Broad Conversation

Events, news and opinion from Blackwell's, Broad Street, Oxford – one of the most famous bookshops in the world. Join the conversation…

Lars Iyers – Fresh, funky and very, very funny

“Iyer’s weird talent continues to grow, and the misadventures of his miserable characters are starting to seem like the brightest things in modern British fiction.” The Guardian on ‘Dogma’

Every so often a new voice appears on the scene that refreshes my love of the written word. With ‘Exodus’ Lars Iyer completes a trilogy of novels that are fresh, funky and laugh-out-loud funny.

Each of the books – ‘Spurious’ is the first in the trilogy and ‘Dogma’ the second – is based around the sort-of-friendship-sort-of-enmity of two academic philosophers; Lars and W.

Comparisons are invidious but there is definitely a slug of Beckett – the meanderings of body and mind – mixed with a dash of Ballard and a sprig of Nietzshe. It all adds up to a unique blend called Iyers…

The novels are clever; a good thing that brings a warm and rewarding  feeling to the reader – perfect for the perishing cold days and nights. And funny, very funny.

Unsurprisingly I am just a little bit giddy that Lars is coming to the shop on Wednesday, 23rd January at 7pm In fact I’m so giddy that if you say ‘Utterly Spurious’ on the door WE’LL LET YOU IN FOR FREE!

http://bombsite.com/issues/1000/articles/6464

http://www.bookslut.com/fiction/2012_03_018717.php

Filed under: Bookshop news and events, , , , , ,

Short Stories Aloud

Reading aloud is the new sexy according to this piece! We are blessed in Oxford to have a monthly event run by the ebullient Sarah Franklin. She explains all…

SSA_LogoHere’s a New Year’s Resolution that’s hard to beat and easy to keep. Come to the Old Firestation on the fourth Tuesday of every month for  Short Stories Aloud, Oxford’s friendliest literary night. Hear professional actors read stories by world-famous and up-and-coming authors.

 There’s wine, there’s cake, there’s a gorgeous softly-lit room where actors lift the stories off the page. There’s a chance to ask the authors questions in the Q&A afterwards, or just to scoff brownies whilst you listen to other people’s questions.

 Featured stories include those by bestselling novelists Ian McEwan, George Saunders, Catherine O’Flynn, Nikesh Shukla and Sophie Hannah, as well as exciting debut authors including Sarah Butler and Julie Mayhew.

 Tickets are a mere fiver on the door (£3 concessions): or free admission if you bring us a cake. See, told you we were friendly…

 The next Short Stories Aloud show is at 7:30pm on Tuesday, January 22nd at the Old Firestation, 40 George Street. Contact

shortstoriesaloud@gmail.com or @storiesaloud for more info. We’d love to see you there!

Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Stories Aloud, ,

Blackwell’s in Books

Oxford is renowned for having produced some fabulous novelists and novels, but did you know that Blackwell’s Bookshop features in a surprising amount of them? Over the years we’ve gathered up a little collection of the novels that feature us – sometimes in a starring role and sometimes just as a throwaway mention. Here’s a selection of our favourites…

Evelyn Waugh – Brideshead Revisited (Little, Brown and Company, Boston, 1945)

Meeting Mr. Samgrass, whom we had seen less often of late, told him of our choice. 

He was standing at the table in Blackwell’s where recent German books were displayed, setting aside

little heap of purchases.p.140

Book Lovers Quotations ed. Helen Exley (Exley Publications Ltd, 1991)

In books we have compendium of all human experience. We may use them or neglect them as we will, 

but if we use them, we may share the courage and endurance of adventurers, 

the thoughts of sages, the vision of poets and the raptures of lovers, and

some few of us perhapsthe ecstasies of Saints.SirBasilBlackwell.

Colin Dexter – Death is now my Neighbour: An Inspector Morse Novel. (Crown Publishers Inc. New York, 1996)

Morse wandered across to the green-shuttered Blackwell’s and browsed awhile; 

finally purchasing the first volume of Sir Steven Runciman’s History of the Crusades.p.282

Larry McMurtry – Some Can Whistle: A Novel (Simon and Schuster, NY, 1989)

resolved, however, to call up Blackwell’s first thing in the morning and order all the books they had 

on hermits and hermitry…’ p.186

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

E. Tangye Lean – Storm in Oxford, A Fantasy (Cobden-Sanderson, London, 1932)

In perfect harmony opposite the stately grandeur of the Sheldonian stood the world’s supreme bookshop, 

Blackwell’s, with it simple blue frontage and air of quiet stateliness.”  p.82

Javier Marias – All Souls (Harvill, London, 1992)

saw him nosing around…in the second-hand section of Blackwell’s monumental

and comprehensive emporium…p.78

The Kenneth Roberts Reader – Doubleday, Doran and Company, NY, 1945)

Blackwell’s is good bookshop – a splendid bookshop. 

In the product of an Oxford author’s pen, Blackwell’s is modestly referred to as 

the Greatest Bookshop in the World.p.151-2

Maida Stainer – The New Oxford Spy (Shakespeare Head Press, Oxford, 1969)

The well is deep, Black Well, you’d say

And deep, yes very deep.

