Tag Archive | "Litro magazine"

Words Words Words, Selfridges

The pop-up library in Selfridges

The seriously stylish department store, Selfridges, has opened their very own pop-up library until the 1st March. The 15,000-book library set up in the UltraLounge space in the basement area of Selfridges Oxford Street store was curated by publishers Faber, Penguin, Tashen and Thames & Hudson. It aims to promote the beauty and power of the written word, and to reinforce the importance of libraries at a time when many libraries are being threatened by cuts and closures. Shopholics can enjoy handwriting analysis sessions, storytelling workshops, Penguin Classics book clubs, audio books, reading material on iPads and a game of Scrabble on the interactive screens. And plenty of celebrities are joining in the celebration, such as Sophie Dahl and Thandie Newton sharing their most treasured reads with the public.

Kimberley Chen

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Litro Competition Giveaway: Dickens Bicentenary

To mark this year’s anniversary celebration of Dickens’s birth, Vintage Classics and Ebury are hosting a Dickens Day at Foyles Charing Cross Road on Saturday 25th February 2012, 10.30am – 5.00pm. A host of celebrated writers including Deborah Moggach, David Kynaston, Sarah Wise, Alex Werner, Sarah Phelps (who wrote the recent BBC screenplay for Great Expectations) and Michael Rosen will discuss all things Dickens. The day will also include a ‘I Never Knew That About Dickens’ quiz, hosted by Christopher Winn, and all ticket holders will receive a goody bag with a free Vintage Classics book. For more information see the Foyles website.

   

Competition

Litro have teamed up with Vintage Classics to offer you the chance to win a choice of five of the following titles by the great man himself:

  • Barnaby Rudge
  • Bleak House
  • A Christmas Carol
  • David Copperfield
  • Dombey and Son
  • Great Expectations
  • Hard Times
  • Little Dorrit
  • Martin Chuzzlewit
  • The Mystery of Edwin Drood
  • Nicholas Nickelby
  • The Old Curiosity Shop
  • Oliver Twist
  • Our Mutual Friend
  • The Pickwick Papers
  • A Tale of Two Cities

To enter, simply ‘like’ our Facebook page and tell us your favourite Dickens quote on our wall or follow us on Twitter and say your quote along with the #litrocomp hashtag. The closing date is midnight on Friday 18th February 2012 and the winner will be announced the following week.

Good luck!

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The Joseph Conrad Inspired Hotel Room

The installation on the Southbank Centre’s Queen Elizabeth Hall

David Kohn Architects and the conceptual artist and sculptor, Fiona Banner, have designed a rather odd one bedroom installation in the shape of a boat perched on the roof of Southbank Centre’s Queen Elizabeth Hall. The unusual idea is the winning entry for the design competition organised by Living Architecture and Artangel, beating submissions from 500 artists and architects around the globe.

Joseph Conrad’s steamboat Roi des Belges, which travelled on the Congo in the late nineteenth century, and Conrad’s disturbing novella Heart of Darkness were the inspirations behind the quirky hotel room. ‘Passengers’ can enjoy a panoramic view of London from the Big Ben to St Paul’s Cathedral from the lower and upper decks of this peculiar piece of architecture. Visitors are also encouraged to record their experiences in the logbook at the bridge of the boat. An octagonal library of specially chosen tomes and a Soanian cabinet with drawings of the Thames and Congo rivers are other weird but wonderful features of this strange vessel.

David Kohn Architects are no strangers to the arts, or indeed awards. The practice has achieved a number of accolades, such as the D&AD Yellow Pencil Award in 2009 for their work on the temporary restaurant at the Royal Academy of Arts. Fiona Banner’s portfolio includes Harrier and Jaguar, two real fighter jets, which were placed in the neoclassical Duveen Galleries at Tate Britain from the summer of 2010 to last January. Banner’s art work explored the tensions between these war machines as both of objects of incredible beauty and devastating violence.

