Emma Darwin's Blog, page 21
June 3, 2013
Why I'm a convert to writing with Scrivener
All I actually need to write a novel is a stack of identical A4 notebooks (makes keeping the wordcount easier), a good biro (fat enough not to get RSI), and a plotting grid. Oh, and piles and piles of scrap paper for all the notes and ideas and snaglists. A...
Published on June 03, 2013 05:43
May 28, 2013
Twenty Top Tips for Academic Writing
Academic writing scares many people who have lots of good things and ideas to put forward. Others have been told they should write better without being helped to understand how. But it's not magic and it's not rocket science; it's a set of skills, and you can learn them. Through...
Published on May 28, 2013 06:40
May 20, 2013
Plain and perfect, rich and rare: what is "lyrical" writing?
A writer friend says that her MA tutor described her writing as "lyrical", and she asked what he meant. He said "something about lyrical writing remaking the world & making the world appear anew", but what does that mean in practice? At the basic level, "lyrical" means that it shares...
Published on May 20, 2013 09:35
May 14, 2013
This Happy Fellow: my year at Goldsmiths
The Royal Literary Fund Fellow's job is simple, on paper. We are professional authors who are paid by the RLF to spend two days a week, in term time, for a year, supporting academic writing across the whole of an academic institution. Most are universities, but conservatoires and art schools...
Published on May 14, 2013 06:34
May 9, 2013
Tomorrow to fresh finds and problems new
The other day, something I was reading tossed a tasty short-story idea into my lap: two people in a particular situation with dramatic possibilities. If you think of craft as a process of problem-finding, as Richard Sennet puts it, then the problem I had found was how those possibilities might...
Published on May 09, 2013 10:14
The 500th Postiversary Competition closes on 31st May
Write a 500-word blog post for This Itch of Writing, and win a Writer's Retreat and other great prizes. More details here.
Published on May 09, 2013 06:19
May 2, 2013
The 500th Postiversary Competition: win a writer's retreat and other prizes
I can't quite believe that This Itch of Writing has being going for 500 posts - and five and a half years, come to that - but it's true. To celebrate, I thought it would be fun to have a competition, and some of my favourite writerly places have kindly...
Published on May 02, 2013 08:59
April 29, 2013
Time to revise, but how will I know if I'm making it better, not worse?
Everyone knows about the terror of the blank page that you've just written Chapter One at the top of. Some writers spend weeks approaching it, dabbing a couple of words on, and deleting them. Others research for a decade in order to avoid getting to the blank page moment at...
Published on April 29, 2013 03:00
April 22, 2013
What I learnt, as a writer, about writing, from A S Byatt's Possession
A while ago I blogged about what's going on, intuitively, when you're reading a really good book, using Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall as an example. But, of course, many of us do read a really good book for a conscious, specific purpose. And if you have to write at length...
Published on April 22, 2013 04:29
April 11, 2013
Spring Roundup: Pinterest, the Postiversary, and other stories
It must be spring in the air: I'm fantastically busy on various fronts, but some of them might be relevant to all you lovely blog-readers, so here goes. Since October I've been absolutely loving my RLF Fellowship at Goldsmiths; it's been some of the most rewarding and enjoyable teaching I've...
Published on April 11, 2013 15:44


