Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Flash Language Literary Pub Quiz



Do you know your Austin from your Zola? Bring a team to Barcelona Bar on Thomas St on 7th September from 7:30pm onwards and and take on the Flash Language Literary Pub Quiz.

Manchester's finest live literature performers will leaf through the pages of fiction history and paper-cut your brain until it bleeds words.

Entry is £1 per person and prizes will be amazing. And it goes without saying that there will be a return of the infamous picture quiz!

Barcelona Bar, Thomas Street 7pm
Wednesday 7 September

Check out the Facebook event page for more details.

Friday, 26 August 2011

Western Europe Sees Huge Shift Toward E-books



Europe has lagged behind the U.S. in widespread adoption of e-books, but a new report suggests that they are finally taking off. The e-book market in Western Europe grew by 400 percent in 2010, a new report finds. By 2015, e-books should make up 15 percent of total book sales in the region. (By contrast, in the U.S., they were already at 6.4 percent in 2010.)
Read more at paidcontent.co.uk

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Bad Language at The Castle Hotel



Bad Language will be running another event of poetry, prose and giggles on Wednesday 31 August with a special guest slot from Max Wallis.

Max Wallis is a poet, performer, editor and model and currently a student at University of Manchester. His poetry book Modern Love is published by Flipped Eye Publishing Limited and is available now here. He is also founder, creator and director of somethingeveryday.co.uk.

If you wish to take part in the open mic section, please e-mail events@badlanguagemcr.co.uk from 6th August onwards to book a 4 minute maximum slot. A few slots each month are saved for newbies so if you've never read before they'd love to hear from you.

Bad Language at The Castle Hotel
Wednesday 31st August 7.30pm
Check out the event page on Facebook for more details.

Dictionary Compilers Create Endangered Words List




Don't try asking directions to Barton Aerodrome nowadays, especially if you are driving a charabanc!

Aerodrome and charabanc are among the words presumed to have become extinct in the past year, according to lexicographers.

Collins Dictionary experts have compiled a list of words which have fallen out of use by tracking how often they appear.

Read more over at The Guardian.

Hugo Winners 2011


The winners of the 2011 Hugo Awards were announced over the weekend, celebrating almost sixty years of recognising 'the best science fiction or fantasy works and achievements.'


The winners were:

Best Novel (1813 ballots): Blackout/All Clear by Connie Willis (Ballantine Spectra)
Best Novella (1467 ballots): The Lifecycle of Software Objects by Ted Chiang (Subterranean)
Best Novelette (1469 ballots): “The Emperor of Mars” by Allen M. Steele (Asimov’s, June 2010)
Best Short Story (1597 ballots): “For Want of a Nail” by Mary Robinette Kowal (Asimov’s, September 2010) Best Related Work (1220 ballots):Chicks Dig Time Lords: A Celebration of Doctor Who by the Women Who Love It, edited by Lynne M. Thomas and Tara O’Shea (Mad Norwegian)
Best Graphic Story (1263 ballots)Girl Genius, Volume 10: Agatha Heterodyne and the Guardian Muse, written by Phil and Kaja Foglio; art by Phil Foglio; colors by Cheyenne Wright (Airship Entertainment)
Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form (1755 ballots):Inception, written and directed by Christopher Nolan (Warner)
Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form (1466 ballots):Doctor Who: “The Pandorica Opens/The Big Bang,” written by Steven Moffat; directed by Toby Haynes (BBC Wales)
Best Editor, Short Form (983 ballots):Sheila Williams
Best Editor, Long Form (898 ballots):Lou Anders
Best Professional Artist (1304 ballots):Shaun Tan
Best Semiprozine (1112 ballots):Clarkesworld, edited by Neil Clarke, Cheryl Morgan, Sean Wallace; podcast directed by Kate Baker
Best Fanzine (870 ballots):The Drink Tank, edited by Christopher J Garcia and James Bacon
Best Fan Writer (814 ballots):Claire Brialey
Best Fan Artist (993 ballots):Brad W. Foster
John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer (1138 ballots):Lev Grossman

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Full Manchester Literature Festival programme now live!


