Another day of applicant interviews and we've almost filled the course for 2014/15. To celebrate, here's a glimpse at our updated 2014 brochure, packed with useful information about studying MA Creative Writing at Edinburgh Napier University. [Click any of the images to enlarge them.] Enjoy!
Want to make a career in writing? Edinburgh Napier University has the course for you.
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Thursday, May 1, 2014
More success for MA students, graduates
We’re happy to report lots of successes by recent graduates and members of our current cohort on the Creative Writing MA programme at Edinburgh Napier University.
Recent graduate Georgina Bruce has been published twice by Britain's most celebrated science fiction anthology, Interzone. Her story Wake Up, Phil appeared in the magazine's 250th issue, while Cat World was published in Interzone 246 alongside stories by award-winning writers Aliette de Bodard and Lavie Tidhar.
Recent graduate Mark Harding has had a story chosen for the prestigious annual anthology, New Writing Scotland. He originally wrote his short story Remote for an assessment on our Genre Fiction module. This is the third year in succession New Writing Scotland has included a graduate's story - all of them originally written for assessments on the MA.
Two members of our current cohort are already experiencing success outside the course. German student Nina Vedder won the Scottish Book Trust’s 50 Word Fiction Competition for March [you can read her winning entry in the crime-themed contest here]. And US student Alana Tempest-Mitchell had a creative non-fiction piece selected for reading on Glasgow’s Subcity Radio, part of a series linked to the Commonwealth Games.
It's not just graduates and students on the course having success. Our writer in residence, science fiction scribe Ken MacLeod had his latest novel published recently. Descent was written while he has been in residence with our programme [ you can read a sample here].
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Polygon publishing graduate's novel - Wasp
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Graduate Ian Garbutt |
Major project is a key element in students attaining their MA in Creative Writing at Edinburgh Napier Univeristy, but work on it doesn’t stop once they leave our course. Take the example of Ian Garbutt from our first cohort, the class of 2009/10.
Ian has just signed a contract with Polygon - original publishers of The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency - for the novel that was his major project on the course. Wasp will be published in 2015. Ian is one of several graduates from the course represented by the prestigious literary agency Jenny Brown Associates.
We make no guarantees that our students will leave the course with a degree under one arm and a publishing contract under the other. Our MA programme is about progressing students on their journey as writers. But it’s pleasing to see graduates like Ian achieving their ambitions as writers - makes all the hard work feel that extra bit worthwhile. Congratulations, Ian!
Monday, January 27, 2014
Mentoring on our unique MA programme
A new innovation we've introduced on the Creative Writing MA at Edinburgh Napier Unveristy is a module called Creative and
Editorial Development. In the past we offered students six
hours of one-to-one
mentoring, but this happened outside teaching modules.
Now we have transformed mentoring into a long, thin module that runs over two trimesters - and it earns every student credits towards their
MA. The new module has only been running for one trimester so far, but the results have been very encouraging.
We
think mentoring is a crucial part of each student’s learning journey, preparing them for life as a self-sufficient writer when they will be working one-to-one with an editor,
agent, artist, development executive, script editor or another
creative collaborator.

Errol Rivera: “Mentoring is what makes this course unique. It helps not to think of your mentoring sessions as a personal workshop. When I stopped expecting
answers or approval from my tutors, we started working like partners
and some amazing things happened. What could have been a lesson become a
conversation. Like everything else on this course, the focus is development - not solipsism.”
Laura Clements: “If
you're serious about taking your writing further as a career, it's
important to throw yourself into
the editorial relationship. The first thing you have to do is identify
a purpose for yourself as a writer and a purpose for your writing. This
isn’t something that you will necessarily be able to set in stone at
the offset, but it will evolve with the progression
of your work over the year. Mentoring is the environment in which this
can happen.”

Friday, October 25, 2013
Happy graduation day for class of 2012/13
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From left: Nicole Brandon, Laura Clements, Griff Williams, S-J McGeachy, Sean Bell. |
Monday, September 30, 2013
MA programme invades Wigtown Book Festival
Edinburgh Napier's MA Creative Writing programme is making its presence felt at the fabled Wigtown Book Festival and its offshoots this week. Current student Anni Telford [above] is reading and discussing her work from 1.30pm on Wednesday, October 2nd at Reading Lasses:
It's Crime Time (Anni Telford): What makes good people do bad things? After 30 years as a psychotherapist working with paedophiles, rapists and violent criminals, Anni Telford puts that experience to good use in her crime fiction. She will discuss her psychotherapy career and how it has inspired a collection of crime short stories.
Tutor David Bishop was in Wigtown on Sunday to run a packed workshop on creating comics, part of Wigtown The Festival. The MA Creative Writing programme's reader in residence Stuart Kelly is chairing events at Wigtown almost every day, while writer in residence Ken MacLeod is at Wigtown this Saturday [Oct 5th] to discuss his work.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
MA students interview acclaimed authors
During the 2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival, graduating students from our MA Creative Writing programme were invited to interview several acclaim authors for SummerhallTV, an arts channel dedicated to capturing the weird, radical and wonderful. We can't embed the videos, but here are URLs for each of these spoken word extravaganzas...
Crime author and comics writer DENISE MINA chats with Errol Rivera
Artemis Fowl creator EION COLFER discusses fantasy fiction with Laura Clements
Rebus creator IAN RANKIN talks crime fiction with Julie Whitley
Comics writer KIERON GILLEN talks with Errol Rivera
Science fiction author KEN MacLEOD chats with Mark Harding
Colorado journalist MARK CRADDOCK talks about studying creative writing in Scotland
Rising star writer ADAM THIRLWELL talks with Nicole Brandon
Comics artist JAMIE McKELVIE talks collaboration with Errol Rivera
Steampunk author ANDREW JAMIESON talks to Griff Williams
Award-winning graduate CATHERINE SIMPSON talks short stories with Julie Whitley
Crime writer ALEX GRAY talks with the ubiquitous Errol Rivera
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