Opening Hours

MAIN LIBRARY:

Tuesday              10am to 6pm

Wednesday         10am to 6pm

Thursday             10am to 7pm

Friday                  10am to 7pm

Saturday              12 noon to 4pm

Sunday                12 noon to 4pm

DEDICATED CHILDREN'S AREA:

Tuesday               10am to 5 pm

Wednesday          10am to 5pm

Friday                   10am to 5pm

Saturday:              12 noon to 4pm

Children's books and DVDs are available during all Main Library Hours.

Monday and Bank Holidays : LIBRARY CLOSED

Easter Break times:  Following classes are cancelled in April :

Rhyme Time Last 15th; resuming 25th

Ballet Storytime: Last 26 March resuming 16 April

Music with Magda: Last 11th and resuming 23rd

Chess : Last 5th April resuming on 26th

 

 


16 March 2025

Philippe Sands presents: 38 Londres Street on 4th June

Philippe Sands is one of our top 3 presenters and also a great supporter of the Library.  We are delighted to welcome him back.

In 38 Londres Street, Philippe Sands blends personal memoir, historical detective work and gripping courtroom drama to probe a secret double story of mass murder, one that reveals a shocking thread that links the horrors of the 1940s with those of our own times.

Thursday 4th June at 7.30pm

Tickets prices are unchanged at £12 from the library. On line sales from Wegottickets.com.  Link here

The house at 38 Londres Street is home to the legacies of two men whose personal stories span continents, nationalities and decades of atrocity: Augusto Pinochet, President of Chile, and Walther Rauff, a Nazi SS officer responsible for the use of gas vans.

On the run from justice at the end of the Second World War, Rauff crosses the ocean to southern Chile. He settles in Punta Arenas, Patagonia, managing a king crab cannery at the end of the world. But there are whispers about this discreet and self-possessed German - rumours of a second career with Pinochet's secret intelligence service, the dreaded DINA.

In 1998, Pinochet is in a London medical clinic when the police enter his room and arrest him on charges of crimes against humanity and genocide. Philippe Sands is called to advise the former head of state on his claim to immunity, but will instead represent a human rights organisation against him. Years later, Sands makes a discovery while working on another book which reignites his interest in the case and leads to a decades-long investigation into Pinochet's crimes, his unexpected connection to Rauff and the former Nazi's possible connection to Chile's disappeared.

 

 

 

Kindly sponsored by Osbournes Law