The Write Path 2025 Anthology - now available!
Simon Whaley • 14 January 2026
in paperback from Amazon, and ebook format from many digital book platforms

The Write Path 2025 anthology
is now available in paperback from Amazon, and ebook format from many digital book platforms (including Amazon, Apple, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Everand, Thalia, Smashwords, and many more!).
It comprises the winning entries and judges’ reports from our members’-only competitions, along with the first, second, and third place winners of our open poetry and short story competitions, and the winners of our 250-word Spooky flash fiction competition.
The ebook version (ISBN: 978-1-7384361-8-7) is priced £2.99, and the paperback version (ISBN: 978-1-7384361-7-0) is £7.99. For more information, click the Books2Read link and then select your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/twp2025
And if you missed any of the previous anthologies, check out the links below:
2024: https://books2read.com/twp2024
2023: https://books2read.com/twp2023
2022: https://books2read.com/twp2022
2021: https://books2read.com/twp2021
2020: https://books2read.com/twp2020
2019: https://books2read.com/twp2019
My thanks go to everyone on the committee and the judges for their help with gathering everything together to enable me to produce the anthology, and to Liz for her proofreading assistance!
Simon Whaley
It comprises the winning entries and judges’ reports from our members’-only competitions, along with the first, second, and third place winners of our open poetry and short story competitions, and the winners of our 250-word Spooky flash fiction competition.
The ebook version (ISBN: 978-1-7384361-8-7) is priced £2.99, and the paperback version (ISBN: 978-1-7384361-7-0) is £7.99. For more information, click the Books2Read link and then select your preferred retailer: https://books2read.com/twp2025
And if you missed any of the previous anthologies, check out the links below:
2024: https://books2read.com/twp2024
2023: https://books2read.com/twp2023
2022: https://books2read.com/twp2022
2021: https://books2read.com/twp2021
2020: https://books2read.com/twp2020
2019: https://books2read.com/twp2019
My thanks go to everyone on the committee and the judges for their help with gathering everything together to enable me to produce the anthology, and to Liz for her proofreading assistance!
Simon Whaley

Join by 31st January 2026 and get a special membership deal. Want to write that novel, poetry collection or script? If so join us. We help to set up and run writing groups and provide support for individual writers, to help writers develop and improve their work. For this year only, join early for a reduced price – £30 for groups, £15 for individual membership, and £10 for students. Membership runs until 30th June 2026. See the joining page for details. Benefits include: 15 free members only writing competitions. Group anthology competition. Discounts on workshops and writing events. Support for new writing groups. Monthly online meet ups for individual writer members. Members' magazine. E-Newsletter. Members only website area. Support for self-publishing. Join by 31st January to take advantage of this special offer.

Here is the winner of our spooky ghost / horror story NAWG 2025 Autumn 250-word Flash Fiction competition . It ran from Friday 3rd to Friday 31st October, First, second, and third place entries will also be published in Link magazine. See the website HERE The prize of £25 for the winning entry goes to SUSAN KING for her story: RUSSIAN ROULETTE. I dread this day. Pumpkins with grinning faces and kids running about dressed as ghosts. Ghosts don’t wear costumes, they’d know that if they’d seen one. I can cope with all that – it’s the knocking on doors blackmailing adults into giving them treats that frightens me. Don’t they know how dangerous this is? Agnes has a bucket of Cadbury Heroes by the door. Her children have grown up and left home which is a relief to me, I can tell you I want to yell at the little ones who stand with expectant faces when she opens the door. Bugger off, I want to shout. But of course, I can’t. You can’t imagine the horror of watching her fill her syringe and pierce the wrapper of a chocolate bar, plunging the needle into the gooey inside and withdrawing it empty. You don’t know what it’s like to watch helpless as she smiles and hands out the sweets. She’s not daft enough to poison each one. For her it’s a game of Russian roulette. She waits for the post on the village Facebook page. She reads the hundreds of messages of sympathy with glee, scrolls slowly through emojis of crying faces, pink hearts and praying hands. She notes the date of the funeral and gets out her dark clothes. It’s the same black dress and coat she wore my cremation. A human black widow spider, she dispensed with me after our children were born. It’s just other people’s children she dislikes.



