The Craft of Writing

Let’s start at the very beginning

But when you're a writer, where exactly is the beginning? We must start where the story begins (even if it that's not really where it began) and help our readers move forwards through the narrative (even if they have to go backwards). In this way the opening is like the first impression when you meet... Continue Reading →

Future>Fiction

Chat GPT. I know, I know but stay with me. Depending on when you're reading this we may still be in the middle of our own existential crisis or, perhaps, robots will have taken over the world using information that we have given them freely. Hard to know. The internet will tell you (so it... Continue Reading →

It’s about time

This week, I am going to talk about time. Which is relative because your 'this week' may not be my 'this week'. I'm not talking about time-travel although in essence all stories, unless they happen in an instant, do travel through time. No, this is about how time is represented in fiction and how, as... Continue Reading →

Are we nearly there yet?

The late, great Sir Terry Prachett advised writers to take the pressure off and write an ending even if it's not the real or final ending. Writers' HQ (brilliant resource) asks us if we are plotters (writing to a defined plot) or pantsers (pretty much making it up as we go along). Epilogues seem to... Continue Reading →

Who’s Story is it anyway? (Part 2)

Or getting up close with the third-person POV. This point of view uses a narrator to tell you the story offering greater insight into events, characters and story points that don't directly involve the main character. Using he/she/they gives the writer distance and objectivity which is particularly helpful if you are working with an unreliable... Continue Reading →

Fact Vs Creative Nonfiction

This week I am exploring that most tricksy of genres - Creative Nonfiction The definition itself seems to be contradictory. If fiction is made up, does that mean that nonfiction must always be true?  What is the extent of the writer’s ‘creative license’ and how to you measure it? What is the tipping point for... Continue Reading →

What is genre?

This week within the MA, we have been encouraged to look at genre-bending or blending. Using existing work; breaking it up, rewriting it and considering it from all angles. As I work through this week's reading and writing activities, I find one question rises to the top over again. What genre do I write in?... Continue Reading →

When is a door not a door?

When it's a metaphor. We all know a good one when we see it. Something that evokes a feeling or a sensation without a drawn-out description. We also know a bad one when we read it. Something that pulls us out of the moment and away from the character. Some novels are overloaded with them,... Continue Reading →

Intertextuality

Or when something is related to something that is already written. The concept of intertextuality suggests that all works of literature are a derivation of an existing work of literature which in turns suggests that nothing is really new. The original definition of intertextuality was coined by a French semiotician Julia Kristeva in the 1960s.... Continue Reading →

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