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.

Thursday 26 April 2018

Mayfield Music and Arts Festival, 28 April to 13 May, 2018; "Poems of Home and Exile"

A reminder that Jonty Driver, together with another poet, Isobel Dixon, will be reading their poems on the theme: Poems of Home and Exile at the Mayfield Festival on 10 May. The event is at 15:00 hrs in the Church of St Thomas of Canterbury, Mayfield. For further details click on the link below.

http://www.mayfieldfestival.co.uk/events/poems-home-exile/

Monday 2 April 2018

March Meeting: by Bill Doherty


Novel and Screenwriting – John Howlett

On 16 March the intrepid membership of the Lit. Soc. defied the rigours of ‘the mini-beast from the east’ to hear novelist, screenwriter and playwright John Howlett discuss his work. He started with the ‘twilight zone’ – a space shared by early memories and family histories; a legacy which extended to a familiarity with and understanding of events which in some instances had even preceded his birth. This well of knowledge was deepened in later life by personal encounters -  with a taciturn head gardener in one of his first jobs in whom he succeeded in busting some dam in the psyche to release a flood of Great War reminiscence. The speaker’s own earliest memory is being carried from his attic bedroom in wartime Croydon to play with his ‘Dinky’ toys under the family’s Morrison table on the ground floor – a fortunate maternal premonition as his bedroom was damaged by a bomb. A trip to Rome in his youth was to provide a Damascene conversion to writing as his creative outlet. The ‘twilight zone’ was to be the kernel of creativity for his roman-fleuve, the six book Harry Cardwell series which opens, like Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms in a military hospital in Italy near the end of the First World War.

One of his earliest and best-known screenplays was for the 1968 film If…,  directed by Lindsay Anderson and starring Malcolm McDowell, which successfully rode the Sixties’ Zeitgeist with its portrayal of schoolboy revolt and full-scale war against the school authorities. The grit for this pearl came courtesy of his days at Tonbridge School where they prophetically branded him ‘subversive’. Howlett made an interesting observation of attitudes to different categories of creative writing in telling how Anderson felt free to unilaterally cut, splice, bend and reshape a screenplay while revering every punctuation mark in the script of a play. John continued to carry a torch for subversion with a piece on the ‘rebel without a cause’, James Dean.

Given his cosmopolitan family background, it was not surprising to hear that our speaker became a self-confessed ‘wandering minstrel’ screenwriting thoughtful, ambiguous and critically well-received TV thrillers in England, Germany and Italy. Happily ensconced in the last of these, he found his professional life disrupted by the political advent of Silvio Berlusconi who   realigned the cultural axis of Italian TV towards Football Italia  and bunga-bunga parties. In a reflective coda, our guest spoke of his personal pantheon of masters of the written word: Lorca, Pablo Neruda and T.S. Eliot. 

This absorbing account of a varied, productive and principled professional career was enthusiastically appreciated by the assembled Lit. Soc. Members.

Sunday 1 April 2018

April 2018 News


Robert Hargreaves Reading Group
There is a change in venue and time for the April meeting. Members of the group should have had a notification of this from Howard Norton.

The Rye Bookshop.
There are a few events coming up in April, Thanks to Emma for providing these details:
On Thursday 5 April at 6pm, local author Peter Davey will be launching his debut novel 'Fraud' - a pacey thriller set in the world of film and publishing.
On Saturday 14 April at 6pm, crime author Graham Minett will be giving an evening talk about his books and writing process, and signing copies of the recently released 'Anything For Her' - a thrilling page-turner perfect for fans of 'The Girl Before' and 'Lie With Me'.
And on Saturday 28 April from 10am, we'll be joined by Colin Bateman, who will be signing copies of his crime thriller 'A Dreadful Trade', set on the coastline of Kent and Sussex.

Monsieur Ka, by Vesna Goldsworthy

Ann Driver writes: “I've just finished reading Vesna Goldsworthy's latest novel, Monsieur Ka. The launch was about ten days ago. It is an enthralling, tragic yet delightful story woven around the lives of White Russian exiles, set in 1947 London. It captures the sense of post war Britain in that coldest of cold winters. Vesna has a breath of knowledge of the history and societies of the counties of Europe devastated by the war and by Stalin's terror, which enriches and informs her work.”