
Michelle Liew Tsui-Lin
Bio
Hi, i am an English Language teacher cum freelance writer with a taste for pets, prose and poetry. When I'm not writing my heart out, I'm playing with my three dogs, Zorra, Cloudy and Snowball.
Achievements (9)
Stories (839)
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Family Tree
It's Sunday, and what makes the tail end of this weekend special is that it's also Family Day in the United States. Family networks are rich and complex. Their members may pursue different interests and paths, yet they have ties that bind. That doesn't change, no matter how we try to cut them. They may grow in varied, new ways, but they have a rich and deep identity when united.
By Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago in Poets
The Needle's Eye
Part 1 The seaside town of Big Quilt, located in the quaint backwoods near the city of Sewme, was a bustling, yet quaint and picturesque locale. The residents, mostly gifted artisans, made their living sewing their homemade, intricate art and quilts. They came together to present their wares at the town's weekly Yarn Festival.
By Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago in Fiction
Mystery on the High Seas - A Max Flummox story
Part 1 Private Investigator Max Flummox ambled onto the deck of The Oceanic Wonder, complete with his characteristic limp and cane. This was the life. Finally, after a year of consistently flowing cases, he was on a well-deserved break. His diagnosed ADD meant that he tended to hyperfocus on cases and, while all that was great, had left him worn out.
By Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago in Criminal
An Ode to Coffee
If you're anything like me, you'll need your morning coffee, especially if you're a creature of habit. Coffee is structure and routine. It is what we're familiar with, and what we cannot do without. The aromatic drink is also our comfort in the middle of our chaotic existence.
By Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago in Poets
Echoes of the Unseen. Content Warning.
Part 1 Laura Kong relished university life. The 19-year-old undergraduate's fixation on accents and imitating them had been a constant feature of her childhood. So interested was the young college goer on accents that she decided on being an interpreter as a career.
By Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago in Horror
Calming Doves
This is in response to Kenny Penn's Haikuplet challenge. Please find the requirements for participation here. In this age of instant gratification and absolute busyness, we need peace and unity more than ever. When voices keep ringing in our heads, that can be difficult to come by.
By Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago in Poets