Charleston Festival

May 15, 2009 – May 24, 2009

near Firle, Lewes
Charleston, East Sussex, BN8 6LL

United Kingdom

01273 709709; infocharleston.org.uk

Web site: http://www.charleston.org.uk/charlestonfestival/

Events: http://www.charleston.org.uk/cha…

Amenities: food/drink

Description: Visit website for directions. There is a shuttle bus available for all events from Lewes train station.

Added by: christiguc.  Contacted: Not contacted.  Venue ID: 26962

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Past events

Happy Birthday Booker (May 16 at 6:00pm)
Kate Mosse.; Hardeep Singh Kohli.; Victoria Glendinning.
Tickets: £10. "To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the prestigious Man Booker Prize, Victoria Glendinning, former Booker judge and biographer of Leonard Woolf, will chair a book club where members of a literary panel champion their own favourite Booker novel, as well as those that did not make it. ... (more)The panel will include writer, presenter, comedian and judge of this year’s Prize, Hardeep Singh Kohli; Kate Mosse, co-founder of the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction, hugely successful author of Labyrinth (Richard and Judy Book of the Year), Sepulchre, and presenter of Radio 4’s A Good Read."
Added by christiguc.
Marina Lewycka, Daljit Nagra (May 16 at 8:00pm)
Marina Lewycka, Two Caravans.; Daljit Nagra, Look We Have Coming to Dover!.
Tickets £10. "In her unique blend of brio and perceptive wit, Marina Lewycka follows her best-selling, award-winning A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian with a novel that charts the fortunes of an assortment of immigrant workers while strawberry picking in Kent. Daljit Nagra’s Look ... (more)We Have Coming to Dover! is a prize-winning collection of poems about assimilation, aspiration and dislocation, rich in humour. Can literary comedy highlight social issues? Marina Lewycka, whose background is Ukrainian, was born in a refugee camp in Germany. Daljit Nagra’s parents came to the UK from the Punjab in the 50s."
Added by christiguc.
Hidden Lives (May 17 at 12:00pm)
Alison Light, Mrs. Woolf and the Servants.; Celia Robertson, Who Was Sophie?.; Giles Waterfield.
Tickets £10. "Alison Light and Celia Robertson.
Chaired by Giles Waterfield.

Alison Light’s Mrs Woolf and the Servants aired Bloomsbury’s dirty laundry in public and retrieved the lives of women who had been relegated to the margins of history. In Who Was Sophie? Celia Robertson ... (more)tells the story of her grandmother’s journey from Joan Adeney Easdale, child protégée and Hogarth Press poet, to anonymous bag lady. Alison Light, whose grandmother was in service, is a cultural historian; Celia Robertson worked as an actress. They discuss the complex truths revealed by their assiduous sleuthing with novelist Giles Waterfield, curator of the NPG Below Stairs exhibition."
Added by christiguc.
The Big Debate: The scientific canon is more relevant to our times than the literary canon (May 17 at 2:30pm)
Richard Fortey, Dry Store Room No.1: The Secret History of the Natural History Museum.; Georgina Ferry, Max Perutz And The Secret Life.; John Mullan, Anonymity: A Secret History of English Literature.; Tracy Chevalier, The Girl with the Pearl Earring.; Joan Bakewell.
Tickets £10. "Jane Austen said that ‘the person, be it gentleman or lady, who has no pleasure in a novel must be intolerably stupid’. But is knowledge of the fundamentals of science more important in the age of climate change and cloning?

For the motion: Richard Fortey, palaeontologist and author ... (more)of Dry Store Room No.1: The Secret History of the Natural History Museum; Georgina Ferry, science writer

and author of Max Perutz And The Secret Life.

Against the motion: John Mullan, Professor of English at UCL, journalist and author of Anonymity: A Secret History of English Literature; Tracy Chevalier, novelist - The Girl with the Pearl Earring, Burning Bright – and Chair of the Society of Authors.

Chairperson: Joan Bakewell, Chair of the National Campaign for the Arts, is a pioneering journalist, cultural commentator and author.

