To learn more about the collection: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Praise-Paving-Ashley-Chantler/dp/0954400704/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1379877950&sr=1-6&keywords=ashley+chantler
Department of English, University of Chester
Monday, 23 September 2013
‘In Praise of Paving’
Kelly Mercer, a former student of Chester’s English Department, has just informed us that she’s done a recording for her friend’s SoundCloud site of Dr Ashley Chantler’s short poem ‘In Praise of Paving’, from his collection of the same name.
To hear Kelly reading the poem:
Treading the Boards at Chester
As a first-year Creative Writing and Drama student,
I was immediately on the alert, on starting at Chester University, for any drama
productions that I could get involved with. It was amazing to find that, within
the very first term, there would be auditions for Shakespeare’s As You Like
It. Myself and two friends, who also studied in the English and Drama
departments, put our names down right away, as we each shared an interest in
Shakespeare. We then convinced a fellow English student to audition as well. We
never looked back. All four of us were successful in securing the roles we
wanted, and every rehearsal was a welcome break from academic study. We met
some excellent people, not only from our own year but from those above us. I
was also involved in a separate production with the University of Chester Drama
Society, and often had to juggle my studies with two lots of rehearsals. It was
tough, though ultimately rewarding!
When we heard that the director, English lecturer
Dr Graham Atkin (whom we all came to love), was going to be putting on another
Shakespeare play in the next academic year, myself and the two aforementioned
friends signed up to be part of it once again. Romeo and Juliet was an
equally enjoyable experience, and we met even more brilliant people who became
very close friends. In my second year, I was also chosen for the role of Vice
President of the Drama Society, so I found that not only did I have my
academic commitments but those of co-running a society, and rehearsing for
R&J. Stressful though it became, I wouldn’t change a thing: it was
all worth it in the end, and I’m proud of everyone who was involved.
Billy Woolrich
BA (Hons) Creative Writing and Drama, University of
Chester (2010–2013)
Tuesday, 17 September 2013
Writing and Publishing Flash Fiction
Dr
Peter Blair’s article on flash fiction has recently been published in the Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook 2014
(Bloomsbury, 2013). A regular bestseller, the Yearbook is an indispensable guide to the publishing and media
industries for writers of fiction and non-fiction, poets, playwrights,
journalists, and commercial artists. Peter’s article includes advice on writing
flashes, guidance on where and how to get them published, and recommendations
for further reading.
Peter
teaches the BA Creative Writing module ‘An Introduction to Publishing and
Editing’ and is co-editor, with Dr Ashley Chanter, of Flash: The International Short-Short Story Magazine. For information
about the BA Creative Writing, click the link on the right. For information about Flash, visit: http://www.chester.ac.uk/flash.magazine
To find out more about the Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook 2014, go to http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/writers-artists-yearbook-2014-9781408192191/
To find out more about the Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook 2014, go to http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/writers-artists-yearbook-2014-9781408192191/
Monday, 16 September 2013
Drabbles
Stories of exactly 100
words are known as ‘drabbles’: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drabble
Dr Ashley Chantler recently had his drabble ‘A Day in the Life of
Steve’ published by 100 Word Story. You can read it at: http://www.100wordstory.org/3195/a-day-in-the-life-of-steve/
Ashley teaches drabbles
on his BA Creative Writing module ‘Flash Fiction’. For information about the
BA, click the link on the right.
Guest Speakers at the University of Chester
The BA Creative Writing website has a new page that lists the guest
speakers who have visited the Department of English in previous years: novelists,
poets, short-story and children’s authors, playwrights, script writers,
biographers, travel writers, and editors.
Go to: http://www.chester.ac.uk/creative-writing/guest-speakers
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