Monday 30 July 2012

My favourite poem

Source

somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond
any experience, your eyes have their silence:
in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me,
or which i cannot touch because they are too near

your slightest look easily will unclose me
though i have closed myself as fingers,
you open always petal by petal myself as Spring opens
(touching skilfully, mysteriously)her first rose

or if your wish be to close me, i and
my life will shut very beautifully, suddenly,
as when the heart of this flower imagines
the snow carefully everywhere descending;

nothing which we are to perceive in this world equals
the power of your intense fragility: whose texture
compels me with the color of its countries,
rendering death and forever with each breathing

(i do not know what it is about you that closes
and opens;only something in me understands
the voice of your eyes is deeper than all roses)
nobody, not even the rain, has such small hands

- e. e. cummings

Sunday 29 July 2012

Book Art: Robert The




"Obsession with the semiotic erosion of meaning and reality led me to create objects that evangelize their own relevance by a direct fusion of word and form. Books (many culled from dumpsters and thrift store bins) are lovingly vandalized back to life so they can assert themselves against the culture which turned them into debris." - Robert The











Friday 27 July 2012

Skin: a mortal work of art

Source

As anyone who is remotely familiar with the goings on of the Publishing industry - or, indeed, anyone who reads - will be aware, stories are no longer confined within the pages, covers and bindings of the traditional book.  New media is taking the Publishing industry by storm: with the growing popularity of e-books and e-readers and the astonishing success of Fifty Shades of Grey two notable victories in the ongoing revolution.  Like Fifty Shades, which began life as a Twilight fan fiction published episodically on websites, many authors are now using the internet as a means of publishing their own work and Penguin's recent purchase of the self-publishing company Author Solutions suggests that publishers are taking these new media very seriously indeed.

Just as I was beginning to get my head around all of these new ways of writing, publishing and reading stories, Shelley Jackson's name appeared on my computer screen.  As a writer and artist, Jackson is known for her hybrid genre experiments and her project Skin takes the use of new media in publishing to a whole other level.

Launched in 2003, Skin is described by Jackson as 'a mortal work of art'.  It is a 2095-word story published one word at a time in tattoos on the bodies of numerous volunteers, referred to as "words".  The story in its full form will be provided only to words, on receipt of proof that they have been tattooed - and the story will die with its words, constantly morphing until the last word's demise. If 2095 volunteers fail to materialise, the incomplete story will be considered definitive.


Personally I have always been rather uneasy about the idea of getting a tattoo, but I absolutely love the idea of a story published on the human body.  Sometimes I feel such a fierce connection with the words on a page that they may as well be branded on my skin.  And perhaps the thing I love most about literature is the endless variety of interpretations that can be made of a single text - what a collection of words means to you is exclusively yours.  No one will ever feel exactly the way that you did when reading those words and your interpretation dies with you, just as Skin dies with its participants.

As much as I admire Jackson's project, I don't think I have the guts to become a participant.  Can you imagine getting a really bland word, like "a" or "the"?  Or some kind of curse word or insult?  However, if you're a great deal braver than I am, Jackson's project is currently only approximately 553 words complete - although she does have over 10,000 applications for the remaining words to sift through.  But there's no harm in trying your luck, particularly as applications are accepted in no particular order: as Jackson states "you could write to me today and get in".

For details on how to apply, or for more information about the project itself, the following links may be of use:
Call for Participants
Guidelines
Project Status
FAQ

You can visit the web page for the Skin Project here and Shirley Jackson's website here.

Wednesday 25 July 2012

Cover of the week


The Kiss by A. P. Chekhov
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Publication date: November 30th 1999
Designer: Darren Hagger

Tuesday 24 July 2012

Reading al fresco!

Much to my dismay, reading is a hobby that tends to be kept behind closed doors.  Us bookish types spend our whole lives shut up in rooms without windows.  We have deathly pale skin and failing eyesight and we shriek with pain when exposed to sunlight - which is why we are often mistaken for vampires.

But in spite of my love of literature (and contrary to any suspicions that may be raised by my own Casper complexion), I adore The Great Outdoors.  There is nothing I hate more than being confined between four walls for extended periods of time.  One of the main struggles I faced at University was having to contend with a lack of fresh air and the consequent lowering of my spirits.  I spent my days reading, reading, reading and reading some more in underheated computer labs and overheated libraries with windows that resembled the little slits in medieval castle walls used for firing arrows out of.  I suppose the architect thought it wise to minimise the chances of anyone leaping to their death in the throes of essay stress.

