tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-63913451380679893852008-01-02T22:54:49.893ZMersey Minis Volume 3 - LONGINGArabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger16125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-32759569411528593842007-12-20T11:54:00.001Z2007-12-20T12:43:27.964ZTell us how to improve for next yearWe are planning to run another competition in 2008, when Liverpool will be European Capital of Culture. Again, it will be a free gift to the city, and we want even more entries from a wider spectrum of the community. To help us improve the competition process and the way we distribute the books, we'd be really grateful for your feedback. We love compliments, of course, but we want criticism too – if we don't know what was sub-standard, we can't improve. So if you're a writer (whether you were successful in this year's comp or not), a reader, a retailer, librarian, or whoever, do please have a look at the questions on the FEEDBACK page (see link opposite) and either email us with your comments, or post them on the blog (tell us if you don't want them made public). MANY THANKS, and a very happy New Year. Enjoy Liverpool's year as Capital of Culture!Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-24447094738949152732007-12-20T11:48:00.001Z2007-12-20T11:53:59.242ZHow to get hold of Volume 3This volume was Capsica's birthday present to Liverpool on is 800th anniversary, so it is not for sale. We gave away 3,000 copies on 28th August 2007, and the remaining books are a free bonus volume in the set. But if you have bought the other four volumes separately, you won't now be able to get Vol.3 as a separate purchase.<br />SO: if you have bought Vols 1,2,4 and 5 and need Vol3 and a band to hold the set together, please email us and we'll tell you how to acquire them. Email: minis@capsica.netArabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-25336104450644841822007-11-28T00:26:00.000Z2007-11-28T00:36:35.981ZPraise for the Minis set<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_RHPptm7HhEg/R0y3ASg_H_I/AAAAAAAAAvc/mAqCnOS9XfM/s1600-h/PUB_SIGN.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp2.blogger.com/_RHPptm7HhEg/R0y3ASg_H_I/AAAAAAAAAvc/mAqCnOS9XfM/s400/PUB_SIGN.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5137682490520969202" /></a><br />“I took the Mersey Minis to the reading group I run in Hoylake Cottage hospital. There are about ten in the group, all elderly and most can no longer hold a book or see to read; so for the last 2 weeks I have read from the Minis. I can't tell you how much they have enjoyed it. We had lots of laughs and shared so many memories and everyone had a thoroughly good time.” <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;"> -- Dr Angela Macmillan</span><br /><br />“Bursting with brilliant writing inspired by Liverpool and the River Mersey, the Mersey Minis are a great way to read about Liverpool, whether you live here or know someone who'd love one, far away – a lovely pressie.”<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- LiverpoolConfidential.com</span> <br /><br />"The research in unearthing so many quotable quotes about Liverpool has been phenomenal."<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Peter Elson, Liverpool Daily Post</span> <br /><br />"I was really impressed with the 'Mersey Minis' book..... it is a gem. It's quirky, charming and 'unputdownable'. The woodcuts by Clare Curtis compliment the book so well and give a sense of atmosphere and life to the text."<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Tom Muir, Orkney Boat Museum </span><br /><br />"I was given your Vol I for a birthday present... the book is very handy for carrying around. I was at a really boring event the other night and was able to read it surreptitiously."<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Stephen Guy, local historian</span> <br /><br />"Mersey Minis presents Liverpool in miniature. A wonderful composite of the city - lovely to hold, and a delight to read."<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Margaret Murphy, crime novelist </span><br /><br />"What a very stylish - and eminently ransackable - collection!"<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Charles Nevin, journalist </span><br /><br />"A wonderful idea and great choice of texts!"<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Christoph Grunenberg, director, Tate Liverpool</span> <br /><br />"A beautifully produced and fascinating book."<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Loyd Grossman</span> <br /><br />"Great idea, lovely wee books"<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">-- Dave Calder, poet and co-founder Windows Project</span>Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-68717191766022470102007-08-27T08:20:00.000+01:002007-08-27T08:22:50.076+01:0024 hours to go!This time tomorrow, Liverpool will have completed eight centuries as a charter town – three cheers!<br />We're celebrating by giving the people of Liverpool and Merseyside the ENTIRE print run of this new book, so get down to one of the locations listed below and snaffle your FREE birthday present, with our love.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-28254650446564169972007-08-20T08:57:00.000+01:002007-08-27T08:20:51.081+01:00Where to get your FREE GIFT copy of Volume 3 on 28 AugustPlease NOTE: There are only limited numbers of books in each location, so I'd get there early - once they've gone, that's it!