Bill Greenwell’s new collection of poetry

Bill Greenwell’s new collection, Ringers, is published this month by Cinnamon Press, which also published Impossible Objects in 2006. It contains sixty poems which veer from the satirical to the serious, well quite serious, and from poems about childhood and death to love and depression. It also includes parodies which have appeared in The Spectator and The Independent – gently lampooning Blake, Auden, Herrick, Owen, Stevie Smith and Belloc. There is a mixture of rhymed and unrhymed poetry. 

Bill, who is the arts staff tutor in Gateshead, is on the module teams for A215 and A363 (the latter of which he helped to write), has also written creative writing chapters for A150. He’s been with the OU for five years, and before that taught at Falmouth and Exeter Universities (and before that in FE). He is now back in the north-east, where he was born. 

‘Most of my poetry is at least slightly surreal,’ says Bill. ‘Or downright absurd. Even the more emotional poems are interested in the bizarre detail. The collection has a recurrent interest in similarities – between people, between events – and hence the title.’ Some of the poems have won prizes or have been commended in competitions like the Wigtown (Scottish National) competition, and the Troubadour, Kent and Sussex, and Yeovil competitions. They’ve also been published in a variety of magazines, from Smiths Knoll to The Rialto

Penelope Shuttle describes him as having ‘one of the sharpest tongues around, one of the sharpest pair of eyes, and the sharpest of hearts’, and describes Ringers as ‘a collection that sees him at the top of his game’. 

You can read more about, and buy Ringers at http://www.cinnamonpress.com/ringers/

Contrary to photographic evidence, Bill Greenwell cannot play the ukulele. But he does use it as a prop. 

Ringers, Cinnamon Press, ISBN 0781907090479

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Michael Stewart’s novel wins the Not the Booker prize

Michael Stewart’s novel King Crow, published in January 2011, has been voted the winner of the 2011 Not the Booker prize.  The prize is awarded by readers of the Guardian books blog, after an extended process of nominations, shortlisting and reviewing in the Not the Booker prize blog.

Blog editor Sam Jordison describes the novel as ‘psychologically adept, funny, nasty, daft and shockingly realisitic all at the same time. It’s just the kind of thing the Not The Booker prize should be promoting.’  In his review of the novel in a blog entry of 26th September, he writes: ‘King Crow is the literary equivalent of a British Sea Power album. It’s full of driving riffs and bristling with energy and menace, but it’s also often tender and lovely. Plus there’s loads of stuff about bird-watching and Kendal – oh and it’s bonkers. It’s great, in other words.’

Michael Stewart is a tutor on A215 Creative Writing.  King Crow is published by Blue Moose Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0956687609

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A new poetry collection from Pauline Hughes

Pauline’s poetry collection Bint is to be launched on November 13 in Gallery North at Northumbria University at 6 pm.  It is published by Red Squirrel Press.

Pauline writes:  ‘Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words’ Robert Frost.  I hope that what I have to say, if anything, is in the poems.   Is there a message in there?  As Alan Bennett said of talking Heads ‘Nobody knows and I certainly don’t’.   But there is an attempt to reach the heart of feeling, to use language to express rather than be locked in the prison house.

The poems are essentially lyric. This Greek term means song – a non-narrative poem expressing a state of mind or feeling.  The impact of the lyric has been perhaps reduced by making it a purely personal voice and the influence of Confessional poetry on what is written is still strong.  There is a sense in which the lyric should be addressing an audience; one should be singing to other persons but with the fragmentation of society you can’t be sure who they are.

There is still the concept of the poet as voice and witness.  Auden talked of the double nature of poetry as both magical incantation (Ariel) and wise/true meaning (Prospero

 ‘The will must not usurp the work of the imagination’ said Yeats but you do have a role as witness (Heaney).   Poem needs both intellect and passion he has said.  It does need to tell the truth. 

There may be social and political pressures one is susceptible to, feeling compelled to give voice to the voiceless, to give space to those who have been denied.  But poetry makes its point in terms of imagery, symbols, language, rhythms. The poet may have no moral obligation to the world  but a poem often is a ‘truth won from life against all odds’ (Donald Davie). 

