An advocate for Arnold Bennett as well as a Woolf sceptic. I trust @bennettsoc.bsky.social will furnish a tribute
An advocate for Arnold Bennett as well as a Woolf sceptic. I trust @bennettsoc.bsky.social will furnish a tribute
We still have a few places left for our annual Literary Lunch
Wednesday 3rd December 2025
AT
The Upper House
12.30 for 1pm
Guest speakers:
Dr Jonathan Taylor
University of Leicester
Dr Lisa Blower
Lecturer in Creative Writing Keele
Email arnoldbennettscty@btinternet.com for full details.
Entertaining Mr Bennett, a
FREE film at the Dudson Centre, Hope street, Hanley. 6th December. A compilation of archive films and recodings of things Bennett found entertaining and sometimes used in his writing. Famous stars he knew at the SAVOY HOTEL.
It certainly does, though I donβt currently have a Bennett on the curriculum. He does get an honourable mention. The New Vicβs recent production of The Grand Babylon Hotel was a real treat.
Help me get this word out? Thanks! Scholarships available, full schedule soon
It's our AGM tomorrow afternoon (Sat 25th)! At Swan Bank ST6 2AA, or via Zoom link emailed to Society members
We remember John Lucas especially for his 1974 book-length study of Arnold Bennett's fiction
RIP Patricia Routledge. Not the least of her achievements was her role in the musical Darling of the Day (with Vincent Price!), adapted from Arnold Bennett's novel Buried Alive
The Dudson Centre is in Hope Street, Hanley ST1 5DD
Coming up on Saturday afternoon, for your delight ...
(2/2) 'You would not get the same treatment in London under any circumstances' - Arnold Bennett in journal, 26 September 1904 [Bennett had moved to live in Paris in March 1903; the following summer he returned to England, visited HG Wells and went to Scotland in search of a cure for his stammer]
'My absence has had the effect of showing me how well I am established in Paris. Wherever I go, in restaurants and shops, I am recognized and greeted with the warmest cordiality. In three places today I have been the subject of an ovation ...(1/2)
The first of our (free) Heritage Open Day walks is tomorrow, starting at Stoke's Dudson Centre at 2pm. Details at our website
'To write popular fiction is offensive to me, but it is far more agreeable than being tied daily to an office and editing a ladyβs paper; and perhaps it is less ignoble, and less of a strain on the conscience.' (3/3)
'Till the end of 1899 I propose to give myself absolutely to writing the sort of fiction that sells itself. My serious novel Anna Tellwright with which I have made some progress is put aside indefinitely β or rather until I have seen what I can do. ... (2/3)
Arnold Bennett in journal, 12 Sept 1898: 'Partly owing to the influence of [Eden] Phillpotts, I have decided very seriously to take up fiction for a livelihood. A certain chronic poverty had forced upon me the fact that I was giving no attention to money-making, beyond my editorship ... (1/3)
London's BFI Southbank (aka the National Film Theatre) is running an Anna May Wong season, so of course there are showings of Piccadilly, 'one of the silent eraβs most captivating films', with a scenario by Arnold Bennett
whatson.bfi.org.uk/Online/defau...
Get to know Arnold Bennett's Five Towns: We have some free Bennett-themed guided walks around Hanley and Burslem for Heritage Open Days on 17 and 19 September, and beyond. Details on our website, and book here: www.ticketsource.co.uk/whats-on?q=A...
ON NOW
8th August - 7th September
FAMOUS FACES FROM STOKE-ON-TRENTβS PAST KIDβS TRAIL β Celebrating Stoke100
10am to 3pm
FREE TRAIL
A free family trail featuring famous faces from Stoke-on-Trent's past.
No pre-booking required, just visit our Visitor Desk to take part
#stokeontrent
Arnold Bennett admired Wells's 1895 short story'The Cone' (whose protagonist is the manager of a Potteries ironworks), and wrote to him that he was 'very glad to find that the Potteries made such an impression on you. ... only during the last few years have I begun to see its possibilities'
#onthisday in 1918 (26 August) Arnold Bennett wrote to the War Office recommending T.S. Eliot for the Interpreters Corps: 'I have pleasure in stating that Mr T.S. Eliot β¦ has an intimate knowledge of the French language. Also that he is a writer of distinguished merit'
Arnold Bennett's 'artistic advantage' over Virginia Woolf; our author's fondness for heaving bosoms; @sathnam.bsky.social's Marriage Material on stage ... All this and more in the Society's latest newsletter, newly arrived in members' mailboxes
The New Vic Theatre has announced full casting for its world premiere production ofΒ The Grand Babylon Hotel, a riotous comedy thriller by Arnold Bennett
#onthisday in 1927 (4 Aug) in his Evening Standard column Arnold Bennett continued his 'remarks' on Victorian novelists with George Eliot, Disraeli, Marryat and Trollope - concluding that 'I have not discussed him who is conceivably the greatest of the Victorians. Of course I mean Thomas Hardy'
Tckets selling fast for this adaptation of Arnold Bennett's classic thriller
www.newvictheatre.org.uk/productions/...
#onthisday in 1917 (24 July) Arnold Bennett dined with JM Barrie, Thomas Hardy and wife. Hardy βhas all his faculties, unimpaired. Quite modest and without the slightest pose,β AB wrote in his journal [Hardy was then aged 77]
The New Vic Theatre in Newcastle-under-Lyme will stage the world premiere ofΒ The Grand Babylon Hotel, a new adaptation of Arnold Bennettβs only thriller, this autumn
Arnold Bennett in his journal, 3 July 1897, enjoying the Earl's Court exhibition
Couverture du roman dβArnold Bennett, le Grand HΓ΄tel Babylon (10/18).
[Blog] Arnold Bennett, le Grand HΓ΄tel Babylon (1902).
Roman dβhΓ΄tel, lβun des premiers du genre, mΓͺlant aventures internationales, satire sociale, romance et comΓ©die loufoque.
www.locus-solus-fr.net?p=1545