Sunday, 28 April 2024

An evening with Jake Goldsmith, Charles Boyle and Kathleen Shields

Sunday 12th May at 7pm

This programme is now available to watch:

Passcode: k^0#8!P3


If you're not already on the guest list please leave your full name and email address in the comments box at the end of this blog. I'll be in touch.


This month's free online gathering features the author Jake Goldsmith, publisher Charles Boyle and translator Kathleen Shields, who will be reading from and discussing two new books, neither of which can be easily categorised, both of which deserve your attention!

Jake Goldsmith lives in Suffolk, England. He is an author with cystic fibrosis and a list of other chronic health conditions. His writing mainly focuses on the phenomenology of illness, philosophy, and how illness defines one’s experiences. 

His second book, published on 1st May 2024, is a collection of essays entitled In Hospital Environments. 

https://www.saggingmeniscus.com/catalog/in_hospital_environments/ This gathering is to celebrate the UK launch.

                                                 

In these essays—dealing variously with illness and disability, writing and reading, liberty and apathy, distrust and expertise, Raymond Aron and liberalism, love and grief, and, not least, a beloved cat—Jake Goldsmith demonstrates the radical honesty at the root of philosophy.

            “This is the sound of honest thinking in extremis.”

                                                                                            —Ray Davis, pseudopodium.org

Order In Hospital Environments here @asterism_books and elsewhere i.mtr.cool/skidllxcrx

_____________________________________________________________________________

In the second part of the programme we'll be joined by publisher Charles Boyle and (we hope) the translator Kathleen Shields, who will be discussing and reading from Jean Follain's  Paris 1935, published in April by CB editions.

 


This is an intimate, multi-layered portrait of the capital where he has been living for ten years, a celebration of what a city is at a point in time: priests and prostitutes and poets, shop assistants and shoplifters, immigrants and war-wounded invalids, royalists and revolutionaries, women, men and children all work and play and dream in these streets.

Whether in poetry or prose, Follain is one of the great modern French writers, a secret garden                     waiting to be discovered by the curious. The publication of the first English edition of Paris, so                 nimbly translated by Kathleen Shields, is cause for joy.
                                                                                                                       – Stephen Romer

Order Paris 1935 direct from the publisher: https://cbeditions.com/Follain.html

Jean Follain (1903–71) was born in Canisy, Normandy. After studying law at Caen, he worked as a judge while pursuing a literary career. He published several poetry collections, including Exister (1947) and Espaces d’instants (1971), as well as prose works about places, Paris (1935), Canisy (1942) and Chef-lieu (1950). Follain knew Éluard and Aragon and was a close friend of Max Jacob. He is often linked with the poets Francis Ponge, Eugène Guillevic and Philippe Jaccottet.
Kathleen Shields taught English at French universities (Paris and Caen) and worked on large bilingual dictionary projects in France and England. For many years she lectured in French at Maynooth University, where she specialised in teaching translation. She is the author of publications in translation studies and literature and of review essays in the Dublin Review of Books. She lives in Dublin.

Charles Boyle needs no introduction!

Join Jake, Charles,  Kathleen and myself on Sunday 12th May at 7pm UK time. 

These are dark times. Keep the lights on.


David



Monday, 1 April 2024

An evening with Rose Ruane and Julian Stannard

  Sunday 21st April at 7pm UK time


This gathering has been archived here and free to watch:

 https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/NgY_PvM0tB6pwunWCWxfRpKKJS_k9SOHzQ4u4RlZ-X6lMM9bnVtcMpZ01Y8IEsBr.H0Ff2gM-12JNRD1A

Passcode: 9Z3=k$Y3


This month's free online gathering brings together two wonderful writers: the poet Julian Stannard and the novelist Rose Ruane, who will be reading from, and discussing, their latest books.

If you're not already on the guest list and would like to join in please leave your full name and email address in the comments section at the end of this blog.



Rose Ruane was originally a visual artist working in performance, sculpture, drawing and video. Stories and language were always part of her art practice, but as the written word crept further and further into her art and gradually edged out making and performing, she had to admit that she had become a writer instead.

She undertook the MLitt in Creative Writing at Glasgow University, and subsequently won the Off West End Adopt a Playwright award in 2015. She writes plays, makes podcasts, performs spoken word and occasionally still has a go at drawing and making things just to see if she still can.

She lives in Glasgow with her ever-expanding collections of twentieth century kitsch and other people’s letters, postcards and photographs.

Her debut novel This Is Yesterday was published in 2021. Her latest, Birding, is published  by Little Brown the week after this programme is broadcast! You can pre-order here: https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/birding-rose-ruane/7402172?ean=9781472158000




Julian Stannard has been described as the poet of cabaret. His poems sing and weep in equal measure; a poetry of wretchedness and hilarity, of discombobulation and the bizarre. In his new collection Please Don't Bomb the Ghost of My Brother a dead brother returns on a white horse, a musical stag slips off to New York, the Kray Twins reappear, a summer pudding is carried across a heath, a pair of buttocks escapes their owner, a couple makes love on a rain-soaked stoop, the Mongols catapult concubines over the parapets, a dead friend walks out of his grave like a twenty-first century Lazarus, a blind boy breaks into the Kelvingrove Gallery and makes off with Salvador Dali’s crucifixion, Ezra Pound – half fish, half man – rises to the surface of the Venetian lagoon, and after ten years in the Cicada Lunatic Asylum the narrator finds peace in the Umbrian town of Bastardo.



‘Imagine 'Carry on Rilke', or Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal reworked as an end of the pier pantomime, and you get something of the flavour of Stannard's brilliant new collection. The mysterious poems are darkly funny, and the funny poems are disconcertingly mysterious. I can think of no better companion to have at your side as civilisation's walls collapse and the world spins crazily from its axis.’ —Alan Bilton

Order from Salt here:

https://www.saltpublishing.com/products/please-don-t-bomb-the-ghost-of-my-brother-9781784633066



Join us, and keep the lights burning.


David