In much contemporary poetry, irony and dispassion are the default tone; a self consciousness which I sometimes find has strangled the poet’s voice.   My poems in Bint are an attempt to express in a more barefaced way.   Some are personal, some are observations, some are personas.  There is immense freedom in subject matter in the writing of poetry now.    But I feel that these poems foreground a woman’s voice speaking and attempt to convey women’s lives from real lived experience.   But I hope this is done with a light touch – with what Heaney calls vitality and insouciance.’

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Turning the Wheel – a new book by Kevan Manwaring

The big ’40’ was coming up. I wanted to do something special to mark my fortieth year. I had a birthday party planned, but beyond this I want to make it a ‘landmark year’. They say life begins at forty, so I was determined to be fully alive! Why we feel the need to mark significant moments in our life as individuals got me thinking about this cultural tendency in a broader sense – how communities make and mark ‘sacred time’: festivals, anniversaries, seasonal celebrations. I had a brainwave: what better way to celebrate my fortieth year than to travel around Britain on my motorbike (a Triumph Legend 900tt) seeing how folk … celebrate. I would visit places and people who mark the ‘turning of the wheel’ in their own distinctive way. I would keep a journal and a blog throughout … and this fed into the book, which I got commissioned to write from O Books, after pitching them the idea. They had already published a previous title of mine – The Way of Awen: journey of a bard; and I had been keeping my Bard on a Bike blog for a couple of years (as a professional storyteller and performance poet, my motorbike is my sole means of transport to gigs, talks, etc) and so a book seemed the natural next step.

The birthday party kicked things off with a bang and, after I’d recovered, I hit the road… I took a Brysonesque approach to this travelogue, accepting my own fallibility and subjectivity of experience. I could physically only see and do so much within one year, and inevitably things wouldn’t always go to plan. I would break down, get lost, turn up late, or find ‘life getting in the way’. Lacking a fat advance to pay for a year off, I had to fit my trips inbetween the business of marking a living – which is mainly tutoring for the OU. Still, it provided a welcome relief from the piles of assignments! By the end I had a deeper understanding of ‘sacred time’ – something that can be found in the most unexpected places and moments. The ways folk celebrate are endlessly diverse and delightful – Britain excels at eccentricity. Perhaps, in my quirky methodology, I was contributing to that. I felt I had certainly marked my fortieth!

Kevan is a tutor for OU creative writing modules at all levels: A174 Start Writing Fiction, A215 Creative Writing and A363 Advanced Creative Writing.

Turning the Wheel is published by  O Books November 25 2011

ISBN: 978-1-84694-766-7  £15.99  313pp

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A first novel from Heather Peace

Heather Peace’s first novel All to Play For is to be published on October 29th by Legend Press. Narrated from 2011 by a former BBC drama script editor, it begins at the Edinburgh Festival in 1985, and follows several young people from varying backgrounds as they make careers in television, ending in 2000. It’s a funny and truthful picture of what it was like to work at the BBC during that period. 

Rhiannon dreams of joining the largest broadcaster in the world: the BBC. And so begins a life of highs, lows, and absurd experiences for five ambitious young people, all keen to make it in the increasingly commercial world of television. Caught in the middle between art and commerce, Rhiannon realises the industry is transforming around her. During one of the most dramatic periods of change in its history, aspiration, desperation and clashes of ego threaten to destroy the Corporation altogether. A story of artistic expression vs corporate gain, of how some people make a drama out of a crisis, and others a crisis out of a drama. 

“Lifts the lid on the inner workings of the BBC Drama department like no other book I have ever read. A bitingly honest funny poignant and brilliant debut novel.” Owen O’Neill. 

Heather is an AL on A363 Advanced Creative Writing in the London region.

www.legendpress.co.uk

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Andrew Garvin contributes to a new play, ‘The Trackers’

Andrew Garvin has contributed to a performance of the satyric play by Sophocles – entitled The Trackers. He co-operated on the English version of the play, which is contained in the book and programme for this performance. The performance of the play was generated from a Congress on Drama in which the Royal Academy of Drama, the University of the Sorbonne, and the Piccolo Teatro di Milano participated. A highly successful and well reviewed performance of ‘The Trackers’ was given on 30 June 2011 at the ancient theatre of Ephesus, Turkey, as part of the Izmir Summer Festival. Performances are being planned now for many other theatres.

