Thursday, 29 September 2022

Book Review: The Christmas Match – Football in No Man’s Land 1914 – Pehr Thermaenius

 














Blurb:


After four months of intense fighting, the war in Flanders between German and British soldiers fell silent on Christmas Eve 1914. The soldiers started singing instead of shooting. On Christmas Day they came out of their trenches and met in No Man’s Land. Some chased rabbits. Some played football. This true story is about two footballers and soldiers, one Saxon and one Scot, who were in units that played a match in a field between the French villages Houplines and Frelinghien.


Scotsman Jimmy Coyle had played professional football before the war. Saxon Albert Schmidt played in the third team for his local club. On Christmas afternoon they each got the chance to defeat their opponents without weapons. Pehr Thermaenius has tracked both Jimmy’s and Albert’s stories through military archives; from mobilization in August to the hard frozen mud in that field in Flanders that became a football field on Christmas Day. The story of the football match is a light in the darkness as the world remembers the tragic waste of a hundred years ago.


Strengths and Weaknesses:


A few of you know I have being working on a series of anti war books with my friend, fellow poet and artist Nick Armbrister since 2013 which we called Europa and through that and I have learnt a lot about various individual stories in the Second World War, most of which terrible and heartbreaking.


The First World War however apart from one brief poem in Europa in 2014 is a part of history I have yet to really delve into with my work in Europa (but I will). The one poem covered the above topic, the Christmas Match in 2014 and has proved a topic of interest ever since to me.


This book it has to be said I discovered by accident recently picking it up at a second hand bookshop and thought hmmm.. this could be a interesting read, and well it was interesting.


It was clear from the beginning that this book was a labour of love by the writer who is a Swedish journalist. Apparently he worked for many years for Dagens Industri (a Swedish financial, daily newspaper) and has long been interested in the First World War.


In this book you can see the attempt by the writer to tell the story over a Scottish and a Saxon Soldier who may well have played in this match but while told whole hearteningly, I was left a little distant in this book by the way these two characters were built up which were left very two dimensional instead of fully formed and took me a lot out of the whole narrative.


Originally published in Sweden, whether this was a language barrier or the style of the writing is a bit trickier not really engaging me throughout the book. Thankfully, either way, the book is mercifully brief in a fairly large format totalling in just over 200 pages and proved easy enough to read through in a few days but it is little more than an introduction than what felt to be a decent, full sized study of an incredible moment in likely one of the most cruel wars in modern history.

8/10 – The historial element of the book.

6/10 – The actual telling of the book.


Tuesday, 27 September 2022

New Podcast Series - Cloaked in the Shadows


 










** Coming Soon ** 

From the minds behind podcasts such as Spoken Label and Reading in Bed, Cloaked in the Shadows is a new podcast launching in January 2023. Anything goes - the unexplained, the unusual, the extraordinary, and the down-right weird. 

Hosted by Andy N and Amanda Nicholson with a vast experience of postcast hosting and interviewing between them, this new series will look at all topics, from far-flung places to topics closer to home and those almost too weird to consider the truth. Sometimes the truth is stranger than fiction.

Cloaked in the Shadows will launch in January 2023 as a monthly show and be available everywhere you find your Podcasts. 


Sunday, 25 September 2022

New Spoken Label Session - Jessica Kim


 











Latest Spoken Label Session features Elisabeth Horan from Animal Heart Press as a additional guest explaining a little bit about the collection "L(EYE)GHT" in discussion features the wonderful Jessica Kim.

Jessica Kim (she/her) is a Korean-American high school junior and poet who has lived in Korea, Singapore, and currently lives in Los Angeles, California. She identifies as visually-impaired and advocates for the disabled community. Recently, she has been named the 2021-22 Los Angeles Youth Poet Laureate and runner-up for the 2022 United States National Youth Poet Laureate.


