Let's Get Writing!

Let's Get Writing

This course is designed to teach participants about the different techniques and genres of storytelling. Over the course of five sessions, we will examine how to write stories in the following genres: mystery, comedy, crime, memoir and fantasy. Through a series of free-writing tasks, participants will get the opportunity to explore their creative boundaries. Guest speakers will be invited to hold talks/reading sessions with participants.

Duration: 5 days (Monday – Friday)
Course dates: 17 – 21 July 2023
Timing: 4.30 – 6 p.m.
Venue: Oxford University Press Bookshop, Park Towers, Clifton
Course Fee: Rs 6000

The classes will start from 17 July 2023 at the Oxford Bookshop, Park Towers, Clifton, Karachi.

The course will teach you about the different genres of storytelling. This is a practical course that will enable you to practice the elements of good writing and create your own piece of writing under the supervision of an established author.

Young students who seek to become authors, poets or content creators. Age Group: 12 to 15 years.

Day 1: Mystery Inc
Are you interested in solving mysteries? Our first session will focus on useful tips to write mystery fiction.

Day 2: Flight of Fantasy
Does fantasy strike your fancy? Let your imagination fly as we discover the ins and outs of fantasy fiction.

Day 3: Laugh-a-minute reads
Do you enjoy stories that make you laugh? Let's challenge ourselves to write a funny story.

Day 4: Life writing
Would you like to write about a real incident from your life? Here's your chance to learn how to write memoirs.

Day 5: Suspense diaries
What can you do to build the element of suspense in your story? Get some tips in our final session for this course.

The course will last for 5 days.

PKR 6,000 for the entire 5-day course.

  • Hands-on practice and feedback from an expert
  • Course handouts
  • Participation Certificate

Taha Kehar

Taha Kehar is a novelist, journalist and literary critic. A law graduate from SOAS, London, Kehar is the author of two novels, Typically Tanya (HarperCollins India, 2018) and Of Rift and Rivalry (Palimpsest Publishers, 2014). He is the co-editor of The Stained-Glass Window: Stories of the Pandemic from Pakistan. Kehar has served as the head of Peshawar city pages and bi-monthly books page of The Express Tribune, and worked as an assistant editor on the op-ed desk at The News. His essays, reviews and commentaries have been published in The News on Sunday, The Hindu and South Asia magazine and his short fiction has appeared in the Delhi-based quarterly The Equator Line, the biannual journal ‘Pakistani Literature’ and the anthology I’ll Find My Way published by Oxford University Press. Two of his short stories appeared in an anthology titled The Banyan and Her Roots which has been edited by the British writer Jad Adams. In 2016, he guest-edited Pakistan: After the Stereotypes – an issue of ‘The Equator Line’ – that focused on new writings from Pakistan. He curates Tales from Karachi: City of Words an Instagram e-anthology that publishes flash fiction from and about Karachi. He recently compiled and edited the first print anthology of the initiative titled Tales from Karachi (Moringa, 2021).Based in Karachi, he teaches undergraduate media courses. His next novel No Funeral for Nazia will be released in the UK in 2023.

Terms and Conditions

  • The course material remains OUPP's property to be used as deemed fit. Participants will receive handouts for reference.
  • The registration fee, once paid, is non-refundable regardless of attendance by the participant. Cancellations will not be accommodated.
  • Oxford University Press Pakistan reserves the right to modify presenters and course content.


For more information, email us at central.marketing.pk@oup.com.
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