Category Archives: Everyone

6 Quick Reads for World Book Night

World Book Night is almost here. Don’t know what this is or confusing it with World Book Day? Well you’re not alone. According to my local book store ‘it finished weeks ago’ — no that’s the one where kids dress up as their favourite character, but don’t read books!

Well next week, Wednesday 23 April, is definitely World Book Night brought to us courtesy of The Reading Agency. It began in 2011, but was moved to this date to coincide with UNESCO International Day of the Book and, probably, the birth and death date of William Shakespeare.

This year The Reading Agency has released 6 Quick Reads — short books and great stories by bestselling authors, written in an accessible and easy to read style. They’re a valuable tool for boosting reading skills, confidence and engagement in learning, and have led to thousands of adults reading, completing and enjoying a book for the first time.

Just to add to my own huge pile of ‘reads’ I’ve completed two of the titles: Leila Aboulela’s A New Year and Fiona Cummins A Boy Called Saul.

Leila’s story follows the recently widowed Suad as she begins to try and transform her life. Family support turns to family grievances — a theme that must be echoed across the nation and familiar to many tv viewers. Will the kids rally round, or leave her to stew on her own?

I wasn’t sure about A Boy Called Saul until I read the opening line: ‘Saul Anguish hated the police.’ Now I was hooked — as I’m supposed to be. How can you ignore someone with the name Anguish or even a police office called Storm.

These are both less than 115 pages, so easily digested in one sitting. I’ve another four to go so I’ll keep you posted. In the meantime, check out the site for more info.

NB: My local library has the biggest selection of Quick Reads I’ve ever seen, housed in a separate bookcase. They haven’t heard of WBN either!

Comments Off on 6 Quick Reads for World Book Night

Filed under Everyone

Celebrating ‘Dis Poetry’ a posthumous retrospective

Tuesday 15 April marks, what would have been, the 67th birthday of Benjamin Zephaniah. To celebrate, Northumberland based Bloodaxe Books have prepared a posthumous retrospective of his work.

Dis Poetry: Selected Poems & Lyrics brings together all the poems from his three Bloodaxe collections: City Psalms (1992), Propa Propaganda (1996) and Too Black, Too Strong (2001), as well as some from The Dread Affair (1985), along with previously unpublished work and lyrics from various recordings. 

Zephaniah has been honoured in numerous ways across the UK since he died in December 2023, aged 65. In his native Birmingham, 65 trees have been planted in The Zephaniah Forest in Burbury Park, Newtown, and a blue plaque commemorating ‘The People’s Poet’ was installed at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery last October. 

His poetry for adults has been published by Bloodaxe since 1992. An earlier selection of his poetry, To Do Wid Me, including a film portrait by Pamela Robertson-Pearce, was published in 2013. This new collection includes a QR code giving access to the film – enabling readers to see and hear him performing over 20 poems. 

This weekend, Saturday 12 April, there is a Benjamin Zephania Day: A Festival of Rhythm, Unity & Revolution at Brunel University, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge, Middlesex, 11.00am to 6.30pm. Attendance is free, but booking essential. Special guests include Adjoa Andoh, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Michael Rosen, Daljit Nagra, Lemn Sissay, and Bloodaxe poet Hannah Lowe. 

For full details of the Benjamin Zephaniah Day, including a Bloodaxe online launch event on Tuesday 22 April at 7.00pm BST, and references, interviews and articles – click BENJAMIN

Zephaniah, B. (15 April 2025) Dis Poetry: Selected Poems & Lyrics, Bloodaxe Books.

Comments Off on Celebrating ‘Dis Poetry’ a posthumous retrospective

Filed under Everyone, Read Now

Shortlist for first Climate Fiction Prize

The Climate Fiction Prize shortlist has been announced, with the judges picking five titles representing the depth and range of climate fiction on offer to readers. The titles, selected from the all-female longlist announced last November, encompass a range of genres, with each tackling the climate crisis differently.

  • The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley (Sceptre, Hodder)
  • And So I Roar by Abi Daré (Sceptre, Hodder)
  • Briefly Very Beautiful by Roz Dineen (Bloomsbury Circus)
  • Orbital by Samantha Harvey (Jonathan Cape, PRH)
  • The Morningside by Téa Obreht (W&N, Orion)

Speaking at the London Book Fair, Chair of the Judges Madeleine Bunting acknowledged the real challenge to communicating the ‘freakish and unpredictable’ weather caused by climate change and putting this at the heart of a novel. However, she said she was impressed how these shortlisted novels had risen to the challenge with their inventiveness and ingenuity.

The Prize f £10,000 is a literary award for climate fiction, launched in June 2024 at the Hay Festival in Wales. It aims to showcase novels that engage with themes concerning the climate crisis.

It is supported by Climate Spring, whose mission statement describes it as “a global organisation with the aim to harness the storytelling power of film and TV to shift how society perceives and responds to the climate crisis”.

The judges in the first year are writers Madeleine Bunting (chair of the judges) and Nicola Chester; Andy Fryers, Global Sustainability Director of the Hay Festival; David Lindo, known as the Urban Birder; and author and climate activist Tori Tsui.

The winner will be announced in May 2025 at the Hay Festival

‘Change starts with the imagination, and no subject so urgently needs new stories of repair and care than the climate crisis.’ Madeleine Bunting, chair of judges, Climate Fiction Prize.

Comments Off on Shortlist for first Climate Fiction Prize

Filed under Everyone