Creative Non-Fiction: An Introduction (12-week course)
Explore various creative non-fiction forms and receive personalised feedback on your writing with this online tutored course.
Fully Booked
This course is fully booked. Please email [email protected] to join the waiting list.
Ready to master the techniques of creative non-fiction writing?
Creative non-fiction blends the art of storytelling with facts, allowing you to shape narratives that are engaging and authentic to others. It enables you to explore personal experiences, societal issues, and historical events through a vivid, compelling lens — transforming ordinary moments into extraordinary narratives.
In this 12-week online course, you’ll explore a variety of forms within the creative non-fiction genre, including biography, reportage, and more. Whether you’ve already started writing and need guidance to move forward, or simply have an idea you’d like to develop, this course will provide you with the essential tools to progress confidently.
Through a combination of insightful lessons, interactive exercises, and practical assignments, you’ll learn how to convey information effectively, structure compelling narratives, and articulate your unique perspective. Experience meaningful progress with personalised one-to-one feedback from your tutor, tailored specifically to your work.
This course will cover…
- Discover your non-fiction niche – explore what draws you to creative non-fiction and begin writing from real life with a 500-word piece.
- Master the art of research – learn practical techniques for gathering material and staying organised.
- Develop interviewing skills – conduct an interview with someone close to you and explore the ethics of representing real lives.
- Bring people and nature to life – craft vivid, empathetic portraits of characters and experiment with writing about the natural world.
- Write with a strong sense of place – explore how setting shapes story and complete an assignment rooted in personal or historical geography.
- Find your voice and shape your story – produce a 1,500-word final piece and learn how to expand your work into a book-length narrative.
Designed for writers with no prior formal training, the course focuses on the foundational skills needed to structure and write compelling creative non-fiction. Under the expert guidance of your tutor, you’ll receive personalised feedback on up to 3,000 words of your writing. Additionally, you’ll have a one-to-one tutorial to discuss your work in depth and explore your next steps as a writer.
Start date
Monday 16 February 2026
Location
Online
Length
12 weeks (please see course schedule below)
Price
£495
*Payment plans available. Drop us a line at [email protected] to find out more.
By the end of this course you will have…
- Gained familiarity with various non-fiction forms and voices.
- Enhanced your ability to extract intriguing and relevant information from documentary, visual, and audio sources.
- Developed skills for effectively interviewing and gathering useful insights from subjects.
- Acquired a deeper understanding of how to craft a compelling narrative.
- Built the confidence and skills needed to advance your non-fiction project successfully.
Course programme
Please note, the module order and/or content of the course may be subject to change.
Module one – Why Write Non-Fiction
In this module, you’ll look at why you want to write non-fiction and think about what the specific type of non-fiction it is that you might be interested in writing. You’ll also look at the ways you can find a story and, for your assignment, you’ll work on the beginning 500-word piece of writing inspired by the world around you.
Module two – Research (part one)
This module begins to tackle the thorny world of research for a piece of creative non-fiction. You’ll be led through some different methods for beginning your research and you’ll learn some tips for making sure you don’t end up with a huge mess of material at the end. There’s not a marked assignment for this module but various writing exercises and also your first one-to-one meeting with the course tutor.
Module three – Research (part two)
In this module, you will focus on interviewing, a crucial skill for any non-fiction researcher whose work is set in the present day or needs to include living people’s memories of the past. You will also consider the ethics of interviewing, looking at how to balance your obligations to your interviewee and the reader. For your assignment, you will be asked to interview someone you are close to, to find out something you didn’t previously know about them.
Module four – Writing About People
In module four, you will look at how to create an in-depth portrayal of a character that makes the reader feel they know them – a vital skill across all fields of non-fiction, from travelogue to history. You’ll consider what makes up a personality and look at how to get inside your character’s head so that the reader empathises and appreciates their complexity.
Module five – Place
In this module, you’ll examine how to describe the locations that form your narrative’s settings, and how to manage the interplay of your people and places. You’ll discuss how they influence one another and drive the narrative arc of your story. For the assignment, you’ll write a biography about a person who defines a place, or write about a location that has a special significance for you.
