One of the things I’ve been trying out is reworking a piece of text into a completely different style. This one was written in the style of Borges.
Read MoreLibraries, by Terry Freedman
Library madness: a trabble of trouble
The worst thing about belonging to more than one library is that it's all too easy to take a book back to the wrong one. I did that a few months ago, and the following conversation ensued.
Read MoreSix-word reviews
When writing short-form I think it helps to think in terms of the minimum viable wordage, or MVW...
Read MoreNot just a numbers game

I’ve been thinking about definitions of success recently.
Read MoreGeoffrey Chaucer's Complete Works: which edition do YOU prefer?

We visited the William Morris Gallery at the weekend, and Chaucer’s Complete Works was one of the books Wm Morris published.
Read MoreKnighton Wood, by Terry Freedman
Success -- at last! A short, hopefully interesting and chortlesome, memoir piece
It is understandable that an ambitious young man, in his late twenties and early thirties, wanting success in all its various guises, and with a belief in the power of the mind, would be attracted to certain kinds of books, tapes and courses. The young man I’m talking about was, of course, me.
Read MoreBooks added to the TBR heap
This article is an excerpt from a longer one that appeared on my Eclecticism newsletter.
Read MoreNano reviews

You’ve heard of six-word stories. How about nano non-fiction?
Read MoreThe scream by Terry Freedman.jpg
A rather annoying side effect of scanning a typed document and converting it to text
It was my intention to provide you with a guide to style guides. But...
Read MoreThe art of writing originated from a very prosaic need, not a creative impulse

The art of making paper was kept secret for hundreds of years.
Read MoreBooks I'm reading or about to read

I’ve been sent the following books by publishers, and will review them in due course. Here is some information about them.
Read MoreIf you learnt how to write well at school, maybe you're lucky

The typical school writing assignment involves working in a way that no real writer does.
Read MoreLet's hear it for the introverts!

This review was originally published in Teach Secondary magazine, and so is aimed at teachers rather than writers, but as writers are often called upon to speak in public I thought this might be useful for them too!
Read MoreReview: 99 Variations on a Proof
It was, surely, only a matter of time before someone would take Raymond Queneau’s idea of exercises in style and apply it to mathematics.
Read MoreYe olde book signing

I’ve recently finished a course on Macbeth and Othello, and I’ve been doing some research.
Read MoreA blogger, by Terry Freedman
AI for bloggers
In my recent blogging course, I abandoned my carefully-prepared lesson, or part pf it, threw caution to the winds, and suggested to the class that we experiment with using AI for writing blog posts. Here’s a partial blog post it came up with, which you will agree is utter rubbish…
Read MoreAn intriguing interlude on the Underground

Travelling back from my saxophone lesson on Saturday, a very attractive young woman kept looking at me. Did I finally have sax appeal I asked myself.
Read MorePhoto by Terry Freedman
An embarassing interlude on the Overground
Last week, Elaine, a friend of hers (D) and I went to an art gallery. On our return we caught the Overground train at Highbury and Islington, heading towards Stratford….
Read MoreWhat makes a great and successful writer?

This is a transcript of a conversation between Fred Terryman and myself. It’s been lightly edited, with the pauses taken out for ease of reading.
Read MoreReview: Adventures in Maps
This beautifully illustrated volume has relevance to several different curriculum areas, containing as it does accounts of intrepid historical journeys that range from 16th century seafaring voyages to Arctic crossings and even the surveys undertaken to facilitate the moon landings.
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