Frank Turner
‘Live In Newcastle’ now available everywhere folks https://t.co/AS3V79tApL
Book Recommendations:
Recommended by Frank Turner
“Check it out - the latest (kindle) book of poetry from @WAYoutArts. Fantastic writing from truly talented people on the margins in Sierra Leone. Have a read: https://t.co/FdhsIrBTvy” (from X)
by WAYout Arts, Alhaji Kondeh, Sulaiman Bangura, Rashid Kamara, Festus Harding, Destiny Dumbuya, Ibrahim Dumbuya, Abdulai Kamara, Kabineh Kabba, Francess Kamara·You?
by WAYout Arts, Alhaji Kondeh, Sulaiman Bangura, Rashid Kamara, Festus Harding, Destiny Dumbuya, Ibrahim Dumbuya, Abdulai Kamara, Kabineh Kabba, Francess Kamara·You?
Broken Pens is the third anthology by WAYout Poets following the success of 'Written Off' and 'Street Rhymes' which are also available on Amazon Kindle. Broken Pens also includes drawings by Mamady aka Rasta Youth and photographs by Nathaniel Sesay aka Mash P. 32 poets and writers came together to create this collection and whilst many of the poems explore living on the street and poverty they also celebrate love and friendship and culture. There is a section on incarceration which includes Manager Gibrilla Kamara's experience in quarantine, poems from the women's prison and from Young, a WAYout member who has been in prison for two years. Introduction by Frank Turner. Poets: Alhaji Kondeh, Sulaiman Bangura, Rashid Kamara, Festus Harding, Destiny Dumbuya, Ibrahim Dumbuya, Abdulai Kamara, Kabineh Kabba, Francess Kamara, Moses Kamara, Milton Kanu, Gibrilla Kamara, Adama, Fatmata, Gladys, Jattu, Yamah, Zainab, Mohamed Kanu, Elijah I. Deen Kuyateh, Ibrahim Kamara, Foday Sillah, Abubakarr Jalloh, Abdul Aziz Kamara, Francis Foday Sannoh, Mohamed J. Kamara,, Kassasungu Songu-Mbriwa, Oosterloo Bill and Ishmael Turay
Recommended by Frank Turner
“I mentioned on @SundayBrunchC4 the other day a book of London walks - "One Man's London", by NTP Murphy. It's an absolute gem, if you have any interest in London history / walking, it's a must-have. After the show they've done a reprint, get yours here: https://t.co/Qk5kYJyepO” (from X)
by Murphy·You?
by Murphy·You?
'One Man’s London' – the idiosyncratic London guide book that won a cult following within weeks of its publication – has at last been reissued in an expanded form. This enhanced illustrated version has been published in response to demands for a reissue that began not long after its original publication. 'One Man’s London' was first published by Hutchinson in 1989, and the edition quickly sold out. Soon, second-hand copies were selling at well above the cover price and, ever since, the book has been keenly sought-after.The book’s attraction has always been its remarkable individuality and the oddities and secrets it reveals about streets every Londoner knows. It tells us of the Roman milestone that lies unmarked beside St Margaret’s, Westminster; of the oldest gas lamps in the world, which still burn along The Mall; of the inconspicuous markers that govern Royal processions; of pubs that go to Buckingham Palace for their licences; of parish marks that still designate the boundaries of old London; and of the miniature Test Match on the wall facing Australia House, among many other features in London often overlooked or ignored. In addition to describing such features, this book also explains why they are there, and their continuing significance today.The author has continued his investigations over the last two decades, and this new expanded and illustrated edition reveals many new secrets, including the ‘illegal’ lamp-posts along the Embankment; the pugilistic cherubs of Selfridge’s; why an admiral’s memorial has a Guinness bottle inside it; why there are no roads in the City of London; and the identity of the heads, each complete with collar and tie, that look down on Trafalgar Square. Arranged, as before, as a series of walks, this new edition concludes with a new, seventeenth, walk along Oxford Street that looks at the delightful statue of the ballerina Darcy Bussell, takes us to the house where William Blake ‘had interviews with angels and persons of scarcely inferior distinction’, and gives us a glimpse of the legendary Tyburn river. It ends with a close inspection of the most famous feature of Broadcasting House, suggesting strongly that the BBC thought they were commissioning one thing while the sculptor made it clear, in letters still visible, that he was giving them something else.Born in London in 1933, Norman Murphy started exploring it as a schoolboy during the War, when “the only way of finding where you were in the flattened streets was to take a bearing on the dome of St Paul’s.” Educated at Wimbledon and Oxford, he joined the Army in 1959 and successive postings to Whitehall enabled him to spend his lunchtimes exploring the alleys, courtyards, and side streets of central London, as well as conducting unofficial tours that became a feature of the Ministry of Defence. Now retired, he is the author of six books, including 'In Search of Blandings', 'One Man’s London', 'Three Wodehouse Walks', and 'A Wodehouse The World and Words of P.G. Wodehouse'.Colonel Murphy is an internationally recognised expert on the author P.G. Wodehouse, former chairman of The P G Wodehouse Society (UK), and now its Remembrancer. He has spent more than twenty years updating his 1989 book One Man’s London, and 'One Man’s Twenty Years On' brings his work firmly into the 21st century.