Writers Abroad Magazine Issue 5 | Page 22

WRITERS ABROAD MAGAZINE: THE THIRD SPACE Let Your Adopted Home Enrich Your Storytelling BY DIANNE ASCROFT For a writer, moving to a new city or country can be fortuitous, providing the inspiration for stories you never imagined you would write before you arrived at your new home. I’m a Canadian and, for more than a quarter of a century, I have lived in various cities and towns throughout Britain. Twelve years ago my husband and I returned to his childhood home in rural County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. Since I settled here with him, the ideas for many of the historical stories I write have been sparked by snippets I hear or read about past events in my adopted county. For example, not long after we moved to County Fermanagh, I first heard from neighbours the tale of the Coonian or Cooneen ghost, a poltergeist that local lore says drove a widow, Bridget Murphy, and her six children from their farm cottage and across the sea to America. The events happened at the beginning of the last century in a farm cottage only a few miles from where I live and one Sunday when my husband and I were out for a walk, we went to see the house. At the time, it was in the middle of a forestry plantation and could barely be glimpsed from the road (the forest was felled this spring, leaving the house starkly visible amidst the stubbly, deforested fields). We jumped over a small ditch, or sheugh as they call them here, beside the road and picked our way through the trees until we came to a greying, run-down yet rather forbidding building in a small clearing. Although we saw nothing otherworldly that day, the house had an eerie atmosphere and I wouldn’t have wanted to remain there after dark. 21 | November 2016