We had our last Edinburgh International Book Festival board meeting
of the year yesterday. It has been a fascinating year as world events swirl around
us and we’ve found ourselves debating issues as diverse as whether to initiate
a cultural exchange involving representatives of the Chinese government, and
what might be the pros and cons of a potential new media relationship with the Murdoch
organisation (this before the hacking scandal broke and vindicated our eventual
decision).
Yesterday it was one of the smaller agenda items that intrigued
me most, a snippet in director Nick Barley’s report concerning our bookselling
operation. The temporary, tented bookshop in Charlotte Sq turns over nearly £600,000
in the 17 days of the festival. It’s an integral part of the proceedings, a large
airy space where you can browse, have coffee and meet authors at after-event
book signings. It carries a vast range of fiction and non-fiction, including of
course the current titles of all the 700-odd authors appearing. This year our
two bestselling titles, both at around 350 copies, were Liz Lochhead’s A Choosing and Carol Ann Duffy’s The Bees.
Two poetry titles.
Not fiction. Not memoir. Not biography.
Poetry.
What does that say? That in times of uncertainty we
turn to poetry for meaning? That in an age of increasing digitisation, the role
of the book as artefact is still essential as the physical setting for poetry? Or
simply that a poet at the top of her game, as both these are, can say more to
us about the business of being human than any novelist, biographer or historian
ever can?
It could be any or all of these things, though it may
not be indicative of a trend. Of all the places on the planet where
one is most likely to find a concentration of poetry buyers, it’s Charlotte Sq
in August.
Nevertheless, it’s heartening; particularly since, as
I mentioned last week, we’re hoping to produce a volume of all the writing from
the four 26 Treasures projects via the crowd-sourced publisher Unbound. And
most of those pieces are poems – not necessarily because people set out to
write poems when first confronted with their museum objects, but because the
constraint of 62 words ends up shoe-horning most people’s thoughts into the poetic
form.
As I write this I realise what an apt metaphor it is
for the approach of Christmas, the constraint of the last few days. Everything
gets shoe-horned into a frantic burst of last-minute activity. I’m hoping that
something creative comes out of it. Inspired present-buying would do. Kindness,
love and family togetherness would be better.
See you in 2012.
PS... Since first posting this, Tessa Ransford has emailed to remind me of this, which she has now designated her Christmas poem for 2011:
PS... Since first posting this, Tessa Ransford has emailed to remind me of this, which she has now designated her Christmas poem for 2011:
A Cup of Kindness
Faith, Hope and Charity
wrote St Paul in his hymn to Love
these three abide
In Iraq, explains Canon White on the radio,
Democracy is not what people yearn for
blasted on them as it was through missiles and bombs
What they most want, why can’t we understand,
is water, electricity and kindness
life, communication, things working normally
God only knows
Buddha only knows
Mohammed only knows
everyone knows we want the kindness
which lies at the heart of our being
In Scotland we have given a song to the world
‘a cup of kindness’
to take, to drink, to share
Water, electricity and kindness,
but the greatest of these is kindness
Tessa Ransford
2 comments:
Thanks again, Jamie, for spreading kindness. God knows, it's needed. It's been the year of Room 121 for us and I've missed that daily exchange we had while writing it. But reading your weekly blog is the next best thing.
Next year, the book of 26 Treasures will offer cups, candlesticks, plates and even sackcloths of kindness.
Happy Christmas to you and family.
John
I guess I connected with Carol Ann Duffy's " The Bees" because of her beautiful poem "New Vows" about the very strange experience of divorce. Very moving and consoling.
Paul
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