Friday, December 22, 2006

'Craiturs' Launch


'Craiturs: Snapshots of Life from Dumfries & Galloway and beyond'
Stories and Poems by Alex Berry and Elaine Palmer
Edited by Hamish MacDonald

Join Alex Berry, Elaine Palmer and Hamish MacDonald for the launch of 'Craiturs', a special anthology from Hamish's 'Writing from Life' work during his time as Robert Burns Fellow with Dumfries & Galloway Arts Association. Alex and Elaine will be reading poems and stories based on their own experiences, and Hamish will be introducing the book and giving a flavour of his own work during the past year. Free event.

Lochthorn Library, Dumfries
Wednesday 17th January 7:30pm

Bladnoch Distillery, Bladnoch, Wigtown
Thursday 18th January 7.00pm

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Storytelling at the Farm

Stories, songs and music to see you through the long winter...
Castle Creavie Farm near Kirkcudbright is holding a series of monthly story gatherings by the fire. All are welcome to bring along a story, song or music, or just sit and enjoy the evening.

Dates and themes are as follows:
13th December - Deep Mid-Winter Tales for a Winter's Night
17th January - Deezing and Thawing
21st February - Candlemas, Flittings and Hirings
21st March - Ides of March: Madness and Hope
18th April - Birth and Youth

All evenings start at 7pm (refreshments) for 7.30pm
Suggested contribution: £5 (£3 concessions), including refreshments.
For more information, contact Charlie or Elaine Wannop 01557 500238 cwannop@ccrc.demon.co.uk or John Wheeler on 01664 450683

Monday, December 04, 2006

In the Saddle Hits the Spot

Castle Douglas author Anthony Davis has scored a big hit with football fans with his recently published story of a remarkable cycle ride. In the Saddle for the Saddlers describes his 184-mile round trip to Liverpool to support his beloved Walsall 40 years ago. The book comes with lavish illustrations and offers 'a delightful cameo of football following in 1961'. Copies are available from Tony Davis at 60 St Andrew St, Castle Douglas, DG7 1EN, price £4.95 + £1 p+p.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Infirmary Anthology from Judi Benson


D&G Royal Infirmary Writer in Residence Judi Benson has edited an inspiring collection of work by hospital staff and patients as part of her work with the oncology department. 'Not Just Words' brings together nearly 70 writers, among them consultants, nurses, carers, spouses, volunteers, archivists, psychologists, admin personnel, as well as patients and poets in the community. The predominant form is the one-word sonnet devised by Augustus Young, and poems encompass joy, sorrow, pain and levity on a range of themes, including the hospital setting.

A percentage of income from sales will go to The Macmillan Unit at Dumfries & Galloway Royal Infirmary.

Both Sides of Hadrian's Wall


Saturday 18th November
2-6pm County Hotel, Selkirk


Several of the region's writers are represented in a new cross-border poetry anthology, Both Sides of Hadrian's Wall, which is being launched in Selkirk. Published by Selkirk's Lapwing Press, the anthology includes over 70 poets from around the Scottish-English border area. For more information, email editor Robert Leach at Selkirk Lapwing Press.

Linda Cracknell Fiction Workshop


December 6th
5.30-7.30pm
Drama Studio, Glasgow University Crichton Campus, Dumfries

A return visit to Crichton Writers from fiction writer and playwright Linda Cracknell, after her inspiring 'Getting Started' session for short story writers earlier this year. Participants must submit first and last paragraphs of a new story in advance.

Info: Vivien Jones 01461 700396

Don Paterson at The Bakehouse


Saturday December 2nd

The Bakehouse proudly presents….

Don Paterson
Poet and musician
Winner of the TS Eliot Prize and the Whitbread Prize for Poetry
Don will read from various collections and from Orpheus, his recently published and brilliantly reviewed version of Rilke's Die Sonette an Orpheus, and play his guitar.

7.00pm for 7.30pm £6.00/£5.00 concs (includes a glass of wine). Info 01557 814196.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Opening for D&G Screenwriters


The Glasgow Media Access Centre has opened its doors to applications from budding filmmakers in Dumfries & Galloway, following on from its recent visit to the region. The deadline for submissions is Wednesday 22nd November. Successful applicants will be invited to join the G-MAC Talent Pool and be offered training over a two-month period (evening and weekend sessions) with a view to a possible film commission. The project is open to fledgling writers, directors and producers in the areas of drama, animation and documentary. For more information, visit the G-MAC website, www.g-mac.co.uk or contact the D&G Screen Commissioner, Mark Geddes, on 01387 263 666.

Flash Fiction Prizegiving & Podcast


Flash Fiction Online
Wednesday 1st October, 7pm
Georgetown Library

Readings, drinks and discussion to celebrate the small but perfectly formed...
The winners of D&G Flash Fiction Competition read their stories and look forward to appearing online in a podcast recorded by at the region's indie radio station, Southwest Sound. Some 80 came in from across the region, with the overall winner Sally Jordan of Lockerbie, with her wonderful story, Onions. She receives an original artwork specially commissioned from artist Andrew Foley to illustrate the winning story.

More information from Jules Horne at DGAA on 01387 253383.

Wigtown Poetry Anthology 2005


The 2005 Wigtown Poetry Competition Anthology is out now from Dumfries & Galloway Arts Association and the Wigtown Book Town Company. Produced in association with the Sunday Herald and the Scottish Poetry Library, it includes the winning and commended poems alongside judges' reports from Don Paterson and Aonghas Macneacail. Copies at £3 from DGAA on 01387 253383 (Andrew Forster), or email andrew@dgaa.net.

Eskdale Shoot - New Crime Fiction from the South



The crime fiction wave sweeping the south of Scotland continues with a new thriller just out from William Mutch. Eskdale Shoot is set in the world of rural forestry, and promises to be the first in a series featuring Peter Thorburn as an unwilling amateur sleuth.

On the eve of his wedding, Thorburn finds himself embroiled in a mire of murder, tampered evidence and harassment. Someone is framing him for murder. With his belief in the integrity of the police destroyed, Thorburn takes the investigation into his own hands, leading to a violent climax in Eskdale...

For more on Eskdale Shoot and other books by William Mutch, visit his website.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Scottish Screen Open Meetings


Thursday 26th October
2-4pm
Robert Burns Centre, Dumfries

Scottish Screen is hosting a series of open meetings throughout Scotland during the autumn, aimed at hearing views on how Scottish Screen can best support film and the wider screen sector in the future, particularly now as it prepares to become an important part of Creative Scotland, the new strategic body for all the arts in Scotland. Ken Hay, Chief Executive of Scottish Screen said of the meetings: "I am really pleased to have the opportunity to take Scottish Screen around the country and to meet some of the communities we are here to serve and develop. These are interesting and challenging times for the screen industries in Scotland and we hope these meetings will give people the chance to hear what Scottish Screen are doing and to air their views. I urge everyone with an interest in the future of the screen industries in Scotland to come along and have their say."

