Christmas is coming, and Granny’s getting fat…

 

With Christmas almost upon us, and thoughts of food and drink filling our waking moments, do consider this Classic Collection which we have been tasting, on your behalf…

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Classic Collection Petit Verdot 2015. This is an interesting wine produced in the Western Cape, with a pleasant after taste and has  a slightly spicey tone – as it says on the bottle, with a hint of dark cherries, plums and mulberries. It think it’s better than the price would indicate. We loved it. You will notice that we have begun this particular bottle. Bad, bad granny and gramps, but so hard not to.

Stockist: NISA

RRP: £7.55

 

Classic Collection Grenache Blanc 2015

Another from the Western Cape, with more of a peaches and apple flavour and one that brings a taste of summer to what has been a damp and dreary week. Best to drink soon, and perhaps not to cellar it for too long. I think it would go well with salmon, and chicken.

Stockist: NISA

RRP: £7.55

 

KWV Mentors Petit Verdot 2014

Crikey, this is a good one. This is an intense wine, loads of flavour, with that dark cherry and plum. It is a hard wine to ignore. You can be chatting, take a sip, and then actually take time to think – this is gorgeous. You’ll love it.

Stockist: Ocado

RRP: £14.95

 

KWV Mentors Cabernet Franc 2013

This is the Cab France Challenge winner 2016 and trust me, you will be doing a lot of sipping, tasting and concentrating. It’s really good.  ‘Bold’ I think is the word, full of character. You might have met people who ‘command their space’. This wine does just that. Take time to enjoy its smoothness, and a flavour with that hint of dark cherries, and much more besides. A complex wine, and worthy award winner.

Stockist: Ocado

RRP: £14.95

 

 

One to have you peeking between your fingers – or not

Blackeyed Theatre, in association with South Hill Park, presents

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Adapted by John Ginman

UK Tour: Spring 2017

 

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OK, I know it’s still 2016 but it’s good to have something to plan for, and this could be it.

Marking the 200th anniversary of the creation of Frankenstein, Blackeyed Theatre’s brand new stage adaptation of Mary Shelley’s gothic horror masterpiece continues its sell-out UK tour this spring.

Geneva, 1816 – Victor Frankenstein obsesses in pursuit of nature’s secret, the elixir of life itself. But nothing can prepare him for what he creates. So begins a gripping life or death adventure taking him to the ends of the earth and beyond.

Adapted by John Ginman, who penned Blackeyed Theatre’s hugely successful 2013 production of Dracula, this world premiere fuses bold ensemble storytelling, live music, puppetry and stunning theatricality to create a fresh telling of what has become a landmark work of literature.

A unique feature of the production is the use of Bunraku-style puppetry to portray The Creature. Designed and built by Yvonne Stone (Warhorse, His Dark Materials), the full size 6’4” puppet, which needs up to 3 people to manipulate it, adds an exciting new dimension to the retelling of the classic story.

This gothic horror masterpiece fuses bold ensemble storytelling, live music, puppetry and stunning theatricality to create a fresh telling of what has become a landmark work of literature.

Frankenstein

125 minutes (including an interval) Ages 11+

For venues and dates: see www.blackeyedtheatre.co.uk.

@Blackeyedtheatr, #FrankensteinTour

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Andalou Naturals Cosmetics

andalounaturalcosmetics, andalou,natural,cosmeticsAndalou Naturals is the number 1 selling natural skin care brand in the US and Canada. I have never used any of their products before but I was very impressed by the literature: Key plant powered antioxidants and the best in Non-GMO, Cruelty-Free, Gluten-Free, Eco-Friendly, Certified Organic, Fair Trade, Vegetarian, Vegan, and Clinically Proven Ingredients. Sign me up. I love organic, fair-trade and natural products. The brand uses Fruit Stem Cell Science and has clinically proven results. I have used their products now and I really believe they work. There is nothing to not love about this brand. Consider me sold.

I particularly love the Moroccan Beauty Oil, A Path to Light Lime Blossom Hand Cream, 1000 Roses Body Lotion, BioActive 8 Berry Fruit Enzyme Mask and their fab Get Started Brightening Kit which has 5 skin care essentials for normal & combination skin. The Get Started Brightening Kit is a great introduction to the brand.

