16 September 2011

Creative Writing Awards 2011 & Writers' Workshop

Rebekah Lattin-Rawstrone
William Ivory

The winners of the Graham Greene Birthplace Trust’s Creative Writing Awards for April 2011 are:

Best Fiction: Matthew Smith (Wimbledon, London, England, UK)

Best Thriller: Fergal Casey (Ballinteer, County Dublin, Ireland)

Best Screenplay: Cathy Hogan (Kilkenny & National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland)

Best Under 21 Writer: Nathan Ellis (Oakham, Rutland, England, UK)

Best Berkhamstedian: Emily Beauchamp (Hertfordshire, England, UK).

Prizes will be presented in Deans' Hall, Berkhamsted School (Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, UK) at the Graham Greene International Festival on the afternoon of Saturday 1st October 2011.

The judges would like to thank all the entrants --- from as near as Greene’s home town, Berkhamsted, and from as far away as Canada --- for their excellent efforts and fine writing. There were many interesting and individual texts, and a great range of styles and subject matter, allied to abundant enthusiasm and impressive commitment to the project. Although Awards were not made in the categories of Travel and Old Berkhamstedian, nevertheless the entries were a credit to the writers in all instances. In the category of Travel the entry from William Whyte (Great Chishill, Hertfordshire, England, UK) was commended by the judges.

The titles (or starting-points) for the Awards in April 2012 will be released at the Festival in October 2011, when there will be a joint Creative Writing Workshop in prose and screenplay writing, led by Rebekah Lattin-Rawstrone (above, top) and William Ivory (above, below). This course will include the professional writers' introductions to two disciplines (in which Graham Greene excelled), shared considerations of sample materials and the writers' guidance in an opportunity to write creatively in one of the genres.

The event will be completed by attendance at Lee Langley’s talk on “Traps and Escapes”. Lee Langley is an award-winning novelist and travel-writer. She wrote the screen adaptation of Graham Greene's The Tenth Man (USA, 1988), and she will talk about the pleasures and problems of adaptation and the lure of faraway places to writers of fiction. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Rebekah Lattin-Rawstrone's first novel was Home (Social Disease, 2008), and she is currently working on her second. She teaches Creative Writing at City University (London) and The Bishopsgate Institute (London). She is a partner of Apis Books, an independent publishing company for shorter fiction, and she was the founder of the writers’ forum Tales of the Decongested.

William Ivory wrote the screenplays for Made in Dagenham (UK, 2010), which was nominated for a BAFTA Award, and Women in Love (BBC, 2011). He is a writer for television, film and stage. He is the author of A Thing Called Love (BBC, 2005) and The Sins for which he won The Edgar Allan Poe Award in New York presented by The Crime Writers Association of America for Best TV Drama Series, and he is the creator of The Invisibles (BBC1, 2007). In 2009 he was awarded an honorary D.Litt. by the University of Nottingham, UK.

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