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I am delighted to welcome you to The Times and Sunday Times
Literature Festival 2023, the 74th to be held in this lovely spa town.
A wonderfully rich and diverse collection of hundreds of events lies between these covers, and in October our buzzing, beautiful site will be full of excited book lovers of all ages – we can’t wait.
As we think, read, talk and laugh together over 10 extraordinary Autumn days, we celebrate the power of words to connect communities and inspire change. Drop into a free VOICEBOX event, explore The Wild Wood, browse the gorgeous bookshops or meet your favourite author – you can be assured of the warmest of welcomes.
Come and join us.
Nicola Tuxworth Head of Programming The Times and
Cheltenham
Sunday Times
Literature Festival
Look out for these icons throughout the brochure
Open captioned events
Programmers’ Picks
Workshop events
Contents Our Partners 4 Read the World 6 Programmers’ Picks 7 Guest Curators 8 Free Activities 10 for Families Free to See 12 VOICEBOX 14 Spotlight 15 Festival Programme 20 Family Programme 72 Young Adult 84 Programme Daily Planners 87 Index 103 Your Visit and Access 108 How to Book 109 Festival Village 110 Site and Venue
Map
Cheltenham
Welcome
Thank you to our Partners and Supporters
Title Partner
We are delighted to sponsor Cheltenham Literature Festival. We work collaboratively with the Festival team, curating a wonderful programme of events featuring the latest literary talent and many of our award-winning journalists. The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
Principal Partners
We are proud to be Partners of this world-renowned literary festival, and to present the annual Cheltenham Literature Festival at Sea bringing you the written word in all its wonderful variety. Cunard
Major Partners
Woodland Trust is proud to partner with Cheltenham Festivals, who share our belief in creating a better future, in a world where woods and trees thrive for people and wildlife.
Woodland Trust
4 Actual Investors
Festival Partners
We’re proud to Partner with Cheltenham Festivals, who help provide our collective communities with interesting and engaging learning opportunities.
University of Gloucestershire
Trust, Foundations and Individuals
Thank you to all of our supporters who have chosen to remain anonymous
Global Partners
We look forward to introducing our Booker Prize-shortlisted books to Festival-goers as part of our mutual ambition with Cheltenham Festivals to share great fiction. Booker
Foundation
With its unbeatable atmosphere and dedication to international writers, the Festival has become a key destination for Dutch and Flemish authors. The Festival is a valuable Partner for the New Dutch Writing and Flip Through Flanders projects.
Martin Colthorpe, Director, Modern Culture
In-Kind Partners
Working with Cheltenham Festivals over the past 20 years has allowed us to be part of a vibrant celebration of culture, creativity and community.
Willans LLP Solicitors
Media Partners
We’re delighted to be working with Cheltenham Festivals — sharing goals to educate, entertain and surprise, it’s a partnership made in heaven! Cotswold
Life
5
Jennifer Hayward and Richard Waite
Key events
Every book you pick up is a portal to a world beyond your own. Imagine the possibilities when 900+ of the world’s greatest writers, thinkers and creatives behind those books gather in Cheltenham for 10 packed days of conversation, debate and celebration.
World-class novelists, incisive global thinkers, bright new voices, bold explorers and conversation-starting creators await you this October.
Join us as writers from close to home come together with voices from Japan, Norway, Taiwan, Vietnam, India, Ghana, Spain, USA, New Zealand, Iceland and beyond. We are proud to continue our collaboration with Ukraine and hear from its most celebrated authors and young minds.
You will detect a global flavour across a range of events spanning art, fiction, current affairs, classic literature, psychology, travel, science and food, and there is plenty for young explorers too.
As the world’s first literature festival (est. 1949), we have been bringing writers and readers together for more than seven decades and have been hard at work to make this year one of the best, and most inspiring yet.
All you need to do is pack your curiosity and join us on Montpellier Gardens. See you there!
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From Africa to the Arctic Circle 21 Books from Japan 33 Love and Loss in Viêt Nam 29
Programmers’ Picks
Change Makers
7 We’ve picked some events not to miss at this year’s Festival
Look out for this icon in the full programme from page 20 and find out how to book on page 109 Family and Young Adult You Don’t Know What War Is Read, Scream, Repeat In the Shadow of the Wolf Queen If I Were Prime Minister Living Your Best Life 74 81 81 83 Fiction Greats Sebastian Barry Kate Atkinson with Richard Osman Ian McEwan Revisits Atonement The Sunday Times Award for Literary Excellence: Zadie Smith Cormac McCarthy: An American Great 22 26 39 60 70
Rethinking the World with Peter Frankopan Rebel Rebel: Soheila Sokhanvari Understanding Afghanistan Future (Hi)Stories 20 45 51 64
Experiences Cheltenham Bookshop Crawl The Suya Kitchen Breakfast with The Times: Behind the Headlines Caleb Azumah Nelson Presents... Richard Curtis: The Sunday Times Culture Interview 27 29 37 59 68 A Great Night Out David Mitchell Adrian Edmondson: Beserker QI Elves: Everything to Play For Andi Oliver’s Caribbean The Gothic Cabaret Why We Go Out Out 29 30 39 60 61 66 85
Unique
Image: Alex Cameron
Guest Curators
Our Guest Curators are a unique and treasured part of the Festival team each year – bringing fascinating insights, new perspectives and inspiring energy to the programme.
Dr Alex George
Dr Alex George is a TV doctor, bestselling author, and Youth Mental Health Ambassador to the government. Alex has become a well-known and respected figure amongst healthcare professionals in the UK, from his years as an A&E doctor, bringing the nation accessible and reassuring advice directly from the frontline throughout the pandemic.
@dralexgeorge
Peter Frankopan
Peter Frankopan is Professor of Global History at University of Oxford and Senior Research Fellow at Worcester College, Oxford. His 2015 bestseller the Silk Roads: A New Global History was named one of the ‘Books of the Decade’ 2010–2020 by The Sunday Times. The Earth Transformed is his landmark examination of the way humans have interacted with the natural world.
@peterfrankopan
I am delighted to be returning to the Festival for my second stint as Guest Curator. I will be talking about my new history, The Earth Transformed, introducing the remarkable Nandini Das and Keyu Jin to the Cheltenham audience, interviewing Simon Schama on pandemics, and gathering a panel of experts to predict the future.
I’m incredibly excited to be coming back to the Festival for the third year in a row and this time as a Guest Curator. I’ll be discussing my new book The Mind Manual, as well as speaking with some very exciting guests about the importance of mental health and what we can do to champion it.
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Anne-Marie Imafidon
Anne-Marie Imafidon became the youngest ever female to achieve a computing A-Level aged 11. Since then, she’s gone on to become one of the most influential women in tech. Anne-Marie is a computer scientist, entrepreneur and current President of the British Science Association.
@notyouraverageAMI
I’m delighted to be able to curate a set of Cheltenham events having spent so much time at Cheltenham Festivals. These are voices we need to hear, understand and evolve our understanding of the world with – bridging design, creativity in tech and reimagining the future.
Ann Morgan
Our Literary Explorer in Residence, Ann Morgan is an author based in Folkestone. In 2012, she challenged herself to read a book from every country, recording her quest at ayearofreadingtheworld.com and in the non-fiction book Reading the World. Her debut novel, Beside Myself, has been translated into eight languages and her latest novel is Crossing Over
@ayearofreadingtheworld
Caleb Azumah Nelson
British-Ghanaian writer and photographer Caleb Azumah Nelson’s first novel, Open Water, won the Costa First Novel Award and Debut of the Year at the British Book Awards, and was a number one Times bestseller. His second novel, Small Worlds, was published in May 2023.
@caleb_anelson
I’m excited to be speaking and curating at The Times and Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival this year. It’s given me space to explore and showcase not only my other disciplines but those I love and admire working within them.
I’m delighted to be returning to Cheltenham for more literary explorations. What better place could there be for playing with ideas of how stories travel and connect us, and testing what such exchanges can teach us about our selves and our world? Bring it on!
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Free Activities for Families
As well as weekends packed full of ticketed events for children, there’s plenty of free activities to discover on site.
THEWOODWILD
Walk-about performances
Woodland Wisps
Step into an enchanted world of wonder, as our storytelling wisps share tales of potions, pixies and magical powers.
Secret Agents
Psst! You there! A top secret mission is unfolding at this year’s Festival and our storytelling agents may require your assistance.
Say hello to Cat in the Hat, Mog the Forgetful Cat and The Gruffalo
Arts and Crafts
Come along and create your own tip-top Festival hat, bird mask, wishing wand or paper windmill to take away.
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Story Shack
Mystery Trails
Moomin Mail Trail
Snufkin has left Moomintroll a puzzle trail. Pick up your quiz sheet and solve the puzzles.
The Twitchers
Mystery Trail
Find the clues and solve the mystery! Pick up a trail sheet and follow the posters to work out whodunnit.
Waterstones Children’s Bookshop
Covered Picnic Tent
The Wild Wood Info Point
Discover the full ticketed Family and Young Adult Programme from
page 72
Storytellers
Meet the author for short story sessions in the Waterstones Children’s Bookshop.
Roll up to Story Shack for stories galore from around the world about animals, faraway places and creatures large and small.
Book Quiz
Bring your book brains along for our booktastic book quiz.
Book Swap
Bring your old favourites along and find some new ones.
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The Den
Free to See
A Very Short Introduction to…
Join experts in The Huddle throughout the day for bite-size introductions to mind-expanding subjects — big topics, short talks.
Join us in the Huddle
Whether you’re after stimulating talks during the day or you fancy great entertainment and music in the evening, visit The Huddle in our Feast Café for a host of free events celebrating writing from close to home and around the globe.
Help us to keep at least 25% of our activities free
From as little as £15 per year you can become a Cheltenham Festivals Member and support our vision for a world in which everyone can explore and create culture
To find out more scan the QR code or visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/members
The Times Crossword
Settle in as The Times Crossword Editor Richard Rogan takes you through the mysteries of the day’s crossword puzzles with a helping hand or a tantalising hint.
Grab a coffee and check out
Clockwise’s contemporary shared workspace at the Festival. Whether you’re looking to connect with your local community or enjoy a relaxed environment, there’s something for everyone.
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Images: Still Moving Media
...around town
Lit Crawl
Join us for a fast-paced evening of pop-up events and quirky happenings.
Saturday 7 October, 6pm – late Venues around Cheltenham
FREE (no tickets required)
Lit Crawl is back to take over the streets of Cheltenham with a riotous evening of the written and spoken word – all completely free thanks to sponsorship from Cheltenham BID
Created by Lit Quake Foundation in San Francisco in 2004, Lit Crawl is now in Boston, Brooklyn, Portland, Chicago, New Zealand and beyond.
Lit Crawl is also part of Cheltenham Festivals’ Spotlight talent development programme, featuring a diverse programme of events showcasing up-and-coming authors, performers, poets and comedians in exciting formats and spaces. Drop in for one session or crawl your way through the whole evening of events.
This is literature done differently.
Look out for the full Lit Crawl line-up from mid-September online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/around-town, in print, and on the Cheltenham Festivals app.
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in association with Cheltenham BID
FREE
VOICEBOX is back, sharing the best and brightest young talent in a vibrant series of free events.
Be part of the conversation as we create change from the ground up and amplify the issues you care about.
With previous speakers including Tom Daley, Francis Bourgeois, Tiwalola Ogunlesi, Dominique Palmer and Alex George, we’re sharing bold content from young people in our community and beyond.
Hear short talks, chats and debates about today’s hottest
topics, delight in pop-up performances from the biggest names and rising stars. Get creative with a drop-in workshop and experience comedy, music and spoken word.
VOICEBOX is home to unmissable experiences and one-off moments.
Drop in to VOICEBOX throughout the Festival.
FREE, NO TICKET REQUIRED.
RECOMMENDS
Our top picks from the ticketed programme...
Let’s Talk 36
About Sex
Liv Little and 70
Yomi Adegoke
Section 28, 71 Pride and Protest
Looks, Lies 84 and Love
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Look out for the full-line-up from mid-September and pick up the VOICEBOX Zine in print, online and on the Cheltenham Festivals app. CHELTENHAMFESTIVALS.COM/VOICEBOX
Spotlight
Spotlight is Cheltenham Festivals’ year-round talent development programme. It offers a wide range of opportunities for all ages to engage with literature and provides an invaluable platform for up-and-coming talent, supporting writers and performers throughout their career.
You can also see up-and-coming talent throughout the programme in…
Write Now
Watch this space as the creative writing project for talented young writers aged 16-19 in Gloucestershire is set to return next year. Students are supported through mentoring, workshops and networking opportunities.
Ones to Watch
From up-and-coming thriller writers (see page 47) to Guest Curator Peter Frankopan’s top non-fiction picks (see page 20), hear from rising stars of a new generation of writers.
Proof Parties
Introducing upcoming novelists before they are published, with Cheltenham audiences being among the first to take away their novels in proof form (see pages 28, 38, 48).
Debuts and Cocktails
Our pick of the year’s best first novels, showcased as part of our big opening night (see page 23). Alternatively, join our book chat with YA novelists in our Debuts and Mocktails event (see page 85).
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Write Now participant
Taking part in Write Now increased my confidence and made me love my own writing.
The talent development work we do is made possible by the funds raised from tickets and donations, as well as the support of our Members, Patrons, Partners, and other supporters. Thank you .
Images: Still Moving Media
Food and Drink
Whether you fancy a quick bite from our street food traders, want to tuck into a three-course meal in one of our delectable food events or enjoy a picnic with your family, we’ve got you covered.
Feast Café and Festival Bar
At the heart of the Festival, enjoy a selection of hot and cold food, pastries, cakes and more.
Tucked away inside an Art Deco former picture house, this iconic venue is home to some of our most unique events. From culinary adventures around the world to grand nights out with some of Britain’s best chefs.
Head to the Cotswolds Distillery bar to enjoy a delicious cloudy G&T or a refreshing wildflower spritz. As the sun goes down, why not enjoy a signature moment with a Cotswolds single malt whisky serve – perfect as a warming dram or a sundowner whisky cocktail.
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By purchasing food and drink on site, you’re supporting Cheltenham Festivals as a charity
Proud to support The Times and Sunday Times Cheltenham Literature Festival
Situated at the heart of the Festival Village and with the very best selection of new books alongside classics and bestsellers, our Waterstones Bookshops are curated especially for this year’s Festival and the visiting writers. Browse the bookshelves between your Festival events, meet your favourite authors and celebrities and get your books signed.
Don’t forget to stop by the Children’s Bookshop where you can browse the latest releases and firm family favourites. If you’re not sure what to try next, ask the booksellers for their top recommendations.
You can also find us in Cheltenham Town Hall’s Drawing Room where you can browse a selection of Festival titles and have your books signed after events in the Town Hall.
20% of the proceeds from all books purchased onsite are donated back to Cheltenham Festivals, supporting our charitable work. You can also purchase books through our online Waterstones Bookshop.
Times Radio – the intelligent radio station from The Times – will be broadcasting live in Waterstones throughout the Festival. Come and say hello or listen on DAB radio, online, on your smart speaker or via the Times Radio app.
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Still
Images:
Moving Media
1–3pm LDF05
Lunch with Sabrina Ghayour
The Daffodil
£42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
12–1pm LH10
Rethinking
Frankopan
the World with Peter
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Festival Guest Curator Peter Frankopan introduces his pick of new writing that reframes our understanding of the world. In Courting India, Nandini Das offers a radical challenge to the narrative of Britain’s early empire. In The New China Playbook, world-renowned economist Keyu Jin offers an insider’s perspective of the people, culture and history of China to explain its economic success story.
British-Iranian chef Sabrina Ghayour’s debut, Persiana, was a cookbook phenomenon, with her simple yet flavour-filled dishes from across the Mediterranean becoming on-trend dinner party staples. She talks about recreating and reinventing the flavours of her ancestry: Persian with influences from the Turkish, Arab, Armenian and Afghani cultures and cuisines celebrated by her family.
1.45–2.45pm LE63
The
Year in Books
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
The year has been an interesting one in the world of books and publishing. We’ve seen the emergence of new genres like cli-fi and bestselling authors kept off the top spot by books about air fryers. Join our panel of experts as they tell us their top picks of the year and reveal some of the quirkier facts and stats.
1.45–2.45pm LC14
The Election Generals
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12 £15
A long-standing Festival favourite, join Broadcasting House presenter Paddy O’Connell, former BBC Political Editor John Sergeant and new recruit Nicky Morgan as they look at the year in politics and draw on their long experience to debate the twists and turns ahead.
Sponsored by Oldham Foundation
With thanks to our event sponsor
20 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
October FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER
Friday 6
Image: Charles Moriarty
2–3pm LA17
Now You See Me: 100 Years of Black Design
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Black designers have been working in every major industry for decades without the spotlight. But that’s about to change. Delving into everything from fashion and architecture to graphic design, Charlene Prempeh brings Black designers and pioneers from the 20th and 21st century into focus.
Ukraine’s
New European
2–3pm LR13
Andrey Kurkov
The Hive £11
Author Andrey Kurkov (Death and the Penguin, Grey Bees) was one of the most incisive and illuminating Ukrainian voices throughout Russia’s invasion. He joins Rosie Goldsmith to discuss his remarkable writing career, his role representing Ukraine on the world stage and his new novel Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv
3.45–4.45pm LR62
Kate Mosse and Emma Donoghue:
Defiant Women
4–5pm LT12
From Africa to the Arctic Circle
Town Hall, Pillar Room £11
Discovering a book about Greenland in 1950s Togo sparked Tété-Michel Kpomassie’s fascination with life in the Arctic. A determined 10-year journey from his small village to live among the Inuit people followed, immortalised in the classic travelogue An African in Greenland. Now 82, and making one final trip out of Greenland, he reflects on his remarkable life with Ann Morgan
2–3pm LL07
Finding Home
The Garden Theatre
£11
Where is home? Our individual experiences of home have complex and emotional roots thanks to our own experiences, ideals and memories. Join Kate Humble and Marchelle Farrell as they reflect on their journeys to connect with the land and ultimately find a place to call home. Chaired by Inua Ellams
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
From swashbuckling female pirates to the illicit love between Anne ‘Gentleman Jack’ Lister and Eliza Raine, leading historical fiction writers Kate Mosse (Languedoc Trilogy, Joubert Family Chronicles) and Emma Donoghue (Room, The Pull of the Stars, The Wonder) explore what happens when women refuse their prescribed role in a man’s world. They discuss bringing boundary-pushing women of history to life with Sarah Shaffi
Sponsored by Institut Français
With thanks to our event sponsor
21 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER
What happens when women refuse their prescribed role in a man’s world?
greatest living novelist
Kate Mosse and Emma Donoghue: Defiant Women
Image: Richard Grassie
4–5pm
Rural Idyll: Myth and Reality
The Garden Theatre
£11
Natasha Carthew grew up in rural poverty battling isolation and limited opportunities. Priced out of the housing market, Catrina Davies has lived in a tiny shed for over a decade. With Raynor Winn, they discuss the impact of living without the means or support to build a future, and the solace they have found in the beauty of the Cornish landscape.
4–5pm LL14
The Write Place?
The Hive £11
Where’s the best place for your writing? With new forms of media changing the trajectory of publishing, it can be difficult to know the best way to reach your audience. Speaking with chair Abigail Bergstrom, Substack’s Farrah Storr, and Joshi Hermann share how to create a community around your work and thrive as a writer.
6–7pm
LH15
Between Two Islands
The Hive
£13
‘I’m black, so you don’t have to be,’ Colin Grant’s uncle Castus would tell him. Through portraits of his Windrush generation family, Colin explores the British-Caribbean experience. Jacqueline Crook ’s acclaimed debut, Fire Rush, tells a story of Black womanhood rooted in the dub reggae scene of the eighties. They discuss patois, dancehall, generational change and Britain’s multilayered history.
5.45–6.45pm LR08
Sebastian Barry
The Garden Theatre £11
‘Nobody pushes the language and the heart together like Sebastian Barry does’ (Ali Smith). Returning to Cheltenham after more than 10 years, one of Ireland’s foremost novelists and twice Costa Prize-winner talks to Clare Clark about his illustrious career and new novel Old God’s Time, in which a policeman’s peaceful retirement is shattered when dark details of an old case emerge.
6.15–7.15pm LE57
Shirley Ballas
Live on Air with Cathy Newman
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12 £15
Strictly superstar and Queen of Latin Ballroom Shirley Ballas chats to host Cathy Newman in a live broadcast for her Times Radio show, The Ladder. Shirley shares her new novel Murder on the Dance Floor and talks about life in general and all things Strictly
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
With thanks to our event sponsor
22 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER
LN05
Image: Blake Ezra
Image: Hannah Cunningham
6.30–7.30pm LX05
Chris Packham
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13
£16
Embark on an epic journey across the place we call home. Leading naturalist and award-winning conservationist Chris Packham and scientist Andrew Cohen share the 4 billion-year biography of planet Earth, revealing extraordinary moments from its history, from the first seconds of existence to the arrival of its incredible inhabitants.
Sponsored by Visitor+
7–8pm LR06
Debuts and Cocktails
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£16
Ticket includes a cocktail on arrival. Many of today’s biggest names in literature appeared at Cheltenham with their very first books. Now it’s time to meet the next generation. The Sunday Times Deputy Literary Editor Laura Hackett talks to three hand-picked debut novelists we think are ones to watch: Cecile Pin Wandering Souls, Maud Ventura My Husband and Michael Magee Close to Home
Sponsored by Institut Français
7–10pm LDF19
Dinner with Michel Roux
The Daffodil
£65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and a drink on arrival.
Journey into the heart of awardwinning and celebrated chef Michel Roux’s home kitchen as he shares the mouth-watering everyday recipes he enjoys cooking and eating with family and friends. Drawing on his experience as a chef and restaurateur, he speaks to Romy Gill about the recipes that have been passed down through generations of the legendary Roux family.
Sponsored by Peter Stormonth Darling Charitable Trust
7.30–8.30pm LE39
Rachel Parris
The Garden Theatre
£13
Over the course of a year, comedian Rachel Parris asked her live audiences for pieces of advice, and in Advice from Strangers she uses those nuggets to inspire her as she explores topics ranging from loss to lockdown to looseleaf tea, in a way that is hilarious and heartbreaking. She shares the wisdom with Caroline O’Donoghue
With thanks to our event sponsors
23 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER
You can filter events on our website by theme or search for your favourite author
Image: Wesley Tingey
Embark on an epic journey across the place we call home, from the first seconds of existence to the arrival of its incredible inhabitants
Chris Packham
8.15–9.15pm LL04
Busy Being Free
The Hive £13
Do we need to change our idea of a fairytale ending? We’re told to seek romance and settle down, but do we need to rethink this as a marker of success? Amy Key and Emma Forrest have experienced the joy that comes from a life built on their own terms. They speak with Abigail Bergstrom about loneliness, connection, self-care and friendship.
Buy books by your favourite Festival authors from our online Waterstones bookshop
With thanks to our event sponsor
8.30–9.30pm LE04
Bernie Taupin
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£16 £20
English lyricist and singer Bernie Taupin has written songs for the world’s biggest stars including Rod Stewart and Alice Cooper, but he remains best known for his collaboration with Elton John. He talks to Matt Chorley about the dramas and accolades of his musical career as exposed in his book Scattershot: Life, Music, Elton and Me
Sponsored by Rathbones
8.30–9.30pm LC52
Fighting Fake News
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £14 £17
We’re all susceptible to fake news, but how does misinformation spread and what can we do about it? One of the world’s top experts on fighting misinformation, Sander Van Der Linden, author of Foolproof reveals the psychology behind its power and how we can protect ourselves.
