Event 286

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Sarah Raven talks to Lucy Dallas

A Year Full of Veg: A Harvest for Every Season

Venue: Baillie Gifford Stage
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The gardening expert shares the most reliable and bountiful varieties to grow, recommends her favourite crops, and unusual vegetables, herbs and salads that you can’t buy in the shops. As well as planting inspiration, she offers expert tips and techniques for growing and harvesting flavourful crops from January right through to December, all based on easy, efficient and productive techniques that work no matter how much outdoor space you have. Lucy Dallas is arts and digital editor at The TLS.

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Event 287

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Dai Smith and Sam Adams in conversation with Emma Schofield

Memories of Wales

Venue: The Hive
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A candid look into the literary life of Wales through the eyes of two men deeply connected to the words of the country. Dai Smith’s memoir Off the Track: Traces of Memory looks back at his time as a writer and historian, broadcaster, chair of the Arts Council of Wales, editor of the Library of Wales, chair of the Dylan Thomas Prize and editor of BBC Wales. Sam Adams’ Letters from Wales: Memories and Encounters in Literature and Life is a collection of his columns over 30 years in the poetry magazine PN Review, offering insights into the literary lives and culture of Wales. In conversation with the editor of the Wales Arts Review, Dr Emma Schofield.

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Event 288

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

BBC Radio 4: The Archers

Venue: Marquee
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Witness the stars of BBC Radio 4’s The Archers read through tonight’s episode and find out how the world’s longest running continuing drama is made.

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Event 391

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Oleksandra Matviichuk in conversation with Charlotte Higgins

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
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Oleksandra Matviichuk is a human rights lawyer, activist and director of the Centre for Civil Liberties in Ukraine, winner of the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize together with the Russian human rights organisation, Memorial, and Belarusian activist Ales Bialiatski. Matviichuk and the Centre have fought for democracy in Ukraine since 2007 and are now part of a ground-breaking international effort to ensure accountability for war crimes. In her acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize, she reminded the world that, “We don’t have to be Ukrainians to support Ukraine. It is enough just to be humans.” She talks to the Guardian’s chief culture writer.

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Event HD35

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Eoin Colfer, Andrew Donkin and Giovanni Rigano

Global

Venue: Wye Stage
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Come on a powerful, hopeful and timely journey into the real effects of climate change with the authors and illustrator behind the Artemis Fowl and Illegal graphic novels as they present their new book Global. They’ll tell us how the graphic novel came to be, the real-life stories that inspired it, and what it takes to create a breathtaking story mixing words and illustrations.

Global follows two young people on different continents whose lives are changed by global warming. Yuki, who lives in an increasingly deserted Inuit township in Nova Scotia, is trying to protect a rare grolar bear (a terrifying crossbreed created by climate change). Sami lives in a fishing village on the Bay of Bengal but, because of the ever-rising ocean level, each day is a struggle to survive.

9+ years
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Event W37

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Merfolk! Mixed Media Workshop

With the University of Worcester Illustration Department

Venue: Hwyl Stage
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You’re invited to take part in a mixed media character design workshop, using our Sea Change postcard exhibition as inspiration, and incorporating collage, print and projections. Enter the magical, mystical marine world of Merfolk!

This workshop is part of Sea Change, the new venture of the International Centre for the Picture Book in Society, which is concerned with sustainability and promoting ocean literacy.

Artists from around the world have sent illustrated postcards to form the Sea Change exhibition, drawing attention to the growing threat to our ocean and seas. You can visit the exhibition at the Festival, and talk to the University of Worcester Illustration Department lecturers who made the Sea Change project possible, on Friday 2 June, 4pm.

12+ years
No parent/carer attendance nor sign in/out is required.
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Event W38

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Rooted Forest School

Natural Craft Workshop

Venue: Wild Garden
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Come and join Rooted Forest School for outdoor family sessions inspired by the Forest School approach. We’ll use foraged materials to craft natural items that you can take away with you, taking part in some simple tool use and finishing off with a hot apple juice around the fire. These sessions are aimed at families and will run whatever the weather, so make sure you’re wrapped up for the conditions.

