The printed version of this year's LitFest brochure - twenty pages long - has arrived. If you can help by distributing or 'placing' it, get in touch. If you are in Headingley at the Farmers' Market this coming Saturday (8 February) you will see some rain-lashed people giving it out. Ask for a fat handful if you can use it.
Tuesday, 4 February 2014
Monday, 27 January 2014
Wonderful youngsters
Sally Andrews writes:
Monday 27 January finds St Chad's school assembly hall crammed with 160 keen pupils and their teachers listening in rapt attention to some of their peers in Year 6 read out poems written with the inspiration of James Nash, local writer and poet working in the school as part of Headingley LitFest's support for community schools.
Once again the compelling gaze of the sightless clay eyes of a terracotta head used by James inspired children to write about the current LitFest theme of 'Surviving'. They wrote movingly, with wide-ranging vocabulary and read out their work with such mature assurance that it only served to illustrate the value of such opportunities to extend their experiences of poetry, poetic imagery and performance.
As Holly said, “It was very inspiring to hear and see a real poet; it made me want to write more poetry.” Her classmate Hajra added that “Planning the poem and setting out my ideas” had also been exciting. Their class teacher, Ms King, was delighted in the spur for her “pupils to keep writing poetry after James has left his mark on the school” and headteacher Mrs Pratten praised those “wonderful youngsters who showed courage in sharing their work with everybody and who had written in such a thought-provoking way.”
Jo Shapcott – multi-award-winning poet in the main LitFest on 20 March 2014 – it seems you have a lot to beat!
Wednesday, 22 January 2014
Programme brochure is being printed!
Exciting eh? They'll be given out at Headingley Farmers' Market on Saturday 8 February - and that's just a start. In the meantime, see the preliminary programme at www.litfestprogramme.blogspot.com
Friday, 3 January 2014
A warning from matron
Update on the LitFest's Wartime Hospital at Beckett Park project:
The illustrated book containing the true stories which have been collected and the discoveries which have been made over the past year or so - some of them extraordinary - will be launched at a very special evening on 21 March at the New Headingley Club in St Michael's Road. During the event, at 8pm, a group specially created for the occasion called Vedettes will give a performance based on some of the stories. You are being warned now that the club is liable to be packed out - so tickets will issued nearer to the date, even though entry is free - with a collection. You can book your place now by emailing headingleyhospital@gmail.com
The illustrated book containing the true stories which have been collected and the discoveries which have been made over the past year or so - some of them extraordinary - will be launched at a very special evening on 21 March at the New Headingley Club in St Michael's Road. During the event, at 8pm, a group specially created for the occasion called Vedettes will give a performance based on some of the stories. You are being warned now that the club is liable to be packed out - so tickets will issued nearer to the date, even though entry is free - with a collection. You can book your place now by emailing headingleyhospital@gmail.com
Matron and nurses at the 2nd Northern General Hospital, Beckett Park, Headingley in 1917 |
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Two heads are better than one
Sally Bavage writes on ‘Surviving’ at Brudenell Primary
As James Nash, local
poet/writer working for the first time for LitFest with Brudenell Primary
School, said of his storytelling sessions here: “I told Year 6 stories; their
stories were better than mine!”
Monday 9th December and yet another marvellous afternoon
where young people shared their ideas with fellow pupils, parents, teachers and
visitors, using a microphone and standing centre-stage to read out to an
audience of 100 tantalising excerpts from their vivid tales woven around a clay
head.
Adventures, accidents,
tragedy, terror, jollity, journeys – all here. The clay model carries scars; speculation ranged from
crashes to war, from falls to wounding, from kidnapping to family rescue from a
cooking pot! Dreams and
nightmares. Beautiful descriptions
of candyfloss clouds, sun-drenched beaches, menacing streets. From Scarborough to New York to
Transylvania – we were taken along a global journey ourselves. We look forward to seeing the whole
stories on display later this year.
Headteacher Jill Harland
commented afterwards: “Having an inspirational author work with our pupils has
raised their ambition and love of literacy. Some have been speaking English for less than two years –
and now see where this work has taken their language development.” Teacher Rachael Mann told us that “The
event really inspired the Year Sixes to write more, and present their work
confidently in front of an audience.
The language used in the stories was excellent and I think events like
these really encourage children to have an interest in writing.”
We can leave the final words
to some of Year Six themselves:
“Working with James improved my writing as
before he came I didn’t know how to start a story.” Asiman
“He inspired me to write
more stories.” Maham
And, simply, “It was fun!!”
Aryaan.
Monday, 2 December 2013
Draft Calendar for 2014
The calendar for the programme of the 2014 LitFest is almost in place, with only a few gaps for extra events to squeeze into - final version in a week or two - so far we've got (in the order of the calendar, and without some of the final titles), Climate Change (with Café Scientifique), Film at Heart (Caesar Must Die), Alison Taft's new novel, Irish Arts, Words on Tap Special (with Matthew Hedley Stoppard), Trio Literati, Malcolm Lowery poetry, Italian Classic readings (Dante and Bocaccio) at the Salumeria, Let Me Speak (creative writing group at Heart, with friends from Osmondthorpe if possible), The Return of the Soldier (Rebecca West, lecture by Dr Richard Brown), Leeds Combined Arts event, Jo Shapcott, Grand Launch of the book of stories from the wartime hospital at Beckett Park (together with a performance based on some of them from the Vedettes - Leeds Met students), Ridiculous Witches with Sarah Shafi, Surviving the Publishing Industry (workshop with Alison Taft), house events including one on little-known war poets, Theatre of the Dales, café events at Mint and Lento on North Lane, Scriptophilia with Peter Spafford and Richard Ormrod, a literary walk around Headingley and West Park, poetry slams at City of Leeds and Lawnswood Schools and Aritha van Herk at Heart.
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