Dear Book Case customer or friend,
We are currently supporting Hebden Bridge Arts Festival which is now well under way and as well as a display of books in the Fetsival Office by authors who are participating there are a selection of books about the artist Paula Rego at Artsmill from this Saturday. The Old Bridge has enthusiastically celebrated its 500th birthday and the winner of our adult quiz about bridges in books was Liz Dodd, to whom congratulations and a £10 book voucher. See below for the answers.
Book Case bags on holiday!Proving popular are our nice big cotton shoulder-friendly Book Case bags - free to anyone who spends £10 or more - and if you send us a photo of it with you on holiday, there’s a chance to win a voucher. There’s a photo of one enjoying the sun in Aqaba here!
Throughout the summer we will continue to open Tuesday afternoons, 2.00-5.30pm, and Sunday afternoons: 2.00-4.30pm
We've got some of our big new selection of quality bargain books on a nice wooden table on the half-landing at the bottom of the stairs, and you'll now find our CDs of classical and other music in the wall racks nearby.
Free to take away is a "Lose yourself in a good book" catalogue of Summer Reading suggestions.
Our Readers' Opinions board is feeling a bit neglected, so we're giving it a rest. However there was support for Jon McGregor's "Even the Dogs", Lorrie Moore's "Who will Run the Frog Hospital" (wonderful!), Claire Tomalin's biography of Thomas Hardy (excellent!), Mark Twain's "Huckleberry Finn" and David Adam's "Cry of the Deer".
Radical mag "Northern Voices" issue 11 (on sale at the shop) claims that the best Eccles Cakes aren't made in Lancashire but in Waites of Mytholmroyd and Hebden Bridge!
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THIS MONTH'S FEATURED BOOKS
We highlight every month books we think are of particular interest: from adult fiction and non-fiction, a children's book and a CD.
Adult fiction: Travelling Light - Tove Janssen (£7.99). This newly translated collection of stories brilliantly evokes the shifting scenes and restlessness of summer. A professor arrives in a beautiful Spanish village only to find that her host has left and she must cope with fractious neighbours alone; a holiday on a Finnish Island is thrown into disarray when a disconcerting young boy arrives; an artist returns to an old flat to discover that her life has been eerily usurped.
Adult non-fiction: Plot: A Biography of an English Acre - Madeleine Bunting (£8.99). After "Guardian" columnist Madeleine Bunting’s deeply conservative father’s death, in an attempt to understand him better, she began to explore his passionate, lifelong attachment to a small plot of land in North Yorkshire, and uncovered traces of its Neolithic inhabitants and of the Cistercian monks. The result sheds a fascinating light on what a contested, layered place England is, and on what belonging to a place might mean to all of us.
Children's book: Eating Things on Sticks - Anne Fine (£5.99). Harry is in trouble. He's burned down the family kitchen so now has to spend a week of his summer hols with his uncle Tristram - who's heading off to stay with a new girlfriend - Morning Glory - on a tiny British island. Harry doesn't expect it to be a lot of fun - with just a wacky competition at the end of the week to look forward to. Ages 8 -12yrs
CD: Venice by Jan Morris, Read by Sebastian Comberti - Naxos CDs (£16.99). To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first publication of one of the finest travel books on the world's most famous tourist destination! "To be heard on the way to Venice, whilst there, and on return."
NEWS
Local Interest
West Yorkshire Folk Tales - John Billingsley, £12.99
Whether hailing from the open Pennine hills or the close-knit neighbourhoods of the industrial towns, the people of West Yorkshire have always been fond of a good story. Well-known local historian John Billingsley's latest book includes cautionary tales, amusing anecdotes, age-old legends and fantastical myths. Line drawings by a local artist.
Waterside Walks in West Yorkshire - Peter Young (£7.99)
Ranges over the whole of West Yorkshire, including rivers, canals, lakes and reservoirs, and has Todmorden, Hardcastle Crags and Ryburn as the most local, as well as Bronte Country.
