My Bookshelf

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Book Club: Poet's Pub

Comprised of an entertaining series of vignettes that occur at the Pelican Pub in Downish, England, Poet's Pub is a humour-filled collection of stories by award winner Eric Linklater—one of the original titles commissioned by Penguin Classics founder Allen Lane—and again available to readers.

When an Oxford poet named Saturday Keith assumes control of the Pelican Pub, what he desires most is the peace and freedom to craft his poems without being disturbed. This is the least of what happens, for the local watering hole soon becomes an out-and-out attraction for various eccentric characters ranging from uncouth rogues to members of academia.

Whoops, been a little longer than I intended between posts... been a busy week, what with book club and my Diva Dance class last night (don't ask). Anyway, back to books.

When it was announced that the next book club read would be Poet's Pub by Eric Linklater, our faces all kind of screwed up with confusion... wha'? who? This is a 'classic'? Never heard of it. I wasn't particularly comforted by the blurb either so I put off reading it for a while, I'm afraid. Even when my mum picked it up off the table and read the first page she grimaced. Moving through it, though, I have to say it picked up.


I don't know about anyone else but I always slightly struggle with humour in books at the best of times. For me somehow humour doesn't always translate in books, which seems odd because I have a fabulous sense of humour (and modesty). I remember when I went to see Hilary Mantel talk at the Southbank Centre and she read out an excerpt from Bring Up the Bodies and suddenly a whole different side, a distinctly funny side, came across that I hadn't previously picked up. So when I saw this was a comic novel, one written in 1929 at that, I sunk slightly into my chair.


So I struggled at the beginning; it seemed more eccentric than it was funny and I didn't have a clue who all these people were running about and writing weird poems about rats and making bizarre cocktails. Moving on, though, the comedy started to come through and I did find myself having a little chuckle. It's wonderfully ridiculous and it was a nice change to read a book, more specifically a classic, that doesn't take itself too seriously and that isn't a million pages long! 


All in all, I enjoyed it. It's not going to go down in history as my favourite read ever. I'm also not sure it would suit everyone but it was fun and a little different. One point that was made at the book club was that it would work brilliantly on stage. I can see there was a 1949 film but no apparent evidence of a play, which is interesting as it has all the silliness and physical comedy of farce such as Michael Frayn's Noises Off and Joe Orton.


Highlight"The red–haired vixen of a maid, Nelly Bly" of course!

Overall the book was rated 6/10 by the book club and 6/10 by me!

Friday, 15 March 2013

Women's Prize for Fiction - Longlist

245533_Book_Scans_S1 245533_Book_Scans_S19 245533_Book_Scans_S12 Flight-Behaviour
245533_Book_Scans_S7 Honour 245533_Book_Scans_S6 Ignorance
245533_Book_Scans_S18 245533_Book_Scans_S10 The-Innocents The-Light-Between-Oceans
Lamb life after life 245533_Book_Scans_S11 May-We-Be-Forgiven
245533_Book_Scans_S3 The-People-of-Forever-Are-Not-Afraid 245533_Book_Scans_S13 Whered-You-Go-Bernadette

No surprises to see Hilary Mantel is up there fighting for, I think, her fourth major award for Bring Up the Bodies. She has some pretty stiff competition if you ask me, though. Female literary heavy-weights Zadie Smith, Kate Atkinson and Barbara Kingsolver are all up there fighting for the once Orange, now colourless Women's Prize for Fiction. Let's also not underestimate the six newcomers on the longlist either, with the last two years' prizes being awarded to debut novelists Tea Obreht (for The Tiger's Wife in 2011) and Madeline Miller (for The Song of Achilles in 2012 - review here).

Thursday, 14 March 2013

Book Break at the Southbank Centre



Do you know what makes me angry? People who exercise at lunch time. To quote Jennifer Lawrence, "I hate saying: 'I like exercising'  I want to punch people who say that." I feel that the slogan, 'There's an app for that" should probably be appropriated and amended soon to read "There's a JLawr quote for that" because there are so many perfect ones for any given situation! Anyway, this isn't unfortunately a post on Jennifer Lawrence or, in fact, on exercising. What I merely wanted to point out was that instead of exercising and making me feel bad, why not go along to Book Break at the Southbank Centre?

