Thursday 21 February 2013

Book Festival at Bartons Chilwell

Authors Flock to Old Bus Depot
 
The transport business may have been sold but Bartons PLC continues on its new journey as a cultural community centre under the guidance of its founder’s great-grandson. The 100 year old, 35,000 sq foot venue plays host to regular events under the banner of NOT. Having held Chilwell’s answer to The Cannes Film Festival, The Edinburgh Fringe and Glastonbury, it’s now the turn of literature to get the Bartons treatment.
On Sunday April the 7th, New Writers UK will be hosting the NOT The Hay Book Festival, for an enticing day of talks and activities, as they take part in the day’s NOT the Camden Market event which runs simultaneously. Headlining the event will be guest speaker Stephen Booth, the popular crime writer will be discussing the sense of place and his use of locations. Earlier in the day, visitors will hear from the local author and historian Alan Oxley on the ‘History of Bartons Transport’ whilst Maureen Rushton will talk about the ‘Canary Girls of Chilwell’, having worked at the Chilwell Shell Filling Factory during the First World War.
Writers Gloria Morgan and Philip Baker will also be present, speaking about the role of character in fiction and revealing where ideas come from. The talks are all free to attend and no booking is required.
With around fifty stalls, the market celebrates all that Nottingham and the East Midlands has to offer and houses a seated food court area with live music, providing a free event for all the family. Plenty of parking is available at a venue that oozes character and history, so if you’re a fan of the written word, or just want a great day out, get along to Chilwell’s High Road between 10am and 4pm. More information on Not the Hay Book Festival can be found at www.newwritersuk.co.uk andwww.bartonsplc.co.uk

Tuesday 19 February 2013

My Day at the Nottingham Festival of Words


The Nottingham Festival of Words took over Nottingham Trent University’s Newton Building for the weekend. NottsLit went along on the Sunday. Here’s an account of my day:

The venue was impressive and immediately brought on nostalgic memories of university days. With a day pass stuck to my wrist I dashed to the first event, a performance from The Theatre Royal’s over 55s Creative Writing Group, or as they now wish to be called, The Royal Writers. What followed was an entertaining hour of prose, poetry and monologues. After an opening limerick, Robbie Rob sang the blues, complete with a chorus line:
‘I have a good life, completely absent of pain,
I have a good life, completely absent of pain,
If it carries on like this, will I ever sing the blues again?’

The variety and pace didn’t let up as we eavesdropped upon a teenage conversation, scripted by Chrissy Thornhill, with The Boyfriend. Shut Up! Innit.

The Frances Cornford poem, To a Fat Lady seen from the Train, is answered individually in the form of romance, poignancy and surprise, before another limerick, this one on the theory of relativity, brought us full circle: ‘…set out one day, in a relative way, and arrived the previous night.’

Act two was introduced by Ann Hill, who succinctly put it, ‘We all love words and that’s why we’re here.’ Marvelous. And, from the evidence of this, they all love performing, too.

Sue Pickles spoke of a hemorrhaging shed, a shed with indigestion, in an expertly constructed tale of four parts and numerous interjections – a piano away from Victoria Wood. Photography successfully accompanied many of these performances, not least when a huge spider made an appearance; Jenny Holliday informing us that it is an Australian arachnid, or, as the Aussie’s call it, a lawn bandit or an ambulance chaser.

The final act welcomed three more writers to the stage and began with some punchy role play, set amid a break in. Robbie Robb may have stolen act one but it was Pamela Senior that stole the hour. After an inspired comic turn she later delivered a deeply moving piece about dementia.
Chrissy Thornhill, Pamela Senior, Wendy Haynes, Particia Stoat, Ann Hill, Robbie Rob, Jenny Holliday, Barbara Watkins, Cathy Grinrod, Sue Pickles, Margaret Christopoulus
All of the work on show was produced under the guidance of Cathy Grindrod, the workshop leader. Cathy, a former Derbyshire Poet Laureate, clearly has a great relationship with the group and has helped them to showcase their talent.

I stayed in my seat for the next event, a talk from the crime writer Steven Dunne.

In 2008 the Derbyshire author self published his first crime novel, The Reaper. After gaining good reviews and generating respectable sales, he was approached by the publisher Headline. The Disciple quickly followed and now, Deity, his third novel to feature DI Damen Brook, is achieving critical acclaim.

