Tuesday 17 March 2015

Something Else to Think About

Sally Bavage writes:

Come along Milord... sit at my table...  as Edith Piaf might have said


The programme for this fifth collaboration between the WEA Headingley Writers group and the writers from the Osmondthorpe group of adults overcoming barriers to learn suggested that “To expect the unexpected shows a thoroughly modern intellect “(Oscar Wilde).  Well, we are very modern indeed here!  Thanks again to the Jimbo’s Fund who helped us with supporting this opportunity for local writers to explore the theme of Something Else in a wide, and wild, variety of pieces.  You can hear more about Oscar Wilde on Saturday 21 March.
 
The hall at the Heart Centre had been transformed into Le Chat Noir cabaret bar, with low lighting, mood music, a ‘cast’ in rather louche attire - and a promise of some really strong writing to entertain us. Nearly two hours of mesmerising original work came to a close, leaving our audience delighted, proud and frankly stunned at what they had been privileged to hear and see.  And the home-made cake made its usual guest appearance as an old favourite.

Headingley Writers had produced the backdrops - thank you to Chloe Wilkinson and Howard Benn – the King of the Rhyming Couplet – who then filled the role of compere by producing a poem to introduce each piece of work, as well as his own feline musings.  I was reminded of the old joke, the very old joke – “What’s black and white and re(a)d all over?” Answer: a newspaper and our costumed Headingley writers, who had really got into the spirit of a Parisian dive. 
Photos: Sally Bavage

What followed was extraordinary –
political prose, stand-up comedy, poetry, kitchen sink (or couch potato) drama, children’s stories and hard-hitting news-reporting. 

We moved between fun and wit to horror and tragedy, all handled with a light touch and providing the humane in the human stories.

After a break for tea and cake and time to set-up, the Osmondthorpe Hub gave us a second half as strong as the first.  Life stories for some – accidents and illness – as well as musings on nature, family and friends were explored in poetry that proved both a challenge to write and perform as well as a triumph over nerves and the occasion.  Yes, hands that often shake were shaking more than usual, but so too had been those of the abled writers.  Performance is never taken for granted, but performing original work grants the audience the privilege of sharing another’s world.

These lovely poems contained such lines as “Don’t take things too seriously”, “I can scamper in my heart” and “Life is about being part of a team, Now I am in the Osmondthorpe Hub team”.  From “In a moment my life changed” to “.. and I love a whiskey too.”  “Literacy has been my magnificent friend” said another.  “I am very proud of myself” and “… but I am still here!”  Of death, “My bell was never rung”.  “To make my family proud of me, I am living through adversity, I am being independent in my own unique way.”   Indeed.  Humbling. Cue tears and cheers.  The End.

Lynn and Rod
Work from the Headingley writers: Howard Benn, Hazel Kilner, Alan Harding, Rod Jeffries, Lynn Alexander, Caroline Wilkinson, Di Spence, Janice Maldonado, John McMahon, Lynn Thornton, Michael Freeman, Jim Mallin, Karen Byrne and Val Wright.


Work from the Osmondthorpe Hub writers: Lee, Carl, Jenny, Sheila, Julie, Mally, Paul, Winkie, Sue, Mandy, Jane, Paul, Robert, Julie.

Grateful thanks to Alison Taft, tutor for the Headingley writers, and Maria Preston, tutor for the Osmondthorpe Hub group.  Also thanks to John and Howard from the Headingley group, David and Gavin from the Hub, who set up and wrestled the technology into submission, and Rachel and Mary, who made such wonderful cakes.

See more on Alison Taft’s work at http://www.alisontaft.co.uk/

See more on Maria Preston’s work at http://www.mariapreston.co.uk/

Audience comments:


Fantastic set of performances

Great event, a great surprise.  Some very thought-provoking humbling and inspiring writing and performances.  Particularly impressed with the bravery and courage of Osmondthorpe Hub insights into their lives.

I really enjoyed the variety of the pieces performed.  The venue is excellent and really well decorated for the event

Very thought-provoking and sensitive work.  A joy to listen to people over 50 being creative!

Impressed with Howard’s artwork, loved Fifi, moved by Val, spellbound by Lynn, entertained and tickled by Lynn, very grateful to Alison for her great commitment and skill in producing such a varied atmospheric programme.  Not sure about the flashing light effect and reminded by one or two artist that my hearing is only around 67% these days.

