Podcast appearances and mentions of Kate Clanchy

British writer

  • 33PODCASTS
  • 43EPISODES
  • 46mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Feb 13, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Kate Clanchy

Latest podcast episodes about Kate Clanchy

That’s Debatable!
Standing with Salman

That’s Debatable!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 47:37


There is a lot going on behind the scenes at the Royal Society of Literature (RSL), as reported this week in The Times and written up in detail on the FSU website. Several current fellows of the RSL, including three former presidents, say that the organisation's refusal to take public stands on authors Kate Clanchy and Sir Salman Rushdie has called into question its support for a writer's right to freedom of expression. Kate Clanchy won the Orwell Prize in 2020 but suffered the ire of an online mob when activists discovered a handful of sentences that deployed what they described as ‘racial stereotypes'. Ahead of a speech in August 2022, Sir Salman was attacked on stage by an Islamist sympathiser and stabbed multiple times, in the chest, liver, hand, face and neck. The response from the RSL was best summed up by Sir Salman himself in a post on X, “Just wondering if the Royal Society of Literature is ‘impartial' about attempted murder? (Asking for a friend.)” For our other main segment, we discuss Army Guidance that encourages soldiers to avoid Christian elements in Acts of Remembrance and says that Acts of Remembrance should be separated from Remembrance Services. Perhaps we shouldn't be surprised, given the 93 diversity networks now active across the Ministry of Defence. ‘That's Debatable!' is edited by Jason Clift.

much poetry muchness
Spell, by Kate Clanchy

much poetry muchness

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2024 1:00


spell kate clanchy
Cancelled
Kate Clanchy

Cancelled

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2022 21:13


It's January 2022. Demurely dressed, Kate Clanchy sits in the UnHerd studio, a platform that prides itself on ‘challenging the herd'. Why conservatives always try to frame themselves as courageous dissenters remains a mystery, but for now, it's enough to know that they are all firmly rooting for Clanchy. Sat across from UnHerd's executive editor, Freddie Sayers, Clanchy will pour her heart out to her white comrade in arms before it is uploaded to the platform's YouTube as an exclusive. They will morosely ponder over how it seems like white people just can't discuss people's racialised physical features like they used to. These days, they come with pesky backlash and the instigation of online furores. Again and again, they will return to confusion. How could Kate Clanchy, a white woman with good intentions, have ended up here? This episode was written by Paula Akpan This is a Broccoli Production  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

kate clanchy freddie sayers
The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma
Ep 284: The Life and Times of Nilanjana Roy

