Greenbelt / Blog / Books

Tamsin Omond's Resolutions

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When asked to write ten resolutions for a greener New Year, GB09 speaker Tamsin Omond instead came up with twelve. Twelve examples of "things that are filling the space between more radical activism and the real world – that are pulling the mainstream into a sustainable vision".

There are some great tips in there for Greenbelters looking to act upon things they heard in Tamsin's talks; things like…

6. I’m starting to like vegetables a lot, especially from my friends’ allotments, terraces or window boxes. And an ex who works on an oil rig(!) has been throwing “meat-free Monday” parties. (http://www.meatfreemondays.co.uk)

Read the rest by clicking here.

Tamsin's talk from GB09 – "WWJD?" – is available from the Greenbelt Talks Shop, and her book "RUSH! The Making of a Climate Activist" is available from Amazon.

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Patience With God by Frank Schaeffer

41fW9soHGUL._SS500_If you enjoyed Frank Schaeffer's talks at GB08, you might be interested to know that Frank has a new book out:  Patience with God: Faith for People Who Don't Like Religion (or Atheism)

"Former evangelical Christian political agitator Schaeffer has been born yet again. This time, he has been reborn into what he calls the Church of Hopeful Uncertainty, as defined by his belief that the vast majority of people inhabits a middle ground between the two fundamentalist extremes battling one another for followers in the world today. He suffers no one who advocates a devotion so rigid as to exclude any but the stanchest. He names names but is an equal opportunity assailant, laying into fundamentalist atheists and religious zealots alike, decrying both for inflexibility and the blatant commercialism of their enterprises. Make no mistake, Schaeffer is not proselytizing. He knows, or at least hopes, that with this book he is singing to the choir of millions fed up with or unable to commit to full-blown atheism or stiff-necked religion of any kind. His belief that faith, in God or not, ought to support and enrich one’s life, not run it into the ground, strikes, he hopes, a universally appealing chord."
- Donna Chavez

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Introductions: Rob Chidley

rob-chidley

by Ben Whitehouse

The Third Tribe is the first book by newcomer novelist Rob Chidley and he's already attracting attention:

"Be prepared to be kept on the edge of your seats," says GP Taylor, the New York Times bestselling author of Shadowmancer. Rob Chidley's book is "gripping and exciting, The Third Tribe is a must read."

Russ Bravo, editor of Inspire Magazine, said, "The Third Tribe features characters that you care about, writing that engages and involves the reader and a message that is both powerful and desperately needed. Well worth reading!"

You can also add me to the list of people heaping praise on Rob's novel. I really enjoyed it and my copy has already been plucked from the bookshelf & is currently on a bedside cabinet somewhere near Telford.

I fired a number of questions at Rob recently to find out a bit more about him in preparation for the Festival, here are his answers in full.

Tell us about your novel.
It’s called The Third Tribe and it’s my first novel. It is a story set in world where water is a scarce resource and where rain is totally unheard of.  It is about Ruth, a desert child from a nomadic tribe and her discovery of the City – the last permanent settlement where peace and prosperity appear to reign through the thrifty rationing of bitter water. But there is a dark undercurrent of violence strangling the City and Ruth hears tales, told in whispers and handed down through generations, of a third tribe who exist beyond the settlement’s boundaries, and of their leader who leaves behind footprints filled with water as he walks.

Where did you find the original impulse to write this novel?
JK Rowling said that one day Harry Potter "came fully formed" into her mind.  Ruth dashed through mine, leaving an intriguing trail of chaos and questions, and it was up to me to find out who she was and what she was doing.  After I met her, I found there was a long process of exploration to go through to find out all the answers.  There was a desert landscape in my imagination, so ‘exploration’ was definitely the word.

Looking at The Third Tribe, what surprises you about it?
The characters seem to have lives bigger than the book’s story, which is ultimately a good thing! People who have read the book say that the main characters climb out of the pages and go off on new adventures.  There is more to this desert world than I’ve discovered, and it is as if my characters are independent of me. It feels like some have their own secrets I’m yet to discover.  I suppose unconscious processes in my mind have given them larger stories with more to tell, more than I’ve yet realised.  It is exciting and a little scary.

What are you reading right now? Are there any authors (living or dead) that you would name as influences?
For fiction: I’d say Susanna Clark and Bernard Cornwell. Bernard Cornwell’s most famous for the Sharpe stories, but he’s written a lot more including some terrific Saxon-era stories.   When reading his battle sequences, you can smell the blood, hear the bones cracking, and feel the swords parting the skin and sinews. Susanna Clarke is equally but differently brilliant.  Her stories are more mystical, comical and sinister, and the world in which they’re set has a superb breadth and depth to them.  Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell is my favourite of hers.