Everything was so professional from the performers, to the scenery and running of the event.  Such a diverse range of performances at a fantastic quality.  I have really enjoyed myself. The Osmondthorpe group were very impressive.  All of their poetry and prose pieces were very good and incredibly moving.  I’m looking forward to seeing them perform again next year.  Thank you. It’s a wonderfully diverse event and really entertaining.  This is the second year I’ve come and I look forward to next year.

Having attended this event twice before, I always look forward to coming again, but this year the quality of the writing and the ambient atmosphere created by the group surpassed all expectation.  There is some exceptional talent in Leeds

Never having been to an event of this nature before, I was unsure of what to expect.  But have been pleasantly surprised at the wide scope, talent skills, variety and content of the group.  Also a pleasant friendly group feel was very apparent.

Inspiring.

The Headingley Literary Festival provides the Osmondthorpe Hub creative writing group with a forum to be heard!  The Hub is about working towards the social model of disability, breaking down barriers that society puts in front of disabled people.  The LitFest gives individuals an opportunity to experience something that they may not have had the chance to do before.  A tremendous experience!

Fantastic atmosphere, warm and friendly and beautifully decorated.  Some great performances from everyone.  Thank you.

Having performed in the morning it was so exciting to see old friends from the group in Osmondthorpe performing and enjoying themselves.  Excellent performances and content!  The Hub performance was truly amazing.

Loved the room setting and music – Cabaret.  Created a terrific ambiance.  Packed room – Le Chat Noir theme and themed red and black clothes added to a polished and enjoyable performance.  The quality of the writing was excellent and the varied programme enabled students to show their individuality perfectly.

This was a very good and enjoyable event.  I thought that the poetry and cabaret theme by the Headingley WEA group particularly the dialogues were very good. I also enjoyed listening to the Osmondthorpe group reciting pieces about their own lives.

Very enjoyable and inspiring.  Full of admiration for writers and performers – their talent and courage – and hard work!  The Heart Centre is such an attractive environment and really inspiring with artworks on walls and dedication to positive creative values – for disabled as well as able-bodied.  The atmosphere was heartening and deeply humane – and the warm of the reception by the audience was an indication of how it was all appreciated.

This was something else!!  It was amazing.  Such talent; different tones, different stories and voices and I loved the black cat slinking its way through the pieces.  Can’t wait to see what you will all do next year.  Thank you writers.

An inspiring event, brilliant combination of groups, wonderful individual contributions – as ever.  Wonderful Osmondthorpe!

Really wonderful, welcoming uplifting, encouraging, thought-provoking, funny, amusing, clever, inspirational, heartwarming  - and long may it continue.

Loved the variety of offerings – torch song, children’s stories, sketches and I went through the gamut of emotions with all of them.

I found the event interesting as it is good to see and hear what other groups are doing

And tutor Alison Taft adds:

It's hard to explain what an impact performing at The Headingley LitFest each year has on my creative writing class. It provides a focus to the Spring term, and it turns a group of sometimes quite disparate individuals into a team, a troupe. The shared experience of writing, editing, rehearsing and performing together breaks down any barriers or reserve between group members. It unites the group, making them feel part of something. We have an age range from 20 something to 90 something. We have the abled bodied and the differently abled, we have people from all walks of life, some with mental health issues and by the end of the spring term, we have forgotten any differences and we are a united force.












Monday 16 March 2015

England Arise - Juliet Barker

Laurah Furner writes:
Juliet Barker                Photos:  Richard Wilcocks
Growing up in Kent on a road called Wat Tyler Way, I spent a great deal of my primary school history lessons hearing about the Peasants' Revolt, and being encouraged to draw pictures of angry mud-spattered men waving pitchforks at the king. After listening to historian and author Juliet Barker’s talk last night on the same subject, in relation to her latest book, England Arise, I found that my primary school education has done me a spectacular disservice on the matter.  

With a clear command of the room and a meticulous manner of speaking, Barker systematically took her audience through each myth of the Peasant’s Revolt and explained the actuality with such authority of her subject that I couldn’t help but try to scribble down every word. Barker’s account of the revolt not only explained the rebels’ unified demand for the removal of corrupt officials and freedom from serfdom, but paid particular attention to the way in which the Chronicles which ostensibly report on the event are the product of a corrupt system bent on denouncing rebellions lead by intelligent artisans and craftsmen as an ‘amorphous mass of ignorant peasants’.

