Just a couple of days until the start of Durham Book Festival:
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Durham
Book Festival announces 2013 programme
Booking open from 8 August
The annual
book festival returns with guests including Linwood Barclay, Simon
Armitage, Lucy Worsley, Alan Johnson, Mark Watson, Rachel Joyce, Jeremy
Vine and Lynda La Plante plus a specially-commissioned family show
adapted from Val McDermid’s My Granny is a Pirate.
We’re delighted to let you know that the Durham Book Festival 2013
programme was announced last night at Durham Castle.
This year’s festival takes place from 12-20 October in a selection
of venues around Durham. The varied programme for 2013 includes a
thrilling list of internationally known crime authors, politicians,
academics, poets, and writers of all genres and styles.
The programme includes many household names from literature,
politics and broadcasting, including Jeremy
Vine, Lynda
La Plante, Alan
Johnson, Lucy
Worsley and Walter
Mosley.
There are also several new commissions for this year, including a
new piece of work by Festival Laureate, poet Paul
Muldoon; Benjamin
Markovits as the first ever Investec Ashes writer-in-residence; and
musician and singer Kathryn
Williams with a new EP of songs inspired by Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar to
celebrate 50 years since its publication.
The festival will be hosting Carina Rodney's specially-commissioned
musical adaptation of Val McDermid's children’s book, My Granny is a Pirate,
directed by Annie Rigby. Musicians from Sage Gateshead and a team of
performers will bring the acclaimed crime author's first foray into
children's literature to life at Durham Town Hall on Saturday 12
October. New Writing North is also delighted to be taking the show on
the road, touring to community centres, libraries and schools across
County Durham as well as to Manchester and Sheffield as part of a
partnership with other book festivals in the North.
The programme launch event included an appearance by acclaimed
writer David Peace, author of the Red
Riding Quartet and The
Damned United, who read a short extract from his new novel,
Red or Dead,
and also announced the shortlist for the Gordon Burn Prize, which you
can read more about here.
The launch also revealed a series of exciting events scheduled for
young readers and writers in this year's programme, with the Durham
Book Festival Schools Day on Wednesday 2 October and the Cuckoo Shop in
Framwellgate where 14-25 year-olds can blog, book advice sessions with
established authors, and generally take a sideways look at the
festival. The Cuckoo Shop will also host exclusive masterclasses with
authors Gavin Extence, Benjamin Markovits and Matt Haig and poets John
Challis and Anna Woodford so aspiring writers can learn from the best.
You can find out more about the Cuckoo programme for young writers at www.newwritingnorth.com/projects-cuckoo-young-writers-page-2244.html.
There are many more events – over 60 this year, including a number
of free events – so have a look at the full programme and book tickets
at www.durhambookfestival.com.
Durham Book Festival is produced by New Writing North for Durham
County Council and supported by Durham University and Arts Council
England, with sponsorship from Banks Group, Swinburne Maddison, PwC,
and the University of Sunderland.
Other events in the region
Durham
Streets Festival
Durham City plays host at the end of August to the Durham Streets
Festival, including a gig with twice Mercury Music Prize-nominee Eliza
Carthy and Jim Moray in the Cathedral. A full programme and booking is
available at http://durhamstreetsof.co.uk.
War Horse at
the Sunderland Empire
The Sunderland Empire is one of the stops on the national tour next
spring of War Horse,
the critically-acclaimed production of Michael Morpurgo’s classic
children’s books. The production arrives in April, and you can get full
details and book at www.atgtickets.com/shows/war-horse/sunderland-empire/. |
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