WRITE-ON-HOLIDAY
Can you teach someone how to write?
I
ask that question because my wife, Diane Whitley, and I are setting
up creative writing courses in Bodrum, Turkey, for next Spring. My daughter,
Becky, has also recently started a three year BA creative writing course
at Leeds University.
The simple answer to the question is 'yes' - and 'no'. It all depends
on talent. If you have some talent, no matter how raw, attending a writing
course will help you understand more about your own writing and give
you insights into character, dialogue and structure that previously
you probably hadn't thought much about. You'll also learn about the
market. If you have no talent, you'll still have a great time on a course,
but you're never going to make it as a writer. Apart from that talent
you also need to be totally focused, have a steely determination, an
absolute believe in yourself - and some luck.
I spent ten years writing and submitting plays before I ever sold one
(a radio play). I wrote over fifty plays that were mostly, to be kind
on myself, poor. I was writing in the dark, stumbling around, not knowing
what I was really doing, only believing that I had some talent, however
latent, and that I was going to become a professional writer one day
and prove all those people who rejected me that they were wrong. I came
from a working class background where there were no books in the house,
I was never taken to the theatre - except to see variety shows. Yet
from about eighteen all I ever wanted to be was a writer and I have
no idea where that came from. I trained to be a teacher and finished
up in Basildon New Town, a cultural desert. I never met nor talked to
writers. During those ten years I wrote in isolation - though towards
the end of that depressing period I received encouragement from the
BBC and Royal Court, actually being invited in to meet them. I was also
close to getting a children's novel published. It was little nuggets
like these that kept me going.
In those days there were no BA creative writing courses, no Arvon Foundation.
But what if there had been? I'm convinced that if I'd attended one of
those courses I could have knocked five years off the time it took me
to sell my first play. I was making basic, fundamental errors which
would have been pointed out, the course would have given me confidence,
I would have had more direction to my writing. How do I know this? Well
I've since tutored for Arvon at Lumb Bank, and I've seen first hand
how some of the writers I've taught have gone on to success (one now
writes for Coronation Street). Paul Abbott will readily concur that
the Willy Russell course he attended at Arvon made him realise he could
be a writer. Tim Firth also attended a Willly Russell course - they
now run courses together! These are just a few examples. Yes, Paul and
Tim would have become writers anyway, but these courses made a difference.
Running creative writing courses in the sun is something Diane and
I have talked about over the last few years. I've had such a broad experience
in my writing career - radio, theatre, television and film - and I've
learnt so much - and I think it's time I passed on some of that to other
aspiring writers. Also from a personal viewpoint, I've spent 25 years
in a room on my own (apart from theatre residences and rehearsals) and
when I've ran Arvon courses I the past I've always found them mentally
stimulating and socially enervating - so hopefully running the Bodrum
courses is going to be equally stimulating !

We went out to Bodrum last March to look at property - we chose Turkey
because it was financially viable as property prices are still 15 years
behind France, Spain and Portugal - and we found a three bedroomed detached
villa with a three bedroomed apartment underneath it. We are currently
having a swimming pool built. The property is big enough for eight students,
plus the tutor.
Write-on-holidays has a very similar ethos to Arvon - but with the
sun! We aim to attract high quality, high profile writers across a number
of genres who can pass on their skill and expertise to new writers or
writers with some experience. And because the courses are in the sun,
we aim to generate a relaxed, holiday spirit where the emphasis is equally
on social interaction as well as writing. For instance there will be
a complete free day to explore the Bodrum peninsular and the evenings
will also be free. The courses run from Monday to Monday, whereas at
Arvon courses run Monday to Saturday, so there's much more time to relax.