Festive Fun from your front room

We’ve scoured the web (well, Eventbrite mainly) for festive fun online. Scroll for our guide to bookish events on a winter/Christmas theme. There’s something for everyone – kids, romantics, nature lovers and thrill seekers.

Citizen Winter Warmer from Edinburgh Book Festival

Saturday 12 December all day

A special day of online events, brought to you via Edinburgh International Book Festival’s YouTube channel or Facebook (@edbookfest)

10.30am DrawAlong with Eilidh Muldoon! (5yrs+)
11.00am Four Seasons – Storytelling with Macastory (3yrs+)
11.30am Self Portrait Poems with Leyla Josephine (7yrs+)
12noon Drawings Diaries with Katie Chappell (5yrs+)
12.30pm Where Snow Angels Go – A Reading by Maggie O’Farrell (5yrs+)

2.30pm Pass the Zine with Edinburgh Zine Library (11yrs+)
3.00pm Music from the Tinderbox Collective (all ages)
3.30pm Poems for Today with Courtney Stoddart (14yrs+)
4.00pm Route of Memories with Eleanor Thom (11yrs+)

6.00pm The Incredible Adam Spark – A Reading by Alan Bissett (YA and adults)
6.30pm The Citizen Collective Stories and Ideas (YA and adults)
7.00pm Citizen Writers’ Group – Sharing (adults)
7.30pm Daughter of Stories – A Reading by Nadine Aisha Jassat (YA and adults)

Kids events

A Fowl Christmas with Eoin Colfer

Thu 17 Dec, 7pm, £

A must for Artemis Fowl fans, there’s a Q&A with Eoin Colfer, appearances from the film’s stars and more. Proceeds go to Shelter

Snuggle up with Debi Gliori’s winter stories

Thurs 10 Dec, 3pm

Learn how to draw a penguin and enjoy some cosy wintery tales with the creator of Bookbug, courtesy of National Library of Scotland.

Lyceum Christmas Tales

1 – 20 Dec on You Tube. FREE.

Lyceum Christmas Tales is an advent calendar of stories, combining new and familiar festive tales penned and performed by some of Scotland’s best-loved writers, musicians and artists. Each fifteen-minute, family-friendly festive tale will be available to watch free throughout December.

Santa and Mrs Claus at Callendar House

Every Thursday at 6.30pm on Facebook

Yes, Santa and Mrs Claus have recorded some wonderful Christmas stories especially for us bairns! Every Thursday at 6.30pm, head to Falkirk Community Trust’s Facebook page to hear a new story. You’ll be able to catch them later on the FCT You Tube channel and Facebook page if you miss them.

Early Years Scotland Keep Connected

Some Christmas-themed events and also just some great educational fun for young families this week, with baby massage, yoga and more.

Play Talk Read 12 Days of Christmas

For the first 12 days of December the Play Talk Read team are sharing a simple Christmas-themed activity a day. They’re on their Facebook page, so you can dip into the fun, whenever you like.

Natural History

Owls of the Eastern Ice

Tues 15 Dec, 6 pm. Donation.

Jonathan Slaght, conservationist, researcher and expert on Blakiston’s fish owl, tells the story of how he saved the world’s largest owl.

The Natural History of Christmas

Thu, 17 Dec, 7pm. Donation.

Wildlife photographer Michael Leach, author of the above named book, explores where our Christmas customs come from.

Crime

Murder in Midwinter

Thu 10 Dec, 7pm, £

Q&A with classic crime collection editor Cecily Gayford, discussing her new book which features short stories by Dorothy L. Sayers, Ruth Rendell, Ellis Peters and more.

Christmas chat with Val McDermid

Wed 16 Dec 2020, 7pm, £

Val McDermid, master of the dark and sinister story, presents Christmas is Murder, a festive collection of chilling tales

The Rankin Files: Lifting the Lid

Thurs 17 Dec, 7pm

Ian Rankin and National Library of Scotland curator Rosemary Hall discuss Rankin’s remarkable archive, donated to the Library in 2018. Delivered via Zoom.

Romance/Saga

A Night of Festive Fun with Milly Johnson

Thurs 10 Dec, 8pm, FREE

Join Sunday Times bestselling author and indisputable queen of romantic fiction Milly Johnson for an evening of festive fun and frolics

An Evening with Carole Matthews

Tues 15 Dec, 7pm, FREE

Trafford Libraries invites you to an evening of life-affirming fiction with Carole Matthews, as she discusses her new novel, Christmas for Beginners.

A Cracking Christmas Author Panel

Wed 16 Dec, 2pm, FREE

Bella Osborne, Tracy Baines and Fiona Ford get together with Northumberland Libraries to talk about their new festive-themed novels.

Other events

Christmas Past, Christmas Present with Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

Wed 9 Dec, 6pm. Donation.

