Around Town

Events are listed by date, then type. Submit listings at least ten days before publication to sport@list.co.uk for sport or kirstin.innes@list.co.uk for all other events. Listings compiled by Kirstin lnnes.

Glasgow

Activities & Events

Masters Fashion Promenade (ilasgoyy School ol'.v\i't. 'l‘he Mackintosh (iallet'y. l(i7 chl'reyy Street. 353 4500. 8 10pm. £15. Nine international postgraduate laxhion students from the (inVs Ml)e\ 'lc\lllc\ as l'ttxlliull course slum ol'l' their debut collectioth. Sec preyicyy. page 4o.

Activities & Events

Café philosophique Alliance Fruitcake de (ilaxgou. 3 l’ark ('ircux. 33‘) 423]. 4.30pm. £5 (£3 l. l)l\cll\\ltitl en l'i'ancaix autoui' d'un \ujet philosophique. ('el moixz comment luii'e Ia pai\’.’

Saturday 1 6 _

Fairs

Misc Funky Market llillhead library. 348 Byres Road. 330 7323. l0am 4pm. l'ree. l‘orgcl knitted egg \yarmerx and layender—\tullcd drayy er l'rexhenerx. this contemporary cral't lair “ill be brimming: \\ ith knick-knackx to l'unkil‘y your Iile. Radical Independent Book Fair Project ('(‘:\. 350 Sauchiehall Street. .352 4000. l lam 7pm. Free. Supporting small press publishers and indeiwiident producers. and circulatng radical reading materials and information. this mini lair promises ciiunter-culturc publications. melting \lxll;tl\. \ i\ id lllllh and stimulating political discourse.

Food & Drink

Queen’s Park Farmers’ Market Queen's Park. 520 l.an}_'\ide Park. 387 7373. l0am 2pm. l'rce. l‘orget all about that lllusx-pl‘udllcctl l‘llhltlxll lai‘iiiei'x' markets are all about quality organic produce “ith the muck still on it.

Talks

Holy City RL‘IlllL‘ltl SI Stephen's ('hurch. Zoo Bath Street. 332 3826.

7 0.30pm. l‘ree. l)ouhter\ and belieyerx alike can rcl'tixe to accept stock illl\\\cl\ or comenlional dogma in iiiyextigating the forgotten xlnl‘lcx ol' the Bible at this. “orkxhop.

What sin

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TELL ME A STORY

Kirstin Innes discovers that storytelling isn‘t just a bygone tradition.

We don’t have much time for folklore these days. The oral tradition of storytelling, while it has contemporary parallels in performance poetry and the sprawling narratives of rap, seems anachronistic in an age of YouTube and email forwards. We don’t seem to be interested in things that go bump in the night unless they've come off a killer Japanese videotape, and tend to dismiss traditional storytellers as eccentrics steeped in peat smoke and obsolete folk history. In the run up to the Winter Solstice, though, with long nights and increasingly sinister shadows, huddling up round a fire to spin old yarns about witchcraft and fairies begins to sound far more agreeable than another stressed night of consumerism.

Deep in the bowels of the GOMA Library, the Scottish Federation of Writers have constructed a (fag free) Victorian smoking-room, complete with fireplace and easy chairs, for a whole day’s worth of storytelling

‘It’s aimed at adults who haven’t lost sight of their

Tuesday 1 9

gather together and share ll]_\lll\. folklore.

childhoods,’ says Marc Sherland, organiser of 3 Seasonal Tales for a Victorian Fireside. ‘There might be stories about trolls and goblins, or more modern comic pieces. We’ve tried to recreate the atmosphere of a small intimate gathering, even though we’re expecting well over sixty people this year.’ He’s already confirmed appearances from Glasgow author Anne C Clarke and Ayrshire Makar Sheila Templeton, but stresses that storytelling experience isn’t necessary for participation.

Over in Edinburgh, master storyteller Duncan Williamson will be holding court at the Guid Crack Club in the appropriately time-warped surroundings of the Waverley Bar. Williamson is a traveller and champion of the oral tradition who estimates that he knows over 3000 stories - telling tales of selkies, kelpies and trickery on the roads.

Go on. Suspend your thoroughly modern disbelief. It’s Christmas. We can’t guarantee that somebody won’t dredge up the one about the escaped maniac on the roof of the car, though.

I Seasonal Tales for a Victorian Fi’resUe. Glasgow. Thu 21 Dec. The Gil/d Crack C/iil) Yii/efest. Edinburgh, Fri 15 Dec.

Mainly in French: booking advisable.

ptk‘llh and stories iii a lexliye nature. If

Activities & Events

Tchai Ovna Games Society 'l‘cliai ()yna. lo0 l)ean\ton l)ri\c. (>40 7358. 8pm. Remember. throu in}; the board up in a bad temper il' you lose is childish.

Thursday 21 .

Activities & Events

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Food & Drink

you are interested in performing pleaxe email marcxhei'land(u yahoo.co.uk its reading \lt‘l\ \\ ill be limited. See preyieu.

Activities & Events

Glasgow’s Hogmanay (ieorge Square. 087] 200 3040. Sandi Thom. The View and The Fratellis do their best to work (ieorge Square into a cork-[Mpping lien/y. \yhilc Donnie Munro puckers tip.

Seasonal Tales for a Victorian Fireside (iallery ol’ .\lodern :\rt. Royal lixchange Square. 230 WW». I 3.30pm k 4.30 7.30pm. .r\n opportunity l'oi' \yriterx to

Check out the

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Mansfield Park Farmers’ Market Mansfield Park. ol‘l' l)umbarton Road. 34l 0844. l0am 2pm. Free. Who needs \lllk‘l‘lllill'kt‘l lttxll \\ hen you’y e got happy produce l‘roin happy placex‘.’ lale the dillcrencc.

Talks

Paris .-\|liance l‘rancaixe de (llasgott. 3 Park ('ircux. 330 428]. opin. Free. Meet the \yritei‘. jotlt‘ttalixl and \(K‘loluglsl Phillipe Meyer for a talk about Paris.

nu \y.gIasgotyshogmanayorg.uk See feature. page 38.

Activities & Events

Glasgow on Ice l'ntil Sun 24 Dec. (ieorge Square. 087l 200 3040.

l0am 10pm. toll peakl £8.50 (£5 ~11»); lamin £32.50. A chance to perfect your pirouettex tor at least let go of the side) as (ieorge Square's open air ice rink returns for another year accompanied by non-stop music.

14 Dot: 9006—4 Jan 2007 THE LIST 45