Archive for September, 2014

Writers of CBBC's Wolfblood, Hannah George and James Whitehouse

Writers of CBBC’s Wolfblood, Hannah George and James Whitehouse will be in town

Screenwriting is a career many avid wordsmiths are clambering to get into, but let’s face it, how many of us who fancy the idea would even know where to start? The fact is, we probably don’t stumble across too many screenwriters in our day to day lives to get any pointers, and searching Google for hours trying to find some tips doesn’t come close to face-to-face human interaction.

Well isn’t it fortunate then that we have two very successful screenwriters coming to Cowes Enterprise College to share some inside industry knowledge with island students. James Whitehouse and Hannah George have been working together for fours years. They have written for series 1 & 2 of CBBC’s Wolfblood, series 5 of The Slammer, and series 3 of Nickelodeon’s House of Anubis. They are currently in development with several production companies with their original work and IWLF Schools might be the first to know that Hannah is actually about to film a pilot at Node Hill school that she has written!

This will be an incredible opportunity for students to pick the brains of the experts and make some contacts- who knows, Hannah might even be looking for some actors and actresses for the pilot. Get your questions ready!

simon chambers

His CV reads like one of a fictitious super hero from the realms of fantasy and fiction, yet “Simon Chambers” is the real deal (albeit with a fake name), and he has the credentials to prove it. As a former paratrooper, Chambers was trained and ready to form the spearhead for the Army’s rapid intervention capability; soon progressing to the first battalion as part of the Special Forces Support Group (SFSG). The years that followed cut similar paths in various other army roles, among which Chambers was only marginally slowed in pace by a particularly bad Parachuting accident while jumping as part of the Royal Corps of Transports Parachute Display team- The Silver Stars.

Yet even once he was discharged from the forces following 22 years’ service, he almost immediately found himself volunteering for a further 6 months in Bosnia.

This is a man who sought (and still does seek) to survive on the near constant presence of adrenalin pulsing through his veins, so it should be of no surprise that when he eventually became too old to soldier in the British Army, there wasn’t a very long list of civilian jobs to match such a colourful work history. But there were Private Security companies. Having attended a close protection course, it wasn’t long before Chambers was offered a job with one of America’s top close protection companies. This was the just the beginning of another 7 years of putting his life on the line but this time, as a hired gun for some of Iraq’s biggest named security companies – Blackwater, Erinys, Aegis and EODT- after he was first positioned there as part of Paul Bremmer’s Bodyguard team. As might be expected when living life on the edge, Chambers came close to losing his balance. During that time he was shot and wounded- twice -and blown up- twice. And yet he has survived such perils.

The man himself will be speaking at Cowes Enterprise College on Friday 17th October, with invites to other island secondary schools. He has recently written his second novel “The Devil’s Playground”, which is about his adventures and published by Percy Publishing. Simon is still active in the field and therefore no pictures or videos are to be taken. Unless your in the audience, his face will remain a mystery.

quoteLet’s be honest, the demographic of the IWLF was a little on the grey side, and the lovely people who make it all happen from the 16th-19th October thought it would be “cool” to nudge the ‘age pendulum’ back the other way just a tad. So… A BUSKING SPOT FOR IWLF SCHOOLS! That is super cool if you ask me. Students of any schools/college on the Isle of Wight are invited to get their writing caps on and come up with something beautiful, challenging, thought provoking, striking etc. etc you get the idea- for everyone to enjoy while they’re getting their refreshments at the festival.

If you think you have a gift at using your voice to express words, whether you sing them, speak them or rap them, whether they rhyme or not- then this is for you (just so long as you live on the island and attend a school/college). Instruments welcome.

Contact us below, and tell us your name, age, school and what you’ll be doing (singing/speaking words…).

This Friday 26th September will be the deadline for Under 11s to have their shot at being a festival interviewer! For those destined for the TV, what better way to get some experience then entering such a competition and learning lots in the process. Lanesend, Gurnard, and Northwood Primary School students, with the help of family or friends, should send us a 2 minute video of themselves interviewing their aunty, uncle, friend, dog, or their favourite fruit! Basically whatever/whoever they want, about whatever they want. GET CREATIVE. Make us laugh if you can. But don’t miss out on the opporunity to interview top authors at the Isle of Wight Literary Festival. Who knows where it could lead!?

