Skip to main content

Fiction Friday: Update

We are restarting Fiction Friday, our previously popular initiative where each week we will post on the blog a marvellous Q&A featuring various college staff discussing what they love to read and why, along with some wildcard questions. 

We love talking about books - it's a great way to start conversations, or discover new reads, not to mention building a rapport with kindred spirits who also love talking about books. 

We will be featuring one post per week, with one lucky college staff member talking about their literary life.

We've been really busy in the interim - here's some highlights:

  • Currently we are tweeting about our 23 Days of Wellbeing - this was inspired by the BRIT Challenge, and we are selecting 23 books for 23 days that we love and relate to living a happy, healthy, well life. 

  • Our Word of the Week continues to grace each seven days with a new and intriguing word choice that expands vocabulary and showcases our fantastic resource, the Oxford English Dictionary!
  • Our Wellbeing Area contains a curated selection of books covering mental health and wellbeing topics for young adults and the college community - you can browse the selection here: https://tinyurl.com/YCWellColl  
  • We've taken part in a number of wider literacy initiatives, including giveaways of great titles for World Book Night, and writing spine poetry for World Poetry Day:

  • We've created displays to educate, entertain and empower, including LGBT History Month, Holocaust Memorial Day, Black History Month and more.
  • And we have continued to do what we do best - help and support our students to succeed, whether by issuing books, maintaining our two study centres, delivering information literacy sessions or ordering new and fantastic stock to aid their learning!
Happy Reading!

You can find us on Twitter as @YC_Reading



Comments

  1. Hello, are you still running the reading blog?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Norwegian Wood Book Club Member Review

Why I Chose… “Norwegian Wood ” (Haruki Murakami)   The question every reader both loves and dreads to answer is this one – what’s your favourite? There are never any short answers – and very often, the result is a  long list.   There are books which you read every summer, or every winter. The ones that remind you of being five, or fifteen, or your college years or your first love. The books we remember fondly are the ones whose lines we memorise and drop into conversation; whose characters we wish we could be like; the ones whose worlds are those we could almost step into, which strike a chord so deep we feel we’ve always known them and afterwards change our perception slightly of our own world.   Norwegian Wood is one of those books.   It is a bittersweet tale of looking back, of an acutely felt nostalgia for past youth and past loves. From hearing the Beatles song, “Norwegian Wood”, Toru Watanabe is reminded of his first love, Naok...

1st Prize Winner, Nick Barton's piece "The Stranger's We've Become"..

I liked to think we’d spend our last night together singing songs not to mourn or regret, but to smile. With no birds outside to hear us, I wanted the stars to gather in constellations above to listen. But, that’s not what happened. Instead, under a hanging light bulb, Stacy and I read in silence while the world outside hummed on without a passing thought as to what we were doing. The quiet between us went on and on until I gave up reading altogether. Watching her reflection in the wardrobe mirror, she sat on the comfy sofa, her knees hugged to her chest and her headphones pressed against her ears made her look awfully cute. She read a paperback open against her thighs and I knew she could see me watching. When I turned around to glance at her, she said without looking: ‘Stop being so needy, I’m reading your book.’ I went back to my story and she hadn’t even broken through ten pages. Last week I read a novel and said she’d love it and I kidded myself into thinking sh...

The Bridport Prize Poems, Short Stories and Flash Fiction Competition

Fancy your chances at writing a poem, short story or flash fiction? Enter in to the Bridport Prize competition for your chance to win a cash prize! Rules : Poems : Max 42 Lines Entry Fee: £8 £5000 1st Prize Short Stories : Max 5000 words Entry Fee: £9 £5000 1st Prize Flash Fiction : Max 250 words Entry Fee: £7 £1000 1st Prize Entrants must be 16 years and over. Posthumous entries are not eligible. Entries must be entirely the work of the entrant. Work must never have been published previously. Entrants can send as many entries as they wish. Entry fees must be in sterling by credit/debit card, cheque or postal order. Entries must be in English. Entries must be typed on A4, Single-sided and securely fastened. Stories to be double spaced, every page numbered and the total word count noted at the top of the first page. Poems to be single spaced. No personal information on the entries (name, address etc), only on the entrant form. Entries...