They say: At Andalou Naturals we believe that beauty is a choice; it’s about how you think, feel and behave. Not only is this true for individuals, it’s also true for companies. As an organization we want to create products that are in accordance with who we are and so we set out to not only commit to but to CHAMPION our beliefs and ultimately, lead the way for others to follow suit.

In order to achieve Non-GMO Project Verified status, our Andalou Naturals team, in cooperation with manufacturers and suppliers, had to rigorously confirm that over 200 source ingredients, as well as the manufacturing process for each ingredient, did not include GMOs of any kind. In 2011, Andalou Naturals became the first personal care brand to achieve 100% Non-GMO Project Verification on every single product and today we are the #1 selling facial skin care brand in the natural channel (SPINS Oct, 2016).

We believe that GMOs, and the dependency on pesticides that they create, are in conflict with the wellbeing of the planet and the wellbeing of every single person. To fully protect our soil and our children, it’s not enough for companies to say they use Non-GMO ingredients, to truly stand up to the multinational corporations that are destroying our land and experimenting with our health, we need to verify it, label it and shop accordingly.

While the Non-GMO Project Verified process is a rigorous one—involving a huge commitment of time, capital and corporate transparency to segregate, trace, assess risk and continually test major GMO risk ingredients and their derivatives—it is a wholly worthy commitment and one that should be done.

We take a stand on issues that matter to us, regardless of cost; we always have, and we always will.

We CHAMPION: Cruelty Free, Eco-Friendly, Vegetarian and Vegan, Fair-Trade, Gluten-Free, Natural, Organic, and Non-GMO Project Verified ingredients.

http://andalou.com
Andalou Get Started Brightening Kit – 5 Pieces is available here.

REVIEW OF ‘YOUNG WRITER OF THE YEAR’ SHORTLIST by Frances Colville

 

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The four books on the Young Writer of the Year shortlist could hardly be more different from each other. There is a novel, a collection of poetry, an anthology of short stories and a novella. And yet they all have a great deal in common. To begin with – obviously – they are all written by young writers, that is writers of 35 years or under. They all in their different ways grab the attention of the reader and linger in your mind long after you have read them. They all make you stop and think. And they all in various ways push the boundaries of literature – by their use of language, their content, their format and above all their originality.

 

Grief is the Thing with Feathers by Max Porter (published by Faber & Faber and available in paperback at £5.59, as an ebook or an audio download) is quite simply not like anything I have read before. It’s a novella (i.e. shorter than a novel but longer than a short story), a portrayal of grief which has rarely been bettered, an entanglement with the Ted Hughes poem The Crow, a piece of prose poetry which is as beautiful as it is dark and haunting.

 

Physical by Andrew McMillan (published by Cape Poetry and available in paperback at £9.99 and ebook) has already won the 2015 Guardian First Book Award and was shortlisted for the 2015 Costa Poetry Award. It’s an intensely personal and very engaging collection of poems – written almost entirely in lower case and without punctuation – many of which haunt you in much the same way as Grief is the Thing with Feathers does.

 

A third of the way through The Ecliptic by Benjamin Wood (published by Scribner and available in paperback at £6.99 or as an ebook or audio download) I was intrigued to realise that I had no idea where the story was going nor where it would end up. Telling of a reclusive group of artists who for various reasons struggle to live in the ‘real’ world, and who find their tenuous grip on reality disturbed by the arrival of a young man haunted by dreams, this novel draws you in from the very beginning because of the power of the writing, and refuses to let you go. It’s original and it’s well-written, and like all the other books on this shortlist it is so worth reading.

 

An Account of the Decline of the Great Auk, According to One Who Saw It is the title of one of the stories in this collection by Jessie Greengrass as well as the title of the book as a whole. It’s the first story in the book and it sets the scene for the others which are without exception well-conceived, well- put-together, and, it almost goes without saying, well-written. There are twelve stories altogether and they vary in time and place, spanning both past and present, and numerous geographical locations. All The Other Jobs stood out for me, but this is a collection which will have universal appeal. Published by JM Originals it is available in paperback priced at £10.99 and as an ebook.

 

I’ve pondered for a long time about which I would choose as the winner if I were on the judging panel, but in the end for me there is no real contest. It has to be Grief is the Thing with Feathers by Max Porter, because of its originality, because it won’t leave my head and because I wish I’d written it.

