P.D. James has been posing questions of her detective hero Adam Dalgleish for sixty years but more recently the veteran writer has turned her attention to Jane Austen. While Dalgliesh has ‘never got a day older’, James herself now uses a stick and was taking a Zimmer frame home from Swindon today. But it is the equally ageless prose of Austen that continues to fascinate James and which has culminated in the crime writers’ most recent book ‘Death Comes to Pemberley’ . The book seeks to answer many of the questions left hanging by Austen , among them ‘Would Elizabeth have married Darcy if he had no money?’ It’s easy to see the enthusiasm that James continues to have for her writing, particularly as she describes another Austen classic, Emma, as a ‘brilliant detective story’, one which she first read when she was fifteen years old. Four year later war broke out and the pressures of bringing up her two girls took their toll on the writer, when her husband returned from the war with mental problems she soon realised that ‘there was never going to be a good time and what I really wanted to be was a writer, so I did most of my plotting and planning on the Tube on the way to work’. Remarkably James’ first novel was accepted straight away, the Northern, District and Circle lines seemingly the perfect underground diversion from rejection. In her books James has used the detective story to say something true about men and women and continues to do so, this time mixing her classy plot construction with that of Austen to great effect. ‘Death Comes to Pemberley’ begins on a typical night in Austenland, then a body is found in the wild wood – the intrigue and storytelling ensuring a BBC adaptation for this Christmas. Let’s hope that James does not have the same experience as she did with previous adaptations of her Dalgleish novels where her dialogue was cut and plot changed.
Sun, song, words and juggling machetes
6 May
The 20th Swindon Festival of Literature is underway and in spectacular style! A perfect morning at Lawn Woods saw Festival Director Matt Holland crack open a bottle of champagne to celebrate the beginning of the third decade of Swindon’s number one arts event. Recent years have brought as many shivers as smiles to the Dawn Chorus, but today early rising festival-goers were treated to blue skies, golden sun and a very early taste of what this years festival has to offer. Swindon Scratch Choir’ s Sun Arise Singers softly sang the sun up at 5.30am as Jake the Juggler and bagpipe man Danny serenaded the large crowd. Folically challenged poet Jason Maverick started proceedings proper with verse, mime, juggling, plenty of audience participation and a poem about turning into his Dad (but not his Mum). Music Alive brought strings and haunting sounds to the woods and Storyteller Chris Park told a tale of thanks before human statue Andria Walton shared Shakespeare with us. Poetry annual Domestic Cherry 3 was also launched by its fragrant founder Mabel Watson. A madcap finale saw Marky Jay build a two man human pyramid to juggle machetes from the top of, sadly for Marky one half of the pyramid was the notoriously unreliable Barry Dicks of the aforementioned Domestic Cherry, causing an event which had started so beautifully to end as an ugly heap in front of a glorious sunset over Swindon.
Hunting the Beautiful Bugs of Bedminster
30 MarHow can an infestation of insects save an ailing shopping centre? Festival Chronicle donned pith helmet and binoculars to undertake a bug safari around south Bristol. Continue reading
Swindon Festival of Poetry – Is it Nearly Christmas?
11 OctIs it nearly Christmas? I wrote a seasonally related poem at Matt Holland’s ‘Poetry and Life’ workshop on Tuesday, the final day of the Swindon Festival of Poetry.
I can’t take all the blame/credit. It was a joint effort. After reading and discussing other poetic works and how they tackle life – and how ‘language can free you and bind you’ – and how poetry differs to prose (‘Poetry can mean something different to what it says,’ said poet Robert Frost and ‘prose is obliged to mean what it says’ said Matt) we collectively tried our own work. Continue reading
Swindon Festival of Poetry – Annie Freud and Tamar Yoseloff
9 OctInternet dating, talking to furniture and works of art were the poetic subjects of last night’s event, at Swindon Central Library’s poetry space.
Sylvia Novak sang and read from her book, Love in the Age of Technology, inspired by internet dating: “It haunted me so much that I wrote an anthology on the experience,” she said. Sylvia sometimes sang with her guitar, and sometimes talked alongside Gavin Daniels performing with flute and guitar.
It’s interesting to hear performers such as Sylvia say they’ve put poetry to music or arranged music to the words. Other people might call it a song, or a rap. Well not quite rap which is riffed off the beat. A dance piece where the dance is created and music arranged to it is still ‘dance’, not movement set to music. Or perhaps I’m wrong here. Does it matter? Are these delineations helpful to poetry reaching a greater audience? Comments at the bottom… Continue reading
Swindon Festival of Poetry – Mabel’s House Party and ‘The Joy of Sex’
8 OctIt’s been forty years since the book, The Joy of Sex, was published with its quirky style and fun approach to lovemaking so Domestic Cherry – the people behind Mabel’s House Party at Artsite Swindon – held a competition with the book as its theme. Saturday night we heard the winners.
It was great to see the venue was completely packed – the only seats left when we arrived were those tiny ones they use in primary schools. Artsite was set up like a night time cafe with feather covered lamps, bottles of wine and of course the Domestic Cherry cups of tea.
There were moments of comedy. Jill: ‘She is less subtle / Goes straight for his buckle’. Judy: ‘I wish I’d misspent my youth.’ Peter made his rhyme out of all the pet and slang names for genitals. Another poet from Ireland read The Tandem – how to decide who cycles at the back and observe the others wiggling posterior. Jo Bell – just named as the first canal poet laureate by The Canal & River Trust – gave us her observations on ‘Coming’ or should that be ‘Cumming’? Continue reading
Swindon Festival of Poetry – poetry darrlin’ Pam Ayres
6 OctAs well as enjoying some of Pam Ayres’s poetry, we heard anecdotes about her life and the inspiration behind some of the audience’s favourite poems, documented in her 2011 autobiography ‘The Necessary Aptitude: a Memoir’.
Pam never had aspirations to write ‘deep’ poetry – ‘other people could do it so much better’. But it’s to poetry’s benefit that she developed her own style and wrote in a way that anyone could relate to and enjoy. Continue reading
Swindon Festival of Poetry – psychogeography and sestinas
6 OctPsychogeography aims to make the everyday more interesting or to absorb and appreciate above and beyond the usual tourist attractions one would look for in an urban environment. Just the thing for Swindon, then.
Comments about the session included: “In context signs are really boring, but out of context they’re silly” and “I liked the skip” also “The Wyvern Theatre has stalactites.” Continue reading


