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Featured image of Juliet Conlin, Neil McKay and Nicola White: The Road to Publication

Juliet Conlin, Neil McKay and Nicola White: The Road to Publication

Comprising a panel of debut authors, Juliet Conlin, Neil McKay and the winner of the Dundee International Book Prize 2013, Nicola White, “The Road to Publication” gave a detailed insight into the process of emerging in print, from the initial approach to writing to ultimate completion of a work. The hour-long session was structured around Read More

Featured image of Michael Hulse: A Poem and a Piece

Michael Hulse: A Poem and a Piece

Michael Hulse’s session was the first of the daily “Poem and a Piece” lunchtime events at the Dundee Literary Festival. The handing out of food and drinks to the audience was a little clumsy at the start but not disruptive enough for anyone to get annoyed about. Other than that, nothing disturbed Hulse’s readings and Read More

Featured image of Imogen Robertson, Iain Gale and Robyn Young: The Dunnett Debate- Historical Fiction

Imogen Robertson, Iain Gale and Robyn Young: The Dunnett Debate- Historical Fiction

This session brought together three enthusiastic historical fiction writers and a professional historian, and promised to discuss some of the aspects of their work, as well as the genre in general; hopes were high for an interesting and informative session. Imogen Robertson’s most recent publication is Paris Winter set in the early twentieth century. Iain Read More

Featured image of Ban this Filth!

Ban this Filth!

It is more than understandable that feminists, particularly those with affection for the work of Andrea Dworkin, might have expected to be- at least- a little offended by this performance. How pleasant it is to be proved wrong. Bissett delicately balances reminiscences of his own life, man and boy, with readings from the work of Read More

Featured image of Em Strang

Em Strang

Bird-Woman Nothing is yet in its true form – C. S. Lewis The bird-woman is in the field in her blue dress, small bird wrapped in a rag of cotton in her hand, legs like twigs, throat between songs The sunlight is squeezing her, squeezing the field-grass until her blue dress is a distant boat Read More

Featured image of James Robertson

James Robertson

I caught up with James Robertson as he was signing a copy of The Gruffalo for a wee boy who seemed perplexed at the adage ‘Lang may your lum reek.’ Robertson ha d, of course, recently translated Julia Donaldson’s children’s classic into Scots; I had also just witnessed a riotous storytelling session where he not Read More

Featured image of Leaving Alexandria: A Memoir of Faith and Doubt

Leaving Alexandria: A Memoir of Faith and Doubt

As a university lecturer whose research and teaching examine the philosophical relevance of religion, I have been struck by the way in which critical discussion often reduces religious discourse to issues of psychology, science or morality. To interpret the relevance of religious scripture through these disciplines is tantamount to saying that religion is merely a Read More

Featured image of Negative Capitalism: Cynicism in the Neoliberal Era

Negative Capitalism: Cynicism in the Neoliberal Era

For those interested in an account of the ways in which capitalism has made our lives miserable, J. D. Taylor’s Negative Capitalism: Cynicism in the Neoliberal Era will not  disappoint. However, the book is not simply a tirade; it aims to spur the reader to reject current conditions of work and existence in favour of Read More

Featured image of An Interview with Morag Muir

An Interview with Morag Muir

Morag Muir is a remarkably prolific artist who has demonstrated over the past 30 years her dedication to art. She has managed the difficult feat of balancing a focused and contagious enthusiasm for painting with a supportive attitude to other artists’ creativity, and a careful tending of her family. For a time she also held Read More

Featured image of The Letters of T. S. Eliot Volume 4: 1928-1929

The Letters of T. S. Eliot Volume 4: 1928-1929

Reviewing Roger Scruton’s recent book Our Church, the historian Diarmaid MacCulloch found against it, and in interesting terms: ‘A similar historical farrago of half-truths and wishful thinking,’ he said, ‘helped convert TS Eliot to high church Anglicanism in the 1920s’ (Guardian, 22.06.2013). The present volume of Eliot’s letters covers precisely the moment of this conversion. But Read More

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