 

And I’m delighted to say that the ‘official’ judges agreed with me. The winner of The Sunday Times/Peters Fraser + Dunlop Young Writer of the Year Award 2016 is Max Porter for Grief is the Thing with Feathers.

 

 

 

Abigail

 

The Bunker, 53A Southwark Street, London SE1

Tuesday 10th January – Saturday 4th February 2017

This sounds interesting and something to look forward to after the Christmas shenanigans are over.

The world premiere of Abigail by Papatango award-winning playwright Fiona Doyle will close The Bunker’s highly-acclaimed inaugural season. Abigail will be directed by The Bunker’s Artistic Director, Joshua McTaggart. Originally written in 2013 when it was long-listed for the Bruntwood Prize, The Bunker’s production stars Tia Bannon (The Winter’s Tale and Pericles, The Globe) and Mark Rose (King Lear, The Old Vic; Hangmen, Royal Court).

In a snow-covered Berlin, a young woman meets a middle-aged man and they fall in love. As the year progresses, they fall apart. Told across a fractured timeline where the past and present collide, Abigail explores the fragility of love and the desperate measures we all go to in order to keep control in an unpredictable world. How far would you go to take control? Would you lie? Would you fight? Would you scream and shout or shut down and cry? In a world where so many things are out of our control, what happens when the one thing you think you need is the one thing you cannot have?

The ethos of The Bunker is about nurturing a performance environment where audiences stay after the show to enjoy events, discussions and drinks in the auditorium. Alongside Abigail, The Bunker will be bringing together an array of artists to explore the question ‘How would you take control?’ with new work-in-progress showings, poetry evenings, music nights and dance response pieces including the brilliant Pint-Sized plays, the lyrical poet Bridget Minnamore, and performances from Shay Barclay Dance.

Abigail

Tuesday 10th January – Saturday 4th February 2017

Tuesday – Saturday, 7:30pm
Saturday and Sunday, 3pm

The Bunker, 53A Southwark Street London SE1 1RU

The nearest tube station is London Bridge (Borough High Street exit). Turn left out of the station and continue up Southwark Street. The closest rail station is London Bridge.

Tickets are available priced £19.50 (£15 concessions)
Previews are priced at £12
Ten £10 tickets are available at each performance for under 25s

Available from http://bunkertheatre.com/ and 0207 234 0486.

 

 

Immerse yourself in the world of Virtual Reality Entertainment with the New Cygnett VR- GW 360° Headset

immerse-yourself-in-the-world-of-virtual-reality-entertainment-with-the-new-cygnett-vr-gw-360-headsetVirtual reality is huge now and there are a number of virtual reality headsets on the market. I would argue that the Cygnett Gateway VR Headset is the only one that has such an affordable price point. It retails at only £24.99. We are also reviewing the Oculus Rift at the moment which is at the high end of the market, costing over £500. But the Cygnett Gateway VR Headset has a lot to offer. First of all, it’s easier to set up and it is significantly more affordable.

Gateway VR headset is comfortable and easily adjustable. It works by putting your phone in the flip down hatch. It gives 360° viewing angle and is fully interactive. It fits most phones and doesn’t pull on your face.

We liked the Gateway VR Headset a lot. It gives a great VR experience at a very good price. You can go places you have never been, use it to learn, or game to your hearts content. It would make a great present. We highly recommend it.

 

Your days of passive spectating are numbered with the launch of the new Cygnett Gateway VR Headset. You can now easily immerse yourself into the world of Virtual Reality Entertainment by simply placing your smartphone into the device. A whole world awaits you full of new, innovative viewing and entertainment fun as you utilise VRtechnology in a simple to use yet effective form. Step into the latest VR technology by being able to see what is happening all around you – behind you, above you, beside you and of course, right in front of you, with the clearest of vision.

 

Slip the comfortable Gateway VR headset over your head, adjust the elasticated straps to fit you perfectly, adjust the dual lenses according to your eyes and start to lose yourself in this new world of virtual reality. The lenses are fully adjustable both vertically and horizontally as well as from a dual focus stand point allowing a clear and fully immersive experience and the breathable face cushioning ensures comfort for extended viewing sessions.

