Mogford Prize Long List 2022



Back in the dark days of January, I wrote a short story and entered the Mogford Prize - a competition that focuses on the theme of food and drink, now in its tenth year.

I’d read a few of the past winners and really enjoyed the food and drink focus. Last year’s winner, ‘Madame Blini’s Disdain’ by Finlay Taylor, had a brilliant and unexpected twist at the tail end…

So, I’m surprised and delighted to have made the long list for this year’s award! The winner will be announced in April and all four shortlisted stories will be available to read (and listen to) on the Mogford Prize website.



NEW BOOK out February 18th

theendoftheroad.jpg

In 2018, I began to write about graveyards and cemeteries. I didn’t know then that my book would be published in the middle of a global pandemic. The End of the Road isn’t all doom and gloom though, and the book is filled with characters larger than life (even those who’ve been buried for years).

The idea was born in a small Suffolk churchyard, where I became bewitched by the gravestones I live alongside. Filled with a desire to uncover their stories, I began to plot a series of biographies, woven into a tale of the open road.  

The result is a tomb tour of the British Isles. The journey was made in an old Daimler hearse, a vehicle that served both as camper van and time machine, bringing me physically closer to the past. Over hundreds of miles on Britain’s back roads, I attempted to collect the ghosts of the dead, from eccentrics and martyrs, to my own long-lost relatives. At the heart of the book is the landscape through which I travelled; graves were visited on bleak hill tops and in deep caves, hidden in ruins and stranded on small islands.

I hope you’ll join me on the journey. And one day, when we’re all allowed to travel again, I hope you’ll visit some of these same places where our ancestors vanished into the earth.

Until then, memento mori. (Try not to worry too much about it)

Moth man

I've squirrelled myself away with a new project over the last few months and haven't spent as much time as I'd like in the branches. 

My new, earth-bound obsession though, is moth-trapping. For those of you who've never done it, trapping involves putting a bright light in the back garden attached to a special container filled with egg boxes. You turn it on at dusk and head out at the crack of dawn to see what's landed in it overnight....

Why do I love it? I think it's discovering the sheer variety of life that goes about its business in the middle of the night. It's a window on a world we rarely glimpse, much like climbing trees.

I've only had the chance, and the right conditions, to trap twice this year but I was amazed by the catch; hawkmoths, buff tips, angle shades, every one entirely different and mesmerising. Here are some photos of my favourites -

The Hollow Beech

Earlier in 2016, I contributed a short video to a project entitled 'Treebank: A digital forest for the future.'

The premise was for hundreds of people to record and share memories of their favourite trees, creating a permanent online library. I've enjoyed swapping tree climbing stories with people from around the world - this old beech is hard to forget. 

You can explore more of the Treebank here or contribute your own memory