Barker’s book partakes in the disassembling of this notion in a most intimate sense, using her scrupulous knowledge of the subject not just to explain the grievances which caused the rebellions, but to include the accounts of specific regions and individuals which provide a much more human aspect of the Revolt than has been attempted before. Leaving the library after the event, I came away not only with the feeling that the changes this rebellion called for are far more relevant to today’s political issues that I had once assumed, but with the notion that although this ‘revolt’ ultimately achieved none of its aims, the aspirant middle classes who attempted to expose and change a system which was corrupt on every level have been finally been given the narrative exposure their cause deserved.  

Audience comments:



Very stimulating presentation. Excellent delivery and makes you want to get to know that period of British history.

Imaginative approach, lively delivery. Just what history talks ought to be! Lovely.

Exemplary. Quite splendidly lucid and informative. Well done all-round.

Great talk from a knowledgeable and enthusiastic speaker. Audience questions also thought-provoking and relevant. Only ‘improvement’ I can think of is one or two visuals just to help along those of us with less starting knowledge.

Good focus on background which widened the scale of this popular uprising. Also role of Richard II extremely interesting.

A very interesting and lively talk. Speaker could command attention without needing illustrations – most lecturers seem to find a screen essential. She brought the past alive. I’m grateful to the LitFest for putting on this event.

Excellent talk and very good Q&A afterwards.

Most valuable account of a revolt that has not had its full story told. It was good to meet the author.

Excellent speaker, thoroughly engaging. Couldn’t have asked for better.

Excellent talk. Will definitely read the book. Great fan of Juliet Barker’s books on Brontës and Wordsworth.

Very interesting. Told me some things I did not know.

Interesting and informative filling in the huge gaps in my knowledge of the period.

Excellent. Great that it was at Headingley library too.

Very informative and insightful talk.

A fascinating talk. Great use of Headingley library.

An enthusiastic and informative talk.

A fascinating and excellent ‘lecture’. Thank you.

Fascinating, coherent, enlightening.

Very interesting and informative.

Very interesting talk. Thank you.

Very informative talk. Thank you very much.

A fascinating event. The speaker was excellent.

Excellent speaker with a really interesting story to tell.

Fascinating! Very interesting.
Always a good speaker, very informative.

Excellent event, talk.

Excellent lecture.

Very good!

Sunday 15 March 2015

Yorkshire Noir - Helen Cadbury, Nick Quantrill, Alison Taft, Nick Triplow

Helen Cadbury, Nick Quantrill, Alison Taft, Nick Triplow


Audience comments:

Photos: Richard Wilcocks

Really interesting. A fabulous articulate discussion and an excellent introduction to new authors, to read and look out for.

Great event. Well balanced between authors talking about their own books and Q & A. More crime fiction events please!

Excellent evening with interesting authors.  Good readings (bought book of one author simply due to reading). Approachable and friendly authors. Many thanks for a great evening.

Excellent evening. Well balanced panel. Alison Taft was a good chair.

Fantastic! Learnt so much. Wish it had gone on far longer.

Was fabulous and really enjoyed it. Took my mom for Mothers’ Day … was well worth it!

Interesting evening. Good speakers. Felt informal and relaxed. Informative. Entertaining.

Informative and enjoyable. Well up to the hoped for standard and a lively evening throughout. Thank you.

Good insights into how different writers go to their tasks. Let’s have more of this kind of event.

Lots of fun and informative about how to write and create ideas.

A good evening. Interesting to hear the background to each of the author’s books and when they started crime novels etc. Nice and informal.

Very interesting to hear about the craft of writing.

Interesting and enlightening evening.

Very interesting talk with different perspectives.

I arrived promptly at 8pm so missed the readings. Discussion interesting.

Superb! Thank you!

Saturday 14 March 2015

The Whale in the Woods

Kate Baldwin writes:
Back: Clare, Dave/  Front: Jem, Julian, Florence
The atmosphere in the Meanwood Institute for the Julian Oxley event was just lovely. With the hall decorated in bunting and an abundance of tea and cake, Dave Robertson’s reading of The Whale in the Woods entertained the gaggle of children at the front as well as the grown ups at the back, especially the local dogwalkers that knew Meanwood Park and the Hollies well. We were even honoured to have the real life counterparts of the characters Florence and Jem in the room – Julian’s daughter and family dog – which were adorable and worked the room with Florence sitting on the stage, occasionally waving to her fans.

After cups of tea and slices of delicious cake kindly provided by Julian’s family, he then read a section from his upcoming Florence and Jem book about the Meanseas pirate ship. Florence clearly knew she was the star of the show when she came to sit on her father’s lap in the middle of the reading, while Jem sat patiently wagging his tail.

