Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Wigtown Festival of the Book


Thurs 7 - Sunday 10 June
Wigtown

Wigtown Festival of the Book 2007

The 2007 Festival of the Book aims to bring you a wide angle view of the book - books in as many forms and meanings as we can, including: book binding, book making, paper making, calligraphy, layout & design, printing, libraries, newspapers, archives...

You'll find full information about the Festival of the Book, held in Scotland's Book Town, on the website, www.wigtown.org.uk.




Christine de Luca at the Bakehouse


Saturday June 30th at 7.00 for 7.30
The Bakehouse presents...

Shetland poet Christine DeLuca

Christine DeLuca is published both nationally and internationally, and writes in both Shetlandic and English. Her first two collections won The Shetland Literary Prize and in 2004 Makkin Sooth Eshaness, won the Rhoda Bulter Prize for Shetland Dialect. Poems have been translated into Swedish, Latvian, Polish, Austrian-German, French, Italian, Welsh and English.

"Her Shetland poems, written in the beautiful Scots of those islands - a blend of Old Scots and Norn - seemed to hanker for a simple and pure way of life which was marvellously evoked in image and sound .... They are poems with a sense of place, sympathy, commitment to language, the urge to celebrate life itself."
Douglas Lipton

Tickets £6.00 concs and regulars (includes a glass of wine); £7.50 until you join!
Ring 01557 814196 or email enquiries@thebakehouse.info or chryssalt2@aol.com.
Book early to avoid disappointment.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Catriona McPherson on Crime Prize Shortlist


Catriona McPherson's society sleuth Dandy Gilver is making crime waves: After the Armistice Ball, the first novel by the New Galloway writer, has been shortlisted for the industry-acclaimed Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year. It's billed as the only literary prize of its kind to be decided by the public and is online here as part of this year's Harrogate Festival. Cast your vote on the site or in any branch of Waterstone's.




Thursday, May 10, 2007

Wigtown Poetry Competition Winners 2007

Congratulations to the winners of the 2007 Wigtown Poetry Competition, judged by Jackie Kay and Rody Gorman (Gaelic judge). Look out for the judges' reports being posted on the competition website shortly.

Ist Prize
My Darling, My Cliché - Kathryn Simmonds

2nd Prize
Pride - Judy Brown

3rd Prize
Odysseus and the Sou’Wester - Jen Hadfield

Gaelic Prize
An fhior bheinn - Aonghas MacNeacail


Commended Poems
Pigeon’s Egg - Isla Duncan
Lead, Kindly Light - Jennifer Copley
Tabernacles - Atar Hadari
Aftermath of Love - Chloe Morrish
Parasites - Christie Williamson
Night Train from Parma - Anna Wigley
The Dead - David Winston Lee
The Hardest Lines - Ronald Kerr
In a Small and Private Room - Anne Stewart
Agoraphobic in Love - Kathryn Simmonds

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Tom Pow & Hugh McMillan at the Bakehouse


Saturday June 2nd 7.00pm for 7.30pm
The Bakehouse presents...

KNOCKOUT! Readings from new publications by Tom Pow and Hugh McMillan

Tom Pow's new work TRANSFUSION, a poem in praise of two twentieth century icons -Muhammad Ali and Nelson Mandela - takes us on a dramatic journey across the landscapes of Africa. It is a frieze against which heroic acts take place, ones which have become part of our own biographies.Performed by Tom Pow and Tony Bonning. And Hugh McMillan reads from STRANGE BAMBOO, his sparkling new collection of ten years of poetry.

Tickets £6.50 (includes a glass of wine)To book phone the Dumfries and Galloway Arts Festival Box Office 01387 260447 or The Bakehouse 01557 814196

Friday, April 27, 2007

Online Worksheet: Novel Writing with David Bishop

A few weeks back, novelist, screenwriter and general tornado David Bishop ran an excellent workshop on novel writing in Dumfries. Sadly, a few people had to be turned away, but don't despair - David has kindly provided an online version, which is now on the DG Writers' Hub right here. He takes a refreshingly realistic look at the life of a working writer. Essential reading for anyone with that novel still inside them, and wondering how to bring it out.

