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Number of results: 97
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Lewes
Festival
Can memory ever be trusted, or is every memoir a work of fiction?
In his new book 'On Memoir', Blake Morrison explores the pleasures and pitfalls of the form. Best known for the much loved 'And When Did You Last See Your Father?', Morrison helped…
Lewes
Festival
As the United States nears its 250th anniversary, American writers continue to grapple with what it means to tell the story of a nation. Women's Prize-winner Tayari Jones is joined by fellow novelist Jay McInerney to reflect on how their characters…
Hove
Music
Taking place on Hove Lawns with stunning views of Brighton & Hove seafront expect an eclectic line up to keep you dancing all day long as we watch the sun set over the sea.
Lewes
Festival
For over 60 years, Margaret Drabble's sharp, insightful writing has chronicled the changing social landscape of Britain and, in particular, the lives and roles of women. Join us to read extracts from 'A Summer Bird-Cage', 'The Millstone' and 'A Day…
Brighton
General event
Join us for a fun-packed festival weekender where live music, oysters & seafood take centre stage in Britain's most iconic seaside town. From our historic fishing roots to today's banging food scene, we're bringing together the best local…
Lewes
Festival
For many, home is not a fixed place but something fragile, shaped by memory, language and hope. Ece Temelkuran, a Turkish writer and journalist whose life has been shaped by political upheaval, draws on her new book 'Nation of Strangers' to reflect…
Brighton
Music
The UK’s Biggest LGBTQ+ Pride Festival
“Historic, inspired and unparalleled. Brighton Pride is one of the best international pride festivals, we love it” Attitude Magazine.
Pride On The Park is the official Brighton & Hove Pride fundraiser for our…
Lewes
Festival
George Orwell once observed that “every joke is a tiny revolution”, a subtle act of defiance against the powers that be. Few comedians embody that idea more vividly than Rosie Jones.
Jones has carved out a unique place in British comedy by placing…
Lewes
Festival
Ten years on from the Brexit referendum, the questions it raised have not gone away. As alliances shift and the US grows openly hostile towards Europe, we are being forced to think again about Britain's place in an increasingly fractured world.
In…
Lewes
Festival
With the publication of 'Trainspotting' in the early 1990s, Irvine Welsh transformed British fiction, bringing new voices, rhythms and realities onto the page. In 'Men in Love', Welsh returns to 'Trainspotting''s characters to explore what happens…
Brighton
Exhibition
The Artist Open Houses offer festival–goers the chance to meet the artists and to view locally made, seriously good arts and crafts.
Lewes
Festival
It is 100 years since the publication of Virginia Woolf's essay 'On Being Ill', in which she describes how illness disrupts daily life, isolates us from the familiar and sharpens our perception of the world. In this festival commission, two writers…
Lewes
Festival
In 'Vocal Break', her dazzling blend of memoir, feminist manifesto and cultural history, Lauren Elkin explores how women's singing has long been labelled unruly, dangerous and uncivilised - from Maria Callas to Beyoncé, Edith Piaf to Billie Eilish.…
Brighton
Lecture
What makes St James’s Street so fabulously unique?
Drag icons Alfie Ordinary, Alex Fincher, and Billie Gold have dug deep into the history books and listened to all the juicy gossip to create a new walking tour of the places and spaces that make up…
Lewes
Festival
In times of upheaval, we often turn to writers who bear witness, who resist, who speak out despite the risks of doing so.
But what does it mean to write and act from conscience? Must a writer always be bound by their conscience? What are the costs…
Lewes
Festival
In 1939, E. M. Forster wrote: “I do not believe in Belief.” Instead, he asked what values guide us when life is most complex. Chinese-born British novelist Jung Chang joins Oscar-nominated screenwriter William Nicholson to reflect on an…
Lewes
Festival
In January 1776, a slim political pamphlet electrified the world. Founding Father Thomas Paine's 'Common Sense' argued that power flows not from kings, empires, or inherited authority but from the people themselves. Today, amid rising populism,…