The Florence and Jem stories were great, passing the hardest test of keeping children occupied for more than two minutes! The Whale in the Woods also had a delightful message at the heart of it: don’t be scared to use your imagination, no matter what others think. The local setting and the characters materialised in front of our eyes also helped to make the book and the event as enjoyable as they were.


Audience comments:

Photos: Richard Wilcocks
I really enjoyed it when they were looking for the whale – J (aged 8)

It is lovely to have a story about the park, thank you a lot.

Taylor really enjoyed the storytelling and receiving the book. Mummy and daddy loved the tea and cake.

Delightful and interesting event. I feel inspired to seek out more LitFet happenings. I especially enjoyed coming to Meanwood Institute – an intimate and friendly experience.

A most enjoyable event – a lovely book (great illustrations). Thank you. PS good cake too!

Enjoyed the reading and book. Good support for local writers. Well done. Good luck Julian.

Excellent reading. Thoroughly enjoyed the story which was made all the better being in the local vicinity.

Very busy event – extremely well attended. Good reading by David.

Fantastic event, fab story, great reader.

Really enjoyed it. Well done Julian!

Kids loved the stories. Great event. Would definitely come to similar.

Lovely event, wonderful atmosphere (and cake!). really enjoyed it.

Excellent event – very enjoyable.

Very enjoyable!

Delightful



Trio Literati - Censored

Audience participation in a Shaw premiere                       Photos: Richard Wilcocks

Serene Leong writes:
Known for their intelligent and witty performances, Trio Literati charmed me tonight with their take on censorship in the UK. They took on a light hearted and entertaining approach towards this sensitive and controversial topic. 

The trio, Maggie Mash, Jane Oakshott and Richard Rastall performed snippets of prose and poetry and were joined by musicians Eleanor Rastall and Jonathan Drummond. Taking the audience on a wild ride, the trio entertained with their versions of censored plays. A few lucky ones in the room were even given a chance to join in the fun, taking up characters in The Shewing Up of Blanco Posnet by George Bernard Shaw, a play which was originally banned by the Lord Chamberlain because of its references to God. 

It was a night of comical banter and intimate sharing, all within the playful perimeters of censorship. I’m glad I joined in the fun! 

Shhh! Shall not elaborate more, because.. CENSORED! 


Jonathan Drummond
Eleanor Rastall
RW writes:
One memorable highlight of the evening was Eleanor Rastall's superb rendering of the Brecht/Weill classic Nannas Lied (Nanna's Song), in the original German: "Meine Herren, mit siebzehn Jahren/ Kam ich auf den Liebesmarkt/ Und ich habe viel erfahren..." Her translation appeared in the programme - "Gentlemen, at seventeen years/ I came onto the Love Market/ And I experienced a lot..." More!

Audience comments:

Brilliant as ever. Entertaining, thought-provoking and innovative. Outstanding communication with and engagement of the audience. Wide range of material skillfully woven into a coherent and engaging presentation.

How wonderful it is to be able to nip on a bus for 10 minutes and then watch such a fantastic show. Well done to organisers and performers.

This superb show combined cabaret, dance and comedy. The script ranged over the history of censorship … but never did the content obscure the performance. Brilliant research matched by wit, song and dance.

Innovative, entertaining show.  Very funny. Love the songs and lighthearted treatment of serious issues which is also thought provoking.

Highly professional compilation, well written, usual high standard of performance. Should be banned!

A joy and delight. Totally original. Amusing and instructive.

Full of energy and life. What we need to make us think with joy and …

Delightfully witty handling of a serious topic which is no less relevant today.

A witty and lighthearted history and exposé of an insidious plague.

Excellent choice of material with contemporary relevance – Eleanor R’s singing included for first time in my experience added a splendid extra dimension.

Original- thought provoking, funny and surprisingly topical. The music complemented the play beautifully.

Entertaining performance.  Very ‘English’, and that’s still okay? Singer had a very appropriate voice, with sympathetic accompaniment.

A thought provoking and enjoyable evening. The musical interludes were particularly enjoyable part of the evening’s event.

Very enjoyable in their inimical style, thought provoking, well presented. Songs and music a welcome surprise. Professional.

Wonderful mix between literature and music with a well balanced note of comedy and knowledge …

A lively funny entertainment with an especially engaging musical performer.

