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Acquisition of an Affordable Collection - Alec Smith.

Alec Smith has a passion for books. He collects rare books, first editions, as well as letters and original documents. He has amassed an amazing collection of books over the years including some unique Tolkien and JK Rowling editions. A recent acquisition is a letter written by Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson a week before the Battle of Trafalgar eerily predicting his own death.


Alec will discuss how to put together a book collection without necessarily draining monetary resources, with newscaster, presenter and author John Suchet. He will also talk about what first inspired him, his successes and failures, joys and disappointments.



Saturday 19 Sep 202611:30

Along a Green Lane Sometime Somewhere - Valerie Belsey

Valerie Belsey invites you to join her to learn about the extraordinary network of green lanes that wind around South Devon and the stories that they tell. After a short introduction, she will lead a walk from The Flavel to discover the green lanes that we can access locally.


Valerie Belsey is the author of " Exploring Green Lanes in the South Hams and the stories they tell." Published in 2023 and in its 3rd edition since 2001. She worked for SHDC in the coast and countryside dept and in the Highways dept of DCC always on green lanes and road history.

Valerie’s new book "Along a Green Lane Sometime Somewhere" will be out at the end of the year and tells how by studying one lane - the one which runs through the Green Lanes Centre - you can find out about many more. One Lane - Many Lives.


Sunday 20 Sep 202610:00

Bad Influence : Rosie Nixon

Rosie Nixon is a visionary leader, author and coach dedicated to helping people rediscover their purpose and embrace change. With 16 years as the award-winning Editor-in-Chief of HELLO! and senior roles at Grazia, Glamour and Red, plus five published books, Rosie brings a rich media expertise to her work. Her coaching style uses storytelling to help clients rewrite their narrative. She is a career reinventor herself having hit burnout in 2022 and embarked on a journey of personal growth. She now sees her ‘breakdown’ as a break-THROUGH.

Rosie is a qualified coach at ACC level with the ICF and in 2024, she founded Rosie’s Reinvention Retreats to empower women with confidence and clarity in wellbeing, career, business and personal growth. These experiences uniquely placed Rosie to develop her Reinvent Like A PRO® framework which will be published in a book by Harper Collins in 2026. She is the author of The Stylist trilogy of novels, and domestic thriller, Just Between Friends. In November 2025 Rosie was identified by Edelman as one of the top 30 global creators influencing the midlife audience. She lives in Surrey with her husband, two sons and two cats.



Following an eventful stint styling Manhattan’s elite, Amber Green is back in London and ready to style her biggest client yet.

Superstar influencer Mandy Sykes is all-American and all-wrong for her new Surrey surroundings. Desperate to endear herself to the British upper crust, and to win likes from a new fanbase, the brash celebrity tasks Amber with providing all the smoke and mirrors she might need.

With only twelve weeks to prove her worth – and to earn the bonus which will secure her dream flat with her steady boyfriend, Rob – Amber’s biggest challenge is to keep her flats firmly on the ground.

But when your new boss has a private life as colourful as her designer wardrobe, and a brother-in-law whose ridiculously good looks can’t help but catch your eye, it becomes hard to tell who’s a genuine influencer, and who is simply a bad influence…


Saturday 19 Sep 202611:45

Becoming the Ocean : Julian Carnell

Julian Carnell has been Director of The Sharpham Trust for over ten years. The Trust owns a historic estate on the banks of the river, downstream from Totnes, offering mindfulness retreats with a focus on reconnecting people to the natural world. Three years ago, he helped create the Wild Dart Partnership to bring together over twenty organisations, landowners and community groups with the aim of restoring the health of the river.


Julian will talk about his new book Becoming the Ocean – a River Dart Journey Through the Wild, the Ancient and the Sacred which follows the Dart from its source high in the peatlands of Dartmoor, through valleys of temperate rainforest, the farming lowlands and the estuary before reaching the sea at Dartmouth. Along the way discovering the amazing history, people and wildlife associated with the river and what we can do to try and reverse its decline and the decline of all our rivers.


