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E-raamat: Writing Routes: A Resource Handbook of Therapeutic Writing

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`Detailed maps are needed for where to start in creative writing and how to proceed. Writing Routes provides just such an atlas, essential information for anybody setting out on the adventure of self-discovery through words.'---from the Foreword by Gwyneth Lewis

Creative writing is a powerful vehicle for personal or professional development, yet often the most difficult part is knowing how and where to begin. The experiences of others, and the strategies and approaches they have used in their own writing, can provide tried-and-tested models for practice, and `ways in' that facilitators can recommend to others.

Writing Routes is a fascinatingly diverse collection of personal journeys, which introduces and demonstrates many different ways of beginning and deepening creative writing for personal or professional development. Seventy contributors from a variety of different backgrounds explain how and why they came to write a particular piece, how they found ways of transforming their experience into writing, and how the process of doing so was beneficial to them. Their writing ranges widely, from journal entries and stream of consciousness to autobiography, poetry, fiction and drama, and the pieces are organised by theme and genre for ease of navigation, designed to be `dipped into' as and when they are needed.

This rich and varied collection will provide writing practitioners, counsellors and other related professionals with ideas and techniques to share with their clients, and is a useful resource that individuals writing for their own personal and professional development will return to again and again.

The use of creative writing as a route to personal or professional development is a powerful therapeutic tool, yet the most difficult part is knowing how and where to begin. This collection of short pieces introduce and demonstrate many different ways of getting into and thinking about creative writing for personal or professional development.

Arvustused

This very readable anthology collects together over 70 contributors who offer a diverse and rich array of personal experience of using creative writing.. I read the writers' words and pieces over a long Bank Holiday weekend by dipping into different parts as the mood took me, and was variously heartened, confounded, warmed and amused. At times, I was stopped in my tracks with the pain and distress of some of the work... a truly wonderful collection of views and writings which I recommend to any reader, and especially to those who might feel the beginnings of a need to put themselves on paper. -- Therapeutic Communities Journal Writing Routes is a book many of us have been waiting for, filling a gap in my bookshelf which I had vaguely discerned but not put shape to. Although the book builds on previous resource JKP handbooks, such as Writing Works (2006), Writing Routes is more than a collection of reflections on therapeutic experience. This is a well-designed navigation tool for exploring the field of therapeutic writing... I would recommend Writing Routes not just to those working in the field, but to any individual embarking on their own

therapeutic writing. -- Lapidus Journal Writing Routes is a diverse collection of personal journeys, which introduces and demonstrates many different ways of beginning and deepening creative writing for personal or professional development. -- The Independent Practitioner Detailed maps are needed for where to start in creative writing and how to proceed. Writing Routes provides just such an atlas, essential information for anybody setting out on the adventure of self-discovery through words. -- from the Foreword by Gwyneth Lewis

