Search results for tiffany murray
  • Hanif Kureishi talks to Tiffany Murray

    The playwright, novelist (The Buddha of Suburbia, Something to Tell You) and film-maker (The Mother, The Black Album, My Son the Fanatic, Venus) discusses his work with the author of Diamond Star Halo.
    English with simultaneous translation into Hungarian

    Budapest 2012, Saturday 5 May 2012, 2pm

  • Val McDermid in conversation with Tiffany Murray

    Val McDermid is one of the best selling crime writers in the English-speaking world. Her prolific literary work, which has been translated into more than 30 languages, includes titles such as The Wire in the Blood, The Distant Echo and her latest work The Retribution. She has been awarded the prestigious Cartier Diamond Daggerprize for her contribution to the genre throughout her career. She speaks with the writer Tiffany Murray.

    Co-organised with the British Council and the Arts Council of Wales and the collaboration of RBA publishing house.

    Segovia 2013, Friday 27 September 2013, 12pm

  • Hay 25 - Ben Okri, Jung Chang, Földényi F. László, Dragomán György, Tibor Fischer, Tiffany Murray talk to Jon Gower

    The Hay Festival is 25 this year, and as part of the celebrations we have put 25 Questions to everyone taking part in all our 15 festivals around the world. Please join the panel to discuss three of the Questions – Why do we read books? We’re building a library of literature, music and cinema. Which one book, film and album would you contribute to it? 25 years ago, the whole world lived in fear of an Aids pandemic, the Berlin Wall divided East and Western Europe, China and Latin America were considered part of the developing world and less than 1% of the world’s population used mobile phones or computers. What changes will we see to the way we live now in 25 years’ time?
    English with simultaneous translation into Hungarian

    Budapest 2012, Saturday 5 May 2012, 7pm

  • Dylan Jones talks to Tiffany Murray

    David Bowie – A Life

    Drawn from more than 180 interviews with friends, rivals, lovers and collaborators, some of whom have never before spoken about their relationship with Bowie, the editor of GQ’s fabulous oral history weaves a hypnotic spell as it unfolds a remarkable rise to stardom and an unparalleled artistic path. With stories and music and film clips.

    Winter Weekend 2017, Saturday 25 November 2017, 7pm 

  • Dylan Jones talks to Tiffany Murray

    David Bowie – A Life

    Drawn from more than 180 interviews with friends, rivals, lovers and collaborators, some of whom have never before spoken about their relationship with Bowie, the editor of GQ’s fabulous oral history weaves a hypnotic spell as it unfolds a remarkable rise to stardom and an unparalleled artistic path. With stories and music and film clips.

    Winter Weekend 2017, Saturday 25 November 2017, 7pm 

  • Gail Jones, Tiffany Murray and Kishwar Desai talk to Gaby Wood

    Writing as a craft

    Gail Jones (Five Bells), Australian writer translated into nine languages and recipient of the WA Premier’s Award for Fiction and the Adelaide Festival Award for Fiction; Tiffany Murray (Diamond Star Halo), British writer and professor at the University of Glamorgan, short-listed for the Wodehouse Bollinger Prize for Fiction; and Kishwar Desai (Witness the night), Indian writer living in the United Kingdon who won the Costa First Novel Award in 2010, will talk about their careers and about the craft of writing with The Telegraph journalist Gaby Wood.

    Segovia 2011, Friday 23 September 2011, 6.30pm-7.30pm

  • Tiffany Murray, Diana Evans, Audrey Niffenegger

    New Fiction

    Edinburgh Book Festival Director Catherine Lockerbie hosts this fiction discussion with the authors of the comic debut Happy Accidents, the great Neasden novel 26A, and the contemporary classic The Time Traveller's Wife.

    Hay Festival 2005, Saturday 28 May 2005, 4pm

  • Orlando Figes, Karl Ove Knausgard, Barbara Navarro, Andrew Millar, Tiffany Murray, Aleksandar Hemon and Peter Florence.

    Hay 25

    The Hay Festival is 25 this year, and as part of the celebrations we have put 25 Questions to everyone taking part in all our 15 festivals around the world. Please join the panel to discuss three of the Questions – What would you do if you knew you would never be caught? We’re building a library of literature, music and cinema. Which one book, film and album would you contribute to it? 25 years ago, the whole world lived in fear of an Aids pandemic, the Berlin Wall divided East and Western Europe, China and Latin America were considered part of the developing world and less than 1% of the world’s population used mobile phones or computers. What changes will we see to the way we live now in 25 years’ time?

    Segovia 2012, Saturday 29 September 2012, 1.30pm

  • Tiffany Murray

    The Hay International Fellow 2011–2012 will talk about growing up with rock stars, and her novel Diamond Star Halo (shortlisted for the Bollinger Prize and the London Award) to political journalist Ken Murray.