Saturday 19 Sep 202614:00

Bosun Bob – Erin Allgrove

Bob and his feline friend have escaped shipwreck and are off on a nautical treasure hunt. They meet many friendly animals along the way who guide them to an oceanic volcano where the treasure is hidden and guarded by a mysterious creature. Will the friends find the treasure, will they escape the volcano?!



This beautifully written tale is the perfect sequel to Bosun Bob The Salty Old Sea Dog. Created by Erin Allgrove and beautifully illustrated by Emily Langstaff Ellis this book and the creatures inside will really capture the imagination of children and adults alike, perfect for reading together.

Yachting Monthly Magazine


FREE TO ATTEND

Saturday 19 Sep 202610:30 (free to attend)

Crime Writers’ Panel

These crime writers have very different approaches to their writing, and it will be interesting to hear how they go about their craft and debate key issues.


Jane Corry is the queen of domestic suspense, now an eight-time Sunday Times bestseller. Her latest book, My Sister’s Secret, is a gripping and emotional suspense about two sisters and the dark past that binds them. The sisters are bound by a secret that could tear them apart…

Jane began her career in journalism, working primarily for women’s magazines, while writing romantic fiction.


Stephanie Austin has created her heroine Juno Browne, a self-proclaimed domestic goddess and reluctant antique shop owner, whose adventures are set in Ashburton on the edge of Dartmoor. There are now nine books in the Juno Browne series, with book ten, 'A Dartmoor Christmas Card Murder', due out in October. Stephanie began her career as a teacher, but has also worked as an artist, an astrologer and has dabbled in antiques.


Martin Hesp’s new series begins with The Cornish Snapper: The Granite Mystery, in which Martin introduces Lammoran and Hamilton—a dynamic duo reminiscent of Holmes and Watson. Drawing on his own experiences in the newsroom, he explores the intersection of investigative grit and the art of photography. Martin has spent over 50 years at the sharp end of British journalism, starting his career as a junior reporter at 17 and eventually becoming the Senior Feature Writer and Columnist for the Western Morning News and Western Daily Press.


Sunday 20 Sep 202614:00

Dartmouth History Research Group.

Come along to this session if you are interested in our fascinating local history. Members of the group will be available to talk about their work, and their locally published books will be available to buy. Their most recent publication is: When War Came to the Dart, by Gail Ham and Hilary Sunman, which combines the memories of local people with official records and other contemporary accounts to chart the impact as the communities of the Dart were immersed in war.

Dartmouth History Research Group has published 40 books and booklets on the area’s history. Books have been written on local figures including Thomas Newcomen, John Davis, John Flavel and Willam Veale; and on local places including Hawley’s Fortalice, The Castle Hotel, Bayards Cove and Slapton Sands.





Saturday 19 Sep 202615:30

Dartmouth Writers Walk : Jonathan Turner

A 1.5 hour guided walk around Dartmouth visiting the places where Dartmouth writers lived and worked.

Hear stories of a non-conformist preacher, banned from Dartmouth, whose sermons are still in print today; of the Victorian politician and inventor who wrote a gothic ghost story for his friend, about Dartmouth’s Gomerock Tower. Listen to poems about the River Dart, and Townstal Church, by a Dartmouth artist and see his painting of the Governor of Dartmouth Castle in the Guildhall.  See Flora Thomson’s house with its stunning harbour views, where she wrote her trilogy Larkrise to Candleford, and Chritopher Milne’s (aka Robin) bookshop, a Dartmouth landmark for over 30 years. Visit the grave of a Medieval merchant and privateer, the inspiration for Chaucer’s Shipman’s Tale, and Dartmouth Museum founded by writer and historian Percy Russell, author of the first and best-selling History of Dartmouth and its Port.

