21 Jan 2014 02:32:00
We are natural storytellers. We've been doing it since we lived in caves. We do it automatically when we tell tales to children. We shape our memories into coherent narratives. We gossip and tell jokes and dream. We live in a world of stories brought to us in books, plays and film.
But when we try to write, so much gets in the way: doubts about our own creativity; abstract notions about what constitutes good writing; anxieties about our ability to come up with good ideas. The words themselves trip us up – how can I get them to say what I want them to say? And how can I create a convincing character? And even the love of books can be such a burden - how dare I write a single sentence when Dickens wrote Great Expectations? And so the blank pages remain blank.
This class aims to clear away such doubts and anxieties, to plunge into the messy, playful, difficult, joyous, imperfect process of discovering stories that have their own energy and form. It will explore the power of memory, the magic of ordinary objects, the relationships between words and visions. It will nourish confidence in your ability to discover your own stories and to write them in your own voice.
By the end of the two days you should be well under way with at least one new story, and you'll have a fund of ideas for more. Although Almond is known mainly as a children's writer, this is not a class in 'writing for children'. It is for anyone who wishes to write well.