Entries from Londonist tagged with 'orangeprize'
March 18, 2008
Tell us something we didn’t know: London is the most expensive city to live in worldwide, according to UBS research. Pro-Tibet protesters target British Museum’s First Emperor exhibit. Heathrow to charge drivers £20 to drop off passengers if sixth terminal proposal is approved. In other Heathrow news, super jumbo jet completes inaugural flight to London, with 470 passengers aboard. Mohammed Fayed fails in his bid to make the Queen and Prince Philip testify at......
Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"July 12, 2007
We love London Lit Plus - it's the capital's independent festival as packed as any other London book-based love-in, such as the London Literature Festival. Sadly, all good things must come to an end and London Lit Plus is finishing its two weeks of literary doings today. If you haven't been to any events yet, tonight is your last chance... * Anything But Hackneyed: Niven Govinden reads from his acclaimed debut novel Graffiti My......
Continue Reading "London Lit Plus: The Last Day"June 7, 2007
Just out the Van: "Writers write. Actors read. Audiences listen. Everybody wins..." at the Liars' League next Tuesday. Six stories stretch from last century to the end of the earth including work from Kay Sexton, Toby Smith, Andrew Lloyd-Jones, hosted by David Mildon and the mysterious sounding "League". 7pm, £2, Upstairs at The Lamb, 94 Lamb's Conduit Street, WC1N 3LZ. Givin’ ‘em away: As part of the re-opening celebrations for the Royal Festival Hall,......
Continue Reading "The Book Grocer"May 10, 2007
Fresh Next Week: This years T.S. Eliot Memorial Lecture is titled Lachrymae rerum: writing about loss. Dannie Abse reads both from Running Late, his latest collection of poetry, and from The Presence, a journal he has been keeping since his wife’s death in the summer of 2005. Alan Jenkins, Deputy Editor of the TLS, reads from his collection A Shorter Life, which includes poems about his mother’s illness and death that have been described......
Continue Reading "The Book Grocer"April 19, 2007
Just out the Van: Alan Lee, best known as co-lead artist on Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings movie trilogy, but also the conceptual designer on the films Legend, Erik the Viking and King Kong and the television miniseries Merlin will be signing The Children Of Húrin tonight. Get your geek on at 6pm, Forbidden Planet Megastore, 179 Shaftesbury Avenue, WC2H 8JR. In Next Week: The Society of Young Publishers presents a reading by......
Continue Reading "The Book Grocer"July 25, 2006
The Londonist Literary List appears every Tuesday. If you'd like to bring an event to our attention, please email londonistlit@gmail.com. Wednesday If know your manga from your anime, your Akira from your Ghost in the Shell, tonight's Tokyopop Manga looks set to draw a dedicated fan-crowd with an evening of music, film and art, including a masterclass and competitions, at the Foyles Gallery, 6.30pm. Tickets are free, but reserve yours by emailing mangaATfoyles.co.uk. The......
Continue Reading "The Londonist Literary List"May 30, 2006
The Londonist Literary List appears every Tuesday. If you’d like to bring an event to our attention, please email londonistlit@gmail.com. There's a wide range of events to choose from this week, with something on offer nearly every night of the week. We also have new releases from, among others, Douglas Coupland (pictured), Peter Carey, Monica Ali, Will Self, and A.M. Homes... Events Around London: Tonight, Turkish author Elif Safak celebrates the English translation of......
Continue Reading "The Londonist Literary List"October 4, 2005
Reading may be a solitary and silent pastime, but when there's an award at stake you can expect to hear many a raised voice. The Orange Prize for Fiction – open to women fiction writers around the world - has been going strong for ten years and although it was denounced as "a lemon" in the early days, vilified by a few (mostly male) commentators and might smack, as Fay Wheldon stated yesterday, of......
Continue Reading "A Prize Orange"August 23, 2005
We're starting to feel a little peeved that every week we have to bow down to Edinburgh, this being the LONDONIST Literary List and all, and not an Ode to Cities to the North. But what can a column do, when it is not only London-centric, but Literary-centric as well, and all the literary stuff is in Edinburgh? But alas, there’s only a week to go, and it seems to be winding down a......
Continue Reading "The Londonist Literary List"