For non-fiction: Anne Fadiman is one of the best writers I’ve ever encountered.  If you could distil joie de vivre into ink and put it on paper, only then could you say you were as good a writer as Anne Fadiman.  Her familiar essays in At Large and at Small: Confessions of a Literary Hedonist make life worth living.

What was the book that most influenced your life — and why?
This is very difficult, because influences are often so difficult to trace and attribute.  I was quite a late developer so far as reading went.  I even needed extra tuition at one point.  So when I borrowed my granny’s ancient copy of Alexandre Dumas’ The Three Musketeers, I felt like I would come of age as a reader, if only I could get through it.  To my delight, I didn’t struggle through it – in fact I was swept up by the story like nothing else.  Strangely, I’ve not read it since but I have felt it calling me of late.

If you had a book club, what would it be reading — and why?
I’d probably want to tackle Coleridge and Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads and the like, because I harbour a belief that Romantic poetry is best served in good company, with a decent wine and after a hearty walk.

What are your favorite books to give — and get — as gifts?
I have, in the past, tried to make rhetorical points through the books I bought other people.  I learned quickly that the best you can expect is a polite thank-you and a cold shoulder. So now I tend to buy books for others that I think they’ll actually enjoy, regardless of whether I think they’re good or interesting.

For myself, I’ve got a bit scared of people buying me books because I have a waiting list of about 40. When people buy you books and then when you see them two weeks later, they always want to know you’ve enjoyed it.  I’m probably about a year behind, if not longer.

Give us three "Good to Know" facts about you. Be creative. Tell us about your first job, the inspiration for your writing, any fun details that would surprise people reading the blog.
1) My first job was as an English teacher in a leafy Dorset Grammar School for boys.  I had great fun teaching The Charge of the Light Brigade with the aid of a genuine (and genuinely dangerous) 1812 Light Cavalry Sabre. My hope always was that my pupils would leave the classroom with a sense that any book could be picked up, explored and enjoyed.

2) Much of my writing seems to revolve around the question of identity which, the more I look into it, the more it seems to explain much of the joy, pain, brilliance and madness of this world.

3) For my wife’s recent significant birthday, I wrote a spoof children’s story called Mrs Lovely the Music Teacher, and I had it professionally illustrated.  It was about a wonderful, supremely busy and slightly maniacal music teacher who turns out to be a robot.  It’s a story which has become part of our lives!

What's your favourite way to unwind?
A long, strong combination of early summer sunshine, a pub garden, real ale and all my old University friends.

Rob says that he enjoyed answering those questions and I'm fairly certain that the passionate reading community at Greenbelt will have questions of their own to grill Rob with over the weekend.

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Carol Ann Duffy is named Poet Laureate

Carol Ann Duffy has been named as the new Poet Laureate, the first woman to be appointed in the 341-year history of the post.

Portrait of Carol Ann Duffy

She's the first woman, the first mother, the first lesbian to be appointed to the post. She was widely regarded as the runner up to the post when Andrew Motion was appointed ten years ago. She's won every prize going for poetry & is largely considered one of the best living poets.

When we were discussing which books to choose for the Greenbelt Book Club I remember mumbling something about Carol Ann Duffy looking likely to be named as poet laureate (this was back in early January) but not feeling too convinced about it. I wish I'd had the foresight to put a bet on the result.

We're reading her latest collection of poetry Rapture as part of the Greenbelt Book Club.

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Passionate about books seeks similar.

book-group-blog
by Ben Whitehouse

One of the things I'm most looking forward to at the festival this year is the book club because I know it's going to be interesting. (Don't get me wrong, I'm looking forward to lots of the Festival but I have a love affair with books which is why I'm the literature coordinator and not in charge of selection of toilets)

We've got an awesome line up of awesome speakers, musicians and big-brained thinkers across the this year but the things that makes my heart swell with affection every year is you, the festivalgoer, always passionate, always engaged and always with an insightful comment on your lips. (And this isn't me just trying to flatter you, gentle reader, I mean it!)

This year we've picked three very different books which we commend to you for discussion at the Festival.

1) Jackie Kay's collection of short stories – Wish I Was Here

This was selected as short stories don't often get look at enough. In travel terms a novel is a long trek from here to there; you can prepare for the long haul journey with lots of bags, equipment and correct clothes. Short stories are weekends away, you've got to travel light and pack generically without knowing what the weather or destination will be like. Booker Prize winner, Anne Enright said: "These stories charm, move and entertain the reader in full-hearted, direct prose. They are full of narrative satisfactions, written with a democratic ear and a poet's poise, with a lyrical twist of phrase that wrings precise emotions from the reader, every time."

2) Henry David Thoreau – Walden: Or, Life in the Woods.

