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8 June 2017
GE17: Hands off my Human Rights
Human Rights protect us all - changing them is the first step down a slippery slope to a dystopian nightmare.
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9 May 2017
Hexham Book Festival: Maggie O'Farrell
Writer Maggie O'Farrell talks about her latest release at Hexham Book Festival.
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9 May 2017
Hexham Book Festival: Sara Pascoe
Sara Pascoe proves she is so much more than a comedian with a fascinating exploration of the female body at Hexham Book Festival.
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9 May 2017
Hexham Book Festival: John Simpson
Should selfie be a word in the dictionary? Previous editor of the OED John Simpson seems to think so!
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9 May 2017
Hexham Book Festival: Gary Younge
Gary Younge presents a moving exploration of the lives and deaths of 10 young people who were killed by guns on one day in the US.
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27 April 2017
Hexham Book Festival: Top Picks
Hexham Book Festival is running from 28th April - 7th May featuring some top authors and writers and a whole host of interesting events.
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24 April 2017
Cambridge Literary Festival: Virago/New Statesman Prize for Women in Politics and Economics
Where are all the women? That is the question that this talk and Virago and the New Stateman's prize is looking to address.
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24 April 2017
Cambridge Literary Festival: Women on the March
The Women's March on Washington broke the record for the single biggest day of protests in US history. At Cambridge Literary Festival the panel discussed the importance of feminism and protest in contemporary politics.
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23 April 2017
Cambridge Literary Festival: Elif Shafak
Prominent Turkish writer Elif Shafak discusses her new novel, the political situation in Turkey and how it has influenced her writing.
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23 April 2017
Cambridge Literary Festival: USA 100 Days On
A panel of writers and academics look at the first 100 hundred days of the Trump presidency and why this had been so important.
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23 April 2017
Cambridge Literary Festival: The Good Immigrant
Writers who contributed the The Good Immigrant look at the challenges concerning race and immigration today.
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17 April 2017
Cambridge Literature Festival: Top Picks
Cambridge Literature Festival is running from 18th-23rd of March, with a whole host of events on more than just books.
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21 March 2017
Defending free-speech - and our right to call it out
Free Speech says everyone has the right to say what they want, even if it is discriminatory or hateful. But that doesn't mean businesses have to sell it, or that we can't call out those who do.
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15 March 2017
Reading For Wellbeing
Can reading be used as therapy? Ellen Orange explores the potential and the pitfalls of 'Books on Prescription'
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6 October 2016
Interview with Sam Baker
Ellen Orange speaks to Sam Baker, a journalist and co-founder of The Pool, and author of The Woman Who Ran, about her career in writing and her new book.
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2 October 2016
Clare Balding
Clare Balding discusses her first children's book - The Racehorse Who Wouldn't Gallop and her inspirations behind it.
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2 October 2016
Spinning Stories
Fleur Alexander takes us on an interactive adventure through some of the best loved children's books.
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2 October 2016
Marcus Sedgwick
YA author Marcus Sedgewick takes us on an intriguing journey to Mexico in his latest book.
Comment posted on 22 March 2017
Books have always been political! The very books people are turning to like 1984 and The Handmaid's Tale were written decades ago in response to the politics of their times. I think it is just more evident to us now as because political positions are getting more extreme, it affects our lives more.
I also think turning to 1984 is interesting because it was originally written in response to Russian totalitarianism - communism rather than fascism or 'alt-right' politics, so slightly ironic that it is being held up as 'liberal' now? It shows that books aren't just words on a page, but also how you read, use and interpret them!
I think the uniting factor is a defence of justice, fairness and true 'democracy' (ie the voice and rights of the people, rather than a political voting system) as opposed to the simplistic delineation of 'left' and 'right'.