Archive for February, 2010

Published by Jen on 26 Feb 2010

Sold Out: The Reading Cure Event

On Tuesday 2nd March, we officially launch Get Into Reading London at ‘The Reading Cure’, a special event at RIBA for health professionals, writers and publishers, commissioners and  community organisations interested in Get Into Reading.

Speaking at the event will be:

The event has sold out and we’re hoping that this will mean big things for Get Into Reading London, so watch this space… the Reading Revolution is growing!

Published by Jen on 25 Feb 2010

Job Opportunity: Get Into Reading Project Worker Belfast

  • Part-time (1 day per week)
  • 3 year contract

About the role:

The Reader Organisation is seeking an exceptional individual to work on a new project in Hydebank Prison, Belfast.
We have secured funding to run a Get Into Reading pilot in two women’s prisons, one of which will be Hydebank Women’s Prison, Belfast, Northern Ireland. This is challenging and ground-breaking work and we need to find an individual who is a tremendously committed reader, who understands the comforting and possibly redemptive power of books, and who is able to share that passionate understanding with others. The successful candidate will be committed to the ethos of The Reader Organisation. We will offer specific and relevant training.

The role requires you to set up a range of Get Into Reading experiences for women in the prison – some will be one-to-one, others group sessions and to introduce a culture of shared reading into the prison. Other work may involve children/families of the women. We expect to start the project in April 2010.  We would look to develop more work in or near Belfast if the successful candidate wishes to work more hours.

You will need to undergo full vetting procedures including an enhanced CRB check.

How to apply:

Please send a full CV and a letter of application – no more than 3 sides A4 – which will show what reading means to you and how you can pass it on to others to   Jane Davis, Director of The Reader Organisation: janedavis@thereader.org.uk.

Please talk about specific reading experiences/books/poems that mean a lot to you. Tell us about your reading experience – breadth and depth. Tell us about your life experience and how that might fit you for the job. We expect most candidates will have a degree in literature, but this is not a formal requirement for the post.

Deadline for applications: 5.00pm Friday 26th March. Please note: applications arriving after this deadline will not be considered. Please make sure your contact details include a phone number by which we can contact you if you are called for interview.

Interviews will be held on Tuesday 13th April, Belfast (venue t.b.c.)

Published by Jen on 24 Feb 2010

Penny Readings 2010: Date Announced and Limited Tickets Available NOW!

Well, no, that time of year is not quite upon us yet BUT we did promise all you eager Penny Readings goers that there would be six tickets put up on eBay each month (from February until the event) for you to bid for.

The date of this year’s Penny Readings has now been confirmed as Sunday 5th December at St. George’s Hall, so if you don’t want to miss out on your chance to attend this hugely popular event, get in there now and bid away! You have ten days to bid for February’s tickets. Click here to bid.

For those of you intrigued to know what it’s all about, or for those that attended last year and heard Alexei Sayle, Frank Cottrell Boyce, Roger Phillips and many others and would like to relive some of the highlights, here’s a short video of the Penny Readings 2009 (which is also being shown on the BBC Big Screens in Manchester and Liverpool):

The Penny Readings from Jane Taylor on Vimeo.

Published by Jen on 24 Feb 2010

Event: What a Wonderful Wirral!

WHAT A WONDERFUL WIRRAL!

Friday, March 12th 2010
10.00am to 3.30pm
Birkenhead Town Hall

Volunteering Wirral and the Cascade project are hosting a joint event, to  showcase the skills and talents of Wirral people, to celebrate volunteering and to promote good practice in volunteer management.

The Deputy Mayor Councillor Alan Jennings will perform the opening ceremony which will be followed by a full day of entertainment and displays.

Activities include: belly dancing, cookery, poetry, healthy lifestyles, African drumming, arts and crafts, martial arts, songwriting, Wirral Green Orchestra, workshops stalls and information desks, BBC Radio Merseyside’s A Team and the Up for Arts Project.

Help celebrate what makes Wirral such a wonderful place to live, work and volunteer in and explore one of Wirral’s iconic buildings in its full glory.

For further information call us at Volunteering Wirral on either 0151 647 5432 (Option1), or 644 7577.

Published by Lisa on 22 Feb 2010

Featured Poem: That Music Always Round Me by Walt Whitman

I have a confession to make: music is, and always has been, my first love in life. Reading comes a very close second, but a passion for music has been instilled in me ever since vinyl records were played to me to get me off to sleep as a baby, through to the cheesy-pop filled days of my early teenage years, up to the present day where I dabble in a bit of everything, but my tastes generally lie in the alternative direction. As I’ve got older, songs have transformed for me from something to dance and sing along to (rather badly, in the case of singing) to things to be appreciated on a much deeper level. They can be at times an intense form of expression, something to console in times of despair and an accompaniment in times of joy, are even an art form. Considering this, music and poetry are close cousins.

