‘In everything there is a story’. By Anita Sethi


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By Anita Sethi

www.twitter.com/anitasethi 

“All the stories that human beings tell are stories of alliance and betrayal”, says Greg Mosse, who runs the Southbank Centre Creative Writing School which will be back in January 2012.  I caught up for a chat with Mosse far from the shores of the River Thames, and instead beside the Khaled Lagoon in the emirate of Sharjah where the Sharjah International Book Fair this year celebrates its 30th anniversary and where Mosse gave creative writing classes. The appetite for learning how to write is clearly immense here: “There was a huge waiting list for the class”, explained Mosse.   It was fascinating to see how the process of storytelling differs throughout the world and the ways in which it is the same as well as the obstacles facing all writers regardless of geographical location. “Everybody knows what a good story is; too often, instead of writing the story they start writing about the story”, explains Mosse. Events like these help since the chance to meet with other writers and readers offers a wonderful window for the “exchange of ideas”.

“You can’t teach imagination but you can teach skills of structure and development”, explained Kate Mosse, founder of the Orange Prize and award-winning novelist, also speaking at the Fair.  Greg Mosse continues, “you can unblock people from the way they might be programmed.  A novel moves really slowly – mastering a form that inches forward is really special and and not like learning to write a pop-song”. This month is National Novel Writing Month but Mosse says, “If it was National Plan a Novel Month that would be much better; if you came out with a plot and the first 5000 words. The novel is a slow moving form that requires lots of stamina”.

He describes his experience of teaching all around the world and helping people to take their experience and inspirations and transcribe it into novel form, describing strategies that are useful for all writers, regardless of their different cultural traditions.   He also discusses some of the international writers he admires which offer an opening into another world including the Saudi Arabian novel The Consequences of Love.  The Mosses have also demonstrated the immense power of the internet to reach a wider international audience with their various hugely successful web projects.

Returning to that tricky art of constructing a novel, Mosse says: “I ask students to understand that there is a possible next thing in everything you say – all the time, in everything, there is a story”.  Without a story, “there is just now, there is no sense of something else about to occur whereas a novel maintains a sense that something else is about to occur”.  

I stroll by the beautiful corniche contemplating the things that are about to occur including delving into more literatures and landscapes from around the world.   As for the things that shall be occurring closer to home by the River Thames, I’m looking forward to chairing Book Club on “The Hare With Amber Eyes” on 23rd November and the event Dark and Deep” on 25th November, with Louise Doughty and Vayu Naidu – hope to see some of you there. In the meantime, happy reading and writing!

in praise of poetry, by Anita Sethi

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 By Anita Sethi

www.twitter.com/anitasethi

Bees weave throughout the Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy’s beautifully bitterweet new collection of poetry, which she shall be reading from this month (7th November 2011, 7:30pm, Queen Elizabeth Hall).  Displaying an astonishing thematic and technical range, “The Bees” (Picador, £14.99) is filled with elegies, eulogies, and is in  the words of Don Paterson, “a beautiful honeycomb of a book”. 

This quietly exhilarating collection opens with the idea that “honey is art”, and indeed after reading these powerful poems, one feels that the creation of language and poetry is as primal and essential as that other life-giving nectar, and how a poem might, in the words of the Poet Laureate herself, display both the passion and compassion that sweeten our lives.

Carol Ann Duffy has long charmed with her beguiling rhymes, the ability to connect through sound seemingly disparate things, and in doing so elucidate a deeper meaning.  A particular favourite poem of mine is the “Hive”, which ends with the simple yet effective line:

“the hive, alive, us – how we behave”

The word “hive” reaches towards its sister-in-sound “alive”, turning into “behave” until the collection becomes a metaphor of how best we ought to live – both alone as a solitary bee bumbling about in the air and together in homes and communities.

The collection is filled with rhymes that catch you by surprise, sometimes stinging, and sometimes soothing.  In the  poem “Water”, the pain and poignancy of losing a mother is distilled throughout until the poem ends with the word “daughter”: “What a mother brings / through darkness still / to her parched daughter” – the poem both remembers the way its author has been nourished and nurtured by her mother whilst looking forward to the next generation and echoing how she now does the same for her own daughter.

Echoes are indeed at the heart of this marvellously nuanced collection, with a poem of this name which hauntingly describes how loved ones linger on in the  memory even when they have left us in life; how intimations of them will catch us suddenly unawares in the midst of our hectic present-day lives. Indeed, reading the collection on the tube home caused quite a literal shiver down the spine as I sensed all around those echoes, hidden from the surface but, when we stop and pause to remember, poignantly palpable.

With an awareness of death at its core, these often startling poems offer an intense, urgent message to seize what is best in our brief lives while we can, to savour life’s many sweetnesses.  This collection raises questions that cut to the very quick of existence and linger in the mind as the taste of honey does on the tongue, leaving the reader with that peculiar feeling that truly good poems incite – at once filled, yet hungry for more:

“What will you do now with the  / gift of your left life?”

Carol Ann Duffy

* Carol Ann Duffy will be reading from The Bees at The Queen Elizabeth Hall on 7th November, 2011, 7:30pm

Email: anita@anitasethi.co.uk

* An archive of Anita Sethi’s literature blogs, dispatches and interviews can be found by clicking here.

in praise of Charles Dickens

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By Anita Sethi

www.twitter.com/anitasethi

It was the best of times, it was the best of times for stimulating literature discussions in the past few weeks at the Southbank, to rewrite that infamous opening line of A Tale of Two Cities.   The spirit of the ubiquitous Charles Dickens has weaved in and out of literature talks, from Claire Tomalin discussing her excellent new Dickens biography, Dickens: A Life (published by Viking) to Greg Mosse invoking him syntactically in a recent thought-provoking Southbank Creative Writing class about writing from an assured third-person viewpoint: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times” in a single line captures the exhilaration of the birth of two republics, yet the horror that they were born in so much bloodshed.  A Tale of Two Cities has also made it on to the wonderful World Book Night list for 2012 released recently and featuring a treasure trove of titles past and present; it will be interesting to see whereabouts in cities around the country copies of the book are left next year (World Book Night, incidentally, is held on Shakespeare’s birthday).

The Booker Prize also raised the debate about ‘high’ versus ‘low’ in literature and the issue of ‘readability’, discussed by Chair of Judges Stella Rimington.  The ghost of Dickens reminds us that it is indeed a false division since whilst being a heavyweight literary figure he is also hugely popular and was so in his time – showing how good writing can straddle divisions to reach a universality.

I recall Charles Dickens every time I return to my hometown of Manchester, since it was there that Dickens himself opened the country’s first free public lending library in 1852, built upon the philosophy and principle to “provide wisdom for all, regardless of background”. It was here that I would enjoy the benefits of such a library and find a quiet sanctuary in the midst of the chaos – but will future generations be able to say the same? Dickens believed that libraries should be available to all, “knowing no sect, no party, no distinction; nothing but the public want and the general good” – showing their fundamentally democratic nature.

The fantastic Dickens 2012 campaign run by the British Council further elucidates the author’s contemporary relevance, and the British Council Literature Director Susanna Nicklin points out that issues tackled by Dickens such as social inequality are still so resonant today, and not only to people in the UK but all around the world.

Dickens offers words of wisdom relevant to life as well as literature, showing how good books can provide us with a moral compass; a favourite quote from the writer himself:  ”Have a heart that never hardens, and a temper that never tires, and a touch that never hurts”.

 

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Email: anita@anitasethi.co.uk

* An archive of Anita Sethi’s literature blogs, dispatches and interviews can be found by clicking here.

jacket image for Charles Dickens by Claire Tomalin

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