Donna Smith

Researcher | Writer | Reader

Fiction Writing


When I was 7 years old, I wrote and illustrated my first book (folded paper, stapled in the centre).  It was about the adventures of a bouncing ball and proved to be a huge success with my readers (family!)  I loved writing stories at school and I wrote, directed and acted in plays and variety shows at home.  They often featured singing, dance routines and poetry - very much influenced by my love of old Hollywood films and musicals - and I somehow managed to persuade my younger brothers to take part!  

When I was 12 years old, I wrote and illustrated a children's book called 'I Hate My Hair!' which was both semi-autobiographical and a cautionary moral tale!  I loved English and Drama lessons, and played the leading female role in the school play, Alan Ayckbourn's 'Ernie's Incredible Illucinations',  I had fantastic English teachers, Mrs Cooper and Mr Hardman, who organised school trips to see productions of the novels/plays we were studying, and my lifelong love of theatre began. 

As an adult, my obsession with stories - books, plays, musicals, operas - continued but I didn't write again until about 13 years ago.  I have since written five novels/part-novels, one of which was written in a month for NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month), but they all need a huge amount of editing!  I have also written lots of poems, many of which have been published in the UK, Ireland and USA.  A selection of them are featured below.

***Content warning: some of these poems deal with sensitive issues such as bereavement, chronic illness and mental health***

📝

 The Prodigal Son 


A man filled with pride comes home 
Puts his overnight bag on the coffee table 
In the ‘good front room’ 
Puts down the keys to his electric car 
That his Dad says is new-fangled rubbish 
Would he not have got a fiesta from Car Dealz Colin instead 
Puts down the artisan cupcakes just so 
That his Mum says are just fairy cakes with notions 
Sure she could have whipped up some for a tenth of the price 
 
And the man puts there the sigh of dust motes scurrying 
And the sofa groaning, disturbed after such a long time 
In the ‘good front room’, only for visitors 
Blinking, remembering, settling 
 
And the man puts there the scratchy, too-small school uniform 
With scuffed, squeaking shoes 
Leaking rain and tears of shame 
And the free school meals, cabbage 
With something nondescript 
The smell of stigma clinging to his clothes 
And the bitter taste of poverty 
Heard in a hundred rows 
Hidden behind closed doors 
 
And the man puts there a wish to be somewhere else 
To be himself plus something, anything other 
One plus x equals endless possibilities 
Add carefully, bit by bit 
For fear of rejection; love, love me do 
And he puts there, “University’s for posh people, not the likes of us; 
Not good enough for you now are we?” 
But he’s gone too far and he no longer fits 
Remember you can always add more but you can’t take it away 
 
And the man puts there the pride in himself 
That he wanted from them 
And the man puts there the graduation photo 
That they didn’t want 
And the man puts there the longing 
For acceptance 
On the coffee table in the ‘good front room’ 
But one angry arm could sweep all these things to the floor 
And he would be eighteen again, trying to explain 
Here was always enough but there is where his dreams live 


Inspired by Table - Edip Cansever

📝

 Fibromyalgia vs You  

 
Think they’ll still call you when you keep saying no 
To parties and dinners, in fact everywhere they go 
And might they not think that it’s all in your head 
Since you’ve never looked better, or so they said 
 
Think they’ll still love you when their you has gone 
Mangled by illness that goes on, and on 
And will their disappointment become one more blow 
To add to pain and misery, it’s another new low 
 
Think you’ll still be you when all of you is lost 
You may still be here but at what cost 
It’s easier to hide away than be a ghost of you 
And staying home, all alone, shrinks your world view 
The need for explanation leads to chronic isolation 
And since you’re no fun, the battle has been won 
 
Fibromyalgia one, you nil

📝

Student 131 

 
Your tatty red rucksack abandoned in the hall, 
spilling notes for an exam 
you will never sit. 
A moment frozen in time, forever, for you. 
Yet the clock continues to tick for us, 
marking your absence 
 
and the eternal curse of the living: 
to always wonder if more might have been done. 
Did we muddle your misery 
with your smiles? 
Was your desperate cry for help unheard, 
the sound drowned in the cacophony of living? 
 
And as we shuffle - uncomfortable, dazed, numb - 
in our kitchen meant for five students, 
not four, 
your mother’s heartbreak fills the room 
with stifled sobs 
and a clinking teaspoon. 
  
As part of the ‘Send Silence Packing’ campaign 131 rucksacks were placed on the lawn at Trinity College Dublin, representing the average number of university students lost to suicide each year in Ireland. 
 
📝

The House of Shattered Dreams 

 
Their dreams were shipwrecked on the rocks of recession, 
recovery unlikely from property crash depression. 
Vultures circled over ghost-estate wreckage 
as people succumbed to Celtic Tiger carnage. 
Emigrate, procrastinate, think it will get better? 
No-one cares, you’re just another debtor. 
 
So they left and they tried to make a new future, 
away from Ireland an optimistic picture. 
But reluctant landlords with no lifeline from the bank, 
as time went by deeper and deeper they sank. 
Emigrate, procrastinate, think it will get better? 
No-one cares, you’re just another debtor. 
 
They went back to Ireland to visit family and friends, 
found their house was wrecked, tenants wouldn’t make amends. 
So desperate to surrender this poisoned chalice, 
they posted all the keys to the bank head office. 
Emigrate, procrastinate, think it will get better? 
No-one cares, you’re just another debtor. 
 
I wish I could tell you that there was a happy ending, 
that life goes on and they got their new beginning. 
But the house was sold in negative equity 
so they still owed the bank the ransom money. 
Emigrate, procrastinate, think it will get better? 
No-one cares, you’re just another debtor. 
 
House of shattered dreams on a ghost estate, 
financial ruination and it’s all too late; 
crippled by the fall-out of boom bubble burst, 
they never had the chance to put their new future first. 
And just because they bought a house like everybody else did, 
they became a part of ‘generation shafted’. 


The 2008 financial crash plunged Ireland into recession.  A collapse in the housing market caused some properties to drop in value by more than 50% and many newbuild properties remained unsold and uninhabited on ghost estates.  In 2025 many properties have yet to return to their pre-crash value. 

📝

War Child 

 
A skein of wild geese shrieking overhead, 
migrating to somewhere warmer instead. 
Journey rehearsed many times already, 
their route is well planned, their progress steady. 
But you, war child, your eyes full of sorrow, 
just five years old, no hope for tomorrow. 
Torn from home in the middle of the night, 
fleeing the warzone, no refuge in sight. 
 
Wild geese and war child fighting for their lives, 
migrants of necessity, just to survive. 
Wild geese are determined, warm climes the prize, 
the sojourn elsewhere a welcome reprise. 
But for you, war child, escape does not mean, 
an end to your nightmare, both lived and seen. 
For all of the horrors scorched in your head, 
could not be erased unless you too were dead. 


📝

Ode to Dylan Thomas 

 
You did go gentle 
Into that good night 
Your alcohol addled body 
Could not rage nor fight 
 
At the bottom of a whiskey bottle 
Wisdom is not to be found 
Though from a troubled soul 
Beautiful poetry may abound 
 
And your words are with us always  
They brook no dying of the light 
  
📝

She’s Leaving Home  


Wrap up well in extra layers 
Protect yourself from harm 
Ravages of stormy weather 
Or danger veiled in charm 
 
Go off into the world my child 
Find treasure every day 
But don’t forget I’m always here 
If ever you lose your way 
 
Wrap up well in extra layers 
Be safe, be happy, be kind 
And rest assured I’m there with you 
If only in your mind 


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