Writer to Writer
with Akhil Sharma
Book a one-on-one mentoring session with Akhil Sharma to discuss your writing project. Akhil will provide guidance to help your creative practice and support your writing life.
Unfortunately, we are full!
Registrations for this course are now closed but do join our mailing list here to be updated on future courses like this.
Summary
Course code: AS5
30 mins to 1 hour mentoring session
For Intermediate to Advanced Writers
Limited sessions available
Selective entry – we’ll offer one-on-one sessions to writers who show promise
Dates
September & October 2022
By appointment only
Venue
TBA
Overview and Learning Outcomes
During a Writer to Writer session (30 mins to 1 hour) with the Visiting Writer you will:
- discuss your writing aspirations with an experienced writer in an encouraging environment
- obtain general advice from an experienced writer on your writing project
- obtain specific practical advice on aspects of the art and craft of writing, writing technique & your writing challenges
- obtain help on shaping your approach to your writing life
- understand what it takes to be a professional writer
Please note the one-on-one consultation is not a manuscript assessment.
Who should register?
Writers including:
- Intermediate Writers — Writers who have chosen to pursue writing as a full time or part time career with a serious, professional intent but who are not yet published with a mainstream or recognised independent publisher, or
- Advanced Writers — Writers who have published at least one book with a mainstream or recognised independent publisher, and/or published in at least one literary journal and/or anthology
Registration and Pricing
Course Prerequisites
To sign up, please register at the link above with the following documents:
- A 500 word writing sample
- A short summary of your writing project of ~100 words
- A short biography of ~100 words
Course Fees
- For each 30 min to 1 hour session:
- $25 for adults
- $10 for students, unemployed, low income migrant workers
- Free for undergraduates and postgraduate students from Singapore tertiary institutions
- Non refundable if cancellation 2 weeks or less before course starts
- Please email us if financial assistance is needed
About Akhil Sharma
Akhil Sharma was born in Delhi in India and emigrated to the USA in 1979. His stories have been published in the New Yorker and in Atlantic Monthly, and have been included in The Best American Short Stories and O. Henry Prize Collections. His first novel, An Obedient Father, won the 2001 Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. He was named one of Granta’s ‘Best of Young American Novelists’ in 2007. His second novel, Family Life, won The 2015 Folio Prize and the International Dublin Literary Award 2016. Sharma is currently a Fellow at The New York Public Library’s Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers.
© Photo credit: Jack Lewellyn
Other Courses & Events with Akhil Sharma
Teaching Creative Writing in Singapore: A Sharing with Akhil Sharma
On 17 December 2022 at NTU at OneNorth, ACWP presented a sharing of Akhil Sharma’s insights during his time as a Visiting Writer on Teaching Creative Writing in Singapore. During the discussion, we explored best practices for teaching Creative Writing in Singapore....
Advanced Short Fiction
This course will develop writers’ understanding of the short story, its forms, structures and techniques. Writers will gain a deeper knowledge of how to write short stories and gain skills and experience to write and revise their short stories.
Telling Tales: Discovering What is True for Us
This course will develop writers’ understanding of the short story, its forms, structures and techniques. Writers will gain a deeper knowledge of how to write short stories and gain skills and experience to write and revise their short stories.
Creative Nonfiction
This course aims to help writers interrogate actual experience. We will ask questions that will allow the representation of that experience to have some of the qualities of fiction. How did a particular moment “feel”? To what extent was meaning generated in a particular moment and to what extent was it superimposed later?