The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2022 347:14


A lifetime spent reading, writing and reflecting teaches you a lot. Nilanjana Roy joins Amit Varma in episode 284 of The Seen and the Unseen to talk about books, feminism, family, memory and the state of the world.  Also check out:1. Nilanjana Roy on Twitter, Instagram, Amazon, Financial Times, Business Standard and her own website. 2. The Girl Who Ate Books: Adventures in Reading -- Nilanjana Roy. 3. The Wildings -- Nilanjana Roy. 4. The Hundred Names of Darkness -- Nilanjana Roy. 5. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen that discuss reading and writing with Sara Rai, Amitava Kumar, VK Karthika, Sugata Srinivasaraju, Mrinal Pande, Sonia Faleiro, Vivek Tejuja, Samanth Subramanian, Annie Zaidi and Prem Panicker. 6.  Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen on the creator ecosystem with Roshan Abbas, Varun Duggirala, Neelesh Misra, Snehal Pradhan, Chuck Gopal, Nishant Jain, Deepak Shenoy and Abhijit Bhaduri. 7. A Meditation on Form -- Amit Varma. 8. Why Are My Episodes so Long? -- Amit Varma. 9. The Prem Panicker Files -- Episode 217 of The Seen and the Unseen. 10. Jonathan Haidt on Amazon. 11. Where Have All the Leaders Gone? -- Amit Varma. 12. The Ranga-Billa Case. 13. Sarojini Naidu on Amazon. 14. The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi. 15. The Mahatma and the Poet — The letters between Gandhi and Tagore, compiled by Sabyasachi Bhattacharya. 16. Amitava Kumar Finds the Breath of Life -- Episode 265 of The Seen and the Unseen. 17. Margaret Mascarenhas on Amazon. 18. The Web We Have to Save -- Hossein Derakhshan. 19. The Country Without a Post Office -- Agha Shahid Ali. 20. Wanting — Luke Burgis. 21. René Girard on Amazon and Wikipedia. 22. The Silence of Scheherazade -- Defne Suman. 23. Silver -- Walter de la Mare. 24. Lessons from an Ankhon Dekhi Prime Minister — Amit Varma. 25. George Saunders and Barack Obama on Amazon. 26. A life in 5,000 books -- Nilanjana Roy. 27. Surender Mohan Pathak, Ibne Safi and Gabriel Garcia Marquez on Amazon.  28. The Power Broker — Robert Caro. 29. The Death and Life of Great American Cities — Jane Jacobs. 30. JRR Tolkien, Ursula Le Guin and Terry Pratchett on Amazon. 31. Forget reading Thomas Piketty. Try a bit of Terry Pratchett -- Robert Shrimsley. 32. Fifty Shades of Grey -- EL James. 33. Ankur Warikoo, Aanchal Malhotra, Manu Pillai and Ira Mukhoty on Amazon. 34. Mahashweta Devi and Naiyer Masud on Amazon. 35. The former homes of Hurree Babu and Putu the Cat. 36. The Life and Times of Abhinandan Sekhri -- Episode 254 of The Seen and the Unseen. 37. Om Namah Volume -- Amit Varma. 38. Salman's Sea of Stories -- Salman Rushdie's Substack newsletter. 39. What Is It Like to Be a Bat? — Thomas Nagel. 40. The Hidden Life of Trees -- Peter Wohlleben. 41. An Immense World -- Ed Yong. 42. The Twitter thread by Sergej Sumlenny that Nilanjana mentioned. 43. The Inheritance of Loss -- Kiran Desai. 44. The Grapes of Wrath -- John Steinbeck. 45. Pather Panchali --  Bibhutibhushan Bandopadhyay. 46. Gora -- Rabindranath Tagore. 47. William Shakespeare, Kalidasa, Geoffrey Chaucer and Krishna Sobti on Amazon. 48. The Cult of Authenticity -- Vikram Chandra. 49. Meenakshi Mukherjee: The Death of a Critic -- Nilanjana Roy. 50. Field Notes from a Waterborne Land: Bengal Beyond the Bhadralok -- Parimal Bhattacharya. 51. Patriots, Poets and Prisoners: Selections from Ramananda Chatterjee's The Modern Review, 1907-1947 -- Edited by Anikendra Sen, Devangshu Datta and Nilanjana Rao. 52. The City Inside -- Samit Basu. 53. Understanding India Through Its Languages -- Episode 232 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Peggy Mohan). 54. Wanderers, Kings, Merchants: The Story of India through Its Languages — Peggy Mohan. 55. The Life and Times of Mrinal Pande -- Episode 263 of The Seen and the Unseen. 56. Manjula Padmanathan on Amazon. 57. The Life and Letters of Raja Rammohun Roy. 58. If No One Ever Marries Me -- Lawrence Alma-Tadema. 59. If No One Ever Marries Me -- Natalie Merchant. 60. Kavitha Rao and Our Lady Doctors -- Episode 235 of The Seen and the Unseen. 61. Lady Doctors: The Untold Stories of India's First Women in Medicine — Kavitha Rao. 62. The Memoirs of Dr Haimabati Sen — Haimabati Sen (translated by Tapan Raychoudhuri). 63. Women at Work — Episode 132 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Namita Bhandare). 64. The Loneliness of the Indian Woman -- Episode 259 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Shrayana Bhattacharya). 65. Films, Feminism, Paromita — Episode 155 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Paromita Vohra). 66. The Kavita Krishnan Files — Episode 228 of The Seen and the Unseen. 67. Manjima Bhattacharjya: The Making of a Feminist -- Episode 280 of The Seen and the Unseen. 68. I, Lalla: The Poems of Lal Dĕd -- Translated by Ranjit Hoskote. 69. Lal Ded's poem on wrestling with a tiger. 70. Anarchy is a likelier future for the west than tyranny -- Janan Ganesh. 71. The Better Angels of Our Nature -- Steven Pinker. 72. The Ferment of Our Founders -- Episode 272 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Shruti Kapila). 73. Rukmini Sees India's Multitudes — Episode 261 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Rukmini S). 74. A Life in Indian Politics -- Episode 149 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Jayaprakash Narayan). 75. The Gita Press and Hindu Nationalism — Episode 139 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Akshaya Mukul). 76. Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India — Akshaya Mukul. 77. Manohar Malgonkar, Mulk Raj Anand and Kamala Das on Amazon. 78. Kanthapura -- Raja Rao. 79. India's Greatest Civil Servant -- Episode 167 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Narayani Basu, on VP Menon). 80. Private Truths, Public Lies — Timur Kuran. 81. Alice Munro on Amazon. 82. The Bear Came Over the Mountain -- Amit Varma's favourite Alice Munro story. 83. The Median Voter Theorem. 84. The Ice Cream Vendors. 85. Mohammad Zubair's Twitter thread on the Dharam Sansad. 86. The Will to Change -- Bell Hooks. 87. Paul Holdengraber, Maria Popova, Rana Safvi and Rabih Alameddine on Twitter. 88. The hounding of author Kate Clanchy has been a witch-hunt without mercy -- Sonia Sodha. 89. Democrats have stopped listening to America's voters -- Edward Luce. 90. From Cairo to Delhi With Max Rodenbeck -- Episode 281 of The Seen and the Unseen. 91. The Indianness of Indian Food — Episode 95 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Vikram Doctor). 92. GN Devy. 93. The Art of Translation -- Episode 168 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Arunava Sinha). 94. Alipura -- Gyan Chaturvedi (translated by Salil Yusufji). 95. Tomb of Sand -- Geetanjali Shree (translated by Daisy Rockwell). 96. Writer, Rebel, Soldier, Lover: The Many Lives of Agyeya -- Akshaya Mukul. 97. Ashapurna Devi, Agyeya, Saadat Hasan Manto, Ismat Chugtai, Qurratulain Hyder, Amrita Pritam and Girish Karnad on Amazon. 98. The Adventures of Dennis -- Viktor Dragunsky. 99. Toni Morrison on Amazon. 100. Haroun and the Sea of Stories -- Salman Rushdie. 101. The Penguin Book Of Indian Poets -- Edited by Jeet Thayil. 102. These My Words: The Penguin Book of Indian Poetry -- Edited by Eunice de Souza and Melanie Silgardo. 103. The Autobiography of a Goddess -- Andal (translated by Priya Sarrukai Chabria and Ravi Shankar). 104. Ghachar Ghochar — Vivek Shanbhag (translated by Srinath Perur). 105. Amit Varma talks about Ghachar Ghochar in episode 13 of The Book Club on Storytel. 106. River of Fire -- Qurratulain Hyder. 107. The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas -- Ursula K Le Guin. 108. The Left Hand of Darkness -- Ursula K Le Guin. 109. Mother of 1084 -- Mahashweta Devi. 110. Jejuri -- Arun Kolatkar. 111. The Collected Essays of AK Ramanujan -- Edited by Vinay Dharwadker. 112. The Collected Poems of AK Ramanujan. 113. Folktales From India -- Edited by AK Ramanujan. 114. The Interior Landscape: Classical Tamil Love Poems -- Edited and translated by AK Ramanujan. 115. The Essential Kabir -- Translated by Arvind Krishna Mehrotra. This episode is sponsored by CTQ Compounds. Check out The Daily Reader and FutureStack. Use the code UNSEEN for Rs 2500 off. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! The illustration for this episode is by Nishant Jain aka Sneaky Artist. Check out his work on Twitter, Instagram and Substack.

