getting out a bit more

Back from a glorious morning at the Guildford Book Festival – glorious, not least, for dragging me out into the dawn in Dorset, and the mist curving over the hils as the sun rose red. After a frustrating week of plotting – a film treatment, of all things – it was good fun to arrive at the Electric Theatre and find myself amongst friends old and new, readers, writers – and Tim O'Kelly, who runs the One Tree Bookshop in Petersfield. Tim's shop is what all book shops should be, and the Guardian have just said so here:


http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/01/day-in-life-independent-bookshop


The event was a 'Reader's Day', which meant a medley of small and large events with various authors including Elizabeth Speller, Mark Mills, Suzannah Dunn, S.J. Parris (aka Stephania Merritt) and Imogen Robertson, for whom I feel an avuncular affection, having given her a well-deserved good review in the New York Times for her first book, Instruments of Darkness. A great deal of laughter, some very interesting book chat, and – as ever – three cheers for the librarians of Surrey, who turned out as volunteers to make sure we got to the sandwiches.


Coming home I listened to Katie Fforde enthusing about Georgette Heyer; she was, apparently, extremely rude about all her millions of fans. Perhaps she should have gone to the Electric?


 



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Published on October 15, 2011 11:40
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message 1: by Nick (new)

Nick I have recently discovered your books and I'm enjoying them a great deal so it is interesting to read that you have been plotting a film treatment. Does this mean we can we look forward to Yashim the Movie?


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Talking Turkey

Jason Goodwin
I'm drawn to Istanbul the way one is drawn to Dickens's London, or Chandler's LA: it is a riotous, burgeoning, creative city with stories round every corner. An atmosphere I try to catch in my books.
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