About this Event
Join the Creative and Professional Writing team at Wolverhampton University along with Guest Author Emma Purshouse on a lively informative discussion on how to forge a writing career. This expert team of writers will talk about their own career paths, the mediums they favour, the pitfalls and the successes of moving between fields, and offer first-hand advice on how to approach the various career paths the industry offers.
They will be joined by Emma Purshouse – the current Wolverhampton Poet Laureate celebrating the publication of her debut novel ‘Dogged’ (Ignite Books) – who will share her personal insights on how to turn your writerly hand to various mediums and industries when forging a literary career.
Go here to book your free place….
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/all-the-writing-selves-we-have-to-be-tickets-149853428639?aff=ebdssbonlinesearch
About this Event
PAUL FRANCIS ~ has won three national poetry competitions, and been placed (second or third) in three others. He is active in the West Midlands poetry scene, regularly reading at a wide variety of venues, and he was poet in residence at the Wenlock Poetry Festival, 2016. He has always been generous and supportive to other writers. I have been a great admirer of Paul and his poetry for many years and was keen to see what a Paul Francis collection, edited (I was tempted to say curated there but thankfully stopped myself just in time) by Fair Acre Press would look like! Emma Purshouse says of Rescue from the Dark: “This isn’t just a collection of perfectly executed verse. This collection is important and urgent. It is a clamour of wronged voices. It’s a place where seemingly unrelated events reveal themselves to be the exact opposite of that, linking up to show us what is wrong with the world. It is a record of things that should never be forgotten. It is also a reminder that where there is humanity there is hope.”
STELLA WULF ~ lived in Wales for almost 40 years but now lives at the foot of the Pyrenees in South West France. Her pamphlet A Spell in the Woods is the product of a combined love of writing, and drawing and painting. David Morley says: “Stella Wulf’s A Spell in the Woods contains powerful, compelling poems of natural observation: of seeing and listening to the world around us and recreating their second life in language.” and David Cooke says “As a pictorial artist we might not be surprised that she has such a clear-eyed focus upon the natural world, but what an ear she has as well!”
JOHN MILLS ~ John’s working life was as an English teacher. His recreations included music, literature, drama, running and caving. He has recently completed an M.A. with distinction in Creative Writing, at Keele University. As a caver he went the extra yard, risking the dangers that took him to beauties most other people never see; and as a runner he pushed himself to the limit. This shows in his poetry and also in his attitude to Parkinson’s disease, which he has had for several years. Typical of the man – he doesn’t ask for pity, but tries to help people understand the condition. Helen Mort says of No Guiding Star:” When I read this collection, it wouldn’t let me go.” James Sheard says:” Read it. It’s mesmerising stuff.” and Clare Shaw says:”This kind of writing makes me glad that poetry exists.”
EMMA PURSHOUSE ~ won the International Rubery Award for Poetry with her children’s illustrated book I once knew a poem who wore a hat. Close was published by Offa’s Press: Greg Freeman of Write Out Loud says of Close:“I think her humour, high spirits, imagination and insights are reminiscent of Liverpool poets McGough, Patten and Henri, and maybe deserve the same popular recognition. Instead of the Mersey Sound, here’s a refreshing and original voice from a sometimes fantastic Black Country – a place where it’s perfectly possible to spot a ‘Mermaid on the number 3 bus’.” Her debut novel Dogged is out with Ignite Books. What I said about Dogged is:” “Anyone who knows Emma Purshouse will not be surprised that she writes a book Wolverhampton and beyond should be proud of… full of real people, page-turning plot, and dark humour. This is pitch perfect. Like Steinbeck it is more film than book.. it is an easy and hard and satisfying and unputdownable read!”
NADIA KINGSLEY, from Fair Acre Press and will be your host. Pull up a chair. Grab yourself a cuppa or a glass of wine and enjoy!!
Poets, Prattlers, and Pandemonialists present there irregular event ‘Home and Away’ – the internationals.
Featuring Michael Wilson, Cat Brogan, Nathan Elout-Armstrong as the Northern Ireland away team
Dave Pitt, Steve Pottinger, and Emma Purshouse as The Black Country the home team.
5 minute feature slots from Sandra Robinson, Gracie Bee, and Priyanka Joshi.
This will be a pay as you feel event.
Come along to monthly Zoom meetings and have a go at poetry prompts to create work on a green theme. Write about your garden, allotment, or local park. Express your thoughts on climate change and the environment. Nurture your nature poetry. Wax lyrical about waxwings. Use the language of flowers.
This session will be led by Emma Purshouse and Steve Pottinger who are experienced workshop facilitators. They will be supporting the group to establish its self. Beginners are welcome.
At the launch event Emma Purshouse will be reading her contribution to this unique book ‘Smell, Memory, and Literature in the Black Country’
“From Banks’s brewery’s yeasty stink to groaty pudding and spicy curry, the book’s collection of essays provides a new literary history of the smells and childhood memories that belong to the Black Country.
Lecturer in Creative Writing, Rob Francis, said: “The Black Country is often an overlooked region of the United Kingdom, but we’ve decided to put it at the centre of this book, using it as the basis for exploration of the relationship between smell and memory.
“Growing up in the Black Country is a unique and exciting experience, with such a rich mix of smells, even within a very short distance, helping to add to our strong sense of identity and connection to the region.”
The book, which has a preface from author Will Self, draws on psychology, neuroscience, memory studies, literary studies and philosophy.
The critical essays reconsider psychogeography through cutting-edge sensory and philosophical engagements with physical space, smell, language and human behaviour.
Professor in English Literature Sebastian Groes said: “The Black Country is going through a transformative moment whereby gentrification and a veritable cultural boom are reinvigorating the region. This book hopes to contribute to forging new, bright futures for the Black Country.”
The creative contributions from writers, including Liz Berry, Narinder Dhami, Anthony Cartwright, and Kerry Hadley-Pryce, meditate on the senses, place, and identity.
It’s hoped that the book will not only appeal to those interested in the rich cultural heritage of the Black Country, but also those interested in place-identity, politics and the importance of culture in the twenty-first century.
The book was released earlier this month and can be purchased from the publisher’s (Palgrave Macmillan) website and Amazon.
You can book your free ticket, here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/launch-event-of-smell-memory-and-literature-in-the-black-country-tickets-141835015349
Steve Pottinger and Emma Purshouse guest at this regular night.
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