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The Cygnett VR headset enables you to feel you really are part of the environment like never before with a full 360° viewing angle, whether you’re feeling the rush of adrenalin skiing down the slopes of a black run or the thrill of plummeting from 12,000ft with only a parachute on your back. Still feeling adventurous? Tour places you have never visited whilst you travel round the globe – stand at the top of The Grand Canyon, gaze up at The Eiffel Tower or support your child’s learning with a trip to the Natural History Museum. You can even virtually walk through your new home before it’s built using the Gateway VRheadset.

 

No need to go to the expense or hassle of visiting your local cinema either; you can watch 3D videos and movies in a perfectly clear high-resolution image from the comfort of your own couch. Feel like Rihanna standing on the stage almost able to reach out and touch your audience or view the goings on in a TV recording studio as you watch everyone from the audience to the TV crew react to the presenter.

 

Used in conjunction with your favourite interactive VR games, gaming fans will find themselves completely absorbed from every angle and can experience the excitement and pressure on a whole new level.

 

Through the new Gateway VR Headset you will also be able to access your phone files, photos and videos through the linked App like never before. This new feature is set to become increasingly popular and an area of huge growth and expansion.

 

The Gateway VR headset features a flip down hatch with a magnetic closure system so that your smartphone can be easily loaded into the headset. This flip down system also allows easy access to charging at either end of the device. When your smartphone is placed inside the unit it is supported by a rubberized, slightly adhesive pad to give your phone extra support and grab whilst sitting within the unit. The Gateway VR headset fits most smartphones from a 4 inch unit such as the iPhone 5 through to a 5.5 inch Samsung Galaxy S9.

 

This affordable VR headset is ideal for those who are looking for a more immersive and interactive viewing experience, for those who want to enhance their child’s learning and for gaming fanatics who want to bring their favorite games to life. It is now available to purchase from UK.Cygnett.com and Amazon.co.uk for only £24.99

 

The below is just a small selection of compatible devices which work with the Cygnett Gateway VR

 

Brand Phone Model
Samsung Galaxy S6 S7 S5 S4 S3 Note 5 Note 7 A5
Apple iPhone 5 iPhone 5C iPhone 5S iPhone 6 iPhone 6c iPhone 6s iPhone 6 Plus iPhone 6s Plus iPhone 7/7Plus
LG G2 G3 G4 Nexus 5

 

 

The Christmas Dinner that Spreads Joy

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It’s only one day but what if you had nothing to look forward to over the Christmas period?

A lot of us might think of the elderly living alone, no-one to make their Christmas a special event but there are many people for whom Christmas can be a painful time. We may not give a passing thought to younger members of society yet many of them will be dreading Christmas too. And if it wasn’t for something that popped up on my Facebook feed I might still be guilty of that.

Facebook might be littered with photographs of what people had for dinner, indulgent cakes, cheesy cartoons and cute dogs – but now and then, among all the dross, something will catch your eye, as a friend’s Facebook post did mine. How would I like to be a Secret Santa? All I had to do was follow the link  to Amazon, choose a pressie and click. Simple yet stunning and I felt I had to share.

There are many young people leaving care, who may be living in B & Bs, bedsits, sleeping the streets or on friend’s sofas and many of them will be dreading Christmas. Lemn Sissay, award-winning official poet of London Olympics 2012 knows how that feels. He was a care leaver himself and he came up with this wonderful idea to make sure that those who are in a similar position have a fantastic Christmas.

Behold The Christmas Dinner  One big Christmas party when they can relax, have fun and be given gifts – this is where the Secret Santa comes in. A festive day for care leavers (those who are 18 – 25 who have been looked after by local authorities away from the home for at least thirteen weeks since the age of fourteen, as well as those with a background in care within the home).

The Christmas Dinner started in Manchester in 2013 but this year there will be similar events in Hackney, Leeds and Oxford.

I spoke with Jill Ambrazitis, who is organising The Christmas Dinner in Leeds to find out more about event and how to get involved.

How many people in the team to bring this sort of event to fruition?

The steering committee for the Leeds event comprised approximately 20 people.  We will also have additional volunteers assisting with set-up on Christmas Eve, more on Christmas Day to help with the actual event and then a further group on Boxing Day to assist with clear-up etc.

How many young people will receive gifts this year?

We anticipate that there will be 50 care leavers attending our event this year, all of whom will receive gifts.

Who devised the list, accepts delivery, wraps the presents etc?