If you wish to attend the meeting, please e-mail:
rsvpdumfries@scottishscreen.com

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Return of Story Nation

Sat 7th October
7.30 pm
St John's Town of Dalry High School
Monday 9th October
Kirkpatrick Durham Hall

Dogstar Theatre Company present...
The Heretic's Tale
A chance to see Hamish MacDonald's play which was part of last year's 'Story Nation' spectacular during his tenure as Robert Burns Fellow. A revised version of the play is currently touring Scotland,and so it's a chance to see something of what you missed, or to refresh your memory with this new version of the play.

Tickets £7.00 (£5.00 concessions) from 01644 420374 (Dalry) or 01387 253383 (Kirkpatrick Durham)

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Calling First-Time Film-Makers

Tuesday 3rd October
7-8.30 pm
Gracefield Arts Centre

Have you ever wanted to make a film but don't know how to go about it?

Do you have an idea for a film but don't have the resources to make it yourself?

Come along to Gracefield and find out how you can make a short film in your region...

Dumfries & Galloway Screen Commission is bringing Scottish film-makers and producers to the region in a unique trawl for new talent. They'll be highlighting a number of schemes on offer to first-time writers and production teams, to encourage applicants from every corner of Scotland to take part.

These schemes are open only to non-students and over-18s, and no previous experience is necessary. Film-makers are looking in the first instance for short scripts with cracking ideas. Training and development will be offered to any writers, scripts or ideas that are taken further in this Scotland-wide initiative. Successful scriptwriters will be teamed up with professional production teams to make a high-quality broadcast product.

It's the first time GMAC has ventured forth outside the central belt to look for new talent - so this really is a rare chance to come forward, put your questions, and make crucial contact with film industry experts. Come along to Gracefield on 3rd to hear what it's all about!

And for more information on screenwriting, Screen Commissioner Mark Geddes has compiled an insider's guide full of valuable tips to download here.

***
Press release from GMAC:

Glasgow Media Access Centre – GMAC for short - has a history of nurturing, training and developing emerging film talent in Scotland.

This year, 2006-2007, GMAC will continue to support Scottish filmmakers with their short film initiatives called Cineworks and DigiCult.

Cineworks is looking for scripts from new writers and will commission ideas in the genres of animation, documentary and narrative fiction.

DigiCult is looking for ideas from new directors and writers who want to make innovative and experimental fiction films.

Both Cineworks and DigiCult are also looking for new producers.

Karen O’Hare, GMAC Short Film Coordinator, said,
“GMAC is looking for new filmmakers from across Scotland. We are looking for new stories from people who are traditionally under represented on screen in Scotland. GMAC actively encourages filmmakers to take risks both in storytelling and style so we hope to produce some radical and challenging films in 2007!”

Filmmakers will receive training and support from GMAC - hosted in their local area - to realise their films ideas.

The commissioned films will premiere at Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2007.

GMAC will be hosting a short film event at the Gracefield Art Centre, Dumfries on Tuesday 3rd October, from 7-8.30pm to promote this opportunity for local filmmakers.

There will be a chance to see some of last year’s Cineworks and DigiCult films and to meet the filmmakers who made them.

The GMAC Shorts team will also be in attendance to explain how you can apply to make a film with GMAC.

Don’t miss this opportunity to find out how you can become a new Cineworks or DigiCult filmmaker!

For more information on this event or interview requests please contact:
Mark Geddes, Screen Commissioner, Dumfries & Galloway Council, Gracefield Arts Centre, 28 Edinburgh Rd, Dumfries, DG1 1JQ
Tel: 01387 263666
Email:
markg@dumgal.gov.uk
Web: www.sw-scotland-screen.com

Love Lyrics Wanted! Valentine's Competition


Valentine's Day Competition

The Feral Choir, led by local songwriter Ali Burns, are looking for poetry and prose pieces on the theme of love, to form part of a Valentine’s performance consisting of music, song and spoken word to be performed at venues in February next year.

Due to the nature of the performance poems should be no more than 20 lines and prose pieces should be no more than 200 words.

Closing date for entries is Friday 8th December 2006

Entries will be selected by a panel

The Feral Choir have built a reputation for innovative performances, for their work in bringing a contemporary slant to traditional songs, and for integrating spoken word with music. The featured soloist for the performance is Polly Bolton, formerly with the Albion Band.

Send entries to the DGCommunity Writers' Forum

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Poetry Reading with John Hudson & Chrys Salt


Saturday October 7th
7pm
Whitehouse Gallery
47 St. Mary Street, Kirkcudbright
with John Hudson and Chrys Salt

Award-winning poets Chrys and John (right) have worked together for over ten years and have drawn crowds to performances across Britain. They have performed in major festivals across the UK, in Europe and the USA.
Of John: "He enjoys a robust and playful verse, wrestling with language and thought, pushing it towards new boundaries, always experimenting, always entertaining" Douglas Lipton, Galloway Standard
Of Chrys: "I was beguiled and delighted by the clear, unfacile fluency of her writing voice... her work will become widely known and loved, popular because it speaks out of past forms in a language so finely tuned it appears natural' Julia Casterton, Ambit

John and Chrys will be followed by the usual Bakehouse floor spots. The Fickle Tupperware Bowl of Fate comes to The Whitehouse!

Contact: 01557 330223 (The Whitehouse Gallery) or The Bakehouse 01557 814196 or chryssalt2@aol.com Tickets £6.50 (includes a glass of champagne)

National Poetry Day: Fiction Mix



Thursday 5th October
2pm - 4pm
Lochthorn Library
with Elspeth Murray and Richard Medrington


National Poetry Day Special Event:
'Novel Approach: Poetry for Fiction Readers'

Keeping with our tradition of special events for National Poetry Day, DGAA, in association with Dumfries and Galloway Library Service and the Scottish Poetry Library, presents 'Novel Approach'. Sometimes readers fancy trying poetry but don't know where to start. We've put together a list of twelve novels popular with book groups and paired them with poetry collections that, at the heart of them, share something with the novels. Elspeth Murray and Richard Medrington, popular poets and performers, have put together a special event where they'll read passages from the novels and match them with poems. If you want to try poetry but don't know where to start, this is the event for you. And if you already love poetry, it's a fresh approach. And, of course, it wouldn't be National Poetry day without the ever-popular Andrew Forster quiz!

Further info: andrew@dgaa.net 01387 253383.

