How I Write: Laura Evans - The Gloss Magazine

How I Write: Laura Evans

Getting into the writing process …

Laura Evans was born in Burnley and grew up in the Midlands in the UK. She completed Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic studies at university before a career as a magazine editor, with a particular interest in travel and nature. A graduate of Curtis Brown Creative’s novel-writing course, she lives with her family in Norwich. Her debut novel, Little Wild (Mantle Debut), a story of class tensions, secrets and first love set in Suffolk in the 1930s, is out now.

My daily writing routine is not as routine as I’d like it to be. When I’m mid-story I could happily do nothing else for days, but like most parents who write I’ve had to adjust, and largely I think that’s a good thing. I write (around other work) when the children are at school; if I’m not too tired, in the evening; sometimes a little on a weekend. There’s a lot to be said for the advice to produce something daily, however small – but if hours are limited I’d prioritise reading every time. Writing isn’t just the act of putting words on the page; reading fuels the thinking, and thinking fuels the work.   

My writing spot is currently a box room overlooking our street. Because it’s so small, the furniture has to be slightly miniature: a chaise longue in front of the window even I, at 5’3”, can’t fully lie on; a compact desk. (Facing the wall, because given any distraction I will daydream for hours.) Over the years I’ve written in coffee shops, libraries, on the kitchen table surrounded by children’s art – and sometimes I still do, but it’s such a gift to have the choice. 

My favourite part of the writing process isn’t a stage per se, but the almost physical sensation of things clicking into place. Sometimes it’s a detail uncovered in research that perfectly connects two plot points; sometimes it’s just the sense of capturing something human and universal. If I had to boil down why I write to a single reason, that’s what it would be: those tiny moments of ‘yes’. 

The book that is inspiring me right now is Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. Unlike the masterpiece that is Susanna Clarke’s Piranesi, it’s a doorstop of a novel I’ve started multiple times, but never in quite the right mood. While this time around I’m revelling in her world-building and beautifully arch narrative voice, the fact it’s taken me so long to come to it is a lesson in how even the most accomplished authors can’t make everyone happy all of the time. 

Right now I’m working on a second novel, and also trying to get to grips with short story writing. It’s such an underrated skill and seems to me far harder than novel-writing, and I’m in awe of writers like Naomi Booth and Lucy Caldwell who make it look easy. 

THE GLOSS MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION

All the usual great, glossy content of our large-format magazine in a neater style delivered to your door.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This