Ray Bradbury’s writing ‘hygiene’

During the period where I’d given up the idea of an MA, I started Ray Bradbury’s writing ‘hygiene’ again. He recommended reading an essay, a short story, and a poem every night for 1,000 nights, and writing a short story every week. I did this for nearly 300 days a couple of years ago, and learned an enormous amount from that exercise, but life got in the way. I’ve started again now though and will keep going.

Ray didn’t like the idea of university writing courses, but the world has changed since he began writing. Would he have done one if he’d been starting today?

Don’t you just LOVE Ray Bradbury!!

To MA or not MA?

I’ve been considering a Masters degree for some time, and have started and withdrawn from two. I withdrew from one because the materials were atrocious and had never been updated (for example, they referred to gluing photographs into a book to be photocopied — in other words pre-digital photography and pre-digital printing!) I started another, which had what I thought would be a good literature component, but withdrew because it didn’t, and because there was too much ‘woke’ politics, which would have served only to make me terrified of writing anything. One of the lecturers didn’t even have a degree in literature or writing, and none of them were widely published (or published at all) outside of academia.

I gave up the idea of an MA, but a few things have changed my mind, so I’ve decided to try again. One: it seems that having an MA in creative writing gets your work out of the slush pile and at least looked at. Second: I found a Masters in Creative Writing at Maquarie University, where I did some courses for my BA. The standards were very high, and the courses organised and taught well. Third: the need/want to do such a course just won’t stop niggling away at me because I think it will take my writing to a higher level. And fourth: a writer friend has applied for this one as well and his optimism infected me. I’ve put in my application, and will see what happens.

Professor Hanif Kureishi, among others, thinks that most of these courses are a waste of time, but I learned a lot in my BA in Literature and Composition at Griffith University, especially the literature courses, and I also enjoyed it a great deal. A Graduate Certificate I did there in Literary Classics was also very rewarding. I like studying and trying to improve myself.

Working on a 19th century mystery

I’m currently busy researching and writing a mystery novel set in rural South Australia in 1870. I know the area I’ve set the novel in quite well as I have a little vintage caravan there. I’m reading as much as I can about the period in books, and I’m also finding the Trove website invaluable for the research, but it’s so interesting that I have to be careful to watch the time. The local newspapers of the day are wonderful resources though. Here’s an example of one I read today, which noted the melancholy news of the death of Charles Dickens.

Update: I expect to finish the first draft this weekend!

I’m also (in my quiet moments) putting together a book of my short stories and knitting a Border Collie.