring evening with another half hour of twilight, so I took the scenic route to my watering hole.  I was tired of moving, of bundling my world into boxes.  Had I died, there and then, I would have requested reincarnation as a snail.
That was when I saw the ‘For Sale’ notice in the window.  A welcoming light shone from within.  A curl of smoke rose from the chimney.  It wasn’t yet so late that a visit would be anti-social, so I scurried back across the bridge.  I sensed that I had found my new home, even before I stepped inside.

The tapping continued…
I sat up and peered out of the window.
‘Aw hell!’
A pale shape drifted into view through the grey-gold dawn.  A malevolent black eye came level with my own.  There was a flash of orange. 
The creature hissed, and then lowered its long neck back to the water. 
The tapping started again.
Swans!  I’d fed the last of the old loaf to them the night before, sitting in the bows watching the sun setting over the industrial estate.  Now they were back, nibbling the algae along the waterline, tapping with their bright beaks on the steel hull.
After a week, I still had much to learn about living on a narrowboat.  Scented candles had dispersed the aroma of wood smoke and weed that greeted me when Pete first welcomed me aboard what was no longer the rusty hulk I had waved to from the Burleigh Pottery, but a sound, proud vessel painted glossy green and gold.  Keen to see this labour of love left in safe hands, he showed me the ropes (quite literally) and taught me to moor and steer.  I worked through my first locks under his critical eye, finding the confidence to balance along the roof, the courage to climb the slimy ladder out of the damp chamber, and then back at Etruria, paperwork signed and payment made, he entrusted her to me. 
My own little home: afloat, in the heart of the Potteries.


And the organisation daft enough to have me notionally looking after PR are the North Staffordshire and South Cheshire Branch of the Inland Waterways Association. 

I'm sure Daphne would join!

Update:  The three shortlisted stories can be read here http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/write-Stoke-winners-Adults/story-21243601-detail/story.html

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Still re-covering...

I think I'm going to need a toasted teacake soon. 

It's not what you'd usually follow a large glass of Rioja with, and you wouldn't usually have a large glass of Rioja with a samosa, of course, but if you've read Limited Capability you'll have a bit of a clue of what these bits and pieces are for (and that the samosas for the cover photo of Episode Ten should be veggie ones, not lamb!)

I've now either found or staged photos for the covers of the first eleven (out fourteen) episodes of Limited Capability.  Three to go!  Without straying too far into Spoilerland, I've used a portion of a photo from a real-life first birthday party for the cover of Episode Six, our Christmas tree from a couple of years ago for Episode Seven, a wintery shot taken in a much smaller garden than the splendidly romantic grounds of Andromeda House for Eight and a suitably muted shot across Southampton Water for Episode Nine.

Episode Eleven has a very bland cover (the water in a swimming pool); I had a more interesting alternative in mind but this struck me, somewhat perversely, as a good choice for the episode reviewed as 'boring' - especially as nobody has yet put in a review to defend it!

So all that are left to do are those for Twelve, Thirteen and Fourteen.  I can see all of them in my mind's eye, but I haven't got anything in stock that meets the spec, so won't get them in the camera lens for a little while.

The tweaks to the text that I've spotted as necessary after a paperback proof-read have also been made to all the episodes with new covers, but I'm expecting more corrections when I get feedback from 'the team' checking for mistakes.  I'm sure that, as previously, fresh eyes will pick up things I've missed. 

And then I've got to finish my revised cover design for the paperback, and order a fresh proof copy for checking before it 'goes live' for sale.  It's amazing how much work there is still to do when you've finished writing a book!


Friday, 9 May 2014

Short stories

On location - Burleigh Pottery, as featured in my 'Too Write' entry.

At the end of last month, I finally put the finishing touches to my short story entry for the forthcoming Stoke-on-Trent Literary Festival.  That's the one with The Sun among the sponsors, as if self-publishing ebooks via Amazon wasn't enough of an ethical dilemma for a leftie feminist writer of claimant-friendly counter propaganda...

Being in the habit of giving away my literary efforts (at least the ebooks - on the basis that if Amazon don't pay tax and don't pay a living wage to their staff, we shouldn't pay them either), I was tempted to post the short story on here now, but I'm not sure whether that would break 'the rules' for the competition.  I will post it, in full afterwards, come what may.  I have already warned my friends that it contains no politics, no benefits, and none of 'that sort of thing'.  But it does contain a character you may have met before.

