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Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Creative writing
On Saturday 7th September, we are holding two adult writing workshops in the library. They will be facilitated by author and presenter and all round interesting guy Keith Whelan. The morning session is Creative Writing, the afternoon session is Short Story Writing. Both these sessions are free to you as the Friends of Wingecarribee Libraries are generously covering Keith's fee for the day. Now, I do know that this is Election Day, but it won't take you long to vote (it's only next door) and maybe that could be your topic for writing. Or maybe you feel you need something to take you mind off the whole thing anyway... So, if you have untapped creativity trapped inside of you, or a whole load of ideas you need to get organised, or you'd just like to see how the process works, then book yourself (and a friend) in for one or both of our sessions. Just phone Bowral Library 4861 1167. I can promise you this will be a fun day, oh and I'll supply morning and afternoon tea too.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Art

Outline’s of Australian Art, the Joseph Brown Collection/ Daniel Thomas
Beyond tattoo/ Allan Graves
Beyond the page/ Quentin Blake
Freestyle Tattoo Australia/Elias Velis
The secret museum/ Molly Oldfield
Masters of the world/ William Bernstein
The art of the First Fleet
Lost, stolen or shredded/ Rick Gekoski
Digital painting tricks and techniques/ Gray Tonge
The girl with a pearl earring/Tracey Chevalier
Theft/ Peter Carey
The art thief/ Noah Charney
The killer’s art/ Mari Jungsted
The Da Vinci code/ Dan Brown
My Name is Red/ Orhan Pamuk
Sunflowers/ Sheramy Bundrick
The biographer/ Virginia Duigan
Some, but not all, children’s illustrators
Pamela Allen Kerry Argent Jeannie Baker
Graeme Base May Gibbs Eric Hill
Judy Horacek Dee Huxley Alison Leicester
Deborah Niland Jan Ormerod Donna Rawlins
Michael Salmon Shaun Tan Julie Viva
Bruce Whatley
DVDs and CDs
The pink panther DVD
Return of the pink panther DVD
Mistral’s daughter DVD
Billy Elliot DVD
Chicago DVD
Footloose DVD
Les Misèrables DVD
Dreamgirls: music from the motion picture CD
Grand designs Australia magazine
http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/insideartexpress
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Dinner at eight
This month our reading is "Faraway". Fantasy, travel, escapism, family history, space etc etc... What is your favourite faraway story? Here's mine.
I visited a distant relatives’ farm when I was about 11. I have vague memories of most of the house and property, the mangy cattle dogs and sheep in the back of the ute and people yelling “shut the gate” at regular intervals, probably to me. The kitchen though, oh I do remember that. The scrubbed pine table was definitely the heart of the home. Everything happened on it- breakfasts, lunch, dinner preparation, a cuppa and a slab of cake, cleaning up my brother after a fall into the barbed wire fence and so on, but it was the pantry that captivated me. On the shelves, rows and rows of pickled and preserved vegetables, fruits, jams, marmalade, potted meats, huge bags of potatoes and onions hanging to dry. I was gobsmacked, speechless, in awe. I was mesmerized by the colours, the shapes, the order and the impressive quantity of deliciousness on those shelves. It was miles away from what I knew, faraway you might say.