The audience decides the outcome by casting a vote. "
Added by christiguc.
The Way We Were (May 17 at 5:00pm)
David Kynaston, Austerity Britain.; Virginia Nicholson, Singled Out.
Tickets £10. "Does the recent success of two vivid social histories, David Kynaston’s Austerity Britain and Virginia Nicholson’s Singled Out, herald the end of the blockbuster biography? Is the sound bite age more suited to books of personal testimony than to door-stopper, definitive ... (more)single lives? Singled Out tells the story of how two million women survived without men after WW1; Austerity Britain describes life for ordinary people post WW11. Their authors discuss the art of letting multiple individual voices illustrate an age. David Kynaston is an historian; Virginia Nicholson’s previous book was Among the Bohemians."
Added by christiguc.
Arcadia (May 17 at 7:30pm)
Adam Nicolson, Earls of Paradise.; Charles Saumarez Smith.
Tickets £10. "Adam Nicolson
in conversation with Charles Saumarez Smith.
In his account of an Elizabethan golden age, Earls of Paradise, retold through the varying fortunes of the Pembrokes of Wilton – the inspiration for writers and artists including Raleigh, Donne, Inigo Jones, Van Dyck ... (more)and Shakespeare – Adam Nicolson explores dreams of rural perfection. His illustrated talk considers whether Elizabethan Britain embodied a more ideal way of living than ours. Adam Nicolson is an award-winning author. Charles Saumarez-Smith, Chief Executive of the Royal Academy, has written about Castle Howard."
Added by christiguc.
Scandalous Liaisons (May 18 at 12:00pm)
Carole Seymour-Jones, A Dangerous Liaison.; Frances Osborne, The Bolter.
Tickets £10. "What drives individuals to experiment with dangerous ways of behaving? In the case of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, the subject of Carole Seymour-Jones’s A Dangerous Liaison, it was free-thinking ideals and Left-Bank intellectualism; in the case of Idina Sackville, ... (more)the subject of Frances Osborne’s The Bolter - the inspiration for Nancy Mitford’s character in The Pursuit of Love and Love in a Cold Climate - it was 1920s high society and Happy Valley mores. They consider the cost of illicit passion and betrayal. Seymour-Jones wrote The Life of Vivienne Eliot. Frances Osborne is a journalist and author."
Added by christiguc.
Literary Love Affairs (May 18 at 2:30pm)
Carmen Callil, Bad Faith.; Jonathan Coe, The Rain Before it Falls.
Tickets £10. "This year is the 30th anniversary of Virago Modern Classics - dedicated to the celebration of women writers and founded by Carmen Callil. Novelist Jonathan Coe freely acknowledges his debt to these rediscovered female authors. They discuss the impact of Virago on writers and readers and ... (more)the influence of Rosamond Lehmann on Coe’s new novel, The Rain Before it Falls, a traumatic family saga, set in the second-half of the 20th century. Jonathan Coe’s previous books include the award-winning What a Carve Up and The Rotter’s Club. Carmen Callil is the author of Bad Faith."
Added by christiguc.
Democracy and Dissent (May 18 at 5:00pm)
Antonia Fraser, Cromwell: Our Chief of Men.; Tristram Hunt, Building Jerusalem.; Geoffrey Robertson QC.
Tickets £10. "The Levellers of the 17th century, whose demands for democracy and the end of parliamentary corruption culminated in the Putney Debates, represent a turning point in British history. Are their radical ideas still as important today? Antonia Fraser’s many highly acclaimed books include ... (more)Cromwell: Our Chief of Men. Tristram Hunt is a historian, lecturer, broadcaster and author of Building Jerusalem. Geoffrey Robertson QC is a human rights lawyer, who appeared for the defence in the Oz and Gay News trials and has also acted in well-known libel and civil liberties cases."
Added by christiguc.
Sylvia Plath's Art of the Visual (May 18 at 7:30pm)
Diana Quick.; Sally Bayley, Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath’s Art of the Visual.; Elisabeth Gray.; Jack Harris.
Tickets £14. "Sylvia Plath’s position as a cultural icon and highly influential writer is unassailable. This event, including poetry, slides, films and a specially commissioned song, presents fascinating new material about Plath as a painter and a reader. Plath’s work is read by the celebrated ... (more)actress, Diana Quick; Sally Bayley, co-editor of Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath’s Art of the Visual, gives an illustrated talk and shows Suzie Hanna’s animation, The Girl Who Would Be God; award-winning playwright Elisabeth Gray introduces her film inspired by Plath’s work and Jack Harris sings the Plath Lullaby."
Added by christiguc.
Diarist Extraordinaire (May 21 at 6:00pm)
Tony Benn.
Tickets £10. "How does one cope after leaving the best club in London after 51 years? Since resigning from Parliament, Tony Benn’s energy for campaigns and controversies has not wavered. In the latest (8th) volume of his diaries, he weaves the personal and the political into a warm and revelatory ... (more)whole. Tony Benn – a one-man antidote to the cynicism of modern politics – talks about his long political career, his passions (including triple-cheese pizzas, coca-cola and baked beans) and ideals."
Added by christiguc.
Past Times (May 21 at 8:00pm)
Linda Grant, The Clothes on Their Backs.; Emily Perkins, Novel About My Wife.
Tickets £10. "Can one escape one’s past and what are the perils of forgetting? Linda Grant’s The Clothes on Their Backs is about a young girl coming to terms with her dislocated and shameful family history. Emily Perkins’ Novel About My Wife is about flight and trying to forge a ... (more)new life. Linda Grant’s fiction includes the Orange Prize winning When I Lived in Modern Times. She also writes on fashion – which plays a significant part in her new novel. Emily Perkins, who lives in New Zealand, is the author of an award-winning collection of short stories and two novels."
Added by christiguc.
Going Wild (May 22 at 6:00pm)
Mark Cocker, Crow Country.; Polly Devlin, A Year in the Life of an English Meadow.; Andrew McNeillie.
Tickets £10. "Mark Cocker and Polly Devlin.
Chaired by Andrew McNeillie.

