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Events for September 11, 2013 through September 17, 2013

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September 2013

Multiples: Adam Thirlwell with Tash Aw, A.S. Byatt and Joe Dunthorne, LRB

September 11, 2013 @ 7:00 pm
London Review Bookshop,
14 Bury Place London, WC1A 2JL United Kingdom
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Is it possible that translation could be an optimistic art? In an effort to experiment with this possibility, the novelist Adam Thirlwell, on behalf of McSweeney’s Quarterly, invented an experiment: what would happen if a story were successively translated by a series of novelists, each one working only from the version immediately prior to their own – the aim being to preserve that story’s style? The result was a compendium of 12 stories, in up to six versions each, in 17&hellip

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Damian Barr at Polari, Southbank

September 11, 2013 @ 7:45 pm
Southbank Centre,
Belvedere Rd London , SE1 8XX United Kingdom
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The LGBT literary showcase, with Damian Barr reading from his acclaimed memoir Maggie & Me. Heading the bill in September, Damian Barr is joined by Lois Walden, Bernardine Evaristo, Susie Boyt and Nick Field. Also tonight, the shortlist for the Polari First Book Prize 2013 is announced. Described by the New York Times as ‘London’s most theatrical salon’, LGBT literary showcase Polari returns. Polari gives a platform to the best in established, new and up-and-coming LGBT literary talent and performance. More information/book tickets

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£12

Samuel Beckett and Judaism, LJCC

September 12, 2013 @ 10:30 am - 12:30 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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For virtually all of his life Irish playwright Samuel Beckett was personally connected with the Jewish people. This presentation will explore those connections and highlight traces of a hidden Jewish context and wartime suffering in Waiting for Godot and other postwar works. More information/book tickets

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£10

Life Lessons from an Ancient Poet with Harry Eyres

September 12, 2013 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Bloomsbury Institute,
50 Bedford Square London, WC1B 3DP United Kingdom
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The writer and journalist Harry Eyres brings you an evening of essential life advice from Horace, the ancient poet who coined the phrase ‘carpe diem’.  He reveals how Horace can help us navigate our way through life, love and leisure. The humble son of a freed slave, Horace championed the saving grace of modest pleasures: poetry, leisure and wine. His writing has much to say about how to live now. For him, poetry, therapy and friendship are all related. ‘Happy is she or he&hellip

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Why critics don’t take funny books seriously with John Crace and Lucy Mangan, LJCC

September 15, 2013 @ 11:30 am - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Critics sometimes remark on the humour in novelists such as Jane Austen and Charles Dickens as if it’s a quality of the writing the reader needs permission to enjoy. Meanwhile many other books that are hailed as comic masterpieces barely raise a smile. What makes humour the poor relation of so much literature? And is it time to take comedy rather more seriously? This is part of the Highgate & Hampstead Literary Festival. More information/book tickets

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Deborah and Lottie Moggach talk to John Crace, LJCC

September 15, 2013 @ 2:30 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Deborah Moggach’s new book, Heartbreak Hotel (all reviews here) is a warm, wise and funny romp in the Welsh countryside, which will appeal to the legions of fans who enjoyed the Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. Lottie Moggach’s Kiss Me First (all reviews here) is a moving coming of age story hidden within a harrowing mystery. While Lottie explores a lot of dark territory – suicide, alienation, innocence betrayed – she has also written an unexpectedly warm-hearted novel. This is part of the Highgate & Hampstead&hellip

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Charlotte Mendelson talks to Claire Armitstead, LJCC

September 15, 2013 @ 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Charlotte Mendelson has just been long listed for the Man Booker Prize for Almost English (all reviews here). She will be talking to Guardian Books and News Editor, Claire Armitstead. Charlotte Mendelson’s last novel, When We Were Bad, was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction, and was chosen as a book of the year in the Observer, Guardian, Sunday Times, New Statesman and Spectator. She is also the author of Love in Idleness and Daughters of Jerusalem, which won both the Somerset Maugham Award and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. Almost&hellip

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A Shed of One’s Own: Midlife without the Crisis with Marcus Berkmann, LJCC

September 15, 2013 @ 4:30 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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For many men, middle age arrives too fast and without due warning. One day you are young, free and single; the next you are bald, fat and washed-up, with weird tendrils of hair growing out of your ears. With age should come dignity and respect, but instead comes tired jokes about buying a motorbike. Marcus Berkmann isn’t having it. Having marked his fiftieth birthday by hiding under the duvet for six weeks, he is determined to find some light in&hellip

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Hunters in the Snow with Daisy Hildyard, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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After his death, a young woman returns to her grandfather’s farm in Yorkshire. At his desk she finds the book he left unfinished when he died. Read all the reviews for Hunters in the Snow. Part story, part scholarship, his eccentric history of England moves from the founding of the printing press into virtual reality, linking four journeys, separated by the centuries, of four great men, the exiled Edward IV, Tsar Peter the Great, the former African slave Olaudah Equiano and&hellip

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Fifty Shades of Feminism with Susie Orbach & Lisa Appignanesi, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Fifty Shades of Feminism is the antidote to the idea that being a woman is all about submitting to desire. Co- editors Susie Orbach and Lisa Appignanesi discuss their selection of fifty women for this inspiring new volume; young and old, writers, politicians, actors, scientists and mothers – their reflections on the shades that inspired them and what being women means to them today. This is part of the Highgate & Hampstead Literary Festival. More information/book tickets

