Niamh Campbell’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Niamh Campbell’s Shelf Life

'Looking back, I really thought of the written world as a built, existing world - a discourse, to use the adult term - and my intention was not to make value judgements but orient myself within it.'

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Noreen Masud’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Noreen Masud’s Shelf Life

‘It is very hard to feel that those around you value book festivals more than doing anything possible to put a spanner in this poisoned system that kills and maims racialised children every single day. Most people want a quiet life. That’s hard, because if you’re marginalised that's not an option for you; you’re right up against the world’s clamour every single moment.’

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Anne de Marcken’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Anne de Marcken’s Shelf Life

‘I have two primary ways of writing: 1) slowly and deliberately, and 2) accidentally. In the first case, a project usually starts with an idea that is persistent enough to grow more clear rather than dimmer in the time it takes me to attend to it. Once I am writing, the idea eventually yields a feeling—some line or passage reveals the heart of the piece.’

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Claire Carroll’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Claire Carroll’s Shelf Life

‘I am working on a new collection. It's set in Jersey, in the channel islands, where I spent exactly half of my childhood. It's a strange place, in lots of ways, but very beautiful too. Politically it's like Nigel Farage fell asleep watching The Truman Show, but the coastlines are breathtaking.’

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Summer Reading
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Summer Reading

Lunate contributors and friends on the books they’re reading this summer

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Karen Powell’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Karen Powell’s Shelf Life

‘I need to reach a certain point in a novel’s development where I feel it has acquired the necessary heft, before I can begin to discuss or share it with anyone else. Before that point, everything feels too fragile and tentative to expose to the air.’

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Catherine Taylor’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Catherine Taylor’s Shelf Life

‘Writing my memoir was akin to opening a time capsule, all the work that went into it. It was simultaneously exciting and exhausting.’

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Glen James Brown’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Glen James Brown’s Shelf Life

‘It used to be I’d just sit down see where the story goes, but life is too short. Now I plot in advance and let research dictate the story, rather than try to impose research on preconceived ideas. You can’t win against historical precedent.’

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Helen McClory’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Helen McClory’s Shelf Life

‘It’s very easy to think that when you stop writing – or are forced to stop writing – that you’ll never write anything worth reading again. It is hard to hold on to self-belief, and feels indulgent too, but if everyone felt like this, about all the art they make, where would we be?’

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Georgina Harding’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Georgina Harding’s Shelf Life

‘But the writing of the novel comes with an utterly different form of concentration, from the first line. I start at that first line, or perhaps a single image, and head on. Inevitably I will go back and chip away at it, again and again, but that's the foundation stone.’

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Tawseef Khan’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Tawseef Khan’s Shelf Life

‘“Attend to your sentences,” from the titan that is Leone Ross, whom I consider a lifelong mentor. Every time we speak, she signs off with that instruction, and I think to myself, yes, I can’t do very much about the business-side of writing. The only thing that I can control are my sentences.’

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Jen Calleja’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Jen Calleja’s Shelf Life

‘That Vehicle especially has almost sold 2000 copies and has been well received shows that trad publishing has low expectations of both literature and readers.’

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The Rebecca Bengal Interview
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

The Rebecca Bengal Interview

‘If I’m asked to write a piece about an artist, it’s actually probably less a true profile in the expansive, authoritative sense, but something more compressed: a story focused on them almost as a character — or maybe call it a portrait, an encounter with that artist.’

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Rebecca Smith’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Rebecca Smith’s Shelf Life

‘I’m not entirely sure what my creative process is yet. I started Rural at University (Masters in Creative Writing) so there were projects and deadlines, which I know I like to work to. I like a structure. So now I’m starting my next book, I’m feeling a little lost. Maybe I’ll need to pretend I’m doing my Masters again.’

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Four Inspirations for Push Process by Jonathan Walker
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Four Inspirations for Push Process by Jonathan Walker

‘Push Process is a work of autofiction. One of the unwritten rules for that mode is it cannot be an exercise in wish fulfilment: the protagonist cannot be more talented, attractive or successful than the author, and indeed, it’s better if they are obviously less so.’

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Gregory Norminton’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Gregory Norminton’s Shelf Life

‘I’m a gifted procrastinator, which means I have to get my wife to hide my laptop on writing mornings so I don’t fritter them away online. If I’m researching a project, I try to combine reading and note-taking with experimental fragments of narrative: writing dialogue between characters, say, or bits of description.’

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Ben Pester’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Ben Pester’s Shelf Life

‘With books, the risk of rejection is different. If your book is going out, it means your agent was into it. This muffles the pain of the world like a mother's love. Also, I think that commissioning editors for books are making decisions about their own reputation, especially for debut or new-ish writers, when they weigh up your work.’

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Joanna Pocock’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Joanna Pocock’s Shelf Life

‘My creative process is pretty chaotic. Ideas, words, phrases, bits of dialogue and situations often come to me in my dreams or on walks. When I get an idea, I have to write it down immediately. Or I lose it.’

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Jade Angeles Fitton’s Shelf Life
Gary Kaill Gary Kaill

Jade Angeles Fitton’s Shelf Life

‘Sometimes I cut myself off from things I worry will influence me because I want to be original, and then find I’ve written something totally unoriginal. But still, we have to try.’

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