jeudi 16 juin 2016

NEW BOOKS JUNE 2016

NEW BOOKS JUNE 2013
 
Non fiction
History’s People : Personalities and the Past      Margaret MacMillan
Fiction
Everyone  brave is forgiven                               Chris Cleave
The North Water                                                Ian McGuire
Penance                                                              Kate O’Riordan
Finders Keepers                                                  Stephan King
End Watch                                                          Stephan King
This must be the Place                                        Maggie O’Farrell
How to measure a Cow                                      Margaret Forster
The Poison Artist                                                Jonathan Moore
Thomas & Mary : a love story                           Tim Parks
A woman much missed                                      Valerio Varesi
The Fox was ever the hunter                              Herta Müller
My name is Lucy Barton                                    Elizabeth Strout  
Avenue of Mysteries                                           John Irving
Did you ever have a family ?                              Bill Clegg

SUMMER NEWSLETTER JUNE 2016


AGM & PARTY

We had a good turnout and very quickly moved on to the party and a glass (or two) of excellent « crémant d’Alsace » which people remarked upon. There was a wonderful spread of delicious food that our cordon bleu members brought along, the weather was perfect (not too hot, not too cold) and a great time was had by all. I shall be posting some photos on Foal’s Facebook page and the blog when I get them. (the blog foal34.free.fr is a good place if you wish to look at the catalogue)

OPENING DAYS JULY (before the move)
We will be open on Saturday 2nd  & Wednesday 13th July so that you can take out your summer reading (you are allowed more books for the summer) The new books will be in the library from 22nd July so you will have plenty to choose from

PLANS FOR NEW PREMISES   23 Rue Lakanal

We have great plans for the new premises once we get up and running. There is a lot to be done getting the place to rights, City Hall will be doing most of the work but our bricoleurs will have plenty to do too. We will have a CHILDREN’S SECTION and you are invited to donate recent children’s books (in good condition) since we don’t plan to actually buy any books for youngsters. Patricia Robb has volunteered to set up story telling sessions for the kids.

We would like to increase the MAGAZINE SECTION thanks to donations of VERY recent issues of magazines (TIME, THE ECONOMIST, etc.)

We shall be increasing OPENING HOURS and we will need VOLUNTEERS for staffing (send an email to foal@dbmail.com with your possible slots). We plan to open every Wednesday(3pm-6pm) and the first and third Saturday of each month (10am-12.30am).

 Dates (subject to change) We hope to have a normal opening  on Saturday 3rd of September but you will be kept informed (it depends on how the renovation goes) and a GRAND OPENING AND BOOK SALE on Saturday 24th September from 10-12.30 & 2pm-6pm. I hope lots of you will come along on that day. It will be announced in the Press and we hope to enroll new members. All this to be confirmed. I met the technicien from City Hall ; work on schools over the holidays takes precedence, so, at the present time, it is impossible to set up an agenda. However, they do plan to do a thorough renovation with new flooring, ceiling and plumbing, so the premises will be spanking new when we move in.

We will need plenty of CHAIRS in the new premises where we plan to hold the Book Chat sessions and the Board meetings so if you have the odd chair to donate, send an email to the foal address (see above) and you can bring them along on an opening day. An armchair or two wouldn’t come amiss as we have a small room where we shall be able to sit and have a cup of tea or coffee and a chat.

ANTIGONE DES ASSOCIATIONS

We shall have a stand at the Antigone des Associations in the International section on Saturday 11th September. Now that we shall able to publicise the library with an address, it will be easier to promote so there will be special flyers, and info about the Grand Opening.

CHRISTMAS PARTY

This is probably getting ahead of ourselves but the good news is that the Claringbulls have very kindly offered to hold the party at theirs on 10th December. We will have a cut off for numbers so when we get nearer the time you will be asked to sign on very fast. Meanwhile, rummage in your attics for hidden treasures which could make good prizes for the raffle and let me know.

mardi 3 mai 2016

WE HAVE PREMISES!!!!!


Well, the good news has been confirmed.
After 6 years of existence and 4 years with a premises dossier at City Hall, we have finally be given permanent premises!!!!! Very near the town center on rue Lakanal, quite big (76 sq metres), will need a bit of sprucing up but we should open at the beginning of September which will give us time to get things organised. We have books all over the place in various cellars and attics, some belong to the library proper and others will go into a Book Sale which we shall hold on opening day. Of course this calls for a celebration and we shall be drinking fizzy at the AGM on 11th June (open to paid up members) before the al fresco lunch in one of our member's lovely garden. If you feel like joining up now, send an email to foal@dbmail.com and you will be eligible for the party too!

