Nursery staff member and Published Author
I cannot even express how much I feel I owe to the University - it's been a big inspiration, both during my degree and after graduating.
My favourite memories from my time at Leeds Trinity
My favourite memories from Leeds Trinity are living in halls. I was in Ripon, and although it didn't look as impressive as the others, I loved it. Every day was different and the openness of the structure made it easy to mix with the people I was living with. I am really shy and everyone was really friendly and coaxed me out of my room, and I am still really good friends with them.
The course and my career
Writing my novel Mist Deep whilst studying at Leeds Trinity
I first started writing Mist Deep, the first in a series, when I was in my first year of university in 2012. I'm an introvert by nature and I was so afraid of leaving my room and socialising that after my lectures, I'd go straight to my room and just write. I think the prospect of university - something which was completely new and like a new world to me - inspired elements of my story. It was like stepping into another world. I had only ever dreamt of attending university and it finally became a reality.
While I was studying and spending time with my friends, Mist Deep was slowly developed whenever I had the time. I would take it with me wherever I went and wrote little bits and pieces, and when I entered my third year and everything started to get really serious, time for my writing suffered. I finally finished it though - two weeks before my dissertation was due in 2015. Altogether, alongside lectures, sparse writing periods, and going out, it took two and a half years to finish Mist Deep.
Getting published
About the novel
Mist Deep is a fantasy novel about a young Ranoschian elfish princess, Kalyah, trapped behind the walls of her own castle and unable to use magic like the rest of her kind. She is told that she remains within the castle and its grounds for her own safety, but it makes her feel weak, embarrassed and detached. When Kalyah is delivered a letter from her father, the king, declaring that she must somehow figure out how to use magic or else drastic action will be taken, this sparks her drive to prove that magic is not the be all and end all.