Archive for Creative Writing

Winners in the Creative Writing Section of the Wootton Bassett Arts Festival

Rosettes have been placed on the winning entries of the Creative Writing section which are on display at Wootton Bassett Library. But for those of you who cannot get there here is the list (marks awarded are show in brackets):

Jane Wade

Jane Wade reading from her winning entry

  • Poetry age 9 years and under – Madigan Brady (86)
  • Poetry age 10 and 11 years – Ali Cummings (86)
  • Poetry 12 and under 15 years – Lewis Jenkins (84)
  • Poetry 15 and under 19 years – Katherine Wilson (85)
  • Journalism 15 and under 19 years – Katherine Wilson (86)
  • Short Story 9 years and under – Julian Shirnia (84)
  • Short story 13 and under 15 years – Emma Bessent (90)

In the following categories there were such a large number of entries we have decided to list first, second and third places:

Poetry adult 19 and over

  1. Alan Martin (88)
  2. Mo Needham (87), Mike Jenkins (87)
  3. Antonetta Newton-Tyres (86), Deb Craven (86)

Short story 10 and under 13 years

  1. Rosie Bevan (87), Katie Smith (87)
  2. Niamh Taylor (84), Lewis Jenkins (84)
  3. Ali Cummings (83)

Short story adult 19 and over

  1. Jane Wade (95)
  2. Deb Craven (88)
  3. Mo Needham (87)

With an outstanding grade of 95 Jane Wade was also awarded the Chairman’s Cup for Creative Writing at the Highlights Concert on Sunday 13th June.

Highlights Concert Photographs

Here are the photographs from the Highlights Concert. We are still awaiting permission to include pictures of some of the performers so if you cannot see yourself her contact us and we will add you in…

What’s on TODAY at the Highlights Concert

The Festival will culminate tonight in the Highlights Concert where the most outstanding performances of the Festival are invited to share their work with a capacity audience in the Memorial Hall.

Expect to see:

  • Singers
  • Pianists
  • Solo Acting
  • Jazz Woodwind
  • Poetry
  • Group Acting

and so much more…

Tickets are FREE and on a first come first served basis. However, a Festival like ours does cost a great deal to put on so donations will be very much appreciated.

Hope to see you there!

What’s on TODAY – Saturday 12th June

Today is SUPER SATURDAY!

It is the busiest day of the Festival with all four sections operating. Here’s the low down for what’s on in each area:

ART – the Exhibition opens at 9am on the Ground Floor of the Civic Centre. The Exhibition will end at 5.30pm and awards will be presented at 6.00pm. Collection of artwork will follow at 6.30pm. Please remember to bring your tickets so that we can be certain the correct artwork is paired with the correct artist!

CREATIVE WRITING – this is taking place in the Upper Room at the Memorial Hall. It runs between 12 noon and 1.30pm.

SPEECH AND DRAMA – performances start at 9.30am and run until approximately 5.00pm. Performances on show will include Verse Speaking, Duologue Acting, Solo Acting, Shakespeare Acting, Group Acting, TV News Reading, Solo Mime, Logical Grumbling, Prepared Reading, Memorised Prose, Duologue Mime, Bible Reading and Public Speaking.

MUSIC – continues in the Memorial Hall starting at 9.30am with Ensemble followed by Woodwind, Piano Duet, Family Groups, Piano Solos, Jazz, Strings and Brass. The last class of the day is Piano Solos which starts at 8.15pm.

REFRESHMENTS – will be on sale from 9am through to 4pm on the Ground Floor of the Civic Centre so pop by for your lunch or afternoon tea we will have filled rolls, tea, coffee, soft drinks, crisps, sweets, biscuits and HOME MADE CAKES.

What’s On at the Wootton Bassett Arts Festival

With only two days to go until the Festival begins we thought it would be helpful to give you a guide to “What’s On” to help you decide what performances you would like to visit.

The Festival Begins…

On Thursday at 1.00pm the Festival opens in St Bartholomew and All Saints Church on Wootton Bassett High Street. Thursday afternoon starts with Pre-School and Junior Choirs and moves on to a variety of other Junior Vocal classes. The evening session continues at the church at 6.00pm with Secondary age Vocal Classes, Adult Vocal Classes, Adult Choirs and Vocal Groups. The evening is expected to finish at approximately 9.00pm.

A Plethora of Piano Solos

Friday evening is dedicated to young pianists studying Piano at grades Preliminary, 1 and 2 and takes place in the Memorial Hall on Station Road.

Super Saturday!