How can one account for the surge of interest in natural history? Mark Cocker’s Crow Country and Polly Devlin’s A Year in the Life of an English Meadow were both instant successes. Crow Country ... (more)is a paean to Cocker’s corvine obsession; Polly Devlin’s book is a tribute to an almost lost way of life. They discuss their passions with Andrew McNeillie, poet and editor of Archipelago, a journal dedicated to the British landscape. Mark Cocker is one of our foremost writers on nature. Polly Devlin is a well-known author and broadcaster. Andrew McNeillie co-edited Virginia Woolf’s Diaries."
Added by christiguc.
What Was Lost (May 22 at 8:00pm)
Catherine O'Flynn, What Was Lost.; Laura Thompson.
Tickets £10. "Catherine O’Flynn’s hugely successful novel, What Was Lost, won the Costa First Novel Award. A modern mystery, based in a shopping mall, it blends humour and pathos in the haunting story of a girl detective and her disappearance. The world famous crime writer, Agatha Christie ... (more)- the subject of Laura Thompson’s acclaimed biography - became a mystery in her own right when she vanished in mid-life. The authors discuss the contrasts between classic and contemporary crime writing. Catherine O’Flynn’s job in a record store influenced her debut novel. Laura Thompson’s previous biography was of Nancy Mitford."
Interested: DeadGoodBooks Added by christiguc.
The Enchantress of Florence (May 23 at 6:00pm)
Salman Rushdie.; Erica Wagner.
Tickets £12. "Salman Rushdie
in conversation with Erica Wagner.

In his new novel, Salman Rushdie, winner of the Booker of Bookers, transports readers to the 16th century Mughal Court, where a visitor from the Florentine world of Machiavelli wins the attention of the Emperor. This vintage Rushdie ... (more)tale of stories within stories, where nothing is as it first seems (or is it?), sets up symmetries between East and West – the hedonistic Mughal capital and the equally sensual Florentine city. Salman Rushdie is the author of nine novels, including Midnight’s Children and The Moor’s Last Sigh. Erica Wagner is the Literary Editor of The Times and author of the novel Seizure."
Added by christiguc.
God's Architect (May 23 at 8:00pm)
Rosemary Hill.; Simon Jenkins.
Tickets £10. "Rosemary Hill
in conversation with Simon Jenkins.

