Don’t miss an unforgettable evening of readings and conversation in the company of Toby Litt, our Word Factory mentor Alex Preston and his apprentice Holly Dawson, at Waterstones’ flagship store in Piccadilly, Europe’s largest bookstore — brilliant fiction and a free glass of wine. Book tickets
Find out more »The News: A User’s Manual looks at the peculiar place that ‘the news’ occupies in our lives. De Botton notes that we invest it with an authority which used to be the preserve of religion. But what does it do for us? Mixing current affairs with philosophy, de Botton offers a guide to the precautions we should take before venturing anywhere near the news and the ‘noise’ it generates. Book tickets/more information
Find out more »Brighton, summer 1940. Fear of invasion brings unspoken desires to the surface as a middle-class English family anxiously awaits news. Geoffrey falls in love with a prostitute he suspects is a Jew; Evelyn is attracted to a ‘degenerate’ German-Jewish painter held in an internment camp. An exploration of chaos and xenophobia in an ordinary town, Unexploded was long-listed for the 2013 Man Booker Prize. Read all reviews for Unexploded. Book tickets/more information
Find out more »Mike Figgis, Lisa Dwan, Melvyn Bragg, Sophie Hannah, Joe Klein at the Tabernacle. Book tickets/more information
Find out more »An Officer and a Spy is Robert Harris‘s compelling recreation of the Dreyfus Affair, a scandal that became the most famous miscarriage of justice in history. Compelling, too, are the echoes for our modern world: an intelligence agency gone rogue, justice corrupted in the name of national security, a newspaper witch-hunt of a persecuted minority, and the old-age instinct of those in power to cover up their crimes. Harris has brought his talent for historical and political drama to The Dreyfus Affair&hellip
Find out more »Jane Austen created the definitive picture of Georgian England – a landscape of Palladian mansions and handsome parsonages, peopled by rigidly-divided classes. No writer matches Austen’s sensitive ear for the hypocrisy and irony lurking beneath the genteel conversation. Never has a novelist written comic prose with such subtlety and restraint. If you want to understand the early 19th century – the power of money and inheritance, the clothes, the interior décor – Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudiceare worth a dozen history&hellip
Find out more »At 14 Julie Burchill fell in love. Not with a boy, but “with a whole race of people – the Jews”. The journalist and novelist has been learning Hebrew and even chose Hatikvah, the Israeli national anthem, as her single record choice for Desert Island Discs. Unchosen, which will be published next spring through crowdfunding, is all about this love affair. In a special pre-publication event the inveterate nonconformist shares with Tanya Gold why she’s such a fan. Book tickets/more&hellip
Find out more »Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld will be discussing their new book The Triple Package: What Really Determines Success at the Royal Institute of British Architects More information/book tickets
Find out more »he comedian and “poster girl for mental illness” launches the paperback of Sane New World, a manual for living with less everyday frenzy. In an upfront and compassionate style, Wax uses her experience of depression and study of neuroscience to explore how the mind works. Everyone can rewire their thinking, she says, using mindfulness techniques among others, to find calm in a crazy world. The paperback of Sane New World: Taming the Mind is published on 27 February 2014. Book tickets/more information
Find out more »We greet the penultimate evening of February and its wilfully controversial 28th day conclusion with an event so hip it looks back at us with contempt and, through a fug of smoke from its Gitanes, remarks, ‘You callin’ me hip, daddio? Even usin’ that vocab make you sound like a moldy fig right there.’ Quite. Joining us are GARY SHTEYNGART, the award-winning comic novelist whose ‘Little Failure: A Memoir‘ is published 35 years after he left Leningrad for the States, and SHEILA&hellip
Find out more »In a small village, in a kitchen, a man announces to his wife that he is leaving, embarking on a journey in search of their dead son. The “Walking Man” paces in ever-widening circles around the town. One after another, all manner of townsfolk fall into step with him – the Net Mender, the Midwife, the Elderly Maths Teacher, even the Duke – each enduring his or her own loss. Israel’s celebrated author David Grossman is back at Jewish Book&hellip
