Showing posts with label The Ceilidh Place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ceilidh Place. Show all posts

Monday, 11 May 2015

ULLAPOOL BOOK FESTIVAL - thoughts and pics

I got back from the Ullapool Book Festival last night after a long day of travel and an exhilarating few days in Scotland. The fictional Highland village of Kinlochbrack, in my novel The Closet of Savage Mementos, is a thinly disguised Ullapool. I worked there in a beautiful small hotel called The Ceilidh Place 23 years ago.


We drove from Aberdeen to Ullapool - this is along the final stretch

The road to Ullapool

A house on Loch Broom

Entering the village of Ullapool
The Ceilidh Place

The village hall!
I went back to Ullapool four years ago to do final research for the novel, and I was back there this time to read at their book festival. In a lovely twist, I got to stay at The Ceilidh Place, which felt very grown up and posh altogether.

The festival was busy and comprehensive: events started at 8am and went on until late - there were writers from South Africa, Canada, England, Malaysia, Scotland and myself from Ireland. There was a ceilidh, as well as readings: poetry, fiction, non-fiction. We ate like royalty, three meals a day laid on (the food in The Ceilidh Place has always been good and has always catered for non meat-eaters like me). We had glorious salads (charred cauliflower was my highlight), celeriac and apple soup, homemade oatcakes, artichoke risotto, spinach and ricotta lasagne, raspberry fool (which pleased me hugely as the chef in my book makes a gooseberry fool, to which Struan says: 'Old fool makes new fool.') At the village hall, where most events took place, there was a tent where you could buy Fairtrade drinks and home-baking - I had a chocolate ginger fridge cake that was out of this world.
Looking over the loch and out to sea

Loch Broom gate

Out for a walk

North of Ullapool

Northern scenery - the weather was fantastic
I went to as many events as I could manage but, after late nights in the bar and upstairs lounge with the other writers, journalists and arts admin folk, it wasn't possible to go to every event. Once we took our hire car and drove about 20 miles north to see Stac Pollaidh and all the other beautiful mountains and inlets (we saw deer!).
Stac Pollaidh
Other times we woggled around the shops and ate (yet more) cake in The Frigate, a shoreside café where I also worked (it was run by The Ceilidh Place way back). There are great shops in Ullapool selling top-notch local crafts, vintage wares and art. There are two book shops in the village, which is pretty amazing, and both support the book festival. I bought my obligatory paperweight (obsessed); I also managed a beachcomb.


Beachcombed finds
All this while attending plenty of readings. The election was on the day we arrived so there was a lot of lively discussion late into the night about all that had happened with that. Many people bewildered by the overall result.


Bilingual signs abound which is great to see. 'Little houses' for toilets - sweet!!

These fab sculptures feature in my novel - I was delighted to find them still in situ in a window on Shore St

Typewriter in The Frigate
Apart from the readings from the books, there was something extra to enjoy at every event: Christopher Brookmyre read hilarious emails received from fans, correcting him on the geography of Berlin, or wanting to meet him in remote places. Zoë Wicomb was fascinating on the politics of South Africa, as was Chiew-Siah Tei on Malaysia. The lovely Kerry Hudson writes her books in a shack in Vietnam (I felt like such a square plodder when I heard that). Ditto while listening to Linda Cracknell recount her solo walks through Scotland and her climbing in Switzerland. Her writing is stitched with wisdom as much as adventure - beautiful.


Myself and Zoe Strachan, waiting for our event to begin

It was terrifying to follow these people's events but my interviewer, writer Zoë Strachan, made it all really easy and we had a full house, including several former Ceilidh Place colleagues, which was a joy.


Writer Ian Stephen from the Isle of Lewis

Writer Murray Armstrong from Airdrie (now living in London)

Malaysian writer Chiew-Siah Tei (now living in Glasgow)

Ullapool harbour - evening
Ullapool is a magical place - it pulls on you and seduces you and never quite lets go. The sealoch and mountain scenery, the sweet white houses, the warm people, the fabulous food - all of it combines to make a wonderful experience. I was honoured to be invited back for the book festival and was like a sulky child when we had to leave yesterday morning; I just did not want to go. Huge thanks to Joan Michaels and her book festival team, to President Louise Welsh, and to our hosts at The Ceilidh Place - you all do a terrific job. Tapadh leibh!

Monday, 27 April 2015

RETREAT NEEDED IN JUNE & ULLAPOOL APPEARANCE

I had a whole post written about Cúirt - quite a personal one - but my computer acted the maggot and needed restarting, and I lost the post despite saving it in a document - wtf? I haven't the heart, energy, head-space or patience to re-write it. Let it suffice to say, I enjoyed the few events I attended. Highlight: Evie Wyld and Jenny Offill in conversation with the always-wonderful Sinéad Gleeson.

Sinéad, Evie, Jenny
I am coming to the end of writing novel #4. Nine months for a first draft on this one. (But I will NOT refer to it as a gestation or the book as a baby - that kind of talk is a pet hate. Giving birth and raising kids is WAY harder than writing books, in my experience.)

It feels good to be at this point - the part where I feel I can breathe again. I will now walk away from the novel for a few weeks then come back and try to make sense of it and knock it into a shape good enough to show my agent. I tried to get a spot in Annaghmakerrig to go over it but they are full. Sigh. Does anyone know of a place I could retreat to for a few days in June (not too expensive and in Ireland, north or south) to work on this?

The Ceilidh Place, Ullapool
Next week I go to Ullapool to read at their book festival - it's the setting, in the Scottish Highlands, for my last novel The Closet of Savage Mementos. I worked there in a gorgeous hotel called The Ceilidh Place twenty-three years ago and my novel is loosely based on that time. Another ex-Placer, Linda Cracknell, is also on the festival bill. The Stornoway Gazette has done a wee feature on the pair of us. The article is here.

Zoë Strachan will be chairing my event at the festival and I am reading her latest novel Ever Fallen in Love in advance - it is set north of Ullapool, coincidentally, and I am very much enjoying it. In another coincidence, it is published by Sandstone Press who will publish the UK version of Miss Emily in August. It's all good.