Showing posts with label Paula Rawsthorne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paula Rawsthorne. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Teenage Kicks report

Five Leaves/Derbyshire Libraries "Teenage Kicks" half day event on the 16th had a near full house of young adults and adults. My organising colleague Ali Betteridge said you need to have nerves of steel in this game as only a few days beforehand we were way below the number we need to run anything let alone a half day event with lots of writers. She kept her nerve while mine was failing. Good call, Ali. We had programmed a great line up of speakers, some being Five Leaves regulars, some occasional, some "friends of" while other sessions were run by teenage readers and, with Pippa from Five Leaves Towers, on the future of the book. Interestingly, the author Pauline Chandler reported that all the teenagers bar one preferred to read in a book format than in any electronic format.
The opening remarks were from Bali Rai. Bali's first book was written when he was nine, Bali and the Giant Peach, at which point he discovered there was more to being a writer than simply changing the name of the main character in a book to your own but otherwise copying it out word for word.
Given that Bali is a writer of an Asian background, it was interesting that his role model was Sue Townsend who also lives in Leicester. It is also thanks to his interest in her as a writer than he is currently doing some work with the RNIB. He told his audience that what everyone has in common is an imagination and the need to tell stories "because we all love gossip and we all tell lies.
Bali became a full time writer in 2001 and is in great demand in schools. He said "I wanted to write about people like me - brown kids, white kids, whatever, working class kids that people didn't used to write about.". He was damning of library cutbacks, reminding us that we need stories, stories about everyday life. "Remove stories about everyday life and you remove diversity [of experience]."
He also set the scene for the day by talking about the importance of reading for pleasure "which will always make you more intelligent. Just like 2 plus 2 will always be four."
From then, until the closing remarks from Paula Rawsthorne the day rushed by. Thanks to all who took part, as audience, organisers and speakers.

Friday, 25 May 2012

East Midlands Book Award 2012

Anne Zouroudi is the winner of this year's East Midlands Book Award, for her crime novel The Whispers of Nemesis (Bloomsbury), set, like her others, in Greece.  Anne was shortlisted last year, but this year only had to travel across the hill from her home to the wonderful venue of Haddon Hall in Derbyshire. Of course, come the revolution, every working class family will live somewhere just as splendid, but it was great to be welcomed into one of the most attractive buildings in the county. The EMBA award was held as the final event of Derbyshire Literature Festival, so thanks to Lord and Lady Manners for opening their home, to Derbyshire County Council (whose leader proudly announced that they had not closed any libraries, unlike other authorities - it has always been, Labour or Conservative, a big supporter of literature) and to Writing East Midlands for organising the Award on behalf of the trustees.
Anne picked up a cheque for £1000, presented by the composer Gavin Bryars, the celeb judge brought in at the shortlisting stage to join bookseller Debbie James and academic Marion Shaw. Gavin gave a terrific extempore speech about each book, and compared the craft of composing to that of the writer. We have already signed him up for Lowdham Book Festival next year.
Of the other shortlisted writers, Paula Rawsthorne was already glowing having been in Leeds that afternoon where she picked up the Leeds children's book award for her The Truth About Celia Frost (Usborne), her shortlisted title here. She was a bit shell-shocked from speaking to 500 teenagers.
The other shortlisted writers were Gregory Woods (An Ordinary Dog, Carcanet), Sunjeev Sahota (Ours Are the Streets, Picador), Laura Owen (The Misadventures of Winnie the Witch, OUP) and Kerry Young (Pao, Bloomsbury).
Five out of six titles then were from independent publishers. Three are first books, which indicates great promise for the future health of writing in the region.
We don't have our external/celebrity judge yet for next year, but we are pleased to announce that the two judges who have to read ALL the books will be Mel Read (former MEP for the East Midlands, now an active member of Leicester Writers Club) and Robert Gent (Robert ran Beeston Poets series for, I think, seventeen years and edited the celebratory collection Poems for the Beekeeper for Five Leaves in 1996).
Nominations for the 2013 award, for books published in 2012, are now open - see www.writingeastmidlands.co.uk for details.

Monday, 12 March 2012

East Midlands Book Award shortlist

EAST MIDLANDS BOOK AWARD SHORTLIST ANNOUNCED
The Trustees of the East Midlands Book Award are pleased to announce the shortlist for the best book published by an East Midlands writer in 2011. The winner will be announced during the Derbyshire Literature Festival, at Haddon Hall on Thursday 24th May 2012, and will receive a cheque for £1000. The shortlist will be promoted via bookshops, libraries, book groups and events.
This year’s East Midlands Book Award is sponsored and supported by Gardners Books Services and Haddon Hall, Derbyshire. The judges who arrived at the shortlist are bookseller Debbie James (The Bookshop at Kibworth) and Professor Marion Shaw. The chair of the judges, who will join them to decide the winner, is composer Gavin Bryars.
The shortlist comprises:
· Gregory Woods (Nottingham) An Ordinary Dog, Carcanet Press - Poetry
· Sunjeev Sahota (Derbyshire) Ours are the Streets, Picador - Novel
· Kerry Young (Leicester) Pao, Bloomsbury - Novel
· Paula Rawsthorne (Nottingham) The Truth About Celia Frost, Usborne Publishing - Young Adult Novel
· Anne Zouroudi (Derbyshire) The Whispers of Nemesis, Bloomsbury - Crime Novel
· Laura Owen (Leicestershire) The Misadventures of Winnie the Witch, Oxford University Press - Children's Stories
Kerry Young's novel was also shortlisted for the Costa First Novel award. This is Anne Zouroudi's second appearance on the shortlist. A full list of nominations can be found at www.writingeastmidlands.co.uk/awards.
Trustee Jane Streeter, who is currently the president of the Bookseller's Association, said: 'Once again it is fantastic for booksellers and libraries to be able to promote regional writers through the East Midlands Book Award. I look forward to sharing this really interesting list with our customers and with local reading groups.. Celebrating writers and reading in our own locality is very important for all booksellers, large and small, and this year’s shortlist gives us all a great opportunity to do just that.'
In addition to Jane Streeter, who is also joint organiser of the Lowdham Book Festival, the Trustees include Ross Bradshaw (from Five Leaves) and Five Leaves' writers David Belbin and John Lucas, all acting in an individual capacity.