4–8 years
Parents/carers must attend but do not need a ticket.
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Event 289

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Mariella Frostrup and Alice Smellie in conversation with Nighat Arif

Cracking the Menopause

Venue: Baillie Gifford Stage
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It’s time for a straight-talking discussion about menopause, and broadcaster Mariella Frostrup and health journalist Alice Smellie are here with all the information you need, plus a side order of humour. Looking at how menopause has been ignored by society and what it really encompasses and means, Frostrup and Mariella use direct experience, the latest science and cutting-edge research, and funny illustrations to present their ground-breaking, no-holds-barred guide to the menopause. Frostrup made the groundbreaking BBC1 documentary The Truth About the Menopause. Smellie is author of Cracking the Menopause: While Keeping Yourself Together. They speak to Dr Nighat Arif, whose forthcoming book is The Knowledge: Your Guide to Female Health.

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Event 290

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Tim Smedley talks to Andy Fryers

The Last Drop

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
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Environmental journalist Tim Smedley gives a thought-provoking and gripping look into his newest book The Last Drop, an investigation into the world’s next great climate crisis: the scarcity of water. Looking at how countries have been addressing water quality issues caused by pollution as well as human mismanagement of water, Smedley offers a fascinating, honest and ultimately hopeful account of the crisis and how we might address it before it’s too late. He talks to Hay Festival Sustainability Director Andy Fryers.

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Event 291

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Emma Cline and Nicole Flattery talk to Stephanie Merritt

At Sea in New York

Venue: Wye Stage
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Join Emma Cline and Nicola Flattery as they discuss their new novels about young women navigating uncertain worlds, and trying to find their place. Cline’s The Guest is about a woman who chooses to stay on Long Island after her relationship with an older man ends, drifting like a ghost through the gated driveways and sun-blasted dunes of a rarefied world, trailing destruction in her wake. Flattery’s debut Nothing Special is a tale of two young women navigating the world of Andy Warhol’s Factory, and coming of age in 1960s New York.

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Event 292

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Jennifer Gabrys

Citizens of Worlds: Open-Air Toolkits for Environmental Struggle

Venue: The Hive
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Citizens of Worlds is the first thorough study of the increasingly widespread use of digital technologies to monitor and respond to air pollution. Drawing on data from the Citizen Sense research group, Jennifer Gabrys argues that citizen-oriented technologies promise positive change but collide with entrenched and inequitable power structures, and explains how people respond to, care for, and struggle to transform environmental conditions informs the political subjects and collectives they become. Gabrys is chair in media, culture and environment in the Department of Sociology at the University of Cambridge, and the author of books including Digital Rubbish: A Natural History of Electronics.

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Event 293

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

BBC Academy: Champion

Venue: Marquee
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Join script editor and chair of the Royal Television Society Wales Ed Russell as he talks Champion, the new BBC One prime time drama described as a love letter to Black family and Black music penned by Candice Carty-Williams (author of Queenie).

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Event 294

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Sea Change: Illustration Exhibition

With the University of Worcester Illustration Department

Venue: Hwyl Stage
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An opportunity to view the Sea Change postcard exhibition now touring the world. Artists from around the world have sent illustrated postcards to form this exhibition drawing attention to the growing threat to our ocean and seas. The exhibition is accompanied by a book featuring 50 of the postcards, including work by Axel Scheffler, Jackie Morris, Roger Mello and Nicola Davies and with a foreword by Peter Thomson, UN Special Envoy for the Ocean. Enjoy viewing the postcards, and meet the staff from the University of Worcester who made this exciting project possible.

Sea Change is the latest venture of the International Centre for the Picture Book in Society, concerned with sustainability and promoting ocean literacy.