However, whilst foraging the internet this evening I made an interesting discovery in the form of Bookyard - an outdoor library in Belgium by artist Massimo Bartolini.  This sent the cogs whirring in my little literary brain: maybe reading could be considered an outdoor pursuit after all?  I've spent the past hour looking up pictures of outdoor bookshelves and I thought I should share some of my favourite finds:

Bookyard - a public library in St Peters Abbey vineyard made by Massimo Batolini for the Belgian Art Festival: TRACK: a contemporary city conversation in Ghent

Hay Castle Books in Hay-on-Wye: a town of bookshops in Wales (road trip anyone?)

More from Hay-on-Wye, where outdoor reading is evidently the norm!

Moonraker Books in Langley, WA

Trees become books of knowledge in Stacks - an outdoor bookshelf installation by David Harper

Ikea create the world's largest outdoor bookshelf on Sydney's Bondi Beach

I feel happy inside just looking at these.  I hope they brighten your day a little too.  Now to sleep, perchance to dream - of forests full of books.

Friday 20 July 2012

"As is a tale, so is life..."


What an incredible human being.  As a recent graduate myself, this really struck a chord with me.  If someone asked me what I would consider to be my biggest flaw, I could say with complete sincerity that it is my indomitable perfectionism.  I'm an intelligent, creative, lucky person; I work hard and I frequently excel.  But I can't get rid of that little voice in the back of my mind, the one that whispers "you could have done that better, you've let yourself down!"  That voice has taken me to some very dark places.  Last year, I made myself ill with constantly pushing myself to do better, better, better: to be something more than what I am.  But I am finally learning to control my perfectionism: to reign it in and channel it into something worthwhile and productive - because perfectionism can be an asset as well as a curse.  As the wonderful J. K. Rowling says, I need to keep sight of what matters most: doing what I love, living a good life, being happy, helping other people and realising that failure is not something to fear but something to learn from. 

"Some failure in life is inevitable.  It is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all.  In which case, you fail by default."

Wednesday 18 July 2012

My Week in Pictures: Ireland Edition



1. Beautiful views of the Antrim Coast
2. Cranny Falls
3. Carnlough Harbour
4. The rather spooky interior of a very old house at the Ulster Folk Museum
5. The reading room above the old printing press at the Ulster Folk Museum
6. My pig-headed boyfriend
7. Queen's University Belfast
8. Digging up dinosaur bones at the Ulster Museum in Belfast

The Woman in Black by Susan Hill

Last week, The Boyfriend and I decided to run away together.  We shacked up in a cold but homely bungalow that used to belong to my grandparents in a tiny seaside village called Carnlough on the Antrim Coast of Northern Ireland.  When we tired of exploring the village, we visited a dinosaur exhibition at the Ulster Museum in Belfast and trekked around an early 20th Century village.  We returned "home" each day exhausted to a house full of cassette tapes with no toaster.  It was like stepping back in time. 


I always spend weeks deliberating which books to take with me on holiday - and I tend to arrive with a small library having grossly over-estimated the time I would have to spend reading in between adventures.  This time, The Woman in Black by Susan Hill found its way into my suitcase and it turned out to be the perfect reading material for the old-fashioned atmosphere of my trip.  And being quite short, it was a breeze to read within my six day time limit - I finished the final chapter on the boat home.


Arthur Kipps, a junior solicitor, is summoned to attend the funeral Mrs Alice Drablow, the house's sole inhabitant of Eel Marsh House, unaware of the tragic secrets which lie hidden behind the shuttered windows. The house stands at the end of a causeway, wreathed in fog and mystery, but it is not until he glimpses a wasted young woman, dressed all in black, at the funeral, that a creeping sense of unease begins to take hold, a feeling deepened by the reluctance of the locals to talk of the woman in black - and her terrible purpose.
- Synopsis from Waterstones


 As a child, I was absolutely intrigued by ghost stories.  My friends and I would sit for hours in my basement with the lights off, trying to outdo one another with tales of the supernatural until they became so outlandish that they descended into humour.  But in recent years, my interest has waned.  The conventional straight-forward ghost story form is not very visible on the modern adult market and as such I have come to regard the ghost story as a rather childish genre.


