Archive for the ‘Libraries’ Category

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At last… Semper Fidelis in the UK!

July 23, 2025

Cover of Semper Fidelis Finally, the untold story of Hadrian’s visit to Britannia is released in print in the province! Read all about it here.

If your local bookshop doesn’t have a copy on the shelf, they should be able to order it. As should your local library.

To the people who have been asking where it is - you know who you are! - thank you for your patience. To anyone who’s thinking, “Shouldn’t that be ‘the previously untold…’?” - yes it should, but I’ve already had to ruin the flow of the sentence by putting ‘in print’ in there. So now I’m off to drown my inner pedant with a celebratory cup of tea.

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Ilfracombe Library

March 11, 2025

Huge thanks to everyone who came to Ilfracombe Library on Thursday to enjoy drinks and nibbles and witness the strange sight of an author draped in pseudo-Roman clothes (well, it was World Book Day, when you are allowed to dress up). Ilfracombe’s library is perched on a hill overlooking a dramatic rocky beach and must have the best views of any library in the country.

This is not one of them:

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Obviously it would have been better to have some shots of the audience (they were there, honestly) but by the time we had the camera sorted out, most of them had escaped. Many thanks to Colin, without whose batteries there would have been no photographic evidence at all, and to Jonathan, who did the pressing of buttons.

Thanks also to the staff at the Library and everyone who helped to spread the word, including the lovely Paul at The Voice radio in Barnstaple, whose soothing influence hopefully helped me produce something akin to coherent sentences on air.

the Voice logo

Strange how the thought of speaking to invisible listeners is terrifying for someone who’s quite prepared to stand in front of 30 people in fancy dress.

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Ruso at the Seaside for World Book Day - 7 March

March 4, 2025

I’ll be deep in the Celtic heartlands to celebrate World Book Day this Thursday, taking Ruso and Tilla to Ilfracombe Library. Dug the Iron Age Man (not a character, but a facial reconstruction) will be there too. There will be an element of suspense to the proceedings, for me if not for everyone else, as I foolishly said I would dress up in Roman Lady kit and am now wondering whether I will get through the evening without falling over it.

To find out, join us at 6.30 pm. Tickets are £2 and you can get them from the Library.

 

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Oh Deary

February 16, 2025

Terry Deary’s views on public libraries made alarming reading this week. Others have replied far more cogently than I could, so if you want a proper response, Julia Donaldson’s article in the Guardian is a good place to start.

Still, if Deary’s comments re-ignite the debate about public libraries, it won’t be a bad thing. We need to continue that debate while there is still a service to discuss. What we’re currently suffering is a haphazard dismantling of a fragmented service as small local battles are fought - and often lost - all over the country.

I worked in a public library for twelve years. I’ve seen the good that libraries do. If you can afford to buy all your books and have internet access, maybe you don’t need to go to one, but for goodness’ sake, why wouldn’t you? Libraries have far more books than most of us could ever afford, they’re (usually) warm, they’re friendly and safe, and they’re full of people who love to read! What’s not to like? (And yes, I know bookshops used to offer most of this. If you still have one that does, you’re very lucky.)

Conversely if you have no money of your own to buy reading material - and many people, especially children, haven’t - where else can you go? Even 50p at a charity shop is beyond some budgets. “The Internet!” is not an answer if you’re six years old, you have several brothers and sisters and everybody wants the computer at once.

Nobody’s saying the Library service doesn’t need to change in the light of the current upheaval in the book trade. But we only got to where we are by a long struggle. Abandoning all that hard-won ground now would be a dreadful mistake.

A while ago I did some digging around to find out the story of just one local library in my area. Some of the arguments may sound familiar:

1850

The Public Libraries Act gives boroughs the power to open free public libraries

1893

(No rush, as you see) - a letter in the local paper gives twenty reasons why a library would be a Good Thing, including, “Because for young people of both sexes a Public Library affords some place to which they can go, instead of loitering aimlessly about the public streets.”

1899

The Council vote against a Public Library, despite popular support which claims that, “The poor people here are very fond of reading,” and, “The people of this town… have been unfairly handicapped in the pursuit of knowledge by the absence of such an institution.”

The local papers are divided:

“The speeches of the members proved… that many of them know nothing at all about the question.”

“The decision was a wise one… while there were so many costly necessities, in the shape of loans for drainage, water supply and street improvements looming.”

“The public will always clamour for anything they can see a chance of getting for nothing.”

1905

Mr Carnegie (founder of the Carnegie Trust) offers £3000 towards the cost of a library. This sparks a public meeting, at which -

“Mr Pile said they should put every opportunity of improvement in the way of the young men of the town.”

(Cheers)

“Mr Dadds said that public libraries were a failure nearly everywhere.”

“Hear, Hear!”

“What did they read in these libraries?”

“Rubbish!” came the reply.

