I spoke to author Jen Alexander in early August; we were talking about writing groups, the pros and cons of running them and the magic that can happen when a group of people gather to write in the same room. Jen put it beautifully when she said ‘As soon as people sit down around the table to write you have a community.‘
This idea of mine, to see if a group of people can write something as sustained and complex as a novel, what that might look like as a process, what it might mean to the people who write it, and the communities they belong to, was an itch I needed to scratch.
Funding from the AHRC has made it possible, with a place on Falmouth University’s 3D3 programme. Now I feel like the living embodiment of the warning ‘be careful what you wish for,’ but in a good way.
I have the luxury of three funded years in which to test my notions of a community of writers, readers and researchers collaborating on a work of long fiction; writers who are not professional, not published, but passionate about creative writing as something they love in the way other people love sport or art or music; activities that bring people into contact with each other to make something and, in the making, make more than just the fiction; make connections, make friends, make new images of the place – the community – they share.
On 22 September 2018, after some planning and publicity, I welcomed the first participants to an echoey community hall, the Ord-Statter Pavilion in Mylor Bridge on the south Cornwall coast. It was a grey Saturday. Outside the rain came down in sheets; inside we clustered in the large hall and shared ideas about what it takes to write a novel: characters that compel, settings that are authentic, powerful descriptive language, strong narrative, a plot that drives forward with a clear, consistent voice. We hung our ideas on a line of bunting.
We asked what a novel can be in the 21st century: print, online, graphic, digital, We looked at examples of novels written by more than one person. Could we see the join?
Then we started to write together, 8 voices woven into one through the form of an alpha poem. I thank Fiona Hamilton and the Orchard Foundation for leading me to John Hegley’s poem What a Poem’s Not, as our model.
This is What a Novel’s Not, by Annie, Barbara, Carole, Caroline, Isabel, Jane, Joanna and Kim.
A novel is not an ambulance driver
But it might still save your life
A novel is not a bear
But sometimes it can give you a hug
A novel is not a clue
But it might help you on its way
A novel is not a dam
But it can contain the deepest reservoir of human experience
A novel is not exhausting
But it can feel like it!
A novel is not a ferryboat
but it may take you across some turbulent waters
A novel is not always ground breaking
It can simply hold you
A novel is not a haunting
But it may spook your mind
A novel is not an ironing board
But it can slowly unfold
A novel is not a judicial review
But it still might have a sense of fair play
A novel is not a knot
But it can get me all tangled up
A novel is not always about love
But love is always there
A novel is not a miracle
But finishing a novel might feel like one
A novel is not a negative experience
But can be sometimes
A novel is not an orange
but it can sometimes get very juicy
A novel is not pretentious
It can draw you in like a fish
A novel is not a quiz
But it may question your beliefs
A novel is not a river
But it can flow in twists and turns
A novel is not a swing in the park
But it might still push you to and fro
A novel is not a triangle
But it can be about love
A novel is not an umbrella
But it could shade you from the sun and the rain
A novel is not a vandal
Though it can wreak havoc
A novel is not a waste of time
But an experience
A novel is not always Xanadu
But it can be for some people
A novel is not a yawn
It shouldn’t send you to sleep
A novel is not a zoo
But it may contain some strange creatures.
We have started to be joined up writers. 
The adventure begins! I’m looking forward to hearing how it goes, Jane – and very happy to know you will be updating us here.
Thank you Jen – it’s going to be a ‘journey’!
Very inspiring. Printed out and pinned on the office wall for encouragement when needed.
What a beautiful idea.