Sunday, September 27, 2009

Village Voice Bookshop invitation to Margo Berdeshevsky reading

Tél. : 01 46 33 36 47
Fax : 01 46 33 27 48
6 rue Princesse
75006 PARIS

Our New Readers' Series: all readings at 7 pm sharp
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12th
Margo Berdeshevsky
returns to the Village with a new book:
Beautiful Soon Enough
' A thrillingly cutting-edge work of photos and short stories flowing together into an extended erotic dream that limns the inner lives of women deeply yearning for connection and authenticity. This is a splendid book’ Robert Olen Butler.
'So much verbal beauty, with the eternal quality of the tale or fable.' 
Marilyn Hacker
A lifelong voyager, Margo Berdeshevsky is currently living in Paris.
Margo Berdeshevsky will be introduced 
by the American poet 
Jerome Rothenberg.

"Beauty is the purgation of superfluities"
— Michelangelo Buonarroti

please visit my websites:
http://www.redroom.com/author/margo-berdeshevsky
http://margoberdeshevsky.blogspot.com/

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Stanley Lover, Chronicles of a Timid Lover

Review by Pamela Lake

At our last ‘First Tuesday’, on 1st September 2009, Stanley Lover brought in a copy of his memoirs, Chronicles of a Timid Lover, self-published, which we all admired. The minutes of the meeting and the on-going debate on self-publishing are reproduced in several articles below. Here Pamela Lake, our Secretary, reviews the book.

SOAF member, Stanley Lover, has recently self-published his memoirs, Chronicles of a Timid Lover, in an attractively illustrated hardback edition. It is the story of a life filled with rich and varied experiences which began in considerable hardship.

Stanley was born in December 1925 in a basement flat in Blackheath, the youngest of eight children - five boys and three girls - and grew up during the Depression. His father, who drank heavily, earned little and his mother struggled to feed the family but always managed to put a meal on the table - a favourite dish was bubble-and-squeak pie. Life was hard: Stanley’s parents had frequent rows about money, punishments were harsh and the children were beaten with a leather strap or locked in the coal hole if they were naughty. But in spite of this, there were some compensations. Stanley discovered football, which became a lifelong passion, and there were regular trips to the cinema to see cowboy films, musicals and Disney’s Fantasia. Although they were short of cash to buy tickets, he and his brother discovered a way of sneaking in without paying and they also succeeded in seeing X certificate Boris Karloff horror films which were in principle forbidden to children under sixteen.

At the age of only fourteen, in January 1940, Stanley left school and began work, first as a machine hand in the turning shop of Siemens Wireless and Cable Factory in Woolwich and afterwards as a salesman in a Dolcis’ shoe shop. He did fire fighting duty during the Blitz and narrowly escaped death when a cluster of incendiary bombs fell close to his home. His dream was to be an RAF pilot but he was too young, so he became an ATC cadet and learned to fly. In 1944, when he was eighteen, he was at last able to join the RAF and, although the war ended before he saw active service, he received a training which was invaluable during his subsequent studies in Mechanical Engineering.

After his work in the shoe shop, Stanley worked as a technical drawing office junior and later as a draughtsman. It was there that he met Jessie, who was a secretary with the company. They fell in love but there were difficulties - because she was married. When her husband returned from the war he refused to divorce her and became violent. She left him and set up house with Stanley and they had two sons, but it was only after twenty-six years that they were finally able to marry. Sadly, just as they were moving into their first home in 1946, Stanley learned that he had tuberculosis. Streptomycin was still in its infancy and so he spent long months in a sanatorium having the usual treatment at that time for a collapsed lung. During his time in the sanatorium, he discovered a talent for drawing and painting and thought of taking up commercial art as a career rather than mechanical engineering. Eventually he was persuaded that it would be an unwise move as work was hard to come by and instead he qualified as a mechanical engineer.