Steven opened his talk at NTU with a series of slides, featuring him and his books like a parent might show off baby photos. There’s no doubt about it, this affable author is enjoying his success and he is, quite rightly, very proud of Deity. A part-time secondary school teacher, he explained how he called on his work experience to write about the difficult in-between years. Steven was interested in the process today’s youngsters go through when they lose their sense of invincibility and realise the world does not revolve on their terms.
A self confessed smug grin - and why not?
As the opening chapters of Deity were read out we heard what all the fuss was about. Four Derby College students go missing, an internet film purporting to show them committing mass suicide. If it's real, why did they kill themselves? If the suicides are faked, why the set up and where are the students? Intriguing stuff.

Questions were welcomed and there was even a rare opportunity to hear from an author’s partner. When asked about Steven's writing process his wife admitted that this was the most she’s heard him speak in weeks. Between writing and teaching there’s not much time for reading, explained Steven who, unlike most crime writers I know, doesn't read many contemporary crime novels. His main influences include Gore Vidal, Arthur Conan Doyle, Truman Capote and Joseph Heller, and he recently dispatched formulaic fiction into Room 101.

After the revealing Q&A there was even time to hear a world exclusive reading of Steven’s fourth novel in the series, The Unquiet Grave, with its tagline Even the dead need answers. With Deity doing so well and the new book set for a summer launch it’s easy to see why Steven’s living the dream.

After Steven’s talk I walked out to a busy lobby as five events all finished at 12 noon. It seemed that the Asian Writers’ poetry reading had been packed. The other events, not so. I applaud the festival for laying on so much choice but they were, perhaps, victims of their own success. With so much going on at the same time some events suffered. This was the case with my first afternoon visit, with four poetry activities kicking off at 1.30pm, the Rainbow Performance failed to get the audience it deserved.

The superb Lecture Theatre 5 hosted the Nottingham Sapphist Writers and Rainbow Writers in a collaborated to deliver an hour of performance poetry. The event aimed to showcase the best of Nottingham’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender writing.

The compère Russell Christie opened the bash with the confident assuredness of a seasoned performer. Without the use of a script or cue cards he spoke from memory, and he spoke from the heart, touching on his experience of life and love as a gay man.

Nicki Hastie from the Sapphist Writers used the festival’s themes of love and lace to compose a poem about connections. An engaging speaker, Nicki spoke of how we are all interlinked, much more so than a spurious Kevin Bacon inspired notion. Her wordplay remained fun whilst offering in-jokes and her account of childhood added depth. In opening herself up, Nicki showed the heart of a poet but if vulnerability was perceived, strength was certainly defined. The honesty continued with the poem, Land of Online Dating; her one and only attempt at online courtship was ripe for poetry.

Next of the Rainbow Writers was Tony Challis. He walked on with a black folder jammed with poems. I got the impression it was his version of Bob Monkhouse’s joke book, a life’s work jotted down for future referral. Tony picked out several short poems to read. The first of which, about a caterpillar, he introduced thus ‘it’s my silliest poem but people seem to like it.’ There was nothing silly about his take on Allen Ginsberg’s Sweet Boy Give Me Your Ass. A versatile poet, an elegant collection.

Hands, written and read by David Kershaw was a compassionate four parter. There was no emphasis on performance, no showing off, no playing to the crowd. It felt personal. Here was poetry that came from the soul.

From the off, Rachel Phillips announced that couples, regardless of their sexuality, all argue about the same four things: Money, Sex, Housework and Personal habits. Her cynical view of relationships continued with Recipe for Disaster. Fun and keenly observed, the poem inventively took the form of a recipe. Like all the poets before her, Rachel allowed the festival’s theme to permeate her poetry but in Prozac – a love story she exposed a different kind of relationship.

At various points Russell Christie returned to delight us. He sees poets as fisherman, castings out their words in the hope of catching love, the love of the audience. His bait included a response to the Mayor of San Francisco’s decision to close the gay bars during the 80s, in a reaction to AIDS. Russell’s time in the USA is recounted once more with Driving from Cleveland to Los Angeles. A chance meeting in a roadside bar – the hustle is on, and it’s not just pool balls! Information Fulfillment is, perhaps, his most personal piece with lines such as ‘I have hoarded the codes of my life and read them in my heart.’