Life - An Inside Job
Inside perimenopause creativity with Laura Graham

Life - An Inside Job

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Jun 29, 2022 58:42


I've been nudging Laura to come and chat with me for ages because I find her story so inspiring, her creativity has just rocketed in the last few years, smack in the middle of perimenopause. She's a poet and comedian from Leeds. She writes brilliantly playful poetry that packs a punch about midlife, menopause and the north. She also does fanny jokes. What's not to love??She has been shortlisted for Leeds Poetry Festival Competition, featured on BBC Radio York and performed at events such as the Vagina Festival and Sonnet Youth Weekender. She is a 2022 Hammer and Tongue national slam finalist. Laura says:If you want to hear more from me and see how I get on at the Albert Hall find me on Instagram @lauragrahamwrites If you want to invite me to read a poem at an event or perform DM me  If you want to hear Stephen James Smith's poem about why we need to create watch this:https://youtu.be/hf1XvPqZ7j0  If you want inspiration on why now read Mary Oliver's poem The Summer Day  If you want to have a go at writing poetry read Grow Your Own Poem by Kate Clanchy and write along with the exercises.  If you want to join a very welcoming online writing community contact Scribblers Union @scrubblersunion If you want to try stand up comedy but are not sure it's for you: It is. Do it.  If you live near Leeds and want to do a comedy course check out https://www.laughatleeds.com  Now tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life? More information about Katehttps://www.katecodrington.co.uk/Instagram @kate_codringtonSecond Spring: the self-care guide to menopause is available from your favourite bookshopYou will find the podcast on Spotify, iTunes and all major platforms, just search for 'Life - An Inside Job'.If you enjoyed the episode yourself, then it would be fab if you shared it with a friend or with your community on social media.MusicTrust Me (instrumental) by RYYZNCreative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0Free Download / StreamMusic promoted by Audio LibraryArtworkPortrait by Lori Fitzdoodles

The Owen Jones Podcast
No, Kate Clanchy Was Not Cancelled

The Owen Jones Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 27:28


This whole saga is completely infuriating. Kate Clanchy is an author who piled on a reviewer who called out racist and bigoted passages in her book; Clanchy denied she'd written them (actually, she had, except she'd written "Ashkenazi nose" rather than "Jewish nose", which is if anything worse), and called on everyone to report the review. What happened next? Women of colour who spoke out about it - not least what it said about the publishing industry - were vilified and abused, while Clanchy was turned into a martyr.One of those women was the brilliant author Monisha Rajesh, who joins me to talk about the truth about what actually happened.Please subscribe - and help us take on the establishment media here: https://patreon.com/owenjones84Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-owen-jones-podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Owen Jones Podcast
The EHRC: A Tory Front Organisation

The Owen Jones Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2022 83:15


he Equalities and Human Rights Commission is supposed to be Britain's official equalities watchdog, but after u-turning on trans rights - after a series of Tory appointments and its former chair warning it was under political pressure to back the government agenda - it's been engulfed in scandal.Investigative work by journalist Ben Hunte has uncovered private meetings between the EHRC and anti-trans rights organisations, while whistleblowers have told him about an anti-LGBTQ culture at the organisation and a failure to recognise racism, leading to an exodus of staff. Ben Hunte joins us to tell us the details, and we're joined by trans commentator Katy Montgomerie to put it all into context.Plus: after author Kate Clanchy piled on a reviewer who pointed out racist and bigoted passages in her books - which she falsely claimed she hadn't written - the author has been turned into a martyr, while women of colour who spoke out about it - and the racism of the wider British publishing industry - have been vilified and dogpiled. We speak to celebrated author Monisha Rajesh who has been viciously trolled online over the saga to tell us the truth.Please subscribe - and help us take on the right wing media: https://patreon.com/owenjones84Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-owen-jones-podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Moral Maze
How Free Should Speech Be?

Moral Maze

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2022 42:25


Yielding to the big star pressure of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, this week Spotify agreed to put a content advisory label on any podcast that includes material about Covid. Mitchell and Young removed their music in protest at Joe Rogan's podcasts. These shows are extremely popular globally but they aired views sceptical of Covid vaccines. In an Instagram post Rogan himself said he'd aim for more impartiality in future, but Spotify's shares are down and more artists are joining the boycott. Who is responsible for the content of Spotify or any other digital platform? Is Covid a special case or must they remove or add a warning about anything any listeners might object to? Is it enough to say sorry or offer to slap on a "contentious material" label? At what point do such safeguards become censorship? And what about other, more traditional, intermediaries? This week the poet and teacher Kate Clanchy said she considered suicide after parting company with her publisher. She'd been accused of racism in the words she used about pupils in her memoir Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me. The students have defended her in print and Clanchy has apologised. And yet the debate goes on. Are publishers morally responsible for their authors ideas and beliefs? If the publisher or internet platform truly disagrees with the material, is it enough to issue an apology or label the offending material as contentious? And does intent count at all? With Journalist Brendan O'Neill, Academic Julie Posetti, Broadcaster Inaya Folarin Iman and Poet Anthony Anaxagorou.

