Wednesday, 25 August 2010

Libraries must not be a 'soft touch' for cuts - The Bookseller Article

Article from The Bookseller...

The Reading Agency has said libraries should "not be a soft target for cuts" after statistics released last week showed a continued decline in library visitors. The stats have led to a media blitz on the issue of libraries, with some campaigners suggesting that up to 1,000 libraries could be under threat from local government cuts.

Last week, the Department for Culture, Media and Sports' (DCMS) Taking Part: The National Survey of Culture, Leisure and Sport report showed a 1.7% decrease in the number of library goers last year. But the agency said that digging deeper into the statistics showed that there was not just a "straightforward picture of a decline in public interest and take up". It said instead that children and young people's use was steady, with children's book borrowing rising for five years in a row.

The Reading Agency also said the best libraries offered a range of groups, activities and services to deliver added value. It said "the social consequences of this more active approach are profound".

The agency singled out the Summer Reading Challenge for children, and the Six Book Challenge for emergent adult readers as two initiatives which have had a positive response from the public. The Summer Reading Challenge saw 725,000 children take part in 2009, an increase of 5% on the 2008 total. This year it is estimated more than 750,000 children will take part. For the Six Book Challenge 13,500 adults registered this year - up 50% on 2009.

In a statement the agency said: "In tough financial times, we cannot afford to undercut libraries' ability to create a nation of readers, our literacy skills deficit is already too large. The scale of cuts means the library network is unlikely to survive in its current shape, so prioritizing and innovating will be key."

It added: "We must not lose sight of libraries' radical social purpose ... They should not be a soft target for cuts."

Monday, 23 August 2010

James Tait Black Memorial Prizes - Winners Announced

Novelist A S Byatt and literary critic John Carey have been crowned winners of Britain’s oldest literary awards, the £10,000 James Tait Black Memorial Prizes.

Byatt was awarded the fiction prize for her Man Booker-shortlisted The Children’s Book at the ceremony on Friday (20th August), while Carey took home the biography prize for his book William Golding: The Man Who Wrote Lord of the Flies. Golding himself took home the prize in 1979.

The prizes, founded in 1919, are for the best work of fiction and the best biography published during the previous 12 months. They are the only major British book awards judged by scholars and students.

Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Finalists revealed for Specsavers Crime Thriller Awards 2010.

The Dagger finalists are -
CWA GOLD DAGGER 2010
Blacklands - Belinda Bauer
Blood Harvest - S J Bolton
Shadowplay - Karen Campbell
The Way Home - George Pelecanos

CWA IAN FLEMING STEEL DAGGER 2010, SPONSORED BY IAN FLEMING PUBLICATIONS LTD
A Loyal Spy - Simon Conway
Innocent - Scott Turow
The Dying Light - Henry Porter
The Gentlemen's Hour - Don Winslow

CWA JOHN CREASEY (NEW BLOOD) DAGGER 2010
Acts of Violence - Ryan David Jahn
Rupture - Simon Lelic
The Holy Thief - William Ryan
The Pull of the Moon - Diane Janes

The winners will be announced on the 8th October at a ceremony broadcast on ITV3 on 12th October.