Southbank Centre, Coin Street and The Reader Organisation have put together a regular reading group in the Saison Poetry Library. Turn up every Thursday until the end of March, meet some fellow book geeks and talk about books. Seriously, way more fun than exercising. You don't need to prepare or do any homework. Unfortunately, I would say, that you probably need to have a pretty lenient boss as it's a two hour lunch break, running from 12.30 to 2.30.


If your March is looking pretty busy, though, or you just don't think you could persuade your boss that Pret a Manger have released a limited edition sandwich that takes two hours to eat, don't fret! The Southbank Centre Book Club meets regularly at 6.30pm with lots of great books ahead to get stuck into. You can have a look at what is coming up and book some tickets via the Southbank Centre website.

Did I mention that it's all free?

Monday, 11 March 2013

Sissinghurst Castle

Whenever I try to surprise someone for a birthday or some other celebration, I nearly always seem to blow it. The power of knowledge is just too much. I mean, seriously, who can resist hinting that you know something they don't?? Ok so I've exposed a flawed side to my mind... but it's an endearing flaw really, no? Anyway, this weekend I actually did it! For Mothers Day, after months of complaints from my mum that my sister never comes home from university, we managed to organise for her to come home for a weekend of quality family fun without my mum suspecting a thing until she arrived! I'm still feeling pretty proud about it...

Anyway, one of the ways we spent our highly anticipated weekend was by going to Sissinghurst Castle in Kent. Sissinghurst is the ruin of an Elizabethan manor house and in its time has been the site of a prison for French seamen during the Seven Years War, a poor house and a working farm. It was also, however, home to author, poet and avid gardener, Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicholson during the 1930s after she failed to inherit her family home of Knole as she was a woman. It was Vita and Harold who created the famous garden at Sissinghurst, which is spectacular in its scope and colour.
The original Hogarth Press

Vita Sackville-West had success as a writer and poet, her best known novels being The Edwardians (1930) and All Passion Spent (1931), but she is probably better known for a number of affairs she had with women, most famously Virginia Woolf. You therefore wouldn't be surprised to know that Sackville-West was published a number of times by the Woolfs' Hogarth Press. In fact the original Hogarth Press currently resides at Sissinghurst itself.

If you suffer from house envy, be prepared. Ask any friend of mine what three things I would want for my home if money were no object and they would all say, probably with a yawn: a lake, a library and a spice rack. Now I don't know whether there's a spice rack hanging around (I bet there is!) but they have a herb garden, a large lake... acres of beautiful countryside surrounding their stunning gardens and, naturally, a personal library, which is open visitors. House envy doesn't even cover it. Rows and rows of books extend right from one end of the room to the other, covering an entire wall. *sighs* amazing
.

Sissinghurst Castle
Biddenden Road
near Cranbrook
TN17 2AB

Friday, 8 March 2013

International Women's Day


Today is International Women's Day. Stylist magazine already stole my idea for a post by giving us some great quotes from women writers. I could come up with something new and original but I figured I can just steal their idea and give you some quotes anyway... so here are some inspirational quotes from great women writers to get you through those last few hours up to the weekend.

JK Rowling (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows)"Words are, in my not so humble opinion, our most inexhaustible source of magic, capable of both inflicting injury and remedying it."
Toni Morrison"If there's a book that you want to read, but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it." 
Dorothy ParkerInterviewer: What, then, would you say is the source of most of your work?Dorothy Parker: Need of money, dear.
Virginia Woolf (you didn't think I was going to get through this post without mentioning her did you?)
"A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."
Emily Dickinson"We turn not older with years, but newer every day."
Adrienne Rich"There must be those among whom we can sit down and weep and still be counted as warriors."
and I'll leave you with this one...
Margaret Atwood (A Handmaid's Tale)“Don't let the bastards grind you down.” 

