Writing Magazine

SUBSCRIBERS’ NEWS

A creative challenge

‘I find so much inspiration from reallife, real-world events firing up my imagination for so much of my fiction,’ writes subscriber Drew Payne. ‘Often just the bare bones of an event will inspire a story. ‘I am not above using events from my own life to fuel my fiction too. It can be a way for me to write about things important to me.

‘When I was twelve, my grandmother died from cancer. It left a lasting and uncomfortable memory. Even forty years later, I can remember so much from that time. This became the starting point for my book Five Days. It is a child’s eye view of terminal illness. It is about twelve-year-old Byron, whose mother is very ill but no one is telling him why. Instead, he is pushed to the side as people try to protect him from what is really happening.

‘Though losing my grandmother was the inspiration here, so much of this

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine3 min read
Get Published
In the 1970s and 80s horror fiction was huge, the genre dominated by bestselling titles by Stephen King and James Herbert, writes Gary Dalkin. Shelves were filled with books by Ramsey Campbell, Shaun Hutson, Brian Lumley, Mark Morris, Stephen Laws a
Writing Magazine4 min read
Short Story Competitions
Win prizes for short stories up to 3,000 words. The Fiction Factory Short Story Competition is inviting short fiction in any genre apart from children’s and YA. Enter original, unpublished short stories up to 3,000 words. The prizes are TBA. The entr
Writing Magazine3 min read
Madeleine Milburn
Madeleine Milburn taught English in Germany after graduating from St Andrews University. However, after a chance connection with a woman running a small independent publishing company, she changed jobs and learned all about the Frankfurt Book Fair an

Related Books & Audiobooks