UnHerd with Freddie Sayers
Kate Clanchy: "My life's work has been taken away"

UnHerd with Freddie Sayers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 45:55


Freddie Sayers meets Kate Clanchy.Kate Clanchy is a writer, teacher, and editor. She has been a qualified and practicing teacher since she was 22. Her writing includes three prize-winning collections of poetry, the Costa First Novel Prize-shortlisted Meeting the English, and the Orwell Prize-winning memoir Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me. Last summer her work came under sustained criticism for its purportedly insensitive depictions of her students. Picador, her publisher until last week, did not come to her defence. Instead her students, who feature in her memoir, and in collections of their wiring like England Poem from A School, that Clanchy edited, supported her alone.Last September, at least 20 of them wrote an open letter to The Bookseller defending her. They said their personal experiences of Clanchy were of “unequivocal care and support for us… as poets and as people”. They said they wanted to push back against suggestions that they “may be victims in some capacity.” They said Clanchy's support gave them confidence as poets.The furore around Clanchy made headlines across the UK last summer. She came to the UnHerd studio to discuss her experiences — of teaching, writing, and cancel culture — for the first time with Freddie Sayers.For more read The Post from UnHerd. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Salty Women
Salty Women // Get That A**hole Away From Me & Let Me Learn

Salty Women

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 62:16


This week the Salty Women are joined by Caroline Hunt, the Equal Opportunities Spokesperson for the Women's Equality Party  and ex-secondary school teacher, so the perfect guest to talk about all things Education!  Book of the week this week is the somewhat controversial'Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me' by Kate Clanchy. Trigger warning, brief references to violence against women.

London Calling
Retreat Australia Fair

London Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 50:42


Toby is on the road doing his “footie reporter” thing and after a quick tour of the north country, he and James widen their scope to  take in the draconian measures elsewhere in the Commonwealth, namely that of Dan Andrews, the Premier of Victoria and Jacinda Ardern, the PM of New Zealand. Of course they turn their sights to the unfolding disaster that is the fall of Afghanistan back into the hands of Taliban. In a prologue to Culture Corner we look at the irony of the attempted cancellation of Scottish poet Kate Clanchy and the Orwellian capitulation of the Orwell Foundation. James has started in on HBO’s White Lotus and quite enjoyed it until… well, you’ll find out, and Toby laments the bad turn that Ted Lasso (AppleTV) has taken in Season 2, but he does give a thumbs up to the Netflix movie Beckett. This week’s opening sound of Dan Andrews courtesy of The Guardian of Australia.

The spiked podcast
139: The myth of the climate ‘apocalypse'

The spiked podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2021 36:27


Climate-change alarmism, Kate Clanchy and the new book-burners, and Geronimo the alpaca -- Fraser, Tom and Ella discuss. Become a spiked supporter: https://www.spiked-online.com/supporters/  Visit the spiked shop: https://www.spiked-online.com/shop/ Related articles: Brendan O'Neill: Apocalypse porn https://www.spiked-online.com/2021/08/10/apocalypse-porn/   Fraser Myers: The climate class war https://www.spiked-online.com/2021/08/10/the-climate-class-war/  Joanna Williams: Kate Clanchy: no one is safe from the woke mob https://www.spiked-online.com/2021/08/12/kate-clanchy-no-one-is-safe-from-the-woke-mob/  Fraser Myers: Why Geronimo must die https://www.spiked-online.com/2021/08/09/why-geronimo-must-die/ 

Front Row
Vikingur Olafsson, Power in publishing, Thackray Museum of Medicine.

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2021 41:18


Last year, Icelandic pianist Vikingur Olafsson was Front Row's artist-in-residence from Reykjavik. Finally this week, he's able to join John Wilson in the studio, where he talks playing at the Proms and how great it is to be back performing in front of live audiences. He shares stories from his new Mozart album (including a childhood tantrum against the child prodigy), and plays Mozart and Cimarosa live in the studio. A storm has blown up over poet Kate Clanchy's recent reaction to a review on GoodReads of her book Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me. The reviewer pointed out racist and ableist tropes in the book. Clanchy has now apologised for getting things wrong but initially accused the reviewer of lies. What does the story reveal about the publishing industry and the critical voice? Who is employed and who is listened to, and what lessons can be learned? We hear from the second of the five museums and galleries shortlisted for the prestigious £100,000 Art Fund Museum of the Year 2021. This year's prize will reflect the resilience and imagination of museums during the pandemic, and today we hear from Nat Edwards at The Thackray Museum of Medicine in Leeds. Main image: John Wilson and Vikingur Olafsson Presenter: John Wilson Producer: Julian May

Grande Lectrice
Le problème Kate Clanchy

Grande Lectrice

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2021 19:26


Le problème Kate Clanchy by Grande Lectrice

probl kate clanchy
The Req Room with Mandy and Mio
The CHRISTMAS BREAK Episode

The Req Room with Mandy and Mio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2020 100:24


Christmas break is now in session! On the last episode of the year, Mandy and Mio check in on each other, promising not to ask questions that are "too heady" or "reflective." (Listener, they get super reflective.) Mio recites a traditional Christmas lyric, Mandy talks about different guitar tunings and the American actor Chrys-Efans (sp?), and together they each go through their favorite pop culture discoveries in the Year of Our Lord 2020. Show notes: - Guitar tutorials on Laura Marling's IGTV - End-of-year questionnaire sourced from Jay Adams on Twitter - Jam Pascual's music review IG (@an.average.law) - Kate Clanchy's Twitter account (@KateClanchy1) Follow us on Instagram and Twitter @thereqroompod for more updates! Our theme music: 64 Sundays by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Artist: http://www.twinmusicom.org/

Stig Abell's Guide to Reading
Season 1, Episode 5 - Poetry with Hollie McNish

Stig Abell's Guide to Reading

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2020 38:11


Welcome to Stig Abell’s Guide to Reading. This week, Stig is joined by author and poet Hollie McNish to discuss all things Poetry. From HOW TO GROW YOUR OWN POEM by Kate Clanchy to the works of Emily Dickinson, as well as favourite children’s poems, Shakespeare’s plays and the connection between writing poetry and learning the guitar! The podcast is an accompaniment to Stig's book THINGS I LEARNED ON THE 6.28: A GUIDE TO DAILY READING, published by John Murray Press on 12th November 2020.