As well as intriguing visitors, the boat will also serve as an inspiring space for creative individuals as writers, artists and musicians have been invited by Artangel to exercise their imaginations in the boat, creating new writing, images and music to be shared with the public. Special guests include the author of Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, Jeanette Winterson, and video and installation artist, Jeremy Deller.

Kimberley Chen 

 

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Q&A: Cherry Potts

Since Cherry Potts’s story, Out of Darkness, appeared in Litro, she’s written and published a book about a community opera and received a special commendation in the Ifanca Helene James competition 2011. You can find out what else Cherry has been up to recently in our Litro Alumni section.

 

What is your earliest childhood memory?
Aged about 18 months, arriving at our new house in the back of my uncle’s soft top sports car – I remember the steep slope down into the little 60′s estate and being bewildered that this was now home; like all the best memories my mother claims I imagined it. No sports car? I don’t believe her.

What makes you happy?
Cuddling up with my girl and the cats on one of the rare days we don’t get up early, and singing my head off at Raise the Roof, Summer all Year Long or Blackheath Chorus… and writing of course.

When did you decide you wanted to be a writer?
Before I could use a pen to form words, I ‘wrote’ in pictures, once I could write I did. I think I consciously knew writing was the thing at about seven, and settled for it for sure when I decided at nine that being a concert pianist wasn’t going to happen.

What are you reading at the moment?
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala My Nine Lives; an odd little collection of imagined autobiographies that makes use of her life on three continents, extracting sections and fictionalising them. Fascinating, if not entirely successful.

What advice would you give to a first time writer?
Write lots and read it aloud, what looks great on paper can sound pretty silly out loud – if that’s what you’re aiming for fine, but listening to it is important.

What is your guiltiest pleasure?
Me? Guilt? Nah…

How do you relax?
Singing.

What is your favourite book?
Mark of the Horseman by Rosemary Sutcliff. Perfection on paper; and a shocking, shocking ending. I chose this because although it’s a children’s book (just – I wouldn’t let anyone under the age of ten read it!) it works for adults too, and never patronises. Beautifully written, I could hardly bear to put it down.

Which author is underrated or deserves to be better-known?
You wouldn’t believe how long I thought about this one. I’ve been scouring my brain for obscure small press writers who are out of print and shouldn’t be, and find myself thinking, “oh, but not all their books are good enough” or “I’m sure they’re quite well known really”. So I’m going to be fairly arbitrary and nominate Barbara C Freeman for rescue from obscurity. A children’s author and illustrator, she wrote 14 books over a 20 year period – 1961-81. I don’t think any of them are still in print or ever made it into paperback. I read most of them when I was between eight and 10, and I re-read several of them recently, and whilst they are not perfect, they contain all the elements that I love: redoubtable heroines, fantasy, history; and sheer daftness – but tempered with a backbone of genuine emotion – you take the fantasy and the daftness because her characters react appropriately to it, and she doesn’t cheat you when the going gets tough. These are comfort reads, perfect for recuperating from flu, tucked up with a hot water bottle and a cup of tea. My favourite (and also a close run for my favourite book of all time) is her first: Two Thumb Thomas, about a boy being brought up by cats, and what happens when they decide he ought to go to school.

What’s the worst job you’ve had?
Sorry, I’m sworn to secrecy.

What is the most important thing life has taught you?
Do what makes you happy. Trust yourself, look out for your friends.

What’s next?
I’ve just started putting together writing workshops to be run in local libraries, but also in weird and wonderful venues – gardens, concert halls, museums… (any suggestions?). The first of these will be at Blackheath Halls in South London, and I am firming up dates for a weekend extravaganza at Sussex Prairies, a beautiful garden in Henfield that I helped plant. I also have plans to start a publishing house, to publish all the talent I discover at said writing workshops. Writing-wise I aim to finish my science fiction novel this year, and I still harbour an ambition to write an opera!

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