    Kells 2013, Sunday 30 June 2013, 2pm

  • Cynan Jones talks to Tiffany Murray

    The Dig

    The author reads from and discusses his searing short novel, weaving the interlocking fates of a badger-baiter and a disconsolate farmer. The story unfolds in a stark rural setting where man, animal, land and weather are at loggerheads. 

    Hay Festival 2014, Saturday 24 May 2014, 1pm

  • Colin Thubron, Tiffany Murray, Anthony Sattin, David Shukman

    Ox-Travels 1

    Four Meetings with Remarkable Travellers from our new Oxfam anthology. Chaired by series editor Mark Ellingham.


    Learn more about the authors: Colin Thubron, Tiffany Murray, Anthony SattinDavid Shukman

    Hay Festival 2011, Saturday 28 May 2011, 4pm

  • Jon Gower and Tiffany Murray in conversation with Peter Florence

    Two interesting Welsh writers will talk to the Festival Director about their work. Jon Gower studied English Studies at Cambridge University and is one of Wales’ greatest literary talents. A writer, presenter and radio and television producer, he has worked for media such as the BBC and Boomerang. He has published a range of books in English, including the An Island Called Smith, which won him the John Morgan Travel Award. Tiffany Murray is a Welsh writer and creative writing teacher. Her novels Diamond Star Halo (2010) and Happy Accidents (2005) have been shortlisted for the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize; she has contributed to The Times, The Telegraph, The Independent and The Guardian.

    With the support of the Arts Council of Wales

    Cartagena 2012, domingo 29 enero 2012, 10:30 h

  • György Dragomán talks with Tiffany Murray

    The award winning translator and novelist will talk about his latest works “The book of destruction” and The White King, which has been translated into 28 languages, with the writer of Diamond star halo. At the end, Dragomán will read a fragment of his book The White King in Hungarian.
    With the collaboration of the Embassy of Hungary in Spain, the Hungarian Tourism Office and the British Council

    Segovia 2012, Sunday 30 September 2012, 5pm

  • Tiffany Murray, Marifé Santiago and Marta del Riego

    British novelist Tiffany Murray returns to Segovia to talk to author Marifé Santiago and journalist and writer Marta del Riego about outstanding women, including the heroine of her latest novel Sugar Hall, which is set in 1950 after the Second World War.

    Segovia 2014, Saturday 27 September 2014, 4pm

  • Gary Kemp talks to Tiffany Murray

    I Know This Much: From Soho to Spandau

    Great music memoir from the Spandau Ballet songwriter and New Romantic star.

    Hay Festival 2010, Saturday 29 May 2010, 8.30pm

  • Allison Pearson talks to Tiffany Murray

    I Think I Love You

    Bestselling author and award-winning columnist Allison Pearson's first novel I Don't Know How She Does It is a lively social comedy about working motherhood, shortly to be made into a movie starring Sarah Jessica Parker and Pierce Brosnan.
     
    Her new novel I Think I Love You is a witty and poignant story about a young girl who falls hopelessly in love with her teenage pin-up and some twenty years later, with her life in pieces all around her, finally gets to meet him...

    Hay Festival 2011, Sunday 29 May 2011, 11.30am

  • John Finnemore, Carrie Quinlan, Andre Vincent and Tiffany Murray

    The Early Edition 2

    Merciless mockery of muppets and mags. Exclusive! In all Sundays...

    Hay Festival 2012, Sunday 3 June 2012, 1pm

  • Paul Murray, Tiffany Murray

    Fictions: The Comedians

    Two magnificent and spectacularly funny second novels. Skippy Dies is an epic and tragic comedy set in Dublin. Diamond Star Halo is a rock ’n’ roll love story down on a Welsh farm. Both Skippy Dies and Diamond Star Halo are shortlisted for the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for comic fiction.

    Hay Festival 2010, Sunday 30 May 2010, 2.30pm

  • Karen Goodwin, Tim Guest, Tiffany Murray, Cathy Rosario, Oliver Shelley

    The Next Big Things

    Agents, publishers and talent-spotters should flock to hear the Millennium Class from the famous UEA Writing School, almamater to Ian McEwan, Kazuo Ishiguro, Owen Sheers and Trezza Azzopardi, in a gala presentation of their graduating work. You'll hear them here first.

    Hay Festival 2000, Friday 2 June 2000, 5.30pm

  • Rebecca Stott, AC Grayling, Andrew Miller, Marcus Brigstocke and Tiffany Murray talk to Clemency Burton-Hill

    Hay 25 - The Way We Live Now 3

    In this third conversation about our big anniversary project the panel discuss two of the 25 Questions:
     
    Which living leaders, writers, scientists, and artists, are opening the doors of the future for humankind?
    Why do we read novels?

    Hay Festival 2012, Monday 4 June 2012, 7pm

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