
Pip: Every good episode starts with a door — sometimes literally, as Darlene Foster’s blog will demonstrate today.
Mara: We’re covering two distinct territories: a short story born from a creative writing challenge, and a book excerpt paired with a review. Let’s start with the challenge that turns a photograph of a door into fiction.
Creative Writing Challenge
Pip: The premise here is elegant — Dan Antion’s Thursday Doors Writing Challenge asks writers to pick a submitted door photo and let it spark something. The question the story has to answer is: what lives behind that door, and what does it cost to step through it?
Mara: The door chosen was submitted by Yvette Prior, and the story it unlocks opens quietly: “Good days were rare for Erin. The new medication was working.”
Pip: Those two sentences do a lot of heavy lifting. We understand immediately that Erin is managing something — anxiety, OCD, something unnamed — and that today is fragile in the way that good things are when you’re not used to them.
Mara: The story builds that fragility carefully. Erin dusts invisible crumbs, wipes an already clean table, times her tea steep to the exact minute. Every detail is precise and earned.
Pip: And then the teapot drips, and she has to talk herself back from the edge — three attempts to pour without spilling. It’s a small, tense, completely believable scene.
Mara: Then the blast hits. The window shatters, the flamingo flies, and the last line lands hard: “She knew something like this would happen. The day had been too good.”
Pip: A whole character arc in under six hundred words.
Mara: From a story sparked by a single image, let’s move to a book that’s been out in the world long enough to earn a review.
Book Excerpt And Review
Pip: The Amanda in Ireland post is a two-for-one: an excerpt from Amanda in Ireland: The Body in the Bog, shared on Sally Cronin’s platform for indie authors, alongside a review.
Mara: Sally Cronin runs what the post calls a space for “book marketer and indie supporter extraordinaire” work — her Smorgasbord blog is a regular home for authors sharing their writing directly with readers.
Pip: Putting an excerpt next to a review is smart positioning — the excerpt shows the voice, the review supplies the credibility.
Mara: The full excerpt and review live over at Smorgasbord Invitations, which is where readers can dig into the actual prose and see what a bog in Ireland does to a plot.
Pip: A door that hides a disaster, a bog that hides a body — there’s a theme here about what’s waiting just out of frame.
Mara: Next time, we’ll see what else is lurking just around the corner.