With the book Walden Thoreau documents the two years where he built a cabin in the woods, moved into it and lived simply. The cabin experience represents the crucible where Thoreau developed many of his sharpest ideas, had formative experiences and turned him into the literary giant we know today. John Updike said that Walden risks "being as revered and unread as the Bible." Thoreau's reflection on his solitary two years living on the shores of Walden Pond was a book that once captured the imagination of Tolstoy and of Gandhi and we're hoping it captures your imagination too. To read the rest of John Updike's rather beautiful review of the book follow the link to the Guardian website.

3) Carol Ann Duffy's collection of poetry – Rapture.

This is a bit of a selfish choice, I read these poems recently at my own bookgroup at the insistence of a friend. She assured me these were some of the most affecting poems I'd ever read. I seem to involuntarily roll my eyes at this kind of hyperbole but I was quickly proved wrong. Poetry sometimes feels like the scrawny cousin of the short story but these poems demonstrate the economic beauty of the love poem. Xan Brooks wrote of the poems:  "Rapture is an extended rhapsody on a love affair, ushering the reader from first spark to full flame to final, messy conflagration."

If you don't own any of these books, click on the link below to buy them from the Greenbelt bookshop. Your local library should also stock these.

We'll provide you with space, bring a mug of something warm and prepare to share your thoughts with other equally passionate souls. I can't wait to hear what people will have to say about these books. Will you be there? You won't want to miss this, it's going to be great!

—-

Ben Whitehouse is Literature Coordinator for the Greenbelt festival. His blog- White Like Milk – is here and you can follow Ben on Twitter here: www.twitter.com/benjaminbrum

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The Man With All The Answers

Chris on "A question of Genius"

Let me introduce a good friend to you and while I do that I’ll also introduce you to a world you see everyday but may not have noticed. Those of you who watch tea-time quiz shows (or watch iPlayer) can see my friend Chris Wills for the next few days on A Question of Genius on the BBC, the latest in a number of TV quiz shows in which he’s participated.

His first quiz show experience was 15-1 back in 2001. Chris wasn’t terribly successful (partly as a result of getting picked on by a “retired paperboy”), but undaunted he then applied for another teatime quizzing legend, Countdown. This was a much bigger success, as he ended up becoming series champion and winning a large number of dictionaries in 2002. Various other stints have followed, including Mastermind and The Weakest Link – on the latter Chris won about £2,500 and a kiss from Anne Robinson.

However, it’s not the winning itself that’s most important to Chris, but – forgive the cliché – the taking part. Some people get a buzz from skydiving, drumming or dancing at a rave; Chris gets a buzz from appearing in front of a TV camera and showing off his general knowledge (or his ability with words and numbers and his love of pastel shades of clothing- apparently they look good on camera).

If he wins, fantastic; but even if he doesn’t, the experience is invariably a positive one, thanks to the other contestants and the production team. They’re all well looked-after, put up in nice hotels, get their travel expenses paid and generally pampered, all by people who work ridiculously long hours, often for relatively low pay and (if they’re freelance) perilous job security, yet somehow manage to remain friendly and enthusiastic. Chris tells me about there being an interesting community spirit within the world of TV quiz shows as he often sees people he’s faced before on other shows.

Chris and I have been friends for about three years, having first chatted on a social networking site; our friendship blossomed from there. Chris is a committed atheist, which may lead some to question how we can have a meaningful friendship without some sort of ideological conflict. In fact, it’s simple: Chris totally respects my Christianity, just as I totally respect his atheism, and whilst our beliefs may differ, faith has never been something that has dominated our friendship.

We often discuss how the actions of the Church (big C) impacts on society and I gain perspective on how my own faith works out in a secular environment. Faithfulness as friends is far more important between us, as is the common ground we share. Chris helps deepen my understanding and love of Doctor Who, he introduces me to great music which helps close some of the musical gaps in my knowledge and we regularly indulge in verbal flights of fancy.

Also, whilst Chris might be an atheist, this does not mean his mind is closed to spiritual matters. Last year, he came to Greenbelt for the first time, after being pestered by me for a few months and found this to be both an enriching and rewarding experience, as so many of the discussions that take place are not specifically around religion, but focus on wider issues of social justice, our perception of those around us and our search for ontological security in an increasingly uncertain world. (Chris wants me to use the word “ontological” – I frequently have to reach for a dictionary when talking to him) For Chris, who is currently doing a part-time Social Sciences degree, these discussions were both illuminating and thought-provoking, so much so he’s coming back this year.

So, although Chris prides himself on being the man with all the answers, he’s also someone who likes to ask plenty of questions. Chris will be taking part in a special Countdown challenge happening at the Hub during this year's festival.

Ben Whitehouse is Literature Coordinator for the Greenbelt festival. His blog- White Like Milk – is here and you can follow Ben on Twitter here: www.twitter.com/benjaminbrum

You can follow Chris Wills on Twitter by pointing your internet at: www.twitter.com/crispeater

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