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Andrew Wilson talks to Henry Kelly about Mad Girl’s Love Song, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Fifty years after her death, Andrew Wilson explores the life of Sylvia Plath before her marriage to Ted Hughes, in an intimate portrait of the brilliant and tragic literary enigma based on her early poems, letters and diaries. Drawing on exclusive interviews with friends and lovers and using previously unavailable archives and papers, this is the first book to focus on the early life of the twentieth century’s most popular and enduring female poet. Andrew Wilson is a journalist who has&hellip

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Maggie O’Farrell talks to Olivia Lichtenstein, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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It’s July 1976. In London, it hasn’t rained for months, water comes from a standpipe, and Robert Riordan tells his wife Gretta that he’s going round the corner to buy a newspaper. He doesn’t come back. Read all reviews for Instructions For a Heatwave Maggie O`Farrell is the author of five previous novels: After You`d Gone; My Lover`s Lover; The Distance Between Us, which won a Somerset Maugham Award; The Vanishing Act Of Esme Lennox; and The Hand That First Held Mine,which won the 2010 Costa&hellip

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Salley Vickers talks to Melissa Katsoulis, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 6:45 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Salley Vickers is the author of the word-of-mouth bestseller Miss Garnet’s Angel and several other bestselling novels including Mr Golightly’s Holiday, The Other Side of You and Dancing Backwards as well as a collection of short stories Aphrodite’s Hat. She has worked as a cleaner, a dancer, a university teacher of literature and a psychoanalyst. She is currently a RLF fellow at Newnham College Cambridge and she divides her time between Cambridge and London. Melissa Katsoulis is the author of Telling Tales: A&hellip

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Sophie Hannah, Sabine Durrant & Christopher Fowler talk to Peter Guttridge, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 6:45 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Three of our best contemporary thriller writers discuss their craft with crime fiction critic Peter Guttridge. The Carrier is a compulsive puzzle of a novel from Sophie Hannah that has you hooked from the very first page, Sabine Durrant’s Under Your Skin is an unpredictable, exquisitely twisty story, which proves that you should assume nothing, believe no one and check everything, while Christopher Fowler’s latest novel, Bryant & May and The Invisible Code won the eDUNNIT Crimefest Award and is shortlisted for the CWA Dagger in the&hellip

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£20

5 x 15 at The Tabernacle

September 16, 2013 @ 7:00 pm
The Tabernacle,
34-35 Powis Square London, W11 2AY United Kingdom
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Unscripted true stories of passion, obsession and adventure with Louis de Bernières, Olivier James, Cerys Matthews, Mark Cocker and Sara Rankin. More information/book tickets

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Victoria Hislop talks to Helen Simpson, LJCC

September 16, 2013 @ 8:30 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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The Story features two centuries of women’s short fiction, ranging from established Queens of the short story like Alice Munro and Angela Carter, to contemporary rising stars like Miranda July, Chimanda Ngozi Adichie and Helen Simpson. Handpicked by one of the nation’s favourite novelists, Victoria Hislop – herself a great writer of, and champion for, short stories – and divided thematically into collections on love, loss and the lives of women, there’s a story for every mood, mind-set and moment in&hellip

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Gill Hornby & Hilary Boyd talk to Lisa Jewell, LJCC

September 17, 2013 @ 12:30 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Hilary Boyd’s first ‘gran lit’ novel, Thursdays In The Park, was published last year and has since sold over 400,000 copies in ebook and print. She has worked as a nurse, a marriage guidance counsellor and a health journalist and published six non-fiction books on health-related subjects such as step-parenting, depression and pregnancy. Gill Hornby is a writer and journalist. She lives with her husband, Robert Harris, and their four children in Kintbury, Berkshire. The Hive is her first novel. Lisa Jewell had always planned to write&hellip

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Daisy Waugh talks to Rachel Hore, LJCC

September 17, 2013 @ 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Bestselling novelist Daisy Waugh discusses her new novel, Melting the Snow on Hester Street, with fellow novelist Rachel Hore. Bestselling writer Daisy Waugh discusses her new book with fellow novelist Rachel Hore. Set in Hollywood in 1929, Waugh’s Melting the Snow on Hester Street follows a high-society couple, an actor and actress, on the brink of bankruptcy and divorce. Hore’s The Silent Tide connects the different worlds of two young women, who through their individual quests become inextricably linked. Bestselling writer Daisy Waugh discusses her new book with&hellip

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John Harvey and Stella Duffy, chaired by Alison Joseph, Chair of the CWA, LJCC

September 17, 2013 @ 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Members of the Crime Writers’ Association, celebrating its 60th anniversary this year, talk about their love of short crime fiction – is the short story’s resurgence really such a mystery? This is part of the Highgate & Hampstead Literary Festival. More information/book tickets 

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Tracy Chevalier talks to Emily Rhodes, LJCC

September 17, 2013 @ 6:45 pm
London Jewish Cultural Centre,
94-96 North End Road London , NW11 7SX United Kingdom
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Tracy Chevalier is the author of six previous novels, including the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring. Born in Washington, DC, she moved to London in 1984, where she continued her education with a post graduate degree in Creative Writing. She was a reference book editor for several years before turning to writing full-time. Renowned for her rich evocations of periods past, Girl With a Pearl Earring was Tracy’s second novel and in 2004 was made into a film starring Colin Firth and Scarlett&hellip

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