Posts Tagged ‘autobiography’

I Am Slave Prize Draw Winners

Thursday, March 7th, 2013

Thanks to everyone who sent a mail to win@abc.nl for the chance to win free I Am Slave tickets! The lucky winners are:

Bianca Fieret
Nathalie Costa

Congratulations!  Thanks again to the Arab House of Arts for providing the tickets.  We hope everyone who mailed in, prize winners or not, will enjoy the 3rd annual Arab Women’s Film Festival this weekend in The Hague.

Thanks also for sending in your choices for most affecting, thought-provoking, life-altering (auto)biographies (several of them nominated more than once).  We have passed your recommendations on to our Biographies buyers!

Saw the Movie? Read the Book!

Wednesday, March 6th, 2013

These March movies started out as books:

Broken is based on Daniel Clay’s novel Broken.

Lore is adapted from The Dark Room by Rachel Seiffert.

I Am Slave is based on the memoir Slave by Mende Nazer, as faithful readers of this blog surely know:-)

Hitchcock is based on Stephen Rebello’s Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho.
So, a movie based on a book based on a movie, all meta-like – Abed would approve, for sure!

Oz the Great and Powerful is, of course, based on L. Frank Baum’s children’s classic The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.

Thérèse Desqueyroux is based on the same-titled book by François Mauriac.

Jack the Giant Slayer is based on the age-old fairy tales Jack the Giant Killer and Jack and the Beanstalk.

Midnight’s Children is based on Midnight’s Children, the Booker of Bookers, by Salman Rushdie.

And finally, The Host is based on that non-Twilight book by Stephenie Meyer, The Host.

Bonus movies based on books:

Bullet to the Head is based on Alexis Nolent’s graphic novel Du plomb dans la tête, which is not yet translated into English.

&Me is based on Oscar van den Boogaard’s Dutch novel Fremdkörper, which will be re-released this month as And Me.

Win FREE tickets to the Arab Women’s Film Festival movie I Am Slave!

Wednesday, February 27th, 2013

In the Nuba Mountains of Sudan, 12 year old Malia is snatched from the arms of her father during a raid on their village. Beaten and sold into slavery, she spends the next six years of her life working for a family, then at 18, Malia (Wunmi Mosaku) is sent to work in London. The city swiftly becomes as much a prison as the home in which she is kept; hidden in plain sight, Malia’s desperate situation goes unnoticed or uncared for by everyone she comes into contact with. Stripped of her passport and living in terror of what might happen to her family in the Sudan should she speak out, Malia is trapped in an unforgiving, alien environment. Despairing of the life to which she has been condemned, she has to call on all her strength to make a dramatic escape back to Sudan and to the father who never gave up hope she was alive, and who never stopped searching for her.

I Am Slave is based on Mende Nazer’s autobiography Slave.  It is the opening film for the 3rd annual Arab Women’s Film Festival, held in The Hague from March 8th until March 10th, 2013. Screenwriter Jeremy Brock, who won a BAFTA for his The Last King of Scotland screenplay,  will hold a Q&A session after the screening of the film, together with Mariam’s Chance director Hanadi Elayan.

See it for FREE with ABC!

Thanks to the wonderful folks from the Arab House of Arts (Arabische Huis voor de Kunsten), we will be giving away 2 pairs of tickets to I Am Slave, which screens at the Filmhuis in The Hague on March 8th, 2013, at 16.45 hrs.

What do you need to do?  Answer the following question:

What is the most affecting, thought-provoking, life-altering autobiography you have read?

Mail your answer to win@abc.nl by Wednesday, March 6th, 2013, and be sure to put ‘I Am Slave’ in the subject header. On March 7th the winners will be announced on this blog.

Please note that there is no right answer to the question.  :-)   We are simply curious and will pass on your recommendations to our Autobiography buyers!

Saw the Movie? Read the Book!

Monday, September 10th, 2012

The Bourne Legacy is “inspired” by Robert Ludlum’s The Bourne Legacy;

the series is written by Eric van Lustbader nowadays.

Savages is based Don Winslow’s thriller Savages.

Being Flynn is based on Nick Flynn’s memoir Another Bullshit Night in Suck City.

Shadow Dancer is based on screenplay writer Tom Bradby’s own thriller, Shadow Dancer.

Bonus movies-based-on-books this September:

De verbouwing is based on Saskia Noort’s book De verbouwing (not yet translated into English, unlike The Dinner Club and Back to the Coast).

Simon (English title Simon and the Oaks) is based on Marianne Frederiksson’s children’s book Simon and the Oaks (English edition no longer in print and only available through our supplier of second-hand books).

In Darkness is based on Robert Marshall’s book In the Sewers of Lvov (also no longer in print and only available through our supplier of second-hand books).

Event Report: Patti Smith Book Signing

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

On Friday, July 6th, 2012, music icon and National Book Award winner Patti Smith graced ABC Amsterdam for one hour to sign books.


What you may not be aware of is that we only got the green light for this signing one week earlier.  We sent out press releases, mailed all kinds of websites and affiliated groups, facebooked it, tweeted it, put up a window display – in other words, we tried very hard, in such a short time, to get the word out that she would be there, so that all her fans would at the very least be aware of this opportunity, and hopefully manage to get themselves over to the store as well!

Happily, a lot of you made it.  People lined up at the front door before Ms. Smith arrived, and the queue stretched all the way around the corner of the store.  We had a few strict rules to abide by, but they did ensure everyone had a chance to get something signed.

Thank you to all of you who came for keeping calm and carrying on, and we hope the encounter with your personal hero was worth it (even if it was ever so brief!).

Even more pictures can be found on our Flickr page.