Emily Brand’s research into the colourful eighteenth-century
ancestry of the 6th Lord Byron has resulted in the publishing of a dramatic and
scandal-filled family saga unfolding over three generations, setting the stage
for the rise of the nation’s most revered (and on occasion reviled) Romantic
poet. Following the lives of three siblings – a flirtatious countess
desperately seeking true love, a villainous lord maligned as a murderer, and a
navy hero with the century’s most remarkable tale of survival (the poet’s
grandfather) – it offers an exciting and sweeping history of eighteenth-century
Britain, through the eyes of a once notorious family now shrouded in legend.
More Non-Fiction:
A definitive guide to our buildings, this richly illustrated
volume offers an enlightening introduction to the memorable and surprising structures of Notts. The county features the exquisite medieval churches of Newark, Worksop
Priory, and Southwell Minster, whilst our country houses offer a fascinating
range of architectural styles: Wollaton Hall shows Elizabethan architecture at
its most fantastic, and Bunny Hall demonstrates the English Baroque at its most
bizarre. Newstead Abbey, home of the poet Lord Byron, incorporates the haunting
monastic ruins from a former Augustinian abbey. The city of Nottingham teems
with Victorian and Edwardian commercial buildings, and is enlivened by a local
tradition of first-rate Modernist architecture.
Author Alan Spree has drawn on a remarkable selection of old
postcards to give a pictorial record of life in Nottingham from the late
nineteenth century to the early 1950s. Although much of Nottingham has changed
over the years, many landmarks have remained and will be familiar today. The
postcards show the changes to Nottingham’s fabric and its community adapting
and changing over the course of this period.
Fiction:
Ed finally meets his daughter's boyfriend for the first
time. Smart, successful and handsome, Ryan appears to be a real catch. Then
Abbie announces their plan to get married. There's just one problem. Ed thinks
Ryan is lying to them. All of Ed's instincts tell him his daughter is in
terrible danger - but no-one else can see it. With the wedding date approaching
fast, Ed sets out to uncover Ryan's secrets, before it's too late… Another page-turner
from Nottingham’s latest million selling novelist.
Devil Gun by Steve Pickering
Set in the 19th century, this tale of danger and friendship
follows the life of a Denim Armstrong: from working on his father’s farm, to hardship at sea aboard the Endurance, to a life on the run from both British
Navy (for mutiny) and the Pinkertons (for murder). The story takes us across
the turbulent Atlantic and the treacherous landscape of the Wild West, where we
witness revenge killings, showdowns and turns of fortune with memorable, and
sometimes notorious, historical characters that shape Denim's destiny. Never
predictable, this debut novel (available in hardback and paperback) is a good
old fashioned adventure story. The author was educated at Birklands Secondary
Modern School in Warsop.
Laurie and Jamie have the perfect office romance. Everyone
can see they're head over heels. This must be true love. Only, they’re faking
it all. When Laurie is dumped by her partner of eighteen years, she's
blindsided. Not only does she feel humiliated, they still have to work
together. So when she gets stuck in the lift with handsome colleague Jamie,
they hatch a plan to stage the perfect romance. Revenge will be sweet... But
this fauxmance is about to get complicated. You can't break your heart in a
fake relationship - can you? Always funny, always emotional, Macfarlane’s
novels are a treat.
Poetry:
Rory Waterman, a Senior Lecturer in English at Nottingham
Trent University, brings us a book of hopes and passions - quiet and lyrical at
times, but also fiercely witty and bold. The poems sometimes come in sequences;
always they are in dialogue with one another, responding, echoing - within and
between the book's two sections. At times, the leitmotifs are apparently
personal, exploring divisions and painful losses. But we also encounter the
largely invented academic Dr Bob Pintle, an anti-hero of the modern university
system.
Drawn from Alan Sillitoe’s eight volumes of poetry, this
selection has been chosen by his wife, the poet Ruth Fainlight. Presented here
are poems that present the world as Sillitoe saw it. Using a storyteller’s
skill, he brought to life the people and places that captured his imagination
and took him on a search for meaning. It’s a vision that is at the same time
clear and precise, politically engaged, fiercely intelligent, and deeply
personal.
A biographical delve into belonging, exclusion, and the
relationship between self-awareness and self-delusion, the rejection of social
norms, and the ways in which we accept and question implied cultural rules. The
poems in this collection question received wisdom, playfully unravelling the
awkward and the bizarre aspects of modern life. Leanne’s poetry is an
exploration of human failures and resilience, the things that make us angry,
and the things that make us laugh. There’s social commentary ('A Piece of the
Pie'), humour ('Bad Kisser') and wisdom ('Call and Response') as Moden brings
us her take on modern life.
Di Slaney is a poet, publisher and animal sanctuary founder
who lives in Nottinghamshire. She has an MA in Creative Writing from Nottingham
Trent University and owns Candlestick Press. Since 2005, Di Slaney has been
filling her ancient Nottinghamshire farmhouse and its land with more livestock
than is sensible. Herd Queen’s heroines remember teenage trysts, do battle with
the slings and arrows of ageing, collage a poem from Prince lyrics and dream of
achieving Shirley Bassey-hood in their seventies.
A queer activist, Kevin Jackson writes poetry that “dares us to
care”. His new poetry collection is ‘Loves Burn’, a book that sets out its
stall on love with a patient probing, a tender curiosity that seems to place
the narrator in that place where poetry uniquely exists - on the edge.
Honourable mention:
Across prose, poetry and script, the young writers explore
racism, homophobia, bodies and gendered violence, the climate crisis, and the
principle of taking a stand. The contributions to this anthology encourage the
reader to experience the fears and anxieties young people experience to
powerful effect.
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