View Article  Creative writing course "the new mental hospitals"
We don't often cover news stories but in the light of my recent departure from a creative writing course, I thought these comments made by the novelist, screenwriter and playwright Hanif Kureishi during an interview at the Hay (Book) Festival, which runs until Sunday...

Kureishi, a research associate on the creative writing course at Kingston University, said: "One of the things you notice is that when you switch on the television and a student has gone mad with a machine gun on a campus in America, it's always a writing student. The writing courses, particularly when they have the word 'creative' in them, are the new mental hospitals. But the people are very nice.

"When I teach them, they are always better at the end – and more unhappy." He added that creative writing courses set up false expectations that a literary career would inevitably follow. "The fantasy is that all the students will become successful writers - and no one will disabuse them of that. When you use the word creative and the word course there is something deceptive about it."

"I always give people the same mark – 71% – and then you write these reports. I always say they were well-behaved, well-dressed ... But how can you mark creative writing?"

View Article  Oh dear, I'm the oldest art school drop-out on the planet
I'm sad to report that I've become the oldest art school drop out on the planet ...probably. Actually I was doing a creative writing MA at an art school and I decided to sling my hook because I felt the classes were at best a distraction from the work I want to do – I still have a day job, so it's not as if I need to attend courses to occupy my time.

However once I mentioned my thinking, I heard similar comments from other people (including a couple of IS&T contributors) to the effect that they were despairing of their creative writing courses, feeling 'short-changed' in terms of what they were getting back in return for their fees etc etc. So has the creative writing bubble burst? Are there too many schools, colleges and universities running creative writing courses with not enough resources to go around. Three common complaints are:
• not enough tutorials
• not enough workshopping and/or not enough willing participants for workshopping
• and a depressing feeling of lack of resources – the one I've just left felt so underfunded as to be threadbare.

One final item of home news – our internet server has been down all day but we hope to resume normal postings from Monday.

View Article  Mixed reviews – and new sites to check out
• My old friend Alexis Byter has just launched a prose and photography blog called, appropriately enough, Words & Vision. It is only just starting to carry content but if you are interested in prose poetry and 'street photography' check it out – or even better bookmark it. www.wordsandvision.com

• Next up, regular IS&T contributor P A Levy says he has "been working hard on getting a new web site up and running – the clueless collective’s magazine of poetica is a spoof of some of the more, shall we say arty and pretentious, literary magazines.  I have to confess that it’s all me; I’m the guilty one.  I wrote all the rubbish.  Anyway, if you get the time please pop by and have a browse at www.cluelesscollective.co.uk and I shall try and entertain you." I've checked it out – it definitely does entertain – Dick & Tom's guide to poetry should be included in every creative writing course.

• Finally, long-time stalwart of the UK haiku and haibun scene Stanley Pelter has a new collection of haibun out. Called insideoutside (published by George Mann Publications, ISBN 9780955241574) and featuring an introduction by Diana Noel, this really should be called something like The Dangerous Book of Haibun for Boys (and Girls) as the contents, aided and abetted by Stanley's pen & ink illustrations, push the form into a far more edgy zone than you normally see with haibun. I liked this collection (tho I can imagine some people being frightened by) not least because it makes you think, whereas all to often haibun just lull you off to sleep. You can order insideout direct from Stanley for £8.00 + £1.50 p&p (contact him direct for euro & US dollar rates) by emailing spelter23@aol.com
View Article  IS&T readership hits new high
Ink Sweat & Tears' readership for April hit a new all time high with 10,001 distinct hosts served and just over 17,000 page views recorded. Thank you.
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