Muu info

A roadmap for anybody setting out on the journey of self-discovery through words.
Foreword 9(2)
Gwyneth Lewis
Preface 11(6)
Gillie Bolton
Victoria Field
Kate Thompson
Fiona Hamilton
1 Getting into Writing
17(18)
Victoria Field
Writing a Journal: A Way to My Soul
18(2)
Satu Nieminen
Natalie's Golden Mantras
20(2)
Alexandra Boyle
Writing Yourself Forward
22(3)
Debbie McCulliss
Writing `Kingfisher'
25(3)
Abi Curtis
Poems Invite us to Write Them
28(2)
Kate Compston
Relaxing into Writing
30(1)
Ray Russell
Happily Ever After... And Then What?
31(4)
Sarah Salway
2 Forging Identities
35(23)
Kate Thompson
Writing Dreams
36(3)
Juhani Ihanus
The Whole Picture
39(2)
Angela Stoner
Letter to a Stranger Processing the Momentary
41(3)
Cheryl Moskowitz
The Mincer Character
44(2)
Myra Schneider
A Rose by any Other Name Might not Smell as Sweet
46(3)
Shelley McAlister
Lucy
49(3)
Andrew Rudd
Dodging Rednecks with a Grudge
52(2)
Tim Metcalf
Writing Barefoot
54(4)
Shirley Serviss
3 Writing the Self
58(23)
Victoria Field
Black Sheep in the Family
59(2)
Larry Butler
People on My Bus
61(3)
Francesca Creffield
Midnight Robber
64(3)
Dominique De-Light
Writing as a Process of Coming-to-Knowing
67(2)
Rosie Alexander
Writing Inspired
69(3)
Sue Glover Frykman
Alpha Writes: 26 Days to Transformation
72(2)
Kathleen Adams
Writing Loops
74(3)
Briony Goffin
Finding Your Racket Voice
77(4)
Sandy Hutchinson Nunns
4 Writing the Body
81(19)
Victoria Field
Finding Beauty in an Ugly Situation
82(2)
Beverly Kirkhart
Listening to Body Signals: Triggers from the Past
84(2)
Jane Pace
Straight from the Hip
86(3)
Sue Ashby
Dealing with Chronic Pain
89(3)
Miriam Halahmy
Broken Face - A Poem
92(3)
Bryony Doran
In Watching you I See Myself
95(2)
Jay Carpenter
Creating a Legacy Out of Everyday Living
97(3)
Claire Willis
5 Writing the Troubled Self
100(18)
Victoria Field
Cracks
101(3)
Rebecca Atherton
The Blue Gate
104(2)
Rose Flint
Giving Perspective
106(2)
Yona McGinnis
The Year the Wall Came Down
108(3)
Maggie Sawkins
Stories from the Silk Tent
111(7)
Lucy O'Hagan
Gilly Pugh
Lizzi Yates
6 Our Families, Ourselves
118(18)
Gillie Bolton
Time Capsule
119(1)
Linda Sliwoski
When Melancholia Strikes, Poetry Steps In
120(3)
Glynis Charlton
The Legacy of Mothers
123(3)
Marliss Weber
For those who Wish to Sing, There is Always a Song
126(1)
Margot Van Sluytman
The Clock and Me
127(3)
Nigel Gibbons
Come In - to the Life of the Poem
130(3)
Graham Hartill
Never Rub Out, Never Throw Away
133(3)
Jonathan Knight
7 Relationships
136(20)
Gillie Bolton
The Healing Fountain
137(2)
Penelope Shuttle
Burning Want
139(3)
Les Murray
Leaving Tortilla, My Cat
142(3)
Claire Williamson
Wall Writing
145(2)
Monica Suswin
Invoking the Ancestors
147(3)
Reinekke Lengelle
A Dreamlike Story of Imagination
150(2)
Terbikki Linnainmaa
A Heart-shadow Fell at Our Feet: Writing a Sequence of Love Sonnets
152(4)
Robert Hamberger
8 Personal Loss
156(16)
Gillie Bolton
To a Gold Ear-ring, Head of Nefertiti
157(3)
Wendy French
The Final `Good Bye'
160(2)
Sarah Birnbach
Something We Need to Learn to Live Alongside
162(2)
Yvonne Watson
Close up, from a Distance
164(2)
Deborah Buchan
Writing My Mother's Obituary
166(3)
Leone Ridsdale
`I'll Never Forget'
169(3)
Joanne Robinson
9 Managing Transitions
172(17)
Kate Thompson
Writing, Waiting, Rocks
173(2)
Mary Lee Moser
The Door
175(2)
Gillie Jenkinson
Do the Work: A Writing Exercise that Turns You Around
177(3)
Reinekke Lengelle
Using Dialogue to Move on with My Life
180(3)
Lynda Heines
Writing a Sketchbook
183(2)
Angie Butler
When I Get Old
185(4)
Judy Clinton
10 Developing Mindfulness
189(20)
Kate Thompson
Mindful Moments
190(2)
David Oldham
Writing a Haiku
192(2)
Carolyn Henson
Lost Heart
194(3)
Elaine Trevitt
Loneliness
197(1)
Julie Sanders
I have a Dream
198(3)
Ronna Jevne
Conversation with a Ponderosa Pine
201(3)
Susan Wirth Fusco
Frustration and Me
204(2)
Janice Putrino
Searching My Soul through Cyberspace
206(3)
Christine Nutt
11 Signals, Lines and Reflections: Writing on Trains
209(6)
Fiona Hamilton
Appendix 1 Writing Routes Map: Themes 215(3)
Appendix 2 Writing Routes Map: Types of Writing 218(5)
The Editors 223(1)
The Contributors 224(10)
Bibliography 234
Gillie Bolton has worked in reflective and therapeutic writing for personal and professional development for twenty-five years, and has written and edited five books, one of which is now in its third edition. A grandmother of three, she lives in Bloomsbury, London, and Hope Valley, Derbyshire. Kate Thompson is a BACP senior accredited counsellor and supervisor and a journal therapist. After gaining a degree in English Literature from Cambridge University and therapeutic training, she developed a method of combining the two. She is a faculty member of the Center for Journal Therapy and Institute for Therapeutic Writing and lives in Colorado, USA.