literature
The Heresy of Love, Shakespeare's GlobeThursday, 06 August 2015![]() Helen Edmundson’s The Heresy of Love may be set in 17th century Mexico and follow the conflict between strict religion and personal development, but its theme of a woman denied her voice by a surrounding male hierarchy retains real contemporary... Read more... |
An Open Book: Quentin BlakeSaturday, 01 August 2015![]() Quentin Blake, illustrator, cartoonist and children’s author, has, to date, illustrated over 300 books. He is most famously associated with Roald Dahl, but he’s worked with a number of children’s writers, most recently David Walliams, illustrating... Read more... |
Listen Up PhilipThursday, 04 June 2015![]() Artists can be selfish bastards. Yoko Ono didn’t pay her babysitters; Bob Dylan has frozen out nearly all his friends; Norman Mailer stabbed his wife, and William Burroughs shot his. Philp (Jason Schwartzman), the young novelist who sociopathically... Read more... |
Margaret Atwood and Graeme Gibson, Corn Exchange, BrightonMonday, 25 May 2015![]() Margaret Atwood’s Forties childhood was spent knocking around the Canadian backwoods with her forest entomologist, proto-ecologist dad, and it shows. Interviewed alongside her husband Graeme Gibson on the Brighton Festival’s closing night, the... Read more... |
Woolf Works, Wayne McGregor, Royal BalletTuesday, 12 May 2015![]() On my way to the Woolf Works opening last night, I made the mistake of reading The Waves, Virginia Woolf’s most experimental novel. It was a mistake because even the briefest immersion in Woolf’s prose was a thousand times more exhilarating than the... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Günter GrassTuesday, 14 April 2015![]() The Nobel prize-winning writer, playwright and artist Günter Grass was arguably the best-known German-language author of the second half of the 20th century. Kate Connolly met him in May 2010 in Istanbul where, after attending a series of literary... Read more... |
The Secret World of Lewis Carroll, BBC TwoSunday, 01 February 2015![]() Alice is always with us; the most quoted work of literature, after the Bible and Shakespeare. In fact, Desert Island Discs should probably add Alice to the mandatory Bible and Shakespeare as an automatic inclusion for the survival kit. Now 150 years... Read more... |
Onegin, Royal BalletThursday, 29 January 2015![]() The habit among ballet critics of being simultaneously down on John Cranko's 1965 Onegin and up on Kenneth MacMillan's 1974 Manon is a curious one. The two have many similarities, from their basis in novels that became operas (though Prévost's Manon... Read more... |
DVD: The Kidnapping of Michel HouellebecqSaturday, 20 December 2014![]() There’s a wonderful drollery to Guillaume Nicloux’s wry and eccentric comedy The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq (L‘Enlèvement de Michel Houellebecq) which is quintessentially Gallic. Three years ago the enfant terrible of French literature... Read more... |
Imagine... Colm Tóibín: His Mother's Son, BBC OneWednesday, 03 December 2014![]() Watching this edition of Imagine… on Colm Tóibín, it was impossible not to be reminded of Graham Greene’s dictum about childhood being the bank balance of the writer. The key event in Tóibín’s childhood came at the age of eight, when his father’s... Read more... |
Sci-Fi Week: Through the eyes of JG BallardFriday, 28 November 2014![]() A sci-fi special would be incomplete without the profoundly influential figure of JG Ballard, a writer who, when he began his career in the late Fifties, fully subscribed to the notion that “sci-fi is the literature of the 20th century.”... Read more... |
theartsdesk at the East Neuk Festival: Littoral SchubertiadSunday, 20 July 2014![]() Schubert played and sung through a long summer day by the water: what could be more enchanting? The prospect did not take into account the pain in that all too short-lived genius’s late work: when interpreted by a world-class trio, quartet and... Read more... |