Only 6 weeks to go until the sixth Manchester Literature Festival!  To get prepared for the big fortnight pick up your very own copy of the official programme from our libraries or visit the Manchester Literature Festival website where the full programme is now live.

This year's festival presents a packed programme including four new literary commissions, an exciting international strand, a host of events focusing on young people and children and an outstanding line-up of celebrated writers, with tickets on sale NOW!

The Festival opens with celebrated novelist and journalist Colm Tóibín, newly appointed as Professor of Creative Writing at The University of Manchester’s Centre for New Writing, in conversation with Booker Prize winning author Alan Hollinghurst.

Other highlights include Andrew Motion’s Manchester Sermon, the unveiling of Anthony Horowitz’s Sherlock Holmes mystery, the ever-popular Afternoon Tea at Manchester’s iconic Midland Hotel with broadcaster Sue MacGregor, Antonia Fraser’s talk on Harold Pinter, Claire Tomalin on Charles Dickens in the Gothic Town Hall, and a passionate and ambitious performance of Sacred Hearts in Manchester Cathedral with Sarah Dunant.

The 2011 line-up also includes Tahmima Anam, Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze, Jeffrey Eugenides, Antonia Fraser, Michael Frayn, David Lodge, Jonathan Meades, Andrew Motion, Catherine O’Flynn, Francesca Simon, Claire Tomalin and Zhu Wen.

Manchester Literature Festival, sponsored by HSBC Premier, takes place from 10 to 23 October 2011 at venues across the city. Tickets on sale NOW - to find out more and to book visit www.manchesterliteraturefestival.co.uk or call 0843 208 0500.

You can also follow the Festival on Twitter@McrLitFest and if you want to Tweet about MLF, please use the hashtag #McrLitFest. Visit www.manchesterliteraturefestival.co.uk for more information!

Local History Source Guide Updated



A newly updated information guide to historical archives linked to the LGBT community in the North West is launched this week following the huge success of earlier issues.

The LGBT History Source Guide is an introduction to the extensive archive and printed material held at the Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives and elsewhere relating to the history of Manchester 's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community.

The guide, which was last reprinted in 2009, was launched last night at a packed event at the Lesbian & Gay Foundation on Richmond Street.

Jeff Evans, a researcher at Manchester Metropolitan University , with help from Sylvia Kölling, told the dramatic and salacious story of the police raid on a drag ball in Manchester which caused a national scandal in 1880.

This incredible story was researched by Jeff and Sylvia using original local and national newspapers and court reports held in archives across Manchester and beyond. Many of these primary sources, like this Manchester Guardian newspaper report, were on display at the event.

The guide is being newly-reprinted after demand outstripped supply of the 2009 version. It's also accessible online on issuu.com. The new and updated guide features up to the minute information, including the influential papers of Alan Horsfall - the founder and secretary of the North Western Homosexual Law Reform Committee.

Councillor Paul Fairweather, lead member for gay men, said: "Manchester 's LGBT community has been incredibly influential in the city's social and cultural history and although it is sometimes difficult for people to find historical information about the community, the interest in the subject is undeniable. For people who are looking to research the LGBT's history, the guide is an indispensible source."

If you hold archive or historical material relating to Manchester's LGBT community, or would like to be interviewed to document your own involvement with them, then please do not hesitate to contact us for advice on either 0161 832 5284 or archiveslocalstudies@manchester.gov.uk.

Edwin Morgan Poetry Prize announced



The winners of the Edwin Morgan Poetry Competition were announced on the 17th August at a prize ceremony at The Edinburgh International Book Festival. The winning poet, Jane McKie, was awarded £5000 for her poem ‘Leper Window, St Mary the Virgin’. Judge Vicki Feaver said: “Each stanza leads the reader further on a sensual and historical journey from a world where leprosy is no longer a scourge to a world where its sufferers went on healing pilgrimages."

McKie triumphed over a five-strong, all-female shortlist chosen by judges Vicki Feaver and Kona Macphee. Runners-up were Gillian Andrews, Sarah Jackson, Jane Yeh and Lydia MacPherson.


Leper Window, St Mary the Virgin by Jane McKie
The contagion of lepers
has lifted.
The low glass, where they crouched
even lower,
remains, but their breath,
their rash, their lack
has passed into the lace
of shadows in the yard.
Where God looked
but did not touch,
the lip of sandstone
is purled with fissures.


