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Box Office 0870 343 1001 www.sundaytimes ... - Blackwell's

Box Office 0870 343 1001 www.sundaytimes ... - Blackwell's

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5 SUNDAY<br />

APRIL 2009<br />

Carvery Lunch<br />

Hall, Christ Church<br />

Two Course Adults’ Menu £16.00<br />

Two Course Children’s Menu £ 8.00<br />

(suitable for age 10 and under)<br />

Come and enjoy a traditional carvery Sunday Lunch<br />

in Hall at Christ Church under the direction of Head<br />

Chef, Chris Simms and Hall Manager, Andrew Hedges.<br />

Make your choice of Roast Beef or Roast Chicken<br />

with all the trimmings from the carvery. This will be<br />

followed by a traditional British Pudding, served to your<br />

table with coffee to follow. Small portions of the same<br />

menu are available for children under 10 years of age.<br />

The Hall reflects Christ Church’s long association with<br />

children’s literature. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland<br />

was inspired and written in this college by Lewis Carroll.<br />

His portrait and the Alice Window can both be seen<br />

here. More recently, the Hall was used as the model<br />

for the dining hall of Hogwarts in the Harry Potter films.<br />

The carvery lunch will be served in three sittings;<br />

Event No: 847 12.30pm<br />

Event No: 848 1.15pm<br />

Event No: 849 1.45pm<br />

Please make any special dietary requirements<br />

or food allergies known when booking<br />

tickets. The Buttery Bar, adjacent to Hall and<br />

decorated with rowing memorabilia, will be<br />

open for the purchase of drinks and wines from<br />

the Christ Church Cellar from 11.30am.<br />

Cathy Galvin, Ben Okri, 829<br />

Andrew O’Hagan,<br />

Lionel Shriver and Wells Tower<br />

Chaired by Bryan Appleyard<br />

Less is More - Short Stories<br />

12pm / Garden Marquee, Christ Church / £8.00<br />

Received wisdom suggests the British have lost their<br />

appetite for short stories while in the States the genre<br />

continues to thrive. Twenty years ago we may all have<br />

leafed through the stories of Roald Dahl and Angela<br />

Carter but today such anthologies simply don’t sell.<br />

Why And is it all about to change Authors Ben Okri,<br />

Andrew O’Hagan, Lionel Shriver and Wells Tower<br />

discuss the future of the short story in the UK. All<br />

are recent contributors to the newly launched fiction<br />

section of The Sunday Times Magazine and are joined<br />

by short story editor Cathy Galvin and questioned by<br />

the paper’s cultural critic, Bryan Appleyard.<br />

A special Sunday Times Magazine event.<br />

106<br />

Wolsey’s Kitchen - where all meals are still prepared for the Great Hall

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