Saturday morning starts early… At 9.00am the doors will be open at the Civic Centre ready for the Verse Speaking classes on the 1st floor and TV News Reading in the Mayor’s Parlour both of which start at 9.30am. On the ground floor of the Civic Centre  REFRESHMENTS will be on sale and you can view the ART EXHIBITION throughout the day. All art entries will be adjudicated at 6.00pm at which point awards will be presented. During the rest of the morning you can watch Duologue Acting, Solo Acting, Solo Mime, Duologue Mime, Memorised Prose, Prepared Prose Reading and “Logical Grumbling”. Followed in the afternoon by more Solo Acting, Verse Speaking, Prepared Prose Reading, Bible Reading, Solo Shakespeare Acting, Group Acting and Public Speaking.

Meanwhile, at the Memorial Hall the day starts at 9.30am with Ensembles followed by Piano Duets, Woodwind, Family Groups, Jazz and Piano Solos. Between 12 noon and 1.30pm Creative Writing will be adjudicated in the Upper Room and Music continues from 2.15pm onwards with Woodwind, Strings, Brass and Jazz. Music starts again for an evening session of Piano Solos beginning at 6.30pm.

Spectacular Sunday

Jazz Piano kicks-off Sunday morning bright and early in the Memorial Hall at 9.00am with Piano Solos taking up the rest of the morning. In the afternoon you can enjoy the Harp followed by Strings, Woodwind, Modern Pop Songs, Songs from Operetta, Shows and Films and finally some classic Disney tunes.

Speech and Drama moves to Noremarsh School on Sunday where you can enjoy Choral Speaking, Group Acting, Duologue Acting, Verse Speaking, Solo Acting and Solo Mime.

The Highlights Concert – The Best of the Best

The whole Festival culminates on Sunday evening at 6.30pm with the Highlights Concert where the most outstanding performers of the Festival are invited to perform their work before the Mayor of Wootton Bassett in the Memorial Hall. This is a thrilling evening of exceptional talent so do try to join us on the night. Admission is free though donations are welcomed to support the Committee’s efforts to stage the Festival in future years. Seats will be allocated on a first come first served basis and are limited by the capacity of the hall.

Programmes are ON SALE NOW (£2.50) at Brian Taylor Music, Wootton Bassett High Street, giving full details of all performances or can be bought during the Festival on the door…

Guest Blog Swindon Festival of Literature – Getting controversial with Daljit Nagra

“Push the boundaries, challenge yourself about difficult issues. Try not to be twee.” These were some of the first few words of advice and encouragement that poet, Daljit Nagra, gave to us during the writing workshop on the Swindon Festival of Literature’s finale. And what good advice. How many of us are guilty of only writing in our comfort zone; not willing to explore further through fear of what it would make us socially or politically?

The workshop began in earnest when about 20 writers – ranging from practising writers to a lady who confessed that she hadn’t written since her school days – sat down to a wholesome lunch. This was followed by tea, a slice of lemon cake and those all important introductions. With the workshop soon underway, Daljit explained that the theme of the afternoon was ‘controversial context’, and made us consider that within art there is also controversy, whether it is subtle or outright crude.

To help us engage, Daljit’s first exercise was for us to jot down what made us angry. And interestingly, being predominantly a prose writer, I found myself trying out poetry by the second exercise. The workshop was experimentary; we discussed pieces of poetry – some of which we found shocking, and there were interesting discussions to follow.

By the end of the day we each had to read out an extract – daunting, yes, but it was fascinating to hear some pretty impressive work which was already taking shape from some of the members of the group. And of course Daljit posed some more interesting questions, some of which I hope will make me think not only about what I’m writing, but how I’m writing it. And what, if at all, am I debating about in my work.

Julie Venis for the Swindon Festival of Literature

Find out more about the Swindon Literature of Festival here:

http://www.swindonfestivalofliterature.co.uk/

http://twitter.com/literaturejenn

literaturejenn@yahoo.co.uk

Guest Blog Pulsar “Live-Microphone” Performance Poetry Evening

Pulsar ‘Live-microphone’ Performance Poetry Evening, at The White Hart, High Street, Wroughton, Swindon, Wiltshire, SN4 9JX.  From 8.00 pm until closing time on Thursday, 10th June, 2010.  Telephone number for The White Hart is 01793-812436

The evening will be held in the pub function room, a separate room from the main bar area. There will be a small charge of £1.00 per person, to help cover costs.  The pub has ample free parking. Wroughton is approximately 3 miles from Swindon, A4361.

You may relax, listen or better still, read your own poems, (or poems of choice), to a partisan and non-competitive audience.  You may also, if you wish, play your own guitar for accompaniment, (although the emphasis is on poetry).

The event will be covered / reviewed by Pulsar Poetry Webzine, with photographs etc.  Reviews and photographs will be featured on our web site, see below.  The evening will be a celebration of poetry and will include ‘live’ contributions from local, (and not so local), published poets.  We will also film the event for posting to YouTube, (with participants’ permission).  To view videos and photographs of poets performing at previous Pulsar events you could visit the Pulsar Poetry Webzine Photo Gallery via the following link http://www.pulsarpoetry.com/Pulsar_photo_gallery.htm and click on the links to You Tube.