She is the author of L(EYE)GHT, runner-up for Animal Heart Press' Chapbook Contest, which has been published in April 2022. You can read all my interviews and press releases under EXPERIENCE. Jessica's poems appear in POETRY Magazine, The Adroit Journal, Frontier Poetry, The Journal, and Waxwing Magazine among others. A Best of the Net and Pushcart Prize Nominee, she is also a YoungArts Finalist in Writing (Poetry), 1st Place Winner of Columbia College Chicago's Young Authors Contest, Commended Foyle Young Poet, 2nd Place Winner of the Bennington Young Writers Awards (Poetry), Gregory Djanikian Scholar Finalist, and more.


More about Jessica can be found at: jessicakimwrites.weebly.com


Her collection can be bought from all major websites but in particularly from animalheartpress.net

Links the Podcast can be heard / streamed from are: 

https://spokenlabel.bandcamp.com/album/jessica-kim-spoken-label-september-2022

https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/jessica-kim-spoken-label-september-2022/id1501847969?i=1000579391802

https://anchor.fm/spokenlabelpodcast/episodes/Jessica-Kim-Spoken-Label--September-2022-e1ktbgg

https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9kOTA1ZTkwL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz/episode/MzMyZmM0OTItMmRiNy00ODNjLWJmMGItNTM4YTVkZTBiNDMx?sa=X&ved=0CAUQkfYCahcKEwjws6eq0q_6AhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCXTkZ93FX4 (Chat Segment)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rIsYkVqwU8&t=3s (Poetry Segment)

https://radiopublic.com/spoken-label-6BalgM/s1!a3d7f 

https://castbox.fm/episode/Jessica-Kim-(Spoken-Label%2C-September-2022)-id2678341-id529783050

https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/spoken-label/jessica-kim-spoken-label-fZ3WqEl7XmP/

https://www.bullhorn.fm/spokenlabel/posts/jessica-kim-spoken-label-sept

https://podcastaddict.com/?id=https%3A%2F%2Fanchor.fm%2Fs%2Fd905e90%2Fpodcast%2Fplay%2F54488016%2Fhttps%253A%252F%252Fd3ctxlq1ktw2nl.cloudfront.net%252Fstaging%252F2022-6-6%252F347cc335-0421-3796-f992-f0025dbea8be.mp3&podcastId=2748767

https://www.podbean.com/ew/dir-wrvjq-15280919

https://podbay.fm/p/spoken-label/e/1663110000

https://music.amazon.co.uk/podcasts/bae49616-2295-4e7c-b931-91415a724cb6/episodes/fe6b1698-2516-4f0f-acd0-c2dda70e2c0b/spoken-label-jessica-kim-spoken-label-september-2022

https://tunein.com/podcasts/Arts--Culture-Podcasts/Spoken-Label-p1317427/?topicId=177086326

https://www.instagram.com/p/Ci5IeeUDbDWIf9JuSUkBU_j_chjnlsQBi-RYP40/ (Chat)

https://www.instagram.com/p/Ci51AHzDHhm0NRsTYMUMUHJoejU8FAJEENMFTw0/ (Poetry Segment)

https://www.owltail.com/podcast/5FvX6-Spoken-Label?fbclid=IwAR25ZFqItcftPPf6x54BqqZJ1DGGtWQM6RhTuvC-hUQOt80g02wuXhFHxQQ 

https://www.audible.co.uk/pd/Jessica-Kim-Spoken-Label-September-2022-Podcast/B0BF9QJ5ZH?ref=a_pd_Spoken_c4_lAsin_0_1&pf_rd_p=a202f891-0d90-47a2-ac3f-8ebc4b2943db&pf_rd_r=FHAPN1Q13K7A5A4YYMYM

https://open.spotify.com/episode/1YJBLgUpBhpbwyncrugq2l

Friday, 23 September 2022

Book Review - Jamie Delano - Leepus: Dizzy

 













 











(To be featured on a future episode of Reading in Bed, the Book Review Podcast)

Blurb:


Leepus lives in Inglund.

He likes to think he does some good there.


But everything's relative.

Leepus: DIZZY fires its eponymous loose-cannon into a wild landscape of dystopian wonders and dark intrigue whose inhabitants enjoy bleak humour, habitual scatologuy and occasional savage violence.