Monday, 22 August 2011

Poetry @ City Library - Simon Rennie and Steph Pike

Steph Pike is a poet who has performed extensively across the Northwest. Her poetry combines politics, passion and lyrical imagery. She has been published in several anthologies and her first collection of poetry, Full of the Deep Bits was published in 2010 by Knives Forks & Spoons Press.

"like a winter morning
like a shallow afternoon
like an evening drowned
the government paying tribute
crouches like a cancer
staring through unbreakable glass"

from War on Terror
Simon Rennie is the founder of the legendary ‘Inn Verse’ Open Mic night. Simon’s well-received first collection, Little Machines, was published by Knives Forks & Spoons Press in 2009 and he is now launching his second, Unless Otherwise Stated. He is currently studying for his PhD at the University of Leeds.

"And here our grass-stained jeans would kneel,
our bark-rough hands would press the stone;
braving the wind we would hear the words
sung aloud for all who feel
or ever felt - you are not alone -
we thought or wished we heard.
"
from Listening at the Statue to the Fallen

Monday 12 September 6pm
FREE 
City Library
Becker Room, First Floor, Elliot House,
151 Deansgate, Manchester M3 3WD

For more information contact Libby Tempest 0161 234 1981/07535 426678 or email Libby on l.tempest@manchester.gov.uk



Thursday, 18 August 2011

It's grim down south...



Todays' guest post is from Calum Kerr, a writer and lecturer. His flash-fiction collection, 31, is still available from www.calumkerr.co.uk, and you can read his daily fictions at flash365.blogpost.com.

It’s Grim Down South
I was born in Lytham St Annes thirty-eight years ago, moved to Manchester to go to University at the age of 19 and then, last month, I moved to Southampton. I didn’t choose to move. No, I moved for love, and we don’t choose who we fall in love with. So, I’m happy to be here, but I didn’t move here for the place, and I miss the north. More specifically, as a writer, I miss Manchester. There are so many clichés out there about how distance makes the heart grow fonder, and you never know what you had until it’s gone. But what has made these phrases into clichés is the truth they hold.

It’s only having left Manchester – and the chance to look back at what I’ve left behind through the lens of Facebook and Twitter – that I can see what a wondrously literary place it is, especially compared to where I am now. Now, I need to pause for a moment, before it seems that I am doing a disservice to Southampton and environs. I have, it is true, only been here for a little over a month, and it may turn out to be just as bustling with writery-types  as Manchester. But somehow, I’m just not getting that vibe.

You see, what you don’t realise about Manchester when you live in it is the extraordinarily varied range of things going on all the time. There are open-mic nights and readings pretty much every night of the week, whether it’s Bad Language at the Castle Hotel, Stirred at Sandbar, Write Out Loud in Sale, the many events organised by Manchester Libraries, or Carcanet, or Waterstones on Deansgate, or the Didsbury Arts Festival, or Chorlton Festival, or Manchester Festival (not forgetting Not Part Of...), or just the many, many reading and writing groups scattered around – Commonword, Monday Night Group, South Manchester Writer’s Workshop – and on, and on, and on.

Within each of these occasions and events are the people who run them, who take part in them, who attend them. The people who make the whole machine run. As well as these events they run blogs, websites, magazines, anthologies, competitions, even publishing companies, all with the aim of getting people writing, getting people reading, keep the world of words turning over.

It’s an amazing contraption which ticks along on its own, making Manchester into a literary hub unlike any other.And do you know what the worst thing is for me? The list above is just of those things, places, events that I have taken part in or been aware of. I’m sure the real list is hundreds of items longer with all the things going on of which I never even heard, and now it’s too late!

So now I see it as my mission to bring some of this writing zeal to Southampton. I’m going to try plugging into the networks down here. A great open-mic has recently started up in Winchester – Poetry Platform @ The Railway – and I’ve made contact with Peter Hunter from Apples and Snakes. My next stop will be the libraries who are always wonderfully supportive wherever you go, and then a hunt for the reading and writing groups.

