Program - Sydney Writers` Festival
Transcription
Program - Sydney Writers` Festival
2 swf.org.au sponsors & supporters SYDNEY WR WRITERS’ R I TERS’ FESTIVAL W WOULD O U LD LIKE T TO THANK SYDNEY WRITERS’ FESTIVAL GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGES THE FOLLOWING PARTNERS AND SUPPORTERS CORE FUNDERS EXCLUSIVE LEGAL PARTNER MAJOR PARTNERS SUPPORTERS Affirm Press Allen & Unwin Apple & Bee Animal Logic Auckland Writers and Readers Festival Avant Card Black Inc Blacktown Arts Centre Bloomsbury Byteback Computing Children’s Book Council of Australia Ciao Magazine City of Sydney Library Emerging Writers’ Festival Epiphany International Artists P/L Fairfax Community News Finch Publishing Giramondo Publishing Griffith REVIEW Good Reading Magazine Hachette Australia Hardie Grant HarperCollins History Council of NSW Institut Français The Hoopla Macleay Museum Magabala Books Melbourne Jewish Writers’ Festival Museum of Contemporary Art Myer Family Company National Trust (NSW) The Nest NewSouth Books NSW Writers’ Centre Overland Pan Macmillan Paper Boat Press Penguin Books Australia Rachel Black Random House The Red Room Company Riverside Theatres Rock Surfers Theatre Company Ryde Library Service Scholastic Scribe Simmer on the Bay South Coast Writers Centre The Stella Prize Sydney Dance Café Sydney Jewish Writers’ Festival Sydney PEN Sydney Story Factory Sydney Theatre Company Text Publishing Treehouse Theatre Inc. University of Queensland Press UWA Publishing Varuna, The Writers’ House Walker Books The Walkley Foundation for Journalism Walsh Bay Precinct The Wheeler Centre WestWords Word Travels Zaffero LITERARY PATRONS Russell Mills WeirAnderson Foundation Bibliotheque Wine FRIENDS OF THE FESTIVAL Alan and Sue Cameron Rowena Danziger AM and Ken Coles AM Catherine and Whitney Drayton David Hardy and Margaret Seale Robyn Martin-Weber Stephen, Margie and Xavier Morris PARTNERS Deena Shiff Jeanne-Claude Strong Jean and Cushing Strout The Key Foundation Anonymous (1) MAJOR PATRONS Marion Dixon Andrea Govaert Mrs Megan Grace and Brighton Grace Tony and Louise Leibowitz Nicola Sepel Jody Yesner PATRONS Sue Lipman Kathyrn Lovric Tavumi Pty Ltd H.K Tey Pty Ltd Karen Waller Lucy and Stephen Chipkin Roxanne Dunkel Carole Ferguson Andrew Freeman Deborah Griffin Adam and Vicki Liberman CULTURAL PARTNERS SWF BOARD Deena Shiff – Chair Peter Shergold AC – Deputy Chair Guy Hedley Elizabeth Johnstone David Marr Lena Nahlous Margie Seale Emile Sherman Kathy Shand SWF STAFF Artistic Director Jemma Birrell Program Coordinator Charis Holt HOSPITALITY PARTNERS MEDIA PARTNERS Executive Director Ben Strout Head of Development Tamara Press Partnerships Manager Ashlea Wallington Operations Manager Mike Smith Head of Marketing Ainslie Lenehan Administrator Natasha Younger Volunteer Coordinator Misty McPhail Marketing Coordinator Aimee Huxley In-house Designer Pilar Chamorro Ticketing Coordinator Richard Cox Operations Coordinator Andy Lysle Ground Transport Coordinator Liam Nesbitt Festival Publicist Benython Oldfield Associate Publicist Simone Bird Photographer Prudence Upton School Days Program Judith Ridge (WestWords) Family Day Program Jeanmarie Morosin Copywriter Dana Holder SWF gives special thanks to Editor Group and BWM for assistance with the Official Program Guide. THE STATE LIBRARY OF NSW PRESENTS 2014 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards Presentation & Cocktail Reception Monday 19 May, 6 pm – 9.30 pm Cost: $40/35 per ticket (Friends/concession, includes refreshments) Bookings required (02) 9273 1770, [email protected] Visit www.sl.nsw.gov.au/premiersliteraryawards People’s Choice • The Secret Lives of Men, Georgia Blain (Scribe Publications) • The Narrow Road to the Deep North, Richard Flanagan (Random House Australia) • The Railwayman’s Wife, Ashley Hay (Allen & Unwin) • Questions of Travel, Michelle de Kretser (Allen & Unwin) • Game, Trevor Shearston (Allen & Unwin) • The Swan Book, Alexis Wright (Giramondo Publishing) Cast your vote by midnight Friday 16 May and go into the draw to win fantastic prizes. Vote: www.sl.nsw.gov.au/peopleschoice The winner will be announced on Monday 19 May 2014. The Book Stack: People’s Choice Tuesday 13 May, 6 pm – 7.30 pm Cost: $15, bookings required Dixson Room, State Library of NSW Enjoy readings from the Christina Stead Prize for Fiction shortlist and discussion with judges Susan Wyndham, Charlotte Wood and Angelo Loukakis. Meet the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards winners Thursday 22 May, 10 am – 11 am Free, no bookings required Philharmonia Studio Pier 4, Hickson Road, Walsh Bay Join winners from this year’s NSW Premier’s Literary Awards as they discuss their work. Event bookings: (02) 9273 1770 [email protected] State Library of NSW Macquarie St Sydney Ph (02) 9273 1414 www.sl.nsw.gov.au The NSW Premier’s Literary Awards are presented by the NSW Government and administered by the State Library of NSW in association with Arts NSW P&D-4263-4/2014 Congratulations to the shortlisted authors of the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards. The winners will be announced at the welcome SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 A MESSAGE FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR S ydney W Writers’ it ’ Festival F ti l marks k tthat special time of the year when the city is transformed by readers and writers. Down at Walsh Bay the atmosphere is electric, with thousands of book lovers soaking up a world of ideas. This year the Festival explores writing that challenges, provokes and questions our concepts of culture, history and identity. More than 400 authors bring their insight and knowledge, their creativity and contemplation, to help us see life from different perspectives. Pushing all kinds of boundaries, the writers will make you laugh, bring you to tears and lead you to places you’ve never been. They will educate, enlighten and expose the truth, the lies and the grey bits in between. Creator of Breaking Bad, the almighty Vince Gilligan, comes to Australia for the first time, with an early Festival event on May 1. Hailed as “the best of the 21st century” by Stephen King, Breaking Bad is one of the most iconic shows of recent times, an epic parable of pride and power with arguably the greatest anti-hero in television history. American National Book Award winner Andrew Solomon gives the 2014 Opening Address. His latest book, Far From the Tree, tells the stories of hundreds of families affected by disability and difference, making the case that it’s diversity that unites us. Internationally acclaimed author Alice Walker comes to the Opera House. The first African-American woman to win the Pulitzer Prize with The Color Purple, Alice is also a committed activist and believes that developing compassion is a critical task each one of us must undertake. She is joined on stage by one of her favourite musicians, Archie Roach, for an evening celebrating the range and scope of her work. Alice also speaks with Miles Franklin Award-winning author Alexis Wright at Parramatta’s Riverside Theatres. More than 20 years after his cult classic Trainspotting, Irvine Welsh comes to Sydney with The Sex Lives of Siamese Twins. Russian immigrant turned US literary celebrity Gary Shteyngart reminisces about his life in Little Failure, Amy Tan brings a sweeping tale of love and family in The Valley of Amazement, and British comedian Sandi Toksvig muses over modern manners in Peas & Queues. Sandi also performs My Valentine, her hilarious one-woman show, at City Recital Hall. From France, we welcome Jacques Roubaud, who has had a long, illustrious writing career and opens up about the Oulipo, his intriguing literary group whose past members include luminaries Georges Perec and Italo Calvino. Don’t miss the two-day Curiosity Lecture Series, featuring lectures on subjects from cooking to love, Epicurus to Gandhi. There is also a Literary Friendship Series, with intimate conversations between writers such as Michelle de Kretser and Robert Dessaix, and daily lectures on the craft of writing. The world’s major award winners join us to share some of the best writing today. See A. M. Homes, who won the International Women’s Prize for May We Be Forgiven, a breathtaking satire of modern American life; Eleanor Catton, who at 28 was the youngest Man Booker Prize winner; and Lucy Hughes-Hallett, whose biography The Pike, about the warmongering, womanising Italian poet Gabriele d’Annunzio, took out the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction. It’s a big year for two of Australia’s greatest writers. David Malouf turns 80 and has released both a new volume of poetry and a collection of essays. Exquisitely written, they dip, dive and soar across subjects large and small. And national treasure Thomas Keneally celebrates 50 years of writing with sessions on his impressive body of work. As Richard Flanagan recently wrote, “We cannot escape politics, history, religion, nationalism – for their sources lie as deep in our hearts as love and goodness, perhaps even deeper”. With the centenary of WWI this year, we look at both the Great War and WWII. How did war change us? Richard Flanagan, Ian Buruma and Frank Dikötter are just a few of the authors shedding light on the subject. Was Jesus really a pacifist? Religious scholar and author Reza Aslan’s provocative new book, Zealot, questions assumptions about Jesus and has caused quite a stir. Reza also speaks about Iran and Israel with Ari Shavit, who writes about the history of Israel and Zionism in My Promised Land. North Korea is a country cloaked in secrecy. Jang Jin-sung reveals the realities of the regime and his experience working for one of the world’s harshest totalitarian states. He speaks to Pulitzer Prize winner Adam Johnson, whose The Orphan Master’s Son is a fictional imagining of the country. New Zealand singer-songwriter Tim Finn performs White Cloud for the first time in Australia, a meditative musing on home and identity. The sensational 5x15 returns to Sydney Theatre with five speakers including Anna Bligh and Wesley Enoch. At night, the Festival Club at Walsh Bay hosts a smorgasbord of storytelling, and The Chaser crew interviews special guests such as Pixar’s Matthew Luhn and journalist Jeremy Scahill. For the first time, Bondi Beach welcomes Sydney Writers’ Festival with a week of events at the Pavilion, including performances by British-Nigerian spoken word artist Inua Ellams. This year’s writers-in-residence are the brilliant Fiona McFarlane and Chris Flynn, who will be blogging daily on Festival goings-on. And keep your eyes out for quotes from Festival authors all across Sydney on City of Sydney trucks and billboards. For children, don’t miss Dav Pilkey, Captain Underpants himself, who will give talks at Chatswood’s Concourse Theatre and Parramatta’s Riverside Theatres. Bring the whole family to the Big Top for Little People at Walsh Bay on Sunday May 25 for a carnival of storytelling, art, discussion, comedy, poetry, theatre, food and dance. Finally, do come and join us for the 2014 Closing Address with Emma Donoghue, bestselling author of Room and, more recently, Frog Music, speaking about the transformative power of literature and the ability of writers to change the world, one reader at a time. It’s thinking season. Have a wonderful Festival! Jemma Birrell Artistic Director swf.org.au 3 contents 4 CITY & WALSH BAY 4-10 THURSDAY MAY 22 CITY & WALSH BAY/BLUE MOUNTAINS 10-15 FRIDAY MAY 23 CITY & WALSH BAY 15-17 SATURDAY MAY 24 CITY & WALSH BAY 17-19 SUNDAY MAY 25 CITY & WALSH BAY 20 WORKSHOPS 21 SUBURBAN & REGIONAL 12-13 EVENT GUIDE LIFTOUT 22 PARTICIPANTS 23 VENUES & BOOKINGS PRODUCED BY MEDIAXPRESS EDITOR AINSLIE LENEHAN, SWF ADVERTISING ELISHA CLOTHIER 9282 2373 READERLINK 9282 1569 YOUR PHOTOS #SWF2014 #SWF2014 Stephen Page creates a world of immense beauty … Australian dance at its best Sun Herald From 13 June · Sydney Opera House TICKETS ON SALE NOW sydneyoperahouse.com · 02 9250 7777 4 swf.org.au city & walsh bay M O N D AY, M AY AY 1 9 / T H U R S D A AY, Y M AY 2 2 festival highlight VINCE GILLIGAN Breaking Bad creator, writer and showrunner Vince Gilligan gives a behind-the-scenes look at Breaking Bad, one of the most iconic TV series in history, hailed as “the best of the 21st century” by Stephen King. He speaks with Adam Spencer. Supported by Macquarie Group. Premium $45, A Reserve $35/$28 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 2 IAIN McCALMAN: THE REEF May 19, 4-5pm University of Sydney Macleay Museum Historian Iain McCalman talks about The Reef and the strategies he employed to write this human story of the living reef. Presented by Macleay Museum. Free, bookings essential, [email protected] 3 2014 OPENING ADDRESS: ANDREW SOLOMON May 20, 6.30-8pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Award-winning writer Andrew Solomon begins Sydney Writers’ Festival’s thinking season with the Opening Address. He shares his own experience and reflects on the stories parents have shared with him about their children facing various challenges. No matter the difficulties, there is power in meeting people on their own terms. Join us to celebrate the start of the Festival, a week of writing, thinking and ideas. $32/$26 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 13 MARATHON READING: ASIA PACIFIC POETRY May 22, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Club Stage Hear a range of poetry read by voices from across the Asia Pacific with Mabel Lee, Dinah Roma, Nhã Thuyên, Kyoko Yoshida, Bella Li, Robert Nery, Violet Cho, Elizabeth Allen and Adam Aitken. Chair: Michael Brennan. Presented with Vagabond Press. Free, no bookings 8 TIM FINN: WHITE CLOUD May 21, 7-9pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Iconic New Zealand singer-songwriter, member of Crowded House and founding member of Split Enz, Tim Finn, performs White Cloud, a meditative performance about family, identity and home. A richly textured blend of melodic music and evocative prose. $30/$25 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 14 A MIND OF ONE’S OWN May 22, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Main Stage The Who’s My Generation proclaimed “I hope I die before I get old.” Dr Philip Nitschke, Dr Ranjana Srivastava and Lynne Segal discuss with Rebecca Huntley how this generation — now in their 60s and 70s — feels about getting old. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 9 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF ALICE WALKER May 21, 8.30-9.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 15 ON CRAFT: STORYTELLING AND THE STORYTELLER May 22, 10-11am Pier 2/3 The Loft Lian Hearn looks at ways of telling stories and reflects on the art of writing with the help of Akabane Sei, the narrator of her novel The Storyteller and His Three Daughters. ngss Free, no bookings THURSDAY 1 BREAKING BAD May 1, 7-8.15pm Sydney Town Hall 1 VINCE GILLIGAN: BREAKING BAD May 1, 7-8.15pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 7 FOOD BOOKS MUSIC: CERIDWEN DOVEY AND CHRIS FLYNN May 21, 7-9pm The Food Society, Darlinghurst Over a delicious meal, join authors Ceridwen Dovey (Only the Animals) and Chris Flynn (The Glass Kingdom), who interview each other about their new books, inspirations and challenges. $115 pre-bookings essential, [email protected] 4 BITESIZE LUNCHTIME TALKS WITH DAVID HUNT May 21, 12-1.30pm State Library of NSW, Metcalfe Auditorium David Hunt tells the hilarious yet true story of Australia’s past, which has made us who we are today. Presented by The State Library of NSW as part of Bitesize lunchtime talks @ the Library. Free, bookings essential, [email protected] 5 FOOD BOOKS MUSIC: STEFANO MANFREDI May 21, 12-2.30pm Osteria Balla Restaurant Stefano Manfredi, one of Australia’s best chefs, will divulge his artistic inspirations in discussion with 702 ABC Sydney’s Simon Marnie at Osteria Balla over a three-course meal and a touch of music. $115 Bookings [email protected] or The Star guest services 9777 9000 10 COFFEE AND PAPERS WITH THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD AND RICHARD KING May 22, 9-10am The Bar at the End of the Wharf Join Sherrill Nixon, The Sydney Morning Herald journalists and Richard King, author of On Offence, to hear their take on what’s making news headlines today and the changing nature of journalism. Supported by The Sydney Morning Herald. Free, no bookings 11 MEET THE NSW PREMIER’S LITERARY AWARD WINNERS May 22, 10-11am Philharmonia Studio The NSW Premier’s Literary Awards celebrate and support achievement by Australian writers. Join winners from this year’s awards as they discuss their work. Presented in association with the State Library of NSW. Free, no bookings 12 THE NAKED BOOKSHELF May 22, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Book collecting is an art and obsession. Join John Purcell alongside French author Jacques Roubaud and Kate Forsyth with special guest author and artist extraordinaire Maira Kalman (via Skype from NY) as they share their library and literary treasures. Supported by Bloomberg. Free, no bookings 16 LET THE LAND SPEAK May 22, 10-11am Richard Wherrett Studio Kathryn Heyman, Malcolm Knox and Ian Hoskins discuss understanding Australia through the nature and history of its land, with Jill Eddington. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 17 MANDY SAYER: THE POET’S WIFE AND A TRILOGY OF MEMOIR May 22, 10-11am Sydney Dance 1 Mandy Sayer’s heartbreaking book The Poet’s Wife details her marriage to Yusef Komunyakaa and beginnings as a serious writer. She will discuss her trilogy of memoirs with ABC RN’s Kate Evans. Free, no bookings 18 INSPIRED BY NATURE May 22, 10-11am Sydney Dance 2 Looking for inspiration? Turn your attention to what’s around you – just as jeweller Alex Monroe, adventurer Jono Lineen and author Inga Simpson did. They speak with Gregg Borschmann. Free, no bookings 19 BOOKS AND ARTS DAILY WITH MICHAEL CATHCART May 22, 10-11am Sydney Dance Lounge ABC RN’s Books and Arts Daily, hosted by Michael Cathcart, broadcasts live, including interviews with Emma Donoghue, Sandi Toksvig and Janette Turner Hospital. Presented with ABC RN. Free, no bookings festival highlight ALICE WALKER 9 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF ALICE WALKER May 21, 7.30-8.30pm Sydney Opera House, Joan Sutherland Theatre Internationally celebrated author and activist Alice Walker, best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Color Purple, is interviewed by Caroline Baum about her recent books and stunning body of work. She is joined on stage by special guest Archie Roach. Premium $55, A Reserve $45/$35 Bookings 9250 1988 tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au or sydneyoperahouse.com S U P P O R T T H E FES T I VA L As a not-for-profit, Sydney Writers’ Festival relies heavily on community support. Sponsorship and donations account for over half of the Festival’s total operating budget. Donate today at swf.org.au/donate or SHOUT us at shoutforgood.com/syd-writers-fest city & blue mountains T H U R S D AY AY, M AY 2 2 swf.org.au 5 blue mountains festival highlight The Blue Mountains program is presented with Varuna, the National Writers’ House and Sydney Writers’ Festival. Book tickets online at varuna.com.au unless otherwise stated. FIONA McFARLANE SR1 OPENING EVENT: VARUNA PROGRAM AND BLACK AND BLUE EXHIBITION LAUNCH May 16, 6-8pm Blue Mountains Cultural Centre Toast the Varuna and Sydney Writers’ Festival program as Tara Moss launches the Black and Blue exhibition. Presented with the Blue Mountains Cultural Centre and Varuna, the National Writers’ House. Free, no bookings 24 THE NIGHT GUEST May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Philharmonia Studio One morning Ruth wakes thinking a tiger was in her house . . . Hear more about The Night Guest, the mesmerising novel by Fiona McFarlane about love, dependence and the fear of uncertainty. Chair: Charlotte Wood. SR2 STORIES FROM THE MOUNTAINS, STORIES FROM THE SEA May 17, 10am-5pm Blue Mountains Cultural Centre These two exhibitions focus on the power of storytelling through Aboriginal art. The day’s events include a floor talk by Brian Robinson and a dance performance. $5 /$3 no bookings Free, no bookings 20 WILD THINGS May 22, 10-11am Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Teenagers aged 15 to 19 are Australia’s most dangerous people, according to new figures. Violence isn’t always found in the most predictable places. Brendan Cowell, Brigid Delaney, Michael Parker and Steve Biddulph discuss with Paola Totaro. