Saturday 22nd April 2023
From the booklet Warminster Area Keep Well:
42% of residents of Warminster Community Area are currently members of the local library compared to 34% across Wiltshire.
Saturday 22nd April 2023
From the booklet Warminster Area Keep Well:
42% of residents of Warminster Community Area are currently members of the local library compared to 34% across Wiltshire.
Friday 13th January 2023
HE Archive @HE_Archive have tweeted:
Did you know Historic England Library is open to the public? Based in #Swindon, this unique collection holds 60,000+ books and journals on #britishhistory and is managed by a team of helpful librarians. For more info http://bit.ly/3ZupMQ0
Tuesday 7th July 2020
From Vision For Warminster:

The Warminster Journal front page lead story last week about the future of the town library has seen retired schoolteacher and lifelong user Terry Cross canvassing and encouraging his friends to respond to the Wiltshire Council Covid survey.
“Books are so important,†said 78-year-old Terry who has taught home and abroad. “From the age of eleven I have borrowed books from Warminster library.”
“I was a pupil at Frome Grammar School when I asked a schoolmate ‘where did you get that book?”
“That saw me enthusiastically go the library in The Close where I did not dare step on the squeaky floorboard as librarian Mr. Hall demanded absolute silence, all those years ago, then Portway House, and of course now the modern one.â€
The library has been a major help throughout his life from the days as a student to now being a pensioner.
“I needed special reads for my degree studies and the library was invaluable and free,†explained Terry.
“I think the library remains inspirational. I like browsing quietly looking for a new read.”
“It is also home to the book club where up to 15 of us meet up once a month sharing our views of the same book.â€
Terry has firm views about which option should temporarily be adopted during the emergence from pandemic lockdown.
The pensioner does not have internet access at home and relies on occasional research and being able to read and send e-mails which is a modern requirement.
“I could only apply for a visa to visit one of my holiday destinations on-line,†explained the septuagenarian who taught in far flung places like Saudi Arabia.
“It has to be option three,†said the bookworm who borrows a book a week on average.
In council speak this option is ‘A socially distanced service offering some access to browse stock and use computers. This would operate in up to six libraries from the end of August and a maximum of a further four, subject to staff capacity and social distancing requirements.’
“Options one and two are essentially the same,†said Terry.
Those two options allow no or seveerly limited access.
â€It should be easy to socially distance at the computers and have people move on after their session.”
“There should be no eating or drinking at the computers.”
“Option three is the one that continue the semblance of a real library. One needs to be able to look and make choices from books displayed which is the joy of a library.”
“Should this survey go unresponded to it will be the an easy step to close library services in the town.”
Wednesday 28th September 2016
Kingdown Community School, Warminster:
Book of the Week: Delirium.
Delirium is a dystopian young adult novel written
by Lauren Oliver, Â about a young girl,
Lena Haloway, who falls in love in a
society where love is seen as a disease.Â
Saturday 31st January 2015
Bojangles Books have published Bad Show, The Quiz, The Cough, The Millionaire Major, by Bob Woffinden and James Plaskett.
The blurb inside the jacket front cover reads:
When Major Charles Ingram won the £1 million prize on ITV’s top-rated show Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?, glitter and confetti showered down on him and his wife, Diana. He was warmly congratulated as the programme’s third million-pound winner.
But within a week his triumph had turned to dust. The show’s producers believed that he had cheated. They accused him of having been guided to the correct answers by the coughing of a fellow contestant and called in the Metropolitan Police.
The possibility that there had been such brazen cheating on what was then the world’s leading TV quiz show instantly became headline news internationally. Newspapers and television stations the world over rushed to report details of the ‘coughing’ plot.
Eighteen months afterwards, at a criminal trial in London, Charles and Diana were both found guilty. Ingram had to resign his commission in the army and faced life as a ruined man. He lost not only the million-pound prize but also everything he already had. Today, more than ten years later, he is still paying the fine imposed by the judge.
But what really happened?
Bad Show tells the true story of the events of that night, what occurred during the months beforehand and what happened afterwards.
It is a story that, for all the unprecedented levels of publicity that the affair generated, has never been told before.
Hardback. 404 pages. ISBN 978-0-9930755-2-0.
Thursday 11th December 2014
Paul Goodenough.
Former Warminster resident Paul Goodenough,
who founded the successful Aerian Studios,
has confirmed on Twitter he is to be theÂ
new writer on the nextÂ
How To Train Your Dragon graphic novel.
Friday 30th May 2014
Stuart Jeffries in The Guardian reviews An Encyclopaedia Of Myself by Jonathan Meades.
Click here.
Friday 30th May 2014

Andrew Anthony in The Observer reviews An Encyclopaedia Of Myself by Jonathan Meades.
Click here.
Thursday 29th May 2014
Danny Howell writes ~
I much enjoyed listening to Jonathan Meades at Salisbury today. I have been an admirer of his work for a long time now. He has an envious way with language. I love his books and television programmes. Often wish I could write and make those tv films like he does. This afternoon Jonathan Meades very kindly signed a copy of his latest book: ‘An Encyclopaedia Of Myself’ for me. When I told him, in a brief conversation, that I was from Warminster, he immediately replied: “I came through Warminster this morning. It’s very lush!”
Jonathan Meades signs a copy of his latest book
An Encyclopaedia Of Myself for Danny Howell.
Photograph taken by Danny Howell.
Author Evelyn Farr
will be the guest speaker at
Warminster Library,
Three Horseshoes Walk, Warminster
on Friday 4th April 2014, at 2.30 p.m.
Evelyn’s latest book is a revised and expanded
edition of Marie Antoinette And Count Fersen ~
The Untold Love Story, and at Warminster Library
she will be giving a compelling new analysis
of the love affair that rocked the French throne
to its foundations.
Admission to the talk is by free ticket
available from Warminster Library ~
call in or telephone 01985 216022.