Business For Superheroes
Ep239: How to Avoid Looking Like an Amateur

Business For Superheroes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2020 31:57


In an incredible twist of irony, Vicky and Joe are talking about how to avoid looking like an amateur, whilst doing a tremendous job of being absolute amateurs on this podcast. Enjoy the uncontrollable fit of giggles while Joe fails to find his forehead with his own hand, and then settle in as our hosts share the most common mistakes first-time authors make with their books. Just because your book is self-published doesn't mean it needs to LOOK self-published. Check this out...   Key Takeaways: [2:25] Vicky dyed her hair and now she has blue ears.  [6:15] Just because you’re self published doesn’t mean you have to look self-published! [8:35] Do not do your book cover yourself. [11:05] Odds numbered pages are always, always on the right hand side.  [11:45] Let’s talk about inner book navigation. [15:40] The white spaces and margins are a dead giveaway whether something has been published vs. self-published.  [20:00] How should you think about text layout?  [22:05] Hiring certain professionals in this process is money well spent.  [24:15] Check the little details! Vicky shares what she means.  [26:10] Interested in barcode readers? Joe knows the answer to it.  [27:45] Just become a person who writes everyday. [29:55] How do you finish a chapter? Tune in next week!  Mentioned in This Episode: Website Vicky on Medium Order Vicky’s new book! Book checklist 90-day Book Course Join Vicky’s Power Hour Banish the Blank Page of Doom-Fast: Why Writer's Block is a Myth, and Other Stories by Vicky Fraser Projectdingle.co.uk Chemicaltranslator.com Subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, and Overcast Bookshop.org Vellum.pub The Bus Driver Who Wanted To Be God & Other Stories, by Etgar Keret  Carpe Jugulum, by Terry Pratchett The Secret Lives of Colour, by Kassia St Clair Neuromancer, by William Gibson Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me Book by Kate Clanchy

Business For Superheroes
Ep237: A Crash Course in Editing Part II

Business For Superheroes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2020 35:00


Vicky and Joe go all-out for Halloween this year, with an episode that has absolutely nothing to do with spookiness at all. Although you do get to hear the word xenotransplant, which sounds pretty Frankensteiny. Speaking of cutting things up and improving them, that's what this episode is all about: how to copy edit your own manuscript. This week's nattering is packed with tips to help you take your draft from good to splendid. Happy editing!   Key Takeaways: [6:00] Vicky and Joe have new windows!  [8:05] What is the difference between copyediting and proofreading?  [12:00] Search for words you tend to use a lot and see if you can rewrite it in a different way.  [12:30] Get rid of your exclamation marks!!!!!!! [13:30] Make an effort to use simpler words.  [17:30] Get rid of needless words.  [21:15] Ditch words like ‘very’, and other boring words.  [23:30] Leverage your metrics more effectively by being specific.  [27:20] Tip you might want to try: Read your book backwards. Vicky doesn’t have the patience to do this, though.  [30:35] Vicky and Joe read your reviews!    Mentioned in This Episode: Website Vicky on Medium Order Vicky’s new book! 90-day Book Course Join Vicky’s Power Hour Subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, and Overcast Don't Touch My Hair, by Emma Dabiri The Bus Driver Who Wanted To Be God & Other Stories, by Etgar Keret  Read Books All Day and Get Paid For It, by Jennie Nash Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me, by Kate Clanchy

Front Row
Poetry and performance from Cumbria's Contains Strong Language festival

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2020 41:12


Dove Cottage Grasmere is the heart of Romantic poetry and is hosting part of this year's Contains Strong Language festival. We'll be asking what the Romantics have to tell us now, with the poet Kate Clanchy who has adapted Samuel Taylor Coleridge's unfinished poem Christabel with a newly commissioned score by composer Katie Chatburn. Novelist, poet and playwright Zosia Wand was born in London but didn't speak English till she went to school and spent all her holidays in Poland. Now she's written a radio play Bones - set on the sandbanks of Morecambe Bay - exploring how it feels to be a migrant and the emotional impact on the generations that follow. In 2005 the award winning poet and novelist Jacob Polley’s home town of Carlisle flooded catastrophically after heavy rain. Three people died and thousands were left homeless in an event that was supposed to be a one in a hundred year event. Now Jacob Polley’s returned to that time for a new play Emergency. It’s a love story set against a merciless storm voiced through ancient Anglo-Saxon riddles about the power of nature. And we discuss the impact of poetry in isolation with the young poet Hannah Hodgson who is living with a life limiting disease. She'll read from her lockdown collection and discuss how poetry managed to say what we needed to say this year from zoom poetry slams to tik tok haikus.