To express interest and gain information about the event please phone 01793 875941 or e-mail: puls...@btopenworld.com or view Pulsar Poetry Webzine: www.pulsarpoetry.com

Guest Blog Swindon Festival of Literature – Investigating MC Beaton

The Swindon Festival of Literature featured a creator of detectives on 11 May at the Central Library.

The author of the Agatha Raisin and Hamish Macbeth mystery series, as well as more than 100 historic romantic novels under various pseudonyms, charmed the audience instantly with her stories and amusing anecdotes.

Born and raised in Glasgow, and having lived in London, the United States of America, the Highlands of Scotland, and now sharing her time between the Cotswolds and Paris, the 74-year-old has travelled a fair bit, perhaps allowing her inspiration for her many novels to ever increase.

Her love of reading was clear, as she explained that she was a part of the reading generation, a great escape pre-TV.

She is clearly not the “moron of the family” as she was once described by her mother, creating characters that have touched the hearts of people worldwide. Moving from journalism into novels, she claims the transition was easy – “You just report what’s in your head”. Her first effort was a Regency novel, written after reading one and thinking that she could do better.

However she claims to have “no literary ambitions” and just wanted to plug a gap in the market at the time for something between Mills and Boon and the Booker Prize.

No one could fail to be drawn in by this warm, interesting woman, and I look forward to seeing if this is matched in The Agatha Raisin companion and Busy Body which will be released in October this year.

By Jennifer Ockwell, Swindon Festival of Literature

Find out more about the Swindon Literature of Festival here:

http://www.swindonfestivalofliterature.co.uk/

http://twitter.com/literaturejenn

literaturejenn@yahoo.co.uk

Guest Blog – Swindon Festival of Literature – Rebecca Adams, a heart-wrenching affair

This inspiring author drew me in from the start, setting the scene for her latest book – Touching Distance. Beginning her Swindon Festival of Literature talk at the Swindon Arts Centre by explaining how her own experiences of traumatic childbirth had some influence on her, one could not fail to feel sympathy and interest as this lively woman stood up in front of us.

Rebecca Abrams

Rebecca Abrams

However she wasn’t one to reach in and grab you by the heartstrings just as an attention-grabbing device. Standing up in front of us she was not asking for sympathy; just sharing her passion for the main character Alexander Gordon and telling us how he: “reached out and grabbed me round the throat and wouldn’t let me go until I’d finished writing the book.”

Set in Aberdeen in the 1790s at the time of a great epidemic of ‘childbed fever’, it follows Gordan’s dedication to finding out more about it so it could be prevented.

Based on a true story, Abrams told of how she tried to make it as factual as possible – perhaps a reflection of her family of historians, scientists and the like. I have bought Touching distance since hearing her speak and can’t wait to find out more about Gordon who snared Abrams so easily with his story.

By Jennifer Ockwell, Swindon Festival of Literature

Find out more about the Swindon Literature of Festival here:

http://www.swindonfestivalofliterature.co.uk/

http://twitter.com/literaturejenn

literaturejenn@yahoo.co.uk

Guest Blog Swindon Festival of Literature – Bow to the King of Terrors, William Hughes

The only professor in gothic studies, William Hughes had a lot to live up to when he gave a talk at the Highworth Library on Monday 10 May for the Swindon Festival of Literature. And he didn’t fail to please the 35-strong crowd.

It was clear from the start that this man knew what he was talking about, as he took the group through from the start of gothic fiction – The Castle of Otranto in 1765 to the more recent Alien trilogy and Resident Evil films.

William Hughes

William Hughes

To help the audience understand the genre better, William set the scene – explaining the reasons for gothic fiction’s rise in the 18th century while the world was very serious and sombre.

And it seems that the beginning of new centuries bring new outbursts with different themes as the world becomes fearful of the unknown and current events spark unease, at least beneath the surface, of the population. It was certainly an interesting event, and one that will make people read gothic-themed texts with a fresh viewpoint.

William is professor of gothic studies at Bath Spa University and has penned books such as Beyond Dracula: Bram Stoker’s Fiction and its Cultural Context and co-authored many others on the gothic genre and Dracula.

By Jennifer Ockwell, Swindon Festival of Literature

The Swindon Festival of Literature is taking place now (3rd to 15th May 2010). Find out more about the Swindon Literature of Festival here:

http://www.swindonfestivalofliterature.co.uk/

http://twitter.com/literaturejenn

literaturejenn@yahoo.co.uk

Syllabus

News about 2011 Syllabus will be posted here as soon as it is completed.