My mother, however, is a huge fan of anything creepy and sinister.  The Woman in Black has long been one of her favourite books and she has been recommending it to me for years, but the notion of reading an old fashioned ghost story from a modern writer has never really appealed to me.  However, with the success of the film my interest has been steadily increasing - I tend to make a point of reading books before watching the film adaptations.


The verdict?  I could not put it down.  I carried it around in my bag all week hoping to snatch a few moments to read whilst we journeyed to and from our destinations.  I came home exhausted from the day's adventures with another planned for the crack of dawn and yet refused to sleep until I had devoured a few more chapters of The Woman in Black.


Hill masterfully creates the eery atmosphere vital to all ghost stories through the secluded setting of Eel Marsh House, with the treacherous Nine Lives Causeway frequently rendering the house completely inaccessible - and therefore inescapable.  The sense of threat evoked by the haunting Arthur Kipps experiences during his visits to the house is greatly intensified by his complete isolation and stranded state.  The sinister atmosphere lingers after the book has been put down.  I frequently found myself dashing down the hall to the bathroom with my heart racing, half expecting the woman in black to emerge from the darkness around me.


Thomas Hardy believed that places are as important as people in fiction, because people are formed by the landscapes in which they are born and bred, though that is probably less true now than it was in his day, when, especially in rural areas, they tended to remain rooted in one place. But a harsh climate and a hard landscape toughen people. A low-lying, dank place tends to be lowering to the spirits, and we all know that constant wind drives people mad. I think the pathetic fallacy is less fallacious than is often supposed.
- Susan Hill quoted by The Guardian
The atmospheric setting becomes almost a 'character' in the book, whilst the protagonist Arthur Kipp takes a back seat.  We are given only the most basic factual details regarding Arthur's lifestyle, family and employment and receive very little insight into his feelings apart from the terror and trauma he experiences in direct relation to the haunting.  As the book begins by introducing us to Arthur's older 'present' self, there is very minimal character development throughout the novel aside from the revelation of the cause of Arthur's intense emotional distress when his stepchildren press him to tell a ghost story.  Minor characters such as Samuel Daily and even the dog Spider are far more endearing than Arthur, and consequently, any risk to the dog's well being causes more of an emotional impact upon the reader than the persistent sense of threat towards Arthur's.  I would have liked to have known Arthur better, so to speak.  If the reader felt a true connection to Arthur, it would allow us to experience the emotions he feels during the ghostly visitations, rather than merely receiving a second-hand account.

However, the reader's distance from Arthur enables Hill to present the menacing figure of the woman in black as the true protagonist of the novel.  While I found the explanation of the woman's motivation for haunting Eel Marsh House adequate, I was rather perplexed by the intensity of her hatred and cruelty to those who had done her no harm. However, she is a wonderfully frightening ghostly presence whose tale evokes sympathy in spite of her malicious intent.  Rather than wasting time on excessive characterisation and unnecessary details, the focus of the novel is entirely on the eery atmosphere and the haunting itself, making it a truly gripping read.  Hill is not afraid to shock her reader and does not shy away from continuing the fear and horror evoked by her novel to its conclusion.

The Boyfriend and I watched the film adaptation of The Woman in Black last night and whilst I thoroughly enjoyed the film, it has very little in common with the narrative that inspired it.  The book holds quite a few surprises even for those who have already seen the film and I would recommend it to anyone who is in the mood for an authentically spooky tale.  Hill's novel is adult and convincing, yet retains the feel of feel of a true ghost story recounted one's basement with the lights out, leaving the reader eager to learn what happens next with the turn of every page.


8 / 10


If you enjoyed this book, you might like:



Monday 16 July 2012

Book Art: Alicia Martin

This time last week, if someone had asked me to describe book art in three words, I would have said: delicate, intricate and beautiful.


Then I discovered Alicia Martín, a Madrid based artist who has taken book art to a whole new level. The beautiful still applies but the delicate and intricate have gone right out the window. Literally.

 
Source


Martín's breathtaking work cannot be summed up in words, but if I had to choose one I'd go for big. Her Biografias series features three gigantic sculptures composed of thousands of books that appear to have taken on a life of their own as they explode out of the windows of buildings and cascade onto the ground beneath, with their loose pages fluttering in the breeze. These works are so powerful I can hardly believe that they are static structures. I can almost feel the force of the books bursting through the windows just by looking at these images - I can almost hear them! I am itching to see the real things.