Some great reads from women writers to start this weekend:

Thursday, 7 March 2013

Cooling and Great Expectations


You might remember that over Christmas I read Charles Dickens' classic, Great Expectations. For some reason I had been led to believe that this was a Christmassy story. This is, quite simply, not true. Admittedly the opening chapter is set on Christmas Eve but that really is as festive as it gets... although this really only occurred to me after I'd finished reading the entire book...

That minor gripe aside, you know I love a good gripe (and that's grIpe not grope as some dirty minded friend suggested...), the reason for this post is that last weekend I quite accidentally found myself in the village that is said to have inspired Pip's home: Cooling, a village and civil parish on the fabulously named Hoo Peninsula.


It's not hard to imagine a young Pip coming across Magwitch amongst the gravestones in the grounds of Cooling's wonderfully dramatic St James' Church. If you take a walk in the graveyard, you will come across what are now called Pip's Graves - those of 13 babies that are referred to by Dickens in his opening chapter as "little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long, which were arranged in a neat row beside their [parents'] graves".


The main reason for my Saturday morning excursion to Kent was to have a lovely, if not a little brisk, walk on the North Kent Marshes. But you can't have a walk without lunch. That's just... the law. So an hour and a half later, a little more windswept, distinctly muddier and disastrously low on calories, my mum and I stumbled into The Horseshoe & Castle pub in Cooling. This, as it happens, was where I discovered the village's connections with Great Expectations.


Tucking in to rarebit next to a cosy fire, I noticed some writing framed on the wall. With St James's Dickensian associations, 'it is not inconceivable to assume that the public house [The 'Three Jolly Bargemen' from Pip's village in Great Expectations] is one and the same as the 'Horseshoe and Castle' that we know today'. Even less conceivable if it is in fact true that the pub was originally called 'The Three Barges'. Dickens really used his imagination there... 
Whether or not it is true, the pub certainly remains as 'homely and friendly' as its fictitious brother.

Musician Jools Holland also lives in the village. His house is actually inside the grand-looking Cooling Castle. Does that make Jools Miss Havisham...? I think so.



Other Dickens-related posts:
Great Expectations
Claire Tomalin on Dickens
Introducing...Charles Dickens
Visit The Old Curiosity Shop
The George Inn

Horseshoe & Castle
Main Rd
Cooling
Rochester
ME3 8DJ
01634 221691

Monday, 4 March 2013

Will Emma Watson fit the slipper for Branagh's Cinderella?



Is it just me or do we seem to be swamped by fairy tales at the moment? We've already had Red Riding Hood with Amanda Seyfried and two adaptations of Snow White in 2012 alone (Mirror Mirror with Julia Roberts and Snow White and the Huntsman with Kristen Stewart). This year we have already had Hansel and Gretel and are about to be re-introduced to the world of Oz through Disney's Oz the Great and the Powerful.

Apparently, though, there are yet more retellings on the way and Harry Potter actress Emma Watson is rumoured to be in two of them: Guillermo de Toro's Beauty and the Beast and now she's about to try on Cinderella's glass slipper for Kenneth Branagh. The last part of that sentence sounds a little creepy for some reason... apologies.. Watson's involvement is still a rumour though, when it comes to Cinderella, and other actresses believed to be being considered for the role are Imogen Poots, Gabriella Wilde and Alicia Vikander. Hilariously, I read that back in 2009 Watson's name was attached to Marilyn Manson's rumoured gothic revamp of the fairy tale. Seems that never happened but that must be worth a look if it comes about?


It looks like Emma Watson might not be the only Hogwarts alumni to return to the world of monsters, though, as fans are petitioning for Tom Felton to play Beast opposite Watson's Belle... As amazing as that would be, I'm not keeping my hopes high...


Though it does look like co-star Daniel Radcliffe is very close to being confirmed as Igor in Paul McGuigan's adaptation of Frankenstein. Igor doesn't actually appear in Mary Shelley's original novel but featured in the 1939 film as a hunch-backed assistant to Frankenstein called Fritz, and again in subsequent films in the Frankenstein series as 'Ygor'. Igor has since become a stock character in interpretations of many Gothic films, including Dracula, Van Helsing and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.