(There may be something in this. For a fee, the local subscription libraries were offering titles like, “Miranda of the Balcony,” “Maid with the Goggles,” “Further Adventures of Captain Kettle,” “Iris the Avenger,” and “Mrs Erricker’s Reputation”.)

1914-18

The Great War interrupts everything,

1925

There is a hold-up acquiring the land. The Carnegie Trustees want to see some action.

1933

A local campaigner points out that “no one with a leaning towards culture would oppose a free library” and finally…

1934

Hooray! The Library opens, after forty-one years of campaigning.

It’s still open now.

Long may it remain.

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Portrait of the writer wondering where to put her books

February 20, 2025

Cover of book called POMPEII showing portrait of woman with writing materials

Above is one of the largest and loveliest of all the books here at Downie Towers. Apart from a brief trip to the radiator to have its photo taken, it lives on the floor. It’s too big and heavy to go anywhere else.

However - if the property gods are kind (and here in the South of Britannia they are notoriously capricious) it may soon have a new floor to live on. Pushing aside all thoughts of packing, I remain inappropriately cheerful, telling myself that this will be a chance to Get the Books Organised At Last.

This is not a way to avoid doing more important things (well, not entirely). I really must get the books sorted out so I can see what’s here. Surely I’m not the only nitwit who has bought a book and then found there’s already a copy of it hiding on the shelf at home?

Oh.

Ah well. Filling the gap until the next Real Book arrives, I see that Alison Joseph has a Sister Agnes novel free on Kindle today (20 Feb) in the UK. For those who prefer Romans to contemporary nuns, there’s a great collection of ‘Tales of Ancient Rome’ by Simon Turney here - also free. Hooray!

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Want a book? Go to the phone box.

February 2, 2025

Hats off to the fine folk of Sheepwash, who have found a great new use for their beautiful red phone box and turned it into a book exchange.

It’s entirely appropriate, since they’re only a couple of miles away from Totleigh Barton, where the Arvon Foundation run residential courses for budding writers. Ah, those photos bring back happy memories…

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Lichfield Literature

September 8, 2025

Lots of good things happening in Lichfield in the first week of October. The lineup for this year’s literature festival is here and includes Adam Hart-Davis, Sophie Hannah, Douglas Hurd, Val McDermid, Eleanor Bron, Lionel Blue, and Colin Dexter. There is also, in the lower right-hand corner of the webpage, a writer of mysteries set in Roman Britain. I’m looking forward to visiting Lichfield Library on the afternoon of Saturday 8th October to talk about writing historical fiction.

I’m also hoping to slip into a talk earlier in the day about the language of the much-loved King James Bible. In preparation I’ve been enjoying a delightful diversion from the many things on today’s ‘urgent’ list - an online ’Shakespeare or Bible’ quiz. Since procrastination loves company, here‘s the link.

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“Can libraries survive in a digital world?”

March 13, 2025

Once upon a time in the town of my birth, you could hop on the train and travel to practically anywhere in the country. Then the rail system was ‘modernised’. Why did we need to spend money running all these little stations, when people could use their own cars? Door-to-door! So much more convenient!

Forty years later, the roads in and out of that little town are crowded with weary commuters who really, really wish they didn’t have to drive ten miles to catch the train every morning. And before you ask - yes there are buses, but most of them don’t connect with the train services. Any suggestion that the local train line might be re-opened are greeted with a hollow laugh and a sentence using the word ’millions’ several times over.

I know it’s not a perfect analogy. I know I have a tendency to rant about this. But in forty years’ time are our grandchildren going to be looking back at the wondrous golden age of public libraries and wondering how we could have been so short-sighted?

Anyway, here’s a link to good article on the BBC Click website about how digitisation (as opposed to funding cuts) is changing libraries.

(Maybe I should have cut all of the above, just typed the word ‘YES’ and put the link?)

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Worth a thousand words

February 8, 2025

Mug with slogan, "Keep Calm and Carry on Reading"

Thanks to Karen Parker for permission to use this wonderful photo. The other side of the mug reads Saving Stony Stratford Library.

Karen also took the author photo that appears on the American hardbacks of the Ruso books.

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Tomorrow is Save our Libraries Day

February 4, 2025

… and here’s the link to the map of events. The scale of the proposed closures in some places (you can see it here) beggars belief.

I worked in a library for twelve years, and I was proud to work in a service that was both valuable and valued - by the users, if not by some of the decision-makers. Much of the research for the Ruso books was, and is, done through libraries. I’d never have had the confidence, the background knowledge or the cash to get started any other way.

Meanwhile, Stony Stratford library could be about to receive a small but not unwelcome windfall. Having borrowed every single item to protest at the possible closure (see ‘Wot no books?’ below), the excellent and resourceful residents now face the challenge of remembering to take all 16,000 things back on time -or pay the fines.

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