Source


I am no art critic but it doesn't take a discerning eye to discover meaning within these works. To me, these explosive sculptures represent the boundary-breaking effect that literature has upon individual minds, and upon society as a whole. A good book can ignite a spark within our minds, encouraging us to break free from the restrictions which enclose our imaginations and create something big, something bold, something beautiful: a work of art. The sculptures evoke the power of literature by attributing books with a physical strength as they become a force of nature in Martín's hands. And secretly, I fear, Martín's sculptures may be a projection of my own future if I do not invest in a Kindle as soon as possible!




You can visit Alicia Martín's gallery website here

Tuesday 3 July 2012

Judging a book by its cover





With months still to go until the hotly anticipated publication of J.K. Rowling's first novel aimed at adult readers, her publisher has decided to tantalise us with the release of the book cover.

I have to admit... I am not impressed.  After the beautiful artwork adorning the Harry Potter book covers, I can't help but feel that very little effort has been put into the design of 'The Casual Vacancy'.  Yes, the colours are bold and eye-catching, but red and yellow is not a complimentary combination.  When Waterstones posted a picture of the cover on their facebook page, someone commented saying that it reminded them of a Caramac wrapper.  The cover provides very little insight into what the book is about: with the only clear hint being the crossed ballot box.  We are left to read into things.  Is the retro detective novel feel of the cover intentional?  And knowing Rowling's tendency to attach huge significance to what appear to be passing details in the plots of her Harry Potter novels, my eye can't help but be drawn to the lower-case 'I' in her name - although this is probably just a stylistic detail.

Luckily, the blurb provided on the Little, Brown book group's website gives us a clearer impression of what the book is actually about:

When Barry Fairbrother dies unexpectedly in his early forties, the little town of Pagford is left in shock.

Pagford is, seemingly, an English idyll, with a cobbled market square and an ancient abbey, but what lies behind the pretty façade is a town at war.

Rich at war with poor, teenagers at war with their parents, wives at war with their husbands, teachers at war with their pupils...Pagford is not what it first seems.

And the empty seat left by Barry on the parish council soon becomes the catalyst for the biggest war the town has yet seen. Who will triumph in an election fraught with passion, duplicity and unexpected revelations?

Blackly comic, thought-provoking and constantly surprising, The Casual Vacancy is J.K. Rowling’s first novel for adults
.

However, even this seems evasive.  Perhaps I'm just so eager to get my hands on the book and start reading that no hint will ever satisfy my curiosity.  It sounds as though Rowling will be focusing on a community: a group of characters rather than one overriding protagonist voice.  Of course, the Harry Potter series is full of characters, with the omniscient third-person narrator enabling the reader to become very well acquainted with many of them - but the the books' focus is clearly on Harry.  I am interested to see how Rowling tackles this different narration approach.
 
 
Honestly, if I had never heard of J.K. Rowling and saw this book cover sitting amongst hundreds of others in a book shop, I doubt I would pick it up.  It's a little dull; there isn't really anything to draw the reader in, and I find the colour scheme off-putting.  Even if they just removed the yellow border, I think I'd like it a whole lot better.  But who hasn't heard of J.K. Rowling? There's a woman who does not need to rely on book covers to sell her stories. The cover could be a blank sheet of paper and I'd still be queueing up to buy this book


The fame attached to Rowling's name has reduced the need for her book cover to attract the right kind of reader. Instead, the design is clearly being used to add to the suspense and mystery surrounding the publication of the novel as it teases but refuses to satisfy. And of course, the plain cover sets itself apart from the detailed artwork associated with the Harry Potter series - and this is probably exactly what Rowling wants to achieve with this novel. I can't help but be disappointed that it's such an ugly book, but I can appreciate the intention behind the design.
I imagine this cover will have a marmite effect: people will either love it or hate it.  What do you think?


Why I love the Kindle: confessions of a book lover



When the Amazon Kindle was released in November 2007, many of us bookish types weren't too happy about it.  We went to bed one night with our educated, progressive minds and woke up staunch conservatives.  Our beloved tangible tomes of ink and paper had undergone thousands of years of consumer evaluation and had never been found wanting - why were Amazon even attempting to offer us an alternative?  The Kindle was a violation, an insult: we took it as a personal offence.

