Posts tagged reading

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21 October: Anthony Browne, Children’s Laureate

Thursday 21 October

Anthony Browne: Gorillas, re-telling Goldilocks and Playing The Shape Game

The Library Theatre, Birmingham Central Library, Chamberlain Square, Birmingham, B3 3HQ

7.15 – 8.30pm

Anthony Browne, the current Children’s Laureate, is an internationally acclaimed author and illustrator of children’s books, with nearly forty titles to his name. His watercolours blend realism with fantastical surreal touches and ingenious visual puns. His books include Little Beauty, The Shape Game and the 2010 title Me and You. Join us for a conversation with Anthony and discover the creator behind dozens of imaginative and sensitive children’s books.

N.B – this event is not specifically aimed at children, although they are welcome.

Tickets: £5 (£4) Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE

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21 October: Bugged Anthology Launch

Thursday 21 October

Bugged! Anthology Launch

Ikon Gallery, 1 Oozells Square, Birmingham B1 2HS

Time: 7.30- 9pm

It was one of the freshest ideas for a writing competition ever. Mass eavesdropping took place on July 1st 2010, all across the nation. Writing was submitted in response to overhears as weird and wonderful as ’Yes, we’re rabbit-sitting. They’re paying us in cushions and umbrellas’ and ‘four o’clock in the morning is the best time to do burglary.’ Now the best of those have been immortalized online and in an anthology, and a selection will be shared tonight. Expect laughter, sadness and a touch of madness.

Check out the Bugged website for more information, examples and other goodies.

Tickets: FREE

Please reserve a place with the box office.

Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE

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20 October: Footnotes – An Almost Closing Party

 

 

Wednesday 20 October

7 Inch Cinema present:

Footnotes A nearly-closing party

  

Venue: The Victoria 48 John Bright St, Birmingham, B1 1BN
Time: 7-11pm
  
In Association with 7 Inch Cinema
  
It’s a truism that great novels make for mediocre movies, but the rule doesn’t always apply when it comes to poems and short stories. This informal evening of film and music will gather a few of the best examples, animated shorts which riff beautifully on the likes of Bukowski and Murakami, Albers and Schwitters. 

We’ll also be asking some Book Festival guests to nominate favourite shorts, and writers including Catherine O’Flynn will provide ‘live accompaniment’ (ie, talk over) a selection of footage from the Media Archive of Central England. Musical interludes come courtesy of the ladies from Sugarfoot Stomp. 

Tickets: £4 (£3) 

Box Office: 0121 303 2323  or BOOK ONLINE 

**Please note this venue is only accessible by stairs. If you think access may be a problem for you, please call us, and we will see if we can help. We apologise for any inconvenience caused. For further questions about access, call us on 0121 246 2770**

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20 October: Dominic Sandbrook – State of Emergency

     

 
 
  

Wednesday 20 October

Dominic Sandbrook State Of Emergency: The Way We Were: Britain, 1970-1974

Birmingham Conservatoire, Paradise Place, Birmingham B3 3HG     

7.15 – 8.30pm     

      

In Association with the RSA     

 

      

In the early 1970s, Britain seemed on the brink of the abyss. Under Edward Heath, the optimism of the Sixties had faded. Headlines were dominated by strikes, blackouts, unemployment and inflation. Britain seemed to be tearing itself apart. Yet amid the gloom glittered a creative and cultural dynamism.     

In this brilliant new history, Dominic Sandbrook recreates that gaudy, schizophrenic atmosphere – where unions marched, the socialist revolution seemed at hand, but feminism, permissiveness, pornography and environmentalism were also transforming lives.     

Whether you were a child, an adult or weren’t yet born in the seventies, Dominic will take you there.     

Tickets: £6(£4.50)     

Box Office: 0121 303 2323   or BOOK ONLINE   

 

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20 October: Jackie Kay – Red Dust Road

Wednesday 20 October

Jackie Kay: Red Dust Road

 


Library Theatre, Chamberlain Square, Birmingham B3 3HQ

7.30 – 8.45pm

Sponsored by Newman University College, Birmingham


Jackie Kay realised at a tender age that her skin was a different colour to that of her beloved mum and dad. Tracing and finding her birth parents, her Highland mother and Nigerian father, in later life led her on a journey both painful and enlightening.

Born and brought up in Scotland, Jackie has published five collections of poetry for adults – The Adoption Papers (winner of a Forward Prize, a Saltire Award and a Scottish Arts Council Book Award) Other Lovers (which won the Somerset Maugham Award), Off Colour, Life Mask and Darling: New and Selected Poems.

Red Dust Road is a memoir, taking the reader from Glasgow to Lagos and beyond Revelatory, redemptive and courageous, it is a story of parents and siblings, friends and strangers, belonging and beliefs, biology and destiny.

