
Writers at Work: Hattie Morrison
Hattie Morrison explores the shape of her writing life – past, present and future – in this latest interview with Hay Festival’s Writers at Work cohort.
Hattie Morrison is a Welsh writer whose work explores the limitations of storytelling, rural life and memory. Her writing has been published by the Guardian, New Welsh Review, her monologue works have been exhibited at Tate Modern, and her chapbooks are held at the Scottish Poetry Library. She was awarded the Young Welsh Writer of the Year prize by New Welsh Review for her essay 'Venus as a Spinster' and she was part of Literature Wales’ Representing Wales cohort between 2022-2023. Last year, she was a recipient of A Writing Chance with New Writing North and Substack, Michael Sheen’s Mab Gwalia, and Faber. Born in Carmarthenshire in 1997, Hattie was awarded a full scholarship to study Fine Art at the University of Oxford, and later completed a Masters in Writing at the Royal College of Art. She is represented by Greyhound Literary Agency and is currently pitching her first novel.
Image credit: Leia Morrison
Hattie Morrison explores the shape of her writing life – past, present and future – in this latest interview with Hay Festival’s Writers at Work cohort.
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