FalWriting went to see Monique Roffey talk with Cathy Rentzenbrink at the Poly on 19th October, talking about her newest novel, Passiontide, her career and experiences.
Read MoreFor our second Halloween Writing Contest submission, Elizabeth Phillips takes inspiration from the Cornish Witch Trials to create her own twisted tale.
Read MoreThird year Conrad Gardner reviews the first episode of Moon Knight.
Read MoreJoe Kahn writes the trailer for the next big LEGO Star Wars game: LEGO Star Wars: Episodes 1-6 and Filler, in this weeks Post-Digital Content roundup...
Read MoreHailey O’Gorman talks to Belfast based writer, performer and editor Ash Anraí-Jones about aer debut podcast, Save Our Games
Read MoreTheo Veall proposes a new concept for writers in the post-digital age…
Read MoreJon Cox interviews Falmouth mayor Steve Eva and discusses the town's history with the university.
Read More2nd Year student Matt Anderson’s peer-voted piece comes from the Post-Digital Content module, where he explores the moment he knew he wanted to be a writer.
Read More2nd Year Josh Cheeseman’s work from the Post-Digital Content module was selected for publication by his peers. In it, he explores his personal history of writing, from the left perspective.
Read MoreThe third entry in Rupture, a series about queerness, the body and everything that waits in the middle. Featuring third year Creative Writing student Yazmin White.
Read MoreThe second entry in Rupture, a series about queerness, the body and everything that waits in the middle.
Read MoreA Gothic short-story about a mysterious forest on the outskirts of a back-of-the-yards town and the strange beasts that roam in it, by 3rd year Undergraduate Elise Peyrat.
Read MoreConrad Gardner reviews Invincible, focussing on the father and son relationship in the series.
Read MoreA small catch up with Lauren Sergi about how Falmouth University helped her get a good job shortly after graduating.
Read MoreMA Professional Writing student Emily Gough writes a brief defence of fanfiction, its uses, and its existence in our literary canon.
Read MoreIn another poetry instalment, second year student Jess Buxton writes about an encroaching monotony in ‘Empty Kitchen’ and a bunch of flowers, wilting in a vase, that sat on her kitchen table during lockdown. Jess likens these images to mental health, exploring the idea that we often only realise in hindsight that we have not been kind to ourselves.
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