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 21 LIFE ON TWO WHEELS May 22, 10-11am The Bar at the End of the Wharf Emma Ayres cycled from England to Hong Kong with only a small violin for company, and Greg Foyster quit his job to cycle from Hobart to Cairns. They speak to Chris Flynn about their biking adventures. Free, no bookings 22 SEIDLER’S LEGACY May 22, 10-11am Wharf Theatre 2 Harry Seidler was a key figure in modern architecture yet few people know his fascinating personal story. Hear his biographer Helen O’Neill, his life partner Penelope Seidler and Tim ‘Rosso’ Ross discuss the architect’s legacy. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 23 THE COLLECTORS: NICOLAS BARKER WITH PAUL BRUNTON May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm State Library of NSW - Friend’s Room, Mitchell Building Nicolas Barker has been the editor of The Book Collector and was head of conservation at the British Library. He and Paul Brunton OAM discuss print as a driver of discovery, fakes and forgeries and collecting. $20/$15 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 24 FIONA McFARLANE: THE NIGHT GUEST May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT SR3 VARUNA, THE NATIONAL WRITERS’ HOUSE – A CELEBRATION May 18, 3-5pm Varuna, the National Writers’ House During the past 25 years, Varuna has launched the careers of hundreds of Australian writers. You’re invited to tour the house and gardens and reminisce with those who helped create The Writers’ House. $40 Bookings varuna.com.au SR4 HERE AND NOW: DEBUT FICTION May 19, 10-11.10am Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Felicity Castagna and Kirsten Krauth speak with Irina Dunn about exploring emerging suburban realities in their fiction debuts. SR5 ADRIAN NEWSTEAD: THE DEALER IS THE DEVIL May 19, 11.40am-12.40pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Adrian Newstead talks about his memoir of his life in Aboriginal art with Djon Mundine. SR6 EMMA DONOGHUE: FROG MUSIC May 19, 1.30-2.30pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Kate Fagan interviews Room author Emma Donoghue about her latest novel, Frog Music. SR7 BEYOND AGEISM May 19, 3-4pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Lynne Segal and Patricia Edgar celebrate creativity beyond the stereotypes with Irina Dunn. SR8 BOB CARR: DIARY OF A FOREIGN MINISTER May 19, 4.30-5.30pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Bob Carr reveals the daily life of a Foreign Affairs Minister, speaking to former federal MP Bob Debus. SR9 THE DR DARK MEMORIAL LECTURE: HOW DO WE ADAPT TO A NEW CLIMATIC EPOCH? May 19, 6-7pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Scientists believe we have entered a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene, where human activity has overwhelmed natural systems. Clive Hamilton asks what it means for humans to make the Earth itself into an artefact designed to suit our needs. $15/$10 Bookings varuna.com.au festival highlight 25 REDFERN NOW May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Is Redfern NOW changing the landscape of Australian TV? Join writers Steven McGregor, Adrian Russell Wills and Jon Bell, as they speak to Ross Grayson Bell about producing powerful storytelling. Supported by Bloomberg. Free, no bookings RICHARD FLANAGAN 26 DARK HUMOUR May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Mark Lamprell, Jo Case and Simon Kennedy show that having a sense of humour is often the best way to deal with what life throws at us. Chair: Walter Mason. Free, no bookings Richard Flanagan talks to Geordie Williamson about his acclaimed new novel on the cruelty of war, the tenuousness of life and the impossibility of love. SR13 THE NARROW ROAD TO THE DEEP NORTH May 20, 3-4pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba SR10 NEW FICTION: SURPRISING FAMILIES May 20, 10-11am Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Sally Piper and Annah Faulkner talk with Carol Major about the surprising families at the centre of their novels. SR11 BLACK AND BLUE PANEL May 20, 11.30am-1.30pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Join the illustrators and poets of the Black and Blue group as they talk with Ron Pretty about their powerful new exhibition, followed by a special buffet lunch and entry into their exhibition at the Blue Mountains Cultural Centre. Lunch and exhibition $20 Bookings varuna.com.au SR12 SANDY TOKSVIG: PEAS & QUEUES May 20, 1.30-2.30pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Stephen Measday asks author, comedian and actress Sandi Toksvig about the history and relevance of modern manners – with hilarious results. SR13 RICHARD FLANAGAN: THE NARROW ROAD TO THE DEEP NORTH May 20, 3-4pm SEE HIGHLIGHT SR14 RESTORATION AND RENEWAL OF AUSTRALIAN WRITING May 20, 4.30-5.40pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba Tegan Bennett Daylight talks with Charlotte Wood and Geordie Williamson about Australian literature’s past, present and future, and the Australian way of reading. SR15 NEW POETRY: FREE EVENT May 20, 6-7pm Carrington Hotel, Katoomba John Watson, Roberta Lowing and Philip Hammial launch and read from their new poetry books. Free, no bookings SR16 CHANGING GEARS: READ AND RIDE May 25, 10am-1pm Blue Mountains Cultural Centre Ride in and listen as Greg Foyster reveals all about his pedal-powered detour from the rat race with Gregg Borschmann. After the discussion, take off for a two-hour cycle tour of the mountains. $15 panel/$30 panel and ride. Bookings varuna.com.au WILLOUGHBY SYMPHONY PRESENTS: The Concourse Concert Hall, Chatswood A delicious lunchtime escape Six concert series with Artistic Director Jane Rutter and guest artists LUNCH & SUBSCRIPTION PACKAGES AVAILABLE Tickets on sale now theconcourse.com.au ROMEO AND JULIETTE A DRAMATIC SYMPHONY Saturday 21 June, 7pm Sunday 22 June, 2pm Tickets $5 - $45 Be enchanted by Berlioz’s grand masterpiece of two star-crossed lovers. Dr Nicholas Milton CHIEF CONDUCTOR AND ARTISTIC DIRECTOR theconcourse.com.au | 1300 795 012 The Concourse Box Office: 409 Victoria Ave, Chatswood WILLOUGHBY SYMPHONY IS THE RESIDENT ORCHESTRA OF THE CONCOURSE 6 swf.org.au 27 GABRIELE D’ANNUNZIO: POET, BON VIVANT, WARMONGER GER May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 28 THE PERFECT VICTIM May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Does fictional violence towards women have an influence on the coverage of real crime? Michaela McGuire, Clive Small and P. M. Newton discuss the cross-fertilisation of real and fictional violence with Jon Page. Free, no bookings 115 SIAN PRIOR: SHY May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio Sian Prior talks to Caroline Baum about her heartbreaking new book Shy: A Memoir. Sian applies her journalistic skills to investigate the intense shyness that has infected her life since childhood. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 30 OUT OF THE ASHES May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Leading thinkers and historians Ian Buruma, Frank Dikötter and Sheila Fitzpatrick discuss the far-reaching ramifications of war and how nations recover. Chair: Hamish McDonald. Free, no bookings 31 THE DR DARK MEMORIAL LECTURE: CAN HUMANS SURVIVE THE NEW EPOCH? May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 2 Clive Hamilton asks what would it mean for humans to mould nature as a whole and to make the earth itself into an artefact designed to suit our needs? Presented with Varuna, the National Writers’ House. Free, no bookings 32 DAVID MALOUF: CELEBRATING 80 YEARS May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay In celebration of turning 80, and a lifetime of exquisite writing, David Malouf speaks to Tegan Bennett Daylight about his life and his work, including his new volumes of poems and essays: Earth Hour and A First Place. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 33 COLIN McDOWELL: SHOPPING FOR MIRACLES May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Who decides what we wear? And why do we let them? With humour, gossip and some surprising facts, Colin McDowell plunges you fearlessly into the murky waters of style. Supported by The Woolmark Company. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au city & & Walsh walsh bay City Bay T H U R S D AY AY, M AY 2 2 festival highlight LUCY HUGHES-HALLETT 27 GABRIELE D’ANNUNZIO: POET, BON VIVANT, WARMONGER May 22, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage 42 HOW DO NOVELISTS ENGAGE WITH POLITICS? May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Christos Tsiolkas, Kathryn Heyman and Alexis Wright have deftly tackled the topics of class, migration, climate change and Indigenous affairs, to name a few. They speak to Margot Saville. Supported by Macleay College. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au Lucy Hughes-Hallett speaks to Louise Adler about the 2013 Samuel Johnson Prize-winner The Pike, an extraordinary biography of Gabriele d’Annunzio: infamous lover and warmongering harbinger of Italian fascism. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 91 FOOD BOOKS MUSIC: MARK JENSEN AND PAULINE NGUYEN May 22, 12-3pm Red Lantern on Riley Join the owners and chef of Red Lantern, Pauline Nguyen and Mark Jensen, as they discuss their sumptuous food, writing and inspirations for the first time together in public. Join us for a three-course banquet meal, with jazz pianist Calvin Orosa. $120 pp Bookings 9698 4355, [email protected] 37 EMMA DONOGHUE: LOVE AND BLOODSHED May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage After her bestselling novel Room, Emma Donoghue returns with Frog Music, a tale of intrigue set in San Francisco in 1876. Emma speaks to Suzanne Leal, leading us into a world of love and bloodshed among lowlifes. Supported by BDO. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 34 OPEN WORDS AND WORLDS May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Philharmonia Studio Dinah Roma, Kyoko Yoshida, Nhã Thuyên and Merlinda Bobis discuss writing lives that move freely across language and cultural borders with humour and love for the word and the world. Presented by Vagabond Press. Free, no bookings 38 VIKRAM CHANDRA: GEEK SUBLIME May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft In Geek Sublime, award-winning author Vikram Chandra writes about his two great obsessions: writing and coding. Vikram shares his passions with Adam Spencer. Supported by BDO. Free, no bookings 35 BACK STORY WITH TOM TILLEY May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Australia’s leading journalists share the stories behind the story, giving candid accounts of experiences you won’t see on the nightly news. Hosted by Tom Tilley. Supported by Bloomberg. Free, no bookings 39 WHAT’S HAPPENING IN AUSTRALIAN THEATRE? May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio What do audiences want in Australian theatre and what do playwrights want to give them? Hear from David Williamson, Lally Katz and Tom Wright who speak with Michaela Kalowski. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets. sydneytheatre.org.au 36 ART AND POETRY: OUR STORY BEGINS… May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Ken Bolton, Jenny Watson, Elizabeth Campbell and Prudence Flint have swapped poems and artworks to create something new. They discuss the relationship between poetry and visual art with Robert Adamson and Johanna Featherstone. Presented by The Red Room Company. Free, no bookings 41 SEX AND LITERATURE May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 2 Talking about sex can get even the coolest people hot under the collar. John Baxter, Kate Belle and John Purcell reveal their secrets about sex in the written form to Angela Meyer. Free, no bookings 40 PEN FREE VOICES LECTURE May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Anne Summers gives the 2014 Sydney PEN Free Voices Lecture on how current politics and media operations limit freedom of expression. Presented by Sydney PEN. Free, no bookings 47 EYEWITNESS May 22, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Foreign correspondents go unarmed into extreme danger to tell their stories. Jeremy Scahill, Yasmine El Rashidi and Zoe Daniel share their tales from the battle zones of Egypt, South-East Asia, Afghanistan and more with Paola Totaro. Supported by Macleay College. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 48 JANETTE TURNER HOSPITAL: THE CLAIMANT May 22, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage In The Claimant, a contemporary reworking of the Tichborne case, a Queensland cattle farmer is the seemingly reluctant claimant of the Vanderbilt fortune. Janette Turner Hospital speaks to Andrew Riemer about the ultimately elusive nature of identity. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 43 JESSICA JACKLEY: FOUNDER OF KIVA AND PROFOUNDER May 22, 1.30-2.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Entrepreneur Jessica Jackley has pioneered funding and lending platforms as cofounder of Kiva and ProFounder. Focusing on the sharing economy and social justice, she speaks to business commentator Whitney Fitzsimmons about her experiences. Supported by Macquarie Group. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 49 LITERARY FRIENDSHIPS: STEPHANIE DOWRICK & WALTER MASON May 22, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Stephanie Dowrick and Walter Mason discuss their literary friendship based on a mutual fascination with spirituality, self-development and books. Free, no bookings 44 CITY OF SHADOWS REVISITED May 22, 2-3.30pm The Mint Join arts writer and photographer Pedro de Almeida as he talks with curator Nerida Campbell and author Peter Doyle about the peculiar and poignant stories of City of Shadows, Sydney police photographs 1912-1948. Free, no bookings 50 DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES May 22, 3-4pm Richard Wherrett Studio Seeing the world from different perspectives can be illuminating and transforming – hear Ceridwen Dovey, Chris Flynn and Fiona McFarlane speak with Angela Meyer. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 45 YVONNE ADHIAMBO OWUOR May 22, 3-4pm Philharmonia Studio Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor talks to ABC RN’s Michael Cathcart about her debut novel Dust, and explores its world of loss and beauty, against the backdrop of Kenyan history and politics. Free, no bookings 51 BOB CARR: DIARY OF A FOREIGN MINISTER May 22, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 1 Take a look behind the scenes in Bob Carr’s Diary of a Foreign Minister. We get a sense of the whirlwind of events, the thrill of being part of history and the exhaustion of constant travel. He shares all with Marion Wilkinson. Free, no bookings 46 HUW LEWIS-JONES: THE CONQUEST OF EVEREST May 22, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Using George Lowe’s original photographs from the first conquest of Everest, explorer and historian Huw Lewis-Jones plots the legendary ascent. This visual spectacle allows the audience to retrace the steps of the triumphant expedition. Chair: David Francis. Supported by Bloomberg. Free, no bookings 52 JACQUES ROUBAUD: WRITER, MATHEMATICIAN AND OULIPEAN May 22, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 2 The diverse interests of French writer and mathematician Jacques Roubaud brought him to the collective Oulipo, which included Georges Perec and Italo Calvino. He talks to Chris Andrews about his illustrious career. Supported by The University of Western Sydney. Free, no bookings OUR IDEAS LEAD THE WAY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES The Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Sydney is passionate about the electrifying debates surrounding today’s biggest issues. That’s why we are proud of our continuing partnership with the 2014 Sydney Writers’ Festival. Among the many highlights of this year’s festival will be Dr Luke Russell (pictured) from our Department of Philosophy, discussing the concept of evil. Is evil merely a myth or a fiction that belongs in horror movies, or does it play an important role in contemporary moral thought? To learn more, visit sydney.edu.au/arts/swf 14/3910 CRICOS 00026A city & walsh bay SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 T H U R S D AY AY, M AY 2 2 8 swf.org.au 53 AN UNCONVENTIONAL FAITH May 22, 3-4pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Reza Aslan, Antony Loewenstein and Jim Al-Khalili talk about faith and believing in something with or without religion with John Cleary, presenter of Sunday Nights on ABC Local Radio. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 54 REFLECTIONS ON THE AUSTRALIAN PSYCHE May 22, 3-4pm Wharf Theatre 2 Gabrielle Carey, Michael Pembroke and David Hunt discuss Australian identity, using the perceptions and attitudes of their subjects, Randolph Stow, Arthur Phillip and various colonial Australians. Chair: Geordie Williamson. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 55 LAUGHING IN THE FACE OF ADVERSITY May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Philharmonia Studio Only when times are tough do we understand what we’re capable of. Tim Ferguson, Mark Lamprell and Liam Pieper tell us how they’ve dealt with adversity. Chair: Suzanne Leal. Free, no bookings 56 MATTHEW LUHN: TELLING STORIES WITH PIXAR May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Space Join Pixar’s head of story, Matthew Luhn, as he discusses his experience with the animation studio, on films from Toy Story to Finding Nemo. He shows you how to become a better storyteller. Chair: 702 ABC Sydney’s Robbie Buck. Supported by Bloomberg. Free, no bookings 63 DIRTY SECRETS: UNCOVERED ASIO FILES May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Imagine you’ve been spied on for years, then you get a chance to peek into your files. Anne Summers, Michael Kirby and Elizabeth Evatt did just that and wrote about their experiences in Dirty Secrets. They talk with editor Meredith Burgmann. Supported by K & L Gates. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au festival highlight ELEANOR CATTON 66 THE LUMINARIES May 22, 6.30-7.45pm City Recital Hall Angel Place Eleanor Catton’s Man Booker Prize-winning novel is an exquisitely crafted epic of historical intrigue and literary accomplishment. She speaks to Steven Gale about The Luminaries. Supported by Man Investments. $32/$26 Bookings 9250 1988 or 8256 2222, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au or cityrecitalhall.com 57 EXCEPTIONAL TELEVISION May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Are great TV series comparable to the novel? Hear from writers of exceptional contemporary television: Peter Duncan (Rake), Steven McGregor (Redfern NOW) and A. M. Homes (The L Word) as they speak with David Knox. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 59 SOMBRE THE NIGHT IS: THE POETRY OF THE GREAT WAR May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft The horrors of the trenches inspired some of the most powerful verse of the 20th century. Hear Judy Davis, Jeff Sparrow, Omar Musa and more read the war poetry that resonates with them. Free, no bookings 58 ALEX MILLER: COAL CREEK May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Prize-winning author Alex Miller returns to the Queensland hinterland of his youth in his latest novel, Coal Creek. He speaks with Ashley Hay about this exploration of tragedy and betrayal, as well as the beauty of lasting love. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 60 JOHN BAXTER: PARIS AT THE END OF THE WORLD May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio John Baxter speaks to Chris Hanley about Paris’s social life during the Great War: the show business, crime, drugs and sex. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au Proud major partner of the Sydney Writers’ Festival 61 MINING MOGULS May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Andrew Burrell and Paddy Manning discuss the larger-than-life personalities and fortunes of Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest and Nathan Tinkler, with Lateline’s Emma Alberici. Free, no bookings 62 FABULOUS WOMEN’S FICTION May 22, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Dance 2 Hear some of the best women’s fiction in Australia today. The stories written by Anita Heiss, Judy Nunn and Susan Duncan capture our imagination and keep us wanting more. Chair: Fiona Harari. Free, no bookings 64 ALICE WALKER: BEAUTY IN TRUTH May 22, 4.30-6pm Wharf Theatre 2 The documentary Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth offers audiences a penetrating look at the life and art of the world-renowned writer and human rights activist. After the screening Alice Walker speaks briefly. $18/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 65 CELEBRATING THE FICTIONAL WOMAN May 22, 6-8pm Simmer on the Bay Join Tara Moss and friends in a celebration of her new book The Fictional Woman, including a conversation between Tara and journalist Julia Baird, with music by DJ Sveta. (18+ event). Supported by The University of Sydney. Free, bookings essential, email [email protected] 66 ELEANOR CATTON: THE LUMINARIES May 22, 6.30-7.45pm SEE HIGHLIGHT Sharpen your writing skills with a national leader in creative writing • Undergraduate degrees • Postgraduate research options • UNSWriting program Cultivating flows of ideas and good writing Connecting writers, publishers and students Offering special events, workshops and public talks arts.unsw.edu.au Never Stand Still Faculty of Arts Social Sciences *2012 Excellence in Research for Australia report Cricos Provider No. 00098G MAGAZINE “I feel like I have been waiting for this magazine all my life.” “New Philosopher is one of the best things happening in Australia.” “It utterly blew me away. ” “Fascinating and challenging material, attractively presented, well bound what more could one ask?” NewPhilosopher.com “New Philosopher has given me hope for the future of this country’s media landscape and for the public discussion emanating from it.” Just $15 per issue at news agencies and bookstores around Australia and NZ. Or subscribe online at https://www.newphilosopher.com/subscribe/ city & walsh bay SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 T H U R S D AY AY, M AY 2 2 / F R I D AY AY, Y M AY 2 3 10 swf.org.au 68 EVENINGS WITH DOMINIC KNIGHT May 22, 7-10pm Sydney Dance Lounge Grab a drink and a bite to eat while you join 702 ABC Sydney Evenings host Dominic Knight for a special version of NORMAN the Quiz and live music, plus engaging discussions with visiting authors. Presented with 702 ABC Sydney. Free, no bookings 69 FESTIVAL CLUB May 22, 7-11.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Stay up late with SWF. Featuring bedtime stories from Story Factory, The Chaser’s Empty Vessel with Julian Morrow and Chris Taylor, and Eddie Sharp’s infamous Erotic Fan Fiction. $15 at the door, details swf.org.au 70 SANDI TOKSVIG: MY VALENTINE May 22, 8.30-9.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT FRIDAY 71 COFFEE AND PAPERS WITH THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, JEREMY SCAHILL AND ANTONY LOEWENSTEIN May 23, 9-10am The Bar at the End of the Wharf Join Sherrill Nixon, The Sydney Morning Herald’s journalists and SWF special guests Jeremy Scahill and Antony Loewenstein to hear their take on what’s making news headlines today and the changing nature of journalism. Supported by The Sydney Morning Herald. Free, no bookings festival highlight SANDI TOKSVIG 70 MY VALENTINE May 22, 8.30-9.30pm City Recital Hall Angel Place Sandi Toksvig - comedian, novelist, actor, broadcaster, show-off and international treasure - performs her smash-hit solo show. A witty evening of stand-up, stories and fascinating facts. Supported by the City of Sydney. $40/$32 Bookings 9250 1988 or 8256 2222, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au or cityrecitalhall.com 72 MORNINGS WITH LINDA MOTTRAM May 23, 9-11am Pier 2/3 Club Stage Be part of the live audience as Linda Mottram presents her 702 ABC Sydney Mornings program. Hear from some of the Festival’s leading and emerging authors as they explore a range of thought-provoking ideas and issues. Presented with 702 ABC Sydney. Free, no bookings 73 SHAPESHIFTERS May 23, 10-11am Philharmonia Studio Can we ever really escape who we are? Lenny Bartulin, Janette Turner Hospital and Robert Wainwright attempt to get to the heart of the elusive nature of identity, in discussion with Jill Eddington. Free, no bookings 74 CAMILLA LÄCKBERG: A LIFE OF CRIME May 23, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Main Stage Camilla Läckberg is the rock star of Nordic Noir, having sold more than five million books. She talks to ABC TV’s Jane Hutcheon about her new novel Buried Angels and her life of crime. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets. sydneytheatre.org.au 75 ON CRAFT: THE QUEST May 23, 10-11am Pier 2/3 The Loft What is required to create stories that transform? Novelist Kathryn Heyman works through elements of narrative structure to explore how story is made and why it matters now more than ever. Chair: Elizabeth Johnstone. Free, no bookings 76 THE BATTLE FOR EGYPT May 23, 10-11am Richard Wherrett Studio Egyptian writer Yasmine El Rashidi speaks to Foreign Correspondent’s Sophie McNeill about The Battle for Egypt, a series of eyewitness accounts of the Egyptian revolution as it unfolded. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 77 RITES OF PASSAGE May 23, 10-11am Sydney Dance 1 Growing up can be a shocking period of change. Steve Bisley, Peter Timms and Christie Thompson place an unflinching literary gaze on what it is to be young in all of its pleasures and pains. They discuss with Fiona Harari. Free, no bookings 78 STATES OF GRIEF May 23, 10-11am Sydney Dance 2 Everyone, at some point, suffers the trauma of a close relative dying. How do we cope with grief? Simon Kennedy, Mandy Sayer and Jono Lineen discuss love, loss and moving on with Susan Wyndham. Free, no bookings 79 ADAM JOHNSON: THE ORPHAN MASTER’S SON May 23, 10-11am Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay In his epic Pulitzer Prize-winning novel set in North Korea, Adam Johnson portrays a world rife with corruption and cruelty in a story of camaraderie and love. He speaks to Julian Morrow. Supported by The University of Sydney. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 80 ALEX MONROE: A MEMOIR OF MAKING THINGS May 23, 10-11am Wharf Theatre 2 World-renowned jeweller Alex Monroe (Two Turtle Doves: A Memoir of Making Things) talks with Caroline Baum about growing up and transforming fleeting thoughts into exquisite jewellery. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 81 CULTIVATING AUSTRALIAN MODERNISM May 23, 10.30am-12pm The Mint Author of Cultivating Modernism Richard Aitken and Sydney Living Museums Assistant Director Ian Innes discuss the Australian history of the modernist garden with ABC RN By Design’s Fenella Kernebone. Free, no bookings 82 CONVERSATIONS: RICHARD FIDLER WITH JIM AL-KHALILI May 23, 11am-12pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Join Richard Fidler for a live broadcast of his ABC Radio program Conversations, with guest Jim Al-Khalili, author of Paradox: The Nine Greatest Enigmas in Science. Presented with 702 ABC Sydney. Free, no bookings 83 WAVES OF EXTINCTION May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Philharmonia Studio Waves of extinction are sweeping the world – join Thomas Suddendorf, Thom van Dooren and Eben Kirksey, who speak with Deborah Bird Rose about which species we choose to favour. Supported by UNSW Arts & Social Sciences. Free, no bookings thecuriositylecture series Don’t miss The Curiosity Lecture Series on the Bloomberg Stage, with sessions all day Friday and Saturday May 23-24. Open your mind to curious subjects great and small, from travel to love, Epicurus to evil. Delve into the French literary collective Oulipo, ponder the loss of Sundays and discover how to eat and live well. Featuring some of the most interesting thinkers today, including Robert Dessaix, Michael Kirby, Dr Ranjana Srivastava, Rebecca Huntley, Lawrence Hill and John Armstrong. Hosted by philosopher, writer and jogging enthusiast Damon Young and Elizabeth Johnstone. Supported by Bloomberg. CUR 1 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON ART AS THERAPY May 23, 10-10.40am Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Philosophical art historian John Armstrong looks at how art isn’t just important for its own sake. It is an instrument, or tool, that can compensate for the frailties of human nature and help us manage our lives better. Free, no bookings CUR 2 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON EPICURUS May 23, 11-11.40am Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Epicureanism as first conceived was a touch-the-earth-lightly philosophy. Luke Slattery looks at how we can apply this ancient creed about how to be happy with less. Free, no bookings CUR 3 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON WHY I LEAVE HOME May 23, 12-12.40pm SEE HIGHLIGHT CUR 4 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON THE BUSH COMING BACK May 23, 1.30-2.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage The bush has been largely marginalised in Australian writing. Bill Garner explores whether with increasing environmental sensitivity and a desire to discover identity through place, the bush is making a comeback. Free, no bookings CUR 5 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON BLOOD May 23, 2.30-3.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Blood determines identity, race, citizenship and even athletic prowess. Join Lawrence Hill for a talk about Blood: The Stuff of Life, drawn from his 2013 Massey Lectures in Canada. Free, no bookings CUR 6 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON OFFENCE May 23, 3.30-4.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Richard King looks at the taking of offence – the way it has become a form of political currency and how indignation is whipped up and weaponised, with hurt feelings paraded like union banners. Free, no bookings festival highlight ROBERT DESSAIX CUR 3 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON WHY I LEAVE HOME May 23, 12-12.40pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage CUR 11 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON LOVE May 24, 1.30-2.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Philosopher David Braddon-Mitchell tells us all about love. What is a whim and what isn’t? He looks at what love is and explores how we can discover what we love. Free, no bookings CUR 12 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON THE LOSS OF SUNDAYS May 24, 2.30-3.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Mary Zournazi explores the loss of social time, the time of gathering and face-to-face communication. Given the contemporary commodification of time, how can we reclaim periods of rest and relaxation? Free, no bookings Why would anyone go to Brisbane? Is Rome worth a look? What has Shintoism got to do with any of this? Robert Dessaix argues that travelling well and often is essential to the civilised life. Free, no bookings CUR 7 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON LIVING WELL May 23, 4.30-5.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Dr Ranjana Srivastava describes poignant reflections on life at the bedsides of her terminally ill patients. As the sun sets over a life, what are the things that really matter? Free, no bookings CUR 9 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON DEFENCE OF EVIL May 24, 11-11.40am Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Many of us use the word “evil” to describe wartime atrocities and serial killers, but is it naive or misguided to believe that evil exists? Luke Russell delves into the subject. Free, no bookings CUR 8 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON OULIPO May 24, 10-10.40am Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage The collective known as the Oulipo was founded in Paris in 1960 and is still flourishing. Chris Andrews looks at what it is exactly and what interest it might hold for us today. Free, no bookings CUR 10 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON THE ETHOS OF EATING May 24, 12-12.40pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Rebecca Huntley looks at why food and cooking has always been so important to her and what she has learned listening to thousands of Australians talk about their approach to buying and cooking food. Free, no bookings CUR 13 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON WHAT GANDHI WOULD DO May 24, 3.30-4.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage Former High Court Justice Michael Kirby shows how remarkably useful Gandhi’s insights remain when confronting the world’s most pressing current issues: women’s rights, climate change, animal rights and sex and sexuality. Free, no bookings CUR 14 CURIOSITY LECTURE SERIES: ON THE SOVIET UNION May 24, 4.30-5.10pm Pier 2/3 Bloomberg Stage While empires disappear, memories live on. The Soviet Union ceased to exist in 1991 but its ghost remains in Putin’s Russia. Historian Sheila Fitzpatrick explores the contradictions. Free, no bookings city & walsh bay F R I D AY, AY M AY 2 3 84 FOLLOWING IN THE FOOTSTEPS May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Finding out what happened to your relatives during war can be illuminating on a personal and historical level. Paul Livingston, John Baxter and Ian Buruma explore stories from their families and the wider historical picture. Chair: ABC RN’s Kate Evans. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 90 TURNING THE TIDE May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Ali Cobby Eckermann and Henry Reynolds speak about the Northern Territory intervention, its historical context and the wider implications. Presented with the Faculty of Education & Social Work, the University of Sydney. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 85 LYNNE SEGAL: THE MARCH OF TIME May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Social activist, feminist, author and academic Lynne Segal turns her formidable gaze towards the thorny issue of aging. She discusses her new book Out of Time, which has garnered widespread acclaim. Chair: Tracey Spicer. Free, no bookings 92 AFTERNOONS WITH JAMES VALENTINE May 23, 1-3pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage James Valentine hosts a fun-filled spin on the world of writing in this edition of the 702 ABC Sydney Afternoons program. Prepare to be entertained, as anything is possible with James. Presented with 702 ABC Sydney. Free, no bookings 86 JUDGING WOMEN May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio Do we judge books by women differently? Booker Prize-winner Eleanor Catton, 2014 Stella Prize judge Tony Birch and the newly awarded 2014 Stella Prize winner speak with Aviva Tuffield. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 87 THOMAS KENEALLY TRIBUTE May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Celebrate 50 years of writing from Australia’s national living treasure, Thomas Keneally. David Williamson, Meredith Curnow and Paul Sharrad review his illustrious career with Geordie Williamson. Presented with the ASA Writers Benevolent Fund. Free, no bookings 88 THE QUARREL BETWEEN POETRY AND PHILOSOPHY May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 2 What are the connections between poetry and reason? Berndt Sellheim, Jakob Ziguras and Luke Fischer discuss the philosophical significance of poetry in their work with ABC RN’s Joe Gelonesi. Supported by UNSW Arts & Social Sciences. Free, no bookings 89 BETTY CHURCHER SPEAKS TO BEN QUILTY May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 93 THE REAL SYDNEY May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Philharmonia Studio Hear about the real Sydney – about Kings Cross, Parramatta and the inner-city, with Steven McGregor (Redfern NOW), Louis Nowra (Kings Cross) and Felicity Castagna (The Incredible Here and Now). Chair: Delia Falconer. Free, no bookings 94 THOMAS KENEALLY: A LIFE OF BOOKS May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Thomas Keneally is one of Australia’s greatest and most beloved writers. Celebrating 50 years of writing, Peter Pierce speaks to Tom about his extraordinary career. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 95 MODERN ETIQUETTE May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Do manners really matter? They certainly do. Join writer and comedian Sandi Toksvig and writer Lucinda Holdforth for an insightful and witty exploration of etiquette today. Free, no bookings 96 EIMEAR McBRIDE: A GIRL IS A HALF-FORMED THING May 23, 1.30-2.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 97 TIM COPE: ON THE TRAIL OF GENGHIS KHAN May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft In On the Trail of Genghis Khan Tim Cope travels on horseback across the entire Eurasian steppe from Mongolia to Hungary. He gives a lively presentation of his extraordinary journey. Chair: Benjamin Law. Free, no bookings swf.org.au 11 118 THE MADONNA–WHORE AND OTHER FICTIONS May 23, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Tara Moss, Nakkiah Lui, Emma Donoghue and Kate Ceberano have been branded with various labels throughout their lives. They tackle old fictions with Tracey Spicer. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au festival highlight BETTY CHURCHER 89 BETTY CHURCHER SPEAKS TO BEN QUILTY May 23, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay 105 LITERARY FRIENDSHIPS: HILARY BELL & ANTONIA PESENTI May 23, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Hilary Bell and Antonia Pesenti met in Paris in 1995, and continued their friendship across continents and decades. They discuss how it was that a playwright and an architect found a way to collaborate. Free, no bookings Betty Churcher has been at the centre of the Australian art world for almost 30 years. She speaks to award-winning artist Ben Quilty about her work Australian Notebooks, and the art at the heart of both of their lives. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 98 KEEPING IT REAL: CRIME AS SOCIAL HISTORY May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 2 The social novel never went away, it went undercover to re-emerge in crime fiction. Join Adrian McKinty, P. M. Newton and Malla Nunn as they discuss blending crime fiction with social history. Supported by UNSW Arts & Social Sciences. Free, no bookings 99 AMY TAN: THE VALLEY OF AMAZEMENT May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Amy Tan speaks to ABC RN’s Michael Cathcart about her new bestselling novel The Valley of Amazement. As with her classic The Joy Luck Club, it is a deeply moving narrative of love and family secrets. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 100 FRANK DIKÖTTER: THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERATION May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Frank Dikötter, whose work has changed the way we view modern China, speaks about The Tragedy of Liberation, and the impact of communism on the lives of ordinary people. With ABC TV’s Jane Hutcheon. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 101 HARRY SEIDLER: A SINGULAR VISION May 23, 2-3.30pm The Mint Join author Helen O’Neill in conversation with Dr Caroline Butler-Bowdon of Sydney Living Museums for this exploration of Helen’s work researching and writing the remarkable life story of pre-eminent architect Harry Seidler. Free, no bookings 102 THE BOOK CLUB May 23, 3-4pm ABC Studios Join ABC TV’s Jennifer Byrne, with regular panellists Marieke Hardy and Jason Steger and Festival guests for the taping of a special Sydney Writers’ Festival edition of The Book Club. Presented with ABC TV. Free, bookings essential 8333 3644, [email protected] 103 STRANGER THAN FICTION? HISTORICAL MEMORY AND THE PAST May 23, 3-4pm Philharmonia Studio Winners of the 2013 NSW Premier’s History Awards Janet Butler, Patti Miller and Jackie French discuss with Tanya Evans how their diverse approaches can reveal different truths about our past. Presented by the History Council of NSW and the State Library of NSW. Free, no bookings 106 MIND THE BODY May 23, 3-4pm Richard Wherrett Studio Don’t know your Chandler from your Crumley, your Hammett from your Highsmith? John Connolly, crime novelist and co-editor of Books To Die For, discloses the joys and sorrows of the modern mystery. Chair: Jon Page. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 107 TURNING A BLIND EYE May 23, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 1 David Marr, Joanne McCarthy and Michaela McGuire speak to Monica Attard about the curious gap between ethics and the law and why some institutions are above it. Free, no bookings festival highlight EIMEAR McBRIDE 96 A GIRL IS A HALF-FORMED THING May 23, 1.30-2.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio Winner of the inaugural Goldsmith Prize for “creative daring”, A Girl is a Half-formed Thing has been called virtuosic, haunting and utterly compelling. Eimear McBride speaks to Geordie Williamson about her debut novel. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au A mighty line up of playwrights and penmanship There’ll be Russian revolution in Andrew Upton’s adaptation of Gorky’s Children of the Sun and finely-plotted crime in Switzerland by Joanna Murray-Smith. of Lucy Prebble’s The Effect Effect,, and the world premiere of Sue Smith’s Kryptonite asks if desire can transcend cross-cultural politics. Marius von Mayenburg’s shape-shifting Perplex nods to Stoppard and Beckett. Jez Butterworth’s Olivier Award-winning Mojo douses 1950s rock ’n’ roll in verbal menace. Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac has plenty of swashbuckling sword and word play to satisfy fearless hearts, and one of Shakespeare’s most complex protagonists plays with dark, dark magic in Macbeth. An ethically questionable romance is examined in the Australian premiere Fill yourself up with the very best classics and new works from award-winning writers. sydneytheatre.com.au/2014 9250 1777 12 swf.org.au city & walsh ba ay event liftout T H U R S D AY AY, M AY 2 2 — S U N D AY, AY M AY 2 5 SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 T H U R S D AY, M AY 2 2 SYDNEY THEATRE RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO WHARF THEATRE 2 THE BAR AT THE END OF WHARF THE SYDNEY DANCE 1 SYDNEY SYDNEY THEATRE SYDNEY DANCE DANCE 2 LOUNGE RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO PHILHARMONIA PIER 2/3 STUDIO MAIN STAGE PIER 2/3 CLUB STAGE PIER 2/3 THE LOFT Wild Things 20 11am 11.30am 12pm 12.30pm David Malouf: Celebrating 80 Years 32 Let the Land Speak 16 Seidler’s Legacy 22 Coffee & Papers with The SMH & Richard King 10 Life on Two Wheels 21 Colin McDowell: Shopping for Miracles 33 Sian Prior: Shy 115 9.30am Mandy Sayer: The Poet’s Wife and A Trilogy of Memoir 17 Out of the Ashes 30 Inspired by Nature 18 Books & Arts Meet the NSW Premier’s Literary Daily with Michael Cathcart 19 Award Winners 11 A Mind of One’s Own 14 Fiona McFarlane: Gabriele d’Annunzio: Poet, Bon Vivant, The Night Guest Warmonger 27 24 Dr Dark Lecture: Can Humans Survive The New Epoch? 31 On Craft: Marathon Reading: Asia Pacific Poetry Storytelling & the Storyteller 15 13 Dark Humour 26 The Naked Bookshelf 12 The Perfect Victim 28 Redfern NOW 25 1pm 1.30pm 2pm 2.30pm How do Novelists Engage with Politics? 42 3.30pm An Unconventional Faith 53 4pm 5pm 5.30pm Dirty Secrets: Uncovered ASIO Files 63 What’s Happening in Australian Theatre? 39 Different Perspectives 50 Jessica Jackley: Founder of Kiva & Profounder 43 PEN Free Voices Lecture: Anne Summers 40 Reflections on the Australian Psyche 54 John Baxter: Paris at the End of the World 60 Bob Carr: Jacques Roubaud: Diary of a Foreign Writer, Mathematician Minister 51 & Oulipean 52 Mining Moguls 61 Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth 64 Emma Donoghue: Love & Bloodshed 37 Open Words & Worlds 34 Sex & Literature 41 Fabulous Women’s Fiction 62 Art and Poetry: Our Story Begins… 36 Vikram Chandra: Geek Sublime 38 Back Story with Tom Tilley 35 8pm 8.30pm 9pm 9.30pm 10pm 11.30am 12pm 12.30pm 1.30pm 2pm 2.30pm 3pm Eyewitness 47 Literary Friendships: Huw Lewis-Jones: Stephanie Dowrick The Conquest & Walter Mason 49 of Everest 46 Laughing in the Face of Adversity 55 Alex Miller: Coal Creek 58 Exceptional Television 57 4.30pm Sombre the Night Is: Matthew Luhn: The Poetry of the Telling Stories with 5pm Great War 59 Pixar 56 5.30pm 3.30pm 4pm 6pm 6.30pm 7pm Also showing tonight at City Recital Hall: 66 Eleanor Catton: The Luminaries, 70 Sandi Toksvig: My Valentine. 7.30pm Story Factory 69 ABC 702 Evenings with Dominic Knight 68 8pm 8.30pm 9pm The Chaser’s Empty Vessel 69 9.30pm 10pm 10.30pm 10.30pm Erotic Fan Fiction 69 11pm 11.30pm 11pm 11.30pm 12am 12am On Craft z 11am Janette Turner Hospital: The Claimant 48 6.30pm 7.30pm 10.30am Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor 45 6pm 7pm 10am 1pm 3pm 4.30pm SYDNEY THEATRE 9am 10am 10.30am S A T U R D AY, M AY 2 4 PIER 2/3 BLOOMBERG STAGE 9am 9.30am Coffee and Papers Literary Friendships Festival Club Curiosity Lecture Series SYDNEY THEATRE WHARF THEATRE 2 THE BAR AT THE END OF WHARF THE SYDNEY DANCE 1 SYDNEY SYDNEY SYDNEY THEATRE DANCE DANCE 2 LOUNGE PHILHARMONIA PIER 2/3 RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO STUDIO MAIN STAGE PIER 2/3 CLUB STAGE PIER 2/3 THE LOFT 10am 10.30am 11am 11.30am 12pm 12.30pm Adam Johnson: Alex Monroe: The Battle for Egypt The Orphan A Memoir of 76 Master’s Son 79 Making Things 80 Betty Churcher Speaks to Ben Quilty 89 Judging Women 86 Turning the Tide 90 Rites of Passage 77 States of Grief 78 Shapeshifters 73 Thomas Keneally The Quarrel Between Poetry & Philosophy Tribute 88 87 Waves of Extinction 83 Camilla Läckberg: A Life of Crime 74 Following in the Footsteps 84 10am On Craft: The Quest 75 ABC Conversations: Richard Fidler with Jim Al-Khalili 82 Lynne Segal: The March of Time 85 Curiosity: On Art as Therapy CUR 1 Curiosity: On Epicurus CUR 2 3.30pm 4pm Malcolm Fraser: Dangerous Allies 109 4.30pm 5pm 5.30pm 12pm Curiosity: On Why I Leave Home CUR 3 Richard Flanagan: Love & War 104 Mind the Body 106 Sheila Chisholm, Australian Ingenue 29 Frank Dikötter: The Tragedy of Liberation 100 Leunig: Holy Fool 110 The Big Read 119 Modern Etiquette 95 Keeping it Real: Crime as Social History 98 The Real Sydney 93 Ross Garnaut: Dog Days 116 Thomas Keneally: A Life of Books 94 Stranger than Fiction? The Madonna-Whore Historical Memory & Other Fictions 118 & the Past 103 The Rally Cry: Turning a Blind Eye Stories that Inspire 107 Change 108 An Iranian talking to A Life in Rhythm an Israeli: Reza Aslan 112 with Ari Shavit 113 Beyond the Block 117 ABC 702 Afternoons with James Valentine 92 ABC 702 Drive with Richard Glover, featuring Thank God It’s Fridays 111 Tim Cope: On the Curiosity: On the Bush Trail of Genghis Coming Back CUR 4 2pm Khan 97 2.30pm Literary Friendships: Hilary Bell & Antonia Pesenti 105 7.30pm 8pm 8.30pm 10.30pm 11pm 11.30pm 12am 3pm 3.30pm Curiosity: On Offence CUR 6 4pm 4.30pm Philip Nitschke: Damned If I Do 114 A Critical Path – Leading Where? 120 ABC RN’s Drive 122 7pm 10pm Curiosity: On Blood CUR 5 Curiosity: On Living Well CUR 7 5pm 5.30pm 6pm 6.30pm 9.30pm 12.30pm 1.30pm 6pm 9pm 11.30am 1pm Eimear McBride: A 2pm Amy Tan: The Valley Girl is a Half-formed of Amazement 99 Thing 96 2.30pm 3pm 10.30am 11am 1pm 1.30pm Patrick White Playwrights’ Award & Fellowship 125 Also showing tonight at Sydney Town Hall: 123 What’s Normal Anyway? 126 Humour & Debauchery with a Few Manners in Between. Mixtape Memoirs 124 6.30pm 7pm 7.30pm 8pm 8.30pm 9pm The Chaser’s Empty Vessel 124 9.30pm 10pm 10.30pm Spoken Four 124 SYDNEY DANCE 1 SYDNEY SYDNEY THEATRE SYDNEY DANCE DANCE 2 LOUNGE RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO PHILHARMONIA PIER 2/3 STUDIO MAIN STAGE PIER 2/3 CLUB STAGE PIER 2/3 THE LOFT PIER 2/3 BLOOMBERG STAGE 9am 9am Coffee & Papers with The SMH & Zoe Daniel 127 9.30am 10am 10.30am 11am 11.30am 12pm 12.30pm Australia & the World 135 A Coloured History 132 Collette Dinnigan: Obsessive Creative 136 9.30am 10am Why Gallipoli? The Cult of Anzac Today 133 The Politics of Translation 134 Culture Wars 128 The Joy of Art 130 Reza Aslan: Zealot 144 The Science of Science Fiction 141 Seven Sisters 145 Revolution & Repression 142 Simple Living 143 Anatomy of the Song 137 Christos Tsiolkas speaks to David Marr 139 The Art of Indignation 153 Arab Autumn 150 Prisoner X: Rafael Epstein 154 Family Ties 151 Hang Up Philosophy 152 The Changing Face of Indigenaity: Now & Beyond 146 Gary Shteyngart: From Russia with Love 148 1pm 1.30pm 2pm 2.30pm 3pm Ari Shavit: 3.30pm My Promised Land 162 4pm 4.30pm 5pm 5.30pm The Art of War 170 A Quirky History of Australia 159 #Three Jerks 163 Mark Isaacs on Nauru: The Undesirables 160 Epic Nomad Adventures 161 7pm On Craft: Trauma Narratives 131 Curiosity: On Oulipo CUR8 11am True Crimes: John Once Upon a Time: 12pm Safran & Michaela Myth & Fairytale Curiosity: On the Ethos 140 McGuire 138 12.30pm of Eating CUR10 1pm Exceptional Lives 167 Jeremy Scahill: Dirty Wars 171 Writing Bodies 168 Murdoch: On the News 169 A.M. Homes: May We Be Forgiven 175 Animated Stories 147 Alexis Wright: The Swan Book 149 Poetry and Music Salon – Do Poets Tell the Truth? 173 Short & Sweet 164 Kate Ceberano 165 People of Letters 172 Curiosity: On Love CUR11 8.30pm 2pm 2.30pm Curiosity: On The Loss of Sundays CUR12 3pm 3.30pm Curiosity: On What Ghandi Would Do CUR13 4pm 4.30pm Lally Katz: Looking Curiosity: On The Soviet Union CUR14 5pm for Guidance 166 5.30pm 6pm Dirty Wars: Film Screening 174 6.30pm 7pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 8pm 10.30am Curiosity: On Defence 11.30am of Evil CUR9 Meet The SMH Best Literary Friendships: New Worlds: A Love Affair with Young Australian Robert Dessaix & Digital Storytelling China 158 Novelists 155 Michelle de Kretser 157 156 6pm 6.30pm Toxin Toxout: Removing Toxic Chemicals 129 1.30pm Story Club 176 5 X 15 177 8pm 8.30pm 9pm 9pm The Chaser’s Empty Vessel 176 9.30pm 10pm 9.30pm 10pm 10.30pm 10.30pm SWF Up Late 176 11pm 11.30pm 11pm 11.30pm 12am 12am SYDNEY THEATRE 9.30am ABC 702 Mornings with Linda Mottram 72 BAR AT THE END OF WHARF THE Coffee and Papers Literary Friendships Festival Club Curiosity Lecture Series Family Day S U N D AY, M AY 2 5 9am 9.30am WHARF THEATRE 2 On Craft PIER 2/3 BLOOMBERG STAGE 9am Coffee & Papers: The SMH, J Scahill & A Loewenstein 71 RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO Family Day F R I D AY, M AY 2 3 RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO swf.org.au 13 11pm 11.30pm 12am RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO WHARF THEATRE 2 THE BAR AT THE END OF WHARF THE SYDNEY DANCE 1 SYDNEY SYDNEY SYDNEY THEATRE DANCE DANCE 2 LOUNGE PHILHARMONIA PIER 2/3 RICHARD WHERRETT STUDIO STUDIO MAIN STAGE PIER 2/3 CLUB STAGE BIG TOP FOR LITTLE PEOPLE PIER 2/3 THE LOFT 9am 9am Coffee & Papers: SMH, Rick Smith & Bruce Lourie 178 9.30am 10am 10.30am 11am Strangers in a Strange Land 186 When Fact Becomes Fiction 187 On Craft: Paradox & Change 183 11.30am The Land of the Fair Go Fear & Loathing 12pm or No Go: Has Australia in a First Draft 199 12.30pm Lost its Soul? 202 Tree of Life: Young Refugees Karima Bennoune: Tell Their Stories Your Fatwa Does Not 188 Apply Here 203 9.30am Mike Carlton: First Victory 184 Fashion Icons 200 Courage, Persistence & Investigative Journalism 185 Real Worlds / Imagined Worlds 180 Ian Buruma: Year Zero 181 Blockbusters: Enemy of the State: What’s the Secret? Jang Jin-sung 197 196 Freedom in Constraints 201 1pm Irvine Welsh: The 2pm Sex Lives of Siamese Twins 213 2.30pm 3.30pm 4pm 4.30pm 5pm 5.30pm Family Day: Inspirational Women 191 Family Day: Illustrator Battle Rounds: Prepare to Draw! 195 Family Day: Your Life & Other Stuff You Made Up! 204 Family Day: It’s Not All About the Future! 205 1.30pm 3pm Family Day: Welcome to Family Day: Cornelia Funke 179 Sarah Blasko & Bendan Cowell 225 What Makes Us Human? 210 SWF Shorts: The Garner Grip 214 Speaking Out 221 Adapt or Die: Small Start, Global Finish 226 UTS Anthology Launch 215 Seductive Villains 211 Memoir: Catharsis 212 Violence, Lust, Revenge & a Touch of Poetry 222 Beach Boys 223 The Derrick Brown Sunday Afternoon Show 224 Dirty Deeds 207 Andrew Solomon 208 Family Day: Comedy Storytelling Hour 216 Writing Children 218 Unauthorised Biography 219 Family Day: Learn to Draw Like Captain Underpants! 217 7pm 7.30pm 8pm 8.30pm 9pm 9.30pm 10pm 10.30pm 11pm 11.30pm 12am 10.30am 11am 11.30am NOW HEAR THIS 198 12pm 12.30pm 1pm 1.30pm Zeruya Shalev: The Remains of Love 2pm 209 2.30pm 3pm Literary Friendships: Benjamin & Michelle 3.30pm Law 220 4pm 4.30pm Closing Address: Emma Donoghue 227 5pm 5.30pm 6pm 6pm 6.30pm 10am Don’t Trust the Stoyteller 182 Final Festival Drinks with Live Music 228 6.30pm 7pm 7.30pm 8pm 8.30pm 9pm 9.30pm 10pm 10.30pm 11pm 11.30pm 12am 14 swf.org.au 108 THE RALLY CRY: STORIES THAT INSPIRE CHANGE May 23, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 2 Join Patrick Abboud, Hal Crawford and 2013 Walkley Award winner Madhvi Pankhania as they discuss how social media and multimedia storytelling are changing journalism. Presented by the Walkley Foundation. Free, no bookings 109 MALCOLM FRASER: DANGEROUS ALLIES May 23, 3-4pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Malcolm Fraser speaks to Laura Tingle about his new book Dangerous Allies, looking at whether Australia should move away from its US-dependent foreign policy. Supported by K & L Gates. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 110 LEUNIG: HOLY FOOL May 23, 3-4pm Wharf Theatre 2 Michael Leunig talks about his life creating art and new book Holy Fool, a collection of his work from drawings and paintings to prints and sculpture, brought together for the first time. Chair: Paola Totaro. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 111 DRIVE WITH RICHARD GLOVER, FEATURING THANK GOD IT’S FRIDAY May 23, 3-6pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Join Richard Glover as he presents his 702 ABC Sydney Drive program live from the Festival. Featuring celebrity guests, authors, live music and a Festival edition of his TGIF comedy show. Presented with 702 ABC Sydney. Free, no bookings city & walsh bay SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 F R I D AY, AY M AY 2 3 festival highlight WHAT’S NORMAL ANYWAY? 123 May 23, 6.30-7.30pm Sydney Town Hall It can be a terrifying moment to realise you are just like your parents. Equally, finding no resemblance to your parents can be just as horrifying. A. M. Homes, Andrew Solomon, Jo Case and Robert Hoge discuss the search for identity with ABC RN’s Natasha Mitchell. Supported by the City of Sydney. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 112 A LIFE IN RHYTHM May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Philharmonia Studio Music has the power to stir our souls and is a source of inspiration for Vanessa Berry, Emma Ayres and Omar Musa. They speak with 702 ABC Sydney’s James Valentine. Free, no bookings 113 AN IRANIAN TALKING TO AN ISRAELI: REZA ASLAN WITH ARI SHAVIT MAY 23, 4.30-5.30PM Pier 2/3 Main Stage The Persian–Jewish relationship has historically been marked by both tolerance and tyranny. Iranian–American Reza Aslan and Israeli Ari Shavit discuss their relationship to their homelands and the larger political dynamic between Israel and Iran. Chair: ABC Radio’s Eleanor Hall. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au Andrew Solomon 114 PHILIP NITSCHKE: DAMNED IF I DO May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Few contemporary Australian figures are as controversial as pro-euthanasia doctor Philip Nitschke. He shares his life story with cowriter Peter Corris. Free, no bookings 29 SHEILA CHISHOLM: AUSTRALIAN INGENUE May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio Robert Wainwright shares his spellbinding account of Sheila Chisholm, an Australian who was friends with the likes of Nancy Mitford and won the hearts of men such as the future George VI. Chair: David Francis. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 116 ROSS GARNAUT: DOG DAYS May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Leading economic thinker Ross Garnaut talks to ABC RN’s Geraldine Doogue about Australia after the boom: how we got here, what we can expect next. Free, no bookings 117 BEYOND THE BLOCK May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Dance 2 Wesley Enoch, Tanya Denning and Kathy Marks speak to Fiona Harari about why we need to move beyond the stereotype of Indigenous affairs reporting and start focusing on the here and now. Presented by the Walkley Foundation. Free, no bookings 104 RICHARD FLANAGAN: LOVE AND WAR May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Richard Flanagan’s elegy for lost love and depiction of life on the Thai–Burma railway is a masterpiece of our time. He speaks to Steven Gale about The Narrow Road to the Deep North. Supported by Editor Group. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 119 THE BIG READ May 23, 4.30-5.