Bring the children along to meet the characters from three heartwarming tales by bestselling children's author Onjali Raúf: The Boy at the Back of the Class; The Night Bus Hero; and The Letter With the Golden Stamp. Suitable for age 7–11.
Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult at all times. Accompanying adults need to purchase a ticket for this event.
Emily Ann Davison will host a mindfulness story time, sharing her book Every Bunny is a Yoga Bunny. Follow Yo-Yo’s journey and discover how we can all breathe, stretch and find calm. Children can join in with yoga moves and calming mindfulness activities. Age 3+
Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult at all times. Accompanying adults need to reserve a ticket for this event.
The hilarious sequel to 'Worst. Holiday. Ever', from bestselling author and comedy writer Charlie Higson, 'Worst. Superhero. Ever' continues the adventures of Stan who, after surviving a holiday to Italy without his parents, lands himself a part as a main character – a brainy superhero – in a well-known TV show. Only trouble is... he's absolutely terrified! Age 8–12
Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult at all times. Accompanying adults need to purchase a ticket for this event.
The story of a young Syrian refugee woman who lives in Shatila, one of the world's oldest refugee camps, told by Meike Ziervogel, co-founder of an NGO for refugees in the Middle East. Meike talks to Daniel Hahn about how her writing draws on experience of working with displaced persons, and her own past.
British Bengali-born writer Tasneem Abdur-Rashid talks to author Maggie Brookes about her uplifting, laugh-out-loud story, The Thirty Before Thirty List, which confronts the choices that a young woman has to make between forging an exciting, independent life or accepting a life defined by family and tradition.
Meet one of the producers of the cult-hit TV show Father Ted. In her nostalgic, warm-hearted memoir Lissa Evans reveals the challenges of the job and shares a hilarious montage of some of her most treasured Father Ted moments, from clerics crashing through windows to runaway milk floats. Lissa is in conversation with author Clare Chambers.
Helen Charman makes a radical case for what liberated mothering could be. Beginning with an understanding that to mother is a political act, Helen talks to author and journalist Eliane Glaser about her research into what motherhood has been, from the 1970s to the 2010s – from Women’s Liberation to austerity and how this maps mothers' fights for an alternative future.
Iain Sinclair’s latest book, Pariah Genius, follows the life of photographer John Deakin, whose chronicles of Soho life – and the world of Francis Bacon and his friends – have so influenced our perception of that generation’s work. He talks to author and broadcaster Horatio Clare about why Deakin remains such a compelling figure.
The lives of two east London teenage boys become fatally entwined in this assured debut addressing themes of the online 'targeting' and 'recruiting' of teenagers, masculinity and marginalisation, Britishness, and the pernicious pull of extremist politics. Darkly humorous and highly topical, this is an Observer Best Debut Novel 2024; and shortlisted for the prestigious Gordon Burns Prize.
Putting a country’s leader on trial once seemed unimaginable. But as journalist Steve Crawshaw makes clear in his new book – a blend of eyewitness reporting and history, including recent stories from the front lines of justice in Ukraine and Palestine – the possibilities of what can happen have been transformed. With host Daniel Hahn.