Helen of Four Gates - Ethel Carnie Holdsworth (£18.95)
A facsimile reprint of the 1917 novel about hard times in the Pennines, the 1920 silent film of which was shot around Hebden Bridge and recently shown to a capacity audience at the cinema.
Local Authors
Reflections - Rob Ward (£45)
From the locally-based international artist and sculptor, a beautiful big yellow new book illustrating over 30 years of his work. Now in stock! More info here.
All for Poor Jack - Steve Tilston (£7.99)
From the well-known folk musician now based in Hebden Bridge - and also a keen archer! - a gripping historical novel set in 1485. While the merchants of Bristol await the outcome of the Battle of Bosworth, the surviving crew of their exploration ship Swallow are force-marched into the hinterland of the New World by native tribes.
Don't Wear It On Your Head, Don't Stick It Down Your Pants: Poems for Young People - John Siddique (£6.99)
From the well-known Hebden Bridge-based poet, a new version of his popular book of poems for young people. "This book is a celebration of who we are; the good stuff, our amazing senses, language, love, gossip and cheese. John Siddique's poems blast off the page into real life or they can melt as gently as a snowflake on your tongue. Many of the poems in this book were conceived in primary schools, so John has added special bonus material to help you enjoy reading and writing more, and also included is an exclusive interview about what it is to be a poet." Shortlisted for the CLPE Award. We hope to have John doing some children's poetry readings at The Book Case over the summer! Watch this space!
A Useful Punctuation Handbook for Adults - Catherine Taylor (£5.99)
Another helpful book from the Norland-based author and teacher, with lots of useful exercises.
Lookbook: colour and design jewellery - Wendy Wright (£3.99)
Start by colouring in the necklaces in the pictures, and end up designing jewellery from the shapes illustrated! Local author from over the county border.
Local Events
Hebden Bridge Arts Festival
We're midway through the festival and the literary events are proving very popular! - John Morrison reminded us of the mockable side of Hebden Bridge, Martin Parr talked about his time at the Albert Street Workshop in the 1970's and Louis de Bernieres and Mavis Cheek talked about their work to a large caprive audience in Mytholmroyd Marti Parr's photos of everyday life in the Upper Calder Valley continues at the Fetsival office.
Still to come:
Saturday 3 July: Long Nose Puppets present Penguin at Little Theatre, Hebden Bridge, 11.00-11.45am. We're stocking the book Penguin by Polly Dunbar.
Sunday 4 July: Going the Distance: Novel Writing Workshops with Anna Chilvers at Hebden Bridge Library, 10am-12.30pm, 2.00-4.30pm. We stock Anna's successful novel Falling through Clouds.
Monday 5 July: Alison Weir and Suzannah Dunn: In Search of Henry's Women at Little Theatre, Hebden Bridge, 8pm-10pm. Two historical novelists (Alison Weir is also a popular historian) renowned for their work about the Tudors discuss Henry VIII's hapless wives.
Sunday 11 July: Trinidadian poet, artist and cook John Lyons returns to Hebden Bridge for a Cook Up in the Trades Club Kitchen, Hebden Bridge Trades Club, 12.30-2pm. Janet Oosthuysen will be supplying a 3-course meal from John's Trinidadian recipes - and we have Cook-Up in a Trini Kitchen and his latest poetry book No Apples in Eden in stock.
Sunday 4 July - Sunday 15 August: Paula Rego Recent Prints Exhibition at Artsmill, Wed-Sun., 11am-5pm.
And "Berringden Brow" author Jill Robinson will be appearing on the Festival Bus with her latest book "A Place like This" on 4th July and 10 July. We stock Jill's humorous trilogy about life in a town not too far from Hebden Bridge.