Front Row
The office in culture, Kate Clanchy, publishers' Super Thursday

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2020 28:26


As major City firms and the likes of Facebook and Google allow their employees to work from home for the foreseeable future, does it herald the end of the office as we know it? And what does it mean for culture? From Working Girl to The Office, The Bell Jar to Joshua Ferris’s Then We Came To An End, the office has provided rich inspiration for the arts. We discuss the history of the office in culture and contemplate what comes next with writer Jonathan Lee and film and TV critic Hannah McGill. The Orwell Prize-winning writer and teacher Kate Clanchy has spent years with young people helping them to become poets. Some of her students are from migrant or refugee families and have brought with them rich poetic traditions; some from home backgrounds that haven’t traditionally seen poetry as a world open to them. Now she has written a book, How to Grow Your Own Poem, which details the way that she uses existing poems and her students’ lived experience to teach – a method that she believes anyone can follow to write their own poem. The start of September would always be a busy time for new books, jostling for attention in the run up to the lucrative Christmas buying period. But lockdown saw many publishers freeze releases from March onwards. And today the floodgates were opened meaning the launch of an unprecedented 590 hardbacks, 28% up on last year. To explore what this means for writers, publishers and consumers Samira is joined by Thea Lenarduzzi, commissioning editor at the Times Literary Supplement, and Kit Caless co-founder and editor at independent publisher Influx Press. Presenter: Samira Ahmed Studio producer: Hilary Dunn

The Verb
Language Lockdown

The Verb

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 48:30


A few months ago, writing an email to a colleague that starts 'I hope you are safe in these extraordinary times' would have been an unusual thing to do, but it very quickly became 'the new normal'. This week Ian McMillan and guests look at the many ways in which our language has adapted to fit our our new routines, from Zooming with friends to socially distancing in supermarkets. Rob Drummond, The Verb's resident linguist has been keeping an ear out for the neologisms of our time, and Kate Clanchy presents some of the work written by her students as part of their weekly online poetry classes. With more time to read, many of us are finding solace in our bookshelves, and discovering new resonances in classic texts. In a piece especially recorded for The Verb, Julie Hesmondhalgh reads from Ruth, by Elizabeth Gaskell, accompanied by Nicholas Howson & Ruth Montgomery from the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, just two of the many musicians who have turned their creative energies towards new ways to perform and collaborate. We also hear from just a few of the poets and performers responding to Lockdown - Hollie McNish, Michael Dickman, and Morgan Bassichis. Presenter: Ian McMillan Producer: Jessica Treen

Creative Cuppa
Kate Clanchy: writer & teacher

Creative Cuppa

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 10:39


Host: Gareth Davies. Produced by The Sound Boutique. Gareth chats with writer, teacher and journalist Kate Clanchy MBE about her work and keeping in touch with her students. Links Kate's author web page: https://bit.ly/39GeFYY Here's that link to Timi Amusan's poem about Oxford: https://bbc.in/3aKYGdI Twitter (where Kate shows off her students' poems): https://bit.ly/2VeFujf Creative Cuppa Homepage: https://bit.ly/32iKRBw Starting a podcast? See what The Sound Boutique can do for you: https://bit.ly/2Zl3q6s Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/creativecuppa)

Where Did It All Go Right?
S2 Episode 3 - Kate Clanchy - Poet

Where Did It All Go Right?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2020 29:07


Ali Jones talks to some of our best-loved creatives about how they caught their break. This week Ali chats to poet Kate Clanchy. Whilst her own writing has won a litany of awards, Kate dedicates much of her time to teaching young writers. She is the author of Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me and editor of England Poems From A School.

poet ali jones kate clanchy
Front Row
The BBC National Short Story Award ceremony

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2019 28:19


Five authors have been shortlisted for the 2019 BBC National Short Story Award and the Young Writers' Award, the winners of which will be announced in front of a live audience in the BBC Radio Theatre. Lucy Caldwell, Lynda Clark, Jacqueline Crooks, Tamsin Grey and Jo Lloyd are competing for the NSSA whose former winners include Lionel Shriver, Sarah Hall and Kate Clanchy. John Wilson is joined by judges of both awards, as well as the Chair of the NSSA Judges, Nikki Bedi. Presenter John Wilson Producer Jerome Weatherald

Tell Me The Truth About Life: Poems That Matter and Why
4: Tell Me The Truth About Life: Kate Clanchy

Tell Me The Truth About Life: Poems That Matter and Why

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2019 33:55


To celebrate National Poetry Day’s 25th anniversary, join Scottish poet, writer and teacher Kate Clanchy as she reads and discusses her favourite poems, and the lines of poetry that speak truth to her.   An award-winning poet, novelist and non-fiction writer, Kate was born in Glasgow and lived in London’s East End for several years before moving to Oxford where she is now writer-in-residence at Oxford Spires Academy, a comprehensive where the children speak over 30 languages. Winner of prizes including the Forward Poetry Prize and Scottish Arts Council Book Award, her recent book Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me looks back over her 30-year career in teaching, and she writes for various national newspapers and BBC Radio.   Sharing and discussing poems including Poem by Simon Armitage (specially read by Simon himself), When I Came from Nepal by Mukahang Limbu and The Wild Swans at Coole by W. B. Yeats, she talks about women poets, her experiences in how pupils write poems and respond to them, and the process of writing authentically.   Tell Me The Truth About Life: A National Poetry Day Anthology, curated by Cerys Matthews, is published by Michael O’Mara Books. Share poems that speak a truth to you via Twitter using #TellMeTheTruthAboutLife.

Rathbones Look forward Series with Andrea Catherwood

In the latest episode of the Rathbones Look forward Series, Andrea Catherwood is joined by award winning writer, teacher and journalist Kate Clanchy. Her latest book Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me has been called 'one of the most inspiring books about teaching ever written'.  Kate Clanchy wants to change the world and thinks school is an excellent place to do it.

teaching series kate clanchy
Rathbones Folio Prize Podcasts
How To Write A Book In A Day

Rathbones Folio Prize Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2019 53:26


They say that everyone has a book in them. But not everyone manages to write it. The Rathbones Folio Sessions 'How To Write a Book in a Day' took place on 19 May 2019 at the British Library, and gathered some of the best writers at work today, to discuss the joys and pitfalls of their practice and process. The all-day sessions were chaired by writer, performer and comedienne A.L. Kennedy.    Part One: The Beginning features Kate Clanchy and Guy Stagg. 