An hour of frank prose, laced with sincerity and love.

left to right: Rachel Phillips, Nicki Hastie, Russell Christie, David Kershaw, Tony Challis
At the end of the Rainbow I headed to the EMBA panel.

Kathleen Bell, sitting in for John Lucas, began by explaining what the EMBA is. In case you didn’t know, it stands for East Midlands Book Award. Now in its third year, the EMBA is an independent, annual award, given to a writer of fiction, creative non-fiction or poetry, currently living in the East Midlands. It aims to promote the best literature coming out of the region and to reward exceptional work.

Joining Kathleen on the panel were two previous winners and a couple of shortlisted writers. In a kind of chronological order we meet Leicestershire’s Mark Goodwin, the first recipient of the award back in 2011. Mark read three poems, one of which was from Shod, the poetic adventure that was a surprise winner of that inaugural award. Active in the poetry scene for many years, Mark has worked in schools as well as for the mental health services and, as you’d expect, his delivery is polished. The poetry itself is vivid, clean and powerful. It has an element of controlled anger.
Paula Rawsthorne, shortlisted for the EMBA in 2012, was the next to read from her work. Her YA novel The Truth About Celia Frost, concerns a friendless, freaky kid who suffers from a disorder that leaves her in constant fear of bleeding to death. Paula’s reading leads up to a dramatic hook, with Celia about to come a cropper, before the book is closed. There was enough fear, tension and desperation in that sample chapter to grab the audience. A clever marketing ploy if ever there was one. A Liverpudlian, Paula now lives in Nottingham and praised the support of the Nottingham Writers’ Studio.
Shortlisted for his poetry book An Ordinary Dog, Nottingham’s Gregory Woods stood up and belted out three poems. It was a pleasure to hear the homo-phonic masterpiece I’d first heard at the festival’s launch night. Another gem previously aired that night at Antenna was Messages, an angry poem that seems to fit Greg’s attitude to love. ‘How I’d rejoice even to hear an insult in your voice.’ Acerbic and precise, the poems were passionately performed.
Winning the 2012 award was Anne Zoroudi, author of the Mysteries of the Greek Detective. The fifth book in her series (of seven), The Whispers of Nemesis, took the prize. The Derbyshire author’s story tells of desperate measures and long-kept secrets, of murder and immortality and of pride coming before the steepest of falls. Anne sees her books as morality tales and picks ‘metaphysical crime’ as her genre. This is no typical procedural detective story, partly due to the detective Hermes Diaktoros, and partly because of the book’s otherworldliness. The author might live in the Peak District but her heart is in the Greek islands and the country’s mythology seems to provide much of her inspiration.
The panelists ended with a brief Q and A, expressing a varied response to the density and profile of the region’s literary scene at which, as expected, Nottingham fared better than north Derbyshire. Another difference of note was in how the novelists and poets saw themselves. Somehow the EMBA have to compare the two’s technical merits.

Overall, it was a brilliant day. Between talks there was a free-to-attend book fair with local publishers, book shops, groups and children’s activities competing for attention. There was plenty of space for relaxing, chatting about books and enjoying refreshments, all in a nice atmosphere.  

The whole festival had been superbly promoted and I can only think that the disappointing attendances at some events were down to the huge variety on offer (although I did hear grumblings about the price). If it had been possibly to be in three places at once I would have also attended the Broadway for the Woody Guthrie do and tagged along on the Nottingham Literary Trail. Roll on next year.

Meanwhile, check out this summer’s Lowdham Book Festival June 21-29 and the Gedling Book Festival July 12-14.   

If you are interested in joining The Royal Writers, please contact David Longford, Education Manager for the Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall on 0115 9895531 or email him david.longford@nottinghamcity.gov.uk
For more information about Cathy Grindrod, visit www.cathygrindrod.co.uk

Steven Dunne’s website is www.stevendunne.co.uk

The Sapphist Writers are a network of lesbian and bisexual women in the East Midlands. Their next meeting is on March 11th at Nottingham Women’s Centre. Please email sapphistwriters@yahoo.co.uk
The Rainbow Writers will next be meeting at Nottingham Writers’ Studio, 7.30pm, 21st March.