Find out more »Gideon Lewis-Kraus’s memoir A Sense of Direction is an account of three pilgrimages – the Camino de Santiago, a tour of Buddhist temples on the island of Shikoku, and a journey to the tomb of a Hasidic Rabbi in the Ukraine – undertaken in the wake of a family crisis. Gideon will be at the shop to talk about pilgrimage, writing and reconciliation with Sheila Heti, author of How Should a Person Be? and Christian Lorentzen, senior editor at the&hellip
Find out more »Isabella Blow was the eldest child of the 12th Baronet of Broughton.The tragic death of her brother at the age of two left the family without an heir to the 300 year-old title, and led Isabella into new and uncharted territory in a choice of career in her adult life. Even today, the aristocracy still differentiates between the sexes over inheritance. In this talk, Isabella Blow’s biographer Lauren Goldstein Crowe will join the sponsor of the Equality Bill, Lord Lucas,&hellip
Find out more »One hundred years after the outbreak of the Great War, Sebastian Faulks, whose novel Birdsong has sold over 2.5 million copies, introduces four writers, and the pieces of First World War literature that mean most to them. Poet and fiction writer Tobias Hill looks at Alain-Fournier’s Le Grand Meaulnes. The Irish poet Michael Longley, whose father was awarded the Military Cross for gallantry during the First World War, reads from the poetry of Robert Graves, Wilfred Owen, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon and Edward&hellip
Find out more »With a twenty-something protagonist named Sheila, and a narrative based on conversations and emails between her and her friends, this 2012 sensation blurs the lines between fiction and nonfiction. Using transcribed conversations, real emails, plus heavy doses of fiction, the always innovative Heti crafts a work that is part literary novel, part self-help manual, and part bawdy confessional. Heti comes from Toronto to discuss with Rachel Cusk her totally shameless and dynamic exploration into the way we live now, breathing&hellip
Find out more »Philip Roth has produced some of the greatest literature of the 20th century, yet there has been no major critical work about him to date. Now, for the first time, Claudia Roth Pierpont brings us the story of Roth’s creative life. Touching on Roth’s family, inspirations, critics, and literary friendships with such figures as Saul Bellow and John Updike, Roth Unbound is filled with insights gleaned from Pierpont’s years of conversations and interviews with the author. Read all reviews for Roth Unbound. Book tickets/more&hellip
Find out more »“If David Foster Wallace had written Eat, Pray, Love it might have come close to approximating the adventures of Gideon Lewis-Kraus”, wrote Gary Shteyngart on his friend’s debut novel, A Sense of Direction. JBW brings the two writers together to discuss an incredible series of pilgrimages. Book tickets/more information
Find out more »Little Failure – the alarming pet-name given to the young Gary Shteyngart by his father when growing up in pre-Glasnost Russia – is a remarkable immigrant memoir. A candid and poignant story of a Soviet family’s trials and tribulations, and of their 1979 escape to the consumerised promised land of the United States, it is also an exceptionally funny account of the author’s transformation from asthmatic Moscow toddler to 40-something Manhattanite with a receding hairline and a memoir to write. Book tickets/more&hellip
Find out more »Is the government wise to invest in teaching skill-based subjects, as opposed to those that rely on creative impulse? Come and hear some of the country’s top defenders of the arts – and its detractors – at what promises to be a lively Spectator Debate on whether a liberal arts education is a secure investment or whether it squanders both time and money. Book tickets/more information
Find out more »The Folio Society and the British Library are hosting a festival which will feature the Folio Prize judges, shortlisted authors and members of the Academy, who will come together for a rich discussion about the art of storytelling. Chair of this year’s judges for The Folio Prize, Lavinia Greenlaw is a writer whose work is celebrated for its beautiful precision; Ali Smith is frequently praised for her dazzling wordplay and abundant imagination. Here they will discuss with fellow Academician, critic and author, Erica Wagner, the role&hellip
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