The link between the two was revived in the public eye recently, perhaps in a controversial way, when Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy declared the Arctic Monkeys to be modern-day poets. For some, this comparison adds fuel to the fire that poetry is being increasingly ‘dumbed down’, needing to have an arguably more popular relation in order to appear relevant to a younger audience. In my opinion the connection isn’t necessarily bad, even though I personally don’t class the Arctic Monkeys to be the most poetic band of the current scene. Alex Turner certainly isn’t a Tennyson, and while they’re more likely to talk about late night rendezvous in nightclubs and the occasional run-in with the law as opposed to anything more quintessentially Romantic, their lyrics certainly do paint a picture. When this picture encapsulates the life experiences of so many then surely, there is something of the poetic there, even if it isn’t quite conventional.

Of course, like so many things in life – indeed, as it is with poetry – it’s entirely subjective and all down to personal taste. I have quite an obsession with lyrics and find myself often not so much listening to a song as analysing its lyrical content. It just fascinates me how singular words can be placed together to say something quite profound and beautiful, in poetry and music alike. There are certain bands and musicians who for me write lyrics that are so eloquent and striking that they wouldn’t be out of place in a poem. To be so personally affecting and to sum up a feeling in a way you could hardly even begin to imagine – that’s where both songs and poetry succeed above no other. This week’s featured poem, a celebration of music in itself, puts it rather nicely by highlighting the notions of emotion and, perhaps especially importantly, understanding – by reading poetry and listening to songs, we come some way to knowing those behind them more intimately. Very often, we find out more about ourselves through them too.

That Music Always Round Me

That music always round me, unceasing, unbeginning–yet long untaught
I did not hear;
But now the chorus I hear, and am elated;
A tenor, strong, ascending, with power and health, with glad notes of
day-break I hear,
A soprano, at intervals, sailing buoyantly over the tops of immense
waves,
A transparent bass, shuddering lusciously under and through the
universe,
The triumphant tutti–the funeral wailings, with sweet flutes and
violins–all these I fill myself with;
I hear not the volumes of sound merely–I am moved by the exquisite
meanings,
I listen to the different voices winding in and out, striving,
contending with fiery vehemence to excel each other in emotion;
I do not think the performers know themselves–but now I think I
begin to know them.

Walt Whitman (1819-1892)

Published by Jen on 19 Feb 2010

2010 Dylan Thomas Prize Announced

The competition is underway for the 2010 Dylan Thomas Prize, the world’s top literary prize for young writers. The annual prize, named in honor of the famous Welsh writer and poet, and sponsored by the government of Wales, brings with it international prestige as well as a cash award of £30,000 ($46,000).

The Prize honors its shortlist finalists and annual winner for published work in the broad range of literary forms in which Dylan Thomas excelled, including poetry, prose, fictional drama, short story collections, novels, novellas, stage plays and screenplays.

The official launch of the 2010 Prize will take place this year at a ceremony and reception hosted at the British Consulate-General in Boston on March 1. Special guests and speakers will include Harvard Review Editor Christina Thompson, Tessa Dahl and former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky.

Entries for the competition must be submitted by the publisher, editor, literary agent, or in the case of produced film scripts and stage plays, by the producer. Writers must be 18-30 years old, and the literary works must have been published within the past year to be eligible for competition.

Submission deadline is April 30, 2010.

Published by Jen on 18 Feb 2010

Les Soeurs Anglaises: Workshops and Courses

Ever fancied learning, or brushing up on, a skill in the French sunshine?

Les Soeurs Anglaises run three and five day textile, creative writing, and dance workshops led by the very best, and most experienced, internationally renowned artists/teachers. Our 2010 programme includes a ‘Poetry in Motion’ 5 day workshop led by internationally respected poet Roger McGough, as well as screenwriting, crime, and creative writing courses – all led by masters of their genre.

Published by Jen on 17 Feb 2010

Official Re-launch of Toxteth Library

Today marks the official re-launching of Toxteth Library – following a £1.3m Big Lottery refurbishment.

To celebrate, Toxteth Library will host a  mini-festival called Through The Eye of The Tiger .There will be lots of community based activities taking place both inside Toxteth Library and in the natural square formed between the library and Windsor House Health Centre just across Windsor Street.

Eleanor Stanton, our Get Into Reading Project Worker based at Toxteth Library, will be there to tell people about the project and hopefully, recruit a few members for her reading groups at the library.

All of the activities – including tai chi, dance classes, food stalls and learning advice – will commence from 1pm and be available through to 8pm at night – we hope that you can make it down there to show your support.