The shortlist for this year’s EMBA will be announced at ‘States of Independence’ a free event celebrating indie publishing at De Montforth University on Sat March 16th. The winners will be announced in June.




Monday 18 February 2013

EMBA Author Panel


EMBA Author Panel at Festival of Words

Kathleen Bell, sitting in for John Lucas, began by explaining what the EMBA is. In case you didn’t know, it stands for East Midlands Book Award. Now in its third year, the EMBA is an independent, annual award, given to a writer of fiction, creative non-fiction or poetry, currently living in the East Midlands. It aims to promote the best literature coming out of the region and to reward exceptional work.

Joining Kathleen on the panel were two previous winners and a couple of shortlisted writers. In a kind of chronological order we meet Leicestershire’s Mark Goodwin, the first recipient of the award back in 2011. Mark read three poems, one of which was from Shod, the poetic adventure that was a surprise winner of that inaugural award. Active in the poetry scene for many years, Mark has worked in schools as well as for the mental health services and, as you’d expect, his delivery is polished. The poetry itself is vivid, clean and powerful. It has an element of controlled anger.
Paula Rawsthorne, shortlisted for the EMBA in 2012, was the next to read from her work. Her YA novel The Truth About Celia Frost, concerns a friendless, freaky kid who suffers from a disorder that leaves her in constant fear of bleeding to death. Paula’s reading leads up to a dramatic hook, with Celia about to come a cropper, before the book is closed. There was enough fear, tension and desperation in that sample chapter to grab the audience. A clever marketing ploy if ever there was one. A Liverpudlian, Paula now lives in Nottingham and praised the support of the Nottingham Writers’ Studio.
Shortlisted for his poetry book An Ordinary Dog, Nottingham’s Gregory Woods stood up and belted out three poems. It was a pleasure to hear the homophonic masterpiece I’d first heard at the festival’s launch night. Another gem previously aired that night at Antenna was Messages, an angry poem that seems to fit Greg’s attitude to love. ‘How I’d rejoice even to hear an insult in your voice.’ Acerbic and precise, the poems are passionately performed.
Winning the 2012 award was Anne Zoroudi, author of the Mysteries of the Greek Detective. The fifth book in her series (of seven), The Whispers of Nemesis, took the prize. The Derbyshire author’s story tells of desperate measures and long-kept secrets, of murder and immortality and of pride coming before the steepest of falls. Anne sees her books as morality tales and picks ‘metaphysical crime’ as her genre. This is no typical procedural detective story, partly due to the detective Hermes Diaktoros, and partly because of the book’s otherworldliness. The author might live in the Peak District but her heart is in the Greek islands and the country’s mythology seems to provide much of her inspiration.
The panelists ended with a brief Q and A, expressing a varied response to the density and profile of the region’s literary scene at which, as expected, Nottingham fared better than north Derbyshire. Another difference of note was in how the novelists and poets saw themselves. Somehow the EMBA have to compare the two’s technical merits.  

The shortlist for this year’s EMBA will be announced at ‘States of Independence’ a free event celebrating indie publishing at De Montforth University on Sat March 16th.

The winners will be announced in June.

Sapphist Writers & Rainbow Writers unite

Festival of Words - Rainbow Performance

Nottingham Sapphist Writers and Rainbow Writers collaborated to deliver an hour of performance poetry in an event which aimed to showcase the best of Nottingham’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender writing.

The compere Russell Christie opened the bash with the confident assuredness of a seasoned performer. Without the use of a script or cue cards he spoke from memory, and he spoke from the heart, touching on his experience of life and love as a gay man.

Nicki Hastie from the Sapphist Writers used the festival’s themes of love and lace to compose a poem about connections. An engaging speaker, Nicki spoke of how we are all interlinked, much more so than a spurious Kevin Bacon inspired notion. Her wordplay remained fun whilst offering in-jokes and her account of childhood added depth. In opening herself up, Nicki showed the heart of a poet but if vulnerability was perceived, strength was certainly defined. The honesty continued with the poem, Land of Online Dating; her one and only attempt at online courtship was ripe for poetry.

Next of the Rainbow Writers was Tony Challis. He walked on with a black folder jammed with poems. I got the impression it was his version of Bob Monkhouse’s joke book, a life’s work jotted down for future referral. Tony picked out several short poems to read. The first of which, about a caterpillar, he introduced thus ‘it’s my silliest poem but people seem to like it.’ There was nothing silly about his take on Allen Ginsberg’s Sweet Boy Give Me Your Ass.  A versatile poet, an elegant collection.  