9–10.15pm LP17
WritersMosaic Live
Town Hall, Pillar Room £13
Join the innovative writers and performers of WritersMosaic including Gabriel Gbadamosi ( Abolition) and Colin Grant
(I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be). They bring together readings, sea shanties and more in a powerful and multi-element response to Britain’s role in establishing and abolishing the Atlantic slave trade.
Words That Burn
A human-rights and poetry project in partnership with Amnesty International UK
This year, poet Deanna Rodger has been running Words that Burn workshops in three Gloucestershire secondary schools.
Look out for Words That Burn events taking place in VOICEBOX during the Festival
24 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER
Do we need to change our idea of a fairytale ending?
Image: Alexandra Cameron
Image: Still Moving Media
Busy Being Free
9.30–11am LDF03
The Success Myth
The Daffodil
£28
Ticket includes brunch. Our obsession with achievement is a trap and our interpretation of success is leaving us busy, burnt-out and lonely. It’s time for a reset. Join Emma Gannon and Elizabeth Uviebinené for an optimistic look at the future of work. Speaking with Abigail Bergstrom they encourage you to write a new manifesto to craft work (and life) on your own terms.
Sponsored by Clockwise
10–11am LC47
Hugo Rifkind Canters Through the News
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
What’s been happening this week?
Join Times Radio presenter Hugo Rifkind and his guests, comedian Geoff Norcott and Labour MP and campaigner Jess Phillips as Hugo broadcasts live from The Forum stage and takes an entertaining canter through the week’s news and culture.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
10–11am LC08
Andrew Roberts and David Petraeus
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £14 £17
Historian Andrew Roberts and battlefield commander and strategist David Petraeus discuss Conflict, their landmark examination of war since 1945. They consider the evolution of warfare up to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, and analyse what we must learn from the past and anticipate in the future to navigate an increasingly perilous world. Chaired by Leslie Vinjamuri
10–11am LA13
Picturing Vermeer
The Garden Theatre
£13
Jonannes Vermeer’s paintings are admired around the world. While many are captivated by the mystery and stillness of his work, we still know little about the Dutch artist. Art critic Laura Cumming and artist and writer Jane Jelley reflect on the continued power of Vermeer’s paintings to inspire. Chaired by Gavin Plumley
With thanks to our event sponsors
25 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
Saturday
October SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
7
Image: Audrey Bizouerne
Image: Alise Katrina Jane
Image: Paul Storrie
It’s time for a reset. Write a manifesto to craft work (and life) on your own terms.
The Success Myth
10.30–11.30am LR33
Caroline O’Donoghue and Annie Macmanus: Broke Young Things
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Exhilarating freedom, minimal responsibilities, dizzying first loves and wild parties...but also broke, anxious and flailing: your twenties are a rollercoaster. Annie Macmanus and Caroline O’Donoghue capture the ups and downs of the ride brilliantly in The Mess We’re In and The Rachel Incident. They join Sarah Shaffi to discuss writing the messy years and the power in finding your feet.
12–1pm LC17
The World in 2050
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Can we build a peaceful, green and healthy future? New technology and our need for sustainable living will dramatically change how we live by 2050. Peter Frankopan explores the future many of us will experience with his expert panel, computer scientist Michael Wooldridge, the former head of GCHQ David Omand and psychologist and health expert Susan Michie
Sponsored by Baillie Gifford
12–1pm LR01
Kate Atkinson with Richard Osman
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Praised by the late Hilary Mantel as ‘inexhaustibly ingenious’, Kate Atkinson has sold over 4 million books globally, won major literary prizes and had her work adapted for television. She returns to Cheltenham to discuss her esteemed career and new collection of stories Normal Rules Don’t Apply in conversation with long-term fan and fellow author Richard Osman
Sponsored by Sofas & Stuff
2–3pm LR30
The Booker
2023
Shortlist
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13
The Booker Prize is the leading literary award in the English-speaking world. Join The Booker Prize podcast co-host James Walton as he introduces you to the books and authors shortlisted for the 2023 prize and presents the world premiere of the award-winning filmed readings. Sponsored by The Booker Prize Foundation
2.15–3.30pm LC12
The Times Debate:
Fixing Broken Britain
1–3pm LDF06
On the Farm with Julius Roberts
The Daffodil
£42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
Former London chef Julius Roberts left the acclaimed Noble Rot restaurant to embrace a slower pace of life. Now the first-generation farmer and star of Channel 5’s A Taste of the Country is on a mission to live a self-sufficient life on his family smallholding. He shares stories from the farm over a lunch inspired by his thoughtful, seasonal recipes.
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Britain seems stuck in a rut, with crumbling infrastructure, feeble growth and declining living standards. Former Foreign Secretary and The Times columnist William Hague, Director of the Centre for Policy Studies and The Sunday Times columnist Robert Colvile, the economist Faiza Shaheen and the former cabinet minister Nicky Morgan discuss the strategies needed to get Britain on its feet. Chaired by John Pienaar. In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
26 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
With thanks to our event sponsors
Image: Stephanie Sian Smith
Image: Jamie Drew
3.30–6pm LK05
Cheltenham
Bookshop
Crawl
Meet at the Box Office, Montpellier Gardens
£15
Join fellow book lovers on a walking tour of Cheltenham’s bookshops. Get an exclusive look at Cheltenham’s rarest books, find out what it’s like to run to an Indie bookshop, and delve into the treasure troves of the secondhand shelves. Peruse the shelves and hear from booksellers as they share their recommendations and give you a sneak peak behind the scenes.
Sponsored by Cheltenham BID
4–5pm LH09
The Earth
Transformed
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13
£16
When we study history we rarely pay attention to the most destructive storms, the worst winters or devastating droughts. Festival Guest Curator Peter Frankopan and scientist Adam Rutherford discuss how the natural environment and changing ecosystems have shaped global history and, with the effects of climate change becoming ever more visible, draw salutary conclusions about what the future holds.
Sponsored by Baillie Gifford
With thanks to our event sponsors
4–5pm LL03
Crew Love
The Garden Theatre
£13
During lockdown, five selfconfessed geeks watched a film about the end of the world. What emerged was a chaotic and delicate bond that reaffirmed their faith in male friendship. Eavesdrop on Inua Ellams, Nish Kumar, Nikesh Shukla, Vinay Patel and Musa Okwonga for beef and banter about endgames, tracksuits, split infinitives and beyond.
4.30–5.30pm
An Eye on 2023
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
As the Private Eye Annual 2023 launches, the editor Ian Hislop joins us to reflect on a tumultuous year and highlight his picks of the cartoons, campaigns and covers from the nation’s favourite (and only) satirical magazine.
Chaired by Hannah MacInnes
4.30–5.30pm
LA06
Disobedient Bodies
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Redefine beauty ideals with writers
Emma Dabiri and Lauren Elkin. For decades, feminist artists have confronted the problem of how to tell the truth about their experiences of their bodies, rebelling against ideals and redefining women’s stories through their work. Emma and Lauren explore these artists and celebrate the power of our disobedient bodies with Charlene Prempeh.
27 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
LC51
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
Delve into the treasure troves of secondhand bookshops and peruse the shelves.
Start creating your wishlist on our website before tickets go on sale
Image: Stuart Simpson
Image: Sophie Davidson
Image: Kasia Kim-Zacharko
Image: Helen Murray
Image: KAbi Bansal
Cheltenham Bookshop Crawl
5.30–6.30pm LR44
The PEN Translates
Proof Party
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes a goody bag of limited edition proofs.
PEN Translates is English PEN’s grant for translated literature. Since 2012, it has enabled over 300 titles translated from over 90 languages to be published, including 18 books listed for the International Booker Prize. Join the authors and translators of forthcoming PEN Translates books for a preview of the UK’s most exciting new literature in translation.
Chaired by Will Forrester
Sponsored by English PEN
6–7pm LM04
Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad
The Garden Theatre
£13
In 1939, after Hitler and Stalin carved up Poland, Daniel Finkelstein’s father was deported to Siberia and endured the horrors of the Soviet Gulag. His mother Mirjam — a schoolfriend of Anne Frank in Amsterdam — was sent to Belsen concentration camp. Daniel recounts their devastating wartime experiences of persecution, resistance and survival with his friend and Times colleague
6.30–7.30pm LQ09
The Long View: Saving Time
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
5.45–6.45pm LP10
Linton Kwesi
Johnson: Time Come
Parabola Arts Centre £13
A true living legend, Jamaican dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson has been at the forefront of poetry, reggae and social activism for five decades. He joins Paul Gilroy to discuss Time Come, his urgent and incisive career-spanning collection that brings his cultural and political writing together for the first time.
William Hague
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
Could time be the key to a brighter future on Earth? The way we think about our past and future is unique, but our busy lifestyles mean we tend to think short-term. Writer Richard Fisher and philosopher William MacAskill examine why, to tackle long-term challenges, we must recapture our ability to look ahead.
Chaired by Julia Wheeler
The Scribbled Self
A guide to writing for wellbeing for young people
Curated by previous participants of our Beyond Words project which put a writer-in-residence in the Gloucestershire Hospital Education Service.
Learn more at cheltenhamfestivals.com/the-scribbled-self And watch out for Scribbled Self events taking place in VOICEBOX during the Festival.
With thanks to our event sponsors
28 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
Image: Katie Downham
Image: Ajamu Ikwe-Tyehimb
7–8pm LR11
Love and Loss in Viêt Nam
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Global bestselling author of The Mountains Sing Nguyễ n Phan
Quế Mai’s new novel Dust Child explores the struggles of Amerasians – children born from wartime relationships between American soldiers and Vietnamese women. Cecile Pin’s Women’s Prize-longlisted Wandering Souls shows the very human cost to a family forced to make a perilous journey in escape from war.
Chaired by Ann Morgan
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From King
With thanks to our event sponsors
7–8pm LH02
David Mitchell
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£38
£42
Ticket includes a signed copy of Unruly RRP £25.
Comedian and student of history
David Mitchell presents Unruly, his exuberant history of England’s earliest kings and queens. From King Arthur to Elizabeth I, this is a tale of narcissists, middle-management insurrection, uncivil wars and at least one total Cnut. He tells Hannah MacInnes how the monarchy came to be, why it matters in the 21st century – and who is to blame.
Sponsored by Hazlewoods
7–10pm LDF20
The Suya Kitchen
The Daffodil
£65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and a drink on arrival.
Journey into the rich, vibrant world of Nigeria’s food, music and poetry. Feasting on West African street food Suya, poet, playwright and performer Inua Ellams is joined by restaurant critic and author Jimi Famurewa as they weave together a beautiful and complex portrait of Nigeria.
7.30–8.30pm LR29
Karl Ove Knausgaard
The Hive
£13
It’s 1986 and a nuclear reactor has exploded in Chernobyl. In presentday Russia, a young mother ponders big questions amidst the everyday juggle of work and family.
Karl Ove Knausgaard talks to Georgina Godwin about how he masterfully weaves these different, yet deeply connected lives together in The Wolves of Eternity and discusses writing fiction following his global hit memoir series My Struggle
Sponsored by the Norwegian Embassy and NORLA
29 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
Arthur to Elizabeth I, this is a tale of narcissists, uncivil wars and at least one total Cnut.
Image: Andy Lo Pó
Image: Ariane Lebon
Image: Sølve Sundsbø
David Mitchell
8–9pm LD08
Marcus Brigstocke’s I’ve Never Read...
The Garden Theatre
£13
How does it feel to take a leap into the literary unknown? In this annual Festival favourite, our host Marcus Brigstocke takes novelist Nicole Flattery, comedian Josie Long and author and podcaster Musa Okwonga out of their bookish comfort zones as they discuss their own reading preferences and the book they have never read… until now.
Sponsored by Cunard
8.30–9.30pm LT06
Epic Voyage, Stolen Childhood
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
When she was seven, Suzanne Heywood was taken out of school and taken on her father’s dream three-year voyage following in Captain Cook’s footsteps. Three years became a decade, and the ‘dream’ became a nightmare of shipwrecks, isolation and no formal schooling. She talks to Caroline Hutton about her remarkable journey back to land, stability and an education.
9–10pm LE07
Adrian Edmondson: Beserker
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£16 £20
8.15–9.15pm LR20
Victoria Hislop
Parabola Arts Centre
£13
Multi-million-copy bestselling author of The Island, One August Night and Cartes Postales from Greece Victoria Hislop returns with The Figurine, a captivating tale of one woman’s quest to come to terms with her family’s brutal past. She talks to Sarah Shaffi
9–10pm LD17
Good
Art; Bad People?
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Can we separate an artist’s work from their life? Should we?
Claire Dederer’s Monsters wrestles with how the likes of Polanski, Hemingway and Picasso should be viewed today. Carmela Ciuraru’s Lives of the Wives investigates the tumultuous marriages of Roald Dahl, Kingsley Amis and more to reveal how women fared in creative partnerships. They talk to Sam Baker
From brutal schooldays to storming the 1980s comedy circuit, through The Young Ones, Bottom and beyond, Berserker! is a one-of-a-kind, fascinating memoir from an icon of British comedy, Adrian Edmondson. With wisdom, nostalgia and uniquely observed humour, Ade traces his journey through life and comedy: growing up in a strict Methodist household, starting out on the alternative comedy scene, through to meeting Rik Mayall, with whom he created outrageous characters in iconic sitcoms such as The Young Ones and Bottom
You can filter events on our website by theme or search for your favourite author
With thanks to our event sponsor
30 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
9.30–11am
LDF02
Here Comes the Fun
The Daffodil
£28
Ticket includes brunch.
Ever wished that life was more fun? Ben Aitken decided to spend a year trying things he thought might be fun (a pilgrimage in Spain, afternoon bingo) and things he was assured were fun (improv, wakeboarding, learning Welsh). Over a hearty brunch he reviews his year of merry making with Inua Ellams and shares his fail-safes for lifting your mood.
Michael Palin
10–11am
Threads of Life
The Garden Theatre
£13
LL16
10–11am
Michael Palin
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
LH01
From the political propaganda of the Bayeux Tapestry to the maps sewn by schoolgirls in the New World. The fascinating cultural history and biology of textiles – and the ways we have created and adorned them – chronicle a rich history of identity, power and politics. Clare Hunter and Aarathi Prasad discuss the history of the world, through the eye of a needle.
12–1pm
The Times Live
The Garden Theatre
£13
LC15
Join columnist Daniel Finkelstein and senior journalists
Alice Thomson, Hugo Rifkind and Michael Binyon as they debate the hot topics of the day, including the leading articles for Monday’s edition of The Times
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
10–11am
LC16
The Sunday Papers with Marcus
Brigstocke
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Start your Sunday the right way with host Marcus Brigstocke and special guests Suzanne Heywood, Michael Binyon and Nicola Tuxworth. Together they run through the Sunday papers and pick out the stories that matter and the ones that really don’t, but that promise to make you smile anyway.
£38 £42
Ticket includes a signed copy of Great-Uncle Harry RRP £22.
When Michael Palin discovered the existence of his great-uncle Harry, he embarked upon a quest to find out about him. Following his trail from India to New Zealand, to the trenches of WW1 and his death at the Battle of the Somme, Michael reveals a story of empire – and of an entire generation – told though the experiences of one man.
Sponsored by u3a Cheltenham
12–1pm
LF11
Skulduggery Pleasant Graphic Novel
Parabola Arts Centre
Plunge into the magical and macabre world of Bad Magic with YA fiction superstar Derek Landy and comic artist P J Holden
See p84 for full event details.
With thanks to our event sponsors
31 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
Sunday
October SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
8
Image: John Swannell
Michael Palin reveals a story of empire –and an entire generation
Write Second Time?
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
If you could rip up the ending of a famous book and start over, which one would you choose? Everyone’s favourite classic literature debate returns with a new theme. Reigning champ James Marriott, Katherine Heiny, Andi Osho and Elizabeth Acevedo join Caroline Hutton in fun and fiery bookish battle.
Sponsored by Cunard
If you could rip up the ending of a famous book and start over, which one would you choose?
Write Second Time?
With thanks to our event sponsors
12.30–1.30pm
Holly Smale, Geek Girl
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Geek Girl author Holly Smale talks about the importance of neuro-diverse characters in books. See p84 for full event details.
2–3pm
The Sunday Times Debate: Is Journalism
Doomed?
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
Can we prevent an entire generation becoming adrift in a sea of clickbait and misinformation online? As a record number of journalists are detained across the globe for doing their job – is the profession under threat? The Wall Street Journal ’s Editor-in-Chief Emma Tucker, Editor of The Sunday Times, Ben Taylor, journalist Sophia Smith Galer, and media expert Charlie Beckett investigate. In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
1–3.30pm LDF12
Sunday Lunch with Mike Brearley
The Daffodil £42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
There are few figures in public life like Mike Brearley. Not only a brilliant all-round sportsman and legendary Ashes-winning cricket captain, but a leading intellectual and successful psychoanalyst – a true polymath. Join him for Sunday lunch as he shares his private passions and recounts his extraordinary life and career, on and off the field. Chaired by Matthew Stadlen
2.30–3.30pm LE61
Hilary Mantel: A Celebration
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Commemorating the anniversary of her death in September 2022, and for Wolf Hall fans everywhere, join us for a very special celebration of the immense writing talent that was Dame Hilary Mantel. Full details will be announced later.
32 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
12–1pm LD02
LF49
LC49
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
Image: Karolina Heller
Image: Denzel Golatt
Image: mcphersonstevens.com
Image: Lexey Swall
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Scan the QR code to download it
2.30–3.30pm LR31
Samantha Shannon and Elizabeth
Acevedo
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Sarah Shaffi meets two chart-topping authors who are setting readers’ imaginations alight and taking BookTok by storm.
Samantha Shannon discusses the 10th anniversary of her Bone Season series and new novel, A Day of Fallen Night. US National Poetry Slam champion and Clap When You Land author
Elizabeth Acevedo’s novel Family Lore imagines a lineage of sisters with unique powers.
Sponsored by the Embassy of the Dominican Republic
4–5pm LT01
Steve Backshall’s Ocean Journeys
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13
Spotting a shark at age nine sparked Steve Backshall ’s life-long fascination with ocean life. Since then, his esteemed career as an naturalist, explorer and BAFTAwinning presenter has taken him to enchanting underwater locations across the globe. He joins Julia Wheeler to discuss Deep Blue, a love letter to our precious oceans and a rallying cry for how we can protect them.
Sponsored by Kohler Mira
4–5pm LR12
Katherine Heiny
Parabola Arts Centre
£13
No one combines wry humour and clear-eyed wisdom about life’s ups, downs and all the chaos in between like Katherine Heiny. She joins Clare Clark to discuss her sparkling career, which spans Single, Carefree, Mellow, Standard Deviation, Early Morning Riser and her most recent collection, Games and Rituals
4–5pm LA02
Will Gompertz: See What You’re Missing
The Garden Theatre £13
Learn how to view the world through the lens of an artist with Will Gompertz. Taking us into the minds of artists – from Rembrandt and Frida Kahlo to David Hockney and Kara Walker – the Barbican Centre’s Artistic Director shows us how to look at and experience the marvellous, life-affirming phenomena of our world with heightened powers of perception.
4.30–5.30pm LR35
Books from Japan
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Don’t miss two of Japan’s most popular authors in conversation with Nick Bradley Toshikazu
Kawaguchi’s million copy-selling Before the Coffee Gets Cold series asks: if you could time travel, who would you meet one last time? In Emi Yagi’s Diary of a Void – Osamu Dazai Prize winner for best debut –a woman’s spontaneous lie about being pregnant to avoid menial office tasks quickly escalates. Co-presented by the Japan Foundation. Sponsored by the Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation
With thanks to our event sponsors
33 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
4.45–5.45pm LX01
Foreign Bodies: The Health of Nations
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£13 £16
Smallpox strikes London; cholera hits Paris; plague comes to India. Humanity has an epic history of being caught between the terror of contagion and the ingenuity of science; desperate for vaccines but fearful of what inoculation may bring. Simon Schama speaks to Peter Frankopan about his latest work Foreign Bodies, a fascinating history of pandemics and vaccines.
5.30–6.30pm LM09
Family Ties
The Hive £13
Bestselling novelist John Niven and acclaimed memoirist Blake Morrison explore sibling relationships, secrets and grief with journalist Poorna Bell . In their powerful new memoirs, John chronicles his upbringing with his troubled brother Gary, and the impact of suicide on a family; Blake explores how addiction can tear families apart as he unravels his sister and half-sister’s lives.
6–7pm LL08
Max La Manna
The Garden Theatre
£13
Max La Manna is an award-winning author and low-waste chef, passionate about sharing ways in which we can enjoy delicious food whilst fighting food waste. He speaks about the simple changes we can make to live a more planetfriendly life.
6–7pm LP05
You’re Bard
Parabola Arts Centre
£13
Experience Shakespeare like you’ve never seen before. Four actors. Four Shakespeare shows. Endless possibilities. You decide everything, from the play to the performance style and which actor plays which part. This hilarious, unpredictable show promises an unforgettable evening of Shakespeare unlike anything you’ve ever seen before.
6–6.40pm LE59
Tommy Jessop: A Life
Worth Living
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£13
Multi-award winning actor, theatre performer and campaigner Tommy Jessop has been at the helm of raising awareness of the potential of people living with Down syndrome, both to the media and our government. He talks to Alex Clark about his remarkable journey, including finding fame in Line of Duty
Westhoff Reviews
6.45–7.45pm LR39
Sebastian Faulks
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
When a young American academic offers to carry another woman’s child, she has no idea of the life-changing consequences. Sweeping between New York, London, and the Scottish Highlands, Sebastian Faulks’ new book
The Seventh Son is a spectacular examination of what it means to be human. He joins Daniel Hahn to discuss it, and the complex ethical issues it explores.
34 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
A chaotic, ambitious, side-splittingly funny interactive Shakespearience
7–8pm LD13
Inside The Baillie
Gifford Prize
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Ticket includes a glass of fizz.
Be the first to know this year’s Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction shortlist as chair of judges Frederick Studemann announces it live at this year’s Festival. He’ll be talking to 2022 winner Katherine Rundell about her remarkable biography of John Donne, Super-Infinite, which was catapulted up the book charts by its Baillie Gifford Prize win.
7–9.30pm LDF21
Dinner with
Skye McAlpine
The Daffodil
£65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and drink on arrival.
Cooking is one of the greatest ways to show your love for someone. Celebrate the joy of eating with family, friends and loved ones with Skye McAlpine. Speaking with Julia Leonard, she shares recipes to comfort, seduce and celebrate and lets us in on the secrets to her stylish and relaxed hosting skills.
7–8pm LE37
Brian Cox
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£16 £20
Star of the successful series Succession, actor Brian Cox has enjoyed a prestigious stage and screen career. He opens up to Julia Wheeler about his rags to riches story. From his difficult childhood in Dundee to the heady days of international fame, all is revealed in his no holds barred memoir Putting The Rabbit in The Hat
8–9.15pm LK01
Gloucestershire
Writers’ Network
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£13
Gloucestershire Writers’ Network competition winners present their work inspired by the theme “Journeys”. Competition judges, author Jane Bailey and poet Philip Rush read a selection of their work.
8–9pm LR22
Writing for Laughs
The Garden Theatre
£13
Come and have a laugh with three talented comedic writers from the worlds of stand-up, screenwriting and fiction. Schitt’s Creek screenwriter and Really Good, Actually author Monica Heisey; actor and former stand-up comedian turned rom-com writer Andi Osho; and Comedy Women in Print
Prize-winner Michelle Gallen, whose portrayals of Northern Irish life have been compared to Derry Girls. They talk to Sam Baker
35 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
Image: Karolina Heller
Image: Rachel Sherlock
Image: David Ho
8.15–9.15pm LC28
Let’s Talk About Sex
The Hive
£13
Why is sex still a taboo?
