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Finish Your Draft in a Year: Group Mentoring

The course

Experience the magic of group mentoring.

What do you need to finish or revise a novel? Strict deadlines, a supportive group of writers to share the struggles and breakthroughs, and an expert mentor for advice, hand-holding and a bit of a push where necessary.

This year-long monthly mentoring programme offers all that and more. It’s for anyone who started a novel and got stuck, as well as writers looking to maintain momentum after finishing a course, and novelists with a draft that needs refocusing and revising.

You’ll spend most of the month pushing your novel forward – with deadlines to keep you motivated, and a bunch of interested classmates for discussion and hive-minding. Bring your questions and concerns to live group sessions with your mentor, and upskill at monthly intensive workshops, run by specialists and targeted at issues we know novelists need at this stage in the writing process. Or quiz the roster of guest authors and publishing experts popping in month by month.

There are directed writing exercises to hone your craft, focusing on short extracts from your novel, which you will share for peer reviewing.

You’ll have regular one-to-one check-ins with your mentor to spotlight what’s going well and what might need more work, plus feedback to help you untangle, rewind and plan next steps.

Story cul-de-sacs? Lost threads? Self-doubt? Stop worrying! We’re here to keep you focused, sharpen your craft and confidence, and get that novel across the finish line.

We recommend you start the programme with at least 10,000 words of a novel.

Join with a one-off downpayment of £100, then a monthly subscription of £175 (total £2,025). Or sign up for a full year at the discounted price of £1,850.

How it works

We give you the theory in the form of videos, podcasts, written lectures and reading extracts. In the case of our live workshops, this includes a live online seminar.

You put it into practice by completing the writing assignments.

You share your work with the small group of fellow writers and the teaching team.

Your tutor and fellow learners read your work and give professional-style feedback on your submission. Giving feedback notes helps to build your skills as an editor - a critical part of the writing process.

You reflect on the exercises with the group and share what you’ve learned.

You use what you learned from the feedback and discussions to review your work and improve it.

Things to know

This is an advanced-level group mentoring programme, designed for writers who have at least 10,000 words of a novel and want to get to the end, or who have a draft that needs work.


The course is suitable if you:

  • Have completed a novel-writing course, or have at least the first 10,000 words of a novel
  • Have an MA or MFA in writing and would like to complete or revise the draft you started there
  • Feel stuck and don’t know if your story has what it takes
  • Have a full draft you’re not happy with and would like to rethink and rework
  • Are keen to further hone your writing craft
  • Would like to broaden your knowledge of trade publishing, including approaching agents and options such as self-publishing and digital-first
  • Would like to develop new effective writing habits and routines, and take yourself more seriously as a novel writer
  • Enjoy the discipline of deadlines and peer feedback
  • Want to join a friendly and supportive small group of learners (maximum 15 per group)
  • Can dedicate at least 5 hours per week for the duration of the programme.

This course allows you to:

  • Devote yourself to the novel-writing process
  • More clearly identify and pursue your potential as a novelist
  • Practise advanced fiction craft techniques and explore boundaries
  • Gain greater understanding of professional expectations around genre, market and the publishing landscape (including self-publishing)
  • Get a good way towards a full draft of your novel
  • Further develop the professional skills novelists require (e.g. discipline, attention to detail, ability to work to deadlines, collaboration)
  • Increase your professionalism in working with others
  • Practise giving effective feedback to other writers and receiving critical notes
  • Build greater independence, autonomy and critical judgement as you self-direct, self-manage and realise your project to the course briefs.

Our courses and training are carefully designed to support accessible and inclusive learning

The programme is divided into sessions, released month by month. Each month follows the same format:

  • Group Zoom with your Mentor – discuss the topic of the month and your progress, and raise questions and writing concerns.
  • Get Down to Write – progress your novel – we suggest you aim for a minimum 5,000 words a month.
  • Guest Workshop – a dedicated live session with exercises and breakout rooms, run by a specialist, to focus on one key element of novel-writing.
  • Read and Review – ask your peers questions about your work and offer responses to other writers’ developing work.

When Do I Log On?
Generally, there’s no need to log on at a set time. You can work through the learning materials whenever suits you, day or night, wherever you are in the world. Just complete the assignments and join forum discussions by the session deadline.

There are monthly live Zoom events with your mentor and guests – if you can’t make a live session, send in questions in advance and watch the recording afterwards. One-to-one tutorials are scheduled to suit your time zone.

Our teaching method is based on the science of active learning: you read/listen/watch, try out, share and reflect. It’s a social experience – you become part of a small group, feeding back on each other’s writing to build a supportive bunch of readers you trust. Find out more here.

Month 1: Where I Am Now
Focus on summing up your novel idea and taking stock of your current practice as a novel writer. You’ll work on a new synopsis to introduce your novel idea to the group, and set some intentions for the months ahead, thinking about what kind of writer you are. What’s stopped you from progressing your writing in the past? We’ll look at what to do when life gets in the way, how to keep your story alive even when you’re not writing, and the art of giving and receiving good critical feedback.

Intensive workshop: Ideas, Blocks and Looking at Your Novel from a Different Angle

In each monthly session you’ll join a group Zoom with your mentor plus a live intensive workshop with a guest expert to get under the bonnet of the novelist’s craft and sharpen your technique. There’s a Q&A forum to raise questions with your mentor at any time of day or night, plus weekly sit-and-write sessions to progress your novel. You will read and respond to the work of your peers in every session, following our critiquing guidelines, to further hone your judgment and editorial skills.

One-to-one tutorials: You will meet your Mentor three times during the programme via Zoom.
Feedback on your novel: Your Mentor will read and feedback on 20,000 words of your novel over the programme.

