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wordfringe
2009

1st–31st May 2009

Week 1

Makar Making

First Friday Fling with Janis MacKay

Pushing Out the Boat

Night at the Light

From Pennan to Penang

Lubrication

Trio Verso

Love as a Foreign Language

Week 2

Demented Eloquence Tag-Team Word Wrestling

Prometheus: A River Stained with Iron

Poetry Workshop

Cream of Strathbogie

Expect the Best: Elspeth Murray

Open Poetry Night

Full Wordfringe Calendar

Love as a Foreign Language

Olivia McMahon launches her new novel, joined by Christie VanLaningham and Bill Kirton

 

Sunday 3 May 2009
7.30pm – 8.30pm

Salmon Bothy, Portsoy [Map]

Admission £4
to include refreshments and nibbles
No booking required

Part of the North Coast Weekend


Olivia McMahon's novel Love as a Foreign Language is the story of a woman teacher of English as a foreign language in an Aberdeen language school, teaching mainly employees of the locally based oil company Termoil.

She is joined at her launch event by Christie VanLaningham, a fiction writer from Oregon now based in Aberdeen, and Bill Kirton, well-known writer of crime novels.

Olivia McMahon

Olivia McMahon's novel Love as a Foreign Language is based (partly) on her long and varied experience teaching English as a Foreign Language. A second novel about a young hairdresser in Paris is based on no (hairdressing) experience at all. Her collection of poems Domestic Verses published locally by Koo Press is all her own.

Christie VanLaningham

Christie VanLaningham writes fiction inspired by failed places, heirlooms, witchy women, abandoned children, lumberjacks, lovable demagogues, every kind of fairy tale, and what it means to be home. Her short stories have appeared in several North American literary journals, and she is currently working on a novel.

Bill Kirton

Bill Kirton has lived in Aberdeen since 1968. He was a university lecturer in French but took early retirement to write. He's written and performed revues at the Edinburgh Festival, written, directed and acted in stage and radio plays and presented programmes on Grampian Television.

His crime novels, Material Evidence, Rough Justice and, most recently, The Darkness, are set in the fictional town of Cairnburgh near Aberdeen. This summer, his historical novel, The Figurehead, set in Aberdeen in 1840, will be published in paperback and as an ebook.


Promoted by

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Supported by

Salmon Bothy

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