David Denny is a British writer whose work spans fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and screenwriting. His writing is driven by atmosphere, memory, and the quiet moments where ordinary lives brush against something darker or more profound.
Across short stories, novels, memoir, and historical writing, he explores themes of loss, identity, belief, time, and the unseen forces that shape human experience. His fiction often leans toward the uncanny and the psychological, blending realism with folklore, myth, and subtle horror, while his nonfiction draws on careful research, narrative clarity, and an accessible, human-centred voice.
Denny’s work ranges from deeply personal recollections of family and place, to explorations of history, faith, and cultural legacy, to eerie tales rooted in landscape and lived experience. Whether writing poetry, prose, or dramatic narrative, he favours a lyrical yet grounded style—one that values rhythm, mood, and emotional truth over easy answers.
He continues to write and publish across multiple forms, developing projects that challenge genre boundaries while remaining focused on storytelling that lingers long after the final page.
For more information www.daviddenny.biz