With my short story safely filed, I planned to get back to work on my long stories, but in the event spent last week composing even shorter ones, as part of our on-going benefits take-up campaign.  Using a fairly rough-and-ready calculation, we've worked out that if there are (as the DWP and HMRC estimate) £16 billion in unclaimed benefits and tax credits left sitting in the Treasury's coffers every year, about £50 million of that is owed to people in Stoke-on-Trent.  And if, as Age UK estimate, every year £5 billion in benefits for older people isn't claimed, about a third of what's owed to Stokies is due to local pensioners.

So yesterday was spent at a stand in the Potteries Shopping Centre, offering people little leaflets with these headline figures about 'Stoke-on-Trent's Missing Millions' on one side, and a 'short story' on the other.  About Jean and John, a pensioner couple entitled to full Housing Benefit and Council Tax Support - but only if Jean claimed a benefit that couldn't actually be paid to her.  About Lucy, another pensioner, who qualified for Guarantee Credit and other goodies only after her income went up.  And Mark, who got 100% rebate on his Council Tax when his Employment and Support Allowance increased, but paid 30% when he was poorer.  There are some parts of the Social Security system that could have been created by the Brothers Grimm - and some that are just grim. 

There were also tales with happy endings for a young family with a disabled child, a guy returning to work after illness and a pair of potentially star-crossed lovers who didn't think they could afford to live together (but could, thanks to Tax Credits).  Hopefully some of the leaflets will find their way to people who'll say 'that's a bit like our story', and claim what they're due.

But it's not all happy news.  Our local council are re-running a campaign against fraud, and while it's supposedly against fraud generally, it's only the benefit fraud and Blue Badge abuse cases that seem to make the papers.  The campaign posters ask 'Know a Cheat on your Street?', encouraging neighbours to report each other and are adorned with a photo of a cheetah.  No doubt a few folk up to no good will be turned in, but it's completely the opposite message to the one me and my colleagues are trying to promote, and will put the very people off claiming that we are trying to reach.

And I can't help wondering how many real life Lyns and Terrys will go through the misery of being under suspicion with vital payments suspended and Court action threatened, Severe Discomfort style, and all because someone in their street thinks they're a cheat.

Saturday, 3 May 2014

Part of the Union


Demonstrating for the NHS in Manchester
 It's a Bank Holiday weekend and all I've got for you is a repeat!  But it seems like an appropriate choice for May Day.  Here's an article my Trade Union, Unite, put on their 'Unite for Our Community' blog earlier in the year... 

If you’re a welfare rights adviser exasperated by programmes like ‘Benefits Street’, how do you tell people what life on Social Security is really like without breaching your clients’ confidentiality?  Stoke-on-Trent Citizens Advice Bureau Training Officer and former benefits specialist Sarah Honeysett thinks she has an answer – she writes what her colleagues have nicknamed ‘welfare rights lit’.

Sarah’s first novel, Severe Discomfort, follows a middle-aged couple’s fight to clear their names of an accusation of Social Security fraud.  Despite the subject matter, it’s an upbeat story with a good helping of humour, a light-heartedly naughty romance and a devious, hypocritical villain, but it also challenges many myths and stereotypes about benefit claimants and the Social Security system.  The unlikely heroes Lyn and Terry Walker wouldn’t dream of appearing on ‘Reality TV’ and no television company would be interested in such apparently dull people - but their circumstances are the reality for many working-age claimants.  They’re reliant on benefits after tough, responsible working lives and - at least at first - are well-supported by a benefits system set up to give them a decent standard of living, despite their disabilities.

“When I started work in the 1980s recession there was a lot of compassion for people who were out of work,” says Sarah.  “Since then, reality TV shows and documentaries such as Saints and Scroungers, On the Fiddle, Skint and now Benefits Street have painted a picture of a Social Security system open to abuse, with benefits supposedly available as a ‘lifestyle choice’. But the rules for claiming whether you’re a lone parent, unemployed or sick are very much tougher now than they were in the Thatcher years, and getting harsher still.  I hope this story will encourage people to take a more sympathetic attitude and think about how they would cope in Lyn and Terry’s shoes.”

Sarah has pledged the profits from sales of both Severe Discomfort and its sequel, Continual Supervision, to Stoke-on-Trent CAB.  Paperbacks of both stories are available from proper tax-paying bookshops, and Kindle versions are available from Amazon.

You can see the original article here - and read other news and views on how Unite is fighting for its Voluntary Sector members.
http://www.uniteforoursociety.org/blog/entry/the-other-side-of-benefits-street/