Backlisted
The Baron in the Trees by Italo Calvino

Backlisted

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2019 63:15


Italo Calvino's third novel The Baron in the Trees (Il barone rampante) is the subject of this episode. Joining John and Andy to discuss the book is writer and fabulist Caspar Henderson. Elsewhere, John is captivated by Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me by Kate Clanchy and Andy talks about and reads from W.H. Auden's late collection of poetry About the House.

house trees baron italo calvino auden kate clanchy caspar henderson
Start the Week
The power of poetry

Start the Week

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2019 42:17


Rowan Williams celebrates The Book of Taliesin – legendary Welsh poems of enchantment and warfare. The former Archbishop of Canterbury tells Andrew Marr how the collection of poems speak of a lost world of folklore and mythology, and the figure of Taliesin is an elusive and exuberant creative poetic fiction. Martin Sixsmith tells the extraordinary story of the Russian poet Sergei Yesenin at the turn of the 20th century. Yesenin lived through the most turbulent times in Russian history, and during an age when poets were stars, and millions could recite his works by heart. The poet Jay Bernard has found inspiration in exploring the black British archive, and the enquiry into the New Cross Fire in 1981 which killed thirteen young people. The poems shine a light on an unacknowledged chapter in British history, and find resonance with the horror of the Grenfell tower fire two years ago. The poet, writer and teacher, Kate Clanchy has seen first-hand poetry’s unique ability to unleash young voices. At the multicultural school in Oxford where she teaches, students speak 30 languages and poetry has become a vital part of bringing pupils together, giving them pride in their work and allowing them to express the reality of their lives. Producer: Katy Hickman Image of Jay Bernard, taken by Joshua Virasami

5x15
Some kids I taught - and what they taught me - Kate Clanchy and Mukhahang Limbu

5x15

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019 21:20


Kate Clanchy is a writer, poet, teacher and journalist. She has a thirty-year career in teaching and is the recipient of several awards for her writing including a Forward Prize for her poetry collection Slattern. Her novel Meeting the English was shortlisted for the Costa Prize. Clanchy’s BBC Radio 3 programme We Are Writing A Poem About Home was a collaborative work with students and was shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award 2015. In 2018 an anthology of her students’ work, England: Poems from a School, was published to great acclaim, and she was awarded an MBE for services to literature. Her new book, Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me, has been called, by Philip Pullman: ‘the best book on teachers and children and writing that I've ever read’. @KateClanchy1 Mukahang Limbu is an 18 year old Nepalese writer based in Oxford. He is a 3-time Foyle Young Poet, a SLAMmbassador, and has won the First Story National Competition. In 2019 he was also the recipient of the Outspoken prize for poetry. His poems have been published in ‘England: Poems from a School’, an anthology written by migrants and he is a die-hard fan of poets Ocean Vuong, Raymond Antrobus, Mary Jean Chan, Frank O'Hara and Rebecca Perry, among many others. @mukki_s1 Recorded live at Wilton's Music Hall London in April 2019. 5x15 brings together five outstanding individuals to tell of their lives, passions and inspirations. There are only two rules - no scripts and only 15 minutes each. Learn more about 5x15 events: 5x15stories.com Twitter: www.twitter.com/5x15stories Facebook: www.facebook.com/5x15stories Instagram: www.instagram.com/5x15stories ‏

North Cornwall Book Festival
Kate Clanchy & Andrew McMillan

North Cornwall Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2018 57:05


Poets Andrew McMillan and Kate Clanchy read from their work in St Endellion Church.

andrew mcmillan kate clanchy
Front Row
Fly by Night, Tim Winton, Poems by teenagers, Music discovered in a painting

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2018 33:16


Australian writer Tim Winton discusses The Shepherd's Hut, his first novel in five years. Set in the parched landscape of his native Western Australia, the young protagonist Jaxie attempts to flee from his abusive father on a journey that takes him to some dark and challenging places.England: Poems from a School is a anthology of poems that has just been published. They were written by school children aged between 11 and 18, most of whom come from migrant families who have settled in the UK. The children attend the comprehensive, Oxford Spires Academy, where the writer in residence is poet and writer Kate Clanchy - she runs workshops there and edited the anthology. Kate joins Sharmaine along with two of the young poets.As Norwich Castle reunites a 17th Century Dutch painting with the treasures and objects that feature in it, curator Francesca Vanke explores the mysteries behind the painting called The Paston Treasure.We return to Thamesmead to see the first performance of Fly by Night, a performance piece created by American artist Duke Riley involving 1500 pigeons. Each bird has a small LED light attached to their legs representing the messages they would once have carried over the battlefields of the First World War. Presenter: Sharmaine Lovegrove Producer: Rebecca Armstrong.

The Essay
Kate Clanchy

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2018 13:36


Muriel Spark is best known for her witty novels but she began as a poet, and her gravestone describes her as "poeta." Poet Kate Clanchy discusses Muriel Spark - poet. Muriel Spark was a Scot, an exile, a poet, a codebreaker, a convert to a particularly Calvinist form of Catholicism from a particularly low-key Judaism and the cosmopolitan author of slender, sophisticated novels whose bestselling book mined her own schooldays in the Edinburgh of the 1930s. She may be most famous for "The Prime of Jean Brodie" but she wrote more than 20 novels, plus poems and plays. She is a writer of many facets, all of them glittering, and is now recognised as the most important Scottish writer of the 20th century. In this series, five Scottish women writers give five very different takes on the novels and life of Mrs Spark.