Words Open Doors in Polmaddy


Sunday 1 October
10.30am - 12 noon
Polmaddy Settlement
1.30pm - 3.30pm
Kirroughtree Visitor Centre
with Vivien Jones and Jackie Galley

A creative writing workshop in a deserted fermtoun settlement, as part of the 2006 Doors Open Days in Dumfries and Galloway. Polmaddy was a settlement that flourished before the “improvements” and clearances of the 1800s, when farming in the region began to move away from traditional agriculture towards large-scale sheep and cattle farming. This place, which once supported a large number of people around communally organised fields, is now an evocative group of ruins: an inn, workshops, barns and a mill, the stones of cottages. Through the workshop you can explore among the ruins of Polmaddy, developing your own creative response to this landscape and its story.

To book your free places on either the morning or afternoon sessions, or both, please phone Solway Heritage on 01387 247543.

Artist's Book Workshop in Wanlockhead


Saturday 30th September
11am - 3pm
Wanlockhead Community Centre
with Liz Niven and Hugh Bryden

Writing and Book-making Workshop with poet-performer Liz Niven and poet-artist Hugh Bryden. Celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Miners' Library by creating a text and making an individual handcrafted book.

Tickets £7.00 from Liz Niven 01387 251621 or ln@lizniven.com

Writing Workshop: Succeeding as a Poet


Monday November 13th
11am-1pm
Room 127 (Drama Studio)
Glasgow University Crichton Campus, Dumfries

with Helena Nelson

Crichton Writers Workshop
‘Succeeding as a Poet’: From Private to Public

A workshop on 'building a profile' for developing writers. Helena Nelson, who runs HappenStance Press will outline some do's and don'ts, and help sort out in practical discussion what is and isn't an asset on your CV- and even whether you really need one. Then Andrew Philip, whose poetry chapbook Tonguefire was published by HappenStance last year, will share some of his experience, and read some of his poems.

Contact: Andy Forster on 01387 253383 or e-mail andrew@dgaa.net

Drama Writing Workshops with Bernard Kops


Mon 30-Tues 31 October
10am-1pm
The Bakehouse, Gatehouse of Fleet

A two-day workshop with distinguished stage, radio and TV dramatist Bernard Kops (Dreams of Anne Frank, The Hamlet of Stepney Green). In these workshops the playwright explores all the necessary elements that are needed to write a successful play. In the first instance the writer will concentrate on a unique study of the three essential twins at the foundation of playwriting. Dialogue and Character; Structure and Style; Story and Theme. The workshops will also look at the through line of everything, the critical exploration of the text and subtext, and the subtle interplay between the two; the right and left hand hemispheres of the brain; the separation of the disciplines; the emotional and creative side of oneself, plus the editorial and analytical process, and the input at a later stage that pulls the whole complex study into a unity. The work produced through all these stages will be demonstrated through readings.

Ring 01557 814196 or email chryssalt2@aol.comor bookings@thebakehouse.info.
Cost £30. 12 places available. Book early to avoid disappointment.

Poetry in the Wilds Writing Workshop


Saturday 21st October
10am-3pm
Caerlaverock Wildfowl and Wetlands Centre
with Jackie Galley

Poetry in the Wilds Writing Workshop
Modern Science and Old Stories
The acclaimed Poetry in the Woods series steps into new territory this Poetry in the Wilds workshop with ecologist and poet Jackie Galley. Caerlaverock attracts skeins of geese and swans to spend their winter in our region. Along with their wildlife heritage they have a rich cultural heritage in the folklore that explained their arrival in autumn and their return migration in spring. We will look at the modern science and old stories associated with these birds and develop our own interpretations.

Please bring a packed lunch, warm clothing and stout footwear.
Booking through Dumfries and Galloway Arts Association on 01387 253383 or andrew@dgaa.net. Cost £3.

Words & Music: The Lutar & The Mistress


Wednesday 27th September
7.30pm
Bladnoch Distillery

and


Sunday 8th October
6pm
Comlongan Castle

The Swallow Theatre presents...
The Galloway Consort:‘The Lutar & The Mistress’ A dramatised musical account of life at court in 16th century Scotland. Actors from The Swallow Theatre and musicians from The Galloway Consort have teamed up again to present a new work for the GaelForce Festival.

Full details in the GaelForce, Wigtown Book Festival and St Ninian Festival brochures.
Tel : 01461 700396 Tickets £5.00 on the door.

Poetry in the Wilds: Land or Sea?


Tuesday 26th September
10am-3pm
Wigtown County Buildings
with Jackie Galley

The acclaimed Poetry in the Woods series steps into new territory in a Poetry in the Wilds workshop with ecologist and poet Jackie Galley, in the stunning surroundings of Wigtown Bay. Wigtown Bay is just a few minutes walk from the County Buildings, but it is a different world, one of wide open skies and muddy estuaries. With the help of the local ranger we will walk along the dividing line between land and sea and use the experience to influence our poetry. Please bring a packed lunch, warm clothing and stout footwear.

Booking through Dumfries and Galloway Arts Association on 01387 253383 or andrew@dgaa.net. Cost £3.

Wigtown Poetry Competition Launch 2006


Saturday 23rd September
3pm
Bladnoch Distillery
with Jackie Kay and Rody Gorman

After its runaway success in 2005, Wigtown Poetry Competition launches its second year with judges Jackie Kay and Rody Gorman (Gaelic category). Hear from this year's judges what they look for in a poem, and hear them read from their own work into the bargain. There's also a chance to pick the new anthology featuring last year's winning and commended poems, produced in association with the Galloway Gazette.

Event free, with refreshments. Contact: Andrew Forster 01387 253383

Wigtown Festival Readers' Day


Friday 22 September
10am to 4pm
County Buildings, Wigtown

with Aline Templeton and Lisa Chaney


The annual Library Service/Wigtown Festival Readers' Day returns with a chance to engage with authors over books we've all read.
Crime writer Aline Templeton (right) will be discussing her first Marjory Fleming thriller 'Cold in the Earth', set in Galloway during the foot and mouth epidemic. Acclaimed biographer Lisa Chaney will talk about and read from 'Hide and Seek with Angels', her biography of JM Barrie. The day will also be scattered with group discussions, presentations from Readers' Groups and the usual giveaways.

Tickets available for morning and afternoon sessions separately. £5.00 each from the Wigtown festival office on 01988 403 222 (Reading Group members contact Bill Millar on BillMi@dumgal.gov.uk)

Friday, August 25, 2006

Flash Fiction Competition Winners

1 Onions by Sally Jordan

2 = Climbing to the Scottish Poetry Library by Alexander Berry

2= Shoes by Janette Walkinshaw

Runners-up:
Plastered by Peter Blake
We have to do something by Hugh Bryden
Community Spirit by Angela Everitt
Henrys Boots by Jim Gardiner
It was the most beautiful t-shirt… by Vivien Jones
Bark and Bite by Suneeta Rathore
Poker Chips by Giancarlo Rinaldi

Audience Award:
We have to do something by Hugh Bryden

To read the winning entries and notes from the judges, head for the D&G Community website over here.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Poetry Doubles Plus Poems

Presenting newly commissioned work from poets taking part in the latest Poetry Doubles series...