<br /><br />In Liverpool city centre, you can find your book here:<br />BBC Radio Merseyside, Hanover Street<br />08 Place, Whitechapel<br />Bluecoat Display Centre 2, Hanover Street<br />60 Hope Street (restaurant)<br />Utility, Bold Street<br />The Italian Club, Bold Street<br />News from Nowhere, Bold Street<br />Walker Gallery, William Brown Street<br />Conservation Centre, Whitechapel<br />Maritime Museum, Albert Dock<br />Tate Gallery, Albert Dock<br />Liverpool Editions, Cook Street<br />Linghams, Heswall & West Kirby<br />Pritchards, Formby & Crosby<br />Waterstones, Bold Street & Southport<br />Borders, Speke<br />Blackwells, Brownlow Hill<br /><br />In Knowsley, you can find the book here:<br />Huyton Library<br />Halewood Library<br />Kirkby Library<br />Prescot Library<br />Page Moss Library<br />Stockbridge Library<br />Whiston Library<br /><br />In Halton:<br />Halton Lea Library<br />Runcorn Library<br /><br />In Sefton:<br />Ainsdale Library<br />Aintree Library<br />Birkdale Library<br />Bootle Library<br />Churchtown Library<br />Crosby Library<br />College Road Library<br />Formby Library<br />Litherland Library<br />Maghull Library<br />Netherton Library<br />Orrell Library<br />Southport Library<br /><br />Plus 13 libraries in St Helens<br /><br />We will add some more locations this coming week, so check back here again.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-66405236043780421492007-08-17T10:31:00.000+01:002007-08-17T10:33:05.064+01:00LONGING: launch countdownThe publication day of Volume 3: LONGING is not far away - Tuesday 28th August. <br /><br />Please note that this volume will be available ON THAT DAY ONLY until the boxed set is out at Christmas. <br /><br />Vol 3 will not be available to buy separately. <br /><br />We will put a list of locations on this blog in a couple of days, so you can get hold of your free copy on Liverpool's 800th birthday.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-43428426078041832242007-08-06T16:54:00.000+01:002007-08-06T17:01:37.180+01:00Competition winnersThe complete list of writers for Volume 3 is released today – 80% of which have been chosen from entrants to the competition launched in March. Our congratulations to all those who won publication, and our great thanks to everyone who entered.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-27782554292872390562007-08-06T16:35:00.001+01:002007-08-06T18:30:51.055+01:00Report on the competition<a href="http://bp0.blogger.com/_RHPptm7HhEg/RrdAULhL-ZI/AAAAAAAAAtU/Pf8_R-aQuWk/s1600-h/3-LONGINGcover.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp0.blogger.com/_RHPptm7HhEg/RrdAULhL-ZI/AAAAAAAAAtU/Pf8_R-aQuWk/s400/3-LONGINGcover.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5095612218826553746" /></a><br />Deborah Mulhearn, Mersey Minis series editor, has written a comprehensive report on the new writing competition for Volume 3 (out on 28 August). Scroll down to find MORE MERSEY MINIS PAGES, click on the link for WRITING COMPETITION REPORT, which will take you to the main website, then click on NEWS.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-20984229444957178852007-08-03T11:33:00.000+01:002007-08-06T16:38:46.581+01:00How to get your FREE copy of LONGINGLONGING will be published on 28 August 2007, and will be available FOR THAT DAY ONLY, so keep on eye on here to find out where you can get your FREE copy of the book. <br />It will also be a free gift within the boxed set of Mersey Minis, available from November, but it WON'T be available to buy separately, ever.<br />So for your 800th anniversary gift and memento, be ready to rush on Tuesday 28th.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-26977326314193542522007-07-27T01:14:00.000+01:002007-07-27T01:16:37.196+01:00Introduction by Deborah MulhearnLonging is the third volume in the Mersey Minis series. It’s a one-off, given away free on 28th August 2007, though it appears again within the complete five-volume set. <br />More than two thirds of the pieces in Longing result from a competition run by Capsica, the Mersey Minis publisher. The others were commissioned. We asked for a short piece of prose about Liverpool, the Mersey or Merseyside, on the theme of longing. The idea was to mix ‘ordinary' voices with established writers and well known names connected with Liverpool and create a sort of photo album full of literary snapshots, all written in 2007, the city’s 800th anniversary. <br />It was a pleasure and a privilege, as Mersey Minis editor, to be part of the panel of judges asked to select the competition entries. But not an easy task, I realised when I started reading. At first they were all clamouring for attention: slices of Liverpool life and longings that I’d either forgotten about or never knew existed. But slowly, distinctive voices started to emerge. Small details of longing stuck with me: wind chimes in a cemetery, a lone dandelion in cracked concrete, the salty lips of a long-ago lover. And then the large sweep of it hit me: for childhoold innocence, familiar streetscapes, the love and protection of parents and grandparents. <br />We all experience longing. It looks forward and back, like our two Pier Head Liver Birds, towards the city and out to sea, or to the future and the past. The two figures on the cover suggest these longings. The sculpture of Eleanor Rigby represents longing for what might have been, and the young girl longs for her life to begin. Perhaps. <br />The pieces selected weren’t necessarily the most polished, but they all have one thing in common besides Liverpool – they come from the heart.