Well performed – very clear and audible at the back.

A nice selection of scenes. Very original and entertaining.

A wonderful selection of songs and prose. Really entertaining.

Very enjoyable, but with a serious undertone.

Excellent mixture of song and spoken word, with lots to think about.

A beautiful show, entertaining, thought-provoking, witty, very well performed.

A highly entertaining evening of humour, satire and music.

What a super evening! I didn’t realise how censors ruled our lives!

A great idea, brilliantly executed. And very funny.

First class in the cabaret tradition. Very well put together and with a top class vocalist.

Brilliant show, very original and though provoking. Wonderful acting and singing.

Brilliantly done and lovely singing and music – most enjoyable.

Good fun (thoughtful) good music.

Very entertaining.

An excellent evening!

Very good!

Thoroughly informative, original and fun.

Great fun.

 A witty and clever script. Perhaps there was a slight imbalance, the first half seeming to have more ‘zing’ than the second which we wanted to go on and on! Eleanor was (is!) a charming addition to the group.

A very slick performance enhanced by so many of the audience living locally and knowing the cast. The interspersing of the drama with music from Eleanor Rastall and Jonathan Drummond worked very well. The fact that some of the Trio Literati team were reading from a script part of the time did not matter. It was a great evening.

The show was entertaining, although the fact that the performers mostly read from the script rather than recite from memory, was distracting – and detracting from the pleasure.

Friday 13 March 2015

Jo Shapcott and Colin Speakman

Sally Bavage writes:
Most things in Nature come in pairs – and each of our splendid poets took an aspect of the natural world to explore when they read their most insightful poetry to us tonight.

Colin has based most of his poetry on the ecological and geological, taking delight in celebrating the Dales through its landscape, its rivers, its wildlife and its inhabitants.  Does a landscape have a memory of the walkers who have passed by – has Emily Brontë left her mark on the very stones of Haworth?  The ‘rivers of life’ in the Dales flowing to the sea through the ‘Ouse-ing mud a mile wide that divides Mercia from Northumbria’, playing ‘beck music’ as they find their way through the clints, sykes, hags and runnels.  The ecology of words across the ‘four seasons, as in the different moods of the movements of a symphony’ give a flavour of Colin’s view of his beloved land. We have our Shards – in millstone grit. We have our secret places – in the limestone caves with their hidden memories of life trapped in time.  “May setting suns still fleck dark waves with gold” gave us a vision of his reflections on a sunset. 

Jo Shapcott and Colin Speakman               Photo: Richard Wilcocks
Jo, too, reflected on the natural world, with a light, witty yet perceptive view of some of Nature’s best-loved representations.  Bees formed an early theme, from waggle-dancing to colony collapse disorder, stings to wax, ending with “It’s over now, honey”.  A buzz of delight hummed round the audience.  Sorry.

The Slender Loris reaching gracefully for the lunch long since flown, like us reaching for memories.   Spring roses, feminists all, that demonstrated attraction for butterflies, spilling pollen wantonly, exuding a rich and sexy essence, distracting bees, sometimes overblown and blousey. Petal power!

From Of Mutability, her latest collection, we heard of diagnosis, being an ex-roommate with a scorpion, the confusions of life with dementia and finally, passing water.  Not the Colin Speakman kind, something more basic.  Such eclectic topics are handled with such brio in Jo’s easy delivery style that both lulled and challenged.  Something Else indeed in an entertaining and absorbing evening. 

Audience comments:

A lovely event – Colin’s poetry was beautiful and he painted beautiful images with his speech. Jo Shapcott was great, very clear presentation of her poems. A really enjoyable event!

Terrific event.  Enjoyed both Colin Speakman’s poems and Jo Shapcott’s. Jo Shapcott drew me in with her personal yet surreal and witty work. Good that she read new poems as well.

A fantastic evening of poetry by the two poets! Colin Speakman’s poems were a celebration of nature and the dales, and Jo Shapcott’s poetry was sophisticated and witty!

Enjoyed it v. much. Really liked the dual nature of the reading.

Great venue – liked the set up with the tables. Fabulous bunting! Lovely evening with two fantastic poets.  

Enjoyed Colin’s poems as they embrace many things I love in the natural world with a great choice of words. Jo Shapcott – magical. Created a world of infinite possibility.

Colin’s poetry was nice and interesting on the local parts around here. Jo’s was also good particularly on the serious piece of her late auntie’s battle with dementia.