Rosemary Hill’s biography of the Victorian architect and designer, Pugin, the central figure of the Victorian Gothic revival, reveals a complex figure who, despite his remarkable life and great achievements - Big Ben, much of the ... (more)Houses of Parliament, 22 churches and 3 cathedrals - died young, disillusioned and insane. She discusses Pugin’s world-view and legacy with Simon Jenkins, former editor of The Times, columnist and author of England’s Thousand Best Churches and England’s Thousand Best Houses. Rosemary Hill is a writer and architectural historian."
Added by christiguc.
Kind of Blue (May 24 at 12:00pm)
A.L. Kennedy, Day.; Lorrie Moore, Who Will Run the Frog Hospital?.; Di Speirs.
Tickets £10. "A.L. Kennedy and Lorrie Moore.
Chaired by Di Speirs.

A.L. Kennedy, whose work is distinctive for its dark humour and linguistic brilliance, is the winner of the Costa Book of the Year for her novel, Day, about the impact of war on an ordinary soldier. She is also an award-winning ... (more)short story writer. Lorrie Moore is one of America’s greatest authors. Her ferociously funny stories ‘pack more wit and tragic-power into a single paragraph than most novels manage over fifteen chapters’ – Helen Simpson. Moore’s novels include Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? They read from and discuss their work with Di Speirs, Radio 4 producer and judge of the BBC National Short Story Award."
Added by christiguc.
Literary Inspirations (May 24 at 2:30pm)
Helen Dunmore, Counting the Stars.; Lloyd Jones, Mister Pip.
Tickets £10. "Helen Dunmore’s novel, Counting the Stars, tells the story of the poet Catullus’ tormented relationship with his secret mistress, Clodia – the subject of his most passionate verse – set against the backdrop of Julius Caesar’s Rome. Lloyd Jones’ Mister Pip, set ... (more)on a strife-riddled tropical island in New Guinea where a single white man re-tells Dickens’ Great Expectations to the rapt inhabitants, is a haunting tour-de-force which has become an international best-seller. Helen Dunmore was the first winner of the Orange Prize for Fiction, Lloyd Jones, who lives in New Zealand, is a prolific writer."
Added by christiguc.
The Seventh Age (May 24 at 5:00pm)
Diana Athill, Somewhere Towards the End.; Katherine Whitehorn, Selective Memory.; Lynne Truss.
Tickets £10. "Diana Athill and Katherine Whitehorn.
Chaired by Lynne Truss.

Diana Athill’s Somewhere Towards the End is a candid and amusing book about getting old, including the decline of sexual desire. Katherine Whitehorn’s Selective Memory is equally honest and unflinching ... (more)about her career, long marriage and grief at the loss of her husband. Diana Athill is a distinguished editor and has written five volumes of memoirs; Katherine Whitehorn is a ground-breaking journalist and author. They discuss the pleasures and pains of looking back, together with Lynne Truss, novelist and best-selling author of Eats, Shoots and Leaves."
Added by christiguc.
State of the Nation (May 24 at 8:00pm)
Michael Billington.; Christopher Hampton.; William Nicholson.
Tickets £12. "Michael Billington and Christopher Hampton.
Chaired by William Nicholson.

Michael Billington, drama critic of the Guardian since 1971 and author of biographies of Harold Pinter and Peggy Ashcroft, believes British theatre is a microcosm of the outside world. Christopher ... (more)Hampton is one of our most lauded playwrights and screenwriters. His dramas include The Philanthropist, Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Embers, and his screen-plays include Atonement and Carrington. He has also directed and written lyrics for musicals and operas. They discuss the interplay between the performing arts and society with William Nicholson, playwright (Shadowlands) and screen-writer (Elizabeth: the Golden Age)."
Added by christiguc.
Revolutionary Relationships (May 25 at 12:00pm)
Jane Dunn, Read My Heart.; Frances Wilson, The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth.
Tickets £10. "Some intimate relationships transcend boundaries. Jane Dunn’s Read My Heart is the love story of Dorothy Osborne and Sir William Temple, whose families were opposed during the Civil War, and who, after their marriage, jointly occupied a pivotal role in C17th social and political ... (more)life. Frances Wilson’s The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth sheds light on the complex literary and bohemian relationship between the poet and his sister, who was also his muse. Jane Dunn’s previous books were Elizabeth and Mary and Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell: A Very Close Conspiracy. Frances Wilson’s previous book was The Courtesan’s Revenge."
Added by christiguc.
Love You More (May 25 at 2:30pm)
Sam Taylor-Wood.; Patrick Marber.
Tickets £10. "She has filmed David Beckham sleeping and made grown men cry. Now artist Sam Taylor-Wood has just finished directing a short film, Love You More, with a script by Patrick Marber. Inspired by the Buzzcocks single of the same name, the film is a tender love-story set in the heady ... (more)punk days of 1978. Sam Taylor-Wood takes photographs and makes films that examine our shared social and psychological experiences. Patrick Marber is a playwright (Dealer’s Choice, Closer and Don Juan in Soho) and screenwriter (Notes on a Scandal). He is currently adapting Ian McEwan’s Saturday for the screen.
They discuss their creative collaboration."
Added by christiguc.
Shock Tactics (May 25 at 5:00pm)
Grayson Perry.; Jane Stevenson.; Frances Spalding.
Tickets £10. "Grayson Perry and Jane Stevenson.
Chaired by Frances Spalding.