As well as the literary sites, you will see the heart of Dartmouth, its backstreets, medieval and Tudor buildings; its steep steps, and magnificent harbour views.  

The walk is 1.25 miles long and will involve two short climbs up to wonderful viewpoints, and some steep steps down again!


Maximum number for each walk: 15


Friday 18 Sep 202611:30
Saturday 19 Sep 202611:30

Elemental : Arthur Snell

Arthur Snell - in conversation with Mary Nightingale 




Arthur Snell is an expert on the interaction between geopolitics and climate change with a degree in History from the University of Oxford. He has over 30 years’ experience in conflict zones and fragile states through the Middle East and Africa and has advised governments – including Ukraine during the current conflict – on a range of security and conflict-related issues. He is also an Associate Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute, the world’s oldest think tank, a former British Ambassador, and has hosted numerous podcasts which have had millions of downloads.


In Elemental, Arthur describes how the climate crisis is already affecting the lives of millions of people. As natural disasters and increased scarcity shake the established world order to its core, he reveals that an alternative future is still possible.

In this groundbreaking study Arthur Snell visits rapidly changing societies to show how we can

live on a warming planet. He presents a vision in which Africa powers Europe with solar energy,

where autocratic oil states are no more, and new shipping routes across the melting Arctic bring

Asia, Europe and North America closer than ever before. In Russia, huge areas of highly fertile

land will be exposed by the melting ice for whoever can seize it, while China's stranglehold on

rare minerals looks set to make it the world's leading superpower.


‘An extraordinary mastery of geopolitics, combining years on the ground in the most

challenging places, a raw instinct for politics and a deep ethical concern for the world in the

face of climate catastrophe. A masterpiece.’ RORY STEWART


Arthur Snell will be in conversation with Mary Nightingale.


Friday 18 Sep 202610:00

Family History as Inspiration for Writing - Alison Huntingford

Alison Huntingford is an only child of two only children and so has always felt a distinct lack of family.  

This inspired her to research her family history and led her to write her debut novel, ‘The Glass Bulldog’, based on the true story of one of her ancestors, which was nominated for the Walter Scott prize for Historical Fiction in 2019.  Her second full length novel, ‘A Ha’penny Will Do’ was published January 2022. 'Dance A Fearful Jig', her third historical novel, was published in January 2024.


Alison has a degree in Humanities with Literature and has always enjoyed reading, especially the great writers of the 19th Century. In September 2021 Alison set up the South Hams Authors Network – an organisation which aims to support and promote the work of Devon writers.  This is a free, informal group which meets on a monthly basis and has a devoted and loyal following.  The group have been involved in book readings at libraries and shops, stalls at local fayres, radio interviews and local newspaper articles. This culminated in the much praised Dartmoor Edge Literary Fest in October 2022, followed by the South Hams Literary Festival around Ivybridge in 2023.


Saturday 19 Sep 202611:30 (FREE TO ATTEND)

Fiesta : Daniel Stables

Daniel Stables – in conversation with Martin Hesp





Daniel Stables is a travel writer and guidebook author based in the UK, specializing in regions such as

Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Southern Europe. He has authored or contributed to over 30 travel

books for various publishers, including Rough Guides and DK Eyewitness, and writes for outlets like BBC

Travel and National Geographic Traveller. In 2021, he was shortlisted in the Freelance Writing Awards for

his work in travel writing. You can find more about his work on his website danielstables.co.uk or follow him on Twitter

@DanStables


Fiesta explores the vibrant tapestry of human festivity, delving into the extraordinary lengths to which we go to express

our cultures and commemorate life's milestones. From drunken pilgrimages to sacrificial funerals, national days to

neo-pagan necromancy, festivals represent human culture at its most vivid and varied, and the resulting account is both

a rich collection of travel writing and an anthropological exploration of the roles that festivals play in society. Through

colourful characters, vibrant sights, and varied locales, Daniel Stables takes a curious, humanistic look at festivals

across the world, unravelling the universal threads that run through our diverse global celebrations.