From debunking myths to recentring physicality, pleasure and consent, founder and host of Sex Talks
Emma-Louise Boynton talks to Everyday Sexism founder Laura Bates, doctor and writer Annabel Sowemimo and Everyone’s Invited founder Soma Sara about how we can rewrite the story of our sex lives and develop safe, healthy and inclusive relationships.
9–10pm LR65
The Talk of the Town Town Hall, Pillar Room £13
A child is dead, and the finger-pointing has begun. Discover the page-turning, society-examining new thrillers by Ayelet Gundar-Goshen (The Wolf Hunt) and Megan Nolan (Ordinary Human Failings). They talk to Clare Clark about writing families and communities under scrutiny and the dark side of tracking down the truth.
9–10pm LE13
Nick Frost
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Well known for cult classics such as Hot Fuzz, Paul and Shaun of The Dead, accomplished actor and writer Nick Frost is a passionate self-taught cook, and even delivered pies to his Instagram followers during lockdown. He talks about his love of food and the memories it evokes which he details in his memoir, A Slice of Fried Gold
36 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
Image: Tom Trevatt
Image: Tilly Pearson
Image: Siggi Holm
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Monday 9 October
8.30–9.45am LC01
Breakfast
with The Times: Behind the Headlines
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes a tea or coffee and a pastry.
Make an informed start to your day. Grab a coffee and pastry and join the Editor of The Sunday Times Ben Taylor, and columnists
Susie Goldsbrough and Josh Glancy as they look at the news stories of the day.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
12–1pm LH05
Spain: A Different History
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Generations have been transfixed by Spain’s turbulent period following civil war in the 1930s. Yet beyond the stereotype of a country haunted by its Francoist past, lies a radically different history that fits into the narrative of modern Europe. Madrid-based historians
Michael Reid and Nigel Townson explore key forces that are shaping Spain’s modern era with El País journalist Ana Carbajosa
Sponsored by Instituto Cervantes and the Embassy of Spain
2–3pm LC43
Growing Up Between Two Continents
Town Hall, Pillar Room £11
Aasmah Mir shares the story of her childhood in 1970s Glasgow, reflecting on the highs and lows of growing up between two cultures. Intricately woven into this story is that of Aasmah’s mother, who left 1950s Pakistan for a new life in Scotland. Aasmah talks to Sam Baker about her story of family, identity, and finding yourself where you are.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
11.30am–12.30pm LA16
The Power of Art
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
From ancient Babylon to contemporary Pyongyang, curator and Director of the National Gallery of Ireland Caroline Campbell will transform your understanding of the world through the eyes of artists. Journey through fifteen vibrant cities and periods in history and unlock the human stories, societies, creativity and innovation hidden behind a millennia of art. Chaired by Gavin Plumley
1–2pm LE42
Judy Murray
The Times and Sunday Times Forum £12 £15
Judy Murray has enjoyed a successful tennis career as a player and coach, while also being mum to tennis champions Andy and Jamie. She talks to Tim Hubbard about all things tennis and how she’s built her knowledge of that world into her debut novel The Wild Card, a story about a once-promising tennis star returning to fulfil her dreams.
3–4pm LH04
A Personal
History of Europe
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
Drawing on half a century of travel and firsthand experience, historian Timothy Garton Ash explores Europe’s progress in its post-war decades of hope – and why so much went wrong. In conversation with his friend, novelist Ian McEwan, they consider how Europe’s past will shape its future and issue an urgent call for us to understand and defend what we have collectively achieved. Sponsored by Baillie Gifford and supported by The British Academy
With thanks to our event sponsors
37 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
MONDAY
OCTOBER
9
Image: Sane Seven Photography
3.30–4.30pm LE08
Jane Garvey and Fi Glover: Live
on Air
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£16 £20
Join the indominable duo and Jane Garvey and Fi Glover as they record one hour of their popular Times Radio show live in The Forum. They’ll be joined by a special guest for a guaranteed hour of fun.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
3.30–4.30pm LR47
The Penguin Michael Joseph Proof Party
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes a goody bag of limitededition proofs.
3.30–5pm LDF14
Feathers and Flowers: Arthur Parkinson and Sarah Raven
The Daffodil
£32
Ticket includes afternoon tea with a selection of finger sandwiches and cakes.
Gardeners Sarah Raven and Arthur Parkinson have a unique friendship built on a shared passion for growing beautiful flowers and seasonal veg. Arthur’s other love are his hens, an interest nurtured by two devoted grandmothers – and the Duchess of Devonshire. Over afternoon tea, they chat with Julia Leonard about gardening, growing, feathered friends and their shared delight in nature.
3.30–4.30pm LQ10
The Anxiety Project
The Hive £11
Daan Heerma van Voss is 74 times more anxious than the average person. Why are 264 million people worldwide suffering from anxiety? Daan introduces us to philosophers, artists and writers in a quest for answers that takes us through literature, classics, the history of anxiety and the science behind it. Supported by the Dutch Foundation for Literature and The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
With thanks to our event sponsors
Penguin Michael Joseph introduce three talented new voices: Sweetness in the Skin is Ishi Robinson’s comingof-age story about finding your voice; Olivia Ford ’s debut Mrs Quinn’s Rise to Fame charts a 77-year-old’s journey on TV show ‘Britain Bakes’; Jessica Bull introduces Miss Austen Investigates: The Hapless Milliner, a regency drama combined with the intrigue of cosy crime novels.
4–5pm LQ04
Embracing Solitude
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Jade Angeles Fitton fled a destructive relationship for a life of solitude in remote Devon. Will Millard tells the story of Ken Smith, the Hermit of Loch Treig, who has spent 40 years living alone in the wild Scottish Highlands. Together they reflect on turning away from society, experiences of solitude through the centuries, and finding calm in our hyper-connected world.
38 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
MONDAY 9 OCTOBER
A regency drama combined with the intrigue of cosy crime novels.
The Penguin Michael Joseph Proof Party
Image: Jonathan Buckley
Image: Jonathan Buckley
4–5pm LA12
Rediscovering Black British Portraiture
The Garden Theatre
£11
Baritone Peter Brathwaite attracted international attention when he researched and recreated 100 artworks featuring portraits of Black sitters. Exploring Black subjects in Western art, from medieval Europe through to the present day, Peter talks about the motivations behind the project and discusses how it directly confronts the debate about representation and decolonisation in museum collections. Chaired by Julia Wheeler
5.30–6.30pm LR17
Ian McEwan
Revisits
Atonement
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11
£14
On the hottest day of 1934, a 13-year-old’s misunderstanding sets in motion a chain of events that will alter the course of three people’s lives, and for which she will spend her whole life trying to atone. Critical acclaim, record sales and an Oscar-nominated film made Ian McEwan’s 2001 novel Atonement a publishing phenomenon. He revisits it with Clare Clark
6–7pm LL06
The Age Rage
The Garden Theatre
£13
Middle age is the prime of life, with empty nests, changing priorities and new freedoms. But why do middle-aged women seem to enrage almost everyone? Often branded as entitled and selfish, how did women in their forties and beyond get such a bad reputation? Sussanah Wise, Lorraine Candy and Victoria Smith investigate.
6–7pm LT11
The Man Who
Loved Siberia
The Hive
£13
19th century naturalist and explorer Fritz Dörries travelled to Eastern Siberia when there were still blank spaces on world maps. Bears, bandits, storms and ice chasms lay in his path, but he overcame every danger to bring home invaluable knowledge of Siberia’s flora and fauna. Roy Jacobsen and Anneliese Pitz talk about his remarkable journey with Daniel Hahn
Sponsored by the Norwegian Embassy and NORLA
7–8pm LU08
QI Elves: Everything to Play For
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
QI Elves James Harkin and Anna Ptaszynski are here to hop, skip and jump into a curiously grand tour of sport. From its weirdest rules to its most unlikely heroes, covering everything from the psychology of football chants to pole-vaulting priests and sporting history’s greatest cheats, join them for a hilarious evening of game, set and facts.
With thanks to our event sponsors
39 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
MONDAY 9 OCTOBER
You can filter events on our website by theme or search for your favourite author
Image: Bastian Schweitzer © Diogenes Verlag
7.15–8.15pm LR07
Heather Morris
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Author of The Tattooist of Auschwitz, Cilka’s Journey and Three Sisters, bestselling novelist Heather Morris has sold 16 million books worldwide. In a special visit from Australia, she discusses her remarkable writing journey and her novel Sisters under the Rising Sun, a moving story of bravery and survival inspired by true events during WWII with Chitra Ramaswamy
7.30–10pm LDF28
Roast Figs, Sugar Snow
The Daffodil £65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and a drink on arrival.
Dine and raise a toast to Roast Figs, Sugar Snow, the classic at the heart of Diana Henry’s extraordinary cookbook repertoire. Sharing comforting delights from cold-weather climes – from the ski slopes of Italy to the coffee houses of Vienna and Budapest, rural New England and beyond – Diana talks about the unique pleasures of autumn and winter.
7.30–8.30pm LC23
No Offence, But...
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Talking about social justice can be tough when we’re met with outrage, disagreement and echo chambers. And winning the argument doesn’t necessarily mean we’re right. Philosopher Arianne Shahvisi, political activist Gina Martin* and journalist Rafael Behr discuss how we can bridge our political, generational or cultural divides and bring about change when it comes to the most urgent issues of our time. Chaired by Julia Wheeler *This participant will appear digitally.
8.30–9.30pm
The Missing
The Garden Theatre
£13
LR41
Can a person ever truly disappear? In a world where observation, surveillance and technology are advancing all the time, leading crime and thriller writers Adele Parks, Louise Doughty and Simon Mason talk to Sam Baker about the ongoing fascination with missing people and reveal how they navigate modern technology to create their gripping and suspenseful tales of disappearance.
8.30–9.30pm LK04
The Wisdom
of Myth and Folklore
The Hive
£11
We can learn a lot from myths, fairytales and folklore, but why is it so important to preserve and retell these ancient stories in modern day? Tom Phillips talks to prolific storytellers Taffy Thomas, Anthony Nanson, Sally Pomme Clayton and Kirsty Hartsiotis about the importance of telling these tales.
40 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
MONDAY 9 OCTOBER
Image: Rosie Turner
Tuesday 10 October
10–11am LN06
How
to Read a Tree
The Garden Theatre
£11
What can trees tell us? If we learn to read the clues, they can reveal secrets about the landscape, guide us to the nearest source of water, show which way is north or where to find the sweetest birdsong. Join author and natural navigator Tristan Gooley to learn their language. You’ll never look at a tree the same way again.
Image: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
11.30am–12.30pm LA10
The Rossettis
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £11 £14
Spice Up Your Life
Scan the QR code to download it
12–1pm
LT10
Ask the Travel Experts
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Want the inside scoop on where to go in 2024? The Times and Sunday Times Travel experts Claire Irvin, Laura Jackson, Jenny Coad and Lucy Perrin are here to help. From short-hop to long-haul, save to splurge, slow travel to quick getaway, they are your guides, whatever your taste or budget. In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
12–2pm LDF07
Spice Up Your Life
The Daffodil
£42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
Spices are a cook’s secret weapon – they can transform a dish from something drab and lifeless to flavour-packed and vibrant. Beloved TV chef Nadiya Hussain shares the ingredients and techniques used in her family kitchen when she was growing up and presents a delicious lunch featuring recipes that blend her British and Bangladeshi heritage together.
Chaired by Chitra Ramaswamy
With thanks to our event sponsor
41 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
The art of the Pre-Raphaelites still has the power to shock and fascinate, and the Rossettis’ approach to art, love and lifestyles are considered revolutionary. Curators of Tate Britain’s The Rossettis exhibition Carol Jacobi and James Finch look at the romance and radicalism of the Rossetti generation and key figures including Christina and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Elizabeth Siddall and Jane Morris. Chaired by Jo Baring. TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
Image: Simon Wilkes
Spices are a cook’s secret weapon – they can transform a dish from something drab and lifeless to flavour-packed and vibrant
Plan your visit to the Festival on the Cheltenham Festivals app
12.15–1.15pm LK03
A Helping Hand
The Hive
£11
‘No man is an island’.
Polly Morland ’s A Fortunate Woman charts the life and work of a country doctor, while Ann Morgan’s Crossing Over captures an unlikely allyship between an elderly woman with dementia and a recently arrived refugee. Together they speak to Julia Leonard about the importance of care, compassion and community and reaching across the social divide.
2–3pm
The Ways of the Woods
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
LR67
2.15–3.15pm LA09
Radical Spirits
The Hive £11
1.30–2.30pm LQ12
Life of a Spy
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
What does it take to be a spy? From James Bond to George Smiley, we have long been fascinated by the world of espionage. Former civil servant and novelist Ava Glass, who brings spy characters to life through nail-biting fiction, and psychologists
Adrian Furnham and John Taylor explore the inner-workings of secret agents – both real and imagined –with Clare Clark
Every tree has a tale to tell. Join natural navigator Tristan Gooley and Pulitzer Prize-shortlisted novelist Daniel Mason as they discuss nature’s most valuable way markers with Daniel Hahn and dive deep into Mason’s novel North Woods, an enchanting exploration of a woodland cabin through the centuries that Mason wrote in sync with the changing seasons around him.
2–3pm LR28
Rose Tremain
The Garden Theatre
£11
How do you find the courage to forge your own path? That is the question facing the young heroine at the heart of Absolutely and Forever, Rose Tremain’s short and piercing new novel of thwarted love and true friendship set in 1960s London and Paris and inspired partly by her own girlhood experiences. She joins Georgina Godwin to discuss it.
From Hilma af Klint and Leonora Carrington to Frida Kahlo, there’s a strong tradition of women artists drawing on the spiritual and supernatural. Illuminating key figures from art history, art critic Jennifer Higgie and curator and art historian Catriona McAra explore the influence and importance of spiritualism and ancient ritual on feminism and contemporary art. Chaired by Grace Banks
2.45–3.45pm LR63
Celebrate with...
Mick Herron
Hotel du Vin £35
Ticket includes fizz and nibbles. Enjoy a rare encounter and intimate audience with a major writer as they revisit a career-defining book. Mick Herron revisits Slow Horses, the first of the acclaimed Slough House series, and now in a major adaptation starring Gary Oldman. He talks to Sam Baker
42 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
Image: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Image: Craig Whitehead
Image: Jim Holden
3–4pm LQ06
Gelong Thubten Meditation Workshop
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£25
Ticket includes tea and coffee. Join Buddhist Monk Gelong Thubten for a practical meditation workshop. Thubten has worked with everyone from Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, the NHS and schools, to Ruby Wax, and in this guided session will share teachings and techniques from his new book Handbook for Hard Times that aims to make you more resilient and much better able to handle life’s challenges.
3.45–4.45pm LR71
Bernard Cornwell
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
Bernard Cornwell ’s Sharpe series has sold more than 20 million books worldwide. He’s here on a rare visit to share the recently published, Sharpe’s Command. At a time when both his career and Britain’s hopes of victory seem in danger, Richard Sharpe and his small band of rogues are sent on an impossible mission behind the enemy lines.
4–5pm LC25
Lessons in 21st Century Diplomacy
The Garden Theatre
£11
What does modern-day diplomacy look like? Sharing their insights are the EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs from 2009 to 2014 Catherine Ashton and former Permanent Undersecretary for the UK’s Diplomatic Service Simon McDonald, who have observed, supported and guided leaders and countries towards collaboration and stability where hope could rise and fall, often in a matter of hours.
Sister Act
4–5pm LR53
Sister Act
Town Hall, Pillar Room £11
From the Bennets to the Marches, sisters are some of the most beloved and enduring characters in literature. Julia Wheeler talks to authors Kate Sawyer (This Family) and Georgina Moore, (The Garnett Girls), two authors who paint a vibrant picture of sisterhood that explores complex sibling bonds, family schisms and how secrets trickle through different generations.
43 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
From the Bennets to the Marches, sisters are some of the most beloved and enduring characters in literature
You can filter events on our website by theme or search for your favourite author
4–5.30pm LDF13
Teatime at 44 Scotland Street
The Daffodil
£32
Ticket includes afternoon tea with a selection of finger sandwiches and cakes.
The residents of 44 Scotland Street in Edinburgh come to life in Alexander McCall Smith ’s gently satirical, wonderfully perceptive serial novels. Anna Marshall has ransacked their pages (and cupboards) for her cookbook, so you can eat like your favourite characters. Join them for afternoon tea with a twist as they tell Frankie Burr about the latest instalment, The Stellar Debut of Galactica MacFee
4.30–5.30pm LQ14
The Conspiracy
Theorists
The Hive £11
Conspiracy theories are more rampant than ever, increasingly shaping politics and the media –and threatening democracy. From QAnon to Roswell to the Flat Earth theory, comedian Dom Joly and professor of social psychology
Karen Douglas explore where these ideas come from – and the people who create and believe them. Are they crazed loonies, or are we sheeple?
5.45–6.45pm LQ01
Navigating Tough Times
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
Ruby Wax tells her unflinchingly honest story of time in a mental health clinic in I’m Not as Well as I Thought I Was. In Handbook for Hard Times, Buddhist Monk Gelong Thubten shares his wisdom for tapping into our inner strength and resilience in difficult times. They reveal their top tips for navigating life’s toughest moments in an increasingly chaotic world.
Chaired by Julia Wheeler
6–7pm LQ03
Good Grief
The Garden Theatre
£13
Michael Rosen has grieved the loss of a child, lived with debilitating chronic illness, and nearly died during the pandemic. Comedian Cariad Lloyd has spoken to hundreds of bereaved people for her award-winning podcast Griefcast. They explore how we can find it within ourselves to live well again after – or even during – the darkest times of our lives.
Chaired by Chitra Ramaswamy.
6–7pm LR52
I Know What You Did That Summer…
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
More than a decade has passed since the teenage murders at the heart of Penance and Kala when new information thrusts each town’s darkest chapter back into the spotlight. Author of Boy Parts and Granta Best Young British Novelist Eliza Clark and New Irish Writer of the Year Colin Walsh join Georgina Godwin to discuss their propulsive literary thrillers.
44 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
Image: Marksteen Adamson
Image: Charlie Clift
6.15–7.15pm LC26
Alastair Campbell and Ian Dunt
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
British politics is broken. We need to change things, but how?
Join two of our most outspoken Westminster watchers, Ian Dunt and Alastair Campbell, as they expose the system in which our deep-seated national problems seem to go permanently unresolved.
Chaired by Hannah MacInnes
6.30–7.30pm LA03
Rebel Rebel:
Soheila Sokhanvari
The Hive £13
Iranian-born artist Soheila Sokhanvari’s powerful and intricate work weaves layers of political histories with mysterious narratives. Her latest show, Rebel Rebel, focused on pioneering women from pre-revolutionary Iran who pursued careers in a culture enamoured with Western style, but not its freedoms. As protests around women’s rights continue to shake contemporary Iran, Soheila talks to writer Ben Platts-Mills about her work.
7.45–8.45pm LR26
Mick Herron
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Mick Herron is ‘at the summit of a new golden age of spy fiction’ (The Sunday Times), with his bestselling Slough House series now a major adaptation starring Gary Oldman. Whether you’re a committed Herron fan, or just joining the tribe, join Mick and Julia Wheeler as he talks about The Secret Hours, a novel Lee Child described as ‘pitch-perfect’.
8–9pm LQ02
Scatter Brain
The Garden Theatre
£13
After a lifetime of stumbling around in a fog, being shut away in a world of daydreams and lost keys, comedian Shaparak Khorsandi looks back on her life through the lens of ADHD and finally makes sense of the chaos. Join her for a delicious mixture of stand-up and excerpts from her new book as she shares her heartbreaking and hilarious journey.
45 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
Image: Natalie Dawkins
TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
Your country needs you. Your world needs you. Your time is now.
Start creating your wishlist on our website before tickets go on sale
Image: M Buck
Image: Heathcliff O’Malley
Alastair Campbell and Ian Dunt
8–10pm LP12
James Walton’s Big Book Quiz
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£15
Tables can seat teams of up to four people. The bar will be open with prizes awarded to the winners. With questions on anything from Dan Brown to Graham Greene, Normal People to Animal Farm, Gangsta Granny to Uncle Vanya, come and pit your literary wits against each other in a fun night of bookish brainteasers, suitable for light and heavy readers alike. Hosted by James Walton of BBC Radio 4’s The Write Stuff, this is a quiz created exclusively for Cheltenham book-lovers.
8.30–9.30pm LR51
Cults: Mystery, Mindgames and Murder
The Hive £13
From The Manson Family to Jonestown, cults have long been a source of grim fascination. Daniel Hahn talks to the authors of two cult-inspired novels. In Carole Hailey’s The Silence Project a mother’s radical behaviour leads to the deaths of thousands. In Gerda Blees’ We Are Light a mysterious collective believe they can live on light alone, with dark consequences.
Supported by the Dutch Foundation for Literature and The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
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With thanks to our event sponsors
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46 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
Help us to realise our vision of a world in which everyone can explore and create culture by remembering Cheltenham Festivals in your will.
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11.30am–12.30pm LH03
The Iraq War: 20 Years On
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11
£14
Iraqi journalist Ghaith Abdul-Ahad joins us to discuss A Stranger in Your Own City, his searing insider account of the unravelling of Iraq. Brought up in Baghdad but reporting for the foreign press, he charts two decades of conflict and loss through the experience of ordinary civilians: shifting allegiances, generational change and the irredeemable personal injustices of war.
12–1pm LH07
Wartime Women
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Women took on an extraordinary range of roles in British intelligence during WWI and WWII. From spies in the Belgian network – knitting coded messages into jumpers and parachuting behind enemy lines – to the WAAFs supplying vital intelligence to the RAF, historians Sarah-Louise Miller and Helen Fry celebrate these remarkable women who defied conventions of their time, with broadcaster Paddy O’Connell.
11am–12pm LM10
Homelands
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£11
Born in Britain to Indian immigrant parents, journalist Chitra Ramaswamy reflects on her powerful friendship with a Holocaust survivor who arrived in Britain on the Kindertransport in 1939. She chats to Sam Baker about her award-winning and unique meditation on human connection and belonging.
1.30–2.30pm LA08
Picasso: A Life
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £11 £14
Picasso’s influence is felt all over the world. 50 years since his death, art historian Ruth Millington and Picasso specialist Gijs van Hensbergen examine one of the most significant artists of the 20th century. Exploring the man, the myth, and the more uncomfortable truths about the artist’s legacy, our expert panel discuss this undisputed master of modernism. Chaired by Jo Baring
Sponsored by Instituto Cervantes and the Embassy of Spain
2–3pm LR16
New Blood:
Crime and Thriller
Writers to Watch
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Love a thrilling page-turner? Then don’t miss Sam Baker talking to three crime and thriller writers we think are ones to watch: Joanna Wallace (You’d Look Better as a Ghost); Jenny Lund Madsen (Thirty Days of Darkness) and Paul David Gould (Last Dance at the Discotheque for Deviants).