Spiked with psychotropics in a charity poka game, Leepus wobbles home to his fortified water-tower to find carnage on his doorstep. Before he can get his head straight he's overtaken by full-tilt mayhem.


Strengths / Weakness:


I first became aware of Jamie Delano’s work a long time ago with the cult comic from DC / Vertigo: John Constantine: Hellblazer which he was a perfect fit to write about a jaded, barbed working class magician.


Since then, he has also wrote Batman: Man-Bat, An extended run on Animal Man and Captain Britain alongside some series he has created such as Outlaw Nation, 2020 Vision and World without End to name but a few. All Fantastic. All Weird. All incredibly wrote.


Leepus: DIZZY is something else altogether and after finishing I am still not 100% sure what to make off it.


Originally published in 2014, Leepus: DIZZY is a dizzying mindf&&k of language described by Stuart Moore as “Trippy, thought-provoking, and well worth your time.”


The book begans with “BludKlash coming on.


At one end of the dripping underpass – four silent Burkababes with horror dogs on chains. A cohort of Hateboyz at the other looking for frontation.


Caught out in the killzone. Heed the need to fade.


One veiled sister giggles weird – slips leash from playful puppy. The dog fast and loose. Boncing muscle. Snot foestoons. A shrunk-down snorting bull.

Sidestep swift. Veronica into shadow”


Well, it’s not exactly the most accesible start to a book but knowing what Delano has done in previous work, it’s not a surprise.

But is it any good? Well, it’s not Hellblazer for me by any stretch of thought although the sense of menace is still there and the mysteries and the tragedy that haunted John also.

Leepus is his own man of course – a old fashioned detective in a post apoclayptic alternative world which certainly made me think of William Gibson definitely but also Welsh’s Trainspotting with a directness that I found most accessible when reading it out from the book.

Of course, like with Welsh’s Trainspotting trying to do this on a bus or train is a problem owning to the bad language which nearly resulted in me getting kicked off and wisely sticking to reading it at home.

Did I enjoy it? I am not sure I did in hindsight as the book didn’t get much more accessible after that and I have to be honest pulled a bit of a slog to get through.

I wanted to enjoy it, I really, really did but I couldn’t get to grips with it atall and sadly ended up dropping it with 100 pages to go.


6/10


Wednesday, 21 September 2022

New Spoken Label Podcast - Matt Nicholson

 












Latest Spoken Label features our returning friend, the wonderful Matt Nicholson.

Matt is described as "Hi, I’m Matt Nicholson – I’m a poet, writer and performer from East Yorkshire (near to the poetic hotspot of Hull). I began writing as a kid, that kind of who am I and what’s it all about? stuff that a lot of people need as they begin to find their place in the world. I only really began to write with any purpose though when I found myself out of work when I was around 40…I have a heart condition and hated the work I had been doing, so I was seeking something new. I was lucky enough to do a creative writing course with The Open University and haven’t really stopped since then."


The session is primarily talking about Matt's new book 'Untanglement' which has had praise such as:


“Proof that poetry can break your heart and mend it again” – Helen Mort


“A collection by a poet who knows their voice and the world is a richer place because of it”  – Wendy Pratt


“A body of work both beautifully intricate and thrillingly unsettling” – Russ Litten

https://spokenlabel.bandcamp.com/album/matt-nicholson-spoken-label-august-2022-2

https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9kOTA1ZTkwL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz/episode/MjJiYTdiZmMtNjBiNC00YzAwLWE2NDAtN2JiY2U1MDY2YjBm?sa=X&ved=0CA0QkfYCahcKEwiQkO2r7Kb6AhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ

https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/matt-nicholson-spoken-label-august-2022/id1501847969?i=1000574527521