Maybe that’s why fate sent me down here, so that I could bring a little bit of Manchester to the south. Either way, don’t worry, Manchester, even if it’s just to visit, I will be back.

Thursday, 11 August 2011

Guest post on the Lit List!


















If you’ve got an article or post idea that you think would be great on the Lit List please contact me (s.lawson[at]manchester.gov.uk) and let me know! I’d really like to see some guest posts here from Manchester and beyond. Possible topics include:
  • Social media and writers 
  • Mobile technology and libraries
  • e-Books and e-Readers
  • Creative writing
  • Poetry events
  • Book reviews
  • Short stories
Also…check out the Categories list on the right for more topics!

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

JK Rowling's real family tree...


When BBC's Who Do You Think You Are? airs the second episode of its latest series in Britain on Wednesday, August 17, viewers will see a very emotional J.K. Rowling come to grips with learning a cherished family story was not entirely true -- that the WWI hero she thought was her great-grandfather was actually a case of mistaken identity. Yet her real great-grandfather was a WWI hero as well and the mistake was an honest one that could easily have happened to any of us.


Read more about JK Rowing's real  family tree...

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Join Melvin Burgess at the Manchester Salon







Join Melvin Burgess on Tuesday 06 September 2011 as he discusses the researching and writing of  'Kill All Enemies'. Published on 1 September, Melvin's latest novel deals with the real life stories behind some of the statistics we read about young people, the young people who are chucked out of school - the losers, the wasters... the kids no one wants.


Remembering when he was a kid and thinking about those kids - rough as hell, dangerous kids - the sort of people no one wanted you to mix with or have anything to do with, Melvin has searched them out and attempts to tell the real story behind them in a way that young people can properly identify with them.


To research for the book, Melvin went into Pupil Referral Units (PRU's, where excluded students are sent) around the North West, as well as to other places where young people got together out of school, and asked them to tell him their stories. He found out what he always suspected: so many of those people weren't losers, they weren't wasters - they were heroes; real, one hundred per cent modern heroes, just having other priorities than school. 'Kill All Enemies' is a celebration of the lives of young people who have other things to worry about besides just school - and who are penalised for it.

In his approach to writing, Melvin says "Every writer knows that editing, dramatising, and interpreting events is an essential part of storytelling. For me, writing is an exploration. You set up your events and characters and then try to explore them as best you can, via the imagination, and some surprising results come up. Exploring people and their stories imaginatively can lead to more interesting and revealing truths than the bald facts. Imaging how being a different person in a different situation is the best possible way to understand things that we know very little about."

This Salon will be a chance to examine the process of writing gritty, realistic novels and how important the process of being immersed in the subject can be for developing stories. Join the next Salon in the discussion area of Blackwell University Bookshop, The Precinct, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9RN. Please arrive around 6:30pm for drinks and nibbles, ready for a prompt 6:45pm start - expected to finish just after 8:15pm. 


Tickets are £5 (£3 concessions) payable in advance, which entitles you to a £3 discount for anything bought from the bookshop on the evening. Purchase tickets in advance, using the PayPal Donate button on the Manchester Salon website (feel free to donate on top of the £5 ticket), in-store or by phone from Blackwell University Bookshop, Manchester 0161 274 3331.


Some background readings

Jodi Picoult and the Anxious Parent, by Ginia Bellafante, NY Times 17 June 2009
Sympathy for the devil, by Melvin Burgess, for the magazine Children's LIterature in Education
What is teenage fiction, by Melvin Burgess, MelvinBurgess.net
Kill All Enemies, book review by Yasmin Redfearn, Kathrine Payne and Hannah Mason, Manchester Salon July 2011
Melvin Burgess interviewed, by Yasmin Redfearn, Kathrine Payne and Hannah Mason, Manchester Salon July 2011

Kill All Enemies promo video inspired by work experience students after reading 'Kill All Enemies', YouTube July 2011


Monday, 8 August 2011

4 book deal for UK self-published author











































Unable to find a publisher for her novel British writer Louise Voss decided to self publish Catch Your Death in the Kindle UK Store. Hoping to attract readers to an unknown author, Voss priced the eBook at the low price of £0.95. The low price helped Voss’s book climb the Amazon charts and the eBook is currently No. 4 in the ‘Suspense’ category of the Kindle UK Store. According to the London Standard the book held the No. 1 position in the Kindle UK Store for the month of June where it sold 50,000 copies.