Like many of my fellow hardened bookworms, I closed my mind to the Kindle immediately, without even taking the time to consider it.  I have been head over heels in love with the ink and paper book since before I learnt to read and, unwilling to kick the habit of a lifetime, I remained loyal to the towers of books stacked precariously around my bedroom, gazing on them fondly even when they crashed to the floor without the slightest provocation at four o'clock in the morning.  I turned my nose up at people with Kindles on the bus, viewing them with the contempt I usually reserve for people who wear glasses without lenses: as though they were merely pretending to read.

But, fellow Kindle-haters, I have a confession to make.  I have been unfaithful.  There is a Kindle lying in bed beside me as I type.  I have just finished Chapter 3 of 'The Great Gatsby' and I'm certainly not hating it - the Kindle or the Gatsby.

In my defence, the Kindle isn't mine.  I haven't permanently deserted my ink and paper sweetheart, I am merely engaging in a casual affair.  I borrowed it from The Boyfriend with the intention of proving a point.  By acquainting myself with the 'benefits' the Kindle has to offer, I would be able to argue against them more eloquently in future debates - that was the theory anyway.  But I am afraid my plan has backfired.  My time with Mr. Kindle is almost over and I'm becoming increasingly reluctant to give him back.  So, instead of a diatribe against the e-reader, I present to you: ten reasons why book lovers love the Kindle:

1. Cheaper books

And what self-respecting bookworm could argue with that?  The Kindle edition is significantly cheaper than the ink and paper copy of many new and upcoming releases.  And if that's not tempting enough, Kindle editions of over one million out of copyright pre-1923 titles are available for free!  Titles include: 'Pride and Prejudice', 'Dracula', 'The Iliad', 'Oliver Twist' and 'The Picture of Dorian Gray'. If that doesn't encourage you to catch up on your classics, I don't know what will.

2. Lightweight and portable

One of the main selling points of the Kindle is its compact size.  Amazon claims that the device weighs less than a paperback book, has the capacity to hold around 1400 e-books and is small enough to fit in your pocket - I don't know what kind of pockets these people have, it certainly doesn't fit in mine.  Whilst the average person will not require 1400 books to satisfy their literary cravings on the train to work, if my English degree has taught me anything it's that the ability to cram every book you could ever possibly need into a small hand-held device would save countless students from a life of chronic back pain.  I will not miss the days of carting 'The Collected Works of Shakespeare' plus 20 hardbacks around in my bag.  And if, like my parents, a continually overflowing newspaper rack is the bane of your existence, you will no doubt appreciate the Kindle's ability to hold your newspapers and magazines too, with new editions of those you subscribe to delivered wirelessly to your device the second they become available.

3. Will save you from the storage issues caused by book addiction

Ever since watching Disney's 'Beauty and the Beast' for the first time when I was four-years-old, I have dreamed of having a room in my house devoted entirely to books.  A library with ladders.  And I am certainly well on my way to accumulating the quantities of books required to fill such a room.  Unfortunately, however, the euromillions win required for the purchase of my ideal house remains a distant dream, and I must admit that things are getting out of hand around here.  My bookcase reached bursting point a very long time ago so I have several years worth of books in a number of large crates on my bedroom floor, resulting in perpetually bruised shins.  The towering stacks of books on my desk present a serious risk to my personal safety and I live in fear lest my cat someday disappears beneath an avalanche of tumbling books.  I adore my ink and paper companions and rooms that don't contain any books feel wrong to me, but until my library with ladders becomes a possibility, I may be forced to admit defeat.  Stopping buying books is not an option I am willing to consider, so the Kindle with its 1400 book capacity is starting to seem like a very attractive alternative.

4. Easier to read lying down

I have always been a bedtime reader.  Reading helps me relax and clears my mind: two vital elements conducive to a good night's sleep.  However, my preferred lying-on-my-side position is possibly the most uncomfortable reading position known to man.  Propping yourself up leads to sore elbows, aching shoulders and stiff necks, but you can only see one page of a paperback with your head resting comfortably on the pillow.  I have developed a technique of rolling from one side to the other as I progress to the next page, but this is a tad too energetic for sleepy bedtime reading.  With its single screen and page flicking buttons on both sides of the device, the Kindle has solved all of my bedtime reading problems.