This year Poetry Doubles features some the finest poets in Dumfries & Galloway reading alongside visiting writers with international reputations. Here’s a chance to sample the work of the D&G poets with new poems from each of them. You can also get the flavour of the readings by downloading poetry podcasts from many of them.

***
The Retired Headmaster

The retired headmaster with the teleprinter moustache
Stutters over his halving garden gate
He is guarding his territory
Putting out his story
To match his interlocutor’s

He told me he was a writer
But he didn’t want to meet another writer
He was no good at that
He put it on hold
He has nothing to print

John Manson

***
A guid catch

Ye went fishin theday,
an cam hame
wi a cucumber.

It lay on wir kitchen table,
lang an thin an cool,
kiddin oan it wis a fish.

Ye’d fun it
in the boot o the car,
missed fae the message bags.

Slicin it fir tea the night,
its wee green seeds
scalin oot like pearl beads,

tae wir widden table,
marked and carved
fae aw wir weddit years,

A’m lookin at its skin
still firm an fresh,
an emerald rollin pin.

An gien thanks
fir wir lucky catch
preserved against
that many odds.

Liz Niven

***
My Father

Fathers were good to all my pals
lectured them about money
then bought them flats,
had doubts about their morality

but flitted them from place to place
at dead of night.
Oh my Dad’ll go spare
they’d cheerfully admit

as they phoned for loans.
At such times
I would remember my own
and his two pieces of advice:

how to remove your bayonet
from an enemy’s ribcage,
and how to disarm a maniac
coming at you from the stairs.

They thought their fathers weird
for having cardigans,
I thought mine odd
because he’d talk to men

who’d burned alive in 1942
and because of other things
I’d watched him do:
vault walls three times his size,

or sprint along a busy street
to punch my Mum. When he went,
it left a hole as a trepan might.
I have no idea where he ended up

though I knew he would live long,
as mad folk do.
Years down the line
I received a sentence or two,

written in his cramped
and delicate monkish way,
I wonder, it began,
if you remember me…

Hugh McMillan

***
River Reading

Lecture les pied dans l’eau –
Lodeve, 30 July 2005

In the shade of a Roman bridge
three poets gather to read from the banking.

A congregation is seated in the river, their feet
bathed by the cool, sun-stroked water.

There’s gentle comedy
in wet trouser-cuffs, in poet-tasters

lifting their feet like oystercatchers
from the slippy riverstones. Soon after

the reading begins a welcome breeze clears
name-tags from the table, topples a parasol

into the water. The Greek poet
doesn’t miss a beat, even when

the raised parasol blesses her with water.
A frisky setter now lollops along the river:

a natural free-verser, on dry land
he moves among the latecomers

shaking up their forms. A woman
in a long white dress - who earlier

had bared it to her thigh merely
to dip her foot in the water –

gives a self aware but silent laugh.
And indeed this is all so very interesting

how can words, rhythm, image
keep up? In fact as one sonorous poem

follows another how can you not wish
for the vitality of the other?

So –

a fierce gust of wind lifts the table up,
turns it in mid-air, landing it

in the river like a raft. The small dog
the presenter has thoughtfully brought

yaps at the sight. The setter bounds
from the river like an avenging angel.
The wind

has lifted the white dress up
over the woman’s head: through its funnel

we now hear her laughter, as circuits break,
microphones fall silent and the borrowed words

one by one return to their origins –
in stones, in leaves, in water, in light.

Tom Pow

***
“What is trowth?”

Whit wey wis Kendall-Smith pitten awa,
Wis it no the trowth he spak,
Agin thon wrongous war oot in Iraq?
His faur-i-the-buik philosophie wis nae defence,
Whan Bayliss said “Naw, naw, ye maunna speik…..”
He fairly stapt up Plato’s learned mou.
Did he no hear the souch o black-burnin shame,
As it whispert owre the decades tae his lug,
‘Div ye no mind the lessons o Nuremburg?’
Or aiblins mibbes it’s o.k.
Fir servin sodgers juist tae say,
“Ah wis anely follaein orders”,
Cause eftir aa, ony excuse wull dae;
‘Gif it wisnae you, it must hae bin yer faither’.
God help us, Tony, sort oot richt frae wrang,
Thon deidly wappenschaw, it must be true,
Whit’s that Voltaire? “Fable convenue”?
Thon’s typical o a cynic lik you.
Nou, here’s Apollo, the hack frae the ‘SUN’,
‘C’mon boys, tak yer seats, the jury’s in’.
The shoutin owre, Bayliss washt his haunds;
Fined twenty graund – an eicht month in the jyle,
Certies Malcolm, it bates bein ‘Shot at dawn’.
Whiles nou ye’re oot – tho tagged an gagged,
But still ye’er no alloued tae speik yer mind.
Ach, ae day Malcolm, fowk’ll get tae hear,
We’ll easy thole anither twa-thoosan year.

Rab Wilson

***
Baton

I could be an Olympic runner
The way I carry this torch for you.
But where do you want me to take it.
Which politician’s backside
Do you want me to light up,
As if fire could illuminate the truth.

Or should I just stop running towards the impossibility
That any of our voices make a difference.
Go instead to the void, light up the forest,
Douse the flames in a loch I’m not locked into.
Take what remains of this flickering light
To the thin places hoping.

Judi Benson

***
Quack

The dog can bark,
the lion roar,
the crow will crow
and human snore.
- To each of them
returns the sound
on the (as it were)
rebound,
but once the duck
has made her quack
there’s no chance she will
get it back.
- The same, of course,
goes for the drake:
his quack is lost
and no mistake.
The duck can quack, then,
all she likes,
and quack and quack
with all her might,
and quack all day
and quack all night,
quack to the left,
quack to the right,
quack with joy
or quack in fright
- it doesn’t matter how she quacks,
she’ll never ever get it back.
Even something like a gecko
makes its hiss and it will echo.

No such luck if you’re a duck.

Douglas Lipton

Artist's Book Workshop

Happy Birthday Wanlockhead!

Create a hand-crafted book with Liz Niven and Hugh Bryden
A Gaelforce Festival event

Celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Miner's Library, founded by Alan Ramsay, Scottish poet and playwright. Inspired by the wonderful setting of Wanlockhead, workshop participants will create a text and make an individual hand-crafted book. With artist Hugh Bryden and writer Liz Niven. All materials supplied.

Tickets £7 from Liz Niven, 01387 251621 lm@lizniven.com

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Poetry in the Wild


Four writing days in some of Scotland's most spectacular countryside...

