Reykjavík Grapevine - 01.08.2014, Page 37

Reykjavík Grapevine - 01.08.2014, Page 37
Schola cantorum summer concert series >ƵŶĐŚƟŵĞĐŽŶĐĞƌƚƐŽŶ Wednesdays in Hallgrímskirkja Experience some of Iceland’s most beloved choral music with Schola cantorum on our latest album Foldarskart. Wednesday August 6th at 12 pm Wednesday August 13th at 12 pm Wednesday August 20th at 12 pm Wednesday August 27th at 12 pm Schola cantorum chamber choir of Hallgrimskirkja presents an excellent ŽƉƉŽƌƚƵŶŝƚLJƚŽĞdžƉĞƌŝĞŶĐĞƚŚĞŐƌĞĂƚĂĐŽƵƐƟĐƐŽĨ,ĂůůŐƌŝŵƐŬŝƌŬũĂ͘ The repertoire consists of Icelandic contemporary music for a capella choir as well as Icelandic folk songs. CONCERT CALENDAR: Admission: 2.000 ISK - Tickets by the entrance I\ZPZ Travel in Iceland the smart way One-day pass: ISK 900 Three-day pass: ISK 2,200 Get around Reykjavík easily and affordably ind us on Facebook: facebook.com/Straeto Get ticket information on your phone. Find your routes, plan your journey, locate the nearest bus stop and track your bus on a real-time map. Get your free app and take the bus: Day passes are available for the Reykjavík area. Gildir: Gildir til: Where to buy: Strætó’s ticket offices, selected hotels and hostels in Reykjavík. The pass comes with a booklet that includes a route map and tips on some cool places to visit with the bus. Strætó Service Center Open every day 07:00–22:00 Tel. 540 2700 37The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 11 — 2014 LITERATURE transpose.” Although Geral- dine has no short- age of incisive, quot- able and writerly advice, the session takes on the tone of a casual chat with a much more suc- cessful, but no less encouraging buddy. Sniffing suspiciously at work that carries what she calls “the whiff of the MFA,” she privileges exten- sive travelling and life experience over formal university writing programmes, telling everyone to just “buy yourself a backpack, and fill it with books. Live someplace where you can think in your own language, but have to buy your groceries in some- one else’s.” She’s funny and no-nonsense, able to make declarations like “I no more believe in writer’s block than I believe in hairdresser’s block” while also rath- er generously admitting to how ardu- ous the labour of writing can be for anyone, herself included. “We love two words where one will do,” she sighs, everyone in the room ‘in it together,’ as it were. “We”: the Pulitzer-winning author and, if only for an hour or so, her peers. One perfect sentence Each workshop, it’s clear from the coffee-time chit-chat burbling in the hallways, has its own unique character owing, of course, to the various back- grounds and styles of the workshop leaders themselves. Iain Reid, a self- described “non-dramatic memoirist,” starts his ‘Writing Your Life’ session with a reading from one of his own works in order to then break down the actual process of (and his own set of rules for) writing from personal ex- perience. James Scudamore, recently longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, cheerfully admits that he puts his workshoppers “through their paces,” filling his ‘Nostalgia’ class with writing and peer-editing exercises from start to finish. Sara Wheeler, rocking back and forth on her heels, a barely contained cyclone of energy, jam-packs her ‘Find- ing the Story’ ses- sion with descrip- tions of the eight classic models for travel narratives, an extensive book list, readings of ex- emplary opening paragraphs, her own fabulous travel an- ecdotes and more good, solid advice— “it’s your book and your voice: be sub- jective” or “it has to be about something that can be written down in one per- fect sentence”—all of which her room of attendees hasten to scribble down as fast as she can share it. There’s a palpable enthusiasm that buzzes over each day’s lunches, between sessions, and on busses back and forth from special events— the reading at the home of Iceland’s Nobel Laureate Halldór Laxness, for instance, or the reception at the Presi- dential residence during which partic- ipants are personally greeted by Presi- dent Ólafur Ragnar and then invited to poke about the place at their leisure. Attendees share their “Why Ice- land?” stories, swap business cards (and, in one case, mix tapes), com- miserate over past rejections and generally talk shop. It’s enlivening and makes the idea of writing seem fun again—less like the romantic, quasi- tragic burden that many writers are conditioned to think they must endure and bear in solitude. Which is, ideally, how it should be. As Iain Reid remarks at the end of a class, “there’s no reason to become a writer if you don’t love it.” Writers Retreat The second annual Iceland Writ- ers Retreat will take place from April 8–12, 2015 and will feature workshops lead by acclaimed in- ternational authors such as Adam Gopnik, Taiye Selasi, and Sjón, among others. Registration opened on July 28, 2014, and space is limit- ed, so attendees, both local and in- ternational, are encouraged to sign up early. For more info, check out www.icelandwritersretreat.com. “Very nearly half of the following partici- pants begin their own narrations with the quiet mantra: ‘I won’t apologise!”

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