October 19th, 2012 posted by John McA
Manchester Sermon – Ali Smith
18th of October 2012
Reviewed by Rachel Heaton.
I approach Manchester Cathedral with a certain amount of trepidation; I have never been inside and only know it as ‘that great big ‘churchy’ thing behind M&S’. Inside it is suitably cathedral-like (I nervously pull my too-short skirt down) and, despite my early arrival, is [...]
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October 19th, 2012 posted by John McA
The Manchester Sermon – Ali Smith
18th October 2012
Having never been to Manchester Cathedral before, the first thing that struck me on arrival was the incredible beauty of the venue. The acoustics, the holy, hushed atmosphere and the high arches which are all typical of Christian places of worship, seemed an odd and foreboding place to [...]
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October 19th, 2012 posted by John McA
“Fifty Years of A Clockwork Orange†– Reviewed by Elizabeth Stancombe
This year Anthony Burgess’s self-dismissed novel “A Clockwork Orange†celebrated its fiftieth birthday with a special edition and a host of events in Manchester, his birth town. On the 18th of October  “Fifty Years of A Clockwork Orange†was held part of the Manchester [...]
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October 18th, 2012 posted by John McA
Blog North Awards –Reviewed by Joanna Byrne
Arriving early for the first ever ‘Blog North Awards’, I couldn’t help but feel slightly thrown by my surroundings. Like most students, the Deaf Institute for me is a place I usually visit much later on in a night, and normally when I’m not in a condition to fully [...]
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October 18th, 2012 posted by John McA
Deryn Rees-Jones and Paul Farley by Flora Anderson
As part of Literature Live, I went to see Paul Farley and Deryn Rees-Jones reading from their new collections The Dark Film and Burying the Wren respectively. It was run as a University of Manchester event in the John Thaw Studio on Oxford road, and was a real [...]
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October 16th, 2012 posted by John McA
James Kelman, Saturday 13th October 2012, 7.30pm, International Anthony Burgess Foundation
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I had not entirely known what to expect when I set off to spend my Saturday evening at a reading of James Kelman’s new novel Mo Said She Was Quirky. I knew the work of Irvine Welsh who has been compared with Kelman, but little [...]
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October 16th, 2012 posted by John McA
A Review of Bio Punk with Jane Feaver, Gregory Norminton and geneticist Neil Roberts, MadLab, 13th October 2012
By Beckie Stewart
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MadLab, on the edge of Manchester’s Northern Quarter, is a modest venue resembling a rundown exhibition space, made haphazard with mismatched chairs, crates and sofas. If it weren’t for the clinical whiteness, the lack of background [...]
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October 14th, 2012 posted by John McA
The chill of the current seasonal change rushes in with me as I enter The International Anthony Burgess Foundation; the setting in which I have come on Saturday 13th October to understand more about the mind, musings, political positions and fictional creations of one of Scotland’s most controversial modern day writers.
Upon winning the Booker prize [...]
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October 14th, 2012 posted by John McA
Home of the Beautiful Game?
As I entered the National Football Museum for the first time I got the same feeling, that jolt that I always get whenever I run out onto a football pitch, or emerge from the underbelly of a stadium and find myself surrounded by thousands of fellow fans, or even [...]
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October 14th, 2012 posted by John McA
“Literature is not easy but without Literature we are lost.†This message welcomes you into The International Antony Burgess Foundation, and being an English Literature student I wholeheartedly agree. It’s Saturday 13th October and I am attending an event by the Literature festival, “Bringing Literature to Lifeâ€. I have no expectations of this event, as [...]
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