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Leaf Author's Page

Rich Hough

Rich is a writer, who trained as a scientist, whose recent projects include an introduction to ecology, You Can Save the Planet (published by A&C Black); and a short story, 'Moose Receives a Letter From the Future', for Pen Pusher Magazine. Last year, Rich wrote and directed NightSchool – a series of four monthly comedy shows for The Theatre Museum, Covent Garden. He has written material for both radio and television and he lives with a wonderful man in North London.

Discovering a Comet

and

More Micro-Fiction

ISBN 1-905599-46-3

£7.99 (plus £1 p&p)

Order from Leaf Books and pay with PayPal (Accepts credit and debit cards. No account needed.)

Imagine this: coming downstairs on a winter's morning to find that someone has shoved a tiny comet through your letterbox. Unwanted celestial light has faded the dado rail and a montage of family photographs is all askew from the eccentric orbit that it's assumed, on an axis from the umbrella stand to the cloakroom door.

 Extract from runner-up ‘Discovering a Comet’ by Pauline Masurel.

Discovering a Comet and More Micro-Fiction contains the winning entries from Leaf Books’ 2008 micro-fiction competition. From tiny comets invading your airing cupboard to still life paintings that refuse to come alive to, in Freda Love Smith’s winning story ‘Jesse and Jesus’, questions that refuse to be answered but ask you to love them all the same, it’s essentially just a bumper assorted collection of total brilliance.

 

 

Was published in -

Imagine Coal

and

More Micro-Fiction

Imagine Coal

Short Story Anthology

Price £9.99 + £1 p&p
Format: Demi 82 Pages
ISBN: 978-1-905599-42-4

Order from Leaf Books and pay with PayPal (Accepts credit and debit cards. No account needed.)

 

The Woman with a Coffee Pot opposite me is so ugly with her work-a-day blue dress. Without rest I have to stare into her large, thick, round face, so like my own mother: the stern gaze, the bulbous nose. She is admired. Cezanne kept her. I am a working girl fresh from the fields, so blotted out.
‘You are the invisible form of my composition,’ he said.

– Extract from ‘Imagine Coal’ by Mary Cookson


Imagine Coal and More Micro-Fiction contains the winning entries from Leaf Books’ second micro-fiction competition of 2007. The thirty-one tiny fragments of wonderfulness within very concisely discourse on a fantastic variety of subjects, from artists’ models to attempted matricide via alien invasions, dancing GIs and elderly men with aphasia.