Archive for May, 2008

Published by Chris on 30 May 2008

Unreasonable Employment Practices

Do you have a problem with your employer? Does your boss expect you to work for your pay? Do your colleagues expect you to spend all day working on spreadsheets, invoices, and other things that you don’t really care about? Annoying, isn’t it? Wouldn’t you rather be at home reading Emily Dickinson and staring into the middle distance? Well now there is an answer: read at work and get away with it. You read that right. A new service called Read At Work offers to disguise your reading as Powerpoint slides. Noone will ever know the difference. “What’s that you’re doing?” your supervisor asks. “Oh, I’m just making up the slides for my Powerpoint presentation at the sales conference tomorrow,” you reply. Give it a try. [via]

Published by Chris on 30 May 2008

More Funding Needed for Dementia Services

Katie Peters, a Project Worker for Get Into Reading, working with Mersey Care NHS Trust and dementia patients writes:

A new King’s Fund report presents a comprehensive long-term view of mental health services and warns the government that expanding demand will require sustained funding increases. The ageing population in the U.K. means that the number of people suffering from dementia is estimated to rise from 582,000 now to just under a million by 2026.  Since November 2006, The Reader Organisation has been delivering reading group sessions and one to one reading sessions with dementia patients at a care home on Merseyside. The results have been astounding. We hope that today’s news will strengthen our case for securing funding to research the effects of this work so that we can develop it and make it part of the care package offered to people suffering from dementia in the years to come.

More on this story from the BBC and from The Guardian.

More from on reading and dementia here.

Published by Chris on 30 May 2008

Les Murray Reads in Liverpool: Wednesday 4th June, 8pm at the Bluecoat

Les Murray

The Reader Organisation has teamed up with The Bluecoat in Liverpool for this rare chance to hear Australia’s leading contemporary poet reading from his work. One of The Reader magazine’s favourite living poets (there are three, guess the other two). His new two-issue series on the best Australian poets begins in issue 30 of the magazine, available in June. Read the editorial for issue 30 here.

Les Murray, is visiting Liverpool on Wednesday 4th June. Be in his company as he reads his poetry and signs copies of his collections. This is an exceptional opportunity not to be missed!

Les Murray, Wednesday 4th June, 8pm, at the Bluecoat. Tickets £5/3 available from the Bluecoat box office: 0151 702 5324, or click here to book online.

Published by Jen on 28 May 2008

Imagine… Doris Lessing

Doris LessingLast night, BBC 1 broadcast a tribute programme about Doris Lessing, winner of the 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature. Presented by Alan Yentob, Imagine… Doris Lessing: The Hostess and the Alien, tells the story of Lessing’s personal life and literary career: her early years in uncultivated Rhodesia, her perpetually difficult relationship with her mother, her fervent political and spiritual beliefs.

Jane Davis, Director of The Reader Organisation, was a contributor to this programme, leading a training reading group with colleagues and undergraduate students at the University of Liverpool.

Reading Lessing’s novel Shikasta, “had an astonishing affect on me”, says Jane. It was this book that set off an electrical current that powered the development of The Reader Organisation. Jane’s aspirations for a Reading Revolution have been inspired by Lessing’s ardent beliefs: “We own a legacy of languages, poems, histories, and it is not one that will ever be exhausted” (Nobel lecture 2007); great books help us to be human.

The Reader Organisation believes that reading is a force for social good that can build community and enhance lives. It is our aim to ensure that quality literature is accessible to all: to engage people of all ages and backgrounds in sharing this resource. Lessing’s plea to Jane to “Read. Read more” has affected not only her life but the lives of many people who otherwise wouldn’t have had the opportunity, or inclination, to pick up a book.

If you missed the programme last night, it is available to watch on BBC iplayer for the next seven days (until Tuesday June 3, 2008). You can also read an interview with Doris Lessing, first published in The Reader magazine, issue 17, Spring 2005.

Posted by Jen Tomkins

Published by Chris on 27 May 2008

More Howard Jacobson in a Soho Restaurant

The first of these clips is here, along with some truly terrible poetry in the comments.

Many thanks to Howard Jacobson for allowing us to use these clips.

Published by Jen on 27 May 2008

On Not Reading Moby Dick

Kimberley Long is a former volunteer at The Reader Organisation. In this installment of her Japanese Diary she discovers that a book of the world doesn’t measure up to the world itself.

‘Call me Ishmael’. I read the first line of Moby Dick as I packed it into my carry-on luggage. It’s one of those iconic first lines, like the opening to Rebecca. It jumps from the page and drags you inside. The character instructs us to call him Ishmael, but we know nothing about him; it may not even be a name he has used until that moment. And for me not knowing is the way it had to remain. Despite all my excitement at reading this marvelous-looking book, real life intervened. When it comes to Moby Dick, I have nothing to review.

The reason for this is that every May in Japan several public holidays fall together to create the wondrous, and fantastically named, Golden Week. It’s the perfect opportunity to travel while taking the minimum of paid leave. A mass exodus of language teachers ensues as we spread far and wide to explore what everything that the right hand side of the world map has to offer. I was off to spend my Golden Week holiday as a slightly prolonged Golden Fortnight in Australia. While I had every intention of coming back with tales of my own adventure against the backdrop of Melville’s masterpiece, I was having too much fun to get around to reading it.

I had a lot of travel time between planes and coach journeys, and thought the book would be there to help me pass these tedious hours. But in the end I spent my journeys people watching, and spying on what everyone else was reading. It seems that short but powerful reads are the mainstay of the gap year travellers, with sightings of various Orwells and Kerouac’s On the Road while taking the tram around Melbourne. Even the ditzy blonde I was sharing my hostel dorm with one night in Sydney preferred an evening in with Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas to coming out partying with me and some university friends. All of this analysis of other people’s reading wasn’t getting me on the hunt of that elusive whale though.