Published by Jen on 16 Feb 2010

Book Launch: The Mourning Tree – the autobiography of Mohamed Barud Ali

Saturday, 20 Feb. 2010 at 4pm
Oxford House, Derby Shire Street, E2 6GH

The Mourning Tree: an autobiography and a memoir of prison, by Mohamed Barud Ali

Kayd Somali Arts and Culture in collaboration with redsea-online.com is proudly inviting you to the presentation of new book: Weerane (The Mourning Tree), autobiography by Mohamed Barud Ali. Join them to discuss this new autobiography with the author and also mark and commemorate with us, the students protest (20 Feb 1982, erupted 28 years ago in Hargeysa) demanding justice and the release of UFFO members.

This prison memoir will not only give first-hand information of the experience of the brutalities of Siyad Barre’s Somalia but also of the life of a nomad child who is brought to the city to live with his aunt because there was no work for him due to the fact that his father did not own any camels to be looked after. In the city while growing up, hunger was never far away. That motivated Mahamed to perform well at school which gave him the opportunity to go to the United Kingdom.  After he earned his university degree, he went back to his home town Hargeysa where he met young professionals’ like him. They decided to volunteer for their community, what became to be known by the international community as Hargeysa Self-help group and locally as UFFO. For their noble acts, Mahamed and his colleagues were imprisoned and what followed were eight long lonely years, where the studying of insects was the main entertainment of the day.  The reasons why they were freed, while at the same time the rest of their community had been destroyed, were as strange and surprising as the reasons why they were jailed in the first place were bizarre. There was no time in Mohamed’s life to get depressed or discouraged when he and his group were freed as the reconstruction of the country had to start immediately.

The other speakers are Jama Musse Jama; director of Red Sea online (publisher of The Mourning Tree), Rashiid Sheikh Abdullahi; Author  and expert on Somali culture,  Martin Hill; the former director of Amnesty International Somalia desk and researcher who was involved in this case, Judith Gardner; author Somalia–the Untold Story: The War through the Eyes of Somali Women, Adan Warsame Said; the author’s friend and fellow prisoner, Fawzia Yousuf H Adam; The Director of Raad, I.M Lewis; Emeritus  professor at The London School of Economics and Political Science (TBC) and others…

The Mourning Tree: an autobiography and a memoir of prison, by Mohamed Barud Ali is the first of “Rag & Dumar” series, which is a selected list of biography books, published and distributed by Ponte Invisibile Ed.

Mahamed Barud Ali is civil right activist, Hero to some, the prisoner of conscience under the brutal regime of Somalia; he lives in Hargeysa, with his wife and children and works on issues relating to human rights and civil liberties.

Join us to discuss this new autobiography with the author and also mark and commemorate with us on Saturday, 20 Feb. 2010, 4pm at Oxford House, Derby Shire Street, E2 6GH. For more information call 07903712949; or email: ayan_mahamoud@kayd.org; website: www.kayd.org

Published by Lisa on 16 Feb 2010

Three Score and Ten: Charting lives through literature

Often you’ll hear people talk of a book as being “a book for an age” for the way it describes a certain era’s fads and fashions so clearly you feel as if you were living there yourself, for its sharp social commentary or just simply for the way it perfectly fits with a period of time. But how about finding a book for your own age – where the protagonist (or one character) is the same age as you, if not quite your exact literary equivalent then your literary peer at least.

Three Score and Ten is an intriguing take on a literary blog, charting quite literally a life through literature. The idea is simple enough; for every year of a near average lifespan (if you were wondering where the name originated from), quotes from two fictional characters – one male, one female – are picked out to illustrate a particular age, the physical markings or psychological whirrings that accompany a stage in the journey of an individual. Even those events we could hardly know or remember anything about – conception and birth – are covered, as well as that unchartered territory, the final destination – death itself.

The man on this literary mission is Wayne Gooderham, whose ideas for Three Score and Ten and general fascination with the relationship between ages and literature can be perused in this article for The Guardian. As well as being a fun project and the product of what some might call a slight obsession, the aims of Three Score and Ten are more far-reaching – in his pursuit, Wayne is reading every book he selects quotes from in their entirety, stretching his own literary comfort zone in the process. Readers of the blog are also encouraged to read something they perhaps wouldn’t usually choose; if they’ve just turned a certain age and want to chart their own year with that of a character, or simply just like a particular quote, then the information is all there to allow them to do so.

What I like about Three Score and Ten, aside from its interactive potential, is that it taps into the notion that we can use literature to identify with ourselves and others. In my opinion, books are a great tool for doing this. And to match yourself with a fictional character can be informative, even if you find your own trials and tribulations don’t quite measure up with that of the literary figure you share your age with. Also, it’s quite interesting to discover whether certain characters that stand as timeless representations of a particular period in life really are just that, or whether they change with time and new perspectives as we do ourselves.

As my 24th birthday is approaching, I think I will definitely have to make an appointment to read The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford – one of the latest additions to the anthology – in the next twelve months. Three Score and Ten is updated with quotes for a new age on a weekly basis.

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