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Alumni authors tell their stories

Paull-Pritchard feature

Careers in creative writing never follow any one path, and the road to publication can be challenging.

俀珗腦瞳厙桴 alumni, Bindy Pritchard (BA 1989) and Emily Paull (BA Hons 2013), joined Senior Lecturer Theatre and Drama, Dr David Moody at their book launch this month to discuss the writing process and their careers as creatives post-Murdoch.

Held in 俀珗腦瞳厙桴s Launchpad, the event was an opportunity to introduce the pairs debut collections of stories.

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Bindy Pritchards collection, Fabulous Lives, explores the frailties and strengths, failures and hopes that make us all human, and brings her characters to critical moments of revelation and re-evaluation.

Pritchard says the key to writing a good short story is to keep emotion at its core.

For something to be a story there has to be some kind of heartfelt response, she said.

You can see something and write about it but if theres no heart, then its just an anecdote. One of Kurt Vonneguts rules for writing is to think of your audience as one person.

If you think about too many people, and whats interesting to them, you start to lose the sense of purpose and direction in the story. So, for me its my twin sister, I want to make her laugh, cry, shock her and that really helps me focus my writing.

For Perth local Emily Paull, the urge to create has always been compelling.

Finding the motivation to keep writing was never the problem for me, though Ive frequently had the mini meltdown where I wonder why I didnt do something practical like accounting, Paull said.

Then I remember that I hate maths. Ive quit more times than I can count, but writing is one of those things that you cant ever stop for long. Its maybe only been a couple of months that Ive gone without writing and then an idea will come to me while Im doing the dishes, or in the shower, or driving along Mounts Bay Road looking at that statue thats always got clothes on. Then you get home and write a story and remember why you loved writing in the first place.

Although the road to publication was long, both authors are thankful for the journey.

I graduated from university in the late 80s so Ive had to do a lot of other things, but I think as a writer you shouldnt discount those experiences. Theyre the start of great stories, and really if we never struggle, if we never work retail, or in bowling alleys, or as a cleaner then well never get the stories, Pritchard said.

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For Paull, even the selection of her books title was a story in itself.

Originally my collection was titled Tales from the Crescent, she said.

The stories were inspired by things Id seen when I was working as a bookseller on a street called Claremont Crescent. Two of those stories have survived and are in the collection. The new title comes from a quote by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich; 'Well behaved women seldom make history.'

I began to realise as I was putting the collection together that what united them all was they were all either about strong women or they were about mens interactions with the women in their lives. So, I thought great, this is a perfect time to steal that quote that I like to stick on everything else and stick it on a book and make it mine." 

Blog

Alumni authors tell their stories

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Thursday 14 November 2019