See also our range of Sea Change workshops: Fish Face, Sea Change Underwater World and Merfolk.

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Event W39

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Rooted Forest School

Natural Craft Workshop

Venue: Wild Garden
Read more

Come and join Rooted Forest School for outdoor family sessions inspired by the Forest School approach. We’ll use foraged materials to craft natural items that you can take away with you, taking part in some simple tool use and finishing off with a hot apple juice around the fire. These sessions are aimed at families and will run whatever the weather, so make sure you’re wrapped up for the conditions.

9–11 years
Parents/carers may attend (no ticket required), or sign children in/out.
This event has taken place

Event 295

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

William Dalrymple and Joseph Sassoon talk to Claire Armitstead

Bombay Trading Dynasties

Venue: Baillie Gifford Stage
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Historians William Dalrymple and Joseph Sassoon give a fresh perspective on the defining forces of 19th-century Bombay and the present: globalisation and corporate power. They explore the captivating world of politics and power, innovation and intrigue, high society and empire in 19th-century Bombay through the rise and fall of the East India Company and the Sassoon trading dynasty. Dalrymple has written four books, including The Anarchy, chronicling the extraordinary story of the East India Company. Sassoon’s The Global Merchants is about one of the great business dynasties of the 19th century.

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Event 296

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Jojo Moyes talks to Viv Groskop

Someone Else’s Shoes

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
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Charming, witty and full of emotion, Jojo Moyes’ stories have a way of settling in readers’ hearts, and her latest is no different. Discover how she creates and writes her enduring characters, as she discusses her latest book Someone Else’s Shoes, a story of unexpected female friendship. When Nisha and Sam accidentally swap gym bags, both women’s lives are irrevocably altered. Moyes is the author of novels including Me Before You, adapted into a hit film, and The Giver of Stars.

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Event 297

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Peter Coveney and Roger Highfield

Virtual You: How Building Your Digital Twin Will Revolutionize Medicine and Change Your Life

Venue: Wye Stage
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The computational chemist (Coveney) and Science Museum director (Highfield) reveal what it takes to build a virtual, functional copy of you in five steps. This is a panoramic account of efforts by scientists around the world to build digital twins of human beings, from cells and tissues to organs and whole bodies. These virtual copies will usher in a new era of personalised medicine, one in which your digital twin can help predict your risk of disease, participate in virtual drug trials, shed light on the diet and lifestyle changes that are best for you, and help identify therapies to enhance your well-being and extend your lifespan. But challenges remain.
Coveney and Highfield talk to Jennifer Gabrys, Chair in Media, Culture and Environment in the Department of Sociology at the University of Cambridge.

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Event 298

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Victoria Belim and Kevin Jared Hosein in conversation with Rosie Goldsmith

Identities

Venue: The Hive
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Belim’s moving memoir The Rooster House: A Ukrainian Family Memoir is a tale of identity and post-Soviet reality told across four generations, as a young woman searches for traces of her great-uncle who disappeared during the 1930s. Kevin Jared Hosein, winner of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize in 2018, is author of Hungry Ghosts, a novel about violence, religion, family and class, rooted in the wild and pastoral landscape of 1940s colonial central Trinidad. Both use writing to deal with complicated issues linked with identity, colonialism and class struggles. They talk to Rosie Goldsmith, journalist and Director of the European Literature Network.

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Event HD36

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Amara Sage

Influential

Venue: Hwyl Stage
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Take a whip-smart deep dive into what it would really be like to be internet famous at 17, with Bristolian author Amara Sage. Introducing her debut YA novel, Influential, and shooting straight to the heart of the modern day teenage experience – both online and offline – Amara will discuss themes of social media, cancel culture, online trolling, body image and more.

14+ years
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Event 384

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

BBC Radio Wales: The Review Show

Venue: Marquee
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Gary Raymond and guest critics review their pick of Hay Festival content.

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