Author website revamped; residential course on his books
Posted on by jessia

Philip Pullman and his web team recently revamped the author’s official website with a new interface and new materials, including links to his lectures, presentations, and essays not otherwise available in print. The site also contains newly compiled information on film and stage productions of his works, a lengthy Q&A, and much more. Check it out here. Thanks to waitingForDust for the tip!

Also at Pullman’s official site is news of a five-day residential course entitled “Fables and Folktales and the Stories of Philip Pullman,” offered by Burgundy Courses. It will take place at Le Verger complex in Coutarnoux, Yonne in the Bourgogne region of France from 14th to 20th June 2009. Aimed at enthusiasts for children’s literature, especially teachers and those with an academic/professional interest in the field, the seminar series will be led by expert on children’s literature Brian Alderson and will focus on “the different facets of [Pullman’s] own writing but also their relationship to the storytelling traditions within which he works.” Learn more about the course, its organisers, and how to apply here.



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DFC falls victim to economic crisis
Posted on by jessia

Fans of Philip Pullman’s “Adventures of John Blake” (illustrated by John Aggs) will be sad to discover that David Fickling Books will no longer be publishing the DFC weekly comic strip due to financial difficulties. “Everyone connected with the comic hopes that the DFC will rise again one day, and so do thousands of readers, but the story of John Blake must be told.” On his official site, the author indicated that he would complete the story as a graphic novel and for film. Read more.

For now, the official site of “John Blake” is still available here.



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Why Pullman’s so angry about God
Posted on by jessia

Alan Franks from the Times recently spoke to Philip Pullman at his home outside Oxford upon the re-opening of Nicholas Wright’s stage adaptation of His Dark Materials at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre. “For a moment it looks as if you might have stumbled on the Grumpiest Old Man in England,” but Pullman speaks passionately about his recent success, his father, and his love of theatre – and likewise the stage production of his most famous books, including performances in community theatres and school halls – among other things. Still, “His anger towards God remains undimmed,” (Franks is clearly amused at the notion of Pullman cursing) though the author admits that the Catholic Church is a “soft target,” and reconciles, “We are very fortunate to live in a time and place where you don’t get dismembered for having the wrong political convictions, and we should be thoroughly grateful for it every day of our lives.”

Pullman is keeping silent with regards to progress made on the eagerly awaited Book of Dust, but indicates a new passion in his life: electric guitar; more precisely the Fender he got last year. You can read the whole interview here. Thanks to Skye for the tip.

His Dark Materials, the play, premiered in Birmingham under the direction of Rachel Kavanaugh last Friday and will be on stage until Saturday, 18 April 2009. The adaptation was first staged at the National Theatre in London under the direction of Nicholas Hytner in December of 2003. For more information about the current Birmingham production, visit the official site of the Repertory Theatre. Tickets cost between £10 and £32.50, and accessible performances for audience-members with hearing or visual impairments are available on certain dates at no extra cost.



Posted in Book of Dust, Interviews, Philip Pullman, Stage adaptations | 3 Comments



Philip Pullman at the Oxford Literary Festival
Posted on by Kinders

Several events at this year’s Times Oxford Literary Festival will feature or reference Philip Pullman:

The Lyra’s Oxford walk, on April 1st at 2pm, is “a walk of under two miles, broadly based on Oxford author Philip Pullman’s Northern Lights and Lyra’s Oxford, but citing many other authors. The route will include the literary-rich Victorian suburb of Jericho and the Oxford Canal (complementing the Inspector Morse Tour), and finish at Oxford Castle. The tour will begin at Oxford University Press, Walton Street, Jericho, and will be led by local historian, author, and publisher, Mark Davies, an Oxford ‘gyptian’ himself.”

On April 2nd at 12pm, Newman Rooms, St. Aldates will be host to Writing for a Change – Responses to Climate Change. Various guests including Pullman will discuss why the artistic and particularly the written response to climate change has been so muted, and whether a new self-awareness is going to be motivated more by fiction than by the writing of activists – or is this not the role of the writer?

Finally, on April 5th at 2.30, the Sheldonian Theatre will play host to the final of Off By Heart, the BBC’s new poetry reciting competition. Pullman will sit on the panel of judges that determines the winner from the 12 best (of over 1,000) entrants.



Posted in Contests, Oxford, Philip Pullman | 1 Comment



American release for Butterfly Tattoo
Posted on by jessia

We’re happy to announce that American audiences will get to see Dynamic Entertainment DEH’s adaptation of The Butterfly Tattoo in select cinemas starting Friday, 17th April. The film screened also last week at the Beaufort International Film Festival in South Carolina where it was honoured Best Feature Film. Congratulations!

If you can’t wait until April and you’re around San Francisco, check out the Tiburon International Film Festival which will screen the film next Friday evening, 20 March. Ticket are available online.

Visit the film’s official website for more details about the production. A European release date will be announced soon.



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