'...You enjoy the physical process of working with words. You experience a vicarious thrill from entering the worlds within your imagination, from being surprised by your characters and your choices...'

'...books are written one word, one sentence, one paragraph and one page at a time...'

David Bishop's writing blog.

Hugh McMillan - Strange Bamboo


Hugh McMillan’s fourth full collection ‘Strange Bamboo’ is about to be released by Shoestring Press. This book reveals him as one of Scotland’s sharpest and most accessible talents. His subject matter ranges from the local to the universal but all is observed with clarity, an unsentimental compassion and, often, a rollicking sense of fun.

Much modern poetry is portentous and self-consciously clever. McMillan’s is, as Robert Nye once pointed out, “ a breath of fresh air.”

“McMillan is unique in the angle and tone of his attack on the familiar.” Ian Duhig

Strange Bamboo ISBN-13 978 1 904886 51 8 £8.95 from Shoestring Press
Visit Hugh's
podcast
and poetry blog.

*****

Out of the Way

Lydia has pink sandals

and butterfly clips:

it’s sunny in the gardens,

the grass tiger stripes,


the news only a distant wheeze

from a kitchen radio,

drowned by bees,

a breeze, the birdsong.


This is why we’re here:

nothing to worry over

but tumbles on soft lawns,

that and the vicious roar


of fighter bombers, spinning

like needles over garden sheds,

practicing pitching bombs

on babies’ heads.


Thursday, April 26, 2007

Writers on Writing: Interview with Jacob Polley

The second in our new series of audio interviews with working writers, giving a unique insight into their art, craft and inspiration.

Jacob Polley

Poet Jacob Polley is one of the 2004 Next Generation poets, and a Eric Gregory Award winner (2002). His new collection, Little Gods, is published by Picador.

Here he talks about getting started in poetry, his inspiration and his process. This interview was recorded during a recent reading in Dumfries as part of the acclaimed Poetry Doubles series.

'...it comes from the desire to create something, to make a mark on paper...'

'...in order to write, you need to be reading...'


'...reading is about learning the sinews of other people's work...'

To hear Jacob Polley's audio interview, click here. For the general podcast page, click here.

Please be patient - 2MB file.
© 2007 Jacob Polley.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

'Markings' Launch with Alan Franks


Saturday April 28th, 7 for 7.30pm
The Bakehouse 44, High Street, Gatehouse of Fleet


An evening of poetry and songs to launch the latest issue of 'Markings' magazine.

Alan Franks is a poet, playwright, novelist, Times feature writer, diarist, humourist and musician and winner of four major poetry competitions (including Wigtown) in the last three years! One of his songs, The Wishfulness Waltz, is the title track of a recent compilation CD by the Fairport Convention.'

"…(Alan's) poems show a great ear, exude a terrific confidence and imaginative freedom - and a reckless, romantic drama that you'd have to have a heart of stone to remain unmoved by." Don Paterson

'Franks' songs are wonderfully true, complex, addictive things. I wish I think, write and play like him….This is the real thing, I promise.' Jake Thackray

Alan will be followed by readings from contributors to Markings 24.
Tickets £7.50 (£6.00 concs). To book ring 01557 814196 or email bookings@thebakehouse.info or chryssalt2@aol.com, or take a chance on the door.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Writers on Writing: Interview with Eleanor Yule

The first in our new series of audio interviews with working writers, giving a unique insight into their art, craft and inspiration.

First off the block: Eleanor Yule

Eleanor Yule is a screenwriter and Scottish BAFTA-winning director whose many screen credits include the feature film Blinded, and awarding-winning documentaries for the BBC (RD Laing, Muriel Spark and the Scottish colourists).

Here, Eleanor Yule talks about the differences between writing for the screen and other media, and opportunities for screenwriters in Scotland.

'...really what screenworks are about is a present-tense narrative unravelling in front of your eyes...'

'...screenwriting, more than any other kind of writing, is an understanding of the film-making process...'


'...if you're coming from novel-writing, you carry a lot of baggage... the narrator is very powerful, the internal world of the protagonist is hard to do filmically...'

To head direct to the audio interview, click here. For the general podcast page, click here.

Please be patient - 2MB file.
© 2007 Eleanor Yule.