festivals
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To the Book Festival yesterday for a reading by three Lithuanian poets: Eugenijus Alisanka, Gintaras Grajauskas and Sigitas Parulskis, representing one half of the anthology Six Lithuanian Poets. It was a fairly small audience, not even filling up the smallest of the festival’s performance tents. A pity, really, because the absentees missed themselves: it was
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My 2008 Edinburgh festival season began last night with a trip to the Usher Hall to hear the BBC SSO under Ilan Volkov perform Thomas Adès’s Tevot and Olivier Messiaen’s final work, Éclairs sur L’Au-delà. Tevot, a recent composition, was described in the programme note (which you can find here) as “effectively Adès’s second symphony”;
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More excitement here yesterday when I discovered that “Yasser” was on at the Assembly Rooms this Fringe. Why? Well, it’s written by someone I know: the Dutch Moroccan novelist Abdelkader Benali. I haven’t seen or heard from Abdel for a long while, but I keep loosely up to date with his life and career through
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You know, I haven’t written anything for weeks. It’s not a case of writer’s block as much as one of writer’s break, one of those fallow periods you have now and then. In past years, I’ve found the summer a surprisingly unproductive season: I never write on holiday (so I no longer expect myself to);
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I have a slot on the West Port Book Festival‘s “Four Hour Festival” event. No time confirmed as yet, but I’ll post when it is. You can find the full programme here.
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As yesterday’s Sunday Herald reports, Edinburgh has a new book festival this year in addition to the established Edinburgh International Book Festival. It’s called the West Port Book Festival, and it’s all free! You can find out more here. The programme doesn’t launch until 11th July, so I can’t tell you any more, but from
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Linlithgow Book Festival now has a Facebook presence. With the full programme listed there, it’s a great way for Facebookers to keep up to date with what’s happening with West Lothian’s literary festival.
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Elmar Kuiper, one of this year’s StAnza readers, videoed various other festival participants reading around St Andrews. There’s a selection on the StAnza Facebook pages and the whole lot is on Kuiper’s YouTube pages. I particularly like the intense focus of this one, Brian Turner reading the title poem from his collection Here, Bullet:
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The programme for Linlithgow Book Festival 2008 is beginning to take shape. It’s looking good, not least with our first Booker Prize-winning author on the festival in James Kelman. Keep an eye the website for further announcements in coming weeks.
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StAnza reports are, naturally, now popping up in the Scottish literary blogomarble. Colin Will offers a StAnza insider’s point of view in his brief sketch. Rob A Mackenzie has two reports: one for the Friday* and one for the Sunday. Rachel Fox muses on her mixed feelings here; while Sorlil gives a StAnza first-timer’s view
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We are delighted to announce that Alex Salmond MSP, Scotland’s First Minister and a son of Linlithgow, will open this year’s festival. A short opening ceremony will take place in the Masonic Halls at 6.15 pm on Friday 2nd November. The ceremony will be free and open to the public.
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The Linlithgow Book Festival website has experienced a few–ahem–technical problems, but we’ve fixed ’em. If you’ve tried to access it and failed, all should now be well. The programme on the front page has also been updated with a little more information about the renga and the Wallace event I’m involved in. And you can
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A quick update: Jennifer Williams will now be reading with me at the Linlithgow Folk Festival gig. I’m also trying to organise some music for it, but that’s not confirmed as yet.
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Linlithgow Book Festival now has a website. Drop by and check it out. Note the additional event on the Sunday afternoon.
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Readers of this blog and Rob Mackenzie’s might remember the reading that we did last year in Linlithgow as part of the Celebrate Linlithgow! arts festival. This year, I’m reading as part of the town’s longest running festival: the Linlithgow Folk Festival. At the moment, it looks like I have the bill to myself, despite