Daniel Stables will be in conversation with Martin Hesp.


Friday 18 Sep 202611:30

Head Over Skis : Sophie Davies

Sophie Davies is a romance author based in West Sussex, who studied English literature at the University of Exeter, and has been working in the publishing industry ever since.

She began posting about her writing journey on TikTok in 2023, which has led to her meeting so many other amazing writers, some of whom have become her closest friends.

 Head Over Skis is Sophie’s debut novel.

Head Over Skis is a spicy rom com for fans of Hannah Grace, Catherine Walsh and Lindsey Kelk.

One ex

One ski-instructor

And one holiday that's about to go off-piste...


The trip finally made it out of the group chat! Lottie and her friends have been planning – and saving – for their ski trip for ages and everything is going to be perfect. Until it isn’t.


Sunday 20 Sep 202613:00

I Wanna Be Loved By You - Andrew Wilson Book Launch

This year Marilyn Monroe turns 100. As a centennial tribute, award-winning biographer, Andrew Wilson, will talk about his biography: I Wanna Be Loved By You, followed by Q&A and book signing.


Dreamer. Bombshell. Icon.

Featuring a wealth of unpublished material, Andrew Wilson’s biography of Marilyn Monroe presents the actress in a startling new light.

Born Norma Jeane Mortenson, she had an uncertain and unforgiving upbringing with a mentally ill mother, an absent father and cruel foster parents. She would dream about Hollywood, and she transformed herself into the ultimate goddess of the silver screen; her image has been branded into the collective consciousness. Men lusted after her, and women wanted to be her. All her life, she just wanted to be loved.

Marilyn Monroe was more than just a goddess of the screen. She was highly intelligent and well-read, and formed long-term friendships with poets, philosophers, playwrights and political activists, such as with the avant-garde poet Edith Sitwell. After training with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio, she worked hard to dismantle the common perception that she was nothing but a dumb blonde.


About the author:

Andrew Wilson is an award-winning biographer, novelist and journalist. In 2003, his first book, Beautiful Shadow: A Life of Patricia Highsmith (Bloomsbury) won an Edgar Allan Poe Award and the LAMBDA Literary Award and was shortlisted for the Whitbread Prize.

Since then, he has written the biographies of Harold Robbins: The Man Who Invented Sex, Mad Girl’s Love Song: Sylvia Plath and Life Before Ted, Alexander McQueen: Blood Beneath the Skin, and the group biography, Shadow of the Titanic: The Extraordinary Stories of Those Who Survived.

'Wilson is an articulate and gentle man, with a mind committed to evidence and the demeanour of someone likely to give you a fair shake. Watching him reminds you that of all the tricks in a biographer s bag, equanimity and respect for an interviewee's first impressions are indispensable' DAILY TELEGRAPH




Sunday 20 Sep 202616:00

Jeremy Hunt : Can We Be Rich Again?

Is Britain stuck in a doom loop of higher debt and higher taxes? Or can we fix the

British economy?


In Can We Be Rich Again? Jeremy Hunt argues that getting out of Britain’s low

growth is a solvable problem, and that we should approach the country’s economic

future with optimism.


Hunt asks the key questions: How deliverable are the changes we need by a Labour,

Conservative or Reform government? How do we get the economy growing despite

dangerous levels of debt? How do we sell long term reforms when our leaders have

so little political capital? But countering pessimism needs solutions not just

assertions, and they need to be realistic – plans that politicians can actually deliver in

a democratic system and the majority of the electorate can get behind.


Jeremy Hunt was elected Conservative MP for South West

Surrey in 2005. He was first appointed Secretary of State for

Health in September 2012, then served as Secretary of State for

Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from July 2018 to July 2019, and Chancellor of

the Exchequer from October 2022 to July 2024. Before his election as an MP, Jeremy

 ran his own educational publishing business, Hotcourses. He also set up a charity to

help AIDS orphans in Africa in which he continues to play an active role. Jeremy

lives in Godalming and London with his wife, son and two daughters.


