Horatio Clare, Sir Simon Jenkins and Clare Mackintosh headline second Montgomeryshire Literary Festival

Horatio Clare, Sir Simon Jenkins and Clare Mackintosh headline second Montgomeryshire Literary Festival

Full programme details for this year’s  Montgomeryshire Literary Festival  have been released, featuring a stellar line up of leading authors including Horatio Clare, Sir Simon Jenkins and Clare Mackintosh.

 

Press Release Now in its second year, the 2019 Monty Lit Fest will take place over the weekend of 14-16th June in the stunning and historic setting of Gregynog Hall, near Newtown. As with last year’s inaugural Festival, the event celebrates authors with personal and literary links with Wales and the Welsh borders:

  • • Hear Simon Jenkins’ often controversial views on Welsh architecture.
  • • Meet bestselling author, Clare Mackintosh, who will be talking about her work and her brand-new novel, After the End.
  • • Find out how mid-Wales has inspired, and continues to inspire, authors as wide ranging as Alan Garner and Tom Bullough.
  • • Listen to stories of Horatio Clare’s writing adventures around the world, and how they have influenced his work.
  • • Learn from Andrew Green how the history of Wales can be told through 100 of its most significant objects – and see some of them for yourself.
  • • Ponder an alternative outcome to the D-Day landings with military historian, Peter Caddick-Adams.
  • • Be inspired by the winners of the 2019 New Welsh Review Writing Awards in conversation with author Cynan Jones and NWR editor, Gwen Davies.

…and more. Budding authors can take advantage of two lunchtime sessions, one with top literary agent Cathryn Summerhayes and the second a hands-on working lunch with Gwen Davies and Julia Forster of New Welsh Review. Festival founder, Simon Baynes, said: ‘I’m delighted that we’ve been able to bring to this year’s Festival such a range of literary talent. From bestselling thriller writers to writers in Welsh; from Welsh architecture to ‘what if’ military history; from Powys in fiction to the newest Welsh writing talent, this year’s Festival really does have something for everyone. We’re also delighted to be teaming up with Gregynog Hall, a fitting backdrop for a weekend of stories and readings, debate and literary delights.’ The Festival will also shortly release its children’s programme, featuring sessions with authors and illustrators and supervised trails through the Gregynog grounds. Accommodation for the weekend, as well as a fine array of food and drink, is available at Gregynog Hall. And, once again, the Festival bookshop will be run by Oswestry’s Booka Bookshop. How to find out more Online ticket sales and full programme details are available via the Festival’s website: https://montylitfest.wordpress.com/tickets/ . For more information about the programme, interview requests, speaker biographies and photographs, contact: baynes@bodfach.com. Press passes are available for the weekend. Please contact baynes@bodfach.com. About us The Montgomeryshire Literary Festival is run by the Montgomeryshire Literary Festival Trust. It aims to celebrate writing in Wales and the Welsh borders, with an annual festival circulating through key locations in Montgomeryshire. The inaugural 2018 Festival took place at Bodfach Hall, Llanfyllin and, in 2020, the Festival will take place in the town of Montgomery. https://montylitfest.wordpress.com

Horatio Clare, Sir Simon Jenkins and Clare Mackintosh headline second Montgomeryshire Literary Festival