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Readings with Adam Johnson, Eimear McBride, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, Alex Miller and Lian Hearn, hosted by Annette Shun Wah. With the announcement of the 2014 Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelist awards, presented by Linda Morris. Presented by The Sydney Morning Herald. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 120 A CRITICAL PATH – LEADING WHERE? May 23, 6-7.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Geordie Williamson leads a lively discussion on the purpose of criticism with ABC Local Radio’s Mark Colvin, Kerryn Goldsworthy, ABC TV’s Steven O’Donnell and The Pascall Foundation’s annual Critic of the Year Prize winner. Presented by the Geraldine Pascall Foundation. Free, no bookings 121 STORIES, STARGAZING, ART AND WINE WITH MICHAEL PEMBROKE May 23, 6-8pm Sydney Observatory Spend an evening with Michael Pembroke as he discusses the story behind Australia’s first governor, Arthur Phillip. Presented with Sydney Observatory, in partnership with the S H Ervin Gallery. $35/$32 Bookings 9921 3485, sydneyobservatory.com 122 ABC RN’S DRIVE May 23, 6-8pm Sydney Dance Lounge ABC RN’s Drive, hosted by Rebecca Huntley, broadcasts live from Sydney Writers’ Festival. Presented with ABC RN. Free, no bookings 123 WHAT’S NORMAL ANYWAY? May 23, 6.30-7.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT city & walsh bay F R I D AY, M A AY Y 2 3 / S A T U R D AY AY, Y M AY 2 4 124 FESTIVAL CLUB May 23, 7-11.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Stay up late with SWF. Featuring Mixtape Memoir with Lifted Brow writers, The Chaser’s Empty Vessel with Julian Morrow and Chris Taylor, and Festival favourite Spoken Four, hosted by Miles Merrill. $15 at the door, details swf.org.au 125 PATRICK WHITE PLAYWRIGHTS’ AWARD AND FELLOWSHIP May 23, 8-10.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Join STC’s Artistic Director Andrew Upton as he announces the winners of the 2013 Patrick White Playwrights’ Award and Fellowship. Sydney Theatre Company artists will also present a reading of the awardwinning play. $5 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 126 HUMOUR AND DEBAUCHERY WITH A FEW MANNERS IN BETWEEN May 23, 8.30-9.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT SATURDAY 127 COFFEE AND PAPERS WITH THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD AND ZOE DANIEL May 24, 9-10am The Bar at the End of the Wharf Join Sherrill Nixon, The Sydney Morning Herald’s journalists and SWF special guest Zoe Daniel to hear their take on what’s making news headlines today and the changing nature of journalism. Supported by The Sydney Morning Herald. Free, no bookings festival highlight HUMOUR AND DEBAUCHERY WITH A FEW MANNERS IN BETWEEN 126 May 23, 8.30-9.30pm Sydney Town Hall Annabel Crabb kicks off the SWF weekend. Featuring Russian immigrant turned US literary celebrity Gary Shteyngart; Sandi Toksvig, one of the UK’s most-loved comedians and broadcasters; and cult author of Trainspotting Irvine Welsh. Supported by the City of Sydney. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 128 CULTURE WARS May 24, 10-11am Philharmonia Studio Robyn Archer, Jim Hearn, Scott Rankin and Kristina Olsson speak to Griffith REVIEW’s Julianne Schultz about why culture is a matter of bitter political contest. Presented by Griffith REVIEW. Free, no bookings 129 TOXIN TOXOUT: REMOVING TOXIC CHEMICALS May 24, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Club Stage Two of the world’s leading environmentalists, Rick Smith and Bruce Lourie, give practical and often surprising advice for removing toxic chemicals from our bodies and homes. Chair: Sunil Badami. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au Irvine Welsh 130 THE JOY OF ART May 24, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Main Stage Why is art important and what does it bring to our lives? Philosophical art historian John Armstrong, art aficionado Betty Churcher and jeweller Alex Monroe discuss the pleasures and benefits of art with Rachel Kent. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 131 ON CRAFT: TRAUMA NARRATIVES May 24, 10-11am Pier 2/3 The Loft Readers often expect literary characters to grow and change. But what of characters whose stories are of loss, dislocation and marginalisation? Pulitzer Prize-winner Adam Johnson explores the techniques used to shape these narratives. Chair: Stephen Romei. Free, no bookings 132 A COLOURED HISTORY May 24, 10-11am Richard Wherrett Studio Bruce Pascoe, author of Dark Emu, and Henry Reynolds, author of the award-winning Forgotten War, talk to Lydia Miller about Australia’s hidden past. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 133 WHY GALLIPOLI? THE CULT OF ANZAC TODAY May 24, 10-11am Sydney Dance 1 Why do Australians celebrate Gallipoli when World War I was largely fought on the Western Front? James Brown, Peter FitzSimons and Joan Beaumont discuss Gallipoli and whether Anzac is relevant today, with Mike Carlton. Free, no bookings 134 THE POLITICS OF TRANSLATION May 24, 10-11am Sydney Dance 2 Linda Jaivin, Jacques Roubaud and Camilla Läckberg discuss the politics of translation, the notion of fidelity and the relationship between writer and translator. Free, no bookings 135 AUSTRALIA AND THE WORLD May 24, 10-11am Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay When it comes to foreign policy, is it time for Australia to loosen its ties with the US and UK? Malcolm Fraser and Bob Carr share their thoughts with Lenore Taylor. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au swf.org.au 15 136 COLLETTE DINNIGAN: OBSESSIVE CREATIVE May 24, 10-11am Wharf Theatre 2 Collette Dinnigan is one of Australia’s most internationally recognised designers. Now, 24 years after she started, she is scaling down to focus on family. She talks to fashion writer Colin McDowell. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 137 ANATOMY OF THE SONG May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Philharmonia Studio Sarah Blasko, Josh Pyke and Urthboy talk words and music, exploring their songs from original idea to final creation with 2SER’s Andrew Khedoori. Presented by 2SER 107.3 and Groovescooter. Free, no bookings 138 TRUE CRIMES: JOHN SAFRAN AND MICHAELA McGUIRE May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage John Safran examines the murder of a white supremacist and Michaela McGuire investigates the death of a patron at Melbourne’s Crown Casino. Chair: Sian Prior. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 139 CHRISTOS TSIOLKAS SPEAKS TO DAVID MARR May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Tender and brutal, Barracuda, the new novel from Christos Tsiolkas, author of The Slap, takes an unflinching look at modern Australia and asks what it takes to become a good person. He talks to David Marr. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au choir of king’s college, cambridge MON 21 JUL 7PM | City Recital Hall Angel Place cityrecitalhall.com or 02 8256 2222 SAT 26 JUL 2PM | Concert Hall, Sydney Opera House sydneyoperahouse.com or 02 9250 7777 musicaviva.com.au/Kings Britain’s most cherished choir presents an intimate and beautiful program of works from favourite classics including Fauré’s famous Requiem to sparkling new repertoire. Book Today! Tickets from $56* *Terms and conditions apply city & walsh bay SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 S A T U R D AY, AY M AY 2 4 16 swf.org.au 140 ONCE UPON A TIME: MYTH & FAIRYTALE May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Albert Einstein once said, “if you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairytales”. Join Cornelia Funke, Kate Forsyth, Vikram Chandra, and Tony Birch as they explore myth and the enchanting world of fairytales with Judith Ridge. Free, no bookings 141 THE SCIENCE OF SCIENCE FICTION May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio Science is the basis for science fiction, but how has fiction influenced science? Join Jim Al-Khalili, Scott Baker and David M. Henley with Dr Karl Kruszelnicki. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 142 REVOLUTION AND REPRESSION May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 1 What does China’s Communist Revolution have to teach us about modern North Korea? What light can North Korea shed on China? Frank Dikötter, Jang Jin-sung and Michael Kirby speak with ABC TV’s Jane Hutcheon. Free, no bookings 143 SIMPLE LIVING May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 2 Can living with less make us happier or is the simple life not as simple as it seems? 702 ABC’s Richard Glover talks to Luke Slattery, Greg Foyster, Inga Simpson and the Finch Memoir Prize winner. Free, no bookings 144 REZA ASLAN: ZEALOT May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Acclaimed writer and scholar Reza Aslan’s new book Zealot hit The New York Times #1 bestseller list after an interview with him went viral. He speaks to Steven Gale about this provocative biography which challenges assumptions about Jesus. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 145 SEVEN SISTERS May 24, 11.30am-12.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Share a unique journey of Australian Aboriginal poetry and spoken word, with seven multi-talented Aboriginal women each performing for seven minutes. A performance focused on healing and strength, with a dash of comedy. Featuring Ali Cobby Eckermann and Jenny Munroe. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au festival highlight GARY SHTEYNGART 148 FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Little Failure is Gary Shteyngart’s candid, witty memoir – from his birth in Leningrad to his immigration and life in America. He speaks to Michael Williams about this epic story of family and belonging. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 146 THE CHANGING FACE OF INDIGENEITY: NOW AND BEYOND May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Philharmonia Studio The definition of Aboriginality is shifting as Australians demand new narratives. What stories are being told in the arts and media and are changes afoot? Wesley Enoch, Anita Heiss and Nakkiah Lui speak to Lydia Miller. Free, no bookings 147 ANIMATED STORIES May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage The Animal Logic team and Justin Monjo discuss their roles in creating some of the world’s greatest animation and visual effects films and television series, including The LEGO® Movie, Happy Feet and The Great Gatsby. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 148 GARY SHTEYNGART: FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE May 24, 1.30-2.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 149 ALEXIS WRIGHT: THE SWAN BOOK May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Miles Franklin Award winner Alexis Wright speaks to Geordie Williamson about The Swan Book, her new novel in which energy, humour, myth, legend and fairytale come together to create a book of startling originality. Free, no bookings 150 ARAB AUTUMN May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio In the three years since the Arab Spring, the old regimes may have passed, but what has taken their place? Yasmine El Rashidi, Karima Bennoune and Lucia Sorbera talk to David Hardaker. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 151 FAMILY TIES May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Kristina Olsson, Steve Bisley and Robert Hoge share their family stories in their moving memoirs. They reflect upon the complications, darkness and light in their history. Chair: Richard Morecroft. Free, no bookings 152 HANG UP PHILOSOPHY May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 2 How does philosophy contribute to contemporary life? Philosophers John Armstrong, Dalia Nassar and Kristie Miller discuss the meaning and significance of thinking for the sake of thinking with ABC RN’s Joe Gelonesi. Free, no bookings 153 THE ART OF INDIGNATION May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Taking offence is a new form of political currency, with indignation being whipped up in place of rational debate. Michael Leunig, Tim Wilson, Richard King and Neil James speak with Peter FitzSimons on the importance of argument in society. Supported by The Plain English Foundation. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 154 PRISONER X: RAFAEL EPSTEIN May 24, 1.30-2.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Ben Zygier was found dead in an Israeli cell. Was he a whistleblower, a double agent or just out of his depth? Rafael Epstein speaks with ABC Radio’s Eleanor Hall to shed light on the story. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au AUSTRALIAN BRANDENBURG ORCHESTRA CELEBRATING 25 YEARS 155 MEET THE SMH BEST YOUNG AUSTRALIAN NOVELISTS May 24, 3-4pm Philharmonia Studio Each year, The Sydney Morning Herald names the authors it considers to be the best young novelists in the country. Linda Morris leads a discussion with the 2014 winners about their novels, with short readings. Presented by The Sydney Morning Herald. Free, no bookings 159 A QUIRKY HISTORY OF AUSTRALIA May 24, 3-4pm Richard Wherrett Studio You can learn a lot about a country from its pastimes and the people who have fallen between the cracks of history. David Hunt, Bob McTavish and Bill Garner discuss with 702 ABC Sydney’s Dominic Knight. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 156 NEW WORLDS: DIGITAL STORYTELLING May 24, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage The digital revolution has enriched the possibilities of writing. Cornelia Funke, Kavita Bedford, Connor Tomas O’Brien and Inua Ellams share their forays into the digital world with Neil James. Supported by The Plain English Foundation. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 160 MARK ISAACS ON NAURU: THE UNDESIRABLES May 24, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 1 Queue jumper, boat person, illegal. The truth behind what’s happening offshore is difficult to determine. Mark Isaacs speaks to ABC TV’s Sarah Ferguson about The Undesirables – what happened at Nauru and the riot that razed it to the ground. Free, no bookings 157 LITERARY FRIENDSHIPS: ROBERT DESSAIX & MICHELLE DE KRETSER May 24, 3-4pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 158 A LOVE AFFAIR WITH CHINA May 24, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Amy Tan and Linda Jaivin have written two very different historical novels about China. But both books involve the end of China’s last imperial dynasty and dangerous love affairs. They speak to ABC RN’s Kate Evans. Free, no bookings ookings LITERARY FRIENDSHIPS: ROBERT DESSAIX & MICHELLE DE KRETSER 157 May 24, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Michelle de Kretser and Robert Dessaix have a strong friendship that began 10 years ago in Tasmania. Join them as they range freely across many topics from the nature of friendship to what makes a good book. AVI AVITAL (ISRAEL) mandolin PAUL DYER AO Artistic Director VIVALDI, BACH, PACHELBEL’S CANON “EXQUISITELY SENSITIVE PLAYING” – NEW YORK TIMES SYDNEY City Recital Hall Angel Place Wed 7, Fri 9, Sat 10, Wed 14, Fri 16 May all at 7pm Matinee Sat 10 May 2pm 162 ARI SHAVIT: MY PROMISED LAND May 24, 3-4pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay My Promised Land tells the story of Israel as it has never been told before. Ari Shavit speaks with David Leser about his work as one of Israel’s leading political thinkers. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au festival highlight $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au BOOK NOW! BRANDENBURG.COM.AU 02 9328 7581 CITYRECITALHALL.COM 1300 797 118 161 EPIC NOMAD ADVENTURES May 24, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 2 Tim Cope, Jono Lineen and Huw LewisJones discuss adventures that include fending off thieves, grappling with extreme temperatures and meeting fascinating characters along the way. Chair: Emma Ayres. Supported by Macleay College. Free, no bookings Michelle de Kretser city & walsh bay S A T U R D AY, AY M AY 2 4 / S U N D A AY, Y M AY 2 5 163 #THREE JERKS May 24, 3-4pm Wharf Theatre 2 It is Sydney 2000. Year of the infamous Lebanese Muslim gang rapes. Western Sydney writers Peter Polites, Michael Mohammed Ahmad and Luke Carman tell their stories. A Sweatshop Production. Free, no bookings 164 SHORT AND SWEET May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Philharmonia Studio It seems the short story has made a comeback. Bethanie Blanchard speaks to Tony Birch, Ceridwen Dovey, Angela Meyer and Kyoko Yoshida about the power of stories. Free, no bookings 165 KATE CEBERANO May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Acclaimed chanteuse Kate Ceberano is also a songwriter and now author with her memoir, I’m Talking. Hear about Kate’s incredible journey as she speaks with Caroline Baum. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 166 LALLY KATZ: LOOKING FOR GUIDANCE May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Lally Katz has been looking for guidance in every area of her life, all her life. Hear her funny stories about the people who became her trusted guides and her favourite characters to write about. Chair: Michaela Kalowski. Free, no bookings 167 EXCEPTIONAL LIVES May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio Robert Wainwright, Hamish McDonald and Lucy Hughes-Hallett speak with Lucinda Holdforth about some of the most interesting unsung characters across the ages. Featuring Cleopatra, Gabriele d’Annunzio, Sheila Chisholm and Charles Bavier. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 168 WRITING BODIES May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Some of the most memorable writing is fleshy – with skin, blood and orgasm. And writers too are bodies: who swim, jog, box and meditate. Damon Young, Irvine Welsh and Tara Moss explore bodies in fiction and philosophy with Lawrence Hill. Free, no bookings Image: Stll from AFTRS student film, All God’s Creatures 169 MURDOCH: ON THE NEWS May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Dance 2 The News of the World phone hacking scandal has put Rupert Murdoch’s media empire under the spotlight. Paul Barry and Rodney Tiffen discuss Murdoch’s reach and issues of journalistic integrity with Monica Attard. Free, no bookings festival highlight A. M. HOMES 175 MAY WE BE FORGIVEN May 24, 6-7pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Celebrated writer A. M. Homes speaks with Susan Wyndham about May We Be Forgiven, winner of the 2013 Women’s Prize for Fiction. The novel is a breathtaking satire of modern American life that begins at full speed and never lets up. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 170 THE ART OF WAR May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Art often presents an idea of war at odds with the official version of a nation. Ben Quilty, Tom Wright and Richard Flanagan discuss the way they explore different truths of war. Chair: RN’s Fenella Kernebone. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 171 JEREMY SCAHILL: DIRTY WARS May 24, 4.30-5.