Years later on a farm stay holiday and the memories this childhood holiday came flooding back as I slurped, chomped and generally feasted on fresh eggs, vegetables, slabs of bread, cakes, scones, homemade jam and lamb, cutlets, roast legs, chops all grown, harvested and cooked by our hosts, again, so far, far away from my usual eating lifestyle. Today my faraway feasts are as close as the contents of my fridge and pantry and as far away as the inspiration from my latest cookbook. What do I fancy? Will I travel to Morroco, Greece, China, Vietnam, India, Spain or France? I’m transported to local markets, salivating as I wander amongst the fresh produce, spices, breads. I can create luscious delectable, ambrosial feasts. Ghillie Basan, Skye Gyngell, Jamie Oliver, Kylie Kwong, Christine Manfield, Luke Nguyen, Yottam Ottolenghi, Mourad Lahlou, Greg Malouf, Rick Stein and a miriad of others all tempt me to tables far away. They aren’t all scrubbed pine but they are essentially the same. Scrumptious, dainty or robust, gourmet or gourmand, hot and spicy, cool, creamy or crunchy.There really isn’t time or space here to truly describe how delicious it is to lose myself in any of these cookbooks and then create something from them, and that’s just the cookbooks. Lets’ not forget food blogs, dvds, magazines, tips from friends, work colleagues, and the family’s treasured and closely guarded recipes. I’ve even been given a a set of music cds (play the music, cook the meal – unfortunately I have to supply my own wine) that match a recipe book.
I wander around my local growers market and I am amazed that the smells and food displays can immediately take back to my childhood or into another country, time or season. I can pick fruit from the trees in the backyard, pick herbs from the garden (if the bunnies have left me some) and cook away. I am transported far away for a while, then I realise, the essential ingredient in my far away feast is very close. It’s not a feast without company, so come on in, the table’s set, dinner’s at eight, don’t be late…
Helen
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Indigireads
This month we celebrate Indigenous writing, films and music. We would like to
show our respect and acknowledge the traditional custodians of this land, of
elders past and present.
Our libraries have some wonderful books on display, all for borrowing or browsing.
We also found the following website full of interesting facts for school projects, general information, booklists and my favourites, indigenous film and music lists. If you have some time, you might like to have a look too.
www.creativespirits.info

Helen
Our libraries have some wonderful books on display, all for borrowing or browsing.
We also found the following website full of interesting facts for school projects, general information, booklists and my favourites, indigenous film and music lists. If you have some time, you might like to have a look too.
www.creativespirits.info
Helen
Monday, April 1, 2013
Murder is a messy business
Yes, April is murder. Lock the doors, close the curtains and curl up with a killer.
What are your favourite crime related reads? Any films or games? What are the blogs, twitter streams or magazines you read for #crimeread? Any apps which form part of your #crimeread enviroment?
There will be a live twitter discussion on 30 April starting at 8.00pm Australian Eastern Standard Time. 9.00pm New Zealand Time, 6.00pm Singapore Standard Time, 12.00 noon Central European Summer Time. Note : this is a staggered start to the discussion.
Use the tags #crimeread and #rwpchat as you discuss the reading, watching playing that is your experience of crimeread, so others can join in the conversation too.
Rachel Franks @rachel franks
Murder is a messy business. The motivations behind committing
murder can be complicated. The murder weapon needs to be considered, a pistol
perhaps? Or, the ubiquitous blunt instrument? The location and the timing of the
murder need to be carefully planned. Witnesses are to be avoided. An alibi has
to be constructed. Then, of course, the question of what to do with the body
must be answered.
If murder is so difficult, why is it so fascinating?
Crime fiction is the world’s largest genre. One of the reasons for
this is that crime fiction writers have so successfully capitalised on the
appeal factors of reading: character; language; setting; and story. Many crime
fiction readers are very familiar with these appeal factors: the numerous
characters from cerebral sleuths who can solve a crime in their living room over
a cup of tea (Edgar Allan
Poe, Arthur Conan
Doyle) to weapon wielding heroes who track cup of tea (Edgar Allan
Poe, Arthur Conan
Doyle) to weapon wielding heroes who track down villains on foot in
darkened alleyways (James M
Cain, Raymond
Chandler, Peter
Corris, Dashiell
Hammett); the language of the cultured conversations from the
novels of the genre’s Golden Age between World Wars I and II (Margery
Allingham, Agatha
Christie, Ngaio
Marsh, Dorothy L
Sayers) to the hard-hitting terminology of forensic procedurals (Patricia
Cornwell, Gabrielle
Lord, Kathy
Reichs) and legal procedurals (Sydney
Bauer, John Grisham, Scott Turow);
the settings that range from Australian towns and cities (Shane
Maloney, Peter
Temple, Arthur
Upfield) to glamorous locations around the world (Ian
Fleming, Patricia
Highsmith); and the diversity of detective stories from the classic
locked room (John Dickson
Carr, Fergus
Hume) to modern day military thrillers (Tom
Clancy, Matthew
Reilly). Crime fiction also covers the continuum of stories that
focus on solving the crime (G K
Chesterton, P D
James, Ellis
Peters) to works that explicitly detail criminal acts (James
Ellroy, Thomas
Harris, Mo
Hayder). There is, quite simply, a dead body for every reader.
