Monday 21 July 2008
7.30pm
Aberdeen Arts Centre
Multimedia:
Maureen Ross
Leán Coetzer
Haworth Hodgkinson
Readings:
Russ Alexander
Jane Bayliss
H. F. Calder
Grant Fraser
Catherine Jaraszkiewicz
Olivia McMahon
Keith Murray
Annie Peart
Gina Sherratt
Gráinne Smith
Tuesday 22 July 2008
7.30pm
Aberdeen Arts Centre
Multimedia:
Blue Salt Collective
Mhairi Allan
Readings:
Moira Brown
Phyllis Goodall
Ruth Howell
Frances Jaffray
Sheila Reid
Judith Taylor
Paulina Vanderbilt
Christie VanLaningham
Cal Wallace
Rapunzel Wizard
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New Writing from Aberdeen
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Wordfringe presents two evenings at the Aberdeen Arts Carnival showcasing new writing
from Aberdeen and North-East Scotland
Admission £3
one ticket covers both nights
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Part 2: Tuesday 22 July 2008
The second part of this showcase of new writing comprises readings from Moira Brown,
Phyllis Goodall, Ruth Howell, Frances Jaffray, Sheila Reid, Judith Taylor, Paulina
Vanderbilt, Christie VanLaningham, Cal Wallace and Rapunzel Wizard, and multimedia
poetry with projected images, live music and dance from the Blue Salt Collective:
poets Knotbrook Taylor and Catriona Yule, poet/musician Haworth Hodgkinson and dancer
Mhairi Allan.
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Based in Angus, Knotbrook Taylor is a poet and sometime photographer; his
first collection Beatitudes is now available from Blue Salt Publishing. He
believes that without a creative element to his life the world becomes a humdrum
place. His defines his poetry as a search for beauty and meaning. His work features
Scottish places reinvented under his outsider's existential gaze.
See www.knotbrook.co.uk
for more.
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Catriona Yule is an Aberdeen poet, short story writer and playwright. Her
first poetry collection Shedding Skin was published in November 2007 by Koo
Press. She has recently completed Storylines, a course run by the Open College
of the Arts, and is about to start another course with OCA to develop narrative
techniques and build her short story portfolio.
She has also started to research a non-fiction project for teenagers and hopes to
start work on a second poetry collection this year.
See www.catrionayule.co.uk
for more.
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Haworth Hodgkinson takes on the dual roles of poet and musician in the Blue
Salt Collective, occasionally performing both simultaneously.
As a poet, he has been published in a variety of magazines and anthologies, and
in 2007 his small collection A Weakness for Mermaids was published by Koo
Press.
As a musician he has composed, performed and improvised for many theatrical projects,
and has recently been playing with Susanne Olbrich's Strange Little Orchestra
in Forres and Findhorn.
See www.haworthhodgkinson.co.uk
for more.
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Mhairi Allan is an Aberdeen based performer, dance tutor and choreographer
with a background in contemporary dance. She has worked with many diverse groups
of dancers of various ages and abilities in both a community and professional context.
Recent work has been as performer in Sweet Love with Janis Claxton Dance
at the CCA in Glasgow.
Previous collaborations with the Blue Salt Collective have inspired and stimulated
her love of poetry and music and continue to fuel her passion for choreographic
ideas.
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Moira Brown has written for many years since her return to Aberdeen from
Guyana in the 1960s. She writes short stories and poetry, has been successful in
several short story competitions and has had poetry published in Reach small
press magazine. Moira is presently the enthusiastic Chair of Aberdeen Writers' Circle.
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Phyllis Goodall writes: ‘On my family's Aberdeenshire croft the person
with most time to talk to me in my childhood was my great-grandmother. Born in 1856
and educated before the Education Act of 1872 forbad the use of the Scots, she had
a wide and rich Doric vocabulary. Since ever I could write I have written stories
and poems, mostly in Doric. I am a retired teacher, the teuchter wife of golf-playing
toonser Tom, a tractable Grandma, an occasional gardener, dowser, Friend of Grampian
Stones, Mensan, one-time Munro climber now reduced to Corbetts with Labcollie Floss,
and the Secretary of the Huntly Writers.’
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Ruth Howell grew up in Belfast but now lives in Aberdeen. She has won various
awards for her poetry, short stories and humorous articles. Ruth has recently completed
a novel for young adults and is currently using the pages from her unpublished adult
novel to line the guinea pig cage.
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Frances Jaffray was born in 1943, and writing has always been in the family.
Her first marriage failed in 1986, and she married George in 1990. Between them
they have four children and five grandchildren. Her work has been published in various
anthologies, the latest in conjunction with the Wordies, the Ellon writing
group.
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Sheila Reid lives and works in the beautiful Lumphanan valley overlooked
by the hills of the Mounth.
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Judith Taylor comes from Perthshire and now lives and works in Aberdeen,
where she is a member of
Lemon Tree Writers. She writes poetry in English and sometimes Scots, and
her first chapbook collection, Earthlight, was published in 2006 by Koo Press. She was Poet Number 91 in the StAnza 100 Poets
Gathering in St Andrews in March 2007.
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To Paulina Vanderbilt poetry is like a pinch of salt: without it Life would
be bland and boring but it should not take itself too seriously. She has been actively
involved in the local writers' scene as a poet and children's writer and has been
published in
The tide breathes out, Meeting Points and Pushing Out the Boat. She performs regularly
at local events (Dead Good
Poets, Wordfringe
2007/2008, Word 06). Publication
of her first poetry collection with
Koo Press is planned for the near future. Paulina is very proud to represent
Dead Good Poets.
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Christie VanLaningham writes fiction inspired by failed places, heirlooms,
witchy women, abandoned children, lumberjacks, lovable demagogues, every kind of
fairy tale, and what it means to be home. Her short stories have appeared in several
North American literary journals, and she is currently working on a novel, from
which her reading has been excerpted.
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Cal Wallace writes short stories, monologues and other bits. He has represented
the Lemon Tree Writers
at various readings, including WordPlay (Shetland) and Word (University of Aberdeen).
His one-act play Uncle Kenny was performed by Wordfringe Festival Players at Wordfringe 2007. His bestselling
blockbuster is due to be written any year now.
Painting of Cal Wallace by David Liddell
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Rapunzel Wizard performs comic poems with a political edge. This has led
to him being called The Beast from Brighton, which was a good description
until he moved to Aberdeen. Tonight offers a rare chance to hear some of his prose
writing.
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