To conclude the summer selections, here are three poems from Jonathan Parsonage’s stunning collection.
Read MoreIn the last essay of the showcase, Jessica Hawes investigates the manipulation of reader within Atonement, exploring a tension between innocence and knowingness.
Read MoreEmma Baker explores self and authorship in her reflection on Peter Carey’s Novel.
Read MoreIn slick and frank prose Lorraine Sharpe takes on the 'massive supermarket’ of life.
Read MoreThe second collaborative sequence from Daniel Y. Harris and Falmouth Lecturer Rupert M. Loydell is now available for purchase
Read MoreChloe Godin examines National Identity within Peter Carey’s novel.
Read MoreBorn in Bucharest, Romania, Adriana is studying Creative Writing at Falmouth University. Her poems are about people and the fragility of human condition.
Read MoreJoshua Williams explores the evolution of interaction within storyworlds in the adventure game genre between 1976 and 2016 in these two extracts from his dissertation.
Read MoreRead Joana Varandas eerie prose, full of tension and things left unsaid.
Read MoreThis week sees the release of the latest novel from Falmouth lecturer Rupert Wallis
Read MoreGabby Willcocks interviews David, Jerome and Andy following their reading at the Landmark Trust Egyptian House during Penzance Litfest
Read MoreCharlotte Bown takes us to a fantastical reality in Chapter One of her children’s book.
Read MoreMelissa Saryazdi explores the presentation of the female in Philip Pullman’s Northern Lights in reaction to C. S. Lewis’ The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe.
Read MoreTeige Maddison is a lover of the lyrical, the evocative, and the hard hitting. On this Open Mic selection, you'll hear Teige reading in his characteristic powerful style.
Read MoreA recent graduate of English, Lol Candlin considers the last three years, well spent between the pages.
Read MoreAlice Rooney discusses innocence, experience, and knowingness in Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone.
Read MoreForming part of her dissertation this except is from the opening of Jodie Reed’s Novel which examines families.
Read MoreJoana muses on the important relationship between writing,
and the stuff we do to avoid it.
In this essay Maisie Prudames examines the potential of the epistolary form within J. M. Coetzee’s novel.
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