Edward Burra is a painter who does not fit neatly into conventional art histories, so it is hardly surprising that he appeals to Turner Prize-winning artist Grayson Perry, best known for his ceramics, with their incongruous ... (more)juxtaposition of decoration and form, and his transvestite alter ego, Claire. Jane Stevenson, Burra’s biographer, rehabilitated his life and a large body of highly original, modernist work. They discuss why this appealing artist, unafraid of bad taste and drawn to scenes of city life, has been unfairly neglected. With Frances Spalding, biographer and art historian."
Added by christiguc.
Stevie (May 25 at 7:30pm)
Eileen Atkins.
Tickets £14. "A unique, first performance by Eileen Atkins of the work of the poet, Stevie Smith.

One of our most admired theatrical Dames, Eileen Atkins has long been fascinated by Stevie Smith. They grew up in the same part of North London – where Stevie Smith remained throughout her life. She ... (more)is one of the great contradictory originals of 20th century poetry, writing of dark matters with reckless abandon – ‘not waving but drowning’ – and light ones with a deep, sardonic edge.

Eileen Atkins, recently seen on the small screen in Cranford, and in the theatre in Bond’s The Sea, has won innumerable awards for her acting. She has a strong association with the work of Virginia Woolf, including playing in A Room of One’s Own and Vita and Virginia and adapting Mrs Dalloway for T.V."
Added by christiguc.
Voyages into the Mind (May 15 at 6:00pm)
Tickets £10. How far can one push the literary boundaries by inhabiting the minds of historical characters and the lives of revered writers from the past? Two of our most admired authors discuss their imaginative and innovative approaches to writing fiction and biography. Hilary Mantel's new novel, ... (more)Wolf Hall, takes us behind the scenes during one of the most turbulent periods of British History, the reign of Henry VIII. Ann Wroe's biography, Being Shelley, abandoned the usual conventions of the genre and was widely regarded as an astonishing achievement. Hilary Mantel's books include Giving Up the Ghost and Beyond Black. Ann Wroe has written four previous works of non-fiction.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Making an Elephant - Graham Swift in conversation with James Naughtie (May 15 at 8:00pm)
Tickets £10. Why has one of our most reticent and private authors written a memoir? In his first work of non-fiction, Booker Prize-winning author Graham Swift reveals fascinating insights into his own life - his passions, motivations, friends, family, favourite reading - and his experiences on the set ... (more)during the filming of two of his most popular novels, Waterland and Last Orders. He talks about the influence of books and art on his life with James Naughtie, presenter of Radio 4's Today and Book Club programmes and author of The Making of Music.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Family Matters - William Nicholson and Virginia Nicholson, Chaired by Juliet Nicolson. (May 16 at 12:00pm)
Tickets £10 Is it a help or a hindrance to write in the shadow of Bloomsbury? William Nicholson, Oscar nominated for his screen-plays Shadowlands and Gladiator, has published a new novel, The Secret Intensity of Everyday Life, set in Sussex and loosely based on an amatory episode in the life of his ... (more)wife,Virginia Nicholson, author - most recently of Singled Out - and grand-daughter of Vanessa Bell.What are the pitfalls of being a writing couple, how far can one go in turning fact into fiction? Brought up at Sissinghurst, Juliet Nicolson comes from a literary family. Her forthcoming book is The Great Silence.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Maynard Keynes: A Man For All Seasons (May 16 at 2:30pm)
Tickets £10 Why didn't the powers that be see the global economic crisis coming? Our panel, all of whom were right on the money well in advance of the current meltdown, discuss the life, legacy and contemporary relevance of Bloomsbury economist John Maynard Keynes.Vince Cable MP, Liberal Democrat main ... (more)economic spokesman, is famed for his wit and wisdom.As the sage of the credit crunch, his new book, The Storm, has been eagerly awaited. Will Hutton, Chief Executive of the Work Foundation, is a journalist, broadcaster and author of The State We're In. Robert Skidelsky, biographer of Keynes, is Emeritus Professor of Political Economy at Warwick University and a cross-bench peer.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
The Victorians (May 16 at 5:00pm)
Jeremy Paxman.
