Showing posts with label mountains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mountains. Show all posts

Friday, July 02, 2010

Into the Deep


I'm very delighted to have a new story published in issue 46 of 'Mslexia', just out. The theme this time was 'Into the Deep' and the selector was Christina Patterson - a writer and columnist at The Independent, former director of the Poetry Society, and literary programmer at the Southbank Centre, who writes on politics, culture, books, travel and the arts. She descibes my story thus:

‘Breathing Common Air’ switches between a glacier, a deep-sea dive, a sofa and a mountain summit, and between the impulses that draw two people together, and then drive them apart.

Her full essay about the theme and submissions can he found here. But you have to get the magazine to read the story.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Where fiction and mountain rescue meet

MOUNTAIN STORY COMMEMORATES 100 YEARS OF S.O.S.

My short story about a mountain rescue, ‘The Weight of The Earth and the Lightness of the Human Heart’ is broadcast on Friday 4th July as part of a week of BBC Radio 4 stories themed, ‘S.O.S. – Save Our Souls’, to commemorate 100 years of the international distress signal. The story was recently published in my second short story collection ‘The Searching Glance’.

The story was inspired by my own adventures on foot in the hills, talking to a member of a mountain rescue team and learning about the mythology of the iconic hill, Schiehallion. The Producer summarises the story, ‘a climber teeters between life and death on a remote hillside as a rescue team search for him. This small human drama catches the attention of the mountain itself in a tale which skilfully blends love, loss and mythology in a lyrical ode to human tenacity’. Ralph Riach is the reader. The story is particularly apt for 2008 which marks the 75th anniversary of mountain rescue in Great Britain.

During the week, this and other commissioned stories by Colette Paul, Paul Magrs, Alison Joseph, and Stuart MacBride, include the most literal portrayal of an SOS signal to the loosest interpretation of a cry for help - and everything in between.

The following day I leave for the Alps, to follow in my father’s footsteps on his summit-bid of 1952. This is part of the project for which I was awarded a Creative Scotland Award in 2007 to write a series of ‘journey-essays’ inspired by human stories in ‘wilderness’ areas. The ten walking journeys include a Scottish drove road and ‘Mozarabic Trails’ in south-eastern Spain.