
Aye Write 2023 - Episode Three
26/8/2023
Local writers and poets from across Edinburgh come together to create a collective love letter to the city they call home. Episode 3: Flic McCann Jacqueline Gilchrist Hilary Birch Anne Hogarth

Aye Write 2023 - Episode Two
26/8/2023
Local writers and poets from across Edinburgh come together to create a collective love letter to the city they call home. Episode 2: Elaine Harris Sylvia Trotter Janet Lewis Susan Cheney

Aye Write 2023 - Episode One
26/8/2023
Local writers and poets from across Edinburgh come together to create a collective love letter to the city they call home. Episode 1: Barbara Munro Anna Phillips Anne Milne Billy Cornwall

Marian Keyes: Family Matters (2020 Event)
12/5/2021
Marian Keyes didn’t start writing until her twenties, she felt that she was ‘all washed up at 30.’ But readers have had a love affair with Keyes that has lasted over two decades now. It’s hard to imagine a greater, more reliable comfort than a new book by Marian Keyes landing solidly in your lap, promising all the qualities that have come to define her work: complicated family dynamics, bountiful quantities of laughter, skeletons in the closet and uncomfortable moments of truth that lie close to the bone. Her latest, Grown Ups, centres around Cara Casey, who after a bang on the head finds herself incapable of keeping mum on the family secrets. With more than 35 million copies sold of her 13 novels to date, Keyes’s own brand of irrepressible, generous, hilarious storytelling goes from strength to strength. Join Keyes and writer Jenny Colgan for an hour of unforgettable grown-up fun in this event recorded live at the 2020 Book Festival.

Anne Enright with Vicky Featherstone: Mothers and Daughters (2020 Event)
07/5/2021
‘You were always sitting in character, you were just never sure which one.’ So says Norah to the memory of her mother in Actress, the new novel by Anne Enright. The mother in question is Katherine O’Dell, who died aged 58 – the same age Norah has now reached. Actress is a portrait of life in the theatre, of one woman’s rise to fame and her subsequent decline, with all the challenges that women on stage faced in the years before the #MeToo movement shone light on them. But this novel is also a tender examination of the relationship between mother and daughter – the reconstruction of an emotional landscape in which fame has left a trail of newspaper articles, photographs and public performances. For this event, recorded live at the 2020 Book Festival, the Booker Prize-winning novelist is joined by Vicky Featherstone, Artistic Director of the Royal Court Theatre and the first Artistic Director of the National Theatre of Scotland, to discuss this sensitive portrayal of a life lived in the spotlight.



Edinburgh International Book Festival