Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas


‘Motherhood is an obliteration of the self,’
Diana Evans • Ordinary People: Shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2019
She was Melissa’s oldest, boldest friend. They had gone to the same primary school. Hazel worked in advertising. She had a wide and glamorous smile behind which was an oft-foul tongue, and long, bouncing, half-French, half-Ghanaian curls falling down her back, the most beautiful, the most envied of their schoolgirl pack, the one the boys always wen
... See moreDiana Evans • Ordinary People: Shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2019
one final choice:
John Yorke • Into The Woods: How Stories Work and Why We Tell Them

it was only Melissa who ate the granola and he was thinking very hard about which granola to buy, the orange and cranberry or the coconut and tropical fruit.
Diana Evans • Ordinary People: Shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2019
We see her face, we see her foot, and we know.
John Yorke • Into The Woods: How Stories Work and Why We Tell Them
