Thursday 25 June 2009

Festival Keynote Speaker confirmed as George Monbiot...

Latest exciting news is that George Monbiot, writer, journalist and activist has been commissioned by the Festival to create a 'Festival Address' - a kind of keynote encompassing and building on George's ideas that:


"The novelists who help to define their era are those who break through the screens erected by society to shield itself from uncomfortable truths. Performing this task while remaining readable is fiction's greatest challenge. "

The Festival is delighted to have George participate in the Festival for this Tenth Anniversary Year. Dates for this event to be announced soon! More about George below or visit www.monbiot.com.

George Monbiot has held visiting fellowships or professorships at the universities of Oxford (environmental policy), Bristol (philosophy), Keele (politics), Oxford Brookes (planning) and East London (environmental science). He has honorary doctorates from the University of St Andrews and the University of Essex and an Honorary Fellowship from Cardiff University. He is the author of the best selling books Heat: how to stop the planet burning; The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a new world order and Captive State: the corporate takeover of Britain; as well as the investigative travel books Poisoned Arrows, Amazon Watershed and No Man’s Land. He writes a weekly column for the Guardian newspaper.

More Festival news coming soon!

Tuesday 23 June 2009

Nick Hornby & Lynn Barber confirmed for October

Nick Hornby & Lynn Barber will be at the Birmingham Book Festival on October 15th... watch this space for further details...

Wednesday 17 June 2009

Hello all...

The offices of the Birmingham Book Festival have been the setting for some very interesting conversations this month..

There has been plenty of talk about new books, and the Festival team (well, Jonathan and I) have some great recommendations for you:

1. Salt and The Wake by Jeremy Page - I am incredulous that two months ago I hadn't heard of Jeremy and now I am impatient for a third novel - not bad considering the second (The Wake) isn't published until July. Jeremy's prose is lyrical, beautiful, his landscapes and atmospheres multi dimensional. There is a gorgeous sense of the East Anglian settings he often uses, you can almost smell them. Tales of tragedy and human spirit, heart warming, original, not quite like anything I've read before.

Reminded me of: Annie Proulx (The Shipping News), Patrick Gale (Rough Music).

2. A Kind of Intimacy by Jenn Ashworth - I love this book. It is like the dark thoughts you had at school, all the things you think that you wonder if anyone else thinks too - but worse. A slow, unashamed descent into a hilarious, terrifying kind of life that you just can't assuage your interest in. Perfectly pitched and just the right amount of crazy to be believable. Can't wait for more from Jenn.

Reminded me of: Sophie Hannah (Little Face), Helen Cross(Spilt Milk, Black Coffee).

** Jenn and Jeremy will be appearing at the Festival on Saturday October 24th**

3. The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters - the new book from Ms Waters is both very like and very unlike her previous ones. If she were seeking to depart from her identity as a gay writer then this book certainly achieves that, but with enough of a deep nostalgia for the same wartime/postwar England we loved in The Night Watch that it is sure to satisfy any and all of her audiences. The story is tightly woven and expertly unravelled, the characters vivid amidst the spectral prowess of the real hero of the book - the decaying country manor at the heart of everyone and everything. Very, very good.

Reminded me of: Sadie Jones (The Outcast)


Other books we loved (Because there isn't room to review them all....):
Becoming Drusilla by Richard Beard.
Heartland by Anthony Cartwright
The Outcast by Sadie Jones
Notes On An Exhibition by Patrick Gale
Spilt Milk, Black Coffee, by Helen Cross
Black Rock by Amanda Smith

If you've read a fantastic book, email me a review and I'll make sure it gets up here...

In other news...

We now have a Twitter account - look us up if you're savvy at that kind of thing - we're still not (but we are better than we used to be!)

We have many writers events promised/provisionally programmed for October including:

  • An evening with The Archers
  • Helen Cross & Tommy Wieringa
  • Readers Afternoon (featuring Jeremy Page, Jenn Ashworth and others)
  • A L Kennedy
  • R J Ellory
  • Lindsey Davis
  • Fourpenny Circus poetry show
  • Short stories inspired by The Smiths
  • BBC Radio Four's A Good Read and Poetry Slam Final
  • Workshops, Seminars and Masterclasses
  • Festival Keynote, lecture and debate

There is much more to come - watch this space.

Don't forget we're on facebook too!

Sara