Jeremy Hunt will be interviewed by John Suchet.



Friday 18 Sep 202614:00

Master and Cartographer : Alan Harper

Alan Harper is an RYA Yacht Master, maritime journalist, and magazine editor, and has contributed articles on yachting, aviation, seamanship, navigation and travel to publications throughout the English-speaking world. His previous books include Waiting for Buddy Guy: Chicago Blues at the

Crossroads, which won the ASCAP Foundation Award and was a Living Blues

book of the year.

Alan will be talking about his latest book: Master and Cartographer, which follows the adventurous life of Captain Greenvile Collins (1643-94). His seafaring voyages took him from Patagonia to the Arctic, into battles against Dutch men of war and Barbary corsairs, and to the slave markets and Silk Road ports of the Mediterranean. A scientific navigator, his professional drive drew him to Shetland, the Scilly Isles and all points in between, as he undertook the most ambitious survey of the British coastline yet attempted, and which helped change the course of history.

This fascinating story is a must for those interested in adventures at sea and all things maritime.


Alan will be in conversation with Tim Wiltshire.


Sunday 20 Sep 202612:00

Meg Clothier : The Shipping Forecast

There’s a sea lover in every Brit.


The Shipping Forecast on Radio 4 has been keeping people in tune with the gloriously fickle British weather for a century, and capturing our hearts and imaginations along the way.


Celebrating a hundred years since the first broadcast, this book takes you to the heart of what the Shipping Forecast means to us as a nation. Each of the ten chapters brings you on a fascinating exploration of a different area of our British maritime history, from stormy weather up above to the seabed far below, and from fishing boats and battleships to the songs and poems inspired by the forecast.


This joyous book invites you to sail away into the enchanting world of the forecast, and is the perfect companion for anyone curious about our great British skies and seas.


Meg Clothier studied Classics at Cambridge, sailed from England to Alaska and worked as a journalist in London and Moscow. She has published three historical novels and Sea Fever: A Seaside Companion, a book full of marine lore and seaside charm, with her brother, Chris. She lives on the sunny side of the Quantock Hills with her husband, two children and an improbable number of vegetables.


Meg Clothier will be in conversation with Georgina Wiltshire.

Sunday 20 Sep 202610:30

Michael Rosen : Getting Through It

Join poetry legend Michael Rosen as he presents his new one-person show Getting Through It, formed of a double bill of monologues, The Death of Eddie and Many Kinds of Love.


Getting Through It is a powerful, deeply personal yet universally relatable, double bill of monologues and poetry.


In the first part, The Death of Eddie, Michael explores his experience after losing his 18-year-old son to meningitis, recalling the strange and contradictory mix of emotions felt after the unexpected loss. This story, memorably captured in Michael’s children’s book The Sad Book, is told in vivid and poetic detail.


In the second part, Many Kinds of Love, Michael recounts his 48-day period in intensive care, after contracting COVID-19 early in the pandemic, and having to face his own mortality. Both stories are told with Michael’s signature positivity, humour and poetry. Together, the two pieces are a testimony to the spirit of recovery.


"Simple yet powerfully affecting, it is a remarkable event" ★★★★★ West End Best Friend


"A universal human journey"  ★★★★★ Everything Theatre


Friday 18 Sep 202619:00

Patrick Gale : Love Lane

Patrick Gale – in conversation with Sophie Pierce


From beloved, bestselling author Patrick Gale comes a searing portrayal of escape and the power of love, home and a family.

Love Lane is a brilliant new standalone novel featuring characters from Patrick’s Costa-shortlisted novel A Place Called Winter.


1950s Northern England. Three generations of men, two of women.

