Adam Mars-Jones in April

Tuesday evening, 11 April - 7 to 8:30, at the Library (or online)

Local author Adam Mars-Jones has an international reputation - his works include novels (The Waters of Thirst, Pilcrow and its sequel Cedilla) short story collections (Lantern Lecture and Monopolies of Loss) the novella Batlava Lake, a book of essays (Blind Bitter Happiness) and Noriko Smiling (a book about Ozu's film Late Spring) and numerous perceptive book reviews (appearing frequently in London Review of Books). He will join us on Tuesday evening (11 April) to talk about about his funny and touching family memoir Kid Gloves: A Voyage Round My Father.

When his widowed father - once a high court judge and always a formidable figure - drifted into vagueness if not dementia, Adam took responsibility for his care.

In the aftermath, he has written a book studded with particular emotions and events. Highly entertaining about (among other things) families, the legal profession, and the vexed question of Welsh identity. It is also a book about himself - including that implausible, long-delayed moment, some years before, when he told his father about his sexual orientation. The supporting cast includes Ian Fleming, the Moors Murderers, Jacqueline Bisset and Gilbert O'Sullivan.

Organised by the Friends of Carnegie Library

Please register with eventbrite for a link to the online livestream.

Naomi Clifford – Out of the Shadows

Essays on 18th and 19th Century Women - at the library (or online)

Tuesday evening 14 March, 7-8:30

Meet Eliza Fenning, a servant whose ability to read proved fatal; teenager Maria Glenn, dragged through the courts by a vengeful would-be suitor; Margaret Larney, pregnant and condemned to death; Mary Ashford, whose woeful end was staged on the opening night of a famous theatre; and French anarchist Louise Michel, welcomed, to the consternation of the great and the good, on a fact-finding visit to a London workhouse.

Join historian Naomi Clifford to discuss her new book, Out of the Shadows, a collection of essays which explores the lives of women whose stories we have forgotten or never known. The 19th-century societies for the aid of discharged prisoners. Above all, the extraordinary work of Susanna Meredith with women in Vauxhall.

Organised by the Friends of Carnegie Library

Register to attend online via Eventbrite