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.

Book Week Scotland

Book Week Scotland author events in Falkirk LibrariesBook Week Scotland, the nation’s annual reading love-in, is back and this year the theme is rebellion!

So, it’s time to rebel against your reading habits. Head to your library to pick up something new, bag a free Book Week Scotland Book,  and find authors you don’t yet even know you love!

We’ve lined up a programme of authors and storytellers who know a thing or two about rebellion…

You can find out about free tickets for all the events below on our website: www.falkirkcommunitytrust.org/libraries/book-week-scotland.aspx

E.S Thomson’s Gothic Crime
Thursday 22nd November, 6.30pm, Larbert Library

ES Thomson Book Week Scotland

The Blood, the third installment of Elaine Thomson’s Jem Flockhart series, is one of our favourite books of this year, so we’re thrilled to bring her to our libraries for the first time.

Jem, the star of the three books so far in the series, is a rebel with cause. Set in a beautifully-realised Victorian London, she lives as a man, allowing her to work as an apothecary… and get caught up in grisly crimes.

Elaine’s books are dark, gothic and atmospheric. Her Victorian London is so richly detailed that when you look up from the page, you’ll be surprised to find yourself in 2018!

Kirkland Ciccone
Thursday 22nd November, 11am, Grangemouth Library

The word rebel might have been invented for the one, the only Kirkland Ciccone!

Kirkland Ciccone has taken the teen scene by storm, with his larger-than-life personality and punk rock-fuelled pop-art style giving him the edge he needed to grab attention. A favourite with librarians and teen readers for his anarchic live events, Kirkland is in much demand. But what he does best is write twisty, weird YA fiction for the freaks/geeks/punks/teens who want to read something a little bit quirkier than the usual fare. His fiction is crammed with memorable characters, spiky dialogue, and Kirkland’s own observations.

Maggie Craig: Falkirk’s Rebels
Friday 23rd November, 10.30am, Forth Valley Sensory CentreMaggie Craig Book Week Scotland author event

Maggie Craig has been bringing Scotland’s history vividly to life throughout her career. She’s written about the workers fighting for their rights on red Clydeside, knows a heck of a lot about the Jabobite Rebellion and has a particular interest in the unsung women who have played a role in Scotland’s past.

She joins us for a very special event at the Forth Valley Sensory Centre. As well as hearing Maggie’s tales of Falkirk’s Rebels, it’s a great chance to find out more about the work the Centre does to support people with hearing and sight loss – and grab a cake and a cuppa in their excellent cafe!

James Oswald
Friday 23rd November, 2.30pm, Grangemouth LibraryJames Oswald Book Week Scotland author event

You might say that James Oswald is a bit of a rebel himself.  He doesn’t spend his days sitting in pretty Edinburgh coffee shops with his notepad and pen, he’s out roaming the fields with his Romney sheep and Highland cows!

By day, James farms and by night he writes classic fantasy and a series of eerie crime novels starring Detective Inspector Tony MacLean. DI MacLean is himself an unusual man, who is unlucky enough to see beyond the veil and the menacing evil that lurks beneath the seemingly ordinary crimes he investigates.

Jan Bee Brown: Rebel Stories
20th/21st November at Bonnybridge, Denny and Meadowbank Libraries

Storyteller Jan Bee Brown joins us for some seriously silly and rebellious tales aimed at primary age children.

Jan loves to share stories from traditional Scottish and European folktales to ancient myths and Celtic legends. She loves stories of the sea that include quests, monsters, the world at war and journeys that cross borders.

Jan speaks German and having lived and worked in Europe is drawn to Nordic myths, dark forests, tales of intrepid travellers and brave women.

Bag a book!


Grab a free copy of the Book Week Scotland book in libraries and at events.

You can also listen to all the stories, right now on the Book Week Scotland website.

Vote!

Vote for your favourite read of 2018 with Falkirk Libraries

 

 

 

 


T
ell us your favourite book of this year.  You can cast your vote in the library, or comment below right now!

The book can be fiction or non-fiction, for any age. As long as it’s a paperback, hardback, graphic novel, audiobook or eBook released in 2018, it counts!