Tickets £10 Continuing his quest to discover the essence of Englishness, Jeremy Paxman, trenchant presenter of Newsnight and University Challenge, turns his attention to the Victorians, who made us what we are today. Drawing on his experience in current affairs broadcasting, his illustrated talk demonstrates ... (more)how the paintings of the era - immensely popular visual narratives - chronicled the changing world of empire, urban life, industry and family. Were the crowds who wept at Balaclava, a picture depicting survivors of The Charge of the Light Brigade, the television viewers of their day?
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work (May 16 at 7:30pm)
Alain de Botton .
Tickets £10 At a time of growing unemployment, work, infrastructure and industry are the big topics of the day. Freud thought that love and work made the world go round, Bloomsbury thought work should be fulfilling and involve making things - whether paintings,lampshades or novels. With his customary ... (more)combination of philosophy and wit, Alain de Botton asks fundamental questions, such as whether craft can survive in the age of call centres, and accompanies us on some work experience from rocket science to biscuit manufacture, taking in art along the way. He is a founder of The School of Life.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Cooks and Lovers - Jill Dawson and Bethan Roberts (May 17 at 12:00pm)
Tickets £10 Can the enlightened reputation of Bohemian households survive the recollections of their female servants? Jill Dawson's novel, The Great Lover, explores the inner lives of the romantic poet, Rupert Brooke, and the maid whose love for him is revived when she receives a letter, in later life, ... (more)from a Tahitian woman claiming to be the writer's daughter. Bethan Roberts' The Good Plain Cook is loosely based on Peggy Guggenheim's short sojourn in rural Sussex with her Communist poet lover and is told from the perspective of the young cook whom he seduces. Jill Dawson's previous work includes Fred and Edie and Wild Boy. Bethan Roberts is the author of The Pools.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
The Children's Book: A.S. Byatt. Chaired by Virginia Nicholson. (May 17 at 2:30pm)
Tickets £10 The Children's Book, A.S. Byatt's new novel, is a panoramic saga of family secrets, set against the backdrop of a Bohemian, artistic, late Victorian and Edwardian world. It poses questions about war and peace, art and society and whether famous writers of children's books are doomed to damage ... (more)their offspring. The action moves from the Kent marshes, to Paris, Munich and the trenches of the Somme, while the vivid characters explore Fabianism, anarchy, free love, class differences and women's suffrage. Another tour de force from the internationally acclaimed author of Possession. Virginia Nicholson's Among the Bohemians was inspired by her own background.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
The Good Life (May 17 at 5:00pm)
Will a reassessment of two of the founding fathers of British socialism - Friedrich Engels and Edward Carpenter - help us find alternative ways of living in an era of collapsing capitalism? Each came from a background of wealth and led colourful and contradictory lives. Engels, the co-author of the Communist ... (more)Manifesto, was a raffish aristocrat and ideologue; Carpenter, brought up in Brighton, was a gay libertarian and advocate of naturism, vegetarianism, communal living, women's suffrage and prison reform. Sheila Rowbotham, the grande dame of socialist feminist studies, and Tristram Hunt, historian and broadcaster, discuss their biographies of Carpenter and Engels respectively.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Art and Authenticity - William Feaver and Deborah Moggach in conversation with Frances Spalding (May 17 at 7:30pm)
Tickets £10 Two recent adaptations caught the Zeitgeist: The Pitman Painters, based on William Feaver's book, at the NT, and Deborah Moggach's The Diary of Anne Frank on TV. The former tells the story of a group of miners from Ashington Colliery in the inter-war years who became artists. The original ... (more)Diary of Anne Frank symbolises the suffering of the Holocaust. William Feaver and Deborah Moggach talk to Frances Spalding about preserving the integrity of recent lives when translating them into new art forms. William Feaver - painter, curator, art critic - is a Trustee of the Ashington Group Collection; Deborah Moggach's latest novel is These Foolish Things; Frances Spalding is an art historian and biographer.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