2–3pm LH14
Mozart in Italy
The Garden Theatre
£11
Acclaimed conductor Jane Glover documents Mozart’s formative trips to Italy as a teenager. From the concert salons of Milan to the church-filled streets of Rome, poverty-stricken Naples to Venice –the carnivalesque birthplace of public opera – Mozart was absorbing Italian culture, language, style and art. What he experienced during these journeys changed him and his music for ever. Chaired by Gavin Plumley
With thanks to our event sponsors
47 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
WEDNESDAY 11 OCTOBER Wednesday 11 October
Image: Rena Effendi
Image: Paul Wilkinson
2–3pm LC38
The Power of the Outsider
The Hive £11
During his time as the most senior Black adviser in Boris Johnson’s government, Samuel Kasumu became increasingly aware he was an outsider; his experiences, assumptions and language were so different to others in Downing Street. In conversation with Georgina Godwin, Samuel reflects on his experiences and explores how our differences can be a force for good – in politics and beyond.
3.30–4.30pm LL13
Coco Chanel: The Legend and the Life
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
Coco Chanel is known as a supreme innovator, vendor of all things elegant and beautiful, and creator of the most successful fashion brand of all time. But what lies beneath is far more complex. Acclaimed biographer Justine Picardie and V&A curator Oriole Cullen shed light on the myths and mysteries that surround this fashion icon.
Sponsored by Cunard
3.30–4.30pm
A Dead End for Russia?
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12
£15
LC45
3.30–5pm LDF16
Dark Rye and Honey Cake
The Daffodil
£32
With reports of escalating Russian casualties in Ukraine and an attempted coup on home soil, are the cracks in Putin’s regime starting to show? War studies researcher Jade McGlynn, dissident journalist Mikhail Zygar and writer and historian Owen Matthews join Andrew Monaghan to explore how effective the Moscow propaganda machine is and ask whether the Russian strongman’s grip remains firm.
3.30–4.30pm LR45
The Hutchinson Heinemann
Proof Party
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes a goody bag of limitededition proofs.
Hutchinson Heinemann presents its 2024 debut fiction: Jennie Godfrey’s The List of Suspicious Things is set in 1970s Yorkshire as women are being terrorised; Flora Carr’s The Tower is a fiery feminist retelling of Mary, Queen of Scots; Suzie Miller’s psychological thriller Prima Facie is about a young barrister turned victim; and Vanessa Walters’ Lagos Wife is a murder mystery set in Nigeria.
Chaired by Daniel Hahn
Ticket includes afternoon tea with a selection of finger sandwiches and cakes.
Belgium has long forged a distinctive baking culture through its seasonal feasts and festivals. Through recipes and stunning photography, Regula Ysewijn guides us in the traditions of this unique region and explores the history, art and culinary ties that bind the Low Countries. Join Regula for a delicious afternoon tea inspired by recipes from her new book.
4–5pm LD01
The Wife of Bath
The Garden Theatre
£11
Chaucer’s bawdy, boundary-pushing Wife of Bath has long captivated readers and writers.
Chaucer scholar and biographer Marion Turner explores Chaucer’s favourite character’s origins, how she related to real medieval women, and where her many travels have taken her since her 14th century debut, from Falstaff and Molly Bloom to #MeToo and Black Lives Matter.
With thanks to our event sponsor
48 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
WEDNESDAY 11 OCTOBER
4–5pm LL02
Secret Gardens:
A Private Tour
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Step inside some of the finest gardens and horticultural destinations in the country. Through sumptuous photography, fascinating stories and interviews, Tim Hubbard and Victoria Summerly have explored the secret gardens of the Cotswolds and Cornwall. They share a captivating portrait of Britain’s best kept secrets and the lords, ladies and gardeners who own and manage them.
4–5pm LT03
The Globemakers:
The Curious Story of an Ancient
Craft
Image: Mark Turner
6–7pm LN04
The Chief Shepherdess
The Hive £13
Zoë Colville left her life as a London hairdresser for life on a Kent farm, where the only use for a hairdryer is warming new-born lambs and nature is a strict teacher and source of ultimate satisfaction. She discusses her transformation and why it’s always the right time to take a bold step and try something new.
The Hive £11
Google Maps might inform, but a globe inspires. Peter Bellerby, founder of the world’s only bespoke globe-makers, Bellerby and Co. discusses the evolution of globe-making through the centuries and shares how his team of expert cartographers and artists keep this ancient craft alive. Chaired by Julia Wheeler.
With thanks to our event sponsors
6–7pm LC30
What if AI Doesn’t Change the World?
The Garden Theatre
£13
AI is both feared as apocalyptic and touted as world changing. With global leaders in the field sounding the alarm, should we be worried or excited? In conversation with The Times technology business editor, Katie Prescott, Professor of Politics David Runciman, AI systems expert Michael Wooldridge and AI ethicist Kanta Dihal explore the promise and peril of AI and ask: are our future fears misplaced?
Sponsored by CyNam
6.15–7.15pm LX04
Chris van Tulleken
and Michael Mosely
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
If time is tight, what’s the one thing you can do to improve your health and wellbeing? Join doctors Chris van Tulleken and Michael Mosely for an eye-opening investigation into the science, economics, history and production of the food we eat. They discuss simple changes that you can make to your diet to transform your life.
Sponsored by Willans
49 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
WEDNESDAY 11 OCTOBER
It’s always the right time to take a bold step and try something new.
The Chief Shepherdess
6–7pm LQ13
Why Women Kill
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£12
When Women Kill by Alia Trabucco Zerán* recounts four murders committed by Chilean women; in My Men, Victoria Kielland takes us into the inner life of America’s first female serial killer. They talk to Fatima Manji about what drove the women to commit these acts, and how society, the media and those in power respond to female killers. Supported by The British Academy, the Norwegian Embassy and NORLA *This participant will appear digitally.
7.30–10pm LDF24
Winter Nights
The Daffodil
£65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and a drink on arrival.
Winter is a time to rest, retreat and reflect. Settle in for a night of wintering with food to soothe the soul from chef Rachel de Thample, along with a treasure trove of poems and tales from Nancy Campbell and reflections and advice from Lia Leendhertz
8–9pm LR34
Bright Snow; Dark Deeds
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
8–9pm LM08
My Family and Other Radicals
The Garden Theatre
£13
Journalist Polly Toynbee’s family tree includes everyone from the Glenconners to Jessica Mitford and features ancestral home Castle Howard. Generations have grown up on the privileged side of the class divide while being committed left-wing, rabble-rousers fighting injustice. She talks to former Labour politician and novelist Alan Johnson about the guilt of privilege and exploding the myth of class mobility in Britain.
6.30–7.30pm LG01
David Baddiel:
The God Desire
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
David Baddiel has spent lots of time fantasising about how much better life would be if there was actually a superhero dad who chased off death. Unfortunately for him, there isn’t. In his usual hilarious yet thoughtful manner, he discusses his divine yearnings and offers a new perspective on this ancient debate.
With thanks to our event sponsors
On a snowy Reykjavík morning, the bodies of five women are found in Lilja Sigurdardóttir’s White as Snow. In Eva Björg Ægisdóttir’s You Can’t See Me, a family’s dark secrets are exposed when a body is unearthed. Ragnar Jónasson’s Reykjavík – co-written with Iceland’s Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir – interrogates the country’s greatest unsolved missing person case. They talk to Karen Sullivan about their dark Iceland-set thrillers.
Sponsored by the Icelandic Literature Center and the Embassy of Iceland
8.30–9.30pm LE40
The British Bloke Decoded
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
The eccentricities and complexities of the regular British male, from his love of beer, football, sheds and banter comes under scrutiny in comedian Geoff Norcott’s book The British Bloke Decoded Here he talks to Sally-Anne Hayward about the research he undertook for the book and why he feels now is the time to forget the toxic male and celebrate the virtues of the simple British bloke.
50 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
WEDNESDAY 11 OCTOBER
Image: Ella Foote
Thursday 12 October
8.30–9.45am LC02
Breakfast with The Times:
Behind the Headlines
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes tea or coffee and a pastry. Make an informed start to your day. Grab a coffee and a pastry and join The Times Brussels correspondent Bruno Waterfield and The Sunday Times Associate Editor Emily Kent Smith as they look at the news stories of the day.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
Buy books by your favourite Festival authors from our online Waterstones bookshop
12–2pm LDF10
Tessa Kiros:
A Life in Food
The Daffodil
£42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
Renowned for her exquisite food and travel books, Tessa Kiros joins us from her home in Tuscany. Over a delicious lunch, she celebrates the cultures and cuisines that connect the threads of her life. From her childhood in South Africa, widespread travels and visits to family in Thailand and Greece, her influences are wonderfully diverse.
With thanks to our event sponsor
11am–12pm LC24
Understanding
Afghanistan
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £11 £14
The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021 has had a devastating impact, particularly on the country’s women who face increasing restrictions on basic freedoms. Afghan filmmaker Tamana Ayazi, Afghan journalist and BBC World Service broadcaster Sana Safi and Afghan scholar and think tank leader Orzala Nemat speak to The Guardian’s International Affairs Correspondent Emma Graham-Harrison about what happens next in the region.
Does Keir Starmer’s governmentin-waiting have what it takes?
Labour: On Track for No. 10?
12.30–1.30pm LR15
Celebrate with...
Rachel Joyce
Hotel du Vin £35
Ticket includes a glass of fizz and nibbles.
Enjoy a rare encounter and intimate audience with a major writer as they revisit a career-defining book. Rachel Joyce revisits The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry in the year it has moved to cinema screens in a major adaptation starring Jim Broadbent and Penelope Wilton. She talks to Tim Hubbard and answers your questions about the book.
1.15–2.15pm LC39
Labour: On Track for No. 10? The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12 £15
Does Keir Starmer’s governmentin-waiting have what it takes to win next year’s general election?
Shadow Health Secretary
Wes Streeting, CEO of Ipsos Kelly Beaver and The Guardian‘s parliamentary sketch writer John Crace scrutinise policy approaches, discuss how the party intends to address key strategic challenges and examine whether a lead in the polls can translate into a change in government.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
51 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
THURSDAY 12 OCTOBER
Image: Ellie Kealey
Image: Pal Hansen
Shakespeare’s Folio at 400
10.30–11.30am LD11
Shakespeare: The Book
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Marking the anniversary of the first printed edition of Shakespeare’s collected works, scholars Emma Smith and Farah KarimCooper tell the story of the First Folio. Together with Charlotte Scott they explore how people have interacted with the text of this iconic book over 400 years, and how we might continue to read Shakespeare as a playwright relevant to the 21st century.
2–3pm LD09
Wordsmith Women
The Garden Theatre
£11
Queen of Countdown’s Dictionary
Corner Susie Dent and medievalist
Jenni Nuttall delve into their literary treasure-troves to unearth a plethora of curious words and interesting stories. Looking back at a millennium of English parlance, they reveal the history behind our everyday words and phrases – and show how the study of language can often challenge our assumptions about the past. Chaired by Alex Clark
12–1pm LD12
Shakespeare: The Man
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
The mysteries of how Shakespeare lived, whom and how he loved and how he worked, have long fascinated readers. Yet for almost two centuries after his death, Shakespeare had no biography. Stanley Wells and Margreta de Grazia explore how our knowledge of Shakespeare’s life and personality has shaped the way we interact with his work, in conversation with Paul Edmondson
1.30–2.30pm LD18
Greg Doran:
Directing the First Folio
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £11 £14
During his illustrious career, Greg Doran has directed or produced every play within Shakespeare’s First Folio, collaborating with our finest actors – from Judi Dench, David Tennant and Harriet Walter to Patrick Stewart, Simon Russell Beale and the late Antony Sher. He shares the excitement, joys and agonies of working on these greatest of plays with BBC Arts Correspondent Rebecca Jones
Receive 10% off when you book all three Shakespeare events
With thanks to our event sponsor
2–3pm LN03
Sacred Landscapes
The Hive £11
For thousands of years our ancestors imbued the landscapes they lived in with meaning, from stone monuments to sacred groves and places of pilgrimage. But today we seem to have lost that enchantment and intimate knowledge of place. James Canton and Katherine May explore how to rekindle our spiritual connection to landscape in Britain.
Sponsored by Leaf Creative
52 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature THURSDAY 12 OCTOBER
2.30–3.30pm LR58
The Sunday Times
Must Reads: Tom
Crewe
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
The Sunday Times Literary Editor Johanna Thomas-Corr talks to Tom Crewe about The New Life, which she described as ‘one of the most beautifully crafted novels of 2023’. Following two young men fighting to change the law and social mores of Victorian England against the backdrop of the Oscar Wilde trial, it’s already won the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
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4–5pm LD04
The Uncanny
The Hive
£11
In The Uncanny, Freud explored why certain things fill us with a unique sense of dread and unease. Whether it’s glimpsing your doppelgänger, sensing another’s presence, or feeling like something’s ‘not quite right’, the uncanny is central to some of our most unsettling stories.
Psychologist Ben Alderson-Day and horror writer and anthologist Richard Hirst talk to Alex Clark
Brexit 2026
3.15–4.15pm LC50
Brexit 2026
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£11 £14
The Director of UK in a Changing Europe Anand Menon, the Public Policy Editor of the Financial Times Peter Foster, and The Times Brussels Correspondent Bruno Waterfield look at the prospects for a more productive and positive relationship with the EU. As the political landscape changes across Europe and the effects of Brexit become clearer, what might change and how might it affect us?
With thanks to our event sponsor
4–5pm LA14
Burma and Myanmar: People, Art, Empire
The Garden Theatre
£11
Although known internationally for its two names and long-running civil wars, Burma/Myanmar is a compelling and complex country. Through an array of art and objects, from ceramic tablets to stunning textiles, curator Alexandra Green and historian Mandy Sadan invite us to reconsider how we think about this fascinating country and give a preview of a major British Museum exhibition opening November 2023.
4–5pm LR14
Sarah Winman
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
Sarah Winman’s Still Life – a bighearted story of people brought together by love, war, art and the ghost of E.M. Forster – was an instant Sunday Times bestseller, a BBC Two Between the Covers pick and received The InWords Literary Award. She joins Daniel Hahn to discuss the novel Graham Norton described as ‘sheer joy’ and her wider career.
53 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
THURSDAY 12 OCTOBER
As the effects of Brexit become clearer, what might change and how might it affect us?
4–5.30pm
LDF15
Dancing on Eggshells with
John Whaite
The Daffodil
£32
Ticket includes afternoon tea with a selection of finger sandwiches and cakes.
Celebrity chef, Bake Off champion and Strictly star John Whaite has become a household name across the UK. He shares his personal story – a complicated narrative of highs and lows, told with tenderness, wit and unflinching honesty – and talks to Uli Lenart about the sometimes painful pilgrimage we make as we gain wisdom from our experiences.
Sponsored by Cunard
6–7pm LE21
Timothy West: Pru and Me
The Garden Theatre
£13
Actors and married couple
Timothy West and Prunella Scales have touched the heart of the nation with their performances and amazing 60-year marriage. Timothy talks to his co-author, James Hogg, about their book Pru and Me which charts the couple’s careers and their relationship, including talking candidly about Prunella’s battle with dementia.
6.30–7.30pm LP01
Anthony Joseph
The Hive
£13
The acclaimed poet performs from his autobiographical collection Sonnets for Albert, which was awarded the prestigious T.S. Eliot Prize. Weighing the impact of growing up with a largely absent father, its calypsonian spin on the sonnet form combines musicality, energetic lyricism and emotional depth.
Supported by T. S. Eliot Prize shortlisted poet Victoria Adukwei Bulley (Quiet) and the T. S. Eliot Foundation
6.30–7.30pm LT07
4.30–5.30pm LC31
Wes Streeting
and Alan Johnson
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
Raised on a council estate, Shadow Secretary for Health and Social Care
Wes Streeting saw his teenage parents struggle to provide for him. Talking to former Labour politician and predecessor Alan Johnson, Wes pays tribute to the love and support that set him on his way out of poverty and informs everything about his mission in politics.
With thanks to our event sponsors
6.15–7.15pm LR24
Jojo Moyes and Mike Gayle
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12 £15
Few writers get to readers’ hearts like Jojo Moyes ( Me Before You; The Giver of Stars) and Mike Gayle (The Man I Think I Know; All The Lonely People). With multi-million sales, acclaimed adaptations and book clubs following their every word, they discuss their writing journeys and new novels Someone Else’s Shoes and A Song of Me and You with Sam Baker
Sponsored by Cunard
Finding Hildasay: Walking in Search of Hope
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13
Facing financial ruin and in the grip of severe depression, exparatrooper Christian Lewis set out on a six-year, 11,000-mile trek around the UK’s entire coastline with only his dog Jet for company. He talks to Liv Bolton, host of The Outdoors Fix podcast about his remarkable journey that changed his life in more ways than he imagined.
54 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
THURSDAY 12 OCTOBER
Image: Pete Rosenbaum
Image: Claudia Janke
Image: Simon Weller
Image: Naomi Woddis
7–8pm LA11
Queer Love in the Ancient World
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Queer love in the ancient world was ignored or suppressed for centuries. But there’s a rich literary tradition of Greek and Roman love beyond the stories we know about. Accompanied by readings and live painting, poet Seán Hewitt and painter Luke Edward Hall share exhilarating queer tales from the classical canon in a riotous celebration of desire in all its forms.
Chaired by Uli Lenart
7.30–10pm LDF25
Wine Times
The Daffodil
£80
Ticket includes a three-course dinner with matched wines. Bar open until late.
Sunday Times Wine Columnist
Will Lyons hosts a special Festival episode of his award-winning podcast, sharing his love of wine, lively conversation and vinous culture. Discussing and decanting with him is former Labour politician and novelist Alan Johnson
Join them for a delicious threecourse dinner with Will’s choice of matched wines.
In partnership with The Sunday Times Wine Club
8.30–9.30pm LU03
Danny Cipriani
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Arguably one of the most gifted players to have worn the red rose, Danny Cipriani made history as the youngest ever player in Premiership Rugby, making his England debut aged 20. Off the pitch, he was seeking a path through pressure and fame. He shares his story, from mental health to media scandals and playing with England’s greatest stars.
8–9pm LR03
The Sunday Times Must Reads:
Eleanor Catton
The Garden Theatre
£13
New Zealander Eleanor Catton made Booker Prize history by becoming its youngest ever winner at 28 with The Luminaries. She joins The Sunday Times Literary Editor
Johanna Thomas-Corr to talk about Birnam Wood, a gripping, propulsive literary thriller of human ambition and survival which has roots in Macbeth and a contemporary eye on the forces at play in our climate crisis-affected times.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
8.30–9.30pm LT02
Helen Skelton:
In My Stride
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Whether it’s kayaking the Amazon or cycling to the South Pole, Helen Skelton is made of tough stuff. With Julia Wheeler she discusses her top life lessons and adventures and shows us how putting one foot in front of the other – on Strictly or in the great outdoors – can help us to journey back to ourselves.
Sponsored by Close Brothers Asset Management
9–10pm LP03
Harry Baker: Unashamed
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Rediscover what makes you come alive with former World Poetry Slam Champion Harry Baker. Following a sell-out run at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, don’t miss him on our Festival stage as he covers everything from falafel-based Chris Evans diss tracks, online toilet seat reviews, and a cracking poem about wellies...
With thanks to our event sponsors
55 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
THURSDAY 12 OCTOBER
Chris Evans
I don’t understand WhatsOnStage
Spectacularly witty
Image: Murdo Macleod
Image: Andrew Brown
8.30–9.45am LC04
Breakfast with The Times: Behind the Headlines
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes tea or coffee and a pastry.
Make an informed start to your day. Grab a coffee and pastry and join the Literary Editor of The Times Robbie Millen, think tank director Anand Menon and author
Tomiwa Owolade as they look at the news stories of the day.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
11.30am–12.30pm
One Last Thing
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
Retired brain surgeon Henry Marsh was unprepared for the impact of his diagnosis of advanced cancer. But in contemplating death, he celebrates life. Wendy Mitchell has written about living with dementia and in her final book she addresses our culture of death denial. With Julia Wheeler they discuss facing mortality and how to live with the end in mind.
12–1pm
The Times Radio
Debate: What Election Year Is It?
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12 £15
Broadcasting live, Matt Chorley asks his panel of election experts what they think will happen at the next General Election. From Times Radio, Ayesha Hazarika and Kate McCann are joined by Times columnist Patrick Maguire to look to the past for answers, while polling-guru John Curtice crunches the numbers. Matt rounds things off with his quiz, Can You Get To No.10?
Sponsored by Oldham Foundation In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
10–11am LP11
Lemn Sissay: Let the Light Pour In Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
For the past decade, Lemn Sissay has composed a short poem as dawn breaks each morning. Lifeaffirming, witty and full of wonder, these poems chronicle his own battle with the dark and are fuelled by resilience and defiant joy. Start your day right with an uplifting hour in the company of one of our most treasured poets.
12–1pm
Design the World Around Us
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
What can architecture and engineering teach us about our world? Engineer Roma Agrawal, and design student Aiysha Kukoyi discuss what we can learn from the design of structures that surround us and what they reveal about the people that made them and the communities that live beside them.
Chaired by Anne-Marie Imafidon
Sponsored by Baillie Gifford
12–2pm LDF09
Destination Fabulous: Finding the Best You
The Daffodil £42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
Celebrate the wisdom and inner beauty that comes with growing older with The Times Fashion Director, Anna Murphy. At 50, Anna feels more visible than ever and she’s here to help you embrace your age. Talking to Julia Wheeler she shares her toolkit to finding the best version of yourself.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
With thanks to our event sponsors
56 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
LX02
LC13
LM06
Friday
FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
13 October
Image: Steve Ullathorne
12–1pm LD03
Summer Daze
The Hive £11
From the French Riviera to New York’s Fire Island, discover the dazzling, dark depths of infamous locations that attracted the world’s talented, rich and famous artists for wild and free summers. Biographers Jonathon Miles and Jack Parlett discuss what these iconic settings meant to the likes of Picasso, Coco Chanel, James Baldwin, The Rolling Stones and more.
Chaired by Erica Wagner
1.30–2.30pm
How Much Does Britain Cost?
LC09
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£11 £14
Institute for Fiscal Studies director
Paul Johnson examines the way the state raises and spends £1 trillion of our money every year. Government spending affects every aspect of our lives, but from the 2008 crash to present day, this account of political short-termism and public policy failure exposes the sobering truth about Britain’s finances. Chaired by Hashi Mohamed
Sponsored by Baillie Gifford
1.45–2.45pm LR46
The John Murray Press Proof Party
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
12.30–1.30pm LR68
Celebrate with…
Eleanor Catton
Hotel du Vin £35
Ticket includes a glass of fizz and nibbles.
Eleanor Catton made Booker Prize history when she won with The Luminaries at just 28. Enjoy a rare encounter and intimate audience with Eleanor as she revisits this career-defining book with Anna James – a fiendishly clever ghost story, a gripping page-turner, and a thrilling novelistic achievement.
With thanks to our event sponsors
Ticket includes a goody bag of limited edition proofs.
Be the first to read three of 2024’s most anticipated debuts: Jiaming Tang’s Cinema Love follows gay men in rural China; Madeline Docherty’s Gender Theory is a searing tale about love, friendship and endometriosis: Scott Preston’s These Borrowed Hills is set on a sheep farm ravaged by foot and mouth disease.
2–3pm LC29
Why Black Lives in Britain Matter
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£11
In the rush to address racial injustice, Britain has followed the lead of the world’s dominant power: America. But what if we’re looking in the wrong place? In conversation with Trevor Phillips, writer Tomiwa Owolade explores whether conversations about race in Britain are viewed through an American lens, instead of reflecting the history, challenges and achievements of Britain’s increasingly diverse Black populations.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
2–3pm LM07
Seán Hewitt and
Octavia
The Hive £11
Bright
All Down Darkness Wide is the luminous and haunting memoir from award-winning poet Seán Hewitt, a fearless examination of queer identity and trauma. In This Ragged Grace, Octavia Bright charts her journey through recovery from alcohol addiction and the parallel story of her father’s descent into Alzheimer’s. They share their remarkable explorations of love, sorrow and identity with Alex Clark
57 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
Image: Murdo Macleod
2–3pm
Tom Holland: War and Peace in Rome’s Golden Age
The Garden Theatre
£11
The Pax Romana were the glory days of the Roman Empire. Stretching from Scotland to Arabia it was the wealthiest and most formidable and vast state in the world. From the gilded capital to realms beyond the frontier, historian Tom Holland presents the dazzling history of the Roman Empire at the height of its power.
