Writing Magazine

Last writes

Before mobile phones, poets were advised to carry a notebook and pen at all times, so that whenever and wherever the perfect poem came to them, they could write. They could also make the deliberate choice to leave the wherewithal for notemaking at home and go on holiday freed from the pressure of writing.

That was the last thing poet David Fillingham of St Helens, Merseyside would do. He discovered that travelling produced a surge of creativity, and whether he was going on holiday or travelling for business, he was likely to come up with new ideas. The journey itself allows headspace which full time work denies, with the bonus of the stimulus of new

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine2 min read
Behind The Tape
If you have a query for Lisa, please send it by email to lisacuttsenquiries@ gmail.com Q In the novel I’m currently writing, a man is shot in his study with a crossbow bolt. The bolt can clearly be seen by others when they enter the room as it is pr
Writing Magazine2 min read
Shrinking Margins
GET PUBLISHED For many readers I’m sure that selling individual copies of books is a significant part of what they do. Some of this may be done these days via social media and a website. Some is done in more personal ways: signing sessions, library
Writing Magazine7 min readCrime
Setting Part Two
In the second of two articles on The Building Block of Setting, I want to examine how to create Mood or Atmosphere (I prefer the term Mood as it implies an emotional element that I’m not sure the word Atmosphere does), the importance – or not – of re

Related Books & Audiobooks