"Happy 500th Birthday Bridge" Quizzes
The answers to our adult quiz (three of the bridges were located in Yorkshire) are:
1. "Horatius" from The Lays of Ancient Rome by Thomas Babington Macaulay (Lord Macaulay) - Rome.
2. Sylvia’s Lovers by Elizabeth Gaskell - Whitby (called Monkshaven in the book).
3. "Lucy Gray" by William Wordsworth - a mill near Halifax, possibly Sowerby Bridge. Near Sterne’s Mill, says one source.
4. "The Long Tunnel Ceiling" from Remains of Elmet and Elmet by Ted Hughes - the bridge east of Mytholmroyd that carries the A646 over the canal.
5. "The Tay Bridge Disaster" by William McGonagall - Rail bridge over the Tay between Dundee city and suburb of Wormit.
and children's quiz:
1. Eeyore in A A Milne's House at Pooh Corner;
2. Black Beauty in the book by Anna Sewell;
3. Anne of Green Gables in the book by L M Montgomery;
4. Maria in Elizabeth Goudge's Little White Horse;
5. Lyra in Philip Pullman's Northern Lights;
6. Tooticky in Tove Janssen's Moominland Midwinter;
7. The three Billy-Goats Gruff (traditional);
8. Jim in Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island;
9. Tom in Arthur Ransome's Coot Club;
10. Toad in Kenneth Grahame's Wind in the Willows
NATIONAL BOOK EVENTS
Orange Prize for Fiction
The winner was The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver
Born in the US and reared in Mexico, Harrison Shepherd is a liability to his social- climbing flapper mother, Salome. Making himself useful in the household of the famed Mexican artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, and exiled Bolshevik leader Lev Trotsky, young Shepherd inadvertently casts his lot with art and revolution. Lacuna is in our bestsellers list. (£7.99)
Orange Award for New Writers
The Boy Next Door by Irene Sabatini
As Zimbabwe breaks free of British colonial rule, young Lindiwe Bishop encounters violence at close hand when her white neighbour is murdered. But this is a domestic crime, apparently committed by the woman's stepson, Ian, although he is released from prison surprisingly quickly. Intrigued, Lindiwe strikes up a covert friendship with the mysterious boy next door. (£7.99)
Both are in stock at The Book Case and there's more info on both at http://www.orangeprize.co.uk/home
Puffin of Puffins
Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer got 68% of the vote for "the Puffin of Puffins" in a project to celebrate the imprint's 70th birthday - more info at http://www.puffin.co.uk/static/puffinminisites/puffin70/vote.html - and if you disagree with the choice, you can read a spirited debate at http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/jun/17/puffin-of-puffins-goodnight-mister-tom
Oxford Professor of Poetry
Esteemed British poet Geoffrey Hill had a landslide vote into the post from Oxford undergraduates. Last year's election resulted in a public argument between Ruth Padel and Derek Walcott, and the post was shelved for a year. We have Geoffrey Hill's "Selected Poems" in stock £8.99
NEW TITLES
July's hardback fiction will include a new novel from Alexander McCall Smith and there's paperback fiction from Tove Janssen, Audrey Niffenegger, Ben Elton, Paul Auster, Matt Haig, Geoff Dyer, Iain Banks, Garrison Keillor, Robert Harris, David Baldacci and more. Reissues include Maria Edgeworth, Thackeray, John Buchan, Christopher Isherwood and Paul Gallico.
