Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Linghams Booksellers

248 Telegraph Road
Heswell
Wirral
Merseyside
CH60 76G
0151 342 7290

Linghams Booksellers provide the following Creative Cafe Project activities:

  • author visits
  • book clubs
  • reading materials in the cafe 
  • literary quizzes 
  • story time for children under six
  • Heswell festival
  • poetry evenings
 Linghams Booksellers    
 

Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Simply Books

228 Moss Lane
Bramhall 
Cheshire
SK7 1BD

0161 439 1436.





Simply Books provides the following Creative Cafe Project  activities:

  • author visits
  • illustrator visits
  • cinema evenings
  • book clubs
  • reading materials in the cafe
Simply  Books 

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Buchhandlung Graff Cafe Lit

Sack 15
38100 Braunschweig
Tel.: 0531 / 480 89 - 0
Fax: 0531 / 480 89 - 89   


Cafe Lit provides the following Creative Cafe Project  activities:
  • bookstore cafe 
  • book events
  • conferences
  • author visits 
 Cafe Lit

Saturday, 20 July 2013

Urmston Book Shop



I visited this delightful bookshop on a warm Thursday afternoon a couple of weeks before the schools broke up for the summer. It was deliciously quiet in there. A backdoor was open and a refreshing breeze made both the shop and the café bearable.
I first met owners Frances and Peter Hopkins when they supplied the books for the Prestwich Bookfest. It’s clear that they work very hard, and that owning an independent bookshop is very demanding and is about more than selling books.
The bookshop hosts several reading groups, holds book launches and photographic exhibitions and occasional film nights. There is a back room and this is sometimes hired out for meetings and workshops.
The café is tiny but a real treat. There are just a few what I would call proper bistort tables and attractive olive-green folding chairs.  The cakes are pretty but delicious, too. They are supplied by local independent enterprises - The Bear Who Bakes, Elaine’s Creative Cakes and Urmston cakes. I settled for the lemon drizzle and one of the best cups of tea I ever drunk.
My purpose was two-fold in visiting the shop that day. I wanted to buy some books for a course I’m teaching next year. I also wanted to check out the café and see if it passed muster. I’m pleased to say the café is joining the project.  It’s good also to support an independent bookshop Sure, I buy books and sell my own via Amazon – and don’t have a guilty conscience about that. But it’s good to go into a bookshop and browse – especially when you’re looking for picture books.
I hope the Hopkins will be able to carry on for many more years.             

Urmston Bookshop

The Urmston Bookshop, Urmston 

72 Flixton Road
Urmston
M41 5AB

0161 747 7442






Urmston Bookshop provides the following Creative Cafe Project activities:

  • book launches
  • film nights
  • book clubs
  • reading groups 
  • story times
  • photographic exhbitions
  • creative meetings 
  • literary newsletter  
Urmston Bookshop  
Read reviews here
Urmston Bookshop revisited 

Friday, 5 July 2013

The Angel Cafe Salford



1 St Philips Place
Salford

Manchester M3 6FA
Area: Salford University Campus
0161 833 0495




 The Angel Cafe Salford provided the following creative cafe activities:
  • provides a space where creative practitioners and their audiences can network
  • facilitates book crossing
  • hosts book launches
  • provides meeting space for community project facilitators 

      The Angel Cafe 

   

Monday, 24 June 2013

Stories on Napkins

This is such a cool idea and one I wish I’d thought of. Stories, no longer than 300 words, are printed on napkins that are used in cafés. One of the Creative Café Project’s remits is to produce merchandise for the cafés – merchandise that will make a profit for specific cafés and for the project in general. Even the writers get paid a very reasonable amount for a piece of flash fiction on the Napkin Story Project. Alas, the deadline is past but no doubt if this works well it will happen again and indeed the Creative Café Project may take on something similar.

Take a peek here to see what a story on a napkin will look like.

All of this will be ready in time for Halloween, so the stories will have a spooky feel. This somehow seems very in-keeping with what CafeLit does in assigning drinks to stories.

The Napkin Story Project is associated with Tiny Owl in Australia and the Leeds Big Bookend, which in turn is associated with Valley Press, a small press that’s doing extraordinarily well in the north of England. I came across the Napkin Story Project on the mcBookishness blog, a blog well worth reading for those serious about writing. Do take a look.