5. Highlighting, bookmarks and notes

Having spent four years of my life studying literature, many of my books have been rendered completely unreadable by excessive highlighting and bookmarking.  The Kindle allows users to highlight, add bookmarks and make notes unobtrusively - meaning I can still leave little love notes for The Boyfriend in the pages of his favourite books, although their academic footnote appearance doesn't quite carry the passionate tone of a good old margin scrawl.







6. The 'find' function

I cannot imagine how many hours I've wasted flicking through my favourite books trying to find an adored quotation.  With the Kindle's find function, simply enter a few key words and hey presto! Another godsend for the student population - we all know that academic referencing can be an absolute nightmare. With the Kindle you can find those page numbers you accidentally forgot to include in a matter of seconds.

7. Built-in Dictionary

The Kindle's built-in dictionary enables you to look up unfamiliar words as you read.  Especially useful when wading through the florid and outdated phrases of the classics.  No more flicking to the glossaries hidden at the back of books to interrupt your reading experience.

8. Never lose your place

Nothing is more frustrating than losing your place in a really good book.  Overestimate by a chapter or two and you'll be bombarded with spoilers.  The Kindle always opens your books at the last page you read, so you can sink back into the story without the stress of accidentally flicking into uncharted territory.

9. Cute Kindle skins and covers

From ditafelici
From skunkwraps

























As much as I appreciate the beauty of the book cover, I must admit that some of the skins and covers available for the Kindle are absolutely adorable.  I am head over heels in love with the embroidered Gatsby one pictured above - although it is more than a little out of my price range.  Simply type 'Kindle' into the search bar on etsy.com and to find cute and quirky ways to personalise your new e-reader (obviously by the time you've reached number 9 on this list I'll have succeeded in persuading you to invest in one).

10. Instantaneous book shopping

I hate going on trips without enough reading material.  And those horribly empty bookless periods between finishing your last book and buying your next.  But with the Kindle, I need never go without.  The Kindle shop allows you to browse, purchase and download books wirelessly from your Kindle device, so you can stock up on books without leaving the comfort of your home (or holiday apartment!) or having to wait for the post.


Of course, for a book fanatic like myself, nothing will ever compare to the promising weight of a hardback, the gratifying crack of a breaking spine, the heady scent of ink on paper and the rustle of the pages as I flick through them with my hands.  But I am enjoying my little excursion into the e-reading experience and I suspect a Kindle will be at the top of my Christmas list this year.  I am a literary techno-phobe no longer.

So, what do my fellow book lovers think?  Do you own a Kindle and how does it compare to our beloved book?  Or do you hate the e-reader with a passion in spite of the pros detailed above?  I'm always up for a good debate so leave a comment or email me at theliteraryaffair@gmail.com and let me know your views.

Prologue

Hello!  I'm Claire, a 21 year old bookworm and writer from sunny Scotland.  After four blissful years spent doing what I love and calling it work, I have finally completed my English degree and am about to embark on my next big adventure: as an MSc Publishing student - I can hardly wait!

None of my real-life friends want to listen to me harping on about books all day every day so this blog is my little place in which to indulge myself.  I'm going to be posting about books, poetry, book art, cover designs, publishing, literary events and anything else that takes my fancy!  I hope to post book reviews too, although my reading-time is largely devoted to the lengthy reading list for my publishing course these days - and who wants to hear my views on A History of British Publishing?  Anyone?  No?

I've always been an avid reader and I will read anything and everything.  As I child, I would sit in the bath and read all of the shampoo bottles!  My favourite writers are J. K. Rowling, Nabokov, Sarah Waters, Philip Pullman, Jonathan Safran Foer, Augusten Burroughs, Margaret Atwood, Virginia Woolf, Charlotte Bronte, e. e. cummings, Pablo Neruda, Max Wallis, Tennessee Williams and, of course, William Shakespeare - to name a few!  I have a very open mind and am always looking for reading recommendations so email me with your suggestions at the address provided below.


When I don't have my nose stuck in a book, I'm the adventuring type.  I love impromptu trips, exploring new places and spending whole days outdoors.  I have a penchant for films, music, theatre, cats, dinosaurs and the sound the sea makes. 

I love to get to know my fellow bookworms, so if you have any comments, suggestions, constructive criticism or would just like to say hello don't hesitate to get in touch!

I am also happy to accept book reviews and other contributions from guest bloggers - just email me with your idea at theliteraryaffair@gmail.com