Hands, written and read by David Kershaw was a compassionate four parter. There was no emphasis on performance, no showing off, no playing to the crowd. It felt personal. Here was poetry that came from the soul.  

From the off, Rachel Phillips announced that couples, regardless of their sexuality, all argue about the same four things: Money, Sex, Housework and Personal habits. Her cynical view of relationships continued with Recipe for Disaster. Fun and keenly observed, the poem inventively took the form of a recipe. Like all the poets before her, Rachel allowed the festival’s theme to permeate her poetry but in Prozac – a love story she exposed a different kind of relationship.

At various points Russell Christie returned to delight us. He sees poets as fisherman, castings out their words in the hope of catching love, the love of the audience. His bait included a response to the Mayor of San Francisco’s decision to close the gay bars during the 80s, in a reaction to AIDS. Russell’s time in the USA is recounted once more with Driving from Cleveland to Los Angeles. A chance meeting in a roadside bar – the hustle is on, and it’s not just pool balls! Information Fulfillment is, perhaps, his most personal piece with lines such as ‘I have hoarded the codes of my life and read them in my heart.’

An hour of frank prose, laced with sincerity and love.

left to right: Rachel Phillips, Nicki Hastie, Russell Christie, David Kershaw, TonyChallis

The Sapphist Writers are a network of lesbian and bisexual women in the East Midlands. Their next meeting is on March 11th at Nottingham Women’s Centre. Please email sapphistwriters@yahoo.co.uk

The Rainbow Writers will next be meeting at Nottingham Writers’ Studio, 7.30pm, 21st March. 

Sunday 17 February 2013

Steven Dunne

Festival of Words: An Audience with Steven Dunne

In 2008 Derbyshire author Steven Dunne self published his first crime novel, The Reaper. After gaining good reviews and generating respectable sales, he was approached by the publisher Headline. The Disciple quickly followed and now, Deity, his third novel to feature DI Damen Brook, is achieving critical acclaim.

Steven opened his talk at NTU with a series of slides, featuring him and his books like a parent might show off baby photos. There’s no doubt about it, this affable author is enjoying his success and he is, quite rightly, very proud of Deity. A part-time secondary school teacher, he explained how he called on his work experience to write about the difficult in-between years. Steven was interested in the process today’s youngsters go through when they lose their sense of invincibility and realise the world does not revolve on their terms.
A self confessed smug grin - and why not?
As the opening chapters of Deity were read out we heard what all the fuss was about. Four Derby College students go missing, an internet film purporting to show them committing mass suicide. If it's real, why did they kill themselves? If the suicides are faked, why the set up and where are the students? Intriguing stuff.

Questions were welcomed and there was even a rare opportunity to hear from an author’s partner. When asked about his writing process, Steven's wife admitted that this was the most she’s heard him speak in weeks. Between writing and teaching there’s not much time for reading, explained Steven who, unlike most crime writers I know, doesn’t read many contemporary crime novels. His main influences include Gore Vidal, Arthur Conan Doyle, Truman Capote and Joseph Heller, and he recently dispatched formulaic fiction into Room 101.

After the revealing Q&A there even time to hear a world exclusive reading of Steven’s fourth novel in the series, The Unquiet Grave, with its tagline Even the dead need answers. With Deity doing so well and the new book set for a summer launch it’s easy to see why Steven’s living the dream.

The Royal Writers

A Nottingham Festival of Words event

‘We all love words and that’s why we’re here.’ Ann Hill.

The Theatre Royal’s over 55s Creative Writing Group, or as they now wish to be called, The Royal Writers, delivered an entertaining hour of prose, poetry and monologues. After an opening limerick, Robbie Rob sang the blues, complete with a chorus line:
‘I have a good life, completely absent of pain,
I have a good life, completely absent of pain,
If it carries on like this, will I ever sing the blues again?’

The variety and pace didn’t let up as we eavesdropped upon a teenage conversation, scripted by Chrissy Thornhill, with The Boyfriend. Shut Up! Innit.