People peer into its depths all day

In a profound, reflective way,

Or maybe they’re just asleep.” p.52

James Atlas – The Great Pretender (Athenum, NY, 1986)

How could I confess that I’d spent my afternoons browsing in Blackwells…?”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ved Mehta – John is Easy to Please (Secker & Warburg, London, 1971)

When the exile returns to Oxford, after years abroad, he visits his college - and Blackwell’s. It is more than great bookshop; it is an institution.p.80-1

Hal Cheetham – Portrait of Oxford (Robert Hale, London, 1971)

Several geological ages ago, warm shallow sea covered Oxfordshire… 

Cockles clung to the spot on which Blackwell’s Bookshop was to be built.p.25

Jeanette Winterson – Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? 2011 (978009956091)

left St Catherine’s and walked down Holywell Street to Blackwell’s bookshop. 

had never seen shop with five floors of books. felt dizzy, like too much oxygen all at once.’ p.137

These are just a selection of some of the one’s we’ve found, and of course, we’d still love to expand our little collection – so it’s over to you! Have you ever stumbled across Blackwell’s in the pages of your favourite novel? If so then we’d love to hear what you’ve found… either leave us a comment or tweet us @blackwelloxford.

Filed under: Beauty of Books, The Bookshop, , , ,

Next week at Blackwell’s…

As you may already know, next Wednesday 18th and Thursday 19th July we will be hosting author talks with hedgehog fanatic and author of The Beauty in the Beast Hugh Warwick and author of new historical thriller Sacrilege, SJ Parris.

It promises to be a very interesting couple of days, so why not come down and join us? Tickets are £2 for each talk and are available from our Customer Services Department or by calling 01865 333623.

However, if you’re away or previously engagement then never fear, look out on Broad Conversation in the week afterwards for interviews with our speakers – and if you’ve got some questions of your own then why not let us know? Either Tweet us with the hastags #hughquestions or #sjpquestions, or leave us a comment – we’ll try to put as many as possible to Hugh and Stephanie, and they’ll be posted to Broad Conversation along with the rest of the interview!

You can also request signed copies of The Beauty in the Beast and Sacrilege by dropping us an email at oxford@blackwell.co.uk

 

Filed under: Literary Events, Oxford, The Bookshop, Uncategorized, , , , ,

May Day – Oxford style

May Day means different things to different people all over the world. It is International Workers’ Day where labour movements and left-wing organisations celebrate, it is feted as the start of Spring and there is evidence of flower festivals in Northern Europe dating back to pre-Christian times.

Oxford wakes very early for May Day – madrigals are sung at 6am by Magdalen College choir from the Great Tower to thousands of revellers who congregate on Magdalen Bridge. A more recent tradition has been for students to jump off the bridge into the murky, chilly (and shallow) river Cherwell. After various injuries the authorities have frowned on this and there is now an annual game of cat and mouse between jumpers and police. This year no-one was able to jump despite the concerted efforts of a few hardy souls.

Pubs open at the crack of dawn – this is, after all, thirsty work and the, err, remarkable John Otway has made a habit of playing a 6am gig outside a pub – last year outside The Bear, this year he was at the Head of the River.

As the morning progresses festivities move more central and the Morris Dancers take centre stage. Here are the Charlbury Morris group performing outside the shop this morning – we filled them up with Bucks Fizz and cake, they danced and stopped the traffic. A fair trade I’d say…

The weather this morning was grotty but May Day proved, once again, to be a very ‘Oxford’ experience

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Filed under: Oxford, , , , ,

Festival Time Again

It’s that time of year again when the literary great and good descend on Christ Church College for the annual Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival for nine days of debate, discussion and bookselling.

In its twelfth year now the Festival is firmly established in the literary calendar and has grown from a very small programme to where it is today – over 400 author events at fifteen different locations throughout Oxford.

For Blackwell’s it is a key date in our calendar and a huge undertaking for us in terms of the resource required to go from this;                                        to this;

 

Our set up takes two and a half days and requires a significant degree of precision to ensure that the correct books are going to the correct location for the correct time (we sell books at each of the Festival venues, not just from the Marquee).

The first day proper is always a nerve tingling time for all of us when the first customers walk through the door at 9am, but once the tills start ringing we are off and running and loving it.

There really is something for everyone. A flavour of the first weekend included the palpable buzz generated by Simon Callow, the 110th birthday of Peter Rabbit – he’s looking remarkably well on it…, a thoughtful joust between Roger Scruton and AC Grayling in the Sheldonian on whether we need God to survive, fans meeting the authors they love, the magnificent Hendricks dispensing copious amounts of free gin, Michael Morpurgo inspiring a generation of future readers.

I could go on, but I am sure that you get the gist. With the glorious weather set fair for the rest of the week there is no place on Earth that I would rather be. If you get the chance do come along

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Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Oxford Literary Festival, , , , , ,

Cleopatra Saturday – All Will Have Prizes!

All day on Saturday 23rd July, everyone who buys a book from Blackwell’s Bookshop on Broad Street will win an instant prize.

The all-day give-away is in celebration of Creation Theatre Company’s summer show Antony & Cleopatra, which is being performed in the rooftop Amphitheatre at Saïd Business School from 8 July – 3 September.

One lucky person will win a “Creation Theatre Ticket For Life”, meaning they can come to see every Creation show free of charge for the rest of their life. If the prize goes early on in the morning, another prize will be released for the afternoon, so the fun will last all day. (Prize is subject to terms and conditions).

Other prizes to be given away on the day are Creation mugs, Creation scripts, a free workshop for a local school, free pairs of tickets and family tickets to Antony & Cleopatra, money-off vouchers for workshops, Blackwell’s Gift Cards, and a range of books.

Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Oxford, , , , ,

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