Sponsored by Cotswold Life
Trends are changing every day –learn what autumn trends work for you and your bank balance
4–5pm LR57
Meet the Literary Editors
The Garden Theatre
£11
What does a literary editor do?
Robbie Millen and Johanna Thomas-Corr (Literary Editors of The Times and The Sunday Times respectively) provide a behind the scenes insight into life on the books pages and share what we should all be reading this autumn. Chaired by Clare Clark
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
4–5pm LL11
Autumn Style with Anna Murphy
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£20
Ticket includes a glass of fizz. Trends are changing every day and it can be overwhelming for your wallet and wardrobe. Looking at her top trends from the season’s catwalks, Fashion Director at The Times, Anna Murphy reveals how to make autumn trends work for you and your bank balance. Take away plenty of top styling tricks and easy ways to upgrade your wardrobe.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
4–5pm
Truth to Power
The Hive
£11
Political cartoonists Peter Brookes and Morten Morland routinely send up our troubled era with their cartoons for The Times, dissecting contemporary political life with bite and wit. They share stand-out moments from the past year with Matt Chorley and draw for us, live from the stage.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
4.30–5.30pm LN01
Hamza Yassin
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £11 £14
Wildlife cameraman and TV presenter Hamza Yassin won the hearts of the nation whilst on Strictly last year. Away from the limelight, his passion is birdwatching – and inspiring others to get out into nature. He shares stories from his varied career – from CBeebies and Countryfile to working on David Attenborough’s latest series, Wild Isles
Sponsored by Woodland Trust
With thanks to our event sponsors
58 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
LH08
FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
LB03
Image: Charlie Hopkinson
Autumn Style with Anna Murphy
4.30–5.30pm LR66
Robert Peston and Cleo Watson
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£12 £15
Riotous and all too believable, Cleo Watson’s Whips is a timely satire on modern politics written from firsthand experience. Robert Peston’s Crash is a gripping thriller exposing the rotten heart of the financial system, set against the background of the 2007 banking crisis. Together they talk to Alex Clark about writing with the inside track.
4.30–5.30pm LM05
Careless
Town Hall, Pillar Room £11
Jenni Fagan was property of the state before birth. By the age of seven she had lived in multiple homes under multiple names. After a childhood spent in care, Norman Greenwood saw his birth certificate and learned that his real name was Lemn Sissay. They shine a light on the UK’s broken care system –and celebrate the redemptive power of creativity.
6.15–7.15pm LM02
The Secret Lives of Ian Fleming and John
le Carré
The Garden Theatre
£13
During his subject’s lifetime, biographer Adam Sisman withheld details of numerous clandestine love affairs that fed into John le Carré’s writing. Nicholas Shakespeare – a close friend of le Carré – was granted unprecedented access to Ian Fleming’s family papers and reveals a dramatic life that provided inspiration for Fleming’s most famous creation. They talk to Clare Clark about these complicated men.
6.30–7.30pm LR09
Val McDermid with Nicola Sturgeon
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
Queen of Crime Val McDermid joins fan, friend and fellow Scot, former first minister Nicola Sturgeon in conversation about her lauded career which has seen her sell over 18 million books, be translated into over 40 languages and receive the Theakstons Old Peculier
Outstanding Contribution to Crime Fiction Award. She discusses her latest, fiendishly clever Karen Pirie novel, Past Lying
With thanks to our event sponsor
6.15–7.15pm
LP08
Caleb Azumah Nelson Presents...
The Hive £13
Festival Guest Curator Caleb Azumah Nelson (Open Water; Small Worlds) brings together a vibrant cast of writers whose roots lie in Ghana, but whose writing and sense of home stretches far beyond. Jessica George ( Maame), Peace Adzo Medie (Nightbloom), Nii Ayikwei Parkes ( Azúcar) and Sharon Dodua Otoo ( Ada’s Realm), join him for readings and lively discussion. One not to miss.
Supported by Goethe-Institut London
7–8pm LR10
Lauren Groff and C Pam Zhang
Town Hall, Pillar Room £13
The New York Times bestselling author of Fates and Furies and Matrix Lauren Groff introduces The Vaster Wilds. Lauren is joined by lauded next generation novelist and former student, C Pam Zhang – the Booker Prize-longlisted author of The Rest of These Hills is Gold and The Land of Milk and Honey. They discuss their new novels and creative relationship. Chaired by Erica Wagner.
59 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
Image: Alan Strutt
Image: Clayton Cubitt
Image: Rosa Ablah
Image: Suki Dhanda
Image: Ralf+Steinberger
Image: Benjamin Adu
Image: Eli Sinkus
Image: Charlotte Graham
7–8pm LC06
Theresa May
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£38 £42
Ticket includes a signed copy of The Abuse of Power RRP £25
As prime minister and home secretary, Theresa May confronted a series of issues in which the abuse of power led to devastating results for individuals and significantly damaged the reputation of, and trust in, public institutions and politicians. The former prime minister argues for a radical rethink in how we approach our politics and public life. Sponsored by Oldham Foundation
7–10pm LDF18
Andi Oliver’s Caribbean
The Daffodil £65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and a drink on arrival.
Caribbean cooking is the cooking of 700 islands, each bringing their own flavour to the plate. TV chef Andi Oliver reveals the melting pot of cultural influences, history and heritage that has uniquely shaped its cuisine. Over a vibrant dinner inspired by The Pepperpot Diaries, she chats with daughter Miquita Oliver about their Caribbean travels and reconnecting with their Antiguan roots.
8.15–9.15pm LA04
DIVA:
Creating an Icon
The Garden Theatre £13
Billie Holliday and Maria Callas, Elton John and Grace Jones, Beyoncé and Harry Styles: from outfits and stage sets to dazzling personas, what creates a superstar?
Kate Bailey, curator of the V&A’s smash-hit show DIVA, talks to arts and culture journalist Charlotte Jansen about some of our most iconic performers from stage and screen.
8.30–9.30pm LR02
The Sunday Times Award for Literary Excellence:
Zadie Smith
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
Joining an elite list of winners that includes Martin Amis, Margaret Atwood and Kazuo
Ishiguro, Zadie Smith receives The Sunday Times Award for Literary Excellence 2023. From acclaimed novels including White Teeth, On Beauty and NW to essays, short stories and the play, The Wife of Willesden, she discusses her illustrious writing career and new novel, The Fraud with Caleb Azumah Nelson
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
With thanks to our event sponsors
60 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
Caribbean cooking is the cooking of 700 islands, each bringing their own flavour to the plate
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Image: Alex Cameron
Andi Oliver’s Caribbean
8.30–10pm LP07
The Gothic Cabaret
The Hive £13
Calling all guys and ghouls…
Friday the 13th is upon us, and our gothic cabaret is the place to shake your bones. Featuring musicians Jo Carley and The Old Dry Skulls with their combination of blues-inspired voodoo sounds and old timey vaudeville cabaret, and spine-tingling stories from Moth Sanctuary – the dark side has never been so fun.
9–10pm
Matt Chorley: Planes Trains and Toilet Doors
Town Hall, Pillar Room £13
LC34
9–10pm
LE60
A History of Women in 101 Objects
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Forget Downing Street and the so-called ‘corridors of power’, some of the biggest high and lows of British political history have taken place in car parks, village halls and seaside resorts. From chance meetings, untimely deaths, and snap (sometimes daft) decisions, join Matt Chorley for this hilarious journey through 50 places that really changed politics.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
The way we remember the past remains dishearteningly patriarchal. Join Annabelle Hirsch, author of A History of Women in 101 Object s, and chair Anita Rani for a fun and witty treasure hunt through history, culture, politics, fashion and art. They will be joined by a very special guest.
With thanks to our event sponsor
BAFTA Young Presenters
We are delighted to be joined by winners of the BAFTA Young Presenters Competition, including 18 year old Precious Assah, to introduce some of our authors and family events on Saturday 14 and Sunday 15 October.
Look out for them at the Festival.
61 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
Friday the 13th is upon us, and our gothic cabaret is the place to shake your bones
The Gothic Cabaret
10–11am
LE56
Yu Miri and Morgan Giles
9.30–11am
LDF01
The Shift LIVE with Trinny Woodall
The Daffodil
£28
Ticket includes brunch. In this special live episode of hit podcast The Shift, journalist Sam Baker chats to beauty entrepreneur Trinny Woodall about how to improve self-confidence and feel empowered at every stage of your life. Be inspired by Trinny’s practical fashion, beauty, health, and life advice – delivered in her signature frank and funny style – to make positive change in your life.
10–11am
Mary Beard:
Emperor of Rome
LB02
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£16 £20
Britain’s best-known classicist Mary Beard shines a spotlight on the emperors who ruled the Roman empire, from Julius Caesar to Alexander Severus. She tackles the questions we all want to know the answers to: what was it to be Roman? What power did emperors actually have? Was the Roman palace really so bloodstained?
In partnership with TLS
Noel Fitzpatrick: Supervet
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
One for animal lovers everywhere; TV’s Supervet Noel Fitzpatrick talks to Georgina Godwin about his first non-fiction book for children, The Superpets (and Me!) Amazing True Stories of Incredible Animals from the Nation’s Favourite Supervet and Keira and Me, the beautifully illustrated and uplifting story of Noel’s heartwarming relationship with his dog Keira.
10–11am
LC21
Are Women’s Rights in Danger?
The Garden Theatre
£13
While the Taliban ban women and girls from taking part in aspects of daily life, reproductive rights are under threat in the US and over 1,500 police have been accused of violent offences against women in the UK. Human rights lawyers
Jennifer Robinson and Keina Yoshida and politician Dawn Butler examine the changes needed to ensure women’s rights and freedoms are protected. Chaired by journalist Masuma Ahuja.
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Yu Miri won Japan’s most prestigious literary prize, the Akutagawa, meanwhile her novel Tokyo Ueno Station was hailed as ‘a masterwork from one of Japan’s most brilliant outsider writers’. Together with her lauded translator Morgan Giles she discusses The End of August, a ground-breaking, multi-generational novel about a Korean family living under Japanese occupation with Daniel Hahn
Sponsored by the Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation
12–1.30pm
How to be a Literary Explorer
Sinners Enclosure
£14
LR70
Ticket includes tea and coffee. Pack your curiosity and journey off the beaten track with our Literary Explorer in Residence Ann Morgan in this whistle-stop tour of translated texts rarely seen in English that will turn reading upside down. Playing with ideas of truth and identity, and chasing down assumptions and biases, it will test what embracing not knowing can teach us about our selves and our world.
With thanks to our event sponsors
62 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
10.30–11.30am LR49
Saturday 14 October SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Image: Dan Kennedy
Image: Ray Burmiston
12–1pm LC10
Taiwan: A State of Ambiguity?
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Frequently in the headlines, the tiny island of Taiwan lies close to mainland China and its disputed status has huge significance for global politics. Robin Niblett, Jonathan Sullivan and Isabelle Chang discuss the history, culture and economy of Taiwan and explain why its stability and security are critical to maintaining peace in the region.
1–3pm
LDF08
Recipes to Reconnect
The Daffodil £42
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
Anna Boglione, of Petersham Nurseries and wellness platform
THE GUT, explores the connection between nature, the food we eat and how we feel. In conversation with Isabella Tree, owner of Knepp’s pioneering rewilding project, they discuss ways we can actively support nature’s regeneration. Join them for lunch featuring recipes from Hugh FearnleyWhittingstall, inspired by Isabella and her family’s work at Knepp.
2–3pm
Audrey Magee
Hotel du Vin £11
Two outsiders visit a small island off the west coast of Ireland with unforeseen and haunting consequences in Audrey Magee’s lyrical, brooding fable The Colony Longlisted for The Booker Prize, the novel follows her Women’s Prize longlisted debut The Undertaking. She joins Alex Clark in conversation about her immensely powerful and affecting work.
12.15–1.15pm LR04
Desert Island Books: Nicola
Sturgeon
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
You’re stranded on a desert island with six of your favourite books. Which ones would you choose?
Following in the footsteps of previous Cheltenham castaways Ian Hislop, Sebastian Faulks, Ian Rankin and Maggie O’Farrell, we hear from the former first minister of Scotland and book-lover Nicola Sturgeon about the titles she would be happily marooned with. Chaired by Sam Baker
2–3pm LX06
Sadiq Khan: Breathe
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
With increasing wildfires, extreme temperatures, flooding and people dying prematurely, there’s so much more to do to tackle London‘s polluted air. Mayor of London
Sadiq Khan speaks with Sathnam Sangera about the climate emergency and his call to action, demonstrating how anyone – whether voter, activist or politician – can take a stand.
Clive Myrie
The Times and Sunday Times Forum £14 £17
Clive Myrie dreamed of becoming a journalist as a Bolton teen with a paper round. 30 years on, the BBC journalist has reported on some of the biggest stories of our time. He reflects on his remarkable career, including reporting from the front line in Ukraine, and shares how his family history has influenced his view of the world. Chaired by Hannah MacInnes
63 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
LR69
2.30–3.30pm LC05
SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Image: Scottish Politico
Image: Greater London Authority
4–5pm LH13
Writing Historical Fiction: How Not to Lose the Plot
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
£13
How do you ensure your fictional world is historically accurate? Sarah Dunant explores women’s lives through her Italian Renaissance novels. Allan Mallinson’s Matthew Hervey series chronicles the life of a British officer serving from the late Napoleonic Wars. With critic Erica Wagner they reveal the secret to plotting a series that weaves characters into a flawlessly researched historical setting.
How do comingof-age narratives compare across cultures and continents?
4–5pm LR56
Coming-of-Age Around the World
The Garden Theatre
£13
Whether it’s David Copperfield or Catcher in the Rye, Norwegian Wood or Normal People, comingof-age novels are some of our most enduring reads. But with the markers of adulthood differing vastly across the globe, how do comingof-age narratives compare across cultures and continents? Jessica George, Marie Aubert and Santanu Bhattacharya join Literary Explorer in Residence Ann Morgan to discuss.
Sponsored by the Norwegian Embassy and NORLA
4–5pm LC18
Russia, China and the New Cold War
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
The 21st century has seen a decline in relations between Russia and China and the US. The Ukraine war has brought Russia and China closer together, creating potential for disastrous confrontation between the superpowers. Journalist and broadcaster Isabel Hilton, International relations specialist Robin Niblett and Gilbert Achcar, author of The New Cold War, discuss the roots of this new tension.
4–5pm LW01
Future (Hi)Stories
Hotel du Vin
£13
Can creative writing help us dream of alternative worlds and imagine different futures for ourselves, technology and the planet? Author Kelechi Okafor, classicist Genevieve Liveley, and technology researcher Oishee Kundu discuss how we can combine the ancient and modern to expand our imagination and reimagine our futures.
4.30–5.30pm LL01
Giving Us Back Our Beauty Standards
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
We’re encouraged to obsess over our beauty while also being told to love ourselves the way we are. But what if there’s a way out of the beauty myth? Miquita Oliver speaks to Anita Bhagwandas about where beauty standards originated from and unpicks why they’ve been perpetuated and upheld today.
4.45–5.45pm LE03
Charlie Mackesy
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
Author, artist and illustrator
Charlie Mackesy won the Animated Short Film Academy award for the screen version of his bestselling book The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse which he co-directed and co-wrote. He discusses the challenges and rewards of making the film with Julia Wheeler, including the process of bringing his heart-warming story to life.
6–7pm LN02
Walk Yourself Well
The Garden Theatre
£13
Spending time in nature can help us soothe anxiety, manage stress and sleep better. Countryfile presenter Julia Bradbury and Festival Guest Curator Alex George chat about their love of walking and the role it plays in their lives. Whether it’s climbing a mountain or strolling round the park, be inspired to take the first step to a healthier, happier you.
With thanks to our event sponsors
64 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Image: Charlie Gray
Image: Venni
Coming-of-Age Around the World
Image: Andrew Burton
6–7pm LP09
Max Porter:
Shy
Parabola Arts Centre
£13
In Shy, a troubled teenager spends nighttime listening to the voices in his head. Join bestselling author of Grief is the Thing with Feathers, Lanny, Max Porter, as he shares his major new work. Our former Festival Guest Curator returns with an innovative performance of the novel with Joe Guglani and the Tongue Fu Band, followed by a discussion of the novel with Alex Clark
6.30–7.30pm LC32
The NHS: A Culture of Cover Up?
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13
£16
Caroline Wheeler has spent two decades covering the contaminated blood scandal which led to 2,800 deaths, while Hannah Barnes has published the inside story of the collapse of The Tavistock Clinic’s Gender Service for Children. They join Today presenter Justin Webb to ask whether a secretive culture of cover up in the NHS is inflicting long-term harm on patients.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
Want early access to your Festival favourites? Become a Member and receive priority booking
See page 36
7–8pm LR40
Teacher’s Pet
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
‘Give me a girl at an impressionable age, and she is mine for life’ said Muriel Spark’s Jean Brodie. Sam Baker talks to two writers whose thrilling new books follow young women falling under the spell of charismatic leaders in the school halls: major New Zealand novelist Catherine Chidgey (Pet) and Granta Best Young British Novelist K Patrick (Mrs S).
Sponsored by Creative New Zealand
7.15–8.15pm LX03
7–8pm LE01
Emma Freud Meets... Richard E. Grant
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£16 £20
From growing up in Swaziland to navigating the highs and lows of Hollywood, Richard E. Grant’s wide-ranging career began with Withnail & I in 1986 and he was Oscar nominated for Can You Ever Forgive Me? in 2019. He talks to Emma Freud about his memoir A Pocketful of Happiness, the majority of which was written in the last year of his wife Joan Washington’s life. Sponsored by Cunard
A Guide to Sex, Evolution and the Female Body
The Hive
£13
Why do women live longer than men? Why are they more likely to get Alzheimer’s? Does the female brain really exist? With boundless curiosity and sharp wit, Lucy Cooke and Cat Bohannon answer the questions scientists should have addressed. Prepare to change the way you think about sex, sexual identity and the very forces that shape evolution.
With thanks to our event sponsors
65 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Image: Francesca Jones
Image: Ebony Lamb
Image: Alice Zoo
7–10pm LDF26
Why We Go Out Out
The Daffodil
£65
Ticket includes a three-course dinner and a drink on arrival. Bar open until late.
Robert Elms was 13 years old when he saw Jackson Five play live. Since then, live music has formed a huge part of his life; from playing or listening to pub rock and jazz funk, to watching Tom Waits showboating with an umbrella or Grace Jones vogueing with a mannequin. He speaks with Alex Clark about why experiencing live music matters.
8–10pm LP15
Tongue Fu
Parabola Arts Centre
£15
They’ve rocked Glastonbury and sold out their last Cheltenham appearances. Tongue Fu are back by popular demand. Bringing together the sharpest poets, storytellers, comedians and rappers to perform with improvised soundtracks from the Tongue Fu band, this is a riotous evening of literature, live music and laughs that’s sure to shake up your Saturday night. Guest line up to be announced on cheltenhamfestivals.com.
8.30–9.30pm LE05
Gaby Roslin:
Spread the Joy
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
TV presenter and broadcaster Gaby Roslin is on a mission to spread joy and help us discover the simple pleasures to be found in our everyday lives. Her guided journal Spread the Joy encourages readers to appreciate life and pass the joy onto others. Gaby offers tips and tricks as well as anecdotes and stories in conversation with Bryony Gordon
9–10pm
A Journey Through Türkiye’s First Century
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
Long distance cyclist and travel writer Julian Sayarer has cycled the country of his roots, while Maureen Freely translates classic Turkish literature, Orhan Pamuk and has written novels inspired by her childhood in Türkiye. They join Ann Morgan to talk about their home country’s past, present and future as it marks its 100th year as a Republic.
8.30–9.30pm LR23
Anne Enright
The Garden Theatre £13
‘One of our greatest living novelists’ (The Times), Booker Prize-winning Irish author of The Gathering, The Green Road and Actress
Anne Enright joins Claire Kilroy in conversation about her lauded new novel, The Wren, The Wren, a moving generational saga of daughterhood and motherhood.
9–10pm LE32
Ed Gamble: Glutton
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£30 £33
Ticket includes a signed copy of Glutton RRP £20.
Ed Gamble has loved food all his life. Before he could walk, Ed already knew that he preferred poached salmon to puree, that celery was a calorie-sapping waste of time, and that mashed potatoes should be made with lashings of butter. Join Ed and Great British Menu host Andi Oliver as he shares a delightful buffet of stories from a life lived through food.
66 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
LT09
SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Image: Hugh Chaloner
Image: Still Moving Media
9.30–11am LDF04
Brunch with Ravinder
Bhogal and Caleb
Azumah Nelson
The Daffodil
£28
Ticket includes brunch.
Celebrated chef Ravinder Bhogal invites you to a feast for the mind and senses as she delves into conversation with literary star and Festival Guest Curator Caleb Azumah Nelson. They discuss food, faith and friendship over an irresistible brunch with dishes from Ravinder’s ‘inventive, bewitching and mouthwatering’ cookbook Comfort and Joy.
10–11am LB01
10–11am LD05
Women in Orwell’s World Town Hall, Pillar Room £12
40 million copies of 1984 and Animal Farm sold, and his name synonymous with dystopia, George Orwell is a towering figure. But how did women fare in his life and work? Anna Funder*, whose biography Wifedom examines Orwell’s forgotten wife and Sandra Newman, author of Julia, a feminist retelling of 1984, discuss writing women back into the story with Alex Clark
*This participant will appear digitally.
10.30–11.30
LC11
Who Rules the Waves?
11am–12pm LR18
Chris Hadfield
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
From crewing the US Space Shuttle and being the Operations Director for NASA, to playing David Bowie’s ‘Space Oddity’ in zero gravity and becoming a multiple New York Times bestselling author, astronaut Chris Hadfield has lived an extraordinary life. Don’t miss him in conversation with Robin Ince about his varied career and his new heart-stopping thriller, The Defector
1–3.30pm LDF11
Sunday Lunch with Jay Blades
The Daffodil
£42
Poem
How to Read a Latin
The Garden Theatre
£13
Back by popular demand, the Classics dons Mary Beard, Llewelyn Morgan and Peter Stothard get together to translate and unpick the meaning behind a latin poem. Translations are provided and only minimal knowledge of Latin is required. In partnership with TLS
With thanks to our event sponsors
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
From the first oar-powered warships to modern nuclear submarines, sea power has determined world power. International relations specialist Robin Niblett is joined by former Naval Commander Eleanor Stack and Russian studies expert Andrew Monaghan, author of The Sea in Russian Strategy, to examine the continuing significance of oceans in warfare, predicting possible sites of the next major naval conflicts.
Ticket includes a two-course lunch and a glass of wine.
Star of The Repair Shop
Jay Blades left school at 15 with no qualifications and has faced many challenges in life. Today he’s a household name with an MBE and chancellor of his former university. Join him for Sunday lunch as he shares the life lessons that have shaped his outlook and helped him to live life to the fullest.