Jo Shapcott is really brilliant; her bee and flower poems are lovely. Really enjoyed her choice.

Really enjoyed Jo’s poetry – just wish we could have heard more of it!  

I liked the flowers on the table, what a kind gesture in this rather grim room. I attend the Wednesday Heart poetry and it was nice to be in a different place hearing word smiths read their work, although sad it wasn’t better attended. The poets were different obviously in style, but both excellent. Thank you.

Nice to hear poetry about our region from Colin – particularly liked the poem about the Wharfe’s journey. Loved Jo’s playful and magical poems. Funny not to react after each poem though, the way we listened in silence seemed a bit odd!  

Colin Speakman – wonderful poetry but a pity he stood behind the lectern where he was almost covered. Jo Shapcott – excellent and clearly read, and humorously introduced.

Very good. Jo’s poetry sparkled with magic and was clean. Colin’s was enjoyable but it would have been better with a microphone.

Enjoyed both. Shame there weren‘t more people. No other points to raise.   

Much enjoyed Ms Shapcott and meeting Colin, known of old. If only everybody could be better heard.  


I rarely come to the Headingley Club and there was no sign indicating how to enter the building.

Thursday 12 March 2015

Jasper Fforde in Headingley Library

Jasper Fforde          Photo: Richard Wilcocks
Kate Baldwin writes:
Jasper Fforde was a wonderfully charismatic speaker and as funny as his novels would suggest. The creator of the Thursday Next series charmed us with tales of how he came to start writing and his methods. A favourite of mine, and apparently his, was what he termed a “narrative dare”, one of which he gave the audience to chew over in their own time: Imagine a world where everyone has three legs.

What I thought particularly brilliant about Fforde’s talk was how easily he held the audience in the palm of his hand. He gave us a laugh a minute – I found myself with a constant smile on my face – while touching on subjects he thought important such as the significance of imaginative play in children. Even then he managed to elicit a laugh with an anecdote about his children setting the parameter for a game by starting with “right, all our parents are dead!”

There were plenty of established fans within the audience already, with some having travelled from afar, but Jasper definitely won a few more at Headingley Library with his books flying off the shelves and a classically British queue forming for him to kindly sign everyone’s copies! Personally, I asked him to provide his favourite pun and I got two for the price of one in return:

 “Marmalade is generally the preserve of breakfast.”

                        and

“Cowards run in our family.”

A lovely man and a fantastic author!


  Read Jasper's blog at http://www.jasperfforde.com/index2.html

Quote: "... books based upon the notion that what we read in books is just a small part of a larger BookWorld that exists behind the page"

Audience comments:


It was fun, funny and informative.  This is the first time I’ve come to an event and I think I lucked out with Jasper Fforde  (SG)

Awesome  (R)

Excellent speaker, amusing and inspiring.  I could have listened to Jasper speaking all evening!  (JB)

A great event.  Thanks for giving me a chance to meet one of my heroes.  (AC)

Really interesting, fun and very genuine  (BY)

It was an amazing experience to hear about the creative process of such a prolific author.  Thank you!  (MS)

Brilliant, lively, offbeat, everything one hoped for  (JO)

Absolutely brilliant – warm and inviting, informative and playful!  Thank you!  (BM)

Fascinating and delightful  (ER)

Wonderful event, thank you.  (JR)

Very good, really enjoyed Jasper’s talk and Q&A  (LO) 

Fantastic event, Jasper was very informative and funny.  I bought 5 books!  (NO)

Very interesting – he’s a great speaker  (JS)

It was great, thank you for organising it.  J  (T)

Excellent talk – entertaining and informative  (CH)

Really enjoyed this  (WS)

Very interesting and engaging speaker.  Would benefit from larger room and have more time (though I’m sure we went over)  (KBH)

Such a privilege to be able to hear his witty and considered talk and answers.  Must confess I did attend a Jasper Fforde event in 2011 at Edinburgh Book Festival and enjoyed that too and read some more books after it so this was event I was already looking forward to.  (SL)

Brilliant!  (PG)

V. interesting and enjoyable.

Absolutely loved it!  Very engaging and amusing.  A really enjoyable evening.

Excellent speaker – relaxed, entertaining and enlightening.

Brilliant!

Fantastic event but that’s simply down to Jasper himself: great work to secure his attendance.  Could happily have had more time, so the member of staff who introduced him could have been more brief IMO.  You said more tickets could have been sold: there are rooms at Heart or other venues.  Though, cheap at the price!!  (RH)