Month 2: My Fictional World
In this session, we’ll look in depth at place in your novel, and practical techniques to help you create more engrossing interiors and exteriors. In particular we’ll explore ways to work with sensory information, colour and movement. You’ll experiment with using description to affect the pacing of your scenes, use sensory devices to set up tension and suspense, and combine description with point of view to create more complex characters.

Intensive workshop: Your Characters in Your World

Month 3: Inhabiting Fictional Bodies
How to embody the physicality of your characters and connect them to their settings. We’ll try out observation exercises and ways of moving in and out of different bodies to observe your fictional world. There are ideas based on method acting to help you get under your characters’ skin and we’ll think about ways to allow space for the reader to do some work.

Intensive workshop: Physicality in Your Writing

Month 4: Vocal Tune-up
In this session, take a deep dive into your voice and what makes you unique as a writer. We’ll look at ways to tend your sentences and word choice, and power your prose so that the reader only notices the effect not the language. There are practical tips on using sound, cadence, length and style on the page, plus how to be brave and become more proud of your work.

Intensive workshop: Sounding Like Yourself

Month 5: Who is My Narrator?
This month we’ll think about psychic distance. How far are you from the action as narrator – and where is your reader? We’ll look at genre conventions and how far your reader expects to be invested emotionally in the events of your novel. There are practical exercises on shifting POVs, drawing readers closer to the action and pulling back to show the bigger picture. Have you set up a varied reading experience?

Intensive workshop: Allowing Space for Your Reader

Month 6: Where Am I Going?
The essentials of narrative structure sound simple – beginning, middle, end – but once you get past the start of your novel it can feel like being lost in the woods. We’ll look at archetypal story structure and ways to plot a path towards a satisfying end. We’ll also explore the importance of change and reader empathy for the character at the heart of your work of fiction, with practical exercises to keep your story on track.

Intensive workshop: Story Structure Deep-dive

Month 7: Taking Stock
A month to step back and reassess your progress so far. We’ll audit your work at this point and look again at what to do when life gets in the way. Drawing on practical techniques from therapeutic and reflective writing, including free writing and journalling, we’ll find ways to explore your characters, themes and story world from a new perspective, and refresh a jaded writing palate.

By this point you should have at least 40,000 words of your novel.

Intensive workshop: Falling Back in Love with Your Novel

Month 8: Shape & Theme – Explore divisions within your novel, from sections to chapters to scenes. Are they arranged in the best way for your story, your genre and your reader? Experiment with alternative approaches, and think about emerging themes and how you weave things together as a whole.

Intensive workshop: The Big Weave

Month 9: Beginnings & Endings – Look at the start and end of each chapter, and use this as a focus for assessing the pace and build of your storytelling. Practical techniques for adding suspense and other ways to keep a reader on your side over the long haul of a novel.

Intensive workshop: Quick, Quick, Slow – Pace Intensive

Month 10: The End – This month we’ll think about the actual end of your novel, think about what needs to happen and how you’ll get your protagonist to that point. Also considering self-care for the novel writer, and how to maintain the energy to keep on keeping on to the end.

Intensive workshop: Keeping Everything Going

Month 11: Step Back to Edit
You may be nearing a full first draft, so this month we’ll focus on thinking like an editor, and what an editor’s eagle eye can teach you as a writer. Overview of the key stages of editing, and why you should stop work at sentence level this month. Practical exercises in architectural editing and assembling your own checklists and style guide.

Intensive workshop: Self-edit Deep-dive

Month 12: Getting Real
At the end of the year, a look out at the industry and options for next steps: publishing, self-publishing, hybrid models. Setting expectations and assessing what’s right for you at this stage in your writing career. Taking stock of all your achievements and setting intentions for the future.

Intensive workshop: Get Agent-ready

At the end of the 12 months you should have around 80,000 words of your novel, and everything you need, including incisive feedback and one-to-one guidance, to start preparing your novel for submission to agents, digital-first or self-publishing. Alternatively, you might like to move on to our Edit Your Novel course or commission a Manuscript Review.

Or you have the option to continue your monthly subscription and keep working through the course month by month with our mentors until you finish your draft.

Feedback
Your Mentor will give you feedback at set points during the course on your progressing novel and prose. This takes different forms at different stages of the course, including one-to-one Zoom tutorials, individual podcasts, notes on your manuscript, written notes or group tutorials. These will be outlined by your moderator at the start of the course.

You will read and respond to work from at least two of your peers every month, as directed by your Mentor and following our critiquing guidelines. In turn you will receive peer feedback on pieces of your own writing.

Join our alumni community 

After your course, you can join our online alumni community – a friendly group of writers supporting each other as they continue to explore and develop their writing. There’s no cost for this.

It’s easy to access via the online classroom, where you can:

  • Revisit all your course materials, including tutor notes, feedback, videos, podcasts and forum posts
  • Rejoin your classmates, and continue working together in a private space
  • Meet alumni from other courses to find beta-readers and share work on our critiquing forum
  • Network with other writers working in your genre or area of interest
  • Take part in regular ‘sit and write’ Zoom sessions, to push forward with your work-in progress
  • Join monthly live alumni events with our expert tutors and industry guests, including agents, editors, publishers, competition and festival organisers, and prizewinning writers

Taking things further
If you’d like to continue on to another Professional Writing Academy course, please get in touch for more details.

The team

Meet your course team

Start your journey

£1850

(Including taxes)

The online Writing a Novel course gets 10 stars for flexibility and user-friendliness, but even more for thoughtful structuring and teaching. I can’t quite believe how far I’ve advanced.

Find out about our payment plans and get in touch.