via Galleycat - read more at ebooknewser

Library Theatre Company announces Autumn 2011/Winter 2012 season















A world premiere of All The Way Home, a new play by Salford-born writer Ayub Khan-Din; an adaptation by national treasure Alan Bennett of Kenneth Grahame’s much-loved The Wind in the Willows; and a revival of The Daughter-in-Law, a rarely seen masterpiece by DH Lawrence, are the three Autumn 2011/Winter 2012 productions in the Library Theatre Company’s second season at The Lowry.

Ayub Khan-Din’s new play, All The Way Home, set in the city in which the play will be seen for the first time, will be directed by Mark Babych, formerly the Artistic Director of the Bolton Octagon Theatre. A deeply emotional comedy-drama, All The Way Home reunites members of a Salford family undergoing as huge a change as that of their home city.

Set in 2002, the production stars a number of very well-known faces including three Coronation Street regulars in Naomi Radcliffe, Kate Anthony, and Sean Gallagher; and Susan Cookson, who starred in two series of hit BBC2 sit-com Early Doors. Ayub Khan-Din is best known for writing the award-winning play East is East, which was turned into a hugely successful film in 1999; West is West, which enjoyed a run in the cinema earlier this year, and Rafta Rafta, which toured the country in a 2008 National Theatre production.

This year’s Christmas production from the Library Theatre Company will be Alan Bennett’s acclaimed adaptation of Kenneth Grahame’s evergreen children’s favourite The Wind in the Willows. The tales of Ratty, Mole, Badger, and Toad have been enchanting us for generations, and this adaptation is sprinkled with Alan Bennett’s trademark flair, wit, and humour. The production runs for 55 performances between Friday 2 December 2011 - Saturday 14 January 2012.

DH Lawrence’s rarely seen The Daughter-in-Law, a gritty drama set at the time of the miners’ strike exactly 100 years ago, also be directed by Chris Honer, completes the Autumn 2011/Winter 2012 Library Theatre Company programme at The Lowry.

With its wonderfully authentic dialogue and deep understanding of relationships, The Daughter-in-Law affirms DH Lawrence, famous for his novels and poetry, as a playwright of the front rank. The Daughter-in-Law runs between Thursday 23 February - Saturday 10 March 2012.

The Library Theatre Company’s annual 10-day re:play Festival, which brings together under one roof the best of theatre seen in Manchester and Salford’s non-theatre spaces over the preceding 12 months, returns for 2012 for the fifth time, at a venue to be confirmed.

The theatre’s Actor’s Toolbox, a workshop programme running for five weeks aimed at actors and members of the profession, will be held in association with Actors’ Centre North. The course, which will cost £145, will focus on the work of northern writers, takes place every Saturday in October at the Zion Arts Centre, Stretford Road, Hulme, Manchester 15. More information is available from Actors’ Centre North on 07818 462981.

As well as producing regularly at The Lowry, the Library Theatre Company will also stage Manchester Lines, its second site-specific piece in the city of Manchester, in summer 2012. Written by Manchester poet and writer Jackie Kay, directed by leading director Wils Wilson and with music composed by Errolyn Wallen, Manchester Lines follows the company’s huge success of its adaptation of Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, which played to packed houses in a converted Victorian mill in June 2011.

The theatre’s outreach programme in schools and with community groups throughout the city continues to thrive. The theatre has recently secured funding from the Paul Hamlyn Foundation to develop StoryBox, a three-year programme working with people with Alzheimer’s and dementia.

World Duty Free, based at Manchester Airport, sponsor a project with primary schools in Wythenshawe in connection with The Wind in the Willows, as well as sponsoring the theatre’s annual ‘adopt-an-actor’ scheme where schools and community groups ‘adopt’ actors in the theatre’s Christmas production before meeting them after a performance during the run.

The programme also includes a popular monthly play-reading group, a community theatre group based in inner-city Manchester, and the norfox young people’s theatre company - the company’s summer production Tall Tales, Tantrums, and Gordon Brown, takes place at the Capitol Theatre at Manchester Metropolitan University on Friday 12/Saturday 13 August - and a Careers’ and Development programme in association with Cornerhouse. More information is available from the Community and Education Department on 0161 234 1922.


