Last August I was invited to Ardoch House on the banks of
Loch Lomond. I have to admit I’d never been there before. Yes, of course, I knew
it was beautiful but I simply wasn’t prepared for it: the setting and the views
from Ardoch House are breathtaking. There’s the loch, the hills to the North,
but most of all an extraordinary sense of calm, an almost edge of the world
magic, a sort of visual balm. It is wonderfully freeing.
I went there, together with Maggie McKernan, to meet Carlos
Alba and Peter Armitage, the owner of Ardoch House. Peter is often described as
a ‘businessman turned philanthropist’. In other words, he retired early ‘to
give something back’. His particular interest is ‘human capital’, especially
the development of young people - most of all, young people from disadvantaged
back grounds. He has put some 7.5 million pounds of his own into rescuing and
developing Ardoch House, and he and his family bear all the costs themselves.
To help with the running he lets Ardoch out to corporate clients and that
allows him to offer courses and accommodation to children based charities in
the UK and abroad.
Carlos, who is a novelist himself, also helps Peter Armitage
develop and promote different projects for Ardoch House - among them, photography
holidays and creative writing breaks - called Literature on the Loch.
Apart from writing fiction
myself, I also worked as a teacher for many years and now sometimes teach courses
to foreign academics – usually research groups - working at English Universities.
The aim is to help them communicate successfully with their peers but also with
other non-specialists. It’s interesting, very specific work. It’s quite
different dealing with an academic who grew up in Japan, from one educated in
Argentina or Jordan, for example. Languages come with all kinds of baggage,
conventions, and manners – and sometimes very different ways of thinking - which
require a slightly different approach for each person. Teaching such a wide
variety of people how to write articles that communicate their ideas and
arguments clearly and successfully is quite challenging, but also very
rewarding. For Literature on the Loch, I’m looking forward to combining my
writer’s hat and my teaching hat – and to helping each person develop their own
individual voice and style.
Since that first meeting, plans have gradually been taking
shape. The first of these creative writing breaks will be at the end of March
or beginning of April (date to be confirmed shortly). There will be a writing
workshop each morning, most afternoons free, and each evening there will be a
guest speaker who will then join everyone for dinner and chat. I will be
conducting the workshops together with Maggie. The team of guest speakers will
include writers Carlos Alba, Andrew Williams and Christopher Brookmyre, as well
as David Robinson, literary editor of the Scotsman.
You can read more about Literature on the Loch by visiting
the website, which has just been launched. http://www.literatureontheloch.com/