Writers for Peace, Project Cafe

Various Moons
Tuesday 23 October, 2018
Project Cafe, 134 Renfrew Street, Glasgow G3 6ST
Continuing this series on the theme of peace. Three writers and one musician from across Scotland come together to read and perform about peace – how we might make it, what it might look like, and how we can work for it.
This is a free event for all.
The authors:
David Manderson
David is an academic and a writer of novels, short stories, non-fiction, screenplays and poetry. He is convenor of the Scottish PEN Writers for Peace committee and the International Committee for the Association of Scottish Literary Studies. He has published full-length works with Kennedy & Boyd and Luath Press and shorter pieces in many magazines and anthologies, including New Writing Scotland, Gutter, Laldy and Chapman. In 2017 he was a Robert Louis Stevenson Fellow. He lives in Glasgow.
Ruth Aylett
Ruth was joint author with Beth McDonough of the pamphlet Handfast, published in 2016 and was the winner of the Hungry Hill Poets meet Politics competition in 2017. She has been published by The North, Prole, Antiphon, Interpreter’s House, New Writing Scotland, South Bank Poetry, Envoi, Bloodaxe Books, Red Squirrel Press, Doire Press and others. She lives in Edinburgh. “I’ve been writing since I was a teenager but four kids, putting some effort into trying to change things, not to mention the academic day job, means that only recently have I made the effort to get published or be heard. I’m an inveterate techie in my working life, which explains the poems about Turing, logarithms and differential calculus; and I still want things to change even if I lack the energy I once had. Hence stories about people who are not much heard and a certain number of rants. Other than that, I write about the things we all write about: love, death, airports, chemical plant, swimming.”
Colin Donati
Colin is a Scottish-born poet and musician of third-generation Italian descent. He gives regular public readings of his work, including extracts from his Scots translation of Dostoevsky’s ‘Crime and Punishment’, and performs his songs and song-settings as part of the duo ‘Various Moons’ with cellist Robin Mason. In 2014 he
edited the collected dramatic works of Robert McLellan, ‘Playing Scotland’s Story’ (Luath Press). He lives in Edinburgh.
Various Moons (Colin Donati and Robin)
Eclectic duo, Various Moons, comprise Edinburgh-based poet, song-writer and musician, Colin Donati, and cellist Robin Mason. First formed in 2014, their gigs around Scotland have included shows at Edinburgh Festival Fringe, The Arran McLellan Festival, Anstruther Harbour Festival and regular appearances at Steve Kettley’s Click Click Club in Edinburgh. ‘In a space somewhere between Tim Buckley and Radiohead’ (Ian McDonough). ‘Slightly unhinged’ (Steve Kettley).
This section: Books, Talks, Poetry and Creative Writing Events
Filed under: Books, Talks, Poetry and Creative Writing Events
Related Pages
- Andrew O’Hagan In Conversation with Kirstin Innes
- Aye Write 2025: Denise Mina and Helen Fields in conversation with Bryan Burnett
- Love Letters To A Murder – The Mythology of Madeleine Smith
- Book Launch: Benbecula by Graeme Macrae Burnet
- Reclaim the Clyde – Poetry and Music to celebrate our river
- Falling Out and Fighting Back
- A Kick Up The Arts – In Conversation with Denise Mina
- Creative Conversations: Isabel Stilwell
- tell it slant at Locavore
- Magi, Ali and Ian at The Stand at Websters
- Sirens Calling and On the Scent of the Honeyed Hive, Linda Jackson and Lesley O’Brien
- A Kick Up The Arts – Nicola Meighan in conversation with Ambrose Parry at The Stand at Websters
- BLOODY SCOTLAND 2025
- “The Pride o’ Scotland”: Scots Language Awards 2025
- Storytelling For Adults, Alexandria
- Poetry Lunch with Len Pennie
- Old Partickhill, Hyndland and Thornwood by Lewis Hutton
- Mill Girls On Tour 2025 – Paisley Launch
- Byres Road Book Festival 2025
- People Make Glasgow Theatre – Alexander Thomson Society
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.