So, this April read a work of crime fiction. If you are already
familiar with the genre try a sub-genre or author you have not read before. If
you are new to crime fiction then you're about to find out that as a great read, crime does pay.
What are your favourite crime related reads? Any films or games? What are the blogs, twitter streams or magazines you read for #crimeread? Any apps which form part of your #crimeread enviroment?
There will be a live twitter discussion on 30 April starting at 8.00pm Australian Eastern Standard Time. 9.00pm New Zealand Time, 6.00pm Singapore Standard Time, 12.00 noon Central European Summer Time. Note : this is a staggered start to the discussion.
Use the tags #crimeread and #rwpchat as you discuss the reading, watching playing that is your experience of crimeread, so others can join in the conversation too.
Rachel Franks @rachel franks
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Eco reads at your library
2013 is the International Year of Water Cooperation.
March is celebrating #ecoread, where you can discuss all your ideas of ecology, environment, water use and conservation, whatever you think fits as an #ecoread.
How do you recycle or reuse your reading, watching and playing?March is celebrating #ecoread, where you can discuss all your ideas of ecology, environment, water use and conservation, whatever you think fits as an #ecoread.
Libraries are part of a sustainable solution
as you do not need to own everything you read.
What does #ecoread make you think of? Is is recycling/upcycling? Is it
science fiction with tales of worlds destroyed because of overuse of
resources?
Don't forget our twitter chat on 26 March starting at 8.00pm Australian Eastern Daylight
Time. 9.00pm New Zealand Daylight Time, 6.00pm Singapore Standard Time,
12.00 noon Central European Summer Time. Note : this is a staggered start to
the discussion.
You can add your pins to this
board on Pinterest (once you follow it and we add you as a pinner) for
#ecoread too. Please use #rwpchat in the text of items which you pin.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Love love love February
Is there anything better in this world than that rush of adrenaline, that
natural high at the feeling of love? For the reader and viewer, genuine,
swooning, pulse-racing, fever inducing, gleeful, heartful love can be so much
fun.This month you could start at historical romance and indulge yourself in Julia Quinn’s On the Way to the Wedding. Or you could watch
Shakespeare in Love or oh-so-many versions of Pride and Prejudice. If you prefer contemporary reads there are some wonderful characterisations
in Rachel John’s Jilted. Susan Elizabeth Phillips' books pull at the heart
strings with their depth of emotions that have you wrought by the end of her
books. As for film and movies who can go past the hilarity of Coupling, the
sweetness of Amelie.There are so many heartreads out there – this will be a month full of love.
Don't forget to join our live twitter discussion on 26 February starting at 8.00pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time. 9.00pm New Zealand Daylight Time, 6.00pm Singapore Standard Time, 12.00 noon Central European Time. Everyone is welcome.
Use the tags #heartread and #rwpchat as you discuss the reading, watching playing that is your experience of love and romance, so others can join in the conversation too.
Don't forget to join our live twitter discussion on 26 February starting at 8.00pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time. 9.00pm New Zealand Daylight Time, 6.00pm Singapore Standard Time, 12.00 noon Central European Time. Everyone is welcome.
Use the tags #heartread and #rwpchat as you discuss the reading, watching playing that is your experience of love and romance, so others can join in the conversation too.
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