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tn8-rZxsY-o

https://radiopublic.com/spoken-label-6BalgM/s1!4b32b

https://castbox.fm/episode/Matt-Nicholson-(Spoken-Label%2C-August-2022)-id2678341-id528714943

https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/spoken-label/matt-nicholson-spoken-label-DmbeFzkNohU/

https://www.bullhorn.fm/spokenlabel/posts/matt-nicholson-spoken-label-a

https://podcastaddict.com/?id=https%3A%2F%2Fanchor.fm%2Fs%2Fd905e90%2Fpodcast%2Fplay%2F55542252%2Fhttps%253A%252F%252Fd3ctxlq1ktw2nl.cloudfront.net%252Fstaging%252F2022-6-31%252Fef15210b-e664-6f74-080b-a0f5aceab9a6.mp3&podcastId=2748767

https://www.podbean.com/ew/dir-89di7-151e01f4

https://podbay.fm/p/spoken-label/e/1662678000

https://music.amazon.co.uk/podcasts/bae49616-2295-4e7c-b931-91415a724cb6/episodes/11da218f-decc-4975-a345-c815fe2d4a1d/spoken-label-matt-nicholson-spoken-label-august-2022

https://tunein.com/podcasts/Arts--Culture-Podcasts/Spoken-Label-p1317427/?topicId=176055815

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cir-caujkyrIiUlA1gHmraTEAReNuc9obU4tpw0/

https://www.owltail.com/podcast/5FvX6-Spoken-Label?fbclid=IwAR3IOFfoCPgNLDaF66mHk8YxUaApO5D7GJ6xZmUAdByqaHGRZVDcAjw3a8w

https://www.audible.co.uk/pd/Matt-Nicholson-Spoken-Label-August-2022-Podcast/B0BDQWX489?ref=a_pd_Spoken_c4_lAsin_0_1&pf_rd_p=a202f891-0d90-47a2-ac3f-8ebc4b2943db&pf_rd_r=KMY7M5MZRTTAXZ9CTPKR

https://anchor.fm/spokenlabelpodcast/episodes/Matt-Nicholson-Spoken-Label--August-2022-e1lth1c

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0jZOlfOMJGAwowl4ngciDy




Sunday, 18 September 2022

Speak Easy readers - October 2022

 












Dear all;

Enclosed is the list for readers for our up coming Spoken Word Open Mic Night 'Speak Easy' on Thursday 06 October at Chorlton's Duclimer.

Night starts at 7.30pm as always and the following readers below will read out a selection of their work across 4 minute slots. 

To go on the subs list / think I have accidentally missed (which is possible knowing me) email me on aen1mpo@yahoo.co.uk

David Bond 

Regi Agulha Jr.

Culian Wood

Esther Koch

Isabelle Pandora Bryne

Polly Anna Rose

Michael Burton

Peter Humphreys

Chrissy Jones

Anna Percy

Karen Lewis

Perry Gasteiger  

Darren Lea Grime 

Cordelia Birkbeck

Amy Langley

Quigley dc

Phil Carter

Tom Hunt

Linda Downs

Andy N & Amanda Nicholson

Steve Smythe

Rebecca Kenny (Guest Host) 


Thursday, 15 September 2022

Book Review - John Buchan - the 39 steps


 













(To be featured in a future "Reading in Bed" Podcast Episode - Book Review Podcast - available on all of the usual places)

Blurb:

Adventurer Richard Hannay, just returned from South Africa, is thoroughly bored with London life—until he is accosted by a mysterious American, who warns him of an assassination plot that could completely destabilise the fragile political balance of Europe. Initially sceptical, Hannay nonetheless harbours the man—but one day returns home to find him murdered... An obvious suspect, Hannay flees to his native Scotland, pursued by both the police and a cunning, ruthless enemy. His life and the security of Britain are in grave peril, and everything rests on the solution to a baffling enigma: what are the 'thirty nine steps?'


Strengths and Weaknessess:

Before we start this of course has being adapted into a film not once but three times (and a fourth time called the Lady Vanishes in 1978), a play and I believe a radio version which of course by any stretch of thought is good going. Personally I’ve seen the first two and while dated are pretty good old school spy films.

I didn’t realise until I got halfway through the book that the book was wrote originally in 1915 and to be honest while admiring the book, the very uneven tone of the book had me struggling right from the off with the main character, Richard Hannay surprisingly in contrast to the films given not a lot of characterization and I thought it hard caring about him when a new American acquaintance is murdered in his flat and then he ends up going on the run to Scotland to avoid two groups who are after to either lock him up or something worse.