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Award-winning journalist Jeremy Scahill takes us inside America’s new battleground and explores its global killing machine. Jeremy talks to Mark Davis. Stay on to watch the Oscar-nominated documentary Dirty Wars . $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 172 PEOPLE OF LETTERS May 24, 4.30-6pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Join the Women of Letters as they stage a very rare, very co-ed People of Letters show, where well-known Australians are paired off and invited to write “A letter to my other half”. Free, no bookings 173 POETRY AND MUSIC SALON – DO POETS TELL THE TRUTH? May 24, 4.30-6pm Sydney Dance Lounge Three diverse poets present and discuss their work with live classical music interludes. Featuring John Mateer, Luke Fischer, Judith Beveridge and hosted by Lisa Gorton. Presented with Word Travels and POEMS NB. Free, no bookings 174 DIRTY WARS: FILM SCREENING May 24, 5.45-7.15pm Wharf Theatre 2 Join us for a screening of Dirty Wars, based on Jeremy Scahill’s book. Ticket-holders from Jeremy’s preceding event are guaranteed seats, limited tickets available at the door. Free, no bookings 175 A. M. HOMES: MAY WE BE FORGIVEN May 24, 6-7pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 176 FESTIVAL CLUB May 24, 7-11.30pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Stay up late with SWF. Featuring writers in the infamous armchair for Story Club, The Chaser’s Empty Vessel with Julian Morrow and Chris Taylor, and music to dance the night away. $15 at the door, details swf.org.au 177 5 X 15 May 24, 7.30-9pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Five speakers, 15 minutes each: Emma Donoghue pursues women in pants; Inua Ellams splits up in style; Colin McDowell explains why we’re all fashionistas now; Anna Bligh reflects on the solace of food; and Wesley Enoch talks inheritance. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au SUNDAY 178 COFFEE AND PAPERS WITH SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, RICK SMITH & BRUCE LOURIE May 25, 9-10am The Bar at the End of the Wharf Join Sherrill Nixon, The Sydney Morning Herald’s journalists and SWF special guests Bruce Lourie and Rick Smith to hear their take on what’s making news headlines today and the changing nature of journalism. Supported by The Sydney Morning Herald. Free, no bookings 179 FAMILY DAY: WELCOME TO FAMILY DAY: CORNELIA FUNKE May 25, 10-10.15am SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 180 REAL WORLDS / IMAGINED WORLDS May 25, 10-11am Philharmonia Studio Ivor Indyk shares the stage with four of Australia’s most versatile poets: Judith Beveridge, Ali Alizadeh, Kate Middleton and John Mateer. They read and discuss poems. Free, no bookings 181 IAN BURUMA: YEAR ZERO May 25, 10-11am Pier 2/3 Main Stage In 1945, a new world emerged from the ruins of World War II. Ian Buruma’s Year Zero is a landmark work reckoning with the drama that ensued as one world ended and a new one began. He talks to ABC RN’s Kate Evans. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 182 DON’T TRUST THE STORYTELLER May 25, 10-11am Pier 2/3 The Loft Dara Horn, John Safran and Gabrielle Carey talk to Kristina Olsson about how memory can help and hinder the piecing together of stories and history. Free, no bookings 183 ON CRAFT: PARADOX AND CHANGE May 25, 10-11am Richard Wherrett Studio Man Booker Prize-winner Eleanor Catton unpacks plotted paradoxes to investigate how change happens in fiction, whether a change of state, a change of mind or a change of heart. Chair: Tegan Bennett Daylight. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 184 MIKE CARLTON: FIRST VICTORY May 25, 10-11am Sydney Dance 1 Mike Carlton speaks to David Marr about First Victory, the story of HMAS Sydney’s hunt for the German raider Emden. This fascinating story is rich and engaging. Free, no bookings 185 COURAGE, PERSISTENCE AND INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM May 25, 10-11am Sydney Dance 2 Joanne McCarthy, Sarah Ferguson and Trevor Bormann discuss the stories they have broken with Christopher Warren. Presented by the Walkley Foundation. Free, no bookings 186 STRANGERS IN A STRANGE LAND May 25, 10-11am Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Gary Shteyngart, Amy Tan and Benjamin Law share stories from their work – sometimes hilarious, sometimes heartbreaking but always well-meaning – of growing up with immigrant parents in a Western country. Chair: Annette Shun Wah. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au swf.org.au 17 187 WHEN FACT BECOMES FICTION May 25, 10-11am The Bar at the End of the Wharf Some of the best fiction today comes from real scenarios, actual history or life experiences. Hear from Janette Turner Hospital, Brigid Delaney and Michael Sala, whose fiction is based on some form of truth. Chair: Sunil Badami. Free, no bookings 188 TREE OF LIFE: YOUNG REFUGEES TELL THEIR STORIES May 25, 11am-12.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Brave and resilient young Iraqi, Syrian and Somalian refugees offer us their life stories with open-hearted grace, performing with honesty, dignity and humour. For all ages, with parental guidance recommended. Free, no bookings 189 FAMILY DAY: EXQUISITE GENRES WITH THE SYDNEY STORY FACTORY May 25, 10am-2pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 190 FAMILY DAY: CRAFTAMANIA May 25, 10am-3.30pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 191 FAMILY DAY: INSPIRATIONAL WOMEN May 25, 10.30-11am SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 192 FAMILY DAY: MORNING TEA WITH YOUR FAVOURITE AUTHORS AND ILLUSTRATORS May 25, 10.30am-12pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 193 FAMILY DAY: STORYTELLING ROOM May 25, 10.30am-3.30pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 194 MCA ZINE FAIR May 25, 11am-5pm Museum of Contemporary Art Celebrate the return of the MCA Zine Fair. Buy zines, listen to talks or show your zinester prowess with hands-on activities. Free, no bookings 195 FAMILY DAY: ILLUSTRATOR BATTLE ROUNDS: PREPARE TO DRAW! May 25, 11.15am-12pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 196 BLOCKBUSTERS: WHAT’S THE SECRET? May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Philharmonia Studio We’d all love to be able to write a great blockbuster. Hear the secrets from writers who do it well: Scott Baker, Steve Worland, Chris Allen and Greg Barron. Free, no bookings AUSTRALIAN FILM TELEVISION AND RADIO SCHOOL* aftrs.edu.au *Top #20 Film School in the World, as voted by the The Hollywood Reporter 18 swf.org.au city & walsh bay SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 S U N D AY AY, M AY 2 5 family day at sydney writers’festival Held under the Big Top for Little People, spilling out from the Bloomberg Stage, Family Day is a carnival of storytelling, art, discussion, comedy, poetry, theatre, craft, food and dance. Phew! With events and activities running all day, kids of all ages can drop by to hear stories, watch live drawing, murals and chalk art in the making, be inspired by authors talking about their work, or get active making their own art, craft and stories. The whole family might even want to shake it out on the Astro-turf dance floor! Supported by Bloomberg. 179 FAMILY DAY: WELCOME TO FAMILY DAY: CORNELIA FUNKE May 25, 10-10.15am Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Cornelia Funke welcomes you to Family Day with a short talk celebrating the rich and exciting worlds to be found within the pages of books. (All ages) Free, no bookings 189 FAMILY DAY: EXQUISITE GENRES WITH THE SYDNEY STORY FACTORY May 25, 10am-2pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Over four one-hour sessions, participants race against the clock to create collaborative stories. Tutors will guide young writers through the perils of collaborative fiction. (Ages 10–14) Free, bookings essential 9699 699 6970, [email protected] ctory.org.au 190 FAMILY DAY: CRAFTAMANIA AMANIA May 25, 10am-3.30pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Get messy! Get Creative! Get into nto our crazy craft area! There will be workshops hops and colouring in and heaps fun activities ivities to do ALL DAY. Try the picture book workshop in the morning with Georgia Perry erry or join the creators of Alphabetical Sydney ydney in the afternoon. Event timings specifi ified at the venue on the day. Free, no bookings 191 FAMILY DAY: INSPIRATIONAL WOMEN May 25, 10.30-11am Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Every girl needs a role model, either real or fictional. Join writers Eliza Sarlos, Sandi Toksvig, Cornelia Funke and Jacqueline cqueline Harvey as they tell you about the amazing women who inspired them to become the people they are today. (Ages 8+) +) Free, no bookings 192 FAMILY DAY: MORNING TEA WITH YOUR FAVOURITE AUTHORS AND ILLUSTRATORS May 25, 10.30am-12pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Buy a cupcake and sit down for a morning tea with your favourite kid’s book writers. Don’t miss out on this once-in-a-lifetime chance to sit down with some of the best authors and illustrators in the whole world. With Jacqueline Harvey, Cornelia Funke and more. (All ages) Free, no bookings 193 FAMILY DAY: STORYTELLING ROOM May 25, 10.30am-3.30pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Pull up a cushion, snuggle in and let your favourite picturebook writers read you their stories. The storytelling room will run all day so drop in at any time to listen to authors reading their books aloud. Withh Deborah Kelly, Jane Godwin, Damon Young, Hilary Bell and Antonia Antonnia Pesenti, Nardi Simpsonn and Kaleena Briggs.. (Younger children) Free, no bookings 195 FAMILY DAY: ILLUSTRATOR BATTLE ROUNDS: PREPARE TO DRAW! May 25, 11.15am-12pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Come along to the greatest drawing showdown this side of the harbour. Watch in awe as local illustrators race each other and the ticking clock in a live draw-off. Andrew Joyner, Tom Jellett, Georgia Perry, Chris Nixon, Andrew Cranna and Gus Gordon: prepare to draw! Hosted by Oliver Phommavanh. (All ages) Free, no bookings 204 FAMILY DAY: YOUR LIFE AND OTHER STUFF YOU MADE UP! May 25, 12.15-12.45pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People How can you use all the odd, boring, funny stuff that happens to you and turn it into super cool stories? Find out with author Tristan Bancks, who loves to make stories out of his own wacky life. (All ages) Free, no bookings 205 FAMILY DAY: IT’S NOT ALL ABOUT THE FUTURE! May 25, 1-1.30pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Science fiction isn’t all about the future. It’s often about things we’re afraid of in the world RIGHT NOW. John Connolly takes you through the wonderful worlds of sciencefiction. Be warned: there will be super-cool movie clips! (Ages 8+) Free, no bookings 216 FAMILY DAY: COMEDY STORYTELLING HOUR May 25, 1.45-2.45pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Remember when you farted during maths and hoped nobody noticed, but everyone did? How embarrassing – for you! Come along and kill yourself laughing at the ridiculous things Tristan Bancks, Oliver Phommavanh, Sandi Toksvig and James O’Loghlin have done. (Ages 8+) Free, no bookings 217 FAMILY DAY: LEARN TO DRAW LIKE CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS! May 25, 3-3.30pm Pier 2/3 Big Top For Little People Join Dav Pilkey, writer and illustrator of the bestselling Captain Underpants series, for an awesome step step-by-step drawing by step guide to dra his world-famous characters. Have you drawn your underpants today? (All ages). age Free, no bookings, limited spaces ACTIVITIES AND EXHIBITIO EXHIBITIONS Activities will run throughout the day with a drop-in dance workshop run by Brent Street Performing Arts Studio, live liv interactive chalk art by Tony Flowers, a live liv mural by Chris Nixon and a fun puppet p ppet show where you might just pu j encounter encounter a monster! Don’t forget fo to to stop by our gallery space to view from view cool original artwork fro some of your favourite kid’s bo book illustrators. iilllustrators. 197 ENEMY OF THE STATE: JANG JIN-SUNG May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage Jang Jin-sung offers a rare glimpse into the inner workings of North Korea, one of the harshest dictatorships in the world. In discussion with Pulitzer Prize-winner Adam Johnson. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 198 NOW HEAR THIS May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Join ABC RN’s NOW HEAR THIS host Melanie Tait for a special hour of live stories, as five well-known Australians reveal their true story to the theme “Lost for Words”. Presented with ABC RN. Free, no bookings 199 FEAR AND LOATHING IN A FIRST DRAFT May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio “The first draft of anything is shit,” Hemingway said. First-draft terror is familiar to many writers. Join Alison Manning and Charlotte Wood as they tell Caroline Baum about the psychology of facing down the first draft. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 200 FASHION ICONS May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Fashion. Style. Influence. Florence Broadhurst had it. Society icon Sheila Chisholm had it. So does department store David Jones and fashion commentator Colin McDowell. Colin joins Helen O’Neill and Robert Wainwright to talk fashion with Steven Gale. Free, no bookings 201 FREEDOM IN CONSTRAINTS May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Dance 2 We think of writing as a fundamentally creative endeavour, unshackled by predetermined structures. But can we actually find creative freedom in constraints? Vikram Chandra, Jacques Roubaud and Neil James discuss with Richard Morecroft. Supported by The Plain English Foundation. Free, no bookings 202 THE LAND OF THE FAIR GO OR NO GO: HAS AUSTRALIA LOST ITS SOUL? May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Is Australia open or closed? What does this say about us and the stories we tell? Richard Flanagan, Tom Keneally and Michael Leunig talk about the myth and reality of Australia with ABC RN’s Geraldine Doogue. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au PHOTO: ISTOCK city & walsh bay S U N D AY AY, M AY 2 5 203 KARIMA BENNOUNE: YOUR FATWA DOES NOT APPLY HERE May 25, 11.30am-12.30pm The Bar at the End of the Wharf Human rights lawyer and activist Karima Bennoune shares highlights from some 300 interviews she carried out – from Afghanistan to Mali – with people of Muslim heritage working to challenge fundamentalism in their communities. Chair: David Francis. Free, no bookings 204 FAMILY DAY: YOUR LIFE AND OTHER STUFF YOU MADE UP! May 25, 12.15-12.45pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 205 FAMILY DAY: IT’S NOT ALL ABOUT THE FUTURE! May 25, 1-1.30pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 208 ANDREW SOLOMON May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage After The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression, National Book Award-winner Andrew Solomon returns with Far From the Tree, to tell the stories of parents whose children are very different from themselves. Andrew speaks with Michael Williams about his body of work. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 209 ZERUYA SHALEV: THE REMAINS OF LOVE May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Bestselling Israeli author Zeruya Shalev speaks with Michaela Kalowski about her electrifying novel The Remains of Love, a meditation on modern Israel and an exploration of family, yearning, compromise and the insistent pull of the past. Presented with the Sydney and Melbourne Jewish Writers’ Festivals. Free, no bookings 206 TRANSNATIONAL: POETRY AND PROSE AT THE BRETT WHITELEY STUDIO May 25, 1-3.30pm Brett Whiteley Studio Join us as we celebrate John Mateer launching Kyoko Yoshida’s Disorientalism, followed by an afternoon of poetry that’ll ease you out of the everyday. With Nhã Thuyên, Louis Armand, Adam Aitken, John Mateer, Michael Brennan and Bella Li. Presented with Vagabond Press and Sydney Poetry at Brett Whiteley Studio. Free, bookings essential, email [email protected] 210 WHAT MAKES US HUMAN? May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Richard Wherrett Studio What are we? Who are we? Thomas Suddendorf (The Gap) and Lawrence Hill (Blood), examine the science of what separates us from animals and how blood unites and divides us, with Ashley Hay. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 207 DIRTY DEEDS May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Philharmonia Studio Forty years. More than 200 million albums sold. Join AC/DC’s legendary bass player Mark Evans alongside Jesse Fink and Jeff Apter, as they delve into the secrets of Australia’s greatest musical export: AC/DC. Free, no bookings 211 SEDUCTIVE VILLAINS May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 1 Why are villains so attractive to write? Is it our fascination with the dark underside of humanity? Peter FitzSimons, Lenny Bartulin and Lucy Hughes-Hallet discuss the dark side with Stephen Romei. Free, no bookings festival highlight SARAH BLASKO AND BRENDAN COWELL: ON WRITING, MUSIC AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN 225 May 25, 3-4pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay It’s not every day you hear two peers interview each other. Consummate artist and performer Sarah Blasko and polymath Brendan Cowell dig deep into each other’s writing methods, greatest fears and creative inspirations. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au Sarah Blasko 212 MEMOIR: CATHARSIS May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Dance 2 It takes strength to be vulnerable enough to write a memoir. Sian Prior (Shy), Mary Coustas (All I Know) and Mandy Sayer (The Poet’s Wife) reveal their difficulties and courage as they speak with Aviva Tuffield. Free, no bookings 213 IRVINE WELSH: THE SEX LIVES OF SIAMESE TWINS May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay Since the infamous Trainspotting, Irvine Welsh has become a cult figure. Twenty years on, he speaks about his latest novel The Sex Lives of Siamese Twins with Angus Fontaine. Supported by Belgiovane Williams Mackay. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets. sydneytheatre.org.au 214 SWF SHORTS: THE GARNER GRIP May 25, 1.30-2.30pm Wharf Theatre 2 Hear diverse readings from Helen Garner’s remarkable writing by some of Sydney’s best actors, directed by Sydney Theatre Company’s Sarah Goodes. Presented with Sydney Theatre Company. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets. sydneytheatre.org.au 215 UTS ANTHOLOGY LAUNCH May 25, 2-3.30pm The Bar at the End of the Wharf Join us for the launch of the 2014 UTS writers’ anthology, Sight Lines. The anthology features some of Australia’s best emerging writers from the UTS creative writing program. Free, no bookings 216 FAMILY DAY: COMEDY STORYTELLING HOUR May 25, 1.45-2.45pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 217 FAMILY DAY: LEARN TO DRAW LIKE CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS! May 25, 3-3.30pm SEE FAMILY DAY PAGE 18 218 WRITING CHILDREN May 25, 3-4pm Philharmonia Studio Like actors, writers inhabit personalities that are different from their own. Michael Sala, Eimear McBride and Peter Timms talk to Joy Lawn about capturing a younger perspective. Free, no bookings 219 UNAUTHORISED BIOGRAPHY May 25, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 Main Stage In biography, how important is having gthe subject’s approval? Tony Abbott, Rupert Murdoch, Kerry Packer and Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest have all had the treatment. Helen O’Neill gets the scoop from biographers David Marr, Paul Barry and Andrew Burrell. $20/$14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au swf.org.au 19 festival highlight EMMA DONOGHUE 227 CLOSING ADDRESS: GIVING READERS WHAT THEY (DON’T KNOW THEY) WANT May 25, 4.30-5.30pm Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay For the Closing Address, Emma Donoghue speaks of the transformative powers of literature: the way it invites, provokes, charms, challenges and troubles readers. She shows how writers help change the world, one reader at a time. $25/$20 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 220 LITERARY FRIENDSHIPS: BENJAMIN & MICHELLE LAW May 25, 3-4pm Pier 2/3 The Loft Benjamin and Michelle Law – brother and sister, foes and mentors – their friendship spans decades. They discuss co-writing Sh*t Asian Mothers Say and what’s it’s like to work on the same project without murdering each other. Free, no bookings 224 THE DERRICK BROWN SUNDAY AFTERNOON SHOW May 25, 3-4pm Sydney Dance Lounge One of the world’s best performers, Derrick Brown does poetry with a dash of rock and roll. Having appeared alongside The Flaming Lips and on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, he brings energy, wit and style. Chair: Connor Tomas O’Brien. Free, no bookings 221 SPEAKING OUT May 25, 3-4pm Richard Wherrett Studio From a Ukrainian red-light district to the seething streets of Nairobi, Maxine Beneba Clarke, Ali Alizadeh and Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor allow their readers to meet characters that rarely get a voice. Chair: ABC RN’s Kate Evans. $14 Bookings 9250 1988, tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au 225 SARAH BLASKO AND BRENDAN COWELL: ON WRITING, MUSIC AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN May 25, 3-4pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 222 VIOLENCE, LUST, REVENGE AND A TOUCH OF POETRY May 25, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 1 Join Adrian McKinty, John Connolly and Camilla Läckberg with Michael Robotham to hear how modern crime fiction can be a prism for examining contemporary mores. And is there a place for lyricism, poetry and style? Supported by The Reading Room. Free, no bookings 223 BEACH BOYS May 25, 3-4pm Sydney Dance 2 Phil Jarratt, Bob McTavish and Nick Carroll talk with Tim Baker about the highs and lows of 100 gnarly years of Australian surfing, since Hawaiian surf god Duke Kahanamoku first hit an Australian wave. Free, no bookings 226 ADAPT OR DIE: SMALL START, GLOBAL FINISH May 25, 3-4pm Wharf Theatre 2 In a rapidly changing media landscape, three Australian storytellers have broken through the clutter to captivate the world and Hollywood. Ross Grayson Bell talks to Graeme Simsion, Ian Collie and Hannah Kent. Presented by AFTRS. Free, no bookings 227 CLOSING ADDRESS: GIVING READERS WHAT THEY (DON’T KNOW THEY) WANT May 25, 4.30-5.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT 228 FINAL FESTIVAL DRINKS WITH LIVE MUSIC May 25, 5.30-8pm Pier 2/3 Club Stage Join the Sydney Writers’ Festival team for a relaxed drink in the Festival Club alongside some live music in celebration of a phenomenal week and the end of the 2014 Festival. Drinks are available from the bar. All welcome. Free, no bookings Indigenous theatre at Belvoir is supported by The Balnaves Foundation Brothers Wreck 24 MAY – 22 JUNE Leah Purcell directs this very alert, very human play about how many other people it takes for each of us to live. Written by Balnaves award winner Jada Alberts. 20 Questions 7 APRIL – 11 AUGUST (MONDAYS ONLY) A cabaret and a talk show rolled into one, each night a new mystery guest from an exemplary roll-call of Indigenous performers is asked 20 questions. Hosted by Wesley Enoch. BELVOIR ST THEATRE BOOKINGS 02 9699 3444 BELVOIR.COM.AU Rarriwuy Hick. Photography: Gary Heery 20 swf.org.au S A T U R D AY, M AY 1 7 — S A T U R D AY, M AY 2 4 Sydney Writers’ Festival workshops are led by recently published and acclaimed local and international authors with experience in teaching what they know. The workshop program runs throughout the Festival week from Saturday, May 17 to Saturday, May 24. Workshops for children, aged 9-13, are held from Saturday, May 17 to Monday, May 19. All workshops are held at the State Library of New South Wales, Macquarie Street, Sydney. The Festival began at the library many years ago and now you can grow as a writer there. Tickets can be booked through Sydney Theatre box office, 9250 1988 or tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au, unless otherwise stated. The Sydney Writers’ Festival workshop program is supported by Pantera Press. W1 FELICITY CASTAGNA: STARTING FROM PLACE May 17, 10am-4.30pm Felicity Castagna teaches you how to create dynamic and engrossing stories by using a sense of place to drive your writing. $150/$140 W30 TIM FERGUSON: THE CHEEKY MONKEY May 17, 10am-4.30pm Tim Ferguson unlocks the secret of comedy writing, offering the insights necessary to improve your writing with a focus on the principles of narrative humour and joke-telling. $150/$140 W2 CBCA JUNIOR MASTERCLASS: CHRISTOPHER CHENG May 17, 10am-4.30pm Bring something old from home and let’s write about it. Share your ideas with Christopher Cheng and together weave amazing stories. For young writers aged 9-13. Presented by Children’s Book Council of Australia (NSW) $70 W3 VANESSA BERRY: PUBERTY CLUES May 17, 1.30-4.30pm Ever wondered how to write a coming-of-age memoir? Vanessa Berry, author of teenage memoir Ninety9, teaches you how to shape a compelling story from teenage experiences. $85/$75 W4 JOHN PURCELL: KEEPING SEX REAL May 18, 9.30am-12.30pm Sex is too important a part of our lives and the lives of our characters to ignore. John Purcell, aka Natasha Walker author of The Secret Lives of Emma, discusses when and how to include sex in your writing. $85/$75 workshops SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 festival highlight DERRICK BROWN W27 POETRY AND PERFORMANCE May 23, 1.30-4.30pm Derrick Brown, the founder of Write Bloody, is one of the world’s best performers of poetry but is also renowned as a writer for the page. Derrick leads a rare three-hour workshop on how to make yyour work singg in both forms. $85/$75 W5 NEIL JAMES: OR GREAT GRAMMAR FOR WRITERS May 18, 10am-4.30pm Do you need better insight into the building blocks of great writing? Neil James reveals how to use traditional grammar to refine your voice and sharpen your style. Supported by The Plain English Foundation. $150/$140 W6 CLAIRE SCOBIE & DAVID ROACH: THE SCREENWRITER’S TOOLBOX WITH A NOVELIST’S CRAFT May 18-19, 10am-4.30pm each day Combining their experience in film and literature, screenwriter David Roach and novelist Claire Scobie cover what you need to craft a compelling novel. Over two days learn how to create three-dimensional characters, build a story world, master plot and nail structure. $275/$240 W7 CBCA JUNIOR MASTERCLASS: DIANNE BATES May 18, 10am-4.30pm Make your writing sizzle! Dianne Bates shows you how to create fresh and original prose and poetry with memorable characters. For young writers aged 9-13. Presented by Children’s Book Council of Australia (NSW). $70 W8 KATE FORSYTH: HISTORY, MYSTERY & MAGIC May 18, 1.30-4.30pm Kate Forsyth shares the secrets of combining elements from different genres to create ground-breaking, fresh and original novels. $85/$75 W9 MELANIE TAIT: LEARN LIVE STORYTELLING May 19, 10am-4.30pm ABC RN’s Melanie Tait tells you what makes a good story, how to become a great live storyteller and what will make your story truly memorable. $150/$140 W16 SUMMER LAND: PATH TO PUBLICATION May 21, 9.30am-12.30pm Congratulations, you’ve finished your manuscript! Now it’s time do to the hard work to get it on the shelves. Summer Land teaches you how to maximise your chance of publication. $85/$75 W17 KRISTINA OLSSON: TRUTH, LIES AND MEMOIR May 21, 10am-4.30pm Kristina Olsson teaches you to negotiate the minefield of memory when shaping a life and how to serve the truth in memoir. $150/$140 W10 CBCA JUNIOR MASTERCLASS: Y HATHORN LIBBY 119 10am-4.30pm May 19, From poetry to story: it’s all in the imagination. Libby Hathorn shares her creative secrets. For young writers aged 9-13. Presented by Children’s Book Council of Australia (NSW). $70 W11 KATE FORYSTH: RE-SPINNING THE MAGIC OF FAIRYTALES May 20, 9.30am-12.30pm Kate Forsyth, Australia’s queen of fairytales, teaches you how to weave a magical world and put your own spin on fairytales. $85/$75 W12 SULARI GENTILL: HISTORICAL FICTION May 20, 9.30am-12.30pm Historical novelists weave imaginary plots into actual events. Sulari Gentill explores techniques to bring history into a narrative to enhance rather than swamp the story. $85/$75 W18 MARK LAMPRELL: THE STORY IN YOU May 21, 1.30-4.30pm Do you have a story based on your own life or real events? Mark Lamprell explores how a good structure helps you bring your story to life. $85/$75 W19 TONY BIRCH: THE WRITER’S NOTEBOOK May 22, 9.30am-12.30pm Tony Birch leads a practical workshop on gathering observations and recording object responses, showing you how to use these as foundations for your creative work. $85/$75 W20 SOCIETY OF EDITORS (NSW): EDITING DEMYSTIFIED May 22, 10am-4.30pm You’ve finished your first draft. Now what? An expert from the Society of Editors (NSW) demystifies the editing process for you. $150/$140 W13 STEVEN LEWIS: ONLINE MARKETING FOR WRITERS May 20, 10am-4.30pm You’ve written the book, now you need an audience. Digital strategist Steven Lewis teaches you how to reach readers online. $150/$140 W21 FOREST FOR THE TREES: WRITERS & PUBLISHING IN 2014 May 22, 10am-4.30pm State Library, Metcalfe Auditorium A one-day seminar looking at the current state of publishing for Australian writers. It brings together writers, publishers and booksellers to discuss what is happening in 2014. Presented with the NSW Writers’ Centre. $55/$45 Bookings 9555 9757, nswwc.org.au W14 ANITA HEISS: SO YOU WANT TO WRITE A CHICK LIT NOVEL May 20, 1.30-4.30pm Anita Heiss teaches you to write a novel that speaks to readers with believable characters and authentic settings. By the end of the day, you should have written your synopsis. $85/$75 W22 TIM COPE: TRAVEL WRITING May 22, 1.30-4.30pm Work with award-winning travel writer Tim Cope on turning your journey into more than just a travel tale. Tim teaches you the importance of weaving your own narrative with the people, culture and history you encounter. $85/$75 W15 DAVID M. HENLEY: BIG WORLD PLOTTING May 20, 1.30-4.30pm David M. Henley shows you how to let your characters find your plot for you and how your world affects your characters. $85/$75 W23 ALAN GOLD & MIKE JONES: NARRATIVE STORYWORLDS May 22, 1.30-4.30pm Alan Gold and Mike Jones empower you with a writing process for developing narratives that can be adapted across platforms. $85/$75 W24 JOHN CONNOLLY: INTRO TO MYSTERY FICTION May 23, 9.30am-12.30pm Interested in writing mystery fiction? John Connolly discusses character and plotting, giving advice on the most difficult aspects of writing for any budding author: starting, continuing and finishing! $85/$75 W25 INGA SIMPSON: SETTING AND DESCRIPTION May 23, 10am-4.30pm Looking to bring your setting to life and write beautiful sentences? Inga Simpson shows you how to capture place on the page and master the art of fine sensory detail. $150/$140 W26 SCOTT BAKER & STEVE WORLAND: THRILLING WRITING May 23, 10am-4.30pm Steve Worland and Scott Baker show you how to generate story ideas, create exciting characters and structure stories that will make your book un-put-down-able! $150/$140 W27 DERRICK BROWN: POETRY AND PERFORMANCE May 23, 1.30-4.30pm SEE HIGHLIGHT W28 ANGELA MEYER: FLASH FICTION May 24, 9.30am-12.30pm Angela Meyer provides an introduction to flash fiction, encouraging you to delight in brevity. Experiment with notions of character, conflict and resolution, and evoke place and mood in just a few words. $85/$75 W29 CONNOR TOMAS O’BRIEN: ELECTRIC LITERATURE May 24, 9.30am-12.30pm Connor Tomas O’Brien, Director of the Digital Writers’ Festival, explores writing digital literature to show you how best to launch your work into a brave new world of words. $85/$75 W31 YVONNE ADHIAMBO OWUOR: SHORT STORIES May 24, 1.30-4.30pm An interactive, intensive, practice-based leap into the art of short story writing with Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor. $85/$75 W32 SAM COONEY: GETTING PUBLISHED May 24, 1.30-4.30pm Sam Cooney gives you the skills necessary to pitch, negotiate terms, edit and get published in a literary magazine. $85/$75 5 D INREA WREAT G S! Register your book club for a chance to WIN 5 signed copies of the Pantera Press title of your choice. Tell us in 25 words or less what your group’s favourite genre is and why. To enter* simply send your answer with your book club name/location, the number of people in your group and a contact email address to: [email protected] Award-winning author Sulari Gentill is back presenting at the Sydney Writers’ Festival. To WIN 1 of 5 Rowland Sinclair Prize Packs tell us in 25 words or less what makes a great story. To enter* simply send your answer, your name, location and a contact email address to: [email protected] PanteraPress.com * Entries to both competitions open on 1/4/14 and close 13/6/14. No purchase necessary. Separate entries are required for each competition, each is a game of skill and each is open to residents of Australia aged 18 years or over. Winners will be notified by email and published at www.panterpress.com on 16/6/14. By entering the competition you agree to receive ongoing correspondence from Pantera Press. Each prize pack is valued at up to $150 and is not exchangeable for cash. Full Terms and Conditions and our privacy policy are available at www.PanteraPress.com suburban & regional – THURSDAY, S U N D AY, AYSATURDAY, M AY MAY 1 818 — S U N DMAY A AY, Y23 M AY ASHFIELD SR17 JOHN CONNOLLY: LY: THE WOLF IN WINTER May 22, 6.30-7.30pm Ashfield Town Hall Internationally renowned crime novelist John Connolly discusses his bestselling Charlie Parker series and his latest novel, The Wolf in Winter. Presented with Ashfield Library. Free, bookings essential, eventbrite.com.au AUBURN SR18 WELCOME TO DISPLACE May 21, 6:30pm - 8pm Auburn City Library In today’s shifting reality people are feeling displaced. Where do we truly belong? Through forests of trauma, humour and candour, our displaced gene discovers how. Presented with Auburn Poets and Writers’ Group in conjunction with Auburn Council. Free, no bookings BANKSTOWN SR19 MAPPING FRICTIONS: DIGITAL STORYTELLING May 20, 7-8pm Bankstown Arts Centre Join James Arvanitakis, George Voulgaropoulos and Kavita Bedford to discuss place and storytelling through writing, photography and film with artists from Bankstown’s Mapping Frictions digital storytelling project. Presented with Bankstown Youth Development Service and supported by the University of Western Sydney. Free, bookings essential 9793 8324 SR20 BANKSTOWN POETRY SLAM May 20, 8-9pm Bankstown Arts Centre Bankstown Poetry Slam is the largest of its kind in Australia. See first-time poets, seasoned poets and everything in between with clicks and stomps. Everyone is welcome. Presented with Bankstown Youth Development Service and supported by the University of Western Sydney. Free, bookings essential 9793 8324 BELROSE SR21 KRISTINA OLSSON: BOY, LOST May 22, 12-1pm Glen Street Theatre Kristina Olsson shares her powerful family story in Boy, Lost. Presented with Glen Street Theatre. $7.50 Bookings 9975 1455, glenstreet.com.au SR22 LOUIS NOWRA: KINGS CROSS May 22, 2-3pm Glen Street Theatre Acclaimed author and playwright Louis Nowra speaks with Mark Dapin about his portrayal of Kings Cross. Presented with Glen Street Theatre. $7.50 Bookings 9975 1455, glenstreet.com.au BLACKTOWN SR23 INTERCULTURAL DIALOGUES May 23, 7-9pm Blacktown Arts Centre An evening of music, literature and conversation, reflecting on the contemporary relevance of E. G. Whitlam’s policies as explored in the It’s Timely exhibition. Presented by Blacktown Arts Centre and the Whitlam Institute within the University of Western Sydney. Free, bookings 9839 6558, artscentre.blacktown.nsw.gov.au BONDI BEACH SR24 SUNBURNT: SIX TRUE TALES OF HOLIDAYS FROM HELL May 19, 8-9pm Bondi Pavilion Nakkiah Lui, Adriano Cappelletta, John AD Fraser, Phil Spencer, Michael Hing and Annaliese Constable share stories about travel mishaps, romances and adventures. Presented by Rock Surfers Theatre Company. Free, bookings essential 1300 241 167, rocksurfers.org SR25 & SR26 INUA ELLAMS’ T-SHIRT COLLECTION BLACK T May 21 & 22, 8-9.15pm SEE HIGHLIGHT SR27 LIVE ON AIR May 23, 8-9pm Bondi Pavilion Stuck in suburbia, poet laureate Telia Nevile is doing the only thing a word-obsessed, socially inept artiste can do. She’s broadcasting a show from her bedroom and you’re invited. Presented by Rock Surfers Theatre Company. $10 Bookings 1300 241 167, rocksurfers.org SR28 BOB McTAVISH: MORE STOKED! May 24, 7-8pm Bondi Pavilion Told in Bob McTavish’s signature mixture of mischief and poetry, More Stoked! is a homage to ’70s surfing as well as a comingof-age story. He speaks with Tracks magazine editor Luke Kennedy. Presented by Rock Surfers Theatre Company. Free, bookings essential 1300 241 167, rocksurfers.org SR29 CUT & PASTE May 24, 8.30-10pm Bondi Pavilion Playwrights, comics, musicians, poets, novelists and the occasional strong man are invited to try out a new 10-minute idea in front of the audience. Presented by Rock Surfers Theatre Company. Free, bookings essential 1300 241 167, rocksurfers.org BONDI JUNCTION SR30 THE NIB LITERARY AWARD May 22, 7-8.30pm Join Waverley Library in an evening of books and literary discussion to celebrate the 13th year of The Nib: Waverley Library Award for Literature. Presented with Waverley Library. Free, bookings and further information 9386 7709, [email protected]. au BOWRAL SR31 TERRY HAYES: SWF IN THE SOUTHERN HIGHLANDS May 25, 2-3pm Bradman Museum Screenwriter Terry Hayes speaks with ABC Illawarra broadcaster Nick Rheinberger about his bestselling debut novel I Am Pilgrim and writing screenplays for Mad Max, Dead Calm and Bodyline. Presented with Southern Highlands Writers’ Festival. $20 Bookings 4862 1634, shwf.com.au SR32 JOHN BAXTER: SWF IN THE SOUTHERN HIGHLANDS May 25, 4-5pm Bradman Museum Australian author and francophile John Baxter, for whom Paris has been home and inspiration for 25 years, speaks with SHWF Director Michaela Bolzan. Presented with Southern Highlands Writers’ Festival. $20 Bookings 4862 1634, shwf.com.au CAMDEN SR33 BILL GARNER: BORN IN A TENT May 23, 6.30-7.30pm Camden Civic Centre Breathtakingly original, Bill Garner’s Born in a Tent tells the history of Australia through the history of camping. Presented with Camden Council Library Service and supported by the University of Western Sydney. $10, including light refreshments, Bookings 4654 7951 or 4645 5039, trybooking.com/ENFT CAMPBELLTOWN SR34 LAWRENCE HILL: BLOOD May 21, 6.30-7.30pm H J Daley Library Blood runs red through every person’s arteries. Lawrence Hill examines the way it unites and divides us. Presented by Cambelltown Arts Centre and supported by the University of Western Sydney. Free, bookings essential 4645 4550 25 festival highlight INUA ELLAMS SR25 & SR26 INUA ELLAMS’ BLACK T-SHIRT COLLECTION May 21 & 22, 8-9.15pm Bondi Pavilion Produced by Fuel. Award-winning spoken word artist Inua Ellams uses lyrical poetry and animation to tell a modern fable about two brothers and the consequences of success. Supported by the British Council. $25/$20 Bookings 1300 241 167, rocksurfers.org swf.org.au 21 SR47 DAV PILKEY: CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS AHOY! May 24, 4-5pm