The Frances Cornford poem, To a Fat Lady seen from the Train, is answered individually in the form of romance, poignancy and surprise, before another limerick, this one on the theory of relativity, brought us full circle: ‘…set out one day, in a relative way, and arrived the previous night.’

Act two was introduced by Ann Hill, who succinctly put it, ‘We all love words and that’s why we’re here.’ Marvelous. And, from the evidence of this, they all love performing, too.

Sue Pickles spoke of a hemorrhaging shed, a shed with indigestion, in an expertly constructed tale of four parts and numerous interjections – a piano away from Victoria Wood. Photography successfully accompanied many of these performances, not least when a huge spider made an appearance; Jenny Holliday informing us that it is an Australian arachnid, or, as the Aussie’s call it, a lawn bandit or an ambulance chaser.  

The final act welcomed three more writers to the stage and began with some punchy role play, set amid a break in. Robbie Robb may have stolen act one but it was Pamela Senior that stole the hour. After an inspired comic turn she later delivered a deeply moving piece about dementia.

Chrissy Thornhill, Pamela Senior, Wendy Haynes, Particia Stoat, Ann Hill, Robbie Rob, Jenny Holliday, Barbara Watkins, Cathy Grinrod, Sue Pickles, Margaret Christopoulus

All of the work on show was produced under the guidance of Cathy Grindrod, the workshop leader. Cathy, a former Derbyshire Poet Laureate, clearly has a great relationship with the group and has helped them to showcase their talent.

If you are interested in joining The Royal Writers, please contact David Longford, Education Manager for the Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall on 0115 9895531 or email him david.longford@nottinghamcity.gov.uk

For more information about Cathy Grindrod, visit www.cathygrindrod.co.uk

Friday 15 February 2013

Word Jam THIS Sunday 7pm

The First ever 'Word Jam' event is at 7PM on Sunday 17th February at the Jam Cafe, Heathcote Street, Nottingham.

This will mark the official start of 'Word Jam' in Nottingham.


http://www.wordjam.weebly.com/

Monday 11 February 2013

‘Shaping the Word’ with Pete Davis

A guest post from James Walker.
 
Pete Davis spent three decades as a fireman and the following two as a storyteller where he has worked with the elderly, the mentally ill and Notts County fans. About fifteen years ago, after a couple of ales, he set up The Storytellers of Nottingham in the Trip where he shared his memories of growing up around the city, culminating in his one-man show Under Bestwood, his unique take on the Dylan Thomas classic. Now he’s offering an introduction to oral storytelling where he’ll be teaching vital tricks of the trade to anyone who fancies themselves as a blabber mouth.

The six-week course will focus on the methods required to retain, construct and perform stories. In particular it will focus in on ways to mentally visualise a story so that you don’t turn into one of those numpties who still have to read from a script when they’re performing a Haiku. Davis’s basic philosophy is: if you believe it, so will they. So if there’s any Romeo’s out there stringing along a couple of lovers then here’s your chance to perfect those excuses so that her in doors never doubts you again.

The course is targeted at writers at all levels of their career and is useful as the publishing industry demands a more rounded product nowadays, someone who is able to write, market and entertain. And let’s be honest, just because you can conjure beautiful imagery on the page doesn’t mean that you are a) a nice person or b) a performer. Writers are pretty unsociable beasts who lock themselves away for months on end, staring into screens, creating artificial worlds out of words. They’re barely one degree of separation away from World of Warcraft. This is your chance to become human again and put your metaphors where your mouth is.

I’ve worked with Pete a few times, most recently on The Space when I commissioned him to take oral histories from Raleigh workers. He’s a great communicator and has the skill of being able to relax people and get them to speak honestly about their life. The Raleigh testaments are the result of lots of conversations and Pete’s ability to slowly cajole out details that people presume are boring but are absolute gold. It’s a skill that requires listening, responding and probing. It sounds easy but it’s not. He’s a great performer as well, able to relay long stories freely without a script. But if you’re thinking of signing up for his workshops why not try before you buy and see Pete’s contribution to the Festival of Words with Stories of the City at Lee Rosy’s, 7.30pm, 13 February.
 
James Walker is the Chair of Nottingham Writers' Studio.
 