It’s a tricky one to mark this because certainly the first two films are so good, but don’t really have a lot to do with the book I felt after reading this – interestingly in contrast to the films – there is no leading lady in the book which perhaps strips away some of the tension in the book but mostly feels like a book which was adapted from the magazine it was originally published with the constant cliff hangers. In 1915, I don’t doubt it would have a cracker to follow through every magazine – weekly or monthly but reading it now in 2022, I struggled with nearly every bit off it. Sure, there is plenty of action in the book and it does seem to move along at a reasonable pace but the layers off implausibility upon implausibility left me feeling the book was very flat.

I know my Dad is a big fan off him, and judging by the amount of books he has and what Buchan wrote, I guess he must have improved over time and I’ve got a few of them to look at a later date.

Whether I will write then after reading them is a little open to debate at the moment. Knowing me I probably will go another one of them a go, but maybe not next week if you know what I mean.

I will however watch either the first or second version of the film again sometime before I do as an example of a rare case where the film is actually better than the book.

4/10


Monday, 12 September 2022

Reading in Bed Episode 57a

 












Debuting their new shorter episodes spread out two a month instead of one, Episode 57a from the book review Podcast 'Reading in Bed' features Andy and Amanda reviewing the following books: 

1. David Jackson - No Secrets

2. Billie Jade Kermack - Awoken

3. Eve Nortley - Born to Brum 


Available on all of the usual places (Itunes, Spotify, Podbay, Podbean, Amazon and about 15 other places) you can find Podcasts including here

Saturday, 10 September 2022

New Spoken Label Session - Kelly Buchan

 












Latest up from Spoken Label (Author / Artist / Poet Podast series) features Professional Tarot Reader, writer for the witch magazine and author of the forthcoming poetry collection - "The Inner Shore" from Fraserburgh, Aberdeenshire, the wonderful Kelly Buchan 

More about Kelly can be found at:

https://www.tiktok.com/@the_witchcrafter

https://www.instagram.com/the_witchcrafter/

https://www.facebook.com/kelly.buchan.7792


The Session can be found at the following places:



















Thursday, 8 September 2022

Book Review - Kevin Bamford - Knocking on Doors

 















Blurb:

Incidents, people and places are evoked with a sure touch as Kevin Bamford recounts recollections of his boyhood in 1940s and 50s Lancashire. From childhood loves to tragedy on the way to a Latin exam, 'Knocking On Doors' is a charming collection of memories and anecdotes with an underlying set of values that can be universally appreciated.


Review:

* A audio version of this book will appear in one of the September Podcasts on Reading in Bed - available on all of the usual places * 

I first met Kevin Bamford the other year who is a local Chorlton Cum Hardy writer through the spoken word open mic circuit in Manchester and has being a regular at the spoken word open mic night I run in this town ‘Speak Easy’ and also pre lockdown in Stretford also.

Kevin is an Ex English Teacher with literally a lifetime of stories to tell and in this book this is what he does with literally dozens of short, sharp stories – mostly no more than a page or so and all are excellent.

All of these cover the earlier parts of his life with his parents right his early life to Blackburn and moving to Liverpool in the 1940s and 1950s and beyond. What is really impressive with these despite they are from a lifetime before mine is the sheer richness of the work and tells so much frequently in such a short moment.

The attention to detail in so many of these stories reminds me a lot off Ivor Cutler the legendary Scottish Poet / Storyteller , although quite different of course with his work on Life in a Scotch Sitting Room, Vol. 2“.

Like Cutler’s work, Bamford’s work is vivid with an incredible amount of memory which I am sure not I could ever hope to produce even now at the age I am now – take for example the piece ‘Boiled Eggs’ which both made me think of the was making tea back when I was a child with similar experiences over eggs and toast.

What is really impressive again like with Cutler is the economy of phrase in pieces like ‘Embarrassment’ in which the prose in these short tales has a heart told within is close to poetry even though it is not set out in a fiction layout and is well worth your time reading.

10/10 Excellent stuff