Tickets for All The Way Home, The Wind in the Willows, and The Daughter-in-Law are on sale now at theatre’s website at www.librarytheatre.com, or via Quay Tickets on 0843 208 6010.

Friday, 5 August 2011

The Story of the 1880 Manchester Drag Ball

Details of police raid on a 1880 drag ball in Chorlton upon Medlock (with illustrations) can be found in Steve Jones, Manchester: The Sinister Side (1997), pp.79-82, q364.1 Jo.





















Join us for the launch of the updates LGBT History Source Guide. Jeff Evans of Manchester Metropolitan University and Sylvia Kölling of Manchester University will be telling the spectacular and salacious story of the 1880 police raid on a drag ball in Manchester and its aftermath which caused a national scandal.

The story, researched in local and national newspapers and court archives, is one example of many signposted in the revised Manchester’s LGBT History Source Guide. Primary sources will be on display at the event. No booking required - just turn up!

The source guide introduces archive and printed material held across Manchester and beyond relating to the history of Manchester's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community. It is the first port of call for anyone interested in the history of Manchester's LBGT community.

The new 2011 version includes the recent deposit of correspondence and newspaper cuttings by Allan Horsfall, founder of the North Western Homosexual Law Reform Committee in 1964. Find out more and view the source guide online over at the library website

Monday 22 August @ 6pm
Lesbian & Gay Foundation
5 Richmond Street
M1 3HF on Mon 22 Aug at 6pm.

Please feel free to send this invitation to your contacts. If you would like an event poster to print and display please email s.lawson@manchester.gov.uk



New! Manchester Archives LGBT History gallery on Flickr
The photographs below can also be viewed directly on Flickr site where you will find many more sets on Manchester Archives Flickr photostream.

Thursday, 4 August 2011

More free music online from Manchester Libraries

Lovely headphones drawing by Kate* at http://farm1.static.flickr.com/56/136222273_0a2a5b2829.jpg
 
There’s been a huge increase in free music for Manchester library members after the recent acquisition of Music Online. 

This web-based music streaming service offers thousands of hours of jazz, world and classical recordings, from Afrobeat to Zydeco and everything in between.  And with the Smithsonian Institute’s world famous Folkways collections there too, there’s bound to be something for every discerning listener bored of a diet of pop. It’s a great way to discover new music without parting with any cash.

Manchester Library members can log onto the website, enter their ticket details and play music free on computers or web-enabled phones. Joining the library is free.

Music Online is just one part of what’s on offer from the library website – as well as music streaming, there are free, downloadable eBooks and audio books, news archives, thousands of pages of reference works and encyclopedias, business information, pictures of Manchester and even help for anyone who needs to pass the driving theory test.

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Flash fiction writers follow Chorlton success with Didsbury anthology and event



















The writing collective behind the popular Chorlton Arts Festival 2011 Flash Mob writing competition and literary salon are currently inviting submissions of short stories for their latest project, running in conjunction with Didsbury Arts Festival.

The five published flash fiction writers and award-winning bloggers behind the idea are Sarah-Clare Conlon, Ian Carrington, Tom Mason, David Hartley and Benjamin Judge. All five regularly read their works of flash fiction (also called micro fiction or short short stories) at literary events and open mic nights in and around Manchester, and have performed as part of Manchester Literature Festival and Oxfam
Bookfest.

Having already organised various successful events   including a pop-up literary showcase for Twestival, Chorlton Arts Festival’s first-ever flash fiction competition and spoken word night, and a literature quiz for the Not Part Of fringe to Manchester International Festival   the group decided to propose a new idea for Didsbury Arts Festival 2011. They will be publishing an anthology of stories on the theme of love and lust, and hosting an evening during the festival with readings by various contributors and a special performance by Manchester-based flash fiction writer and novelist David Gaffney (who is also judging the annual DAF short story competition).

Submissions are now open for the FlashTag anthology; the closing date is Sunday 7 August so you need to act fast! Stories are invited from anyone over the age of 18 on the day of the event, be they published authors or first-time storytellers. Entry is free and stories must not exceed 400 words. All entries will be judged anonymously and the successful stories will appear in an anthology called Quickies: Stories For Adults.

