@debi
Active 6 years, 4 months ago-
Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
Thank you!! I keep thinking I must submit that story somewhere.
If you’re in the mood for another, CafeLit published one of mine earlier this month CafeLitMagazine: A Horse, A Queen, Some Crockery by Elizabeth Leyland, homemade lemonade
But honestly only read it if you feel like it.
CafeLit asks writers to name a suitable favourite drink -…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
How long have you got?ย btw, I re-read your story for ‘Bump in the night’ yesterday, and was much impressed , all over again. Good stuff.
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
Tell me about it! ๐ ๐
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
Know what you mean about ‘just nice’. Sarah Winman’s ‘Still life’ had that effect – a thoroughly ‘feel good’ effect, in part for location. Which is no bad thing, since I do re-read for comfort. And also find that writing that takes my breath away one day, might notย have the same effect on another.ย No wonder this writing lark is so hard!
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
I don’t remember a sex scene in The Offing though if I sense something – anything – which seems a clunky effort to suddenly heighten the drama, I start to disengage. If the author has a crisis of confidence, so do I.
I find it easier to explain why I dislike something than why I like it. Though I very rarely ‘dislike’ anything, I just get…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
A quick glance at p.82, and I suspect it was theย brutal blowjob (but more subtly described). I am aware of a degree of wariness with each book of hers I buy but she always does it for me in the end. I am also very aware (in a science-minded family) I lack analytical skills, so can’t always justify my reasons to like or dislike (and hence am crap…[Read more]
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
In my notebook I put, ‘Gave up page 82. So many adjectives. Characters insufficiently interesting.’
I don’t know what was wrong with p 82 but I don’t think anything gruesome had happened yet.
Sounds super critical and a bit rich coming from someone so keen on Mrs Dalloway. I think basically it wasn’t my cup of tea, otherwise the adjectives would…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
He can also be stomach-turning gruesome!
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
‘really good’ ๐
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
‘Butcher’s Perfume’ – I could see it was really could but I’m a wimp and I’m not sure I finished it.
Benjamin Myers – I tried The Offing. Historical fiction (which I write), lots of scenery and countryside (fab) and set in beautiful Yorkshire. What wasn’t to like? But I couldn’t get far with it.
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
Same here, with stories, although ‘Butcher’s perfume’ in ‘The Beautiful Indifference’ blew me away.
Have you discovered Benjamin Myers?* I’ve just finished his ‘Male Tears’ which is short stories and much less impactful (to me) than his novels.
*not at the Festival!
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
I loved ‘How to Paint a Dead Man.’ Also ‘Haweswater’. I find her short stories a hard read – often grisly or too troubling.
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
I confess I’ve never read Mrs Dalloway, but have ‘Burntcoat on my tbr pile. Fell heavily for Sarah Hall having picked up ‘How to paint a dead man’ in a charity shop, some years ago.
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Libby replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years ago
I’ll sign up for Sarah Hall, and Graham Macrae Burnet – among others.
Also Mrs Dalloway for whom I seem to have limitless capacity though others may groan ๐
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years, 1 month ago
Quick count says I’ve bookmarked 19, but I don’t know if all are online, which they need to be because I’ll not be there in person :-(.
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Sandra replied to the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years, 1 month ago
Thanks a lot for this Libby – have so far browsed 20 out of 43 events …
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Libby started the topic Edinburgh book festival 2022 programme in the forum Coffee Shop 4 years, 1 month ago
The 2022 programme for the Edinburgh International Book Festival is available Home | Edinburgh International Book Festival (edbookfest.co.uk)
A lot of the events will be broadcast online (there’s an online-only option toย help search them) with ticket prices ‘pay what you can afford.’ I enjoyed several events last year. If you miss the live…[Read more]
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Athelstone posted an update 4 years, 1 month ago
Den people, writers, denizens, does anybody know how much it cost in subs to be a scout (in the UK) in the early 1990s?
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I know somebody who might know if you are still trying to find an answer. Would you like me to ask?
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I wouldn’t want you to go to any trouble, but if it’s easy to ask then I’d be grateful. My MC is recounting a time when his foster-mother gave him subs to go to scout meetings, but he stole the money. This would be around 1991. I’d like to be able to say what he used it for.
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I did ask MrsB, who used to be a Beaver Scout Leader, and she said there was no set amount handed down from above (that is, the Scouting Association) but that each group decided how much to charge, so you’ve got some latitude. Unfortunately, she couldn’t remember how much her own group used to charge thirty years ago.
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Thanks Richard. Yes, thinking back to my brief spell as a scout, a couple of years in the mid-60s, I vaguely recall differing amounts depending on what activities were planned. I did suspect that it might vary from troup to troup, particularly as some are linked to schools and other organisations.
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My friend was a scout leader at the time but not involved with the finances. He reckons he knows someone who will know and is asking. Will pass on any further info I get.
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Thanks Bella
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Only just seen this. My family was involved in the scouts from the mid 80s to date, and my dad was group scout leader of the 4th Dovercourt during the 90s. I’ll ask him if you like, though I can’t say if he’ll remember or not
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Thanks, daeds. As with Bella, I wouldn’t want you to put yourself out for this. I can always “write around” the point.
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Fwiw I just spoke to my mum, who was also a leader, who thinks that by that time subs were collected annually rather than per meeting, and that it would have been about ยฃ50. I get the impression that before that it would be a case of a parent or guardian handing over 50p or a quid when they dropped off the child at the beginning of the meeting,…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Monthly Comp – June 2022 in the forum Monthly Competition 4 years, 1 month ago
Thoughts for today
Writing this on the fifth day of June โ my daughter’s 51st birthday and the third day of the Queen’s Jubilee celebrations of a reign of 70 years โ my memories span a similar length of time. In June 1953, once again off school and suffering with the recurring pain of a persistent ear infection, my mother attempted to divert me…[Read more]
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Sandra replied to the topic Monthly Competition- May 2022 in the forum Monthly Competition 4 years, 1 month ago
Well done @ Knicky – I agree with Sea, there should be more, because the writing was, as ever, fabulous. And I too had to check @Alex‘s on Google that my my guess was right. 1961, eh?
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