Huddersfield Literature Festival

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Huddersfield Literature Festival
GenreLiterary festival
Location(s)Huddersfield, England
Years active2006–present
PatronsSir Patrick Stewart OBE
Lemn Sissay MBE
Websitehttp://www.huddlitfest.org.uk/

Huddersfield Literature Festival (HLF) is an annual literary festival that takes place in March in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England.[1]

Introduction[]

HLF is a blended 10-day digital and venue-based literature festival of 50+ events held online and at accessible spaces in Huddersfield. It includes author talks, performance poetry, workshops, discussion topics, wellbeing projects, family and multi-arts events.

The Festival promotes community cohesion and offers opportunities to enjoy arts and culture to a wide range of people, with free and low-cost activities, innovative commissions inspired by local community partnerships, and proactive engagement with underrepresented creatives, performers and audiences.

Events take place online, outdoors and at a number of venues around Huddersfield, including The University of Huddersfield, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Huddersfield Town Hall, The Media Centre, libraries and local bars/cafes.

The Festival provides Access Guides to key venues and includes several subtitled events every year. Many events are free or low cost.

Festival patrons are Lemn Sissay MBE and Sir Patrick Stewart OBE.

In 2016, 2017 & 2020, the Festival was chosen as a finalist in Welcome to Yorkshire's White Rose Awards and in May 2017 it won a Huddersfield Examiner Community Award (Arts category).

The next Huddersfield Literature Festival is scheduled to run in March 2022.

History[]

Originally conceived in 2006 the festival is run as a not-for-profit organisation, with funding from the University of Huddersfield and the Arts Council, with business sponsorship from local firms.

From 2009-2011 the festival was headed up by creative writing tutor and author Michael Stewart. In 2012 it took a break, but was relaunched in 2013 with a new Festival Director Michelle Hodgson of Key Words. In April 2013, Michelle featured in The Independent on Sunday's Happy List for her work with the festival.

Over the years, the festival has welcomed a diverse range of authors, poets and performers (see below).

Notable visiting authors[]

2006[]

(Winner of the British Council Literary Prize 2003 [2]), Francesca Beard, Martyn Bedford, John Boyne, Donna Daley-Clarke,[3] David Stuart Davies, Gideon Defoe, Jeremy Dyson, Paul Farley, Mark Gatiss, , Sarah Hall, Stephen Hall, , Peter Hobbs, ,[4] Simon Ings, Helen Ivory, , Shamshad Khan,[5] Frances Leviston, Mil Millington, Julie Myerson, Patrick Neate, Jacob Polley, Geoff Ryman, ,[6] George Szirtes, ,[7] (aka: Sophie Codman),[8][9] Louise Welsh

2007[]

Andrew Motion, Joanne Harris, Adam Foulds, Joolz Denby, [10]], Simon Scarrow, Robert Low, Dorothea Smartt,[11] Gaia Holmes, Shamshad Khan. Lee Hughes, David Wheatley, ,[12] , Michael Stewart, Sol B River.

2008[]

Ann Cleeves, Duncan Lawrie, Joanne Harris, Doreen Lawrence, CWO Gold Dagger Winner 2008,[13] Sefi Atta, ,[14] Louise Page, ,[15] Nick Toczek[16] and .

2009[]

Joanne Harris, Lemn Sissay, Ian McMillan, John Cooper Clarke, Mark E. Smith, Simon Armitage.

2010[]

Alexei Sayle, A. L. Kennedy, Sara Maitland, Moniza Alvi.

2011[]

David Peace. Melvin Burgess, David Nobbs, Anne Fine.

2012[]

Break year, no festival.

2013[]

Jodi Picoult, Kate Atkinson, Joanne Harris, Jeremy Dyson, Annabel Pitcher, Michael Stewart, Monkey Poet, Andrew Mitchell, Gaia Holmes.

2014[]

Kate Adie, Annapurna Indian Dance, David Barnett, Paul Burston, Jim Crace, Mari Hannah, Joanne Harris, Gwyneth Hughes, Keith Jarrett, Marina Lewycka, VG Lee, Adam Lowe, Ken MacLeod, Sunny Ormonde, Lemn Sissay and Jah Wobble.

2015[]

David Barnett, Paul Burston, M. R. Carey, Bettina Carpi, Jamie DeWolf, Rosie Garland, Matt Haig, Joanne Harris, Amanda Huxtable, Christian Jarrett, Helen Lederer, V. G. Lee, Gary Lloyd, Wilf Lunn, Kei Miller, David Nobbs, Diriye Osman, Gerry Potter, Justina Robson, Kadija Sesay, Michael Stewart, Bryan Talbot & Mary M. Talbot.

2016[]

Asfa-Wossen Asserate, Michael Billington, James Bran, Paul Burston, Rosie Garland, Christopher Fowler, Prof Joanne Fletcher, Kate Fox, Claire Harman, Joanne Harris, Alan Johnson MP Ben Miller, Michael Stewart, Rupert Thomson, Irvine Welsh, Levison Wood

2017[]

Jake Arnott, James Bran, Paul Burston, Kit De Waal, Kate Fox, Joanne Harris, Alan Johnson MP, Murray Lachlan Young, Owen Lowery, Adrian Lukis, Jenni Murray, Henry Normal, Ian Rankin, Lemn Sissay, Attila the Stockbroker, Julie Summers, Michael Stewart

2018[]

Diane Allen, Annapurna Indian Dance, Simon Armitage, Paul Burston, Emily Drabble, Joanne Harris, Marty Jopson, Vaseem Khan, Lucy Mangan, David McAlmont, Owen O'Neill, Helen Pankhurst, Annabel Pitcher, Michael Stewart, Sir Patrick Stewart, Jeremy Vine.

2019[]

Johnny Ball, Paul Burston, Ann Cleeves, Jon Copley, Kit de Waal, Professor Angela Gallop, Joanne Harris, Darren Henley, Alan Johnson, Kate Fox, Lisa Luxx, Owen O'Neill, Nikesh Shukla, Cath Staincliffe, Michael Stewart.

2020[]

Bernardine Evaristo, Helen Mort, Lemn Sissay (note: events limited due to Covid outbreak)

2021[]

Paul Burston, AA Dhand, Dark Horse Theatre, Ching He Huang, Alexander McCall Smith, Val McDermid, Kei Miller, Saima Mir, Johny Pitts, Peter Robinson, Monique Roffey

References[]

  1. ^ Price, Stuart (6 March 2010). "Ten best talks & festivals", The Independent, p. 10.
  2. ^ British Council.org Testimonials
  3. ^ Greenstreet, Rosanna (April 22, 2006). "Q&A Donna Daley-Clarke". The Guardian. London.
  4. ^ Literature Northwest
  5. ^ Poetry International
  6. ^ BBC Bradford
  7. ^ [1]Sheffield Hallam University
  8. ^ "Terry Pratchett Books". Archived from the original on 2011-07-28. Retrieved 2010-07-07.
  9. ^ Yorkshire Evening Post
  10. ^ The Bookseller.com – Simon Trewin
  11. ^ Contemporary Writer.com Dorothea Smartt
  12. ^ British Council – Rommi Smith, Writer in Residence
  13. ^ "Crime Writers Association – Kester Aspden". Archived from the original on 2010-08-15. Retrieved 2010-07-07.
  14. ^ Poetry PF – Janet Fisher
  15. ^ "Euro Renaissance.co.uk – Jim Greenhalf". Archived from the original on 2010-04-17. Retrieved 2010-07-07.
  16. ^ Fife Direct.org – Nick Toczek

External links[]

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