The collection will be launched at a fun-filled literary evening during Didsbury Arts Festival on Wednesday 28 September at the Northern Lawn Tennis Club on Palatine Road. Full details of how to submit are on the website at http://flashtagmcr.wordpress.com with updates via Twitter @FlashTagMcr. The group can be contacted via flashtagmcr@gmail.com.

FlashTag organiser and judge Sarah-Clare Conlon says: “We wanted to follow up our success at Chorlton Arts Festival in May with something completely new, and it struck us no one in Manchester has done a literary-based Smut Night. We thought it’d be great to hold it in the suburbs, so we’ll be launching our anthology of tongue-in-cheek saucy and romantic stories at a special evening of readings and fun.”

The third Didsbury Arts Festival runs Saturday 24 September to Saturday 1 October; more details can be found on the website at www.didsburyartsfestival.org.

Short stories saved from Radio 4 axe?

















BBC Radio 4 seems to have performed a partial u-turn on its decision to cut the number of short stories it airs from three to one per week, with a compromise of two weekly broadcasts.

Listeners, authors and celebrities such as Joanna Lumley and Stephen Fry are among 5,500 of those who signed an online petition opposing the move to reduce the number of short stories aired, which was borne out of Radio 4 controller Gwyneth Williams’s desire to extend the programme "The World at One"

Read more at The Bookseller http://bit.ly/rhs1IG

Monday, 1 August 2011

5-4-3-2-1 SF Gateway ready for lift off....












Wow! The Science Fiction Gateway launches in September and will release thousands of out-of-print titles by classic genre authors as eBooks. The SF Gateway will launch with more than a thousand titles by close to a hundred authors building to 3,000 titles by the end of 2012, and 5,000 or more by 2014.

Gollancz’s Digital Publisher Darren Nash said, “The Masterworks series has been extraordinarily successful in republishing one or two key titles by a wide range of authors, but most of those authors had long careers in which they wrote dozens of novels which had fallen out of print. It seemed to us that eBooks would offer the ideal way to make them available again. This realization was the starting point for the SF Gateway.”

Wherever possible, the SF Gateway will offer the complete backlist of the authors included and will be closely integrated with the recently announced new online edition of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, which provides an independent and definitive reference source of information on the authors and books included.

The Gateway site will also act as a major community hub and social network for SF readers across the world, allowing them to interact with each other and recommend titles and authors. The site is planned to include forums, blogs, regular promotions, and is envisaged to become the natural home on the net for anyone with an interest in classic SFF.

British Science Fiction Award-winner Alastair Reynolds said: “When I first started reading SF seriously, as a teenager growing up in Wales, one of the first walls I hit was the realisation that many classic and influential works of the field were either out of print or so hard to obtain that they may as well have been. SF is a forward-looking genre but its past has always been as fascinating as its future, and for that reason the SF Gateway is an exciting and groundbreaking venture, which should prove an enormous asset to the field.”

Double Arthur C. Clarke Award-winner Pat Cadigan added: “This is exactly what I've been hoping for now that the digital book is becoming more widespread. I have always said that the eBook will not be the death of the physical book – the eBook will save so many wonderful books from being lost. We have to remember that what we read is the book – what we read it on, whether ink and paper or pixels on a screen, is just the interface. I'm honestly thrilled about this new project and delighted to be on the list.”

The SF Gateway will be officially launched by Gollancz in September. Visit the website for announcements and more author details. You can also talk to the SF Gateway on Twitter and on Facebook.














If you like reading sci-fi and want to meet like minded people and chat about SF you should definately visit the Manchester Sci-Fi Book Club. The monthly meetings take place at Madlab on Edge Street and the group are always looking for new members.  The next meeting is Tuesday 16th August 7 – 9 pm to discuss Anvil of Stars by Greg Bear.

You can contact the group via Twitter @mcrsf_madlab using #mcrsf , keep up to date with Manchester Sci-Fi book club posts at Madlab: http://madlab.org.uk/content/tag/mcrsf/  and join the manchester SF group on Google.