Module six – Finding your voice and telling your story
For the final module, you will pull together everything you’ve learned to produce a 1,500-word piece of non-fiction on a topic of your choice. You’ll also look at how you might start to go about creating a book-length narrative, and the way the skills you’ve learnt in this course can transfer to long-form creative non-fiction.
Live sessions
There will be two live sessions for this course, which will take place over Zoom.
Zoom one: Monday 16 February, 7–8pm GMT
Zoom two: Bookable one-to-one
Brilliant tutor – Ed was very friendly and down to earth. His teaching style helped me feel safe to try out new writing with minimal fear. Ed’s guidance was extremely helpful and insightful. He offered lots of ideas for developing my writing and routes for potential publication. I also loved the structure of the course, meeting peers and the course content. I hadn’t expected so many readings but these were extremely useful.
Why study with National Centre for Writing?
National Centre for Writing has been supporting writers to develop their craft for over 25 years. Our online tutored courses are developed in partnership with University of East Anglia, home to the prestigious School of Literature, Drama and Creative Writing, which boasts award-winning alumni including Kazuo Ishiguro, Ian McEwan and Anne Enright. Our course tutors are all published writers, many of whom have studied or taught at UEA themselves.

While many online writing courses are available worldwide, ours stand out by offering:
- One-to-one feedback on up to six assignments, directly from your course tutor
- A tailored learning experience with a maximum of 15 students per class
- The flexibility to progress through the course from anywhere, at any time
- Support and structure to help you develop a consistent writing routine
- Essential skills and knowledge to enhance your craft
- Increased confidence in your ability as a writer
- The opportunity to join our NCW Alumni—an international network of like-minded writers and translators
Meet the tutor
Edward Parnell
Edward Parnell has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia. He’s been the recipient of an Escalator Award from the National Centre for Writing, and has taught Creative Non-Fiction with us since 2020. His second book, Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country, a work of narrative non-fiction was published in hardback in the UK during October 2019 by William Collins, and subsequently released in the UK and US in paperback in October 2020. The book was shortlisted for the PEN Ackerley Prize 2020 for memoir and autobiography.
Read about Ed’s experience writing his mixed-genre book Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country →
The course was well-prepared and designed and the tutor’s input and feedback was excellent.
How does this course work?
We have partnered with digital learning platform Teachable to host our self-paced courses. The platform is accessible across a range of devices, simple to use, and does not require any specialist equipment.
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We want to make sure that you get the most out of our tutored online courses and feel confident that you’re choosing the right course. Each course contains a mixture of teaching content, reading to prompt discussion, writing exercises for you to hone your skills, and group and one-to-one feedback.
Click to read more about how they are structured and what equipment you may need.
Interviewing subjects for non-fiction: a beginner’s checklist
From filtering through personal stories about an important figure to getting the gritty facts from a potentially taciturn expert, interviewing is a challenging skill that needs the right preparation.
15 August 2025
Writing about music with Aniefiok Ekpoudom
In this episode of The Writing Life podcast, cultural writer and editor Josh Baines is joined by narrative non-fiction writer Aniefiok Ekpoudom to discuss writing about the music industry.
3 December 2024
Five surprising ways to incorporate archival research into your writing
NCW tutor and writer Elizabeth Lewis Williams highlights five ways to use archival research as inspiration for your writing.
13 August 2025
Got a question?
If you still have questions, get in touch with the Academy team by emailing [email protected] or phone (+44) 01603 877177 between our working hours of 9am – 5pm BST, Monday to Friday. We’re here to help!
Writing narrative non-fiction with Dan Richards & Edward Parnell
In this episode of The Writing Life podcast, writers and NCW Academy tutors Dan Richards and Edward Parnell discuss the journey of writing narrative non-fiction.
17 June 2024
Five non-fiction writing tips for beginners
Try out this step-by-step process for writing non-fiction, biography or memoir from Polish journalist and blogger Marcin Wilk.
19 February 2021
Five surprising ways to incorporate archival research into your writing
NCW tutor and writer Elizabeth Lewis Williams highlights five ways to use archival research as inspiration for your writing.
13 August 2025