When veteran Canadian wheat farmer, Harry Cane is brutally obliged to sell up and sail home to an England transformed by two world wars, his arrival triggers unwelcome self-examination for the family he abandoned, and for whom he has never been more than a distant myth.

His daughter feels duty bound to take him in but is riven with doubt and ambushed by a long-buried anger she has never before expressed. Harry's effect on the next generation is less predictable and enables his granddaughter to deal with an unspeakable trauma, while her gentle husband feels seen for who he truly is. Can Harry stay and make a new life before

it's too late, or will he find himself cast out again, punished for having witnessed and understood too much?

From the rural plains of Canada to 1950s Liverpool and Yorkshire, Love Lane is a searing

portrayal of escape and entrapment, and a powerful exploration of what home and family

can really be.


Patrick Gale was born on the Isle of Wight. He spent his infancy at Wandsworth Prison, which his father governed, then grew up in Winchester before going to Oxford University. He now lives on a farm near Land's End. One of this country's best-loved

novelists, his most recent works are A Perfectly Good Man, the Richard and Judy bestseller Notes From An Exhibition, the Costa-shortlisted A Place Called Winter and Mother's Boy. His original BBC television drama, Man In An Orange Shirt, was shown to great acclaim in 2017 as part of the BBC's Queer Britannia series, leading viewers around the world to discover his novels.




Love Lane has been selected for this year’s Book Festival Big Read


Patrick Gale will be in conversation with Sophie Pierce.

Saturday 19 Sep 202610:00

Poetry Slam : Jackie Juno

Jackie Juno is a multiple Poetry Slam champion (and the only person to have won the coveted Glastonbury Festival Poetry Slam twice - 2017 and 2024)!

She has performed her poetry at two TEDx Talks, been chaired Bard and Grand Bard of Exeter for 8 years combined, and has hosted cabarets and poetry nights in various towns in Devon for decades.

She has published six poetry collections, including the recent ‘Priestess of the Powder Puff Experiment’ with Burning Eye Books.

She has created several multi-media one-woman shows, including ‘CANCER DANCER - My Quirky Quest for a Cure’, a comedic extravaganza written during her chemotherapy treatment in 2022.

Her material is hilarious, but also tender, confessional and occasionally ranting against the injustices of the world.


Jackie, along with the inimitable Ed Tripp, will be hosting Dartmouth's first ever Poetry Slam to find the best Performance Poet 2026!

There will be a cash prize of £100 for the winner, who will have to battle through several rounds of exciting, nail-biting performances to prove worthy of the title.

The audience gets to judge who they want to win.

Open to anyone over the age of 16?

Poets need to contact jackiejuno63@gmail.com for further information and to apply to enter.



Saturday 19 Sep 202614:00

Rock Idols - Sophie Pierce and Alex Murdin

From devils and druids to timeless tors, join artist Alex Murdin and writer Sophie Pierce for an illustrated talk exploring the magic and mystery of Dartmoor. Their new book, Rock Idols: a guide to Dartmoor in 28 tors, is thought to be the first illustrated guide to Dartmoor in many years, with new, original drawings of these mysterious monoliths. Sophie and Alex will share their adventures exploring the tors, as well as some of the fascinating folklore, geology and history of Dartmoor. They will show Alex's new drawings of the tors, as well as intriguing Victorian etchings of some of Dartmoor's most famous features including Scorhill Stone Circle and the Dewerstone.

Saturday 19 Sep 202617:00

Roger and James Deakins : Reflections: On Cinematography

Roger & James Deakins – in conversation with Monty Halls


We are delighted that Roger and James Deakins can join us this year to talk about Roger’s fascinating career in cinematography, as described in his new book, Reflections: On Cinematography.


From two-time Academy Award winner from 16 nominations, and five-time BAFTA award winner from 11 nominations, Sir Roger Deakins - widely regarded as the greatest cinematographer of all time - a one-of-a-kind visual memoir, telling his life's story by way of his iconic, beloved films, including The Shawshank Redemption, Skyfall, Fargo, Blade Runner 2049, The Big Lebowski, 1917, and No Country for Old Men, among others.