Lemn suggested that we set up an Amazon wish list, (we believe Manchester and Hackney were already doing this).  I added the suggested gifts and required quantities to the Leeds Wish List on Amazon. All gifts purchased from the list will be delivered to me.  We have a group of volunteers participating in a marathon gift wrapping session on Saturday 17 December.

How can people get involved? 

At this stage, mostly by being Secret Santas and purchasing gifts via the Amazon Wish list using this link https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/registry/wishlist/1A1SAFC1KDL5B/ref=nav_wishlist_lists_2

Ideally, we would like to have as many of the gifts as possible delivered by 16 December (prior to the wrapping activity), however, having said that this does not mean that we would not accept contributions/donations thereafter!  In addition, our venue does not have any sofas/soft furnishings, so if there is anyone who has bean bags/sofas etc. that they are not using and would be prepared to lend/donate these to us  that would be amazing.

So, click on the link and choose your present. It’s quick and easy way of being Secret Santa and it will make someone’s day to receive a sackful of presents.

If anyone else is thinking of doing something similar you can find out exactly how to plan your event for 2017 on Lemn Sissay’s blog.

Best Endeavours Critical Endeavours: Jane Cable on what happens once you get that publishing deal continues

Jane Cable, publishing, writing
BEST ENDEAVOURS

Jane Cable’s blog about what happens once that digital publishing deal is in the bag continues.

CRITICAL ENDEAVOUR

A few weeks ago I mentioned I’d visited a book club who’d been reading The Cheesemaker’s House. Now I love being invited to book clubs because they’re a great opportunity to meet readers and talk about books – mine and other people’s – for ten minutes before the wine starts flowing anyway. But this time we talked about books most of the night.

This club was the one my friend Becky belongs to and was held in the familiar surroundings of her kitchen. The amount of food (everybody brought a plate) and the number of women squeezed onto and around her table had to be seen to be believed. By the time the late arrivals fought past the chairs nearest the back door it was difficult to see any part of the floor at all.

The lovely woman sitting next to me told me the club had started in January 2000 when their children were small and she showed me a list of every book they’d read. The fact mine was on the list at all was entirely due to Becky’s enthusiasm and I felt very humble – and suddenly really worried I was going to let her down.

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In fact it was a wonderful discussion. Most people had enjoyed the book but it had clearly been read with a critical eye as well and there were a few points of contention. There is one scene where a rather drunken suitor goes a bit too far with Alice after a party: did it border on sexual assault, or was it just the sort of thing most women have had to contend with at some time or other? Some had noticed there was perhaps an element of possession (in the ghostly sense) involved, so did that make it all right?

Favourite characters is also a great topic for debate and is a question I’m always asked. Because the book is written entirely from Alice’s point of view I obviously became very close to her so it was really interesting for me that Becky wasn’t very keen. What I did love was the way that people related to my secondary characters; Adam, the gay (but in no way camp) best friend and Margaret, the sage but lively elderly neighbour. When I first started writing I was told that my minor characters were like cardboard cut outs so it always pleases me when the care and attention I give to them now shines through.

We also talked long and hard about charmers. The main love interest in the book, Owen, is known as the village charmer (although he denies it) and before the story starts I give the following explanation:

‘Charmers work largely with non-herbal cures for complaints. Secrecy surrounds their work, which must not be done for gain, and while men or women may be charmers, the gift must be passed contra-sexually, man to woman or woman to man; charmers often receive their powers and word charms from old persons anxious to pass their skills to a worthy successor.’

The concept is a fascinating one and we fell to talking about whether such people exist today. My researches seemed to indicate they died out in the West Country in the 1950s but one member of the group knew different: her husband (who is French) had been given a charm by an elderly lady from his home village just before she died. Her story sent shivers down my spine. There’s nothing better than finding an extra kernel of truth in your fiction.

Read Frost’s review of The Cheesemaker’s House here: https://www.frostmagazine.com/2013/12/the-cheesemakers-house-book-review/

Jane Cable is the author of two independently published romantic suspense novels, The Cheesemaker’s House and The Faerie Tree, and a sporadic contributor to Frost. Another You tells the tale of how two young American soldiers born sixty years apart help forty-something Marie Johnson to rebuild her shattered confidence and find new love. Discover more at www.janecable.com