my writing room

I like to know where writers write. Details fascinate me – the mess, or lack of it; the creative details, or their absence; the layout of desk versus window versus brick wall.
So where do I write?
For many years I worked from home and was happy to flit between the computer, washing machine, and school run. Sometimes I had more space than at others.
The children left home, we downsized, and a small bedroom became my work space. Then the grandchildren arrived and very soon my writing room was taken over by a cot. Important documents fought with the needs of an infant.
I took myself out of the house and found the ideal writing space. I now drive for an hour into the countryside - wonderful 'thinking time'. When I come to my destination I arrive at silence, except for birdsong.
Crossing the courtyard, I let myself into an oast house and climb the steep stairs to my circular first floor room. It is usually freezing. My desk is in front of a window that looks out over the Sussex countryside. From time to time cars, farm vehicles and the postman scrunch over the gravel outside. Small birds flit around outside and nest in the eaves. On windy days the cowl on the roof thumps in time to my tapping on the laptop.
The round walls are hung with images – collages of family photos, paintings by my grandchildren, treasured pictures. Surrounded by the people who matter to me, I write about what matters to me too.
(photo shows the view from the window above my desk in my oast house writing room)