Poetry in the Wild is a series of four writing days taking place across Dumfries and Galloway. The format of each day is the same. The morning session explores a special natural place accompanied by a knowledgeable and enthusiastic guide. This experience is then used as the inspiration for an afternoon of writing. The outcome of these four writing days will be the opportunity to see your poetry in print in a special supplement to Working Words, the Dumfries and Galloway Arts Association quarterly magazine.

Each day runs from 10am to 3pm. Please bring a packed lunch, warm clothing and stout footwear. There is a charge of £3.00 for each participant. Booking is through Dumfries and Galloway Arts Association



Volcanic rocks and viaducts
Saturday 26th August 2006
The Bakehouse, Gatehouse of Fleet

From our writing base of the Bakehouse, we will travel the 10 minutes out of Gatehouse of Fleet and into the wild heart of Galloway to explore the Cairnsmore of Fleet National Nature Reserve. Cairnsmore is the haunt of red deer and rare birds, volcanic rocks and viaducts. The place inspired Dorothy L Sayers, let it now inspire your writing.

Taking the water
Tuesday 19th September 2006
The Old Well Theatre

Moffat is famous for its healing mineral spas. We will explore the river and its wildlife and take the water as our main theme for the day. And there is always the possibility we will share the river banks with otters and kingfishers.

Land or sea?
Tuesday 26th September 2006
Wigtown County Building

Wigtown Bay is just a few minutes' walk from the County Buildings but it is a different world, one of wide open skies and muddy estuaries. With the help of the local ranger we will walk along the dividing line between land and sea and use the experience to influence our poetry.

Modern science and old stories
Saturday 21st October 2006
Caerlaverock Wildfowl and Wetlands Centre

Caerlaverock attracts skeins of geese and swans to spend their winter in our region. Along with their wildlife heritage they have a rich cultural heritage in the folklore that explained their arrival in autumn and their return migration in spring. We will look at the modern science and old stories associated with these birds and develop our own interpretations.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Catriona McPherson Book Launch


Thurs 3rd August, 7pm
Ottakers, Dumfries

Launching the second Dandy Gilver mystery from Dumfries and Galloway's very own Queen of Crime, Catriona McPherson. Rsvp to dumfries@ottakers.co.uk.

'The Burry Man's Day'. Catriona's first book, After the Armistice Ball, which goes into paperback on the same day, sold out two hardback print runs and was short-listed for a prestigious Dagger Award last year.

"effortlessly balances the driest wit with melodramatic suspense" The Scotsman
"McPherson is onto a winner" Scotland on Sunday

'After the Armistice Ball' was set in D&G. The new novel takes place on the banks of the Forth but there is a prominent D&G tourist attraction which Catriona has borrowed as a location for a lot of the action. If you can spot which D&G landmark appears in the book, you could win the chance to do the same yourself! Send the answer in by email or post and you will be entered in a draw to have a character with your name appear in the third Dandy Gilver novel next year.

Announcing Poetry Doubles Plus

The acclaimed Poetry Doubles series returns:

Poets from Dumfries and Galloway share the stage with guest poets from all over the world. This time round, our visitors are Simon Armitage, Jean Binta Breeze, Robert Crawford, Tony Curtis, Selima Hill, Kathleen Jamie and Michael Symmons Roberts. They're pairing up with John Manson, Liz Niven, Hugh McMillan, Tom Pow, Rab Wilson, Judi Benson and Douglas Lipton for seven amazing evenings.

This year, the programme includes several extra activities, including novel readings and workshops, and a number of specially commissioned poems from the participating D&G poets.

(all readings start at 7pm)

Wednesday 16th August
Bladnoch Distillery, Wigtown
Robert Crawford & John Manson

3.00 pm Poetry Workshop with Robert Crawford, Newton Stewart Library
Robert will look at what makes a poem work, and get you started on your own.
Don't miss this rare opportunity to learn from one of Scotland's finest poets.


Monday 21st August
Old Well Theatre, Moffat
Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze & Liz Niven

Thursday 24th August
The Studio, Gracefield Arts Centre, Dumfries
Simon Armitage & Hugh McMillan

Thursday 31st August
The Studio, Gracefield Arts Centre, Dumfries
Michael Symmons Roberts & Tom Pow

3.00 Georgetown Library, Dumfries
Michael Symmons Roberts reads from and discusses his first novel 'Patrick’s Alphabet', a dark, philosophical thriller.

Monday 11th September
Robert Burns Centre, Dumfries
Tony Curtis & Rab Wilson

3.00 Poetry Workshop with Tony Curtis
Tony will look at participants’ experiences of poetry and suggest ways of moving forward. Bring along a poem.

Thursday 14th September
Old Well Theatre, Moffat
Selima Hill & Judi Benson


Monday 18th September
Robert Burns Centre, Dumfries
Kathleen Jamie & Douglas Lipton


Tickets £7 per reading £5 concessions (students and those in receipt of benefits) Special offer. All 7 readings for £42 (£30 concession). Workshops and novel reading free with tickets for the poetry readings, £3.00 otherwise.

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Summer Writing Roadshow

Are you a poet looking for feedback? A playwright in search of a plot? A beginning writer seeking inspiration, advice and ideas? DGAA is offering a chance for one-to-one writers' surgeries around the region with poet Andrew Forster and playwright/fiction writer Jules Horne.

Tues 25th July
10.00-13.00 Blackaddie Hotel, Sanquhar
14.00-17.00 One-Stop Shop, Manse Rd, Thornhill

Thurs 27th July

10.00-13.00 Stranraer Library
14.00-17.00 Newton Stewart Library

Tues 8th August

10.00-13.00 Lockerbie Library
14.00-17.00 Eskdalemuir School

Thurs 10th August

10.00-13.00 Selkirk Arms Hotel, Kirkcudbright
14.00-17.00 Ken Bridge Hotel, New Galloway

This is a great chance for guidance, tips and a chat about your writing plans and interests. Andrew Forster (Literature Development Officer and poet) and Jules Horne (Virtual Writing Fellow (playwright and fiction writer) will be on hand for some friendly feedback.
This opportunity is aimed at writers at any stage who are looking for inspiration or practical help. There'll be lots of inspiring books to view as well as information sheets to take away. A one-off opportunity - don't miss the boat!

Ring Andrew Forster on 01387 253383 to book a slot.

Friday, July 14, 2006

Bakehouse Bonanza

The Bakehouse presents its new programme:
www.thebakehouse.info


Date: 29 July 2006
Time: 19:30
Poet and musician Alan Franks.
The winner of The Petra Kenny Prize and The Scottish National Poetry Competition returns to The Bakehouse by popular request.

