Thursday, 24 January 2013
Save the date - Feb 27th
Save the date fellow book lovers... Wednesday February 27th for the masters of story telling - Sarah Rayner and Lesley Pearse are coming to Supper Club. They are both gripping reads and we're anticipating a sell out - so get in quick!
Tickets available from the usual places. In person from The Mint House in Hurstpierpoint, The Post Office in Ditchling or from Brighton Dome Ticket Office (01273) 709709
The lovely people at The Mint House bookshop are also offering 10% discount on all Supper Club books, so if you want to read them before the event, you can. Do bring them along for the authors to sign!
A wonderful feast awaits you as well as a free glass of wine.
See y'all there!
Laura x
Friday, 18 January 2013
Frosty night but a sellout!
What a fantastic evening! It was a cold and frosty night but we had a full house in teh cosy barn in Ditchling. Though we were all chilled to the bone with scary readings from Julia Crouch (who revealed that a film of her first book CUCKOO published by Headline is in the offing)and we shivered when Tom read from his book SKIN & BONES published by Preface when he describes a massacre in a small village in East Sussex - very much like Ditchling. *Scream* But the tots of quince vodka kept our spirits high!
Do join us for our next Book Lovers' Supper Club on February 27th with Sarah Rayner and best selling author Lesley Pearse, who has told me that David Bowie wrote a song about her (faints with excitement)
Join us on Facebook - Book Lover's Supper Club or follow us on twitter @bookloverssupper to keep uo with all the news!
Laura X
http://www.midsussextimes.co.uk/news/local/authors-crouch-and-bale-have-a-taste-for-fear-1-4695867
Thursday, 27 December 2012
Book Lovers' Supper Club
BOOK LOVERS' SUPPER CLUB
What is it? Well, it has the glorious advantage of doing exactly what it says on the tin.... If you love books, and enjoy good food and wine then this is for you.
We hold the event (which is about once every six weeks) in the gorgeous vintage barn in Ditchling, East Sussex. It starts at 6.30 and you arrive and are welcomed with a glass of wine. Grab a seat at the tables and enjoy your Sussex based tapas style supper (the menu changes seasonally) but to give you a taste of the menu from last time we had: High Weald Dairy Sussex Cheese, homemade green tomato chutney, mushroom & walnut pate, courgette & lemon croquette, roasted butternut squash and spicy winter coleslaw, followed by homemade chocolate gingerbread and a nip of damson vodka.
We then have a reading from a couple of best selling authors, followed by an interview with them and a chance to ask questions (as well as getting books signed)
We have some truly amazing authors lined up for 2013 - so do come and join us, either on Facebook - Book Lovers' Supper Club or on twitter @ Bookloverssupper
Tickets are available either in person from The Post Office, Ditchling, or The Mint House Hurstpierpoint, or from Brighton Dome Ticket Office on (01273) 719719
Look forward to seeing you there!
Friday, 14 December 2012
Isabel's Skin by Peter Benson published by ALMA
What a treat. And the perfect weather to read this gothic tale of misty haunting horror in. Perhaps horror is too strong a word - but certainly low level menace and mystery.
Stylish, sharp and memorable.
I urge you to give it a go. Especially if you are curled up infront of a fire with a glass of red wine.
Enjoy.
Monday, 7 May 2012
Book Doctor
April 23rd. World Book Night. And where else would I be other than the local library - offering my services as The Book Docotor.
Bored with your bookshelves? Hacked off with your holiday reading? Then come and talk to me.... I've done this a few times now, and it always starts off the same. People are a little shy, then they notice the home made Madelaines and the bottle of Maderia ( a nice Proustian touch I thought) and then pretty soon there's a queue.
First up was a charming woman who just lost her sparkle with reading.
"I regularly go to Waterstones, but I look at all the covers on the 3 for 2 tables and I end up buying stuff that I just know I'm not going to like"
A common problem madaam, and one I can sympathise with.
We had a chat about older books and she went off clutching a prescription for some Angela Thirkell, Sylvia Townsend-Warner and Molly Keane.
Next up was an Irish girl who only really enjoyed science-fiction and "nothing with monsters in"
Marge Piercy it is then...
An elderly woman who wanted something modern.
A Visit from The Goon Squad was soon on loan from the library.
Two very assured teenage girls who 'rather enjoyed speculative fiction'. Gulp. And loathed Harry Potter AND Twilight were given I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith and the woman who was splitting up from her partner and needed a joyous good read - well - there's was only one choice really - Nancy Mitford. Natch.
The queue was now out of the door and I had great fun writing prescriptions for some classics, some moderns and some mates books too.... especially Every Vow you Break by Julia Crouch - now THAT should help the insomnia (evil laugh)
Really looking forward to the next time - perhaps by then I will have got myself a white coat.
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Things that you make go hmm
I don't know what's wrong with me. Every new book that I pick up I feel like hurling across the room. Admittedly I did set myself the onerous task of reading Dance to the Music of Time by Anthony Powell over the holidays. - three hundred characters. Yes. Three hundred. Then there was The Stranger's Child by Alan Hollinghurst. And someone who was raving about it gave me The Rules of Civility....oh dear. Well, let me say that Dance to the Music (12 volumes. Yep, 12) is going to have to dance on without me and Alan Hollinghurst who is a fabulous writer lost me on that one too... As for Rules of Civility - well, I don't feel like being very civil about it to be honest - Dominick Dunne dun it better guv. Honest. Oh yes, and I read Pure which won plaudits and prizes galore and I was like - meugh...I've read better. So it's not that I haven't been reading (frankly that will never happen) but it's just that I haven't been inspired. AT ALL. I even in a moment of desperation picked off the shelves an old Iris Murdoch - The Philosopher's Pupil. Crikey.I gave that a miss, too.
Then - thank goodness I went to swish bookish party at Waterstones in London and in my goodie bag was a freebie proof copy of My Policeman by Bethan Roberts. Hoozah and Hoorah! Finally - a great book. One worth reading.
It's set in Brighton in the 50's and is an absolute corker. I don't want to give anything away - but do urge you to read it. You'll LOVE it.
Then - thank goodness I went to swish bookish party at Waterstones in London and in my goodie bag was a freebie proof copy of My Policeman by Bethan Roberts. Hoozah and Hoorah! Finally - a great book. One worth reading.
It's set in Brighton in the 50's and is an absolute corker. I don't want to give anything away - but do urge you to read it. You'll LOVE it.
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