67 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
Sunday 15 October
Image: Cristobal Vivar
1.15–2.15pm LE02
Tim Peake
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£32 £35
Ticket includes a signed copy of Space: The Human Story RRP £22
Tim Peake is one of only 628 people to have explored Space, and was the first British astronaut to visit the International Space Station. 50 years after the last astronaut walked on the moon, he talks to Julia Wheeler about the realities of space exploration as revealed in his book Space: The Human Story
2–3pm LH06
Beyond the Wall: Life in the GDR
The Garden Theatre
£13
Millions of Germans alive today were born in a country that no longer exists. The West remembers the German Democratic Republic as a grey socialist blur, but it has its own identity and over 41 years weaved a distinct strand into the national narrative. Historian Katja Hoyer and poet and novelist Lutz Seiler colour in East Germany’s vanished past and discuss its legacy with Daniel Hahn
Supported by Goethe-Institut London
3.30–4.30pm LC19
Red Memory: China’s Cultural Revolution
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
The Cultural Revolution in China was a decade-long period of political and social turbulence. Nearly fifty years on, this brutal and tumultuous decade continues to shape China today. Former Guardian China correspondent Tania Branigan and Chinese foreign policy expert Yu Jie join journalist and broadcaster Isabel Hilton to examine how the cultural revolution has influenced contemporary policy and politics in China.
1.30–2.30pm LU02
Louise Minchin: Fearless
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage
£13 £16
Broadcaster Louise Minchin pushed herself to the extreme to bring endurance adventures with trailblazing women to the forefront: a journey that saw her swim the Antarctic Circle and cycle across Argentina. Louise is joined by special guests to explore what drives their resilience and determination, inviting us to find the bravery inside us all. Chaired by Hannah MacInnes
With thanks to our event sponsors
3.30–4.30pm LE34
Richard Curtis: The Sunday Times Culture Interview
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£16 £20
Screenwriter, producer and director Richard Curtis sits down with Scarlett Curtis for The Sunday Times Culture Interview. Choosing clips from some of the most iconic moments, he looks back at a prolific career including rom coms Four Weddings and a Funeral, Love
Actually and About Time as well as the loved TV shows Blackadder and The Vicar of Dibley and the creation of one of comedy’s greatest ever characters, Mr. Bean
4–5pm LR54
Shall I Be Mother?
Town Hall, Pillar Room £12
Today the decision to have or not have children is a complex and nuanced decision. Catalan author of Boulder Eva Baltasar* and Mexican author of Still Born Guadalupe
Nettel* join our Literary Explorer in Residence Ann Morgan to talk about how it’s influenced their new works.
Sponsored by Instituto Cervantes and the Embassy of Spain
*This participant will appear digitally.
68 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
Image: Rachel Joseph
Image: Alex Chamberlin
Image: Rich Hardcastle
4–5pm LQ07
Dr Alex George: The Mind Manual
Parabola Arts Centre
£13
Doctor, UK Ambassador for Mental Health and Festival Guest Curator
Alex George has been on the frontline of the mental health crisis, working to reduce stigma and raise awareness when it comes to the nation’s wellbeing. Alex talks to psychotherapist and writer Anna Mathur about how we can create the foundations for good mental fitness and shares his mental health toolkit.
Sponsored by Gloucestershire College
4–5pm LP06
Natalie Haynes:
Divine Might
The Garden Theatre
£13
Goddesses are as mighty, revered and destructive as their male counterparts. Natalie Haynes returns with her trademark passion, wit and fierce feminism for a show stopping tour of the divine might of goddesses. From Athene, who sprang fully formed from her father’s head, to Artemis, goddess of hunting and protector of young girls and Aphrodite, goddess of sex and desire.
5.15–6.15pm LP16
Robin Ince: Bibliomaniac
The Queen’s Hotel, Regency Suite
£13
Why play to 12,000 people when you can play to 12? Comedian and presenter Robin Ince’s stadium tour with Brian Cox was scuppered by the pandemic. Rather than doing nothing he decided he would instead go on a tour of over 100 bookshops. Join him for anecdotes and tall tales from between the stacks of the UK’s weird and wonderful bookshops.
5.30–7pm LDF17
The Art of Making Whisky
The Daffodil
£35
Ticket includes sharing board and whisky tastings.
Founder of Cotswolds Distillery
Dan Szor reveals the art of whisky distillation and maturation with sommelier Dave Broom. Share a dram with Dan as he swaps bustling New York for the rolling hills of the Cotswolds and chats about his journey into the world of whisky.
5.45–6.45pm LE06
Barry Cryer: A Celebration
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
From his days in music hall and revue to his collaborations with Morecambe and Wise, Kenny Everett, David Frost and the I’m Sorry, I Haven’t A Clue team, Barry Cryer was a legendary comedian. Celebrate his life with his son
Bob Cryer, author of Barry Cryer: Same Time Tomorrow?, as he joins comedians Jack Dee and Arthur Smith, actor Helen Atkinson-Wood and chair Alex Clark to discuss the man behind the one-liners.
6–7pm LL12
Elizabeth Day: Friendaholic
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage £13 £16
Growing up, Elizabeth Day wanted everyone to like her, to the detriment of her own boundaries and mental health. She speaks to her good friend Sathnam Sanghera about the significance and evolution of their friendship, her experience and those of others around the world, via ghosting, frenemies, social media and other communication styles. Together they leave no stone unturned.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
With thanks to our event sponsors
69 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
Image: Rory Lewis
Image: Andrew Burton
Image: The Cosmic Shambles Network and Steve Best
6–7pm LT04
To the Ends of the Earth?
The Garden Theatre £13
Julia Wheeler talks to two adventurers about their remarkable journeys to the planet’s most at-risk areas. Leon McCarron travelled 1,600km of the Tigris River – once the lifeblood of ancient Mesopotamia and modern Iraq, rendered almost uninhabitable by climate change and geopolitics – by boat. Kate Rawles rode a self-built bamboo bike 8,000 miles through South America to highlight biodiversity loss.
6.30–7.30pm LR59
The Sunday Times Must Reads: Claire Kilroy
Town Hall, Pillar Room £13
7.15–8.15pm LR64
Liv Little and Yomi Adegoke
The Hive £13
Cormac McCarthy: An American Great
6–7pm LD16
Cormac McCarthy: An American Great Parabola Arts Centre £13
From Blood Meridian to The Border Trilogy, No Country for Old Men to The Road, Cormac McCarthy’s bleakly violent, apocalyptic visions of the American south earned him literary legend status in his own lifetime. In the year of his passing, Erica Wagner and Travis Elborough join Daniel Hahn to reflect on a remarkable body of work.
When Soldier Sailor – Irish author Claire Kilroy’s first novel in over a decade – was published, The Sunday Times described it as ‘a novel that immediately feels like the definitive work on modern motherhood’. She joins Literary Editor of The Sunday Times Johanna Thomas-Corr to discuss the novel that many are calling one of the best of the year.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
Two debut novelists share their highly-anticipated reads: Slay in Your Lane author Yomi Adegoke’s The List explores the fall-out of a media power couple after a very public allegation. Gal-dem founder Liv Little’s Rosewater is a queer black love story that celebrates chosen family and staying true to yourself.
Chaired by Clarissa Pabi
8–9pm LC44
James O’Brien
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
£14 £17
We are living in a country almost unrecognisable from the one that existed a decade ago. Who broke Britain and how did they do it?
James O’Brien reveals the shady network of influence that has created a broken Britain of strikes, shortages and scandals, revealing how a select few have conspired to bring Britain to its knees. Chaired by Hannah MacInnes.
With thanks to our event sponsors
70 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
Start creating your wishlist on our website before tickets go on sale
Image: Ula Soltys
Image: Magda Christie
Cormac McCarthy’s bleakly violent, apocalytpic visions of the American south earned him literary status in his own lifetime
60 years later, Hill House is occupied again... Discover the enduring power of the haunted house on the page and screen
The Haunted House
8–9pm LD06
The Haunted House
The Garden Theatre
£13
In a special visit from the US, author Elizabeth Hand presents the landmark first novel to return to the world of Shirley Jackson’s Hill House. Joined by horror expert Roger Luckhurst they discuss the enduring power of the haunted house on the page and screen with Alex Clark
8.30–9.30pm LC20
Section 28, Pride and Protest
Town Hall, Pillar Room
£13
While Section 28 prohibited the ‘promotion of homosexuality’, bringing loneliness and abuse on those growing up gay under it, it inspired protest and the formation of LGBTQ+ rights groups. 20 years after the act was repealed, author and psychotherapist Emmett de Monterey, journalist and historian Paula Akpan and writer and filmmaker Juliet Jacques consider its legacy. Chaired by Laurie Belgrave.
Reading For Pleasure
Cheltenham Festivals is on a mission to inspire the next generation of readers
If you’re a KS2 or KS3 teacher looking to boost reading for pleasure in your school, then look no further than Reading Teachers = Reading Pupils. With an annual conference (this year on Tuesday 10 October), a national network of teachers’ book groups, and a course exclusively for Gloucestershire teachers, there’s something for everyone to learn and enjoy.
Check out our champion books for the upcoming academic year and find out more about how to get involved at cheltenhamfestivals.com/rtrp
71 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
All our family events are Relaxed. Find out more on page 108
Saturday 7 October
12–1pm LF61
Maddie Moate: A Very Curious Christmas
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 6+ £8
10–10.50am
The Museum of Marvellous Things
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 5+ £8
LF23
10–11am LF38
Mythological Mayhem with Maz Evans
The Hive Ages 9+ £8
Let the magic begin! Stars in jars, moons like balloons, dancing doo-dahs and singing noo-nahs, this is a museum like no other –it’s made from the magic of your imagination. With giant puppets, songs, interactive storytelling and music, join bestselling author and illustrator of Sir Charlie Stinky Socks Kristina Stephenson for a peek inside this marvellous museum.
Come and celebrate the next generation of hilarious adventures from Who Let The Gods Out? author Maz Evans as she takes you on a journey through the Maya Underworld in Oh Maya Gods! Learn about the mysteries and the magic of Mesoamerica and get an introduction to the ancient sport of Pok-a-Tok, with the usual dose of Maz’s mythological mayhem.
10–11am
LF60
Blanksy the Street Cat
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 5+ £8
Blanksy the Cat uses his creative talents to help his friend Pete the Busker become rich. Join comedy writer Gavin Puckett and World Book Day illustrator Allen Fatimaharan for an art-tastic morning inspired by the book. Expect hilarious read-alouds, sing-alongs, interactive games and create your own Blanksy the Street Cat.
Ever wondered why crackers go bang? How fairy lights work? Can reindeer communicate? CBeebies presenter Maddie Moate is here to answer all these questions and more along with science demos and wacky Christmas facts. Get the chance to ask Maddie your own curious questions about wintery science and Christmas traditions around the world too.
12–12.45pm
Spyceratops
The Hive Ages 3+ £8
LF20
Are you ready to become a super spy? Go undercover with award-winning author-illustrator Alex Willmore to meet Spyceratops, the little dinosaur who is the greatest secret agent in the world. You’ll hear a hilarious reading of the story before working with Alex to create a new spy character and join in with the draw-along.
73 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
12–1pm LF15
Tom Gates
with Liz Pichon
The Garden Theatre
Ages 8+ £8
Get your pencils at the ready and doodle along with author and illustrator Liz Pichon as she draws Tom Gates and a host of other characters. Ask Liz questions about her books, doodling and more, and find out everything about the newest book in the Tom Gates series, Happy to Help (Eventually)!
Art Makes People Powerful
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 7+ £23
Ticket price includes one adult and child and book. Additional child tickets £10 each.
Unlock your creativity with celebrated British artist, author, educator and protect-the-arts activist, Bob and Roberta Smith
Find out how you can use art to feel more powerful, make speed art, and learn about the colour wheel and famous artists with interactive songs in this action-packed art workshop. Session times:
LF17: 12–1pm
LF18: 1.30–2.30pm
2–3pm LF12
The Worst Horrible Histories
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 8+ £8
Expect savage stories, gruesome games, foul facts and deadly drawing with illustrator Martin Brown and celebrate 30 horrible years of the world’s bestselling children’s history series. Find out the best worst bits of history and pick up some wicked drawing tips.
1.30–2.15pm LF22
Shifty McGifty
The Hive Ages 4+ £8
Celebrate 10 paw-some years of everyone’s favourite baking doggy duo, Shifty McGifty and Slippery Sam, the fur-bulous crime-fighting doggy detectives. Expect interactive storytelling, live illustration and drawing games as author and illustrator, Tracey Corderoy and Steven Lenton, bring the series to life.
2–3pm LF57
You Don’t Know
What War Is
The Garden Theatre
Ages 11+ £8
12-year-old Yeva Skalietska’s life was changed forever when Russia invaded Ukraine. Sheltering in a damp basement, Yeva started to write a diary which was eventually published. Hear Yeva’s story as she talks with Times arts editor Alex O’Connell about her journey from Kharkiv to Dublin as a refugee, in a powerful account of war.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
74 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
With thanks to our event sponsor
Image: Ger Holland
2.30–3.30pm LF40
If the World Were 100 People
Town Hall, Pillar Room Ages 6+ £8
There are almost 8 billion humans on Earth, but it’s tricky to picture so many people at once. Instead, let’s imagine the whole planet is a village where 100 people live with author Jackie McCann and illustrator Aaron Cushley, and find out how numbers and data can reveal stories about our world.
3.15–4.15pm
LF45
Fantastic Adventures
The Hive Ages 8+ £8
Wizards, witches, knights and dragons. Four sensational storytellers Anna James, Skye McKenna, Lee Newbery and E.L. Norry talk about how they power up their imaginations to write their extraordinary adventures, recommend other brilliant books and share tips and tricks for writing your own stories.
Free Family Fun
Don’t forget to check out The Wild Wood
THEWOODWILD
Storytelling, mystery trails, arts and crafts and more...
See pages 10 and 11 for more information
3.30–4.30pm LF54
Go Wild with Huw Lewis-Jones
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 7+ £8
Follow your expert field guide Huw Lewis-Jones deep into the woods to learn about bears and to Antarctica and beyond to discover the secret life of penguins. Find out what it takes to be an explorer with stories about Huw’s real-life adventures and lots of amazing animal facts.
3.45–4.45pm LF09 Twitchers Mysteries with M.G.Leonard
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 8+ £8
Perfect for young nature enthusiasts, birdwatchers and detectives in the making, author M. G. Leonard presents The Twitchers Club series, full of adventure, friendship and the magnificent wonder of birds. Pack your backpack and head on over to discover how to write a whodunnit along with some fun bird facts.
75 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER
Sunday
10–11am
LF26
The Marvellous Myth Hunter
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 5+ £10
10–10.45am
LF05
Speak Up with Rocket!
The Hive
Ages 4+ £8
Go on a mission with World Book Day author and illustrator
Nathan Bryon and Dapo Adeola as they bring young activist Rocket’s adventures to life. Hear about her latest plan to save the local library by organising a peaceful protest, take part in the draw along and learn top tips for writing stories and speaking up about things that matter.
Love myths, weird creatures and interactive games? Dust off your maps and strap on your jetpacks for a journey to ancient, far-off lands! Bring your best adventure outfit and join us as we travel to ancient Congo, lands of Norse legend and first nation’s Canada to uncover how the world began.
11.30am–12.15pm
LF03
Mog the Forgetful Cat
The Hive Ages 3+ £8
Join professional storyteller, Liz Fost to celebrate 100 years of the incomparable author and illustrator Judith Kerr with a special event based on everyone’s favourite family feline, Mog. We’ll be celebrating with a reading of Mog the Forgetful Cat, some cat themed activities, and maybe even Mog herself will drop by.
2–3pm
LF02
10–11am
Everyday Action, Everyday Change
LF64
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 10+ £8
Want to make the world a fairer and more equal place but find those complex problems overwhelming? You’re not alone. Everyday Racism founders Natalie and Naomi Evans empower you to deal with the big issues, from racism and sexism to homophobia and ableism, and show that with small, achievable steps you can make a big difference in the world.
Impossible Creatures with Katherine Rundell
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 9+ £8
Prepare to be swept away to a land beyond your wildest imagination with master storyteller Katherine Rundell as she presents her epic fantasy series Impossible Creatures Embark on an urgent quest to a place where all the creatures of myth live and uncover the secret of the islands that threatens the creatures’ survival and the world itself.
76 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
8 October
Image: Tim Lane, Penguin Books
12.15–1.15pm
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
Ages 7+ £8
A meet and greet will follow the show. Signed copies of David’s book will be available.
Prepare for a supercharged, one-hour spectacular with one of Britain’s favourite storytellers including hilarious performative readings and a chance to get your questions answered live on stage. Fun for all the family – laughter guaranteed. Come dressed to impress to be in with a chance to win a star prize.
12.15–1pm
I’m Sticking with You
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 3+ £8
Bear and Squirrel are back and ready to party! Get moving and shaking with games, readings and live drawings as picture book creators Smriti Halls and Steve Small present the third in their hugely popular, funny, rhyming series about the joy of friendship.
1–2pm
Once Upon a Witch’s Broom
The Hive
Ages 5+ £8
Embark on a magical journey packed with witches, dragons, unicorns and mermaids from the Once Upon A… series with author and illustrator Beatrice Blue Explore incredible photos from Beatrice’s latest adventures, take part in a magical creatures’ quiz, help create a new magical creature and join in the draw-along.
The Garden Theatre
Ages 4+ £8
Come along for a fun-packed picture-book session with awardwinning author and illustrator Rob Biddulph. With live drawing and storytelling, Rob brings his stories and characters to life including The Blue-Footed Booby and his new character Gigantic, a small whale with a big heart. Have your pencils and paper ready and Draw with Rob.
77 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
LF06
LF27 David Walliams
LF16
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
2–3pm LF04 Gigantic Fun with Rob Biddulph
Image: Charlie Clift
Knight Sir Louis Comic Workshop
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 6+
£18
Ticket price includes one adult and child and book. Additional child tickets £10 each.
The Brothers McLeod are writer and voice actor Myles, and illustrator and animator Greg. Join them for an interactive Create Your Own Knight workshop inspired by their hilarious Knight Sir Louis series. Together you’ll create a brand-new knight or wizard character and come up with your own adventure in six comicinspired storyboard panels. Session times:
LF50: 2–3pm
LF51: 4–5pm
3–4pm LF19
The Funniest Boy in the World
The Hive Ages 8+ £8
Do you have what it takes to be a comedian? In this creative session, Best Laugh Out Loud Book award winner Helen Rutter introduces her follow up to The Boy Who Made Everyone Laugh featuring a young, aspiring comedian navigating the world of comedy and school with a stammer. Find out where story ideas come from and how to make them funny.
Cheltenham Literature Festival for Schools
We can’t wait to welcome over 10,000 pupils from schools and home education settings to the Festival Village for inspirational explorations of the written and spoken word.
This year’s writers, illustrators and industry professionals include Manjeet Mann, Benjamin Dean, Pamela Butchart and Jamie Littler.
Find books by our Festival authors on our online Waterstones bookshop
Why couldn’t Black Beauty’s foal make a speech at the festival?
She was a little horse.
For more information about our work with schools, visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature-for-schools
78 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
The World
The Funniest Boy In
Saturday 14 October
10–11am
LF08
Bookmaker Like You
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 9+ £8
10–11am
Storm Whale
The Hive
Ages 4+ £8
LF14
What would you do if you found a little whale washed up on the beach? Find out what happens in a lively morning of story readings and live drawing with author and illustrator Benji Davies as he celebrates 10 years of his classic picture book, The Storm Whale and presents his new book The Great Storm Whale.
What
Anyone can be a bookmaker, whether you’re a writer, illustrator, bookseller or editor. Authors
Jasbinder Bilan and Nadine Aisha Jassat talk with Waterstones
Children’s Laureate, Joseph Coelho, about the big team of people behind turning their ideas into books and what inspired them to create stories.
Nursery Rhyme Time
The Hive
Ages 2+ £6
Join in with a performance of classic and contemporary rhymes, songs, riddles and tongue twisters as poet powerhouse Allie Esiri and special guest perform a selection from A Nursery Rhyme for Every Night of the Year, each introduced with a quirky fact or historical reference.
Session times:
LF36: 11.45am–12.15pm
LF68: 12.45–1.15pm
12–1pm
LF42
Storm Whale
With thanks to our event sponsor
10–11am
LF55
Greeks, Gods and War with Tom Holland
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 9+ £8
Go on a wolf-back ride through ancient Greece with historian and The Rest is History presenter Tom Holland. Inspired by family holidays in Greece, Tom talks with Times journalist Lucy Bannerman about his thrilling illustrated novel for young people that interweaves myth and history, to tell the story of the Persian invasion of Greece.
In partnership with The Times, The Sunday Times and Times Radio
A Sleepover with Jacqueline Wilson
The Garden Theatre
Ages 7+ £8
This event will be interpreted in Makaton.
Famous for writing characters Tracy Beaker and Hetty Feather, Jacqueline Wilson is one of Britain’s best-loved children’s authors Jacqueline talks to Bex Lindsay from Fun Kids Radio about her writing career and where she finds her story ideas. Find out about her long-awaited sequel to Sleepovers when Daisy sets out to create The Best Sleepover in the World for her non-verbal sister.
79 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Image: David Bebber
Image: Charlie Hopkinson
would you do if you found a little whale washed up on the beach?
You can filter events on our website by theme or search for your favourite author
12–1pm LF28
Adventuremice
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 5+ £8
Looking for adventure? Co-author legends Philip Reeve and Sarah McIntyre introduce a tiny mouse named Pedro who sets off to see the world and meets the brave and daring Adventuremice. Does he have what it takes to join their team to protect the Mouse Islands? Learn how to draw Pedro, hear more about his adventures and explore the Islands.
12.30–1.30pm LF07
Master Storyteller
S F Said
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Ages 9+ £8
In a strange, alternate world where the British Empire never ended, a boy uncovers a mythical, magical animal – a Tyger. Blue Peter award-winning author S F Said tells his own story from avid young reader and Star Wars fan, to prizewinning author. Discover how he creates exciting, action-packed stories and unforgettable worlds in this energetic and inspiring event.
2–3pm LF52
Creating Creatures
Writing Workshop
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 9+ £18
Ticket price includes one adult and child and book. Additional child tickets £10 each.
Harness your superpowers with fantasy author Janelle McCurdy and learn how to write stories inspired by video games, films and more. Find out about the latest novel in the Umbra Tales series Mia and the Traitor of Nubis and hone your umbra-taming abilities by creating your own umbra.
2–3pm
LF13
Adam Rutherford: Where Are You From?
The Garden Theatre
Ages 9+ £8
Ever wondered who you might be related to? In fact, everyone’s related to vicious Vikings, Roman emperors and kings and queens, and geneticist Adam Rutherford ’s here to tell you how. Prepare for a mind-boggling insight into four billion years of human evolution and find out who you really are. Hosted by author Rashmi Sirdeshpandi.
80 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Feeling brave? Create a story so repulsive and terrifying it wouldn’t be published
2–2.45pm LF56
Esme Higgs
Horses and Me
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 7+ £8
Meet Esme Higgs (AKA ThisEsme) writer, presenter, and horse-mad ordinary girl as she presents her mystery series, The Starlight Stables Gang, inspired by her real four-legged friends. Hear about Esme’s life as an equestrian, country lifestyle content creator and how she runs her stables. Ask Esme your questions too.
2.30–3.30pm LF10
Read, Scream, Repeat
The Hive
Ages 9+ £8
Feeling brave? Comedy horror writer Jennifer Killick along with Joseph Coelho, Sharna Jackson and Elle McNicoll talk about the inspiration behind their chilling stories in Read, Scream, Repeat and share what weird and wonderful fears keep them awake at night. Help them create the fourteenth story – a tale so repulsive and terrifying it wouldn’t be published.