Over the course of a brilliant 50-year career, Sir Roger Deakins has proven to be the greatest artist & visionary that the craft of cinematography has ever known.


In Reflections: On Cinematography, Deakins offers his fans and film enthusiasts a one-of-a-kind look into his life and improbable road to Hollywood immortality. Readers will discover how "the boy from Torquay, England" overcame a troubled childhood to enter his way into art school; his fortuitous entry into world of documentary filmmaking (including a yacht race around the world); to shooting groundbreaking music videos such as Herbie Hancock's "Rock It," to his singular film career, including his longtime collaborations with the Coen Brothers, Sam Mendes, and Denis Villeneuve.


Filled with never-before-seen storyboards, sketches, and diagrams, Deakins shows readers how he created some of the most iconic scenes in the most beloved films of all time. Through candid, lyrical prose, Deakins reflects on his life and each of his projects; how he helped shape them, and how they shaped him.


A truly unique visual memoir, Reflections is for film fans and general readers alike, and for anyone looking to find inspiration, beauty, and creativity by looking through the singular lens with which Roger views the world.


Roger & James Deakins will be in conversation with Monty Halls.

Saturday 19 Sep 202619:00

The Owl and the Nightingale - Poetry Group

In this session, members of Dartmouth Poetry Group invite you to share their love of poetry.

There will be readings from Simon Armitage's The Owl and the Nightingale.


Dartmouth Poetry Group are poetry enthusiasts who meet monthly at The Flavel. New members are always welcome to come and share in their love of poetry.



Friday 18 Sep 202614:00 (FREE TO ATTEND)

The Storyteller’s Journey : Keith Rossiter and Jonathan Posner

Join writers Jonathan Posner and Keith Rossiter on an adventure into the world of imagination.


Jonathan Posner is a full-time author and publisher based in Exeter. He has written and published six action-adventure novels set in Tudor England. He has also written and published two anthologies; one of short stories and the other of ‘old bloke having a rant’ articles. Earlier works include libretto and lyrics for three full-length stage musicals plus a one-act play. Jonathan gets a thrill from seeing his books in print and getting great feedback from readers, which is why he is so keen to share what he has learned about the craft of writing with others.


Keith Rossiter is a former journalist turned full-time novelist. He has published one thriller set in Greece, The Chaos Game, a young adult novel White Raven, and a novel for middle-grade readers, Shadow Lands: The Poacher’s Trap. He is also a screenwriter and filmmaker.

He admits that in the years since leaving journalism he has been on a steep learning curve – and he is eager to share that adventure with new and improving writers.


Saturday 19 Sep 202614:00

Three Rivers : Robert Winder

Robert Winder was Literary Editor of the Independent (where he ran the Foreign Fiction Award for translated novels) and Deputy Editor of Granta. He is the author of many titles (both fiction and non-fiction) including Bloody Foreigners: The Story of Immigration to Britain and The

Last Wolf: The Hidden Springs of Englishness. The former helped inspire the Migration Museum Project, which aims to create a major museum on the theme of migration in Britain and for which he was a founder trustee.


Three rivers: the Rhine, the Rhone and the Po. Each one coursing down from a single patch of Alpine ice in the jagged heights of Switzerland. Together they gave birth to three different European cultures – German, French and Italian. The very heart of Western Europe – its languages, religion and agriculture, its science, politics and art – has been nourished by these waters, from the Romanesque buttresses and vines of Provence to the Wagnerian music of the Rhine and the artistic miracles of Lombardy.

Setting off from the dramatic mountain landscape where this story begins, acclaimed historian

Robert Winder traces the rivers’ journeys, revealing in shimmering detail their impact on Europe’s rich history as they flow towards the sea.


Full of flavour and sparkle.’ The Sunday Times.


Friday 18 Sep 202615:45