Faber offers academy for new Irish writers

FABER AND Faber has published Irish writers from Samuel Beckett to Seamus Heaney and Sebastian Barry

FABER AND Faber has published Irish writers from Samuel Beckett to Seamus Heaney and Sebastian Barry. Now it is going to teach aspiring writers how to join their ranks.

The Faber Academy will begin a six-month course Writing a Novel from Start to Finish in Dublin next month. It also has plans to offer a poetry-writing course next year.

The novel-writing course, based at the Winding Stair bookshop on Ormond Quay, will take the form of weekly evening workshops and monthly day-long seminars on Saturdays.

Writers such as Anne Enright, Joseph O’Connor, Hugo Hamilton, Claire Keegan and Claire Kilroy will be among the guest lecturers and will address issues such as plotting, editing and presenting your novel.

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The course directors are James Ryan, whose most recent novel South of the Border was shortlisted for the 2008 Kerry Group Literary prize, and writer and critic Éilís Ní Dhuibhne.

Some 16 places are available on the course, but one participant chosen on merit will be awarded a fellowship and will not have to pay the €3,000 fee.

Patrick Keogh, head of the Faber Academy, said Ireland was chosen as a venue for the course because Faber and Faber had long-standing links with the country and had published some of the finest Irish writers.

“It always strikes me as a place that is wrapped up in the idea of storytelling, both the written and the spoken word,” he said.

The course was aimed at everybody, he said, but participants were chosen based on the quality of work they submitted.

All applicants must send a sample of their prose fiction no longer than 1,000 words to the Faber Academy before September 11th.

Mr Keogh said the course offered no magic formula to becoming a published writer but it hoped to help new writers reach a point where they had sufficient material and know-how to complete a first draft.

Asked what the reaction might be in Ireland, he said: “It’s a suck it and see moment. I hope there’s an appetite for it. If there’s an appetite for it, we’ll do another one.”

Applications for the course starting on October 7th close next Friday. For details see www.faberacademy.co.uk

Alison Healy

Alison Healy

Alison Healy is a contributor to The Irish Times