The videos will be used to help promote the festival this year and in the future.

email videos to submissions@isleofwightliteraryfestival.org by Friday 26th September

Festival Interviewer. See 'Competition' tab for details

Festival Interviewer. See ‘Competition’ tab for details

Bridget_Minamore

Bridget Minamore, ladies and gentlemen!

For a young woman in her 20s, Bridget Minamore has already achieved what many could only wish to in a lifetime.  She is a writer who has just completed an English degree at University College London. She facilitates poetry workshops, writes and performs things for all sorts of people, and was shortlisted to be London’s first Young Poet Laureate. The Guardian, The Independent and The Huffington Post have been keen supporters of Bridget’s work, with its broad scope and diverse topics. Recently, Bridget has been writing about about hip hop, climate change, her 97-year-old grandmother, football, London, Ghana and teeth. She reads a lot of books and has just got back from travelling in South America in time to be joining us at Cowes Enterprise College on Friday 17th October. Here’s a little taster of Bridget’s work, but there are many more poems, pictures and videos of her work on her website.

They Told Me To Write About Deptford            

We hold pride in our homes in the base of our throats

like the last gasp bastion of breath your niece made

before each and every feeding –

it’s a greedy way of living only babies understand.

 

You are greedy so you left.

 

You are elsewhere now,

pretending that new home is your home,

that Eastern corner of the city claims you now, they say,

you love it there, they say, and you say

kind of / yes but no / you’re wrong,

I love it there but it’s not home, and

anger, suddenly becomes irrationally easier for you to hold.

 

You are protective of this place, so you fight back with facts like

– the canals in East London aren’t even all that, and

– it’s not rough here it’s eclectic, and

– no-one even likes the underground, and

– I prefer the smell of weed and not shisha in the streets, and

– in Deptford there are 4 night busses from central London

so the one night bus to Hackney Wick just isn’t cutting it, plus

the 8 drops me off on the wrong side of the Stadium anyway.

 

You are protective of this place.

 

South East London is your awkward cousin, the men you love,

Ghanaian food, Chelsea football club, Beyoncé –

someone, something,

only you can say bad things about.

 

– and you are here now;

showing others market stalls with clip on earrings,

because home apparently never changes and never ages

and always leaves imprints behind

 

you show them the door to the shed at your old hairdresser’s house

you hid behind because the she told the tax man she was unemployed

 

you show them the empty space left for the man with the pincers for fingers

who always put extra onions on your burgers before he died

 

you show them the remnants of the cafe round the corner

with a train for a seating area that they, They, are trying to take away

 

the station that has never really felt like a station

because it still doesn’t have proper barriers

 

your dad’s old cab office

 

the place that’s the base of the Save Lewisham Hospital campaign

 

the pub that has the same football supporters every Sunday in the season

so you dare not mention Arsenal here

 

the plantain that is always 6 for a pound not 5

because if Abdul tried to raise the price

Marcia and Afua and Roland would tell him

he was trying to end their lives

 

and the university you nearly went to but avoided

because everyone told you to spread your wings and

fly a bit further from home

 

you tell them to be wary of the wha gwan’s in the street

because here wha gwarn does not mean what’s going on

it means when and where are we going to meet

 

you tell them of the way your mother speaks differently here

as if she can tell the darker faces from closer lands

will still always understand her better than you can

 

you tell them of rumours of So Solid Crew sightings

that stretched from New Cross to Peckham in the early 2000s

 

but you decline to remind them of the bridge

that visitors always describe as having water running under it

because they never see this part of the city clearly

 

You are protective of this place,

This awkward blue Ghanaian Beyoncé on the wrong side of the river.

 

You are here now.

But you are greedy.

So you left.

 

– and every time you come back you are reminded

of the wet, running water under the bridge that doesn’t exist,

and the reasons your Dad left that cab office,

and the pulled taught forehead that would follow a too tight braiding trip to Jessie’s house,

and the theatre you didn’t know existed until you were old enough to miss it,

and the Jollof rice and chicken wings you always get from the Nigerian man

at the base of the market that is never as nice as it first seems,

 

 but you are greedy,

 

 and so always

 

 keep on eating it.

