Date/Time
Date(s) - 26/04/2025 - 12/07/2025
9:30 am - 12:00 pm
*Please note that this course is online and you will be using Zoom*
With Andrew McDonnell
If you’ve written a novel, short stories, life-writing or even poetry, or are in the process, than this course is for you.
It is also suitable for people who are writing regularly and would benefit from a work-shopping environment.
Writing can be an isolated activity; we often ‘write in the dark’ and this course offers the opportunity to discuss work with others who understand this process, and how beneficial feedback is to the redrafting process.
Each week, two to three writers submit up to 1500 words of prose or short fiction / 2-3 poems. Across two hours, the group will discuss the presented work, and offer critically constructive feedback.
The remaining time will be taken up with conversations on publishing, prize culture and where submission windows might be open for journals etc. Though there is no pressure to publish, it will offer students an insight into the next steps once a manuscript is ready.
Students will be expected to submit work in advance to allow the tutor and peers to read in advance.
Praise for the course:
I have learned so much on the Advanced Creative Writing Course at The Public House Norwich.The classes are small, about 6/8 students, relaxed and very friendly. The tutor is supportive and helpful. The students were all writing in different genres and at various stages with their writing. I really looked forward to each class and the two hours flashed by each week. Anyone wanting to learn about writing and improve their own skills would do well to sign-up to one of these classes. Strongly recommended! – S.A. Harris, author of Haverscroft, Salt. (2019)
About the Tutor
Andrew McDonnell is a published writer of poetry and short fiction. He is the poetry editor with Gatehouse Press and former editor of Lighthouse Literary Journal. He is the course leader for BA Hons pathways in English Literature and Creative Writing at University Centre Peterborough where he also runs the UCP Literary Festival and has taught as a sessional lecturer at both UEA and Anglia Ruskin, as well as marking MFA prose fiction dissertations for Birkbeck. His short stories and poetry have been published in a wide range of anthologies and journals. His poetry collection, The Somnambulist Cookbook was published by Salt in June 2019. He recently completed working towards a Phd on second person narration in literary short fiction.
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