In the Frame - Julia Neuberger and Colm Toibin Chaired by Andrew Motion (May 20 at 6:00pm)
Julia Neuberger.; Colm Toibin.
Tickets £10 What stories do we tell ourselves as we look at our favourite paintings? Julia Neuberger has chosen to reminisce about the memories that Camille Pissarro's Lordship Lane Station, Dulwich (1871) evokes, and Colm Toibin muses on Paul Cezanne's inner thoughts as he painted Route Tournante (1902-06). ... (more)Colm Toibin is one of our most celebrated writers, author of the Booker-nominated The Master. His major new novel, Brooklyn, will be hot off the press. Baroness Neuberger DBE is one of our most distinguished figures in public life. She became a Rabbi in 1977, served as Chief Executive of the King's Fund, and was appointed by the Prime Minister as Champion for Volunteering last year.Andrew Motion is Poet Laureate and has written extensively on art.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Midsummer Nights - Kate Atkinson, Lynne Truss and Jeanette Winterson. (May 20 at 8:00pm)
Tickets £10 To celebrate its 75th year, Glyndebourne commissioned some of our best writers to compose a story inspired by a favourite opera.The resulting anthology, edited by Jeanette Winterson, is set to become a classic. So bring your picnic hampers and champagne and listen to Kate Atkinson on La ... (more)Traviata, Lynne Truss on The Turn of the Screw and Jeanette Winterson on La Fanciulla del West. Kate Atkinson is the author of Behind the Scenes at the Museum and When will there be good news? Lynne Truss, novelist and playwright, is the author of Eats, Shoots and Leaves; Jeanette Winterson is the author of Oranges are Not the Only Fruit and The Passion.
Interested: MissAlabaster Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Being Good (May 21 at 6:00pm)
Patrick Gale discusses The Whole Day Through.; William Fiennes discusses The Music Room.
Tickets £10 The male and female protagonists at the centre of Patrick Gale's new novel The Whole Day Through are torn between sacrificing romance due to the needs of dependant relatives and grasping personal happiness.William Fiennes' The Music Room revolves around the contrasts between his charmed ... (more)upbringing in a 700 year-old moated castle and the impact on his life of a disabled brother. Both are meditations on home, family and the meaning of love. Patrick Gale's previous novel was the best selling Notes from an Exhibition;William Fiennes is the author of The Snow Geese.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Pitch Perfect (May 21 at 8:00pm)
Tickets £10 'Who knew deafness could be this funny?' (Lorrie Moore). Despite dealing with loss in many forms, David Lodge's latest novel, Deaf Sentence, is exhilaratingly entertaining as well as sad, stoic and thought provoking, and brings into play all the elements of campus life which made his reputation. ... (more)One of our most significant and versatile literary figures, he straddles the world of academia and popular fiction. His novels, many of which have been adapted for T.V., include Changing Places, Small World, Nice Work, Therapy, Thinks... and Author, Author.
Interested: DeadGoodBooks Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Darwin - Steve Jones and Ruth Padel Chaired by James Moore (May 22 at 6:00pm)
Steve Jones discusses Darwin's Island: The Galapagos in the Garden of England.; Ruth Padel discusses Darwin: A Life in Poems.; James Moore discusses Darwin's Sacred Cause .
Tickets £10 No scientist is more important or more interesting than Charles Darwin. In the 200th anniversary of his birth and the 150th year since The Origin of Species, we celebrate the significance of the theory of evolution with geneticist and leading science writer Steve Jones, and Darwin the man ... (more)and Victorian paterfamilias with poet Ruth Padel, his great, great, grand-daughter. Steve Jones' Darwin's Island shows that his discoveries owed as much to the British countryside as to the Galapagos. Ruth Padel's Darwin:A Life in Poems imagines the conflicting emotions of the private man and the eminent scientist. Open University Professor James Moore is Darwin's co-biographer and the co-author of the recent Darwin's Sacred Cause.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Lincoln - Doris Kearns Goodwin In conversation with Robert Harris (May 22 at 8:00pm)