July's non-fiction includes:
- Marie Antoinette, James Herriot, Buzz Aldrin, Peter Kay, Mark Radcliffe, a woman who married into France and an Alzheimer's carer in Biography
- Oil and fighting in the Middle East in Current Affairs
- local ecopractice in Environment
- feeding babies and toddlers, curries for students and traditional British cooking in Food and Drink
- Bumper Guardian puzzles in Games and Hobbies
- a North Yorkshire acre and the 1960s in History
- British eccentrics in Humour
- a year's reading from home in Language & Literature
- Professor Stewart's oddities in Mathematics
- miracles, angels, messages in water and fulfilment in making your own in MBS
- donkeys and new editions of classic nature books (Bell, Williamson, Mabey, Leighton) in Nature<_FONT>
- Ray Mears goes North in Outdoor Activities
- The Ancient Mariner (with Dore pictures), U A Fanthorpe and Jo Shapcott in Poetry
- Karen Armstrong on God in Religion
- Wainwright 2011 diaries, Redstone Art diary 2011 and Earth Pathway 2011 diary in Stationery
- Minis and buses in Transport
- 2011 road atlases, living in the Uzbek desert, driving to Mongolia, England's unfashionable places, drugs and violence in Latin American and travel classics from Hudson, Wharton and Slocum in Travel
- and an excited dog, a dreaded weird island holiday, Artemis and a Tudor escapist romance in Children's books
For a fuller listing, click here: http://www.btinternet.com/~bookcase/Forthcoming.htm
E-mail phone or fax us to reserve any of these new titles.
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What you've been buying: JUNE's bestsellers at The Book Case
Local books including our own history and a new walking guide are again featured in The Book Case bestsellers for June as well as current national prizewinning fiction.
1. I Know My Own Heart - Anne Lister, ed. Helena Whitbread (£15.99)
There was universal interest in Anne Lister following the broadcast of "The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister" starring Maxine Peake at the end of May which brought a lot of orders for local author Helena Whitbread’s book based on the diaries through our website.
2. Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver (£7.99)
Again in second place, this chunky novel from the author of Poisonwood Bible about a man torn between the warm heart of Mexico and the cold embrace of 1950s McCarthyite America. Making himself useful in the household of Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo and Trotsky, he inadvertently casts his lot with art and revolution.
3. Hebden Bridge: a short history of the area - Peter Thomas (£5.99)
Back near the top is Peter Thomas’s account of the history of our area. Our own Royd Press publication.
3. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (£8.99)
The Booker-winning story of Thomas Cromwell - political genius, briber, charmer and bully - as Henry VIII’s pursuit of Anne Boleyn shakes the kingdom. The audio version is our current CD of the Month and Hilary Mantel is attending the Hebden Bridge Arts Festival.
5. The Pennine Way - Paddy Dillon (£12.95)
A new guide with a detailed description of the official route, photographs throughout the seasons and OS map extracts with full information about accommodation, public transport and other facilities available en route.
6. Halifax and Calder Valley Memories (£12.99)
From True North in Halifax, photographs and descriptions of scenes in Halifax, Elland, Brighouse, Hebden Bridge and Todmorden from Edwardian times on, covering events, street scenes, the war years, royal visits, the shops, leisure and transport.
7. Beautiful Cows - Valerie Porter (£12.99)
Photographic portraits of the best in bovine beauties. Beautiful Pigs and Beautiful Sheep are also available.
8. Memories of Ted Hughes 1952-1963 - Daniel Huws (£5.99)
This little book about Ted Hughes in his Cambridge years, and his friendship with Sylvia Plath continues to sell well.
9. Yorkshire Dales Textile Mills - George Ingle (£9.99)
An illustrated Royd Press publication about the many - now mostly forgotten - textile mills there used to be in the Dales.
10. Change of Climate - Hilary Mantel (£8.99)
By this year’s Booker winner, a novel from 1994 described as both a first rate thriller and a literary family saga - from the violent townships of South Africa to the windswept countryside of Norfolk.
Best wishes from your local independent bookshop,
The Book Case
29 Market Street, Hebden Bridge HX7 6EU
Telephone 01422-845353
Fax 01422-844295
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website: www.bookcase.co.uk
text version: http://www.btinternet.com/~bookcase/
"Like a book written by a computer. Like a pile of quivering word vomit. Like my worst reading experience ever."
Identify this prizewinning book (in stock at The Book Case) so loathed by Giles Coren! Answer next month.