Medicine Unboxed
MAPS - Kate Clanchy - REFUGE

Medicine Unboxed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2017 32:05


Kate Clanchy is the author of two prize-winning collections of poetry, 'Slattern' which won the Forward Poetry Prize (Best First Collection) and a Somerset Maugham Award, and 'Samarkand', which was shortlisted for the Forward Poetry Prize (Best Poetry Collection of the Year) and won a Scottish Arts Council Book Award. Her poetry has been broadcast by BBC Radio and published in The Scotsman, the New Statesman and Poetry Review. She writes for radio and broadcasts on the World Service and BBC Radio 3 and 4. Her poetry collection 'Newborn' covers pregnancy, birth and caring for a new baby, and she wrote a poetic picture book for children, 'Our Cat Henry Comes to the Swings'. 'What Is She Doing Here?: A Refugee's Story' (2008) won the 2008 Writers' Guild Award (Best Book) and in 2013 her first novel 'Meeting the English' was published.

The Writer and the Critic
Episode 57: Get in Trouble | What is Not Yours is Not Yours

The Writer and the Critic

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2016 95:43


This month on The Writer and the Critic your hosts, Kirstyn McDermott and Ian Mond, plunge straight into discussing two short story collections, Get in Trouble by Kelly Link [1:30] and What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours by Helen Oyeyemi [40:10].  Listeners might like to check out the following links mentioned during the podcast: Get in Trouble reviewed by David Ulin in the Los Angeles Times What is Not Yours is Not Yours reviewed by Nina Allan in Strange Horizons What is Not Yours is Not Yours reviewed by Kate Clanchy in the Guardian If you've skipped ahead to avoid spoilers, please come back at 1:33:30 for final remarks. Up for discussion on the next episode - which will be the first episode of 2017! - are two more  short story collections: Bødy by Asa Nonami Ghost Summer: Stories by Tananarive Due Read ahead and join in the spoilerific fun!

writer trouble critic kelly link helen oyeyemi kate clanchy david ulin nina allan
Arts & Ideas
Proms Poetry Competition - 08 September 15

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2015 33:19


Radio 3 presenter Ian McMillan, poet Kate Clanchy and Judith Palmer of the Poetry Society introduce the winning entries in this year's Proms Poetry Competition. The Poems are read by Carolyn Pickles.

The Guardian Books podcast
Surprising stories with Steve Toltz and Kate Clanchy - books podcast

The Guardian Books podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2015 38:20


The Australian novelist on transforming his own woes into comedy and Kate Clanchy on defying commercial pressure to produce a ‘literary hand grenade'

Arts & Ideas
Prom Plus Literary - Philip Larkin

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2014 21:10


Poets Andrew Motion and Kate Clanchy discuss the writing of Philip Larkin and his collection, 'Whitsun Weddings', which was first published 50 years ago in 1964. This programme presented by Matthew Sweet, was recorded in front of an audience at The Royal College of Music as part of the BBC Proms. To find out further information about the events which are free to attended go to bbc.co.uk/proms.

Front Row: Archive 2013
Karl Hyde; Harold Pinter's The Hothouse; Kate Clanchy; Jodi Picoult

Front Row: Archive 2013

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2013 28:40


With John Wilson. Karl Hyde, of electronic duo Underworld, has worked with prominent film directors Danny Boyle and Anthony Minghella. Along with his partner Rick Smith, he was also the musical director of the London 2012 Olympics. Hyde talks about his latest project, Edgeland - a soundtrack for The Outer Edges, a film about Essex - and reveals the real inspiration behind their trance anthem Born Slippy. Harold Pinter's The Hothouse is in a rare revival on the London stage, starring John Simm and Simon Russell Beale. Writer Iain Sinclair delivers his verdict on the play about a bureaucratic mental institution run by a sadist. Poet Kate Clanchy won the National Short Story award in 2009 with her story The Not-Dead and the Saved. Now she has taken the next literary leap by writing her first novel Meeting the English. She explains how the book came about, despite her vow that she'd never write a novel. In the latest episode of Cultural Exchange, in which creative minds select a favourite art-work, best-selling author Jodi Picoult nominates Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937. Producer Ellie Bury.

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts
StAnza Podcast 2009 19th March Day 2

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2009 26:41


In our first full day podcast, we've got excerpts from this year's StAnza discussion, where Kate Clanchy, Thomas A Clark, David Mach, Peter McCarey and Stephen Scobie explore Scottish identity and Homecoming within the context of the national's poetic heritage. We've also got a reading from Stephen Scobie's new collection "Robert Louis Stevenson:From World's End" and a few kind words from poets Robert Crawford and Kate Clanchy about StAnza. Produced and presented by Colin Fraser.

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts
StAnza 2009 Opening Night Podcast

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2009 27:50


Capturing some of the excitement of StAnza's spectacular opening evening, we have an interview with David Mach, sculptor and Burns burner; poems from acclaimed poets Bill Manhire and Kate Clanchy; music from the amazing Sheena Wellington; and the StAnza 2009 opening speech from Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond. With thanks to Gill Bowman and Ewen Maclean for use of their tracks. Produced and presented by Colin Fraser for StAnza.

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts
StAnza 2009 Preview Podcast

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2009 21:02


A preview of StAnza - Scotland's Poetry Festival - 18th - 22nd March in St Andrews. Featuring music from Gill Bowman, poetry from Kate Clanchy and readings of Ros Brackenbury, Bill Manhire, Adam O'Riordan and Jenny Bornholdt who will all participate in this year's festival. More info at www.stanzapoetry.org

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts
StAnza 2009 Preview Podcast without Pictures (mp3 format)

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2009 21:02


A preview of StAnza - Scotland's Poetry Festival - 18th - 22nd March in St Andrews. Featuring music from Gill Bowman, poetry from Kate Clanchy and readings of Ros Brackenbury, Bill Manhire, Adam O'Riordan and Jenny Bornholdt who will all participate in this year's festival. More info at www.stanzapoetry.org