Uncover the past and present of festive maladies and the cures suggested by early recipe books – bat blood or stale urine, anyone?

Zoom Cook-a-long with Alissa Timoshkina

Sat, 12 Dec 2020, 2pm, £

The author of ‘Salt & Time shares three of her favourite Russian winter recipes.

Ghostland – an evening of supernatural tales 

Tue 8 Dec, 7pm, £

Join Edward Parnell, author of GHOSTLAND, on a journey through the lonely moors, moss-covered cemeteries, and folkloric woodlands that were familiar to the likes of MR James, Alan Garner and Susan Cooper.

The conversation will be followed by a reading of a classic ghostly tale: Between Sunset and Moonrise by Richard Malden, performed by Robert Lloyd Parry of Nunkie Theatre.

Festive films by the fireside with the Moving Image Archive

Tue 15 Dec, 3pm, FREE

Fire up memories of Christmas past with home movies capturing the wonder of children on Christmas morning and visit a proper toy shop to buy some presents. From Co-op adverts, to Hogmanay parties, and snowy scenes, there’s something for everyone in this fun film show.

Have we missed any events? Tell us in the comments or social media.

Falkirk Libraries Book Week Scotland 2018

Book Week Scotland 2018 authors

Book Week Scotland is one of our favourite times of the year: It gives us an excuse to make even more of a fuss about books and reading than usual AND we get to invite our favourite writers and artists along to our libraries!

2018 was no different and from 19-25 November we brought some brilliant authors to the Falkirk area for some top-notch bookish chat!

ES Thomson at Larbert Library, Thursday evening

ES Thomson at Larbert Library
Author Elaine Thomson with Larbert Library’s Laura (left)

History and crime were featured in our adult author events this year and our first author brings both beautifully together in her Jem Flockhart series.

Laura from Larbert Library has been raving about ES Thomson’s books for ages and was pleased as punch that she could join her on the Thursday evening for a chinwag.

As well as finding out more about the latest installment in her dark, gothic Victorian crime thrillers, Elaine kept us enthralled with nuggets of information about Victorian medical practices. Unsurprising really when you learn that she has degree in Medical History!

Maggie Craig at Forth Valley Sensory Centre, Friday morning

Maggie Craig at Forth Valley Sensory Centre
Maggie Craig at Forth Valley Sensory Centre

Maggie Craig really got into the spirit of Book Week Scotland’s rebellion theme with stories of Falkirk’s ain rebels from Jacobite history.

She also shared some tales from her excellent non-fiction titles about the Jacobite Uprising and from “When the Clyde Ran Red”, her gripping social history book about Glasgow’s workers battling for their rights.

Maggie’s Falkirk visit has piqued her interest in a slice of local history: She’s been researching Camelon’s nail manufacturers from the 19th Century who fought against worker oppression. We’ll look forward to hearing what she finds out!

James Oswald at Grangemouth Library, Friday afternoon

James Oswald and library staff at Grangemouth Library
James Oswald and library staff at Grangemouth Library

We ended the week by welcoming back James Oswald for a cracking cosy chat. We got a peek behind the publishing process and heard  about his new Constance Fairchild series.   

There was also much discussion over the pain of choosing book titles. Interesting fact: After much agonising, The Damage Done was named (by James’s editor) after a song by the goth band Sisters of Mercy… Occurs to us that we need to do a Library Love podcast on books named after songs!

We made sure to get a staff picture with James at the end.  As a big fan of his Inspector McLean series,  Victoria from Grangemouth library was chuffed to get answers to some of her burning questions and comic book lover Gavin was keen  to find out more about James’s writing for 2000AD.

Kirkland Ciccone at Grangemouth Library, Thursday morning

Kirkland Ciccone at Grangemouth Library,
Kirkland Ciccone at Grangemouth Library

For our main teen event of the week, we introduced Grangemouth High S3 to the shy, retiring Kirkland Ciccone.

It’s always a joy to welcome Kirkland to our libraries as he never disappoints with his hilarious and (mostly) true stories of growing up  in Cumbernauld, loving his local library and becoming the punk rock weirdo he is today.

,Glowglass, Kirkland’s latest book for teens came out earlier this year, but – big news – he’s next going to write some adult fiction! We can’t wait.

Jan Bee Brown’s pirate tales, Tuesday and Wednesday

We didn’t forget about our youngest library users – pupils from Denny, Laurieston and Antonine primary schools were entertained by Jan Bee Brown’s pirate rebel stories. The youngsters had a fantastic time and Jan looked smashing in her tri-corner hat!

 

And that’s it! Browse the gallery below for the full action. Be sure to swing by your library to bag your free copy of the Book Week Scotland book of rebel stories!

Select the first image to scroll through.