For the Love of Life in COLLAGES, the Man Booker shortlist and a glorious goat gouda

September 14, 2013Things I'd Love to Have Made, Third Novel, Writing, Writing Courses

In my post in July I wrote about the September publication of COLLAGES, a collection of new writing by students on Maggie Hamand’s wonderful CCWC courses. Maggie has kindly included an extract from my third novel, a work in progress called For the Love of Life, in the collection and now you can buy COLLAGES here, if … Read More

Voice, and Bill Viola

August 14, 2013Things I'd Love to Have Made, Writing

I have never really been able to explain to myself what voice means for an artist, and particularly for a writer, even though I know it exists. But when I read this: Voice is a set of ideas and concerns that becomes distinctively owned by the writer. in the summer edition of The Author, at last … Read More

Dying Matters

May 14, 2013Death and Dying, Things I'd Love to Have Made, Third Novel

It’s Dying Matters Awareness Week and, as Iris Murdoch said (she’s quoted on the Awareness Week page): Bereavement is a darkness impenetrable to the imagination of the unbereaved. I think – although everything changes in the writing of a novel – but at the moment I think my third novel will be narrated by a beneficent angel because, … Read More

The making of character

January 14, 2013Things I'd Love to Have Made, Writers, Writing

Sometime last week I heard part of an interview with John le Carre about the making of character. This is what he said: You can’t actually make up a character out of other people, you simply can’t. You grab the bits that are appealing to you, that touch you or alienate you, but in the … Read More

Free indirect style, and the CCWC

December 14, 2012Writers, Writing, Writing Courses

I’ve struggled to understand free indirect style, let alone how to use it in fiction. But in James Wood’s brilliant How Fiction Works all is made wondrously clear through his lucid prose. As he writes, on page 11: Thanks to free indirect style, we see things through the character’s eyes and language but also through the … Read More

Modern Etiquette …

November 14, 2012Reviews, Things I'd Love to Have Made

… at the turn of the century before last. Published by Frederick Warne & Co., (also publishers of Beatrix Potter’s work) in 1870 and reprinted many times since, Modern Etiquette is invaluable for a glimpse of the codes of behaviour people were advised to follow in the late 19th-century. In the Introduction it states: Society has … Read More

Second novels

October 14, 2012Things I'd Love to Have Made, Writers, Writing

Stephen Fry wrote (I found it here, thank you Lydia Netzer, although I couldn’t find it directly from him): The problem with a second novel is that it takes almost no time to write compared with a first novel. If I write my first novel in a month at the age of 23, and my second … Read More

Searching for the Secret River

September 14, 2012Reviews, Things I'd Love to Have Made, Writers, Writing

I’ve just finished reading Kate Grenville‘s Searching for the Secret River: it’s brilliant, and a must-read for anyone who writes historical fiction (my second, about-to-be-redrafted, novel is one of those). Searching for the Secret River is a kind and wise book about writing and the process, the stumbling blocks and the breakthroughs. It’s about the gradual … Read More

Personal best

August 14, 2012Design, Things I'd Love to Have Made, Writing

It’s the stories behind the gold medals at London 2012 that have intrigued and heartened me because they apply not only to sport, but to anything we each choose to do or to be or to become. In writing, it is in the rewriting (which often means many many drafts) that the real work begins: … Read More

Beyond the Border …

July 14, 2012Storytelling

… is the name of a magical storytelling festival held at St Donat’s Castle in south Wales every other year. It takes its name from Dylan Thomas’s Poem in October. Here are the second, fourth, fifth and seventh verses: My birthday began with the water – Birds and the birds of the winged trees flying … Read More

The London Literature Festival …

June 15, 2012Things I'd Love to Have Made, Writers

… looks absolutely wonderful. It runs between 3 -12 July and Noo Saro-Wiwa and Mark Haddon I’d love to hear, but there’s so much, including a debate about last year’s riots in London, writing classes and much much more. And the thing I would like to have made, this month, is the present series of programmes on … Read More

On this centenary of the tragic sinking of RMS Titanic

April 14, 2012Titanic

My great-grandmother, Noël Rothes, set sail from Southampton on RMS Titanic on 10 April 1912. She was one of 2,224 passengers and crew bound for New York. She was also, very luckily for her, one of 712 who were saved. She boarded lifeboat number 8 at 1 am in the morning on 15 April 1912. … Read More

No news … is good news?

February 16, 2012Reviews, Things I'd Love to Have Made

My agent sent my second novel out to publishers on the 3rd of February and has given them until the 29th (that leap year day) to respond. So, perhaps an editor will ask me, or more to the point my novel, to marry her (or him) on that day. It would be good if s/he … Read More