 

Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE

In association with The Drum and SHOUT Festival.  

 

 

jorg albrecht

19 October: Jörg Albrecht – Contemporary German Literature

 

  

Tuesday 19 October

  

 
 
 

Contemporary German Literature: Jörg Albrecht & Uwe Schütte

  

 Birmingham Conservatoire, Paradise Place, Birmingham B3 3HG  

 

7.45 – 9pm  

Supported by Aston University.  

 

Jörg Albrecht lives in Berlin and is one of the most exciting young writers to emerge from Germany. He writes novels and for the stage. His roots are in slam poetry, and he has produced radio plays, given multi-media performances with his band phonofix and has also written a libretto for Hanover State Opera. His latest novel Sternstaub, Goldfunk, Silberstreif was a considerable success. It tells a fictitious history of space travel, mixing numerous allusions to popular culture with authentic details of the history of German aeronautics.  

Introduced by Dr Uwe Schütte, Reader in German in the School of Languages & Social Sciences at Aston University, Jörg will talk about his work and trends in the Germany’s young literary scene, and particularly Berlin.  

 Jörg Albrecht is the 2010 Writer-in-Residence at Aston University, sponsored by the DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service).   

   

Tickets: £5 (£4)  

Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

  

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19 October:Writers Without Borders

Tuesday 19 October

10 Years of Writers Without Borders

Venue: The Library Theatre, Birmingham Central Library, Chamberlain Square, Birmingham B3 3HQ.
Time: 7.30pm – 9.30pm
Writers Without Borders would like to invite you to our 10th Anniversary celebrations. The evening is all about poetry, storytelling and music from a choir of poets and writers from around the world based in The Midlands rich in culture and diversity, languages and beats.

This event promises to be an unforgettable evening of performance and entertainment. 

Tickets: FREE

Entry is free but please reserve a place with the box office.

Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE

 

 

 

 

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19 October: Lionel Shriver – So Much For That

Tuesday 19 October

Lionel Shriver: So Much For That

Birmingham Conservatoire, Paradise Place, Birmingham B3 3HG
7.15 – 8.30pm
 
 
Shep Knacker has saved all his life to retire to a tropical paradise. He issues an ultimatum to his reluctant wife, who calmly informs him that she has cancer. Suddenly their ailing marriage and life savings are about to be tested to their limits in a fight to save her. So Much For That is a scathing look at the American health insurance system and the way we are increasingly forced to equate our right to life with our fiscal worth.

Novelist and journalist Lionel Shriver’s repertoire also includes The Post Birthday World, Double Fault and the Orange Prize winning We Need To Talk About Kevin, the film of which is due for release in 2011.

  

In Conversation with Matthew Day, Head of English at Newman University College Birmingham

Tickets: £7 (£5)

Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE

See our review of this book here

 

 

 

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16 October: West Midlands Youth Poetry Slam Finals

 
 
 
 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday 16 October

 

West Midlands Youth Poetry Slam Finals!

  

 

Hosted by Birmingham Poet Laureate 2006/7 – SPOZ 

   

   

  

South Birmingham College, High Street Deritend, Digbeth, Birmingham, B5 5SU 

  

Times: U12’S 12-1pm  U15’S 2-3pm  

 

 

 

 

Like gladiators to the coliseum they come to wage a war of words. 

   

Some word warriors will fall and some will triumph… and some will go home with a jolly nice trophy, a pat on the back from teacher and no detentions for at least a week.  

  

  

This live final is the culmination of an on line campaign, which has seen loads of young people uploading their poetic performances to  

www.youthlamwm.com  to see “who has the X Factor”…but in a poetic kind of way.  

  

 Tickets: FREE  

  

  

Entry is free but please reserve a place with the box office.  

  

  

Box Office: 0121 303 2323  or BOOK ONLINE  

  

 

    

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15 October: David Shukman – Reporting Live From The End of the World

 

   

 
 

Friday 15 October

David Shukman: Reporting Live From The End Of The World

Birmingham Conservatoire, Paradise Place, Birmingham B3 3HG   

7.15-8.30pm   

In association with the RSA   

When frontline BBC news reporter David Shukman switched from world affairs to environment in 2003, he feared he might be in for a dull life. He couldn’t have been more wrong. His new job has taken him to every corner of the earth: journeying up the fabled North West Passage in the Arctic, chasing loggers in the Amazon and battling through plastic waste in the Pacific Ocean, getting trapped in Siberian blizzards along the way. Reporting Live from the End of the World charts Shukman’s extraordinary adventures, providing a fascinating eye-witness account of the state of the planet.   

Tickets: £6 (£4.50)   

Box Office: 0121 303 2323 or BOOK ONLINE 

 

 

 

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