Tickets £10 When Barack Obama was asked which book he could not live without in the White House, his answer was instant: Team of Rivals:The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, by Doris Kearns Goodwin. No wonder President 44 admires President 16, a great orator, from humble origins, who saved civil ... (more)war-torn America and ended slavery. Novelist Robert Harris - 'I have not enjoyed a history book so much for years' - is also a fan. He talks to the doyenne of US presidential historians and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for History about U.S. politics, past and present. Robert Harris is the author of Fatherland, Enigma, Archangel, Pompeii, Imperium and The Ghost.
Added by DeadGoodBooks.
Odyssey (May 23 at 12:00pm)
Chris Stewart discusses Three Ways to Capsize a Boat.
Tickets £10 Chris Stewart shot to fame with Driving Over Lemons, describing his life on a peasant farm in the Alpujarras mountains of Spain. He was drawn there by reading South from Granada, by Gerald Brenan, and wrote an introduction to the Penguin Modern Classics edition of the book. His farm is 16 ... (more)miles from the village where Brenan entertained his Bloomsbury friends. Three Ways to Capsize a Boat, his new publication, describes his journeys before moving to Spain. Chris Stewart will talk about his hilarious adventures on land and sea. His other books are A Parrot in the Pepper Tree and The Almond Blossom Appreciation Society.
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Only Connect (May 23 at 2:30pm)
Tickets £10 'No question - the non-fiction book of the year is Richard Holmes' Age of Wonder' (Andrew Marr) - an incident-packed account of a time when science and art marched hand in hand, and Coleridge and Humphry Davy were Yin and Yang. Jenny Uglow's Words & Pictures explores fascinating working ... (more)relationships between writers and artists such as Hogarth and Fielding, Wordsworth and Bewick, Dickens and Phiz. Was there something in the water in 18th and 19th century Britain which catalysed fertile collaborations? Richard Holmes has also written extensively on the Romantic Poets. Jenny Uglow's books include The Lunar Men.
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The Stuff of Nightmares (May 23 at 7:30pm)
Tickets £10 Chaired by William Nicholson Can books, aimed at a young readership, help make sense of shocking events in recent history? Markus Zusak's The Book Thief, set in Nazi Germany and narrated by Death, has become an international best-seller. Michael Morpurgo's War Horse tells the story of the ... (more)carnage of a generation of youth in the trenches and has been adapted for a highly successful stage production by the NT. They discuss the power of words to disturb and to nourish. Markus Zusak is a prize-winning Australian writer. Michael Morpurgo is the former Children's Laureate and bestselling author of over 100 books, many of which tackle dark themes.William Nicholson writes novels for children, including The Wind Singer.
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Life-Patterns (May 24 at 12:00pm)
Anne Chisholm discusses Frances Partridge: The Biography.; Margaret Drabble discusses The Pattern in the Carpet.
Tickets £10 Chaired by Giles Waterfield What is the creative urge that compels some writers to publish memoirs and diaries, and what makes some of these books masterpieces of English literature? Frances Partridge, a central figure in the Bloomsbury Group, was one of the great British diarists of the ... (more)20th century. Her biographer,Anne Chisholm, reveals the spaces between the words. Renowned author Margaret Drabble has written a very original memoir, The Pattern in the Carpet, which pieces together the part that jigsaw puzzles play in her life.Anne Chisholm has written lives of Nancy Cunard and Rumer Godden. Margaret Drabble's most recent novel is The Sea Lady; she is also a biographer and critic. Giles Waterfield, a novelist and art historian, is the Chair of The Charleston Trust.
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Roosting (May 24 at 2:30pm)
Tickets £10 The Dowager Duchess of Devonshire, the youngest of the Mitford Sisters, is a woman of many parts, first and foremost chatelaine of Chatsworth, one of England's greatest and best-loved houses, but also a writer and of course, a fashion icon. Charlotte Mosley is the meticulous and admired ... (more)editor of The Mitford Letters and the correspondence between Evelyn Waugh and Nancy Mitford.They talk to Adam Nicolson, chatelain of Sissinghurst and award-winning author, about the on-going responsibilities of inheriting a national treasure and a famous name. Adam Nicolson's new book is Sissinghurst: An Unfinished History. Deborah Devonshire's Home to Roost is a sequel to Counting My Chickens.
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