Showing posts with label Faber Academy Crime Writing Course. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Faber Academy Crime Writing Course. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Stylist and Faber and Faber new crime author revealed!


Stylist and Faber and Faber reveal the incredible winner
of their Crime Fiction Competition




London, 17 October – Eight months ago Stylist magazine and publishing house Faber and Faber set out to find Britain’s hottest new crime fiction talent – with a £5,000 book deal to be won. After 364 astounding entries, three intensive days of reading entries and a shortlist judged by Ruth Rendell and Stylist editor Lisa Smosarski, the winner has finally been revealed as Kate Griffin, author of the brilliant Kitty Peck And The Music Hall Murders.

Despite all of the entries’ incredible level of talent, Griffin’s opening 6,000 words immediately grabbed the judges’ attention. Ruth Rendell explains, “It’s original, well and simply written and has a horrible but moving subject.” Hannah Griffiths, publishing director at Faber and Faber agrees, “Something about Kate Griffin’s imagination and the way she captures it on the page is very special and rare. Her protagonist – and antagonist – are entirely memorable. And the story is rich with character and mystery.”
Set against the backdrop of the Victorian music hall, the story focuses on the intelligent and immensely likeable heroine Kitty Peck who is drawn into a crime-ridden seedy underworld run by the monstrously compelling, Lady Ginger. Kate, 49, from St Albans wrote the entire chapter in a weekend (sitting in her pyjamas), “I know it sounds weird but the idea just popped into my head. It’s based around the world’s oldest surviving music hall, Wilton Hall in London’s East End.” Having previously worked as a journalist and PR for The Society For The Protection Of Ancient Buildings, Kate is embracing her new role as an author. “I’m incredibly excited and daunted about finishing the novel. My husband is also thrilled. I keep catching him looking at holiday flats in Cornwall.”
However, it wasn’t just Kate Griffin who has been discovered in the course of the competition. The second prize, a £1,750 writing course at Faber Academy, goes to the brilliantly ambitious Markers by stenographer Alexis Rigg, 29, from London. The high-concept thriller blew Stylist associate editor Alix Walker away, “The premise gripped me the second I started reading it. It reminds me of The Hunger Games and was exactly what I wanted to find – writing that could set future literary trends, rather than follow them, and a story begging to be turned into a film. I think Alexis will benefit hugely from Faber’s course.”
Faber and Faber will publish Kate’s first novel next July and have high hopes it will be the first of many more.
For more information contact Faber and Faber’s publicity manager Alex Holroyd at alexh@faber.co.uk or on 020-7927 3885.
NOTES FOR EDITORS
About Shortlist Media Limited:
Shortlist Media is the award-winning ‘freemium’ media company. Independently owned, the company was established in the summer of 2007. In total, Shortlist Media has won more than 30 industry awards for editorial, commercial and publishing excellence since it began and, now in its fifth year, is trading profitably. In 2011, the company was awarded Most Innovative Business in the Fast Growth Business Awards.

In October 2009, the company launched Stylist. Described recently as “the most influential magazine launch in the last five years” by Enders Analysis, Stylist has become the UK’s number one women’s fashion and lifestyle weekly with an audited ABC of 431,266. We’ve won 12 awards since launch, most recently Editor of the Year for Lisa Smosarski and Consumer Brand of the Year at this year’s magazine Oscars, the PPA Awards.

Shortlist Media’s offices are situated in the heart of Bloomsbury, at 26-34 Emerald Street, London WC1N.

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Writing Wrongs with Faber Academy!



Join authors R J Ellory and Sophie Hannah as they demystify crime writing and put you on the straight and narrow as to what is the best when it comes to crime writing!



WRITING WRONGS: A HANDS-ON GUIDE TO WRITING CONTEMPORARY CRIME




With RJ Ellory and guest Sophie Hannah



Bloomsbury House, 74-77 Great Russell Street, London, WC1B 3DA.


June 10th to June 12th, 2011, 10am-5pm each day


£425 inc. artisan lunch (includes VAT).



In 1962, with the publication of PD James’s Cover Her Face, Faber solidified its reputation for the very best in crime writing. In 2011, the Faber Academy is continuing to build on that reputation, but in a different way.


Writing Wrongs: A Hands-on Guide to Writing Contemporary Crime presents a unique opportunity to new and aspiring writers to join RJ ELLORY and guest tutor SOPHIE HANNAH here at the Faber offices for a weekend of plotting, pace and character. This intensive course is designed to strip away the mysteries attendant to the genre, and identify the real reasons that crime fictions works, or doesn’t.


Additionally, there will be chance to discuss your individual projects in the course, and to address any specific areas of difficulty you might be facing whilst writing your novel, with focus on practical, realistic, honest answers to those commonly, and not-so-commonly asked questions.

