Site icon Jo Fenton

Why I Write – Elisabeth Carpenter

Spread the love
Advertisements

It’s my great pleasure today to welcome one of my first writing friends, Elisabeth Carpenter, to my blog to talk about her writing journey.

As I child, I’d devour the Sweet Valley High books and immerse myself totally in that world, but being a writer seemed so unattainable to someone like me. It didn’t even enter my head that I could write a story that would ever be published, so I was never one of those writers who created stories from an early age.

Years later, I saw an advert for a writing course in a newspaper two years after my eldest child was born in the late nineties. Funnily enough, I recently found the first assignment, which was to describe why I wanted to write. The first line I’d written was: ‘I want to write because I enjoy reading.’ It was hardly dazzling prose, but it pretty much summed it up!

Embarrassingly, I didn’t finish this course; life got in the way. I was so impatient, then – I wanted to be a brilliant writer straight away. I wasn’t, of course, so it went on the backburner. Instead, I enrolled with the Open University to study towards an English Literature and Language degree. This was a huge turning point for me. The courses didn’t teach the prescriptive semantics of grammar, but how the use of language can tell you so much about a person: where they come from, what they think.

Studying some of the great novels in such detail was a revelation and totally transformed the way I thought. I realised that there wasn’t some kind of unattainable magic required to write a book – it was perfectly accessible. So, a few years later, after having my second child, I began writing my first manuscript – scribbling in notebooks whenever I got the chance. I worked on it for two years and it was never published, but writing it taught me so much. I think with each manuscript, a writer improves, hones their voice.

In writing this post, I’ve realised that my initial spark of desire to write came soon after having each of my children – that strange time when they’re new-borns and you don’t feel like yourself; the real world seems so far away. Writing is a fantastic way of connecting with yourself and to other people, exploring what it means to be human. I don’t know what I’d do without it.

About the Author:

Elisabeth lives in Preston, Lancashire with her family. She loves the north of England, setting most of her stories in the area – including the novel she is writing at the moment.

www.elisabethcarpenter.co.uk

http://www.twitter.com/libbycpt

https://www.instagram.com/libbycpt/

 

Book links:

99 Red Balloons: An absolutely gripping psychological thriller with a twist you won’t see coming eBook: Carpenter, Elisabeth: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store

11 Missed Calls: A gripping psychological thriller that will have you on the edge of your seat: Amazon.co.uk: Carpenter, Elisabeth: 9780008223540: Books

Only a Mother: A gripping psychological thriller with a shocking twist eBook: Carpenter, Elisabeth: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store

The Woman Downstairs: The brand new psychological suspense thriller that will have you gripped: Amazon.co.uk: Carpenter, Elisabeth: 9781409181491: Books

 

Exit mobile version