Showing posts with label Alan Apperley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alan Apperley. Show all posts
Monday, 12 April 2010
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
Admin
A couple of things while I think about them.
I'm away in Poland with the England cadet epeeists for a few days so if you're looking for organ donations, don't wait until I get back. The same goes for office hours and academic advice.
In my absence, my friend Alan Apperley is launching his magnificent novel, Indeterminate Creatures, upstairs at the Old Joint Stock pub, Colmore Row, in Birmingham: Thursday at 7. Everyone's invited. It's a lovely book and there's a reading and q+a session, so you can ask him when he'll finish marking your essays.
I'm away in Poland with the England cadet epeeists for a few days so if you're looking for organ donations, don't wait until I get back. The same goes for office hours and academic advice.
In my absence, my friend Alan Apperley is launching his magnificent novel, Indeterminate Creatures, upstairs at the Old Joint Stock pub, Colmore Row, in Birmingham: Thursday at 7. Everyone's invited. It's a lovely book and there's a reading and q+a session, so you can ask him when he'll finish marking your essays.
Monday, 8 March 2010
Author, Author!
My friend and colleague Alan Apperley (of Prefects and Nightingales fame) has a novel out, Indeterminate Creatures (launched 25th March by Tindall Street Press). We've just seen the first copy of the book and it looks beautiful. Order your copy now! I'll get a free one, as I'm in the acknowledgements…
Monday, 23 February 2009
Howling Gales
The Nightingales: Insult to Injury
Stewart Lee
John Peel died in October 2004. While Peel favourites the Fall and the Undertones were swiftly beatified by desperate Newsnight Review pundits, his beloved Birmingham post-punks the Nightingales somehow escaped such inappropriate appropriation. But the new album from the “Gales” is their finest for 27 years.
The twin guitars of Alan Apperley and Matt Wood chime and coruscate; the drummer, Darren Garratt, has perfected a unique kind of flailing accuracy; and Robert Lloyd’s Black Country burr carves wry couplets into the hammer-effect, copper-top tables of the subconscious. Start here and work backwards.
Klangbad KLANGBAD40
Friday, 23 January 2009
Happy Birthday, old man
Wednesday, 3 December 2008
Indeterminate Creatures
I've just been to a reading by Alan Apperley from his novel, Indeterminate Creatures, to be published by Tindal Street Press in January 2010. The title derives from an Elizabeth Goudge novel (she was a bourgeois, regional and religious novelist, completely unlike Alan) and the novel traces the simultaneous growth of creativity in a fecund and artistic sense during a young couple's first pregnancy (though it's much more profound than this summary makes it appear - and Hitler's in it too).
The reading was fun. Although an experienced lecturer and performer in other fields, he was clearly nervous and more comfortable talking about the novel than reading it - even though it went down very well in front of a crowd of lecturers, students and fellow novelists. I'd read the book in draft form a couple of times, and it was fascinating to hear how characters and settings were transformed into 'real' people and places simply by reading out loud.
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