How the Blog Works

How the blog works




The most recent entries or "posts" appear at the top. To find older ones, scroll down. On the right at the bottom of the page are links to older posts, which you can click on to find material posted last year, last month, etc.

Contributions are welcome and can be e-mailed to me at lawrenceyoulten@gmail.com. Content can include 1) announcements about, or introductions to, forthcoming meetings and other events of possible interest to members. 2) Summaries of talks given at Literary Society meetings or at meetings of the Book Group. 3) Announcements of forthcoming TV or radio programmes of possible interest to readers. 4) Reviews of books read recently or in the past.

Ideally, contributions should be submitted as documents in Word format (.doc or .docx files) and pictures in the form of .jpg files but other formats, including .pdf files are acceptable.

Links can be included to give easy access to relevant material on the internet.

Sunday 31 July 2016

The Tidal Zone, by Sarah Moss

The recently published novel by one of this year's Literary Society speakers has received a lot of critical attention. A particularly favourable review appeared in The Observer (click here to read it') The Tidal Zone was also discussed on the Radio 4 Saturday evening Arts programme, which you can reach on BBC  Radio iPlayer at the following link (click here)  Make sure your computer's volume control is turned up. The discussion runs for about eight minutes, starting about eight and a half minutes into the programme.

Sunday 17 July 2016

"Why India Matters to Us All" by Sir Mark Tully

On Friday 15 July our meeting was held in the hall of St Thomas'  School in Winchelsea, since it was correctly anticipated that we would have a large audience for this talk. Sir Mark Tully, who was born in India but educated in England, including studying theology at Cambridge, now lives in New Delhi. For many years he was the BBC's "Man in India" and he is well known for his many radio broadcasts, including the popular series, "Something Understood".  His fascinating talk ranged over many aspects of the relationship of Britain and India, including shared history, different attitudes to spirituality and diversity, economic challenges and conflicts between the development of a major country with the desire to restrict man-made climate change. A lively discussion followed Sir Mark's talk, and the large audience appreciated our speaker's fluent and stimulating style.

Saturday 9 July 2016

Jonty Driver Poetry Reading

On Sunday 10th July at 4-00 p.m., in the church of Sr Mary, St Mary in the Marsh, as part of the John Armitage Memorial (JAM) Festival in the Romney Marshes, C.J. (“Jonty”) Driver read his sequence of poems called BEFORE:  22 poems about his African childhood and young manhood, including the five weeks he was held by the security police in solitary confinement in South Africa in 1964.  In between some of the poems in the sequence, Peter Fields played on the violin a variety of pieces - some classical, some folk, some popular.


This recital was a continuation of the very successful recital of 2015, also in St Mary in the Marsh, when Jonty read the sequence of poems called REQUIEM and Peter played a transposition of Bach’s Cello Suite No 2. BEFORE has been published so far only in a South African literary magazine in 2013, though a printed version of the sequence was available at the recital for those who like to read as well as listen.

Here is a link to a review of this event: click here