Category: Liverpool
-
Park Benched

Park Benched is a flash fiction piece set in Stanley Park, Liverpool, narrated by a park bench that silently observes an encounter between two men. The story centres on a university student—confident in his sexuality as a gay man, yet uncertain about how that identity should be lived—capturing the tension between openness, naivety, and vulnerability…
-
A City of Imagination: Could Liverpool Create a Yellow Submarine Art Park?

Liverpool has always been a city powered by imagination—from Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire roots to The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine. This article explores whether Liverpool could create a world-class art play park inspired by global examples such as Gulliver Park in Valencia, Kyiv’s Landscape Alley, and sustainable scrap-tyre playgrounds across Africa. Blending public art, play, music, and…
-
Iron Men, not Snow Men

Set on Crosby Beach, this flash fiction gives voice to one of Antony Gormley’s Iron Men, blending humour and reflection on public art, tourism, and cultural legacy.
-
🌟 November Round-Up at alisonlittle.blog – News, Reviews, Guides & Stories

November has been a busy month on alisonlittle.blog — from the breathtaking River of Poppies in Port Sunlight and a powerful review of Chris Shepherd’s Anfield Road, to guides on the best winter gloves, sustainable living pledges, and Christmas jumpers you can wear all season. I also share a personal account of workplace culture inside…
-
My 18 Months Working for Chums: An Insider’s Account of Workplace Culture, Inequality and Daily Humiliation

My 18 months working for Chums exposed a workplace culture built on strict control, inconsistent rules and unnecessary humiliation. From being disciplined over tailored shorts in a heatwave to witnessing staff dismissed without fair process, the experience revealed deep problems in management, timekeeping policies, and employee treatment. Shockingly, outsourced staff in the Global South enjoyed…
-
Rivers of Poppies at Christ Church United Reformed Church, Port Sunlight: A Stunning Tribute of Remembrance

A breathtaking River of Poppies now cascades from the tower of Christ Church United Reformed Church in Port Sunlight. Created by local knitters, community groups, and Green Watch from Bromborough Fire Station, the installation honours those who served and sacrificed, symbolising remembrance, unity, and the enduring spirit of the village.