3.45–4.45pm LF62
In the Shadow of the Wolf Queen
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 9+ £8
In the lakes, the wolf queen sharpens her spear. In the mountains, an ancient girl opens an eye. In the forest, an orphan is summoned by the trees. Delve into a magical world with Kiran Millwood Hargrave as she introduces the first book in her epic Geomancer trilogy and shares the inspirations behind creating her fantasy world.
Other events families might like at the Festival
81 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SATURDAY 14 OCTOBER
Steve Backshall’s 33 Ocean Journeys Chris Packham 23 Hamza Yassin 58 Noel Fitzpatrick: 62 Supervet Tim Peake 68
Read, Scream, Repeat
Sunday 15 October
10–11am LF65
Lemony Snicket
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 9+
£8
A Series of Unfortunate Events author Lemony Snicket talks about his cautionary tale, Poison for Breakfast, involving a bewildering note and a winding set of clues to solve the mystery of his own demise. Enjoy this thoughtprovoking discussion for curious children and adults with Lemony Snicket, the pen name of American novelist Daniel Handler. Hosted by Daniel Hahn
12–1pm LF01
Matt Lucas and The Boy Who Slept Through
Christmas
The Garden Theatre
Ages 8+ £8
Laugh your socks off with comedian, writer and actor Matt Lucas as he talks with Bex Lindsay from Fun Kids
10–10.45am LF53
Bugs and Bagoos
The Hive
Ages 4+ £8
Join author Karl Newson for a fun-filled, interactive event to meet a detective on the case of a mysterious blue creature and a bug on his daring dash back home. With songs to sing, clues to solve, a draw-along, and a pair of yellow slippers... a splendid time is guaranteed for all!
10–11am LF67
The Power of the Pack
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 5+ £8
With boundless energy and an impulsive nature, werewolf Rudy is always ready to follow the scent of adventure. And with his loyal pack of friends by his side there’s nothing he can’t achieve.
Join author Paul Westmoreland for a spooky interactive story-building session and decorate and colour your own skateboard bookmark.
11.30am–12.15pm LF44
Sophie Dahl’s Madame Badobedah
The Hive
Ages 5+ £8
Set off on an imaginary journey with performance artist Ellie Westbrook as Sophie Dahl ’s glamourous, adventurous and mysterious hotel guest Madame Badobedah. Join her as she reminisces with tall tales about her life as a jewel thief, time traveller and explorer, and bring your questions along for Sophie.
Radio about his hilarious and heartwarming children’s book about a boy who wishes Christmas away, then sets out on a mission to bring it back. With 20 original songs written by Matt there may be a singalong in this early festive treat!
12–1pm LF59
Dr Ranj:
A Superfamily Like Ours
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 4+ £8
Celebrate families of all shapes and sizes, with author Dr Ranj , the nation’s favourite doctor. Rohan is excited and ready for the superfamily summer festival, but will Rohan and his daddy really be a superfamily without mummy? Discover the superpowers of love that are always part of us, whether our family is near or far.
82 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
12–1pm LF37
Sathnam Sanghera: What is an Empire?
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Ages 9+
£8
When you hear the word ‘empire’ you might think of Ancient Roman times or Star Wars. But what about the British Empire? What is it and why don’t we learn much about it? Journalist Sathnam Sanghera introduces you to the British Empire and how it’s shaped our lives today. Put your questions to Sathnam in the audience Q and A.
Mouse’s Wood Card Workshop
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 5+
£18
Ticket price includes one adult and child and book. Additional child tickets £10 each.
Go on a journey through the seasons with some woodland creatures in Mouse’s Wood: A Year in Nature and make a pop-up card with illustrator and maker Alice Melvin
Session times:
LF30: 12–1pm
LF31: 2–3pm
3.15-4.15pm LF69
The Taming of the Cat
The Hive Ages 7+ £8
Join award-winning author and illustrator Helen Cooper as she introduces her enchanting modern fairytale The Taming of the Cat featuring dangerous escapades, a plucky mouse called Brie, a lethal cat called Gorgonzola and lots of cheese! Plus, Helen will be celebrating the 25th anniversary of her bestloved picture book, Pumpkin Soup
1–2pm
If I Were Prime Minister
The Hive Ages 4+
£8
LF63
Norwegian songwriter, vocalist and poet Trygve Skaug and illustrator Ella Okstad introduce their extraordinary picture book in which a child gives their perspective on several things the grown-ups running the country could do differently. With stories, songs and a drawing workshop, this is ideal for children who dare to dream big and adults who want to look on the world with fresh eyes.
Sponsored by the Norwegian Embassy and NORLA
2–3pm LF66
Robert Muchamore’s Robin Hood
Parabola Arts Centre
Ages 10+ £8
Bestselling author Robert Muchamore has reinvented legendary folklore hero Robin Hood for today’s readers; teen rebel, social media star and vigilante, forced to flee corrupt officials to become a figurehead for modern-day rebels in Sherwood Forest. Robert talks about the latest instalments in his action-packed series and what he loves about being a writer. Ask Robert your questions too.
If I Were Prime Minister
With thanks to our event sponsors
83 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
SUNDAY 15 OCTOBER
If I were prime minister I’d wear my favourite shoes every day and the streets would be paved with trampolines.
YOUNG ADULTS YOUNG ADULTS
Saturday 7 October
Sunday 8 October
12.30–1.30pm LF47
Looks, Lies and Love
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Ages 14+
£10
Beauty and fame come at a price. YA authors Holly Bourne and Amara Sage’s compelling novels convey powerful messages about the pressures social media and society put on us to look and behave in certain ways. They discuss these themes along with feminism and the body positivity movement with author Tamsin Winter
5–6pm LF25
Queer Love, Actually
The Hive
Ages 14+ £10
YA author William Hussey is joined by acclaimed author Tanya Byrne and new writer Daniel Tawse to talk about their latest books, the growing publishing trend for queer romance, the influence of Tik Tok, favourite tropes and writing believable characters, crushes and kisses. Join in the book chat with your questions too.
Don’t miss the best and brightest young talent at this year’s Look out for the full line-up of free events from mid-September and pick up the VOICEBOX Zine.
12–1pm LF11
Skulduggery Pleasant Graphic Novel
Parabola Arts Centre
£8
Ages 12+
Bad Magic book suitable for ages 15+
Plunge into the magical and macabre world of Bad Magic with YA fiction superstar Derek Landy and comic artist P J Holden Meet a cast of unforgettable characters including the infamous skeleton detective and his whip-smart partner in this behind-the-scenes talk about the creative process involved in making a graphic novel set in the Skulduggery Pleasant universe.
12.30–1.30pm LF49
Holly Smale, Geek Girl
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Ages 16+ £10
Geek Girl author Holly Smale has an MA in Shakespeare and was a fashion model but never felt like she fitted in. Like many girls and women, she received a late autism diagnosis. With her first adult fiction title published, she talks with Hana Walker Brown about her differently wired brain, her writing, and the importance of featuring neuro-diverse characters in books.
84 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
Saturday 14 October
12–1pm LF29
You Are a Story: Writing Workshop
Regency Suite, Queens Hotel
Ages 12+
£18
Ticket includes a copy of You Are a Story RRP £7.99
Find your voice and become a creative writing superstar with YA author and Brit School Performing Arts graduate Laura Dockrill . The best writing comes when you tap into your imagination and express yourself honestly. Get to know yourself through writing and celebrate the exciting, creative, unique person you are.
Sunday 15 October
2.30–3.30pm LF24
Debuts and Mocktails
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Ages 14+
£11
Ticket includes a mocktail. Writer and poet Laura Dockrill presents three debut novelists writing across popular YA genres: TikTok star Bea Fitzgerald ’s Greek myth re-imagining, Ravena Guron’s murder mystery, and Josh Silver’s dystopian novel. They talk about finding their voice, their creative processes and different paths to being published. Followed by a Q&A.
5–6pm LF21
Killer Reads
The Hive Ages 14+ £10
Secrets, suspense, mystery, murder – everything you love about a killer read is found in the latest books by fabulous YA writers Benjamin Dean and Holly Jackson Talking with fellow thriller writer Kathryn Foxfield, they reveal their writing process as they plot the perfect murder, build tension and drop in red herrings and subtle clues. Plus, interrogate the panellists in our Q&A.
2–3pm LF32
Living Your Best Life
Town Hall, Pillar Room
Ages 13+
£10
Staying safe online, consent, respect and how to say ‘no’ are some of the biggest social issues facing young people today. Author and life coach, Michelle Elman, is joined by mental health campaigner and broadcaster Natasha Devon and Don’t Be that Guy scriptwriter and author Alan Bissett to discuss how to live your best life online, address toxic masculinity, and share ideas for how to create positive change and be the best version of yourself.
Other events Young Adults might like at the Festival
The Success Myth 25
Max La Manna 34
Harry Baker: 55
Unashamed
Caleb Azumah Nelson 59 Presents...
Coming-of-Age 64
A Global Guide
Giving Us Back Our 64 Beauty Standards
Elizabeth Day: 69
Friendaholic
Liv Little and 70 Yomi Adegoke
85 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature YOUNG ADULTS
18-30 Spark Membership Ignite your curiosity with our FREE 18-30 Spark Membership ✓ Priority booking ✓ 50% discount on walk up tickets one hour before the event cheltenhamfestivals.com/membership Plan Your Perfect Festival With the Cheltenham Festivals app Available on Android and IOS, it’s the easiest way to plan your Festival visit. Scan the QR code to download it. Developed in partnership with Birmingham City University
Cheltenham Festivals are committed to local and national targets in sustainability
We’ve signed up to Cheltenham Zero and Festival Vision 2025. See our three-year sustainability strategy at cheltenhamfestivals.com/green-cheltenham-festivals
Cheltenham Zero are excited to be supporting Cheltenham Festivals with their Net Zero journey. We applaud their aspiration to become industry leaders, setting ambitious goals for Net Zero ahead of national targets.
87 cheltenhamfestivals.com SECTION TITLE 87 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER
The
12pm 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm 10pm
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room
Times and Sunday Times Forum The Garden Theatre The Hive The Daffodil
LH10 Rethinking the World with Peter Frankopan LE63 The Year in Books
LR62 Kate Mosse and Emma Donoghue: Defiant Women
LC52 Fighting Fake News
LR06 Debuts and Cocktails
LP17 WritersMosaic Live
LE57 Shirley Ballas Live on Air with Cathy Newman
LE04 Bernie Taupin
LR08 Sebastian Barry
LE39 Rachel Parris
LH15 Between Two Islands
LL04 Busy Being Free
LDF19 Dinner with Michael Roux
LT12 From Africa to the Arctic Circle
LN05 Rural Idyll: Myth and Reality LL14 The Write Place?
LC14 The Election Generals LL07 Finding Home LR13 Andrew Kurkov
LDF05 Lunch with Sabrina Ghayour
LA17 Now You See Me: 100 Years of Black Design
Becki Sillence, Cheltenham Zero Communications Manager
LX05 Chris Packham
9.30am 10am 11am 12pm 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room The Times and Sunday Times Forum The Garden Theatre The Hive The Daffodil Regency Suite, Queens Hotel Parabola Arts Centre
LC16 The Sunday Papers with Marcus Brigstocke
LH01 Michael Palin LL16 Threads of Life
LF05 Speak Up with Rocket!
LDF02 Here Comes the Fun
LD02 Write Second Time?
LC15 The Times Live
LF03 Mog the Forgetful Cat
LF49 Holly Smale, Geek Girl
LF27 David Walliams
LF06 Once Upon a Witch’s Broom
LC49 The Sunday Times Debate: Is Journalism Doomed?
LT01 Steve Backshall’s Ocean Joruneys
LF04 Gigantic Fun with Rob Biddulph
LR31 Samantha Shannon and Elizabeth Acevedo
LE61 Hilary Mantel: A Celebration
LF19 The Funniest Boy in the World
LR35 Books from Japan LX01 Foreign Bodies: The Health of Nations
LA02 Will Gompertz: See What You’re Missing
LR39 Sebastian Faulks
LD13 Inside the Baillie Gifford Prize LE37 Brian Cox
LL08 Max La Manna
LR22 Writing for Laughs
LM09 Family Ties
LR65 The Talk of the Town LE13 Nick Frost
LC28 Let’s Talk About Sex
LDF12 Sunday Lunch with Mike Brearley
LF64 Everyday Action, Everyday Change
LF16 I’m Sticking with You
LF11 Skulduggery Pleasant Graphic Novel
LF50 Knight Sir Louis Comic Workshop
LF02 Impossible Creatures with Katherine Rundell
LF51 Knight Sir Louis Comic Workshop LR12 Katherine Heiny
LE59 Tommy Jessop: A Life Worth Living LP05 You’re Bard
LDF21 Dinner with Skye McAlpine LK01 Glos Writers Network
LF26 The Marvellous Myth Hunter Adult event Family event Young Adult event
89 cheltenhamfestivals.com SECTION TITLE 89 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER
LH04 A Personal History of Europe
LH05 Spain: A Different History
LC23 No Offence, But...
LC43 Growing Up Between Two Continents
LQ04 Embracing Solitude
LA12 Rediscovering Black British Portraiture
LL06 The Age Rage
LQ10 The Anxiety Project
LR47
LT11
LU08 QI Elves: Everything to Play For
LK04
LDF28
cheltenhamfestivals.com 90 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER MONDAY 9 OCTOBER
The Times and Sunday Times
The Garden Theatre The Hive The
Hotel
1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm 10pm
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room
Forum
Daffodil Regency Suite, Queens
8.30am 9am 10am 11am 12pm
LA16 The Power of Art
LE42 Judy Murray
LE08 Jane Garvey and Fi Glover: Live on Air
LDF14 Feathers and Flowers: Arthur Parkinson and Sarah Raven
LC01 Breakfast with The Times: Behind the Headlines
The Penguin Michael Joseph Proof Party
Roast Figs, Sugar Snow
The Man Who Loved Siberia
The Wisdom of Myth and Folklore
LR07 Heather Morris
LR41 The Missing
LR17 Ian McEwan Revisits Atonement
91 cheltenhamfestivals.com SECTION TITLE 91 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER
Hall,
Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room The Times and Sunday Times Forum The Garden Theatre The Hive The Daffodil Regency Suite, Queens Hotel Hotel du Vin 10am 11am 12pm 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm
How to Read a Tree
Know What You Did That Summer...
Good Grief
in 21st Century Diplomacy
The
Theorists
Town
Baillie Gifford
LN06
LA10 The Rossettis LQ12 Life of a Spy LR71 Bernard Cornwell LQ01 Navigating Tough Times LR26 Mick Herron LP12 James Walton’s
Big
Book Quiz LR52 I
LQ03
LA03 Rebel Rebel: Soheila Sokhanvari LC26 Alastair Campbell and Ian Dunt LR53 Sister Act LC25 Lessons
LQ14
Conspiracy
LR51 Cults: Mystery, Mindgames and Murder
Ask the Travel Experts
A Helping Hand
Spice Up Your Life
44 Scotland Street
LQ02 Scatter Brain LR67 The Way of the Woods LR28 Rose Tremain LA09 Radical Spirits LQ06 Gelong Thubten Meditation Workshop LR63 Celebrate... with Mick Herron LT10
LK03
LDF07
LDF13 Teatime at
On
LT03
LL02
LQ13 Why Women Kill
LC30
LDF24 Winter Nights
LM10 Homelands
cheltenhamfestivals.com 92 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER WEDNESDAY 11 OCTOBER
The Times and Sunday Times
The Garden Theatre The Hive The Daffodil
Suite, Queens Hotel 11am
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room
Forum
Regency
12pm 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm
LH03 The Iraq War: 20 Years
LH07 Wartime Women
LC45 A Dead End for Russia?
LX04 Chirs Van Tulleken and Michael Mosely
LE40 The British Bloke Decoded
LR16 New Blood: Crime and Thriller Writers to Watch
LH14 Mozart in Italy
LC38 The Power of the Oustsier
The Globemakers: The Curious Story of an Ancient Craft
LN04 The Chief Shepherdess
LD01 The Wife of Bath
What if AI Doesn’t Change the World
LM08 My Family and Other Radicals
Secret Gardens: A Private Tour
LR34 Bright Snow, Dark Deeds
LL13 Coco Chanel: The Legend and the Life
LR45 The Hutchinson Heinemann Proof Party LDF16 Dark Rye and Honey Cake
LG01 David Baddiel: The God Desire
LA08 Picasso: A Life
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room The Times and Sunday Times Forum
The Daffodil Regency Suite, Queens Hotel Hotel du Vin
LC02 Behind the Morning Headlines with The Times
LC24 Understanding Afghanistan
LD11
Shakespeare: The Book LD12
Shakespeare: The Man
LD18 Greg Doran: Directing the First Folio
LC39 Labour: On Track for No.10?
LD09 Wordsmith Women LN03 Sacred Landscapes
LDF10 Tessa Kiros: A Life in Food
LR15 Celebrate with Rachel Joyce
LR14 Sarah Winman
LT07 Finding Hildasay: Walking in Search of Hope
LR58 The Sunday Times Must Reads: Tom Crewe
LC50 Brexit 2026
LA14 Myanmar and Burma: People, Art, Empire
LC31 Wes Streeting and Alan Johnson
LA11 Queer Love in the Ancient World
LR24 Jojo Moyes and Mike Gayle
LE21 Timothy West: Pru and Me
LD04 The Uncanny
LP01 Anthony Joseph
LDF15 Dancing on Eggshells with John Whaite
LT02 Helen Skelton: In My Stride
LU03 Danny Cipriani
LR03 The Sunday Times Must Reads: Eleanor Catton
LDF25 Wine Times
LP03 Harry Baker: Unashamed
93 cheltenhamfestivals.com SECTION TITLE 93 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER THURSDAY 12 OCTOBER
The
The Garden Theatre
Hive
11am 12pm 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm
8.30am 9am 10am
7pm 8pm 9pm
8.30am 9am 10am 11am
Town Hall, Baillie Gifford Stage Town Hall, Pillar Room The Times and Sunday Times Forum The Garden Theatre The Hive The Daffodil Regency Suite, Queens Hotel Hotel du Vin
LC04 Behind the Morning Headlines with The Times
LP11 Lemn Sissay: Let the Light Pour In
LM06 One Last Thing
LX02 Design the World Around Us
LC13 The Times Radio Debate: What Election Year Is It?
LD03 Summer Daze
LDF09 Destination Fabulous: Lunch with Anna Murphy
LR68 Celebrate with Eleanor Catton
LC09 How Much Does Britain Cost?
LC29 Why Black Lives in Britain Matter
LB03 Tom Holland: War and Peace in Rome’s Golden Age
LM07 Seán Hewitt and Octavia Bright
LR46 The John Murray Press Proof Party
LN01 Hamza Yassin
LM05 Careless
LR66 Robert Peston and Cleo Watson
LR57 Meet the Literary Editors LH08 Truth to Power
LL11 Autumn Style with Anna Murphy
LR09 Val McDermid with Nicola Sturgeon
LR10 Lauren Groff and C Pam Zhang
LC06 Theresa May
LR02 The Sunday Times Award for Literary Excellence: Zadie Smith
LC34 Matt Chorley: Planes Trains and Toilet Doors
LE60 A History of Women in 101 Objects
LM02 The Secret Lives of Ian Fleming and John le Carré
LP08 Caleb Azumah Nelson Presents...
LA04 DIVA: Creating an Icon
LP07 The Gothic Cabaret
LDF18 Andi Oliver’s Caribbean
cheltenhamfestivals.com 94 Book online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature DAY PLANNER FRIDAY 13 OCTOBER
12pm 1pm 2pm 3pm 4pm 5pm 6pm 7pm 8pm 9pm
Performers Writers Hosts Readers Listeners Staff Volunteers Sponsors Partners Publishers Agents Contractors Audiences Illustrators Educators
YOU
Speakers
Patrons Members
making our Festival
98
Thank you all for
possible.
Patrons
Life Patrons
Dr Lynda Albertyn and Pat Gallasch
Mark and Sue Blanchfield
Peter and Anne Bond
Dominic and Jannene Collier
Michael and Felicia Crystal
Colin and Suzanne Doak
Miles and Monica Dunkley
The Eaton Family
Fingerhuth Leung Family
Charles Fisher
Sarah and Darren Gates
Lucy Freeman and Peter Hulett
David and John Hall
Margaret Headen
Diane and Mark Hill
Jeremy and Germaine Hitchins Family
Jonathan and Cassinha
Hitchins Family
Stephen and Tania Hitchins Family
Jeff and Keren Iliffe
Elizabeth and Michael Jones and Family
David Jones and Amanda Payne
Rick and Lisa Jones
Steven and Linda Jones
Hugh and Sue Koch
Robert and Moira Leechman
Hazel and Jeremy Lewis
Eileen Lockwood
The McKelvie Family
Fiona McLeod
The McWilliam Family in loving memory of Ruth McWilliam
Keith Norton and Piers Norton
Mark and Elizabeth Philip-Sorensen
Shelley Bence and Felix Robson in memory of Jason Robson
Karen Salters and Marcus Freer
John and Susan Singer
Simon Skinner and Jean Gouldsmith Skinner
Andrew Smith
Phil and Jennifer Stapleton
Liz and Neil Stewart
Sharon Studer and Graham Beckett
Chris and Bridgette Sunman
Fiona and David Symondson
Michelle Thorley
Luanne and Hodson Thornber
The Walker Family
Jaqueline Woof
Director’s Circle
Heather Barrett
Sue Bennett
Jack Black
Torie Blythe-Richards
Richard Claridge
Sarah Cook and Gemma Irvine
Michael and Angela Cronk
Arlene Davies
Sally Dimmer
Carol and Adrian Farnell
Ricardo Fearon
Marc and Melanie Gillespie
Jeremy and Alison Halliday
Mark and Moira Hamlin
Stephen Harper and Megan Broadley
Jennifer Hayward and Richard Waite
Stephen Hodge
Andrew and Caroline Hope
Graham and Jenny Hopkins
Simon and Emma Keswick
Emma Logan & KB Beaton
Helen and Iain Lovatt
Andrew and Susanne Malim
Hayden and Tracy McKinnes
Spencer McPherson and Emily Poole
The Miskin Family
Chris Morgan
P. J. Moore
Joanna Morrison
Oldham Foundation
In Memory Of Edward and Gladys Parker
John Phillips
Andrew Pitt and Pamela Odih
Anthony and Rowenna Poeton
Jan and Gill Rowe
Andy and Ali Stalsberg
Peter Stormonth Darling
Charitable Trust
Amanda and Paul Toner
Michael and Rosie Warner
Stephen Wood
Gold Patrons
Sigrid and Ben Atkinson
Nicholas and Alixandra Avery
Geraldine and Jim Beaty
Christopher Bence
Sam Berwick
Stephen Bond
Charlie Chan
Ian Culverhouse
Wallace and Morag Dobbin
Peter and Sue Elliott
Colin and Susan Enticknap
Louise Hewett DL
Mike and Judie Hill
Elizabeth Jacobs
Sir Michael and Lady McWilliam
Paul and Kathy Mottershead
Kim Moore
Stuart Palmer
Dr Julia Pearson and Dr Keith England
Adrian and Cassandra Phillips
Martin and Susan Pickard
Joanna and Stuart Richards
Zoe and Khal Rudin
Brenda Salters and Harold Longmate
Candy Shaw and William Barff
Mat and Patsy Shilling
Esther and Peter Smedvig
Silver Patrons
We would also like to thank all our anonymous Patrons and Silver Patrons who are listed on the website: cheltenhamfestivals.com/ our-patrons
99
Acknowledgements
The Times and Sunday Times
Cheltenham Literature Festival is presented by Cheltenham Festivals, a Charity and a company limited by guarantee.