Date: 4—6 August 2006
Time: 10:00—16:00
The Gatehouse Gala.
The Best of Gatehouse - An exhibition of local art and craft.

Date: 26 August 2006
Time: 19:30
An audience with Kenneth White.
The internationally renowned Scottish poet, prose writer, essayist before his appearance at The Edinburgh International Book Festival.


Date: 6 October 2006
Time: 19:30
The Bakehouse @ The Whitehouse Gallery.
Solway Poets John Hudson and Chrys Salt read their work at the Whitehouse Gallery, Kirkcudbright as part of Gaelforce.


Date: 28 October 2006
Time: 19:30
Happy Birthday Bernard.
Internationally renowned poet and playwright Bernard Kops reads at the Bakehouse to celebrate his eightieth birthday and the launch of Markings 23, in which he will feature.


Date: 2 December 2006
Time: 19:30
Poet and Musician Don Paterson.
The recipient of the T S Eliot and Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prizes reads his poetry and sings.

Poetry Postcards in the Woods

Poems on postcards please...

Nature photography by multi-talented Derek Ross is the lovely backdrop for a series of Poetry in the Woods postcards from Dumfries & Galloway, published to mark the launch of the Poetry in the Woods trail in Mabie Forest, just outside Dumfries. It's the finale of a whole slew of Poetry in the Woods events run by poet and ecologist Jackie Galley, with the support of Scottish Natural Heritage and the Forestry Commission Scotland. More on the Mabie Forest Trail launch here.

Bakehouse Workshops: Exchange of Words


Exchange of Words workshops

The Bakehouse
44 High Street
Gatehouse of Fleet
DG7 2HP
Tel: 01557 814196

Elspeth Brown, John Hudson and Chrys Salt will facilitate 3 x one-and-a-half hour workshops at The Bakehouse. There are places for 30 participants @ £10.00 per head. 10 participants to work with the same facilitator throughout the day. Elspeth, John and Chrys are members of the Solway Poets. They are widely published and have performed country-wide in Europe and the USA. Biographies can be found on The Bakehouse Website http://www.thebakehouse.info/ and on the Live Literature Scotland website www.scottishbooktrust.com
Info: 01557 814196 or www.thebakehouse.info

Saturday, July 08, 2006

BBC Scotland: Overdue South

Overdue South, a radio play by Jules Horne, is one of three comedies commissioned for BBC Radio Scotland and recorded in front of a live audience at the Traverse Theatre earlier this year. Broadcast times:

Thurs 13th July 1130
Fri 14th July 0030
Sun 16 July 1705

and (for one week only) on the BBC Scotland website.

The play was directed by Marilyn Imrie for Catherine Bailey Ltd and stars Eileen McCallum, Louise Ludgate and Billy Riddoch.

Friday, June 30, 2006

BBC Radio 4: The Long Road to Iona

Whithorn writer Janette Walkinshawe has just recorded an Afternoon Play for BBC Radio 4 with producer David Ian Neville. 'The Long Road to Iona' will be broadcast on 30th August at 2.15, with a cast including Jimmy Chisholm, most recently seen at the Swallow Theatre in the touring production, "The Collection". He appears along with Ann Scott Jones, Finlay Welsh, Susan Coyle, James Bryce and Jim Webster-Stewart.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Crichton Campus Creative Writing Awards


Results of the Glasgow University Crichton Campus Creative Writing Awards 2006:

Muriel Carmichael Prose Prize
1. Jackie Galley
2. Vivien Jones
3 Heather Baird

Commended : Pam Gulland

Kirkpatrick Dobie Poetry Prize
1. Vivien Jones
2. Jackie Galley
3. Betty Tindal

Commended : Eryl Shields

Steven Runciman Essay Prize

Winner: Ashley Park

Highly Commended:
Angela Callaghan
Judith Dawson
Joe Smith

Southlight Sits. Vac.

Come on board Scotland's liveliest new literary magazine!

Southlight magazine, the new literary magazine from the southwest of Scotland, is looking for an energetic volunteer to help with administration and publication.

If you're computer-literate and a good organiser, willing to volunteer around an hour a week to handle submissions and help out with producing two issues a year, get in touch with the editorial team's Jo Abbott via wurrbit@hotmail.com.

Poetry in the Woods Launch
















Words and walks have come together in a new poetry trail in Dumfries & Galloway. Mabie Forest near Dumfries is the home of the just-opened 'Poetry in the Woods' walkroute - the brainchild of poet and ecologist Jackie Galley, with support from Scottish Natural Heritage and Dumfries & Galloway Arts Association. It brings together work by regional poets who've taken part in outdoors poetry workshops by writers including wildlife expert Gerry Cambridge.

Flash Fiction Workshops 2

Flash Fiction workshops are now underway across the region with DGAA Virtual Writing Fellow Jules Horne - a chance to brush up your writing skills in time to enter the Writers' Forum Flash Fiction competition. Please email jules_horne@yahoo.co.uk to book. Remaining dates are:

Mon 10th July – 7-8.30pm
Lockerbie Library

Tues 11th July – 2-3.30pm
Dumfries Nth West Resource Centre

Thurs 13th July – 11am-12.30
Stranraer Library

And if you can't make it to a workshop, visit the DGAA Online Writers' Hub and download the flash fiction worksheet for tips and inspiration.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

The Art of Ballads & Bards - Sheila Mullen Project


Dumfries-based Crichton Writers have teamed up with painter Sheila Mullen for an exciting cross-art project. Over the summer, they're creating work that explores the relationship between writing and painting, leading in the autumn to an anthology, a programme of viewings and readings, and a dramatised piece at the Swallow Theatre.

Performance Dates:

Thursday 14th September 6.00 pm.
Viewing and Readings. Crichton Foyer & Drama Studio.
Refreshments :Wine and Nibbles.

Thursday 21st September 7.30 pm.
Viewings and Readings, Broughton House. Kirkcudbright.
Refreshments: White wine and elderflower cordial.

Tuesday 3rd October. 7.30 pm.
Viewings and Readings, Chambers Gallery. Moffat.
Refreshments :Wine and Nibbles.

Information: Vivien Jones

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Poetry in the Woods Trail Opening

Tuesday 27th June, 6pm
Mabie Car Park, Mabie Forest

The Poetry in the Woods project enters a new era with the launch of its woodland poetry trail in Mabie Forest. This opening event is a chance to walk the route, and hear a selection of poems read by the participating poets. Light refreshments will be served!

To book, ring Andrew Forster at DGAA on 01387 253383 or email andrew@dgaa.net.

Southlight Issue 1 Out

Introducing a fine new addition to the Scottish literary magazine scene: Southlight is a new literary journal that aims to bring the best in new prose, poetry and critical work from across Scotland and beyond.

