Feminism, cyber warfare and politics feature at sell-out Cliveden Literary Festival

The Cliveden Literary Festival returned for a third time last weekend with Ian McEwan, Howard Jacobson and Elif Shafak among the authors taking part in a busy event that saw speakers discuss topics from feminism to Russian spies, cyberwarfare and conspiracy theories to secrets of the universe.  Continue reading at 'The Bookseller'

[ The Bookseller | 2019-09-30 13:22:16 UTC ]

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Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists – meet the class of 23

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Granta reveals its pick of future star British novelists

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[ The Guardian | 2023-04-13 07:00:37 UTC ]
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Book thief who stole more than 1,000 manuscripts ‘wanted to cherish them before anyone else’

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Reykjavik International Literary Festival Names Guest Authors

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The Brooklyn Book Festival, After the Storm

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Sexual abuse casts a long shadow in Ian McEwan’s ‘Lessons’

Sexually abused by his piano teacher, a boy struggles to reclaim his life in Ian McEwan's new novel "Lessons." Continue reading at The Washington Post

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Lucy Sante on Writing with the Back Brain

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Among the Literary Lions, at Full Roar, in the 1980s

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The Ever-Shifting Challenge of Promoting Literature in Translation

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Ian McEwan’s ‘most epic book to date’ to be published in September

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McEwan's 'mesmerising' Lessons signed by Cape for September release

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Organisers urged to keep literary festivals hybrid in new campaign

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Sour Grapes by Dan Rhodes review – a vengeful satire on the publishing world

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This Week’s Reykjavík International Literary Festival: ‘Cozy Venues’

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Sissay, Osman and Slimani to star at hybrid Durham Book Festival

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England’s Cliveden Literary Festival Plans a Physical Presentation

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Emmanuel Carrère’s Dark Places, by Felipe Restrepo Pombo

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World Literature Today Announces Finalists for 2022 Neustadt International Prize for Literature

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“Silence Became My Mother Tongue”: A Conversation with Sulaiman Addonia, by Anderson Tepper

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Octavia Butler's legacy celebrated at Barbican feminist literary festival

The legacy of science fiction author Octavia Butler is to be explored at the Barbican's New Suns feminist literary festival this month. Continue reading at The Bookseller

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