‘Shaping the Word’ with Pete Davis, Wednesdays, 20 February to 3 April 2013, 7–9pm, £48. Sessions split between Broadway and the Nottingham Writers’ Studio. To book admin@nottinghamwritersstudio.co.uk

Sunday 10 February 2013

Steven Dunne - The Writers' Process

Steven Dunne

The Writers’ Process

Sun 17 Feb

11am-12 noon

Nottingham Trent University’s Newton Building

The author of The Reaper and The Disciple will take readers behind the crime scenes of his latest psychological thriller Deity.

Combing intricate forensics with meticulous detection and psychological insight, Dunne’s novels are heavily researched.

A former freelance journalist, Steven is now a part-time teacher in Derby.

 

Entry with pass: call 0844 477 5678 or visit www.nottwords.org.uk for details.

Follow Stephen on Twitter @ReaperSteven

Friday 8 February 2013

The Writers' Process - Belbin with Eaton

David Belbin talks to Michael Eaton

The Writers’ Process

Sun 17 Feb

11am-12 noon

Nottingham Trent University’s Newton Building

Novelist David Belbin talks to playwright Michael Eaton about the Nottingham crime novel and the difference between writing for adults and young adults.

Entry with pass: call 0844 477 5678 or visit www.nottwords.org.uk for details.

Thursday 7 February 2013

The Writers' Process

Making Lace

The Writers’ Process

Sun 17 Feb

11am-12 noon

Nottingham Trent University’s Newton Building

If you’re interested in discovering how writers craft their work, this is for you.

An exploration into what writers say about their own process, from initial idea to finished product, with the use of selected extracts.

Karen Buckley has published poetry and short fiction and has a PhD in Creative and Critical Writing.

Entry with pass: call 0844 477 5678 or visit www.nottwords.org.uk for details.

Tuesday 5 February 2013

Flash Fiction - read the best entries

In celebration of National Storytelling Week (Saturday 26th January – Saturday 2nd February) Nottingham Festival of Words ran a Flash Fiction Competition (50 words). To read the winning entry and the shortlisted ones, click the link below:
 
READ the BEST ONES HERE

Sunday 3 February 2013

Lowdham Festivals

Lowdham Festivals Programme of Events:
Winter Weekend and First Fridays 2013


The programme explores the theme of Secrets and Lies, exposing hidden depths & dark horses… Polly Toynbee, Catherine Bailey, Sheelagh Gallagher, Chris Weir, Chris Arnot, Roy Bainton, Sophie Hannah & Alison Moore will explore fictional secrets & the mysteries of the human psyche…

Friday 1st March
Weird Stuff, with Roy Bainton
2.00 – 3.30pm, Lowdham WI Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
The  weekend opens with the first “First Friday” event of 2013 with Roy Bainton, author of The Mammoth Book of Unexplained Phenomena. Mysteries continue to surface, from showers of frogs over Hungary to birds falling to earth in Arkansas, as well as UFOs, mediums, panics, paranoia and a universe proving stranger in fact than imagined.
www.roybaintonwrites.com

Tickets: £5 Full, £4 Concessions, £3 Festival Friends, including tea and cake

Searching for Lost Breweries (and the odd missing football ground), with Chris Arnot
7.30 – 9.00pm, The Old Ship Inn, Main Street, Lowdham
There was a time when Nottingham without Shipstone’s would have been as unthinkable as Leeds without Tetley’s & Manchester without Boddington’s. Chris Arnot reminds us what we have lost (though recognising the gains won by real ale campaigns & microbreweries) as breweries closed. Wandering round the UK, he also searched for long-forgotten football grounds. Beer and football, who knew there was a connection?
www.chrisarnot.co.uk

Tickets: £5 Full, £4 Concessions, £3 Festival Friends

Saturday 2nd March
Secrets and Lies in the novels of Ian McEwan and Sarah Waters, with Sheelagh Gallagher
2.00 – 3.00pm, Lowdham Village Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
Sheelagh Gallagher, from Nottinghamshire Libraries, wanders through the darker side of
two of Britain’s best-known novelists.