A joint venture between DGAA Literature Department, Crichton Campus Writers’ Centre and a volunteer editorial and production team, Southlight launched at the Wigtown Spring Book Fair on 29th April and has been receiving warm acclaim ever since. Copies (£4.00) are available from Angus MacMillan.

Issue One features work from Linda Cracknell, Ruth Thompson, Vicki Feaver, Hugh MacMillan, John Manson, Mick Parkin, Ian McDonough, Tom Pow, Margery Palmer McCulloch, Jacob Polley, Liz Niven, Jackie Galley, Laura Helyer and an interview with Jackie Kay.

Tom Pow at the Bakehouse

Saturday 10th June
The Bakehouse presents...

Tom Pow is back at the Bakehouse by popular request. Many of you will remember the wonderful evening we had when Tom and Diana Hendry helped launch the venue with their wonderful little book ‘Sparks’ in February 2004. The Bakehouse has come a long way since then! There's now a Bakehouse and Markings website, so you can book by going to www.thebakehouse.info.

To book, call 01557 814 196 or email chryssalt2@aol.com or sunnyrathore@btconnect.com
Tickets free
The Bakehouse, 44 The High Street Gatehouse of Fleet

Flash Fiction workshops

To get you geared up for the D&G Flash Fiction competition, we're running a series of flash fiction workshops across the region. It's also a chance to catch up on developments in year 2 of the virtual residency.

Workshops are being hosted by local writers' groups, but are open to the public. Max of 15 places on each, so please book by ringing Andrew Forster on 01387 253383 or emailing andrew@dgaa.net.

Mon 26th June 1-3pm
Room 120, Crichton Campus, Dumfries
(hosted by Crichton Writers)

Wed 28th June 2-3.30pm
Newton Stewart Library
(hosted by Wigtown Scribblers)

Mon 10th July 7-8.30pm
Lockerbie Library
(hosted by Lockerbie Writers)

Tuesday 11th July, afternoon time tbc
Dumfries Nth West Resource Centre
(hosted by Broken Pencils)

Friday, May 19, 2006

Flash Fiction Competition



A unique opportunity for writers in Dumfries & Galloway: have your short short story illustrated by a specially commissioned artwork by artist Andrew Foley. And all you need to do is write 200 cracking words…

1st prize:
Original artwork illustrating the winning story
by artist Andrew Foley

2 runner-up prizes:
‘Anthropology’ by Dan Rhodes

and
the best ten stories will be recorded
for the D&G Writer’s Podcast.

NB The fiction competition is only open to local writers, so you’ll need to join the forum (click here and then on the 'forum' link, or contact Andrew Forster on 01387 253383)

Closing date: Friday 4th August

Join the D&G Writers' Forum

The Dumfries & Galloway Writers’ Forum is now up and running, and we’re launching it with a flash fiction competition with a fabulous and unique prize – an original artwork illustrating the winning story by artist Andrew Foley. See below for details.

Visit the forum at the regional Writers' Hub, www.dgcommunity.net/writers, and click on the ‘forum’ link. Then click on the ‘Writers’ Practice Forum’ for more info.

To post a message you first need to join the forum:
Click on 'register' (top of the hub page) and follow the instructions.

The flash fiction competition is only open to writers living in the region.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

James Robertson Reading - Gideon Mack


Tuesday 20th June, 7pm
Lochthorn Library, Dumfries


Scottish novelist and poet James Robertson will be holding a local launch for his new novel, The Testament of Gideon Mack, published by Penguin. Don't miss this chance to hear one of the country's literary stars read from a major new work.

'Written with great lyricism, tight pacing, superlative storytelling and immense imaginative power, this is Robertson's most ambitious and accessible novel to date.'

Monday, May 15, 2006

Caerlaverock writer strikes orange!



Many congratulations to Caerlaverock writer and ecologist Jackie Galley, who has made it onto the Scotsman/Orange 2006 short-list with her short story, ‘The Paper Boy’. This will be published in the competition anthology, ‘Work’, and is eligible to go forward to the major prize, which will be awarded at a ceremony in Edinburgh in July.

Poetry Launch with Judi Benson




Thursday 1st June
Town House Hotel, Annan Road
Dumfries

Judi Benson, Writing Fellow at Dumfries Royal Infirmary is holding a reading at the Town House Hotel (on Annan Road) on Thursday 1st June, to introduce her collection, ‘The Thin Places’. There will also be some opportunities to read from the floor.

Look out also for Judi's colourful display of over 100 pompoms and poems in the foyer at the Ewart Library, Dumfries. These were gathered during her recent project at the Infirmary, where she works within the Oncology Department, and they'll be on view until May 22nd.

Gorgeous Avatar

Theatre Royal, Dumfries Monday 29th May 7:30pm Tickets £10.00/ £8.00 concession


The Traverse Theatre - Scotland's New Writing Theatre - presents
'Gorgeous Avatar' by Jules Horne

Debut play by D & G's Virtual Writer in Residence, directed by Philip Howard, and featuring Pauline Knowles, John Kazek, Una McLean and Patrick Hoffman.

Amy's living the dream. A country hideaway, online home-working, and everything delivered right to her door. There's little reason to go beyond the garden gate. She's even found romance on the internet. High tech, long distance, low maintenance. Except he's real and he's on a flight somewhere over the Atlantic. Meanwhile, neighbours Dan and Rose are living the nightmare. With so much space, how come there's so little room to manoeuvre? And can a makeover do more than paper over the cracks?Gorgeous Avatar is a wry, tender and fantastical story of love and loneliness in the digital age - and all the things that Amazon can't deliver.


gorgeous photo gallery

production blog

Poetry Doubles Special - Duffy & Feaver



Carol Ann Duffy and Vicki Feaver
Robert Burns Centre Film Theatre, Dumfries
Sunday 11 June 7:00pm


It gives us great pleasure to present two of Britain's finest women poets.

Carol Ann Duffy won the TS Eliot prize this year for her collection 'Rapture'. She is one of Britain's most popular poets and performers, with seven collections of poetry, most recently the TS Eliot prize-winning 'Rapture'.

Vicki Feaver has recently brought out a new collection with Cape, 'The Book of Blood', her first collection for 12 years.


This promises to be a memorable night, and is sure to sell out, so do book
early to avoid disappointment.

Tickets £8.00 from Dumfries and Galloway Arts Association on 01387 253383 or andrew@dgaa.net

Rab Wilson Launches New Scots Poetry Collection


Thurs 25th May, 7pm : Sanquhar Bookshop
Fri 26 May, 7pm : Poosie Nansies, 21 Loudon Street, Mauchline
27 May, 2pm : The Bookshop, Wigtown
30 May, 6pm : Ottakars, Glasgow
31 May, 6pm : Poetry in the Parliament, Edinburgh
9 June, 7.30 pm: Leith Festival, The Lighthouse pub on the shore
24 July, 7.30pm : Crail Arts Fest, Crail Town Hall


Our traditional language could hardly have a more eloquent exponent.
LESLEY DUNCAN, THE HERALD


Sanquhar poet Rab Wilson's new collection, Accent o the Mind, is published by Edinburgh's Luath Press.