Cheltenham Festivals
Board of Trustees
Mark Philip-Sorensen (Chair)
Lucy Carlton-Walker
Deborah Cogan Thacker
Adrian Farnell
Beverley Grimster
Peter Howarth
Caroline Hutton
Shamil Makhecha
Jonathan White
Andy Williams
Company Secretary
Matthew Clayton
Co-CEOs
Ian George
Ali Mawle
Senior Management Team
Helena Bibby
Suzanne Ross
Head of Programming
Nicola Tuxworth
Deputy Head of Programming
Lyndsey Fineran
Programming and Strategic Engagement Lead
Emma Whittle
Family and Schools
Programme Manager
Loraine Evans
Learning and Participation Manager (Literature)
Rebecca Smith
Programme Managers
Sophie Hoult, Jo James, Ellie Petrie
Festival Administrator
Emily Davis
Marketing and Box Office
Jade Beard, Phil Brook, Leah Dunderdale-Smith, Hannah Franklin, Dan Hartland, Hannah McNally, Laura Nettings, Martin Perks, Madelaine Richards, Louise Sinclair, Liz Wheatley
Learning and Participation
Sarah Cooksley, Philippa Claridge, Khazana McLaughlin, Kelly Turner, Rose Wood
Development
Katherine Cox, Claire Crawford, Alice Gilder, Becky Harte, Holly Haynes, Evan Holt, Helen Knowles, Jenna Marks, Rosie Massey, Teddy Mladenova
Tara Patterson, Samantha Sandford, Connor Teague, Eleri Thomas
Finance
Ben Bates, Russ Poole
Get close to the Festivals with Patronage
From £90 per month, your Patronage covers all four Festivals and will support our artistic programmes and learning and participation activity.
Operations and Production
Ollie Bradstock, Clive Bremner, Louise Carles, Rob Challis, Adrian Hensley, Melissa King, James Kitto, Andrew Lansley, Sophia McCrea, Tarren Productions, Mo Soper
Festival Advisory Group
Sam Baker, Abigail Bergstrom, Clare Clark, Inua Ellams, Will Gompertz, Daniel Hahn, Andrew Holgate, Caroline Hutton, Sharna Jackson, Clarissa Pabi
Contact
If you have specific comments about any aspect of the Festival, please email boxoffice@ cheltenhamfestivals.com
Main Switchboard No. 01242 511211
Artwork Credits
Programme artwork @ 2023 Ruth Brown, 10:AM
Production
Printed by Orchard Press Cheltenham Ltd
Company No. 456573
Charity No. 251765
VAT Registration No. 100114013
This brochure is correct at time of going to print – find programme updates online at cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature
You’ll also benefit from; Advanced booking and early programme announcements
Access to hospitality areas at our Festivals
Invitation to special events and parties
To find our more please email patrons@cheltenhamfestivals.com or visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/patrons
100
Aarathi Prasad 31
Aaron Cushley 75
Aasmah Mir 37
Abigail Bergstrom 22 24 25
Adam Rutherford 27 80
Adam Sisman 59
Adele Parks 40
Adrian Edmondson 30
Adrian Furnham 42
Aiysha Kukoyi 56
Alan Bissett 85
Alan Johnson 50 54 55
Alastair Campbell 45
Alex Clark 52 53 57 59 64 66 67 68 70 72
Alex Clarke 34
Alex George 8 14 64 69
Alex O’Connell 74
Alex Willmore 73
Alexander McCall Smith 44
Alexandra Green 53
Alice Melvin 83
Alice Thomson 31
Allan Mallinson 65
Allen Fatimaharan 73
Allie Esiri 80
Amara Sage 84
Amy Key 24
Ana Carbajosa 37
Anand Menon 53 56
Andi Oliver 60
Andi Osho 32 35
Andrew Cohen 43
Andrew Monaghan 48 68
Andrew Roberts 25
Anita Bhagwandas 65
Anita Rani 61
Ann Morgan 29 42 63 65 67 69
Anna Boglione 64
Anna Funder 68
Anna James 57 75
Anna Marshall 44
Anna Murphy 56 58
Anna Ptaszynski 39
Annabel Sowemimo 36
Annabelle Hirsch 61
Anne Enright 67
Anneliese Pitz 39
Anne-Marie Imafidon 56
Annie Macmanus 26
Anthony Nanson 40
Arianne Shahvisi 40
Arthur Parkinson 38
Audrey Magee 64
Ava Glass 42
Ayelet GundarGoshen 36
Ayesha Hazarika 56
Bea Fitzgerald 85
Beatrice Blue 77
Ben Aitken 31
Ben Alderson-Day 53
Ben Platts-Mills 45
Ben Taylor 32 37
Benjamin Dean 85
Benji Davies 79
Bernie Taupin 24
Bex Lindsay 79 82
Bob and Roberta Smith 74
Bob Cryer 70
Brian Cox 35
Bruno Waterfield 53
Bryony Gordon 67
C Pam Zhang 59
Caleb Azumah Nelson 59 60 68
Carmela Ciuraru 30
Carol Jacobi 41
Carole Hailey 46
Caroline Campbell 37
Caroline Hutton 30 32
Caroline O’Donoghue 23 26
Caroline Wheeler 66
Cat Bohannon 66
Catherine Ashton 43
Catherine Chidgey 66
Cathy Newman 23
Catrina Davies 22
Catriona McAra 42
Cecile Pin 23 29
Charlene Prempeh 21 47
Charlie Mackesy 65
Charlotte Jansen 60
Charlotte Scott 52
Chitra Ramaswamy 40 41
Chris Packham 43
Chris van Tulleken 49
Christian Lewis 54
Claire Dederer 30
Claire Irvin 41
Claire Kilroy 67 71
Clare Clark 33
Clare Hunter 31
Cleo Watson 59
Clive Myrie 64
Colin Grant 22
Colin Walsh 44
Daan Heerma van Voss 38
Dan Szor 70
Daniel Finkelstein 28 31
Daniel Hahn
69 71 82
Daniel Handler 83
Daniel Mason 42
Daniel Tawse 84
Danny Cipriani 55
Dapo Adeola 76
Dave Broom 70
David Baddiel 50
David Mitchell 29
David Omand 26
David Petraeus 25
David Runciman 49
David Walliams 77
Dawn Butler 63
Daze Aghaji 23
Derek Landy 32 84
Dom Joly 44
103
39 42 58 59
36
34 39 42 46 48 53 63
INDEX Index
Dr Ranj 82
E.L. Norry 75
Ed Gamble 67
Eleanor Catton 55 57
Eleanor Stack 68
Eliza Clark 44
Elizabeth Acevedo 32 33
Elizabeth Day 70
Elizabeth Uviebinene 25
Ella Okstad 84
Elle McNicoll 82
Ellie Westbrook 82
Emi Yagi 33
Emma Dabiri 27
Emma Donoghue 21
Emma Forrest 24
Emma Freud 66
Emma Gannon 25
Emma Graham-Harrison 51
Emma Smith 52
Emma Tucker 32
Emma-Louise Boynton 36
Emmett de Monterey 72
Erica Wagner 57 59 65 71
Esme Higgs 81
Eva Baltasar 69
Eva Björg Ægisdóttir 50
Faiza Shaheen 26
Farah Karim-Cooper 52
Farrah Storr 22
Fi Glover 38
Flora Carr 48
Frankie Burr 44
Frederick Studemann 35
Gabriel Gbadamosi 24
Gaby Roslin 67
Gavin Plumley 25 37 47
Gavin Puckett 73
Gelong Thubten 43 44
Genevieve Lively 65
Geoff Norcott 25 50
Georgina Godwin 29 42 44 48 63
Georgina Moore 43
Gerda Blees 46
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad 47
Gijs van Hensbergen 47
Gilbert Achcar 65
Gina Martin 40
Grace Banks 31 42
Greg Doran 52
Guadalupe Nettel 69
Hamza Yassin 58
Hana Walker Brown 84
Hannah Barnes 66
Hannah MacInnes 29 32 45 64 69
Hannah McInnes 71
Harry Baker 55
Hashi Mohamed 57
Heather Morris 40
Helen Atkinson-Wood 70
Helen Fry 47
Helen Rutter 78
Helen Skelton 55
Henry Marsh 56
Holly Bourne 84
Holly Jackson 85
Holly Smale 32 84
Hugo Rifkind 25 31
Huw Lewis-Jones 75
Ian Dunt 45
Ian McEwan 37 39
Inua Ellams 21 27 31
Isabel Hilton 65 69
Isabella Tree 64
Isabelle Chang 64
Ishi Robinson 38
Jack Dee 70
Jack Parlett 57
Jackie McCann 75
Jacqueline Crook 22
Jacqueline Wilson 80
Jade Angeles Fitton 38
Jade McGlynn 48
James Canton 52
James Finch 41
James Harkin 39
James Hogg 54
James Marriott 32
James O’Brien 71
James Walton 26 46
Jane Bailey 35
Jane Garvey 38
Jane Glover 47
Janelle McCurdy 80
Jasbinder Bilan 79
Jay Blades 68
Jenni Fagan 59
Jenni Nuttall 52
Jennie Godfrey 48
Jennifer Higgie 42
Jennifer Killick 81
Jennifer Robinson 63
Jenny Coad 41
Jenny Lund Madsen 47
Jess Phillips 25
Jessica Bull 38
Jessica George 59 65
Jiaming Tang 57
Jo Baring 41 47
Jo Carley 61
Joanna Wallace 47
Joe Guglani 66
Johanna Thomas-Corr 53 55 58 71
John Crace 51
John Curtice 56
John Pienaar 26
John Sergeant 20
John Taylor 42
John Whaite 54
Jojo Moyes 54
Jonathan Sullivan 64
Jonathon Miles 57
Joseph Coelho 79 81
Josh Glancy 37
Josh Silver 85
Joshi Hermann 22
Josie Long 30
Judy Murray 37
Julia Bradbury 65
Julia Leonard 35 38 42
Julia Wheeler 28 33 35 39 40 43 44 45 49 55 56 65 69 71
Julian Sayarer 67
Juliet Jacques 72
Julius Roberts 26
Justin Webb 66
Justine Picardie 48
K Patrick 66
104 INDEX
Kanta Dihal 49
Karen Douglas 44
Karen Sullivan 50
Karl Newson 82
Karl Ove Knausgaard 29
Kate Atkinson 26
Kate Bailey 60
Kate Humble 21
Kate McCann 56
Kate Mosse 21
Kate Rawles 71
Kate Sawyer 43
Katherine Heiny 32 33
Katherine May 52
Katherine Rundell 35 76
Kathryn Foxfield 85
Katie Prescott 49
Katja Hoyer 69
Katrín Jakobsdóttir 50
Keina Yoshida 63
Kelechi Okafor 65
Kelly Beaver 51
Kenya Hunt 48
Keyu Jin 20
Kiran Millwood Hargrave 81
Kirsty Hartsiotis 40
Kristina Stephenson 73
Laura Bates 36
Laura Cumming 25
Laura Dockrill 85
Laura Hackett 23
Laura Jackson 41
Lauren Elkin 27
Lauren Groff 59
Laurie Belgrave 72
Lee Newbery 75
Lemn Sissay 56 59
Lemony Snicket 82
Leon McCarron 71
Lia Leendhertz 50
Lilja Sigurdardóttir 50
Linton Kwesi Johnson 28
Liv Bolton 54
Liv Little 71
Liz Fost 76
Liz Pichon 74
Llewelyn Morgan 68
Lorraine Candy 39
Louise Doughty 40
Louise Minchin 69
Lucy Bannerman 79
Lucy Cooke 66
Lucy Perrin 41
Luke Edward Hall 55
Lutz Seiler 69
M. G. Leonard 76
Maddie Moate 75
Madeline Docherty 57
Mandy Sadan 53
Marchelle Farrel 21
Marcus Brigstocke 30 31
Margreta de Grazia 52
Marie Aubert 65
Marion Turner 48
Martin Brown 74
Mary Beard 63 68
Masuma Ahuja 63
Matt Chorley 24 56 58 61
Matt Lucas 83
Maud Ventura 23
Maureen Freely 67
Max La Manna 34
Max Porter 66
Maz Evans 73
Megan Nolan 36
Michael Binyon 31 34
Michael Mosely 49
Michael Palin 31
Michael Reid 37
Michael Wooldridge 26 49
Michel Roux 23
Michelle Elman 85
Michelle Gallen 35
Mick Herron 42 45
Mike Brearley 32
Mike Gayle 54
Mikhail Zygar 48
Miquita Oliver 60 65
Monica Heisey 35
Morgan Giles 63
Morten Morland 58
Moth Sanctuary 61
Musa Okwonga 27 30
Nadine Aisha Jassat 79
Nadiya Hussain 41
Nancy Campbell 50
Nandini Das 20
Naomi Evans 76
Natalie Evans 76
Natalie Haynes 70
Natasha Carthew 22
Natasha Devon 85
Nathan Bryon 76
Nguyễn Phan Quễ Mai 29
Nicholas Shakespeare 59
Nick Bradley 33
Nick Frost 36
Nicky Morgan 20 26
Nicola Sturgeon 59 64
Nicole Flattery 30
Nigel Townson 37
Nii Ayikwei Parkes 59
Nikesh Shukla 27
Nish Kumar 27
Noel Fitzpatrick 62
Octavia Bright 57
Olivia Ford 38
Oriole Cullen 48
Orzala Nemat 51
Owen Matthews 48
P J Holden 32 84
Paddy O’Connell 20 47
Patrick Maguire 56
Paul David Gould 47
Paul Edmondson 52
Paul Gilroy 28
Paul Johnson 57
Paul Westmoreland 82
Peace Adzo Medie 59
Peter Bellerby 49
Peter Brathwaite 39
Peter Brookes 58
Peter Foster 53
Peter Frankopan 20 26 27 34
Peter Stothard 68
Philip Reeve 81
Philip Rush 35
Polly Morland 42
105 INDEX
Polly Toynbee 50
Rachel de Thample 50
Rachel Joyce 51
Rachel Parris 23
Rafael Behr 40
Ragnar Jónasson 50
Rashmi Sirdeshpand 81
Ravena Guron 85
Ravinder Bhogal 68
Raynor Winn 22
Rebecca Jones 52
Regula Ysewijn 48
Richard Curtis 69
Richard E. Grant 66
Richard Fisher 28
Richard Hirst 53
Richard Osman 26
Rob Biddulph 77
Robbie Millen 56 58
Robert Colvile 26
Robert Elms 67
Robert Muchamore 83
Robert Peston 59
Robin Niblett 64 65 68
Roger Luckhurst 72
Roma Agrawal 56
Romy Gill 23
Rosalie Kim 31
Rose Tremain 42
Rosie Goldsmith 21
Roy Jacobsen 39
Ruth Millington 47
S F Said 81
Sabrina Ghayour 20
Sadiq Khan 64
Sally Pomme Clayton 40
Sally-Anne Hayward 50
Sam Baker 30 35 37 40 42 47 54 63 64 66
Samantha Shannon 33
Samuel Kasumu 48
Sana Safi 51
Sandra Newman 68
Santanu Bhattacharya 65
Sarah Dunant 65
Sarah McIntyre 81
Sarah Raven 38
Sarah Shaffi 21 26 30 33
Sarah Winman 53
Sarah-Louise Miller 47
Sathnam Sanghera 64 70 83
Scarlett Curtis 69
Scott Preston 57
Seán Hewitt 55 57
Sebastian Faulks 34
Shaparak Khorsandi 45
Sharmaine Lovegrove 22
Sharna Jackson 81
Sharon Dodua Otoo 59
Shirley Ballas 23
Simon Mason 40
Simon McDonald 43
Simon Schama 34
Skye McAlpine 35
Skye McKenna 75
Smriti Halls 77
Soheila Sokhanvari 45
Soma Sara 36
Sophia Smith Galer 32
Sophie Dahl 82
Stanley Wells 52
Steve Backshall 33
Steve Small 77
Steven Lenton 74
Susan Michie 26
Susie Dent 52
Sussanah Wise 39
Suzanne Heywood 30 31
Suzie Miller 48
Taffy Thomas 40
Tamana Ayazi 51
Tamsin Winter 84
Tania Branigan 69
Tanya Byrne 85
Tessa Kiros 51
Tété-Michel Kpomassie 21
The Brothers McLeod 78
The Old Dry Skulls 61
Theresa May 60
Thomas Heatherwick 56
Tim Hubbard 37 49 51
Tim Peake 69
Timothy Garton Ash 37
Timothy West 54
Tom Crewe 53
Tom Holland 58 79
Tom Phillips 40
Tomiwa Owolade 56 57
Tommy Jessop 34
Tongue Fu 67
Tongue Fu Band 66
Toshikazu Kawaguchi’ 33
Tracey Corderoy 74
Travis Elborough 71
Trevor Phillips 57
Trinny Woodall 63
Tristan Gooley 41 42
Trygve Skaug 83
Uli Lenart 54 55
Val McDermid 59
Vanessa Walters 48
Venetia La Manna 34
Victoria Hislop 30
Victoria Smith 39
Victoria Summerly 49
Vinay Patel 27
Wendy Mitchell 56
Wes Streeting 51 54
Will Forrester 28
Will Lyons 55
Will Millard 38
William Hague 26 28
William Hussey 85
William MacAskill 28
Yeva Skalietska 74
Yomi Adegoke 71
Yu Jie 69
Zadie Smith 60
Zoë Colville 49
106 INDEX
Cheltenham Festivals is on a mission to inspire the next generation of readers. This collaboration between Joanie Clothing and the arts and culture charity is helping to make this possible.
£10 from the sale of every reading for pleasure jumper will be donated to the charity to help support this work.
Your Visit and Access
Entrance to the Festival Village is free; you simply buy tickets for the individual events you wish to see.
Getting to the Festival
Cheltenham is easily accessible from all over the UK, by road and rail. For more information on public transport and car parks go to cheltenhamfestivals.com/ your-visit.
Festival Venues
Most festival venues, including the Festival Box Office, are in the Festival village, in Montpellier Gardens, Cheltenham.
All offsite venues are within walking distance. You can find the Festival Village map, along with address details for all our offsite venues on page 110.
Accessibility
We’re committed to providing the best service possible for all customers with access requirements, including:
• access to complimentary personal assistant tickets
• bringing assistance dogs to the Festival site
• open captioned and British Sign Language-interpreted events Visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/ access-requirements for more information.
Digital Participants
As part of our ambition to bring you the widest possible range of speakers and topics, some participants may appear digitally
This will be identified in the event information.
Family Events
Children under 11 must be accompanied by an adult with a valid ticket for all events. Everyone over 12 months needs a ticket and a seat, except babies in arms (12 months and under) unless specified.
Relaxed Events
This year, all of our family events are ‘Relaxed,’ meaning that events have a relaxed approach to noise and movement in the venue, and you are free to enter and exit throughout.
Please Note
Filming, audio recording and photography is not permitted during events. Visitors to the Festival may be filmed and/or photographed for future promotions.
For more information please visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/ your-visit
SECTION TITLE 108
How to Book
To get the best out of the Festival we recommend you book in advance, however there will be availability for some events at the Box Office on site.
Online
cheltenhamfestivals.com/ literature
Create your Wish List in advance to buy tickets online on the first day of Members or General booking. For a step-by-step guide to creating a wish list, please visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/wishlists
By Telephone
Call 01242 850270
You can also contact the Box Office by emailing boxoffice@ cheltenhamfestivals.com For full details about Box Office opening hours, in person and telephone tickets sales, booking fees and terms and conditions, please visit cheltenhamfestivals.com/booking
Booking Dates (all booking opens at 10am)
Life Patrons
Director’s Circle Patrons
Gold Patrons
Silver Patrons
Members’ Priority booking
18-30 Members
General booking
Access Ticket
Bookings
Please book using our online form at cheltenhamfestivals.com/ access-requirements
Dining Event Booking
Our dining seating plans are pre-allocated by the venue and tables may be shared.
Please inform our Box Office about any dietary requirements or add these to the special requirements field when booking online.
Seating
Seating is allocated in most venues, only the Pillar Room in Cheltenham Town Hall is unallocated seating.
Members Discounts
Ticket discounts are not available for events which include catering, books or any other goods in the ticket price. This only applies to those still on the old membership scheme
Gift Certificates
Cheltenham Festivals Gift Certificates may be purchased at our Box Office or online and may
During the Festival
You can purchase tickets in person at our Festival Box Office. Opening hours will be listed on our website.
Booking Fees
Booking fees apply to all bookings and are charged per order. Fees are £3 online and over the phone, and £1.50 in person.
20 August
Wednesday 23 August
Saturday 26 August
Monday 28 August
Wednesday 30 August
Thursday 31 August
Wednesday 6 September
be redeemed against ticket or Membership purchases.
Refunds
Tickets cannot be refunded or exchanged, except in the case of a cancelled event. Sometimes alterations to the advertised details of an event or performance are made at short notice. If this happens there is no obligation to refund your money or exchange your seats.
For full ticketing terms and conditions please visit cheltenhamfestivals. com/terms-and-conditions
SECTION TITLE 109
..............................................................................................Sunday
110 FESTIVAL MAP MONTPELLIER WALK The Hive Covered Picnic Area The Wild Wood Buggy Park Box O ce Too Far Media Clockwise Cotswold Distillery Wild Wood Info Point Story Shack The Den Waterstones Children's Bookshop Cheltenham Town Hall and Pillar Room Queens Hotel, Lit Crawl ...around town Parabola Arts Centre Hotel du Vin Festival Village MontpellierWalk Old BathRd HalesRd MontpellierTerrace ThirlestaineRd Su olk Rd Su olk Rd Su olkSquare MontpellierSpaRd Su olk Square RoyalWell ClarenceSt HighSt HighSt HighSt AlbionSt LowerHighSt RegentSt HewlettRd All Saints Rd Winchcombe St Pittville St PortlandSt Evesham Rd Evesham Rd Tommy Taylors Lane StPaulsRd North Place North Place Cambray Place BathRd Bath Rd AmbroseSt Henrietta St St. James Square NewSt KnappRd JessopAve ClarenceSt ThePromenade ThePromenade Su olk Parade MontpellierSt MontpellierSt BayshillRoad Montpellier Villas North St ImperialSquare FairviewRd StMargaret’sRd SwindonRd TewkesburyRd StGeorgesRd ParabolaRd PITTVILLE PARK University of Gloucestershire Hardwick Campus Prince of Wales Stadium Leisure at Cheltenham Bath Rd Pitch and Putt Pittville Pump Room Pittville Play Area 4 2 1 5 3 Festival Village Off-site Venues 1 Cheltenham Town Hall Baillie Gifford Stage, Pillar Room and Waterstones Bookshop GL50 1QA 2 Parabola Arts Centre GL50 3AA 3 The Daffodil GL50 2AE 4 Hotel du Vin Sinners Enclosure GL50 3AH 5 Queens Hotel GL50 1NN
MONTPELLIER SPA ROAD
MONTPELLIER TERRACE
Montpellier Gardens, Cheltenham, GL50 1UL
Site open from Friday 6 October, 10am
Free entry
The Bandstand
The Garden Gallery
VIP Lounge in Partnership with Cunard
The Times and Sunday Times Forum
Waterstones Bookshop
The Garden Theatre
Feast Cafe Festival Bar The Huddle
First Aid
111 FESTIVAL MAP
The Da odil