January Newsletter

Alison Little with a 'Lots to Say' expression.

Hello and welcome to the January update from alisonlittle.blog.

If you’re new here, this is where I share writing, research, creative work and reflections on culture, libraries, public space, art practice and everyday life in and around Liverpool. January has been a busy and varied month – and I wanted to pull everything together for you in one place.

Here’s what’s been published recently on the blog.


🏃‍♀️ Starting running (without the pressure)

A gentle, realistic beginner’s guide to getting into running using walk–run methods, choosing simple, practical kit and finding ways to stay motivated – whether you prefer heading out on your own or joining a group.

Male beginner runner in black athletic gear jogging on a gravel path through a green park. He wears white New Balance running shoes with coral accents, bone conduction headphones, and a black waist belt with zippered pouch. Morning light and lush trees frame the scene, evoking a fresh start and outdoor fitness motivation.
Beginner Runner

🎨 Could Liverpool create a Yellow Submarine art play park?

Liverpool has always been fuelled by imagination – from Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire roots to The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine.
This article looks at whether Liverpool could develop a world-class public art play park inspired by projects such as Gulliver Park in Valencia, Kyiv’s Landscape Alley and sustainable playgrounds across Africa.

It asks some big (and very local) questions:
Should it be free and community-led? Funded through tourism? Could it rival places like Park Güell – while still staying rooted in Liverpool’s own culture and communities?


🚨 Student police officers, universities and public protection

For over three decades, UK police forces have embedded student officers within university degree programmes, sometimes operating undercover among their peers.

Using an anonymised case study, this piece looks at emotional maturity, institutional culture, over-parenting and informal networks inside policing – and asks whether current practice is undermining public trust and failing some of the people most in need of protection.

A young white girl with straight, shoulder-length blonde hair and light blue eyes stands against a solid pale yellow background. She wears a light blue short-sleeved T-shirt and holds a round black pendant with a square digital display at its center, suspended from a thin silver chain around her neck. Her expression is one of surprise or curiosity, with slightly parted lips and wide eyes. Her hands gently grasp the chain just above the pendant, drawing attention to the object.
Undercover Police Officer A

🌳 Park Benched – flash fiction

Set in Stanley Park, Liverpool, Park Benched is told from the point of view of a park bench quietly observing an encounter between two men.

The story centres on a university student who is confident in his sexuality but uncertain about how that identity should be lived – exploring vulnerability, consent and the subtle ways confusion and power can intersect in public spaces.


🧵 Tittle-Tattle – feminist conceptual artwork

Tittle-Tattle is my conceptual artwork using a domestic rolling pin carved with gossip-like statements.

The piece looks at how women are encouraged to judge one another through appearance, cleanliness, homemaking and social status – and challenges the quiet persistence of internalised misogyny inside everyday domestic life.


📖 Between the Pages – historical fiction

Set in the Rawdon Reading Rooms on Breck Road, Anfield (later to become a public library), this short story captures a slow winter’s day during a time of social change.

First performed at the People of Anfield celebrations at the Irish Centre on Boundary Lane, with music from the Socialist Singers, it reflects working-class life, women’s quiet resilience and the importance of shared reading spaces.


🏛 Birkenhead Priory – a hidden local landmark

Founded in 1150, Birkenhead Priory is the oldest standing building in Merseyside – and one of the region’s most overlooked historic sites.

This piece explores the priory’s long history, its links to early ferry crossings across the Mersey and its survival within a rapidly changing dockland landscape.

Spiral stone staircase at Birkenhead Priory, leading from the refectory area to the upper-level dining space. Rough-hewn steps curve clockwise within thick medieval walls, framed by a stone archway and lit to reveal centuries of wear. A metal handrail runs along the inner edge, guiding visitors through this historic vertical passage.
Spiral stone staircase
Birkenhead Priory

📚 Liverpool launches its Year of Reading

Liverpool Central Library was buzzing on Saturday 24 January 2026 with poetry, performance, flash mobs and storytelling for the city’s Year of Reading launch.

From powerful spoken word on identity and homesickness to brilliant Scouse poetry and local history, it was a reminder that reading in Liverpool is social, creative and very much alive.


The fight to reopen Breck Road Library

The campaign to reopen Breck Road Library continued on Saturday 22 January outside Liverpool Central Library.

Former staff, community workers, councillors and local residents spoke about the real impact of the closure on the Anfield and Everton communities – with young people describing what it means to lose access to a local, safe and supportive public space.

Colorful handmade protest banners displayed on a stone wall in Liverpool, opposing the closure of Breck Road Library. Messages read “CLOSED BOOKS – CLOSED MINDS,” “SAVE OUR LIBRARIES,” and “CATHEDRALS OF THE MIND,” highlighting community resistance and the cultural importance of public libraries.
SAVE OUR LIBRARIES

🛍 Tracey Emin, Sarah Lucas and The Shop

A look back at the short-lived but hugely influential Shoreditch space run by Tracey Emin and Sarah Lucas in the mid-1990s.

Blurring art, commerce and everyday social life, The Shop became a defining moment of the YBA era and a key reference point for third-wave feminist art.


✍️ Returning to digital sketching

A reflective post on my own practice – moving from daily sketching in 2025 into a renewed digital workflow in 2026.

It covers my struggles with Krita, the switch to Infinite Painter, and how experimenting with texture, tools and slower working helped rebuild confidence and reconnect me with digital drawing.

Digital sketch featuring swirling abstract lines and shapes in warm tones of orange, yellow, and brown. Set against a solid orange background, the overlapping curves and loops create a sense of motion and energy. Stylized and expressive, ideal for showcasing creative process or abstract design inspiration.
Digital Sketch

What’s coming up on alisonlittle.blog in February

February is shaping up to be just as busy – and just as mixed.

I’ll be covering:

  • 🎬 New exhibitions at FACT Liverpool
  • Ongoing coverage of the fight to reopen Breck Road Library
  • 💔 Not gushy hearts for Valentine’s – expect something a little more reflective (and probably political) instead
  • 🥾 Local hikes to properly wake you up – places to clear your head and get moving
  • ✍️ More progress with my digital sketching practice
  • 🏃‍♀️ My running playlist – what I actually listen to when I’m trying to get out of the door

As always, alisonlittle.blog will keep blending art, libraries, local history, feminist practice, public space, creative work and everyday life in Liverpool and the wider region.

Thanks for reading – and I’ll see you back here in February.

One response to “January Newsletter”

  1. This is a wonderfully rich and thoughtful January roundup—grounded, generous, and intellectually alive. I really admire how your work moves so fluidly between the personal and the public, from gentle, pressure-free running to big civic questions about art, policing, and public space. There’s a clear care for people, place, and ethics running through everything you share.

    Liked by 1 person

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