The Creative Writing
Handbook
The Creative Writing
Handbook
Techniques for New
Writers
Edited by
JOHN SINGLETON
and
MARY LUCKHURST
MACMILLAN
Editorial matter, selection and Chapter 1 © John Singleton and Mary
Luckhurst 1996; Chapter 2 © Liz Allen; Chapter 3 © John Singleton
and Geoff Sutton; Chapter 4 © Ailsa Cox; Chapter 5 © John Singleton;
Chapter 6 © Elizabeth Baines; Chapter 7 © John Lennard; Chapter 8
© Mary Luckhurst; Chapter 9 © Mary Luckhurst and Betty Princep;
Chapter 10 © Liz Cashdan, Mary Luckhurst and John SingletoN 1996
All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of
this publication may be made without written permission.
No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or
transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with
the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988,
or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying
issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court
Road, London WIP 9HE.
Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this
publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil
claims for damages.
First published 1996 by
MACMILLAN PRESS LTO
Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS
and London
Companies and representatives
throughout the world
ISBN 978-0-333-64226-9
ISBN 978-1-349-13814-2 (eBook)
DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-13814-2
A catalogue record for this book is available
from the British Library.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
05 04 03 02 01 00 99 98 97 96
Contents
How to Use this Book
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Making a Mark
JOHN SINGLETON AND MARY LUCKHURST
The Workshop Way
LIZ ALLEN
Words Words Words
JOHN SINGLETON AND GEOFF SUTTON
Writing the Self
AILSA Cox
The Short Story
JOHN SINGLETON
Innovative Fiction and the Novel
ELIZABETH BAINES
Writing to Form - Verse
JOHN LENNARD
Writing for Performance - Stage, Screen and Radio
MARY LUCKHURST
vii
1
18
41
77
100
129
164
201
233
Journalistic Writing
MARY LUCKHURST AND BETTY PRINCEP
10 Editing and Rewriting
260
LIZ CASHDAN, MARY LUCKHURST AND JOHN SINGLETON
9
Recommended Reading
Biographical Notes
Acknowledgements
280
282
284
v
How to Use This
Book
If you are following a creative writing course, or belong to a
creative writing group or are writing on your own you will
find this book essential reading. It's about learning the craft
of writing. It is not a textbook. Neither is it a 'How To' book.
It doesn't tell you what to do. We don't believe in prefabricated writing assembled from step-by-step instructions.
What we do believe is that the imagination drives writing
and that it is most effective when harnessed to craft. We feel
writers corne to good writing in different ways but the best
way to improve is by constant practice; by trying out and
experimenting with new forms and strategies; by rewriting.
So what this book offers is not writing-by-numbers but a
whole variety of suggestions and ideas for every kind of
writing you can imagine. It's a rich resource book packed
with possibilities.
Most taught creative writing goes on in practical group
sessions. This book shows you how to get the best out of such
workshops and how to build on that experience by developing your writing in your own time.
We believe good readers make good writers so we have
recommended hundreds of books and authors for you to
select, browse through and learn from. Accomplished writers read as well as write because they've learnt their craft by
imitating the good practice of others. Writing is something
you can catch through reading.
The Handbook is sequenced and the chapters take you
through each stage of the writing process from first acquiring basic skills with words, finding ideas and developing
vii
viii
THE CREATIVE WRITING HANDBOOK
them through different forms and genres to the final crafting
stages of revision and editing. But don't feel you have to
work your way through it systematically. Pick and mix. Select from it what appeals. Adapt the material to suit your
needs.
We feel strongly that writers should not work in intellectual isolation. So, Chapter 1 considers some general issues of
practice and theory and puts writing in a broad cultural,
historical and ideological context. Each of the subsequent
chapters starts with a short discussion on aspects of language and genre and is followed by a workshop section
where up to ten workshops are described in detail. You can
use them to structure your own course with a small group of
friends or follow them as part of a taught school, university
or community writing programme. The third and final section of each chapter offers you a whole range of writing
suggestions to tryout in your own time. Some of them could
be workshopped as well. The point is you use the book the
way you want.