An invitation to Paris, and news from North America and North Wales

When Emily posted her last update on here, some four years ago now, to mark the publication of her new book Out of the Shadows: Six Visionary Victorian Women in Search of a Public Voice, we were both living and working in and around London. In recent months, we’ve each made huge changes to our lives. I’ve moved to rural North Wales and Emily has moved to North America. In our mid-forties, we’re once again nurturing our friendship over a long distance – just as we did during our mid-twenties.

It’s long-distance friendships with literary women that allow me to invite you to the Ruppin Agency’s third annual Paris writing retreat. My friend Jacqueline, founder of Véranda Association Culturelle, hosts the retreat in her stylish venue in the 15th arrondissement. I’m so grateful to Jacqueline for introducing me to this glorious corner of Paris – walking distance from the Eiffel Tower and yet a neighbourhood of real Parisians.

When you open the unassuming front door of the secret retreat venue, you step into a light-filled orangery where we hold the morning warm-up and late-afternoon cool-down workshop sessions to get you into the writing zone and help you reflect on what you’ve written. We keep the group sizes small so that we can shape all our activities to each participant’s needs.

The retreat venue has won an International Design and Architecture Award, and its enviable staircase bookshelves featured in top interiors magazine House & Garden.

I love walking through the retreat venue during the daytime seeing participants writing independently at desks in the library or in private studies in the cave and penthouse. The creative energy is palpable. And the real treat for me and my husband Jonathan Ruppin, an editor and former agent, is meeting one-to-one with participants in the garden studio, where we delve deep into each participant’s projects and processes.

It was another literary friend, Saara, who first introduced us to Jacqueline. Jonathan and Saara had worked together for years at Foyles independent bookshop before Saara moved to Paris, where she started up Magical History Tours. Saara’s literary excursions are always a highlight of our retreat.

I’ve witnessed many a new friendship form while Saara gives us an insider’s glimpse of Paris’ literary scene – antiquarian book markets, writers’ hangouts, hidden reading rooms. The conversations we have over retreat breakfasts and lunches, and the work we share during our welcome drinks reception and farewell readings event, are the kernel of friendships that continue to grow once the retreat has come to an end. The most joyful aspect of running these retreats is watching literary shoots reach out across continents – a Texan novelist meeting up via Zoom with a short story writer from London; a self-help writer from Poland sharing drafts with a memoirist from San Francisco; an American essayist who has long lived in Paris meeting in a local café with a Brit who has also made her home in one of the world’s most literary cities.

If you’d like to learn more about the Ruppin Agency’s Paris Retreat, you can hear Emma and Jonathan on World Radio Paris. To nab a last-minute spot on the upcoming retreat, email Emma at studio@ruppinagency.com and mention Something Rhymed or quote Paris100 to get your £100 discount.

Arifa Akbar to Speak at Second Something Rhymed Salon

At tonight’s Something Rhymed salon,  journalist and literary critic, Arifa Akbar, will be sharing a behind-the-scenes glimpse of her experiences as a literary editor and reviewer.

If you would like to join in the conversation, please nab one of the last spots by emailing SomethingRhymed@gmail.com.

The Independent Arts Correspondant Arifa Akbar.
The Independent Arts Correspondant Arifa Akbar.

Arifa Akbar is a journalist and literary critic. She is the former literary editor of The Independent, where she worked from October 2001 until April 2016, as a reporter and arts correspondent before joining the books desk in 2009.

She was a judge for the Orwell Prize in 2013, the Fiction Uncovered Prize in 2014, and the British Book Industry Award in 2016.

Arifa has chaired author interviews at the London Literature Festival, Foyles, Asia House and the Bath Literature Festival.

She is a regular newspaper reviewer on Sky News, and reviews books in print and on radio. She studied English Literature at university and then completed a Masters in Gender Studies, specialising in French Feminism and ‘writing the body’.

  • Salon Two: So-called Women’s Issues 
  • Wednesday May 4th, 6.30pm-9.00pm 
  • New York University in London, 6 Bedford Square (Gower/Bloomsbury Street side), WC1B 3RA
  • Nearest tube: Tottenham Court Road. Holborn, Russell Square, Goodge Street and Warren Street are also close by.
  • Disabled access and facilities. Please do let us know if you have any access needs.

Our friends at Naked Wines have kindly provided the wines for our salon series, and they are even offering a discount especially for our readers.
Our friends at Naked Wines have kindly provided the wines for our salon series, and they are even offering a discount especially for our readers.