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-8077260102691051192007-07-27T01:13:00.000+01:002007-07-27T01:14:42.912+01:00Judges' commentsCharles Nevin: "This is me from elsewhere: ‘I’ve always liked Scousers, with the admiration of the timid for the daring, of the man below for the high-wire artist; in this case, high-wire artists of the over-dramatic, the anarchic and the riskily sentimental.’ The competition entries were like that, even from the non-Scousers: some pulled it off, as you can see; others didn’t."<br /><br />Jane Davis: "Some pieces stood out because they were both well done and had something to say. Others were included because – after all this was Liverpool – they just had great stories. Still others were irresistible because they recorded lost Liverpool, or shared memories."Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-85775968481404423272007-07-27T01:06:00.000+01:002007-07-27T01:11:30.005+01:00Karoline Fritzsch – a Beatles story<a href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_RHPptm7HhEg/Rqk4LDse4QI/AAAAAAAAArg/DCR4LsmThA0/s1600-h/Music.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_RHPptm7HhEg/Rqk4LDse4QI/AAAAAAAAArg/DCR4LsmThA0/s320/Music.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5091662616340652290" /></a><br />When I was eight years old, I discovered my dad’s Beatles album. In order to sing along. I started writing down the lyrics, and as I didn’t speak a word of English, I ended up with pages full of words that didn’t exist in any language, but sounded right. At 25, I still catch myself discovering the real lyrics. <br />When I was thirteen years old, I was a full-blown Beatles fan. I decided to go on a pilgrimage and cycle all the way from eastern Germany to Liverpool, a plan that I never realised and laughed at as I got older. At 25, I’m settled in the city that seems to have been with me all this time. <br />Mysterious ways, indeed.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-15348019915786065012007-07-27T01:05:00.000+01:002007-07-27T01:06:46.422+01:00Lewis Biggs – Bling itBling lies at the heart of the Liverpool experience, always present, but reaching maestro level on a Friday night. Liverpool people just love attention. Not that we are greedy or needy, like those poor stage-actors who curl up and die if they think that they are being ignored for a minute. No, we just feel that a glance of appreciation or envy is as much the currency of conversation as verbal wit. Bling’s the visual vocabulary of attitude, a kind of performance art. Within a group of people, it becomes a form of visual intercourse, the repartee of accessory. It’s what I miss when I’m away.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-73226150197223655722007-07-27T01:04:00.001+01:002007-07-27T01:04:53.026+01:00Dea Parkin – City loverLiverpool. Like a lover, like an undependable, kiss-and-flee, love-you-leave-you-love-you charmer. Not so much a ne’er do well, more a don’t-stay-long-enough-to-tell. Defying commitment to category. Always flirting with tomorrow, dancing on the grave of your past. When will I ever know you? Sparkling in the light, moody in the shadow. Exciting. Stimulating. Passionate. I like that in a city.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-41881065281442191452007-07-27T01:02:00.000+01:002007-07-27T01:04:00.577+01:00Jennifer Moore – I say goodbye and you say helloEvery teenager yearns for escape, craving new horizons. At fifteen I flew all the way to America, only to find Liverpool waiting there for me. At the Hard Rock Cafe, Orlando, I bought the book, got the t-shirt and came away with a John Lennon recording and a tiny packet of dust for good measure. Not just any dust, you understand. Cavern Club dust.Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6391345138067989385.post-23080865537267731232007-07-27T01:00:00.000+01:002007-07-27T01:02:35.582+01:00William Backshall – The ScaldyI learned to swim in the Cut. On summer days, we lads would scale the canal wall adjacent to our terrace house, undress on the towpath, and with those of us able to boast a swimming costume hurriedly changing, the rest would jump or dive into the dark canal waters with whoops of delight. The centre of attraction was a huge submerged pipe on the far bank constantly discharging pleasantly hot water from the grimy rubber-works boiler room. This was known far and wide as the Scaldy, which, over many years attracted boys with its free entertainment. In addition to swimming, youths would bring along bars of soap, and enjoy an al fresco bath, though whether they emerged cleaner was doubtful. <br />Others would daub their bodies in bizarre patterns with the clay that surrounded the area, and after cavorting around in imitation war dances of Redskin Indians seen at the local movie matinee, they would then jump into the waters and emerge again as palefaces. <br />Older lads engaged recognised swimming styles, whilst we kids adopted what was known as ‘doggy’. I eventually learnt to dive, progressing from belly flops that left my stomach red and smarting, to an improved crab-like entry. At the bottom of the dive the water was inky black, and surfacing, it would change to a dark brown, then lighter brown, becoming clear only inches from the top. What a brew! Why we never came down with dreadful diseases, I’ll never understand. Another hazard was the neighbourhood rubbish that lay jettisoned on the bottom, old beds and bike wheels, ensuring great care had to be taken not to become entangled.... (more)Arabella McIntyre-Brownnoreply@blogger.com