It wasn’t that I didn’t want to read it. I searched for time in Sydney but was distracted by the pure white sails of the opera house and the intrepid types scaling the Harbour Bridge. Three jam packed days of sightseeing in Melbourne saw encounters with wombats, koalas, and even a particularly aggressive kangaroo that decided to grab my arm and not let go. But no sightings of any whales, physical or otherwise. Travelling alone is a surprisingly social experience. It’s almost impossible to get a moment to yourself as there’s always someone who wants you to go drink, eat, or play pool. Saying you want a quiet night in with a good book is rarely an option.

So the days passed and I still hadn’t done any reading. I did once pull the book from my bag somewhere on a twelve hour journey between Sydney and Melbourne, but I couldn’t bring myself to read it. Compared with watching the scenery whiz past in a blur of golden earth and bush contrasted against cloudless blue skies, hiding from my adventure inside the foxed pages of a 150 year-old novel seemed absurd.

I suppose in some ways this is the absolute antithesis of a review, but I think it’s really just a reminder of what we sometimes forget: that as great an experience as reading is, the adventure around you is often more compelling than what’s happening on the page. The book is currently lying unread with a pile of paper and my open, overflowing diary stacked on top of it next to my laptop. The manga sticker I was using for a bookmark is still jutting out of the top of the first page. And the man called Ishmael still has his story to tell.

By Kimberley Long

[Editor's Note: If you now feel you would really quite like to read about Moby Dick, click here to read an excitable recommendation that was published in The Reader magazine, issue 15, back in 2004. Buy back issues, single copies, and subscriptions to the magazine here.]

Published by Chris on 26 May 2008

Featured Poem: Ephemera, by W.B Yeats

This week’s poem is recommended by Kirsty McHugh of the OUP Blog and Otherstories. Thanks Kirsty.

I only read this poem by Yeats recently because of an essay I was writing, but I was immediately struck by the sadness and resignation that runs through it. We see a couple in the autumn of their relationship, and we overhear their final conversation: the muted agreement that the “love is waning”. While the poem itself is shot through with the imagery that came to characterize Yeats’s early work of nature, trees, and the cyclical life of the soul, it is also one of the most poignant and stunning evocations of dying love that I have ever read.

Ephemera by WB Yeats (written 1884, published 1889)

‘Your eyes that once were never weary of mine
Are bowed in sorrow under pendulous lids,
Because our love is waning.’

And then she:
‘Although our love is waning, let us stand
By the lone border of the lake once more,
Together in that hour of gentleness
When the poor tired child, Passion, falls asleep:
How far away the stars seem, and how far
Is our first kiss, and ah, how old my heart!’

Pensive they paced along the faded leaves,
While slowly he whose hand held hers replied:
‘Passion has often worn our wandering hearts.’

The woods were round them, and the yellow leaves
Fell like faint meteors in the gloom, and once
A rabbit old and lame limped down the path;
Autumn was over him: and now they stood
On the lone border of the lake once more:
Turning, he saw that she had thrust dead leaves
Gathered in silence, dewy as her eyes,
In bosom and hair.

‘Ah, do not mourn,’ he said,
‘That we are tired, for other loves await us;
Hate on and love through unripining hours.
Before us lies eternity; our souls
Are love, and a continual farewell.’

Published by Chris on 24 May 2008

Doris Lessing Documentary Features The Reader Organisation. BBC1, Tuesday May 27, 10.35pm.

Coming up on BBC1 on Tuesday May 27th, the Imagine series, presented by Alan Yentob, is running a documentary on Doris Lessing, featuring an interview with Jane Davis, Doris Lessing fanatic and Director of The Reader Organisation. Jen Tomkins wrote about the day the crew visited here.

Published by Chris on 22 May 2008

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle–Happy Birthday

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was born on May 22nd, 1859 and it’s been a big week for him. A copy of A Study in Scarlet, in a first printing of Beeton’s Christmas Annual 1887 was donated to an Oxfam charity shop in Harrogate and sold at auction for £15,500 (net) on Tuesday. Here’s the catalogue entry from Bonham’s:

Lot No: 67

DOYLE (ARTHUR CONAN)

A Study in Scarlet… Containing also Two Original Plays for Home Performance [in Beeton's Christmas Annual. Twenty-Eighth Season], FIRST PRINTING OF THE FIRST SHERLOCK HOLMES STORY, wood-engraved frontispiece and illustrations by D.H. Friston and W.M.R. Quick, title and contents leaf with advertisements on verso, some staining to pages 1 and 16/17, bookplate of George Arthur Hodgson, bound with 4 other Christmas special issues in contemporary half morocco, spine gilt (lettered “Christmas Annuals”), without original wrappers and advertisements, front hinge split, contents working loose [De Waal 416; Lilly, Detective Fiction 16], 8vo (207 x 130mm.), Ward, Lock & Co., [1887]

Doyle sold the rights to this story for £25. The current issue of The Reader magazine features an article of mine about A Study in Scarlet which you can read here. Full details of issue 29 of the magazine are available here.

[edit] A tipsy wink to The Bunburyist, for spotting this one.

Published by Chris on 19 May 2008

Featured Poem: Howard Jacobson surprised by joy in Soho restaurant

Over dinner in a Soho restaurant recently, Jane Davis asked Howard Jacobson to recite a poem. Here’s the result. Jane has form, by the way.

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