Wales Book of the Year Short List 2019

Literature Wales has today announced which titles have been shortlisted for both the English and Welsh-language Wales Book of the Year Awards 2019. Literature Wales has today announced which titles have been shortlisted for both the English and Welsh-language Wales Book of the Year Awards 2019. The Award is presented annually to the best works in the fields of creative writing and literary criticism in three categories: Poetry, Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction. This year’s Short Lists include some of Wales’ leading writers. Collectively they have won a range of literary prizes including: the Somerset Maugham Award, Sunday Times Business Book of the Year, the Orange Prize, Terry Hetherington Young Writers Award, the Costa Poetry Award, the Branford Boase Award, National Eisteddfod Chairs, Crowns and Medals for poetry, prose and drama, and last but not least, the Wales Book of the Year Award. Going head-to-head with established literary giants are some of Wales’ most exciting debut writers. The English-language Short List 2019 titles are: Roland Mathias Poetry Award Insistence, Ailbhe Darcy (Bloodaxe Books Ltd.) Salacia, Mari Ellis Dunning (Parthian Books) Gen, Jonathan Edwards (Seren) Aberystwyth University Fiction Award Arrest Me, for I Have Run Away, Stevie Davies (Parthian Books) West, Carys Davies (Granta Publications) Sal, Mick Kitson (Canongate Books) Creative Non-Fiction Award Moneyland, Oliver Bullough (Profile Books) The light in the dark: A winter journal, Horatio Clare (Elliott & Thompson) Having a go at the Kaiser:  A Welsh family at war, Gethin Matthews (University of Wales Press) The English-language judges are: Sandeep Parmar, poet and Professor of English Literature at Liverpool University; Louise Holmwood Marshall, Head of the English and Creative Writing Department of Aberystwyth University; and novelist and Emeritus Professor of Creative Writing at Birkbeck College, University of London Russell Celyn Jones. On behalf of the judging panel, Louise Holmwood-Marshall said: “The range and quality of the entries demonstrates, yet again, the incredible talent of Welsh writers and the cultural contribution that authors from and of Wales make to the country’s long-established literary heritage. The 2019 shortlist illustrates not only an incredible breadth and variety of writing but also the significance of the stories of Wales to a global readership.” The Welsh-language judging panel for Wales Book of the Year 2019 are: poet and 2017 Wales Book of the Year winner, Idris Reynolds for his memoir of Dic Jones, Darn o Haul Draw yn Rhywle: Cofio Dic (Gwasg Gomer); popular broadcaster and sports author, Dylan Ebenezer; and the Aberystwyth University’s Head of Welsh and Celtic Studies Cathryn Charnell-White. The Welsh-language Short List titles are: Gwobr Farddoniaeth Twt Lol, Emyr Lewis (Gwasg Carreg Gwalch) Cyrraedd a cherddi eraill, Alan Llwyd (Cyhoeddiadau Barddas) Stafell fy Haul, Manon Rhys (Cyhoeddiadau Barddas) Gwobr Ffuglen Prifysgol Aberystwyth Ynys Fadog, Jerry Hunter (Y Lolfa) Llyfr Glas Nebo, Manon Steffan Ros (Y Lolfa) Esgyrn, Heiddwen Tomos (Y Lolfa) Gwobr Ffeithiol- Greadigol Cymru mewn 100 Gwrthrych, Andrew Green (Gwasg Gomer) Cymru Ddu a’r Ddalen Wen, Lisa Sheppard (Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru) Rhyddhau’r Cranc, Malan Wilkinson (Y Lolfa) Lleucu Siencyn, Chief Executive of Literature Wales said: “These exceptional titles encourage readers to explore and consider some of life’s biggest questions. Mental health and identity – both personal and national – flow through these selections. This is contemporary Welsh writing at its very finest.” To read more about the shortlisted titles and their authors, visit  www.literaturewales.org. The winners of this prestigious award will be announced at an Award Ceremony held at  Aberystwyth Arts Centre on Thursday 20 June, where a total prize fund of  £12,000 will be distributed to the winning writers. Each category winner will receive a prize of  £1,000, and the main award winners in each language will receive an additional £3,000. Each winner will also receive a specially commissioned trophy created by the artist Angharad Pearce Jones. Tickets for the Award Ceremony are £7.50 (£5 concessions) and can be purchased via the Aberystwyth Arts Centre website. At the Award Ceremony both the People’s Choice Award and Gwobr Barn y Bobl (the Welsh-language people’s prize) will also be presented to the reading public’s favourite title from the Short List. Visit the Wales Arts Review website to vote for your favourite English-language title: www.walesartsreview.org. The Welsh-language poll is hosted by Golwg360: www.golwg360.com For further information on the Wales Book of the Year Award visit: www.literaturewales.org/wales-book-year