“Alison is a passionate advocate, a connector of ideas, people and activities and someone who genuinely cares about the ecology of the literary arts.”
Chris Gribble (Chief Executive of The Forum Trust)
A short story The Man Who Types by A.T. Boyle is in a new anthology featuring writers based in India and North America, HELL HATH NO FURY.
Eight of A.T. Boyle’s stories about Lancashire, England, appear in the first exObjects anthology alongside contributors Shashi Deshpande (shown in the photo below), Vikram Sampath, Jaishree Misra, Shinie Antony, Belinda RushJansen and more.
In 2021 Alison launched Artificial Silk’s collaborative web magazine exObjects and joined a live-streamed Grief panel at Bangalore Literature Festival with Bollywood podcaster RJ Stutee.
She ran Sadabahar: Evergreen events at HUG Green Arts festival featuring a global community postcard with an evergreen theme, Zoom creative writing workshops linking England with India, and publication of climate short stories.
One of A.T. Boyle’s short fiction stories was Highly Commended from 1,700 submissions to a BBC Radio 4 competition for audio presentation.
Starting out as a copywriter creating reviews for Bertelsmann’s global book club magazine, she became founding and managing editor of a BBC magazine with weekly sales of 60,000. The author of many published stories, she launched online book reviews for Orange and worked as a publisher of print and digital in London, Cambridge, Bath and Oxford (Kar2ouche /UCL).
Writing Conventions – What’s new? was awarded a Distinction by the University of Bristol. It studied the use of online social networks for in-depth commentary on fiction.
A.T. Boyle is the author of a fiction story set in Istanbul that was shortlisted in the international Mslexia awards.
The published story morphed into a performance script and multimedia performance at the Bluecoat arts centre and a perambulation through a Liverpool shopping area with an audience of over 8,000 people.
Click here for more insights into The Typing Man and the Turkish Woman drama.
“There’s a small but powerful story hidden in The Typing Man – the woman’s story that lies within. There is also the story of the relationship between Fıstıkçı and The Typing Man. This story has impressed me. Alison has greatly captured the city, the spirits of the city, surrounded by hustle and bustle. She has reflected the rhyme of the city like an Istanbulli, a place where she truly belongs. The mood of the city is nicely written. It’s a moving saddening love story filled with lively characters from around Istanbul. The writer narrates the story so well that it inspires the reader’s curiosity.” Jale Sancak
Jale Sancak is President of the Istanbul Galatapera Culture and Arts Foundation. She writes and performs with Kara Kutu Tiyatro.
Jale was awarded the Haldun 2001 Taner Short Story Prize, the 2014 Duygu Asena Novel Award, and the 2018 Attila Ilhan Novel Prize.
The Dance of the Eagle and the Fish
Originally a story for adults written by the satirical Turkish writer Aziz Nesin, the longer text was first translated into English by Ruth Christie, then Alison adapted it for presentation in a large format picturebook.
You can buy a copy of the book here
‘A terrific story… with a timeless quality’ (School Librarian magazine).
The illustrator was Istanbul-born Kağan Güner, and for a time the book author and illustrator lived close by. There were plans to produce a second book, but Kağan died in 2011 at the age of 48.
His PhD in modern Turkish art at the School of Oriental and African Studies followed a master’s degree at Chelsea College of Art, with work showcased in Tokyo, Seoul, New York, Paris, Lisbon, Bologna and Bratislava.
Also a UNESCO war artist, the Museum of London collected four of Kağan’s pieces from the London Against War exhibition.
The Guardian’s obituary of Kağan Güner was written by the Punjabi poet Amarjit Chandan.
World Book Day reading and chat…
Returning to her secondary school to talk writing inspirations…
Events at the Artificial Silk exhibition in the community gallery of the People’s History Museum…
Talking to the cast of young cast of The Typing Man and the Turkish Woman…
Family events at Bluecoat in Liverpool…
You can take part in writing activities at any time of the year through exObjects
Check our Events and News page for updates on publications, workshops and events in 2024 and 2025.
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