Andrew writes: ‘My role in this project was the very-thoroughgoing editing and, in many places and passages, rewording from the version by Mr Andreadis of the English version of the play. This was essential because Mr Andreadis, the first translator, wanted a highly popular and colloquial version to suit the satyric and comic nature of the play, but knew little of this type of English language of the people. I worked to a small extent with translation but to a far greater extent with more colloquial, carnivalesque wording to bring the popular style of Andreadis’s English translation into greater relief. In this I was drawing to a certain extent on the fiction I have already published (such as ‘Cabinets’, a short story in the anthology entitled Unthank introduced by Sir Malcolm Bradbury). So my main part in the shaping of the translation and performance involved attendance at the initial Congress and afterwards particularly close and fruitful cooperation with Mr Andreadis on the reworking of the actual wording of the English version.  The programme of the play is the book on whose English version I have worked. After the performance at the Izmir Summer Festival in Turkey, the play has been put on at Eleusis (the location of the ancient Greek mysteries) and several other locations.’

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Frome Festival Short Story Win

 

Jacq Molloy, a tutor on Creative Writing courses A215 and A363, won the Frome short story prize over the summer with her story ‘Wake’. The competition attracted over 550 international entries. Literary agent Jane Judd wrote to Jacq to say, ‘this story is very well written and a worthy winner.’

The story has a teenage girl as its narrator and is set in Belfast during the height of the troubles. The main action involves the girl, a coffin and a chocolate biscuit. Jacq lived in Belfast as a child and the story is based on her experiences of attending funerals and wakes: regular family outings!

Jacq was thrilled to win the competition and said, ‘It was a lovely surprise to get the phone call from the competition organisers and to have such positive feedback for my story. The setting and themes are ones I return to as a writer.’

 Jacq is working on a series of stories about growing up in Belfast and though they usually involve loss, they also include black humour. ‘As a child it was perfectly natural for me to attend wakes on a regular basis and though there were plenty of tears, there was also much laughter. It is that bitter sweet combination that attracts me as a writer.’

Jacq’s website: www.jacqmolloy.com

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Amelia And The Virgin: Saints and their devils

I will be reading from my forthcoming novel, Amelia and the Virgin at the Ilkley Fringe Festival on October 10th at 9pm. As well as extracts from the novel, I will also be giving a talk on the research that inspired it – beginning with my three year old daughter’s diagnosis of epilepsy in 2002. As I tried to find out about the condition, I kept coming across references to satanic posssession, visionary saints and other arcane links. The novel traces nine months in the life of thirteen year old Amelia:

Liverpool,1981. Amelia and her eccentric Catholic family are eagerly awaiting the Pope’s visit to the city. Increasingly disturbed by visions of a mysterious Goddess, Amelia becomes pregnant and is convinced her baby is the new Messiah. Marguerite, Amelia’s mother, ignorant of her daughter’s condition, takes an extended trip to Ireland to visit the order of nuns she has inherited. Amelia’s visions intensify and apparent miracles are performed. A cult develops. The family is divided. As believers swell in number and the papal visit nears, it becomes evident that Amelia and her unborn baby are in danger.

Tickets are free so please come along if you’ve nowt better to do on a cold October evening!

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Jackie Wills featured in world poets series

A215 associate lecturer Jackie Wills is featured in a world poets 
series put together by the celebrated poet and editor, Sudeep Sen.   Jackie, based in Brighton, is working on her fifth collection of poetry.

The World Poetry Portfolio, published on the Molossus website, 
features an impressive range of contemporary poets, including Kwame Dawes, Maurice Riordan, Naomi Shihab Nye, Tomas Salamun, Mimi Khalvati, Ruth Fainlight, Alfred Corn and Pascale Petit.

http://www.molossus.co/poetry/world-poetry-portfolio-39-jackie-wills/

jackie.wills@ntlworld.com
http://jackiewillspoetry.blogspot.com/
Royal Literary Fund Fellow, University of Sussex 2010-11

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Ida and Louise – a radio commission for Jane Purcell

I’ve just been commissioned to write a five part Woman’s Hour Drama based on the lives of Ida and Louise Cook.   Both were avid opera lovers and during their travels to Europe in the 1930s became aware of the persecution of the Jews.  This was contrary to the bland reports received in the British newspapers.  When Ida started writing successful romances for Mills and Boon and Louise learned German, they used the money to sponsor and rescue dozens of Jewish families, right under the noses of the Nazis.  I’ve tried to think of other titles but Ida and Louise seems to have stuck – despite or maybe because of Thelma and Louise

Here’s a picture of the two of them in their opera finery:

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