Award Winning performance poet to stun students

Award Winning performance poet to stun students

Sabrina Mahfouz is currently a Sky Academy Arts Scholar for poetry; an Associate Artist at the Bush Theatre; Poet in Residence at Cape Farewell – a climate change and arts organisation; a Global Shaper with the World Economic Forum and a Writer at Liberty for the civil rights charity, Liberty. Her first collection of plays and poems, The Clean Collection, is published by Bloomsbury.

The award-winning performance poet will lead a workshop at Cowes Enterprise College on writing and performing your own work. The participants will spill their stories onto paper through a number of fun writing exercises and engage in some performance exercises in order to prepare them for presenting their favourite pieces to the rest of the class on Friday 17th October.

Sabrina will also be performing on Friday night as part of the Friday Fringe to the main Isle of Wight Literary Festival.

An illustration from her wonderful children's book- The Magic Bojabi Tree

An illustration from her wonderful children’s book- The Magic Bojabi Tree

Dianne Hofmeyr is a children and young teen author. Her ‘Zeraffa Giraffa’ story won Children’s book of the Week (2014) in the Sunday Times with not just a beautifully imaginative story, but equally brilliant illustrations to match. It’s not just young children who are captivated by her words, Dianne has also written a series of fast paced action and adventure novels with her Oliver Strange series for an older audience. She will be sharing some valuable insights into her writing when she visits IWLF and will also conduct a workshop for students. Dianne’s own personal adventurous history of travelling the world is infused into her work to create special reads.

She will be visiting Gurnard Primary School and Lanesend Primary School on Friday of the festival, leading workshops based on the Indiana Jones style, high adventure series: Oliver Strange and the Journey to the Swamps, (set in Botswana) Oliver Strange and the Ghosts of Madagascar (set in Madagascar) and Oliver Strange and the Forests of Secrets (set in Colombia), the workshop will explore:

How do you find a story? What makes your characters special? How do you use language to create tension? How do you develop your story using images and music?

Dianne will de attending the Thursday Ryde School event where Reception and Year 1 will be presented with The Magic Bojabi Tree – an interactive storytelling experience

Meet monkey, zebra, elephant, lion and clever tortoise and find out what happens when they all want the fruit from a very special tree. A story told with masks, music and plenty of fun and maybe even a chance to dance to some African marimba music. The Magic Bojabi Tree was nominated for the 2014 Kate Greenaway Award and is translated into 7 languages. It will be produced by the Worcestershire Symphony Orchestra in November with specially composed music.

 Year 2 and 3 will be hearing all about Zeraffa Giraffa

What happens when a giraffe is sent all the way from Africa to Paris? How will she get there? Based on a true story.  A chance to map the giraffe’s journey through the desert, down the Nile river, across the Mediterranean & finally her walk to Paris, with music to set the atmosphere. Make your own giraffe mask afterwards.  Zeraffa Giraffa, Illustrated by award winning Jane Ray, is in The Sunday Times Top 100 children’s classic in the past 10 years

Get to know more about Dianne by visiting her website.

Students across multiple year groups from Christ the King College and Carisbrooke College will work together to create a collaborative story- On a giant scroll! Sarah Holding will be leading ‘The Big Write’ workshop on Friday 17th October, taking the game of ‘consequences’ to a whole new level. Attendees will also be fortunate to hear about Sarah’s own highly successful science fiction trilogy which features a sense of ‘Dr Who’s tardis’ with time travel adventure (look out for the SeaBEAN trilogy). Reduced priced books will be available for students to buy on the day and there’ll be opportunities to get them signed by the author herself… don’t forget to bring some extra cash to school that Friday! There are stacks of glowing reviews on the website and if you can crack the code, you can win prizes so click the link and find out more.

Author of the SeaBEAN trilogy and brain behind the very successful schools workshop- 'The BIG Write'

Author of the SeaBEAN trilogy and brain behind the very successful schools workshop- ‘The BIG Write’

Lit-fest-youth-logoGood evening all! So this will be the first of many posts to keep you in the loop of all things literary happening in the IWLF Schools Programme! Isle of Wight Literary Festival 2014 is just around the corner (Thurs 16th-19th October) and there’s so much we’d like to tell you about so you don’t miss a beat. Join us here every evening where an author/performer/guest speaker for this year’s IWLF Schools Programme (the first there’s been, we might add!) will be revealed.