So, if you haven’t written before or are about to embark upon your first crime novel and want to know where to begin, or you have half a dozen completed works and need advice on how best to secure an agent, then this course is for you.


For more information about the course, visit www.faberacademy.co.uk, call Ian on 0207 927 3827, or email ian.ellard@faber.co.uk



COMPETITION!


In celebration of Writing Wrongs at the Faber Academy, we are offering the opportunity to win a bundle of 5 PD James books, including the fantastic ‘Talking About Detective Fiction’. To win, all you have to do is to tweet us (twitter.com/faberacademy) with the best first line of a crime story you can come up with, using the hashtag #writingwrongs. The best entry received by Faber noon on Friday 11th March wins!

(Deckchair not included!)

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Writing Wrongs with the Faber Academy

A Hands-on Guide to Writing Contemporary Crime with tutor RJ Ellory & special guest Val McDermid

From the American Noir of Raymond Chandler to the dreaming spires of Colin Dexter, all crime fiction shares some common characteristics: this intensive course is designed to strip away the mysteries attendant to the genre, and identify the real reasons why good crime fiction works.Through class discussion, exercises and individual workshop sessions, this course will explore numerous specific topics, from your goals as a writer to the style in which you write, from ‘quality versus quantity’ to learning how to self-edit, from inspiration, ideas, research, right up to overcoming ‘writers’ block’.

So, if you haven’t written before or are about to embark upon your first crime novel and want to know where to begin, or you have half a dozen completed works and need advice on how best to secure an agent, then this course is for you.

£425 inc. VAT and daily artisan lunch

1st April 2011 – 3rd April 2011 at Bloomsbury House, WC1B 3DA

For more information or to book please call Ian Ellard

Tel +44207 927 3827 or Email iane@faber.co.uk

Monday, 9 March 2009

Faber Academy Crime Writing Course


Becky Fincham
from British publisher Faber and Faber sent us this press release about an interesting opportunity for budding crime writers in the UK. Be aware, though, that space is strictly limited, so if you’re interested, don’t wait around.

Learn to Write Crime Fiction with Mark Billingham and Laura Wilson
Thursday 2 April to Sunday 5 April 2009
Jaffé & Neale Bookshop 1 Middle Row Chipping NortonOxfordshire OX7 5NH England
In a unique collaboration with award-winning independent bookshop Jaffé & Neale, the Faber Academy presents an intense four-day writing workshop with bestselling crime-writers Mark Billingham and Laura Wilson. Set over four days in the upstairs gallery of Jaffé & Neale, a wonderful bookshop in the picturesque Cotswold town of Chipping Norton, Mark Billingham and Laura Wilson have devised a course that will suit beginners every bit as much as those with a good degree of experience. There will be sessions on character, plot, dialogue and of course those all-important twists that keep thriller readers turning the pages.Suspects can expect plenty of lively discussion, inspiring writing exercises and one-on-one tutorials. They can expect surprises. They can also expect to have plenty of fun ...
The course includes:
  • 4 days intensive tuition with Mark Billingham and Laura Wilson (10 a.m.-5 p.m.)
  • A complimentary Moleskine® Notebook
  • A daily artisan lunch
  • Regular coffee breaks
  • A Friday night reading in the bookshop by Mark Billingham and Laura Wilson, followed by a glass of wine
  • A handy course pack including local hotel recommendations
A special discount off Faber books purchased at www.faber.co.ukCourse cost: £500 / €630 (price inclusive of VAT)For more information and specifics about how to register, click here. There are openings for only 15 participants, so book soon.

About the Tutors
Lead tutor Mark Billingham is the bestselling author of the series of novels featuring Detective Inspector Tom Thorne and the recent standalone thriller In The Dark. He has won the Sherlock Award for Best British Detective, the Theakston's Old Peculiar Crime Novel of the Year Award and been nominated for five CWA Daggers. He has also written extensively for television and worked for many years as a stand-up comedian.
He is a regular reviewer on Radio 4's 'Front Row' as well as writing about crime fiction for The Independent, the Sunday Times and Time Out. He has led creative writing workshops at the Harrogate and Cheltenham Festivals and has been the judge for many short story competitions.
Guest tutor Laura Wilson is the acclaimed author of seven crime novels. These include The Lover, which won the Prix Polar Europeen and most recently Stratton's War which was awarded the Ellis Peter Dagger for historical crime fiction. Aside from being crime fiction critic for the Guardian, she has tutored two Arvon courses on crime fiction as well as teaching many courses at Winchester Writer's Conference. She is chair of the 2009 Harrogate Crime Writer's Festival.

Now, to me it seems strange that neither Mark nor Laura are Faber authors but were selected for their high profile. The publisher said that there will be Faber authors acting as tutors for 2010. It's a damn shame that Michael Dibdin isn't still around. I'd pay to attend that one.