Thursday, March 15, 2012

A very overdue update

If this blogpost were a library book, I would have a very big fine to pay! Apologies!

It's been very busy recently, and not just in literary terms! This weekend I did a charity hitchhike called Jailbreak, in aid of Cancer Research. I managed to get from Norwich to Rosslare in Ireland within 48 hours and spending no money! Hitchhiking was a new experience that has been inspiring a lot of poetry since I got back.

Apart from preparing for and undertaking Jailbreak, I've been doing a lot of literary stuff. Last month I read at two events: the UEA CWS Open Mic, which was wonderful and which introduced me to some truly amazing young poets, and Freewheelin', a spoken word night run by Lewis Buxton and Alex Valente, and which debuted on March 5th at the Bicycle Shop in Norwich. It was a brilliant night in a lovely setting (although a Baileys hot chocolate set me back £5.60. £5.60?!?!) with a really vibrant variety of poets sharing their work. I was so honoured by my introduction. I can't remember it exactly but I remember thinking how welcoming the atmosphere was, how well Lewis and Alex hosted it, and how poetry is the place where I can feel confident and accepted. It was a fantastic night and I hope there'll be many more to come!

Towards the end of February I took a workshop at Writers' Centre Norwich with the wonderful Pascale Petit. As soon as I saw her name, I just had to book it. Her collection 'What the Water Gave Me' is one of my absolute favourites (I reviewed it here) and the workshop didn't disappoint. It was lovely to undertake some exercises that I found really unusual, but had a recogniseable Pascale Petit spin on them. The afternoon was spent critiquing a poem we had sent in advance, which was really helpful and surprisingly enjoyable! I left having a greater confidence in my work. It was a class for intermediate to advanced writers, and some of the participants had the MA Creative Writing from UEA, but I felt more comfortable in that workshop than I have done in beginner's classes...I guess because I am not a beginner. The thing I particularly liked was that Pascale's choice of exercises really brought out my 'voice', the vocabularly and imagery that I have swirling around in my head, the way I like to look at the world. I was surprised that it was a scientific, geological and botanical lexicon that emerged. I got some good work out of the workshop, had a really good time, and have definitely made a leap as a writer as a result of Pascale's suggestions.

Thirdly, I saw Jeanette Winterson give a talk at my university as part of the UEA Spring Literature Festival. She. Was. Wonderful. I came out feeling so inspired. Winterson read us the first chapter of her new book 'Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?', took questions, and just generally shone. Her humour, her humility, her gentleness, her sharpness, were extraordinary. You had to be there to understand how amazing the talk was. I literally ran down to Waterstones to buy a signed copy of the book afterwards. I'm halfway through it and it's wonderful...perhaps a bit philosophical in places for my own taste, but wonderful.

Anyway, that's all for now folks! :)