Tickets: £3

New Fiction from Alison Moore
3.30 – 5.00pm, Lowdham Village Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
Nottinghamshire writer Alison Moore hit the headlines when her book The Lighthouse was short-listed for the 2012 Booker Prize. Her book begins on a North Sea ferry, on whose blustery outer deck stands Futh, a middle-aged, recently-separated man heading to Germany for a restorative walking holiday. “A masterclass in slow burn storytelling.” Boyd Tonkin, The Independent. Alison will be in conversation with Ross Bradshaw from Five Leaves.
www.alison-moore.com

Tickets: £5 Full, £4 Concessions, £3 Festival Friends

Polly Toynbee - Dogma and Disarray: David Cameron at Half Time
6.45 – 8.45pm, Lowdham Village Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
Guardian writer Polly Toynbee last came to Lowdham to give a verdict on how Labour was doing. Now, halfway through the Coalition government, she looks at how David Cameron is managing, and what drives him. In conversation with fellow author David Williams, she will look in detail at what has happened to the NHS and the Welfare State.
Plenty of time for discussion!

Tickets: £12 Full, £10 Concessions, £9 Festival Friends Bar available
Ticket price includes a copy of the book
Dogma and Disarray (Granta Books)

Sunday 3rd March
Mysteries, Secrets and Curiosities of Nottinghamshire, with Chris Weir
11am – 12.30pm, Lowdham Village Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
Chris Weir from Nottinghamshire Archives comes back to Lowdham to talk about obscure parts of local history, including the statue commemorating the invention of the umbrella, the strange Viking Sculpture at Cuckney Church & the origins of the Major Oak’s name.
Tickets: £5 Full, £4 Concessions, £3 Festival Friends

Catherine Bailey and the Secret Rooms
2.00 – 3.30pm, Lowdham Village Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
Catherine Bailey returns to Lowdham to discuss her new book, Secret Rooms: A True Gothic Mystery – the complex story of love, honour and betrayal inside the walls of Belvoir Castle. Catherine is also the author of Black Diamonds, the story behind the Wentworth estate.
She will be in discussion with Professor John Lucas.

Tickets: £7 Full, £6 Concessions, £5 Festival Friends

An Evening with Sophie Hannah
7.00 – 9.00pm Lowdham Village Hall, Main Street, Lowdham
Acclaimed author Sophie Hannah wrote several collections of poetry before turning to a life of crime. The Spectator said her “…excellent psychological thrillers derive much of their appeal from her knack for coming up with the sort of opening situation that instantly puts the reader in the literary equivalent of an armlock.’ A fitting end to a devious weekend…
www.sophiehannah.com

Tickets: £7 Full, £6 Concessions, £5 Festival Friends Bar available

The Winter Weekend forms the first part of their 2013 programme – here are some other dates for your diary:

Friday 5th April 2 - 3.30pm – Methodist Chapel, Main Street, Lowdham
Tea, Coffee and Chocolate: Hot liquid pleasure.... with Carol Barstow
Carol Barstow from Bromley House Library will talk about the arrival of the new hot drinks into the country with the Restoration in 1660, and the reactions to them - some of which seem rather surprising today. There will of course be samples of Restoration style hot chocolate included, served by Carol, in suitable period costume…

Friday 3 May 2 – 30pm – Methodist Chapel, Main Street, Lowdham
Boots and Bonnets in Jane Austen's Books, with Deirdre O'Byrne (also in costume!)
From Eliza Bennet's muddy boots to Eleanor Tilney's white gowns, apparel is always significant in Jane Austen's works. We'll discuss some of the ways in which she uses dress in her novels, and learn a bit about her own attire too.

Friday 7th June 2 – 3.30 - Methodist Chapel, Main Street, Lowdham
A Tale of Two Airfields: Newton & Syerston, with Tim O'Brien
The Last Post at RAF Newton was in 2001, ending the history of an airfield with stories included Josef Warchal's amazing journey from Poland across war-torn Europe as well as a role in post-war training and the Vulcan landing. Meanwhile, Syerston moved from the days of Bomber Command though the world's first jet flying training school and quieter times with today's gliding activity.

Friday 5th July 2 – 3.30 Methodist Chapel, Main Street, Lowdham
George Orwell In An Hour - with Mike Wilson
Each year Mike Wilson is challenged to cover the entire work and life of a major writer. So, prepare for everything you need to know about George Orwell, his life, journalism and novels … in an hour.

Tickets for all events available from The Bookcase, Lowdham 0115 966 3219
Each event £5 (£4 concessions, £3 Friends) including tea and cake.

Keep an eye on www.thebookcase.co.uk and www.lowdhambookfestival.co.uk
for events details.