Hear Rab read the title poem and other work in Scots on the Scottish Writers' Podcast, recorded at the BBC Scotland studios in Dumfries. More on Rab Wilson's work...

After calls for the Scottish Executive to take action to ensure Scots is recognised as a language, Accent o the Mind is a timely and contemporary collection, chiefly in the Scots tongue.

Rab Wilson covers the variety of modern Scottish life through refreshingly honest and often humorous poetry, encompassing history, text messaging, politics, asylum-seeking hedgehogs and connoisseurs of Buckfast...

His set of 15 interlinked sonnets, Cormilligan, about a late example of the Clearances in the south-west, has rightly been seen as a tour de force, combining, as it does, acute humanity and sense of landscape with technical virtuosity. Somewhaur in the Daurk, his series of sonnets inspired by the Miners’ Strike of 1984-1985, gives the participants and their womenfolk a voice and a dignity that demand sympathy, regardless of political viewpoints.

The poems he wrote as Wigtown Bard range from the historical to the satirical and enlivened Wigtown’s literary festival in 2004. Individual poems, whether set in the local supermarket or the former mining towns of his youth, have humour, pathos, sometimes indignation, and always a warm immediacy.

Rab Wilson is a free spirit who speaks and writes in Scots (in everyday letters and emails as well as poetry) with complete ease and unselfconsciousness. This inspirational new collection consolidates Rab Wilson’s position as one of Scotland’s leading poets and plays a part in the reinvigoration of the Scots language in modern Scottish society.

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Southlight Launch


Announcing the first issue of Southlight magazine, a new literary journal from southwest Scotland. Southlight was launched at Wigtown Spring Book Fair on 29th April, and is a collaboration between DGAA Literature Department, Crichton Campus' Writers' Centre and a vcolunteer editorial and production team.

Issue One features work from Linda Cracknell, Ruth Thompson, Vicki Feaver, Hugh MacMillan, John Manson, Mick Parkin, Ian McDonough, Tom Pow, Margery Palmer McCulloch, Jacob Polley, Liz Niven, Jackie Galley and Laura Helyer, and an interview with Jackie Kay.

Wigtown Poetry Prize 2006


The inaugural Wigtown Poetry Prize was launched at Bladnoch Distillery on 29th April, with the top prize of £2,000 going to Alan Franks. His winning poem, The Lift, was chosen from a field of over 2,000 entries by judge Don Paterson. The Gaelic prize of £1,000 went to Catriona Lexy Campbell for Cinneas.

Full details are on the website for Wigtown, Scotland's national book town.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Online Fiction & Poetry Workshops


A clutch of new fiction and poetry worksheets have now appeared at the Dumfries & Galloway Writers' Hub. Puffin children's author Cathy Cassidy and Hodder novelist Fiona Gibson reveal how they got started in their respective fiction fields, and poet Dorothy Alexander looks at found poetry.

These worksheets are online versions of writing workshops held in the region, designed so that those of you unable to make it along don't miss out. You'll also find useful writers' group materials on creativity, blogging and verbatim plays. And look out for Gerry Cambridge's wildlife writing worksheet based on his recent Poetry in the Woods workshop. Coming soon!

Monday, March 27, 2006

Theatre Campaign

Dumfries writer and actress Maggie Reid has passed on the details for the Scottish Parliament petition to support 7:84 theatre company. Anyone wishing to sign the petition should go to www.784theatre.com and click on 'campaign'.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Stewart Conn at the Bakehouse


The Bakehouse presents...

A Reading With


Stuart Conn
Edinburgh's First Poet Laureate



Saturday 25th March
7:00 for 7:30
Book on 01557 814196

Gerry Cambridge at Poetry in the Woods



Saturday 25th March
10am - 3pm
Mabie Forest Education Centre

The Poetry in the Woods project comes to an end with a grand finale: a guided walk through Mabie Forest, followed by a workshop on writing about wildlife, taken by acclaimed poet and wildlife photographer Gerry Cambridge, followed by...

4:00
Lochthorn Library
Poetry in the Woods Final Reading with special guest Gerry Cambridge, Poetry in the Woods workshop leader Jackie Galley and readings by project participants of poems featured in the forthcoming Mabie Forest Poetry trail.

Gerry Cambridge is a poet, literary critic and editor of the literary magazine The Dark Horse.
He has published three full-length poetry collections: The Shell House, Madame Fifi's Farewell and Nothing But Heather, a collection of poems accompanying his own wildlife photographs, written while Writer in Residence at Brownsbank Cottage.

Jackie Galley is a poet and ecologist and has been the main workshop leader of the Poetry in the Woods project. Her poems have appeared in magazines and anthologies and she has featured in both series of Poetry Doubles, reading with Simon Armitage and Gillian Allnutt. She is on the editorial team of the forthcoming Southlight Magazine.


Admission to reading free. Book workshop with Ae Forest on 01387 860247 and book reading with Andrew Forster on 01387 253383 or andrew@dgaa.net.

Getting Started in Fiction


with Cathy Cassidy and Fiona Gibson

Tuesday March 28th 1:00 - 4:00pm
Lochthorn Library, Dumfries
Tickets £3.00

Do you want to make the break into writing professionally?
Have you ever read a novel and thought you could do better?

Children's novelist Cathy Cassidy and popular novelist Fiona Gibson share their experiences of writing fiction: getting started, writing for a market, finding agents, finding a publisher. A valuable opportunity to ask the questions that you've always wanted to ask, and to find out about the realities of working as a writer.

Cathy Cassidy worked as fiction editor on Jackie Magazine. She is also the agony aunt for Shout Magazine. Her first novel 'Dizzy' was published by Puffin in 2004, and she followed this with 'Indigo Blue' and 'Driftwood'. She is growing a steady following among younger readers, for writing about mature themes in a way younger readers can relate to. Her fourth novel is due this year.

Fiona Gibson has worked on various teenage and women's magazines, including Jackie and Just Seventeen, and as a freelance features writer for publications such as the Guardian, the Observer, Marie Claire. She writes a weekly column in the Sunday Herald. Her first novel, 'Babyface', was published by Hodder & Stoughton in 2003, followed by 'Wonderboy', in 2004, and a non-fiction book about family life, 'The Fish Finger Years', was published last year, also by Hodder. A new novel, Lucky Girl, is out in June 2007. Her work centres mainly around family and relationship issues.

Book with Andrew Forster on 01387 253383 or andrew@dgaa.net