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Writing Our Lives I


Life writing workshop with Kate Potts (autumn term)

Image credit: Krismas

‘Even if you think you know what the story is, you don’t until you write it.’
   - Melissa Febos

In five fortnightly in-person sessions we’ll explore considerations and techniques in prose life writing—memoir, autobiography, autofiction, personal essays, and work that crosses boundaries of genre and form.

Focusing on different key aspects of life writing in each session, we will read and discuss a variety of examples including work by Ocean Vuong, Karl Ove Knausgarden, Lemn Sissay, Olivia Laing, Maggie O’Farrell, Maggie Nelson and Polly Rowena Atkin.

The five sessions will focus on (but won’t be limited to) these themes:

1.      Writing as research: life writing methods

2.      Narrative style and voice

3.      Realness and authenticity: the interplay of memory and imagination

4.      Multiple selves: time frames and perspectives

5.      Form, structure and time: finding a container that suits your work

Though discussion, short writing prompts, ‘homework’ activities and feedback on your own work in a supportive group space, you will develop and hone your writing.

This course is designed for writers with some experience keen to explore the possibilities of life writing or build on work in progress.

Dates: Friday September 19th to Friday November 14th
Time: 10:00am to 12:30pm

Fee: £150.00 / 125.00 concession

Venue: The Exchange, Stroud GL5 1DF

Writing Our Lives I (autumn term)
£150.00
Writing Our Lives I (autumn term) CONCESSION
£125.00

Tutor: Kate Potts

Kate Potts is a poet and freelance lecturer, mentor and editor. She has taught creative writing for Middlesex University, Royal Holloway, Oxford University, Arvon and The Poetry School.

Kate's most recent book is Pretenders (Bloodaxe, 2025), a multi-voice documentary work exploring imposter feelings and imposters. She writes about creative writing and care in her substack Speak Up! On writing, failing better and taking up space.

'As a study of imposter feelings, Pretenders is revelatory: humane in its ability to hold and make space for vulnerability, and altert to the socio-political dynamics that underpin the impulse to self-doubt.' - Sarah Howe

'Kate Potts is one of the foremost writers of our generation.' - Fiona Benson

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15 July

Summer Poetry Walks at Dusk with Philp Rush

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23 January

Writing Our Lives II