Stanley’s work as an engineer has taken him to many parts of the world, including Malaysia, Latin America, Africa and China. His experiences negotiating contracts in Peking during the period of Mao’s ‘Great Leap Forward’ make fascinating reading, but during his time there he was also delighted to be able to study the state of Chinese football. For not only has Stanley travelled widely in his capacity as a mechanical engineer; he has been a football referee in many countries. He is passionate about football, has written a number of books on it and is also a keen golfer.

In 1974 Stanley’s first marriage was virtually over and he spent a holiday alone in Tenerife. It was there that he met his adored second wife, Gilberte and he moved to France. They married in 1977 and live in Neuilly where they met Nicolas Sarkozy on a number of occasions when he was Mayor. There is a charming photo in the book of Gilberte with a young-looking Sarkozy in 1992 when he awarded her with a career medal.

Stanley is something of a Renaissance Man. Apart from his passion for sport, he is a gifted painter and sculptor and the cover painting on his book of the West Lake in Hangchow is by him. In his youth he also sang in amateur productions of Iolanthe and The Pirates of Penzance. He loves classical music and regrets that he never studied the piano. In fact, he did begin having lessons as a child in 1941 and the story of them is a poignant moment in the book, which sticks in my mind.

Stanley wanted to learn the piano, but money was a problem until finally he found a Mrs Digby who agreed to give him a one -hour lesson each week for three months for a sum of twenty-five shillings. He practised on the wreck of a piano in his parents’ flat and after six lessons he had made some progress. Mrs Digby said that she would give him a test the next time he came, to see if he was ready to start playing real pieces. He had five days in which to prepare and he worked hard at his exercises. The great day arrived and he set out for his teacher’s house. When he arrived, he saw a gaping void: Mrs Digby’s house and the adjoining terrace houses had been completely destroyed by a bomb. Stanley never played the piano again.

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Minutes of SOAF First Tuesday meeting at Carr’s Irish Pub on Tuesday, 1 September, 2009

Minutes taken by Pamela Lake

Present

Gregor Dallas
Pamela Lake
Gwyneth Hughes
Stanley Lover
Anne Morddel
Jim Pollard
Annabel Simms
Pierre Tran
Emma Vandore

Three subjects were discussed at this meeting. The first was W.H. Smith’s deal by which Penguin Books will become the sole supplier of foreign travel guides in Smith’s airport, motorway and railway station outlets. This is a very worrying development which is harmful to authors and so far the Society of Authors in London has not made any protest. However, John Toner, Freelance Officer of the National Union of Journalists has launched a campaign and has written to the Office of Fair Trade. Gregor has written to him expressing his support.

After a lively discussion, the following decisions were made:

1; Check whether Which has taken the matter up.

2. Find out how John Toner’s protest is progressing via the NUJ

3. Write to Head Office, SoA, London, to ask what they intend to do about the matter

4. Check whether there is a travel writers’ association

5. Consider what other bodies could be consulted - for example, the European Commission on the legality of the W.H. Smith/Penguin deal.

The second subject was who will be chairman of SOAF after Gregor Dallas’s three-year term expires this October. An appeal for candidates was made in Gregor’s August email; so far no one has applied for this exciting, unpaid job. A second appeal will be launched this September.

The third subject discussed was self-publishing. Stanley Lover produced a copy of his memoirs, Chronicles of a Timid Lover, which he has self-published in hardback with the firm M.C.T. Biddles. The book is very well produced - good paper, several pages of photographs and an attractive cover design. Stanley ordered 100 copies, intended for family and friends, and they were delivered within one month at a total cost of £946.81p. He may now consider going into paperback and trying to attract a publisher.

Everyone remarked on the excellent quality of the book which was vastly superior to that of other self-publishing firms members had used. Anne Morddel had used Lulu, but only to train herself, before self-publishing entirely on her own. She said that with Lulu she had had to do all the work herself and that they used poor quality paper.

One of the major drawbacks to self-publishing is that it is virtually impossible to get the national press to review one's book. The general feeling of the meeting was that authors should consider getting together in some kind of consortium and creating a joint publishing venture. It has been done before and could be again.