 

mardi 22 mars 2016

NEWSLETTER March 2016


NEWSLETTER MARCH 2016

 
I can'r seem to be able to copy the images that are in the Newsletter, the one that should be in this space is of a couple of champagne glasses. This explains the first sentence of the text below


 

I expect you are surprised to see this festive image but drinking some fizzy might soon be a reality. Indeed, I was informed this week that the Premises Commission had held its meeting and that Foal’s dossier had been given an « avis favorable » by the Mayor. The next step is for them to find suitable premises but it does look as if we are well on the way to getting something permanent. If and when this happens, which might be in the not so distant future, Foal members will be drinking fizzy and celebrating. My secret hope is that this might intervene before the AGM and the summer party which is due to take place on 11th June (I hope the date is already in your agendas) so that we can do our celebrating then.

The new books will be in the library tomorrow (23rd March), another excellent selection as you have already seen.

 

This is a very short newsletter, I just wanted to share the good news.

 
There was another image here of some party hats
# # #

lundi 21 mars 2016

New Catalogues !!!

The new catalogue (Title Alphabetical Order) is now online. To download it, just click Here.
Also available : Author Alphabetical Order Here.

Click on “télécharger vers navigateur” (download to browser) and then on “ouvrir”

vendredi 4 mars 2016

NEW BOOKS MARCH 2016


FOAL BOOK ORDER MARCH 2016

NON FICTION

The Outsider : My life in intrigue                                      Frederick Forsyth

By the author of The Day of the Jackal, the story of a happy boy who wanted an adventurous life and got it

Stop the Clocks ** see poem below                                   Joan Bakewell

A memoir  which is not Bakewell’s goodbye. She isn’t ill; hopefully, she has more time yet. But it is, perhaps, a preparation for goodbye, being a kind of reckoning up, a wry analysis of the world she will leave behind

Gimson’s Kings and Queens                                                          Andrew Gimson

An entertaining romp through England’s monarchs

How the French think : an affectionate portrait of an intellectual people by   Sudhir Hasareesingh

In this nation of arrogant intellectuals, even the beggars make eloquent speeches – but why are the French like this ? Why do they think differently ? The French like to construct a theory and then use it to explain facts ; the British and others like to examine the facts and then construct theories.

FICTION

The Man without a shadow                                                           Joyce Carol Oates

Psychological thriller, a meloncholic examination of the ways in which we define ourselves in terms of our work and relationships.

The Improbability of Love                                                 Hannah Rothschild

A novel set in the art world. « I don’t know why everyone doesn’t set their novel in the art world » Ms Rothschild said. « It’s got everything : extremes of wealth, goodies, baddies, the intangibility of beauty and desire, history, scholorship.. you name it »

The Neopolitan Novels                                                        Elsa Ferrante (4 volumes)

The series follows the lives of two perceptive and intelligent girls, Elena Greco and Raffaella Cerullo, from childhood to adulthood as they try to create lives for themselves amidst the violent and stultifying culture of their home– a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Naples

Exposure                                                                              Helen Dunmore

A fine addition to the shelves of cold war literature, an unconventional spy thriller

Numero Zero                                                                       Umberto Eco

This wry, witty novel about the skulduggery of the Clean Hands scandal

The Noise of Time                                                               Julian Barnes

A fictional biography, Barnes gives himself the narratorial freedom to enter the workings of the composer’s (Shostakovich) mind while also offering outside context for the reader.

Blood, Salt, Water                                                               Denise Mina

Her 12th book and Denise Mina is showing no signs of losing her power to draw readers into a shadowy world of crime.

Rogue Lawyer                                                                     John Grisham

Grisham is debuting what looks to be a series featuring a so-called street lawyer named Sebastian Rudd. Rogue Laywer is so cleverly plotted, it could be used as a how-to manual in fiction-writing courses

The Moor’s Account                                                                       Laila Lalami

Long listed for the Man Booker 2015 The story of an ill-fated expedition to the New World which sets of in 1527. The reader is gripped as the expedition lurches from disaster to disaster

High Dive                                                                             Jonathan Lee

A hauntingly atmospheric tale of the 1980s. A Provisional IRA bomb explodes in the Grand Hotel, Brighton, as it hosted senior delegates at the Tory party conference. This shocking event becomes the focus of Jonathan Lee’s third novel, though its surprises are truly unexpected

Broken Harbour                                                                 Tana French

A tale about the different facets of obsession and insanity. Tana French is a very popular author at the moment

**The  title of Joan Bakewell’s memoir probably comes from the first line of a W H Auden poem which I find very moving and which was recited in the burial scene in 4 Weddings and a Funeral


Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
Silence the pianos and with muffled  drum
Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.

Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead
Scribbling on the sky the message He Is Dead,
Put crepe bows round the white necks of the public doves,
Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.

He was my North, my South, my East and West,
My working week and my Sunday rest,
My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
I thought that love would last for ever: I was wrong.

The stars are not wanted now: put out every one;
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun;
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood.
For nothing now can ever come to any good.

 

 

#