Riverside Theatre, Parramatta Join one of the world’s most popular writers and illustrators for kids, Dav Pilkey, for a funfilled session. Supported by the University of Western Sydney and Parramatta City Council. Adults $19 / Children (under 16) $14 / Family tickets $55 Bookings 8839 3399 SR48 THE RUMBLE May 24, 5.30-6.30pm Riverside Theatre, Parramatta Young poets in a battle of spoken word, featuring Jesse Brand and Ahmad Al Rady. Hosted by Miles Merrill. Presented with Word Travels and WestWords, supported by the University of Western Sydney and Parramatta City Council. Free, bookings 8839 3399 PENRITH CASTLE HILL SR49 TIM FERGUSON: CARRY A BIG STICK May 21, 6.30-7.30pm Penrith City Library Tim Ferguson shares his story as he went from a high-energy life to carrying a big stick after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Presented by Penrith City Library and supported by the University of Western Sydney. $5, including light refreshments, Bookings 4732 7891 SR35 AN EVENING WITH CAMILLA LÄCKBERG May 21, 7-8pm Castle Hill Library International bestseller and Swedish crime sensation Camilla Läckberg speaks about her latest thriller Buried Angels. Presented with The Hills Shire Library Service. $7.50 bookings essential, thehills.nsw.gov.au/library SR41 JANETTE TURNER HOSPITAL: THE CLAIMANT May 22, 7-8.30pm Hornsby Central Library Janette Turner Hospital, one of Australia’s foremost novelists, discusses her new book The Claimant, a ravishingly readable novel about the shifting and elusive nature of identity. Presented with Hornsby Central Library. Free, bookings essential 9847 6614 hornsby.nsw.gov.au/library CASULA HURSTVILLE SR36 ZOE DANIEL: STORYTELLER May 24, 2-3pm Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre Zoe Daniel discusses Storyteller, her memoir about juggling work, ambition and family amid the unpredictability of life and the predictability of the 24/7 media cycle. Presented with Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre and the University of Western Sydney. Free, bookings essential 9824 1121, casulapowerhouse.com SR42 TOXIN TOXOUT May 22, 7-8pm Hurstville City Library Find out how to reduce pollutants in your body with Toxin Toxout authors Rick Smith and Bruce Lourie. Presented with Hurstville City Library. Free, bookings essential 9330 6142 SR50 AN EVENING WITH JUDY NUNN May 23, 6.30-7.30pm Penrith City Library Judy Nunn speaks about her novel Elianne, a sweeping story of wealth and power set on a sugar cane plantation in Queensland. Presented with Penrith City Library and supported by the University of Western Sydney. $5 including light refreshments, bookings 4732 7891 KOGARAH RANDWICK SR43 TIM COPE: ON THE TRAIL OF GENGHIS KHAN May 21, 6.30-7.30pm Kogarah Library and Cultural Centre Tim Cope and his canine friend Tigon set out to retrace the steps of Genghis Khan. Barking mad or just plain adventurous? Find out as Tim speaks about his travels. Presented with Kogarah Library. Free, bookings essential 9330 9528, kogarahlibrary.eventbrite.com.au SR51 STORYTELLING WITH LIAN HEARN May 21, 6.30-7.30pm Margaret Martin Library, Randwick Lian Hearn speaks about her latest novel, The Storyteller and His Three Daughters. Presented with Randwick City Library Service. Free, bookings essential 9399 6966 CHATSWOOD SR37 JANG JIN-SUNG: DEAR LEADER May 21, 12.30-1.30pm Chatswood Library on The Concourse North Korean defector Jang Jin-sung offers a rare and electric expose of the inner workings of the totalitarian state. Supported by The Concourse. Free, bookings essential 9777 7900 willoughby.nsw.gov.au/library/ SR38 ADRIAN McKINTY May 22, 12.30-1.30pm Chatswood Library on The Concourse Award-winning crime novelist Adrian McKinty speaks to ABC RN’s Kate Evans about his body of work and third Sean Duffy thriller. Supported by The Concourse. Free, bookings essential 9777 7900 willoughby.nsw.gov.au/library SR39 DAV PILKEY: CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS AHOY! May 23, 6-7pm The Concourse Theatre Join one of the world’s bestselling and most popular writers and illustrators for kids, Dav Pilkey, for a fun-filled session about his Captain Underpants series, with Dav drawing his famous characters and taking questions. Supported by The Concourse. Adults $19/children (under 16) $14/ family tickets $55 Bookings 1300 795 012, concourse_boxoffice@centuryvenues. com.au HORNSBY SR40 ALEX MILLER: COAL CREEK May 21, 6.30-8pm Hornsby Central Library Alex Miller takes us into the stone country of Central Queensland and explores tragedy, betrayal and the true nature of friendship in Coal Creek. Presented with Hornsby Central Library. Free, bookings essential 9847 6614, hornsby.nsw.gov.au/library PARRAMATTA SR44 THE CENTRE OF SYDNEY May 21, 7-8pm Information and Cultural Exchange, Parramatta Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Lachlan Brown, Luke Carman, Felicity Castagna and Fiona Wright take you deep into western suburbia, its places and its people, in a night of discussion. Presented with the University of Western Sydney, Writing and Society Research Centre and Information and Cultural Exchange Parramatta. Free, bookings essential, [email protected] SR45 ALICE WALKER WITH ALEXIS WRIGHT May 23, 6.30-7.30pm Riverside Theatre, Parramatta Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Alice Walker and Alexis Wright, winner of the Miles Franklin Award, discuss their writing, activism, connection to place and more with writer Melissa Lucashenko. Supported by the University of Western Sydney and Parramatta City Council. $16/$12 Bookings 8839 3399 SR46 CHRISTOS TSIOLKAS: CLASS AND SPORT IN AUSTRALIA May 23, 8-9pm Riverside Theatre, Parramatta Christos Tsiolkas looks at class envy, politics, migration and ever-pervasive sport in Australia. Malcolm Knox talks to Christos about the pressures of growing up. Supported by the University of Western Sydney and Parramatta City Council. $16/$12 Bookings 8839 3399 RYDE SR52 DAVID HUNT: GIRT May 20, 6.30-7.30pm Ryde Library David Hunt tells the hilarious yet true stories of Australia’s past which have made us who we are. Presented with Ryde Library Service. $5 Bookings 9952 8352 SR53 BREAKING NEWS WITH PAUL BARRY May 21, 6.30-7.30pm Ryde Library In the wake of the phone-hacking scandal, join award-winning journalist Paul Barry for the lowdown on the Murdoch dynasty. Presented with Ryde Library Service. $5 Bookings 9952 8352 WOLLONGONG SR54 ROCKET READINGS May 18, 1.30-3.30pm Wollongong Art Gallery Come for a poetry reading with Kaye Aldenhoven and Irene Wilkie plus an open-mic session with MC Linda Godfrey. Presented by the South Coast Writers Centre. Free, no bookings SR55 BLACK WALLABY INDIGENOUS WRITERS’ NIGHT May 22, 6.30-8.30pm Wollongong Art Gallery A launch of Dreaming Inside II, a collection of poems by Aboriginal inmates at the Junee Correctional Centre, presented on their behalf by their tutors, Aunty Barbara Nicholson, John Muk Muk Burke and Ron Pretty, hosted by South Coast Writers Centre. Supported by the Wollongong Art Gallery and Arts NSW. Free, bookings essential 4228 0151, [email protected] writers index SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 A-Z O F PA R T I C I PA N T S 22 swf.org.au See swf.org.au for biographies hies of all participants. KEY: CUR Curiosity Lecture Series, see page 10 W Workshops, see page 20 SR Suburban & Regional events, see page 21 ■ International writer A Patrick Abboud 108 Robert Adamson 36 ■ Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor 45, 119, 221, W31 Louise Adler 27 Michael Mohammed Ahmad 163, SR44 Adam Aitken 13, 206 Richard Aitken 81 ■ Jim Al-Khalili 53, 82, 141, 176 Ahmad Al Rady SR20, SR48 Emma Alberici 61 Kaye Aldenhoven SR54 Ali Alizadeh 180, 221 Chris Allen 196 Elizabeth Allen 13 Chris Andrews 52, CUR8 Jeff Apter 207 Robyn Archer 128 Louis Armand 206 John Armstrong 130, 152, CUR1 James Arvanitakis SR19 ■ Reza Aslan 53, 69, 113, 144 Monica Attard 107, 169 Emma Ayres 21, 112, 161 B Sunil Badami 129, 187 Julia Baird 65 Scott Baker 141, 196, W26 Tim Baker 223 Tristan Bancks 204, 216 Nicolas Barker 23 Greg Barron 196 Paul Barry 169, 219, SR53 Lenny Bartulin 73, 211 Dianne Bates W7 Caroline Baum 9, 64, 80, 115, 165, 199 John Baxter 41, 60, 84, SR32 Joan Beaumont 133 Kavita Bedford 156, SR19 Hilary Bell 105, 190, 193 Jon Bell 25 Kate Belle 41 Maxine Beneba Clarke 59, 124, 221 Tegan Bennett Daylight 32, 183, SR14 Karima Bennoune 69, 150, 203 Vanessa Berry 112, 124, W3 Judith Beveridge 173, 180 Steve Biddulph 20 Craig Billingham SR11 Tony Birch 59, 86, 140, 164, W19 Steve Bisley 77, 151 Cate Blake 172 Bethanie Blanchard 164 Sarah Blasko 137, 225 Anna Bligh 177 Merlinda Bobis 34 Ken Bolton 36 Trevor Bormann 185 Gregg Borschmann 18, SR9, SR16 David Braddon-Mitchell CUR11 Jesse Brand 124, SR48 Emma Brazil SR11 Michael Brennan 13, 206 Kaleena Briggs 193 David Brooks SR15 ■ Derrick Brown 224, W27 James Brown 133 Lachlan Brown SR44 Paul Brunton 23 Robbie Buck 56 Meredith Burgmann 63 John Muk Muk Burke SR55 Andrew Burrell 61, 219 David Burrows 147 ■ Ian Buruma 30, 84, 181 Janet Butler 103 Caroline Butler-Bowdon 101 Helene Byfield W21 Jennifer Byrne 102 C Elizabeth Campbell 36 Nerida Campbell 44 Adriano Cappelletta SR24 Gabrielle Carey 54, 182 Mike Carlton 133, 184 Luke Carman 163, SR44 Bob Carr 51, 135, SR8 Nick Carroll 223 Jo Case 26, 123 Felicity Castagna 93, SR4, SR44, W1 Michael Cathcart 19, 45, 99 ■ Eleanor Catton 66, 86, 183 A.H. Cayley 69 Kate Ceberano 118, 165 ■ Vikram CCh Chandra 38, 140, 201 Christopher Cheng W2 Violet Cho 13 Vi l t Ch Betty Churcher 89, 130 John Cleary 53 Rob Coleman 147 Ian Collie 226 Mark Colvin 120 ■ John Connolly 106, 205, 222, SR17, W24 Annaliese Constable SR24 Sam Cooney 124, W32 Tim Cope 97, 161, SR43, W22 Peter Corris 114 Miriam Cosic 40 Natalie Costa Bir W21 Mary Coustas 212 Brendan Cowell 20, 225 Annabel Crabb 69, 126 Andrew Cranna 195 Hal Crawford 108 Meredith Curnow 87 D Zoe Daniel 47, 127, SR36 Mark Dapin SR22 Judy Davis 59 Mark Davis 171 Pedro de Almeida 44 Michelle de Kretser 157 Bob Debus SR8 Brigid Delaney 20, 187 Tanya Denning 117 Robert Dessaix 157, CUR3 ■ Frank Dikötter 30, 100, 142 Collette Dinnigan 136 DJ: Ribongia 124 ■ Emma Donoghue 19, 37, 118, 177, 227, SR6 Geraldine Doogue 116, 202 Ceridwen Dovey 7, 50, 164 Stephanie Dowrick 49 Peter Doyle 44 Peter Duncan 57 Susan Duncan 62 Irina Dunn SR4, SR7 E Ali Cobby Eckermann 90, 145 Jill Eddington 16, 73 Patricia Edgar SR7 ■ Yasmine El Rashidi 47, 76, 150, 176 ■ Inua Ellams 124, 156, 177, SR25, SR26 Wesley Enoch 117, 146, 177 Rafael Epstein 154 Kate Evans 7, 84, 158, 181, 221, SR38 Mark Evans 207 Tanya Evans 103 Elizabeth Evatt 63 F Kate Fagan SR6 Kelly Fagan W21 Delia Falconer 93, 215 Annah Faulkner SR10 Johanna Featherstone 36 Sarah Ferguson 160, 185 Tim Ferguson 55, SR49, W30 Richard Fidler 82 Jesse Fink 207 ■ Tim Finn 8 Luke Fischer 88, 173 Sheila Fitzpatrick 30, CUR14 Whitney Fitzsimmons 43 Peter FitzSimons 133, 153, 211 Richard Flanagan 104, 170, 202, SR13 Prudence Flint 36 Chris Flynn 7, 21, 50 Angus Fontaine 213 Kate Forsyth 12, 140, W8, W11, W21 Greg Foyster 21, 143, SR16 David Francis 29, 46, 203 John AD Fraser SR24 Malcolm Fraser 109, 135 Grant Freckelton 147 Jackie French 103 Colin Friels 59 ■ Cornelia Funke 140, 156, 179, 191, 192 G ■ Steven Gale 33, 66, 104, 144, 200 Ross Garnaut 116 Bill Garner 159, CUR4, SR33 Joe Gelonesi 88, 152 Sulari Gentill W12 Rebecca Giggs 124 ■ Vince Gilligan 1 Richard Glover 111, 143 Linda Godfrey SR54 Jane Godwin 193 Alan Gold W23 Kerryn Goldsworthy 120 Sarah Goodes 214 Gus Gordon 193, 195 Lisa Gorton 173 Ross Grayson Bell 25, 226 Nancia Guivarra 193 H Eleanor Hall 113, 154 Clive Hamilton 31, SR9 Philip Hammial SR15 Andrea Hanke W21 Chris Hanley 60 Fiona Harari 62, 77, 117 David Hardaker 150 Mark Harding W21 Marieke Hardy 102 Jacqueline Harvey 191, 192 Libby Hathorn W10 Ashley Hay 31, 58, 210 Terry Hayes SR31 Jim Hearn 128 Lian Hearn 15, 119, SR51 Anita Heiss 62, 146, W14 David M. Henley 141, W15, W21 Kathryn Heyman 16, 42, 75 ■ Lawrence Hill 168, 210, CUR5, SR34 Michael Hing SR24 Robert Hoge 123, 151 Lucinda Holdforth 70, 95, 167 ■ A.M. Homes 57, 123, 175 ■ Dara Horn 182 Ian Hoskins 16 ■ Lucy Hughes-Hallett 27, 167, 211 David Hunt 54, 159, SR52 Rebecca Huntley 14, 122, CUR10 Jane Hutcheon 74, 100, 142 I Dan Ilic 69 Ivor Indyk 180 Ian Innes 81 Mark Isaacs 160 J ■ Jessica Jackley 43 Linda Jaivin 134, 158 Neil James 153, 156, 201, W5 Phil Jarratt 223 Tom Jellett 195 Ben Jenkins 176 Diana Jenkins 177 Mark Jensen 91 ■ Jang Jin-sung 142, 197, SR37 ■ Adam Johnson 79, 119, 131, 197 Lou Johnson W21 Elizabeth Johnstone 75, CUR13, CUR14 Mike Jones W23 Andrew Joyner 193, 195 K ■ Maira Kalman 12 Michaela Kalowski 39, 166, 209 Lally Katz 39, 166 Deborah Kelly 193 Matt Kelly 69 Thomas Keneally 94, 202 Luke Kennedy SR28 Simon Kennedy 26, 78 Hannah Kent 226 Rachel Kent 130 Fenella Kernebone 22, 81, 170 Andrew Khedoori 137 Gretel Killeen 217, SR39 Richard King 10, 153, CUR6 Michael Kirby 63, 142, CUR13 Eben Kirksey 83 Dominic Knight 68, 159 David Knox 57 Malcolm Knox 16, SR46 Kirsten Krauth SR4, W21 Karl Kruszelnicki 141 L ■ Camilla Läckberg 74, 134, 222, SR35 Mark Lamprell 26, 55, W18 Summer Land W16 Benjamin Law 97, 134, 172, 186, 220 Michelle Law 220 Joy Lawn 218 Suzanne Leal 37, 55 Mabel Lee 13 ■ Shirley Lee 142, SR37 David Leser 162 Michael Leunig 110, 153, 202 Tim Levinson (Urthboy) 137 Steven Lewis W13 ■ Huw Lewis-Jones 46, 161 Bella Li 13, 206 Jono Lineen 18, 78, 161 Paul Livingston 84 Antony Loewenstein 53, 59, 71 Astrid Lorange 69 ■ Bruce Lourie 129, 178, SR42 Roberta Lowing SR15 Melissa Lucashenko SR45 ■ Matthew Luhn 56, 124 Nakkiah Lui 118, 146, SR24 M Carol Major SR10 David Malouf 32 Stefano Manfredi 5 Alison Manning 199 Paddy Manning 61 Sara Mansour SR20 Kathy Marks 117 Simon Marnie 5 David Marr 107, 139, 184, 219 Judith Martinez SR11 Walter Mason 26, 49 John Mateer 173, 180, 206 ■ Eimear McBride 96, 119, 218, W21 Iain McCalman 2 Joanne McCarthy 107, 185 Hamish McDonald 30, 167 ■ Colin McDowell 33, 124, 136, 177, 200 Fiona McFarlane 24, 50 Steven McGregor 25, 57, 93 Michaela McGuire 28, 107, 138, 172 Adrian McKinty 98, 222, SR38 Sophie McNeill 76 Bob McTavish 159, 223, SR28 Stephen Measday SR12 Miles Merrill 124, SR48 Angela Meyer 41, 50, 164, W28 Rose Michael W21 Kate Middleton 180 Alex Miller 58, 119, SR40 Kristie Miller 152 Lydia Miller 132, 146 Patti Miller 103 Jennifer Mills 59 Peter Minter 59 Natasha Mitchell 123 Justin Monjo 147 ■ Alex Monroe 18, 80, 130 Richard Morecroft 151, 201 Linda Morris 119, 155 Julian Morrow 69, 79, 124, 176 Tara Moss 65, 118, 168, SR1 Linda Mottram 72 Djon Mundine SR5 Jenny Munroe 145 Omar Musa 59, 112, 124 N Zareh Nalbandian 147 Dalia Nassar 152 Robert Nery 13 Telia Nevile SR27 Adrian Newstead SR5 P.M. Newton 28, 98 Pauline Nguyen 91 Barbara Nicholson SR55 Philip Nitschke 14, 114 Chris Nixon 195 Sherrill Nixon 10, 71, 127, 178 Zoe Norton Lodge 176 Louis Nowra 93, SR22 Judy Nunn 62, SR50 Malla Nunn 98 O Connor Tomas O’Brien 156, 224, W29 Steven O’Donnell 120 Mark O’Flynn SR11, SR15 James O’Loghlin 216 Helen O’Neill 22, 101, 200, 219 Kristina Olsson 128, 151, 182, SR21, W17 Brett Osmond W21 P Jon Page 28, 106 Madhvi Pankhania 108 Michael Parker 20 Bruce Pascoe 132 Michael Pembroke 54, 121 Georgia Perry 195 Antonia Pesenti 105, 190, 193 Oliver Phommavanh 195, 216 Liam Pieper 55, 172 Peter Pierce 94 ■ Dav Pilkey 217, SR39, SR47 Julie Pinkham W21 Sally Piper SR10 Darrell Pitt W21 Peter Polites 163 Ron Pretty SR11, SR55 Sian Prior 115, 138, 212 John Purcell 12, 41, W4, W21 Josh Pyke 137 Q Ben Quilty 89, 170 R Scott Rankin 128 Henry Reynolds 90, 132 Judith Ridge 140, SR47 Andrew Riemer 48 Archie Roach 9 David Roach W6 Brian Robinson SR2 Michael Robotham 222, W21 Aden Rolfe 124 ■ Dinah Roma 13, 34 Stephen Romei 131, 211 Deborah Bird Rose 83 Tim Ross 22 ■ Jacques Roubaud 12, 52, 134, 201 Luke Russell CUR9 Adrian Russell Wills 25 S John Safran 124, 138, 182 Michael Sala 187, 218 Eliza Sarlos 191 Margot Saville 42 Mandy Sayer 17, 78, 212 ■ Jeremy Scahill 47, 69, 71, 171, 174 Julianne Schultz 128 Claire Scobie W6 Ella Scott Lynch 172 ■ Lynne Segal 14, 85, SR7 Penelope Seidler 22 Berndt Sellheim 88 ■ Zeruya Shalev 209 Eddie Sharp 69, 172 Paul Sharrad 87 ■ Ari Shavit 113, 162 Louise Sherwin-Stark W21 ■ Gary Shteyngart 126, 148, 186 Annette Shun Wah 119, 186 Inga Simpson 18, 143, W21, W25 Nardi Simpson 193 Graeme Simsion 226 Luke Slattery 143, CUR2 Clive Small 28 Pip Smith 124 ■ Rick Smith 129, 178, SR42 ■ Andrew Solomon 3, 123, 176, 208 Lucia Sorbera 150 Scott Spark 172 Jeff Sparrow 59 Adam Spencer 1, 38 Phil Spencer SR24 Tracey Spicer 85, 118 Ranjana Srivastava 14, CUR7 Jason Steger 102 Michel Streich SR11 Thomas Suddendorf 83, 210 Anne Summers 40, 63 T Melanie Tait 198, W9 ■ Amy Tan 99, 158, 186 Chris Taylor 69, 124, 176 Lenore Taylor 135 Christie Thompson 77 ■ Nhã Thuyên 13, 34, 206 Rodney Tiffen 169 Tom Tilley 35 Peter Timms 77, 218 Laura Tingle 109 ■ Sandi Toksvig 19, 70, 95, 126, 191, 216, SR12 ■ Paola Totaro 20, 47, 110 Christos Tsiolkas 42, 139, SR46 Aviva Tuffield 86, 212 Janette Turner Hospital 19, 48, 73, 187, SR41 U Andrew Upton 125 V James Valentine 92, 112 Thom Van Dooren 83 George Voulgaropoulos SR19 W Robert Wainwright 29, 73, 167, 200 ■ Alice Walker 9, 64, SR45 Christopher Warren 108, 185 Robert Watkins W21 Jenny Watson 36 John Watson SR15 ■ Irvine Welsh 126, 168, 213 Scott Whitmont SR37 Irene Wilkie SR54 Marian Wilkinson 51 Michael Williams 148, 208 David Williamson 39, 87, 172 Geordie Williamson 54, 87, 96, 120, 149, SR13, SR14 Kristin Williamson 172 Faye Wilson SR11 Tim Wilson 153 David Winter W21 Charlotte Wood 24, 199, SR14 Steve Worland 196, W26 Alexis Wright 42, 149, SR45 Fiona Wright SR44 Tom Wright 39, 170 Susan Wyndham 78, 175 Y ■ Kyoko Yoshida 13, 34, 164, 206 Damon Young 168, 193, CUR1-12 Z Jakob Ziguras 88 Mary Zournazi CUR12 venues & bookings SATURDAY, MAY 18 – THURSDAY, MAY 23 F E S T I VA L I N F O R M A T I O N INFORMATION BOOKINGS Sydney Writers’ Festival presents sentttss both free and ticketed events. Seats cannot be booked for free events in the Walsh Bay Precinct. These events fill quickly, so we recommend you arrive early. All venues must be vacated at the end of each event. The majority of ticketed events can be booked through the Sydney Theatre Company box office, either online at tickets.sydneytheatre.org.au, by phone on 9250 1988 or in person at 22 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay. Satellite box offices will also operate at Pier 2/3 and Sydney Town Hall for ticket purchases on event days. For bookings not taken by Sydney Theatre, please refer to individual event listings in the program. Concessions apply for children under 16, full-time students and Australian Health Care Card or Centrelink pension cardholders. Transaction fees may apply for all bookings. ACCESSIBILITY All venues are wheelchair accessible. After the Festival, some events will be available on our website as video links or audio podcasts. HEARING LOOP The following venues are fitted with a hearing loop system: Sydney Theatre, Wharf Theatre 2, City Recital Hall, Sydney Opera House and Sydney Town Hall. ENQUIRIES (excluding bookings) For any general enquiries, please contact Sydney Writers’ Festival either by phone on 9252 7729 or by email on [email protected]. TRAVELLING TO THE WALSH BAY PRECINCT TRAIN AND FERRY The closest train station and ferry terminal is Circular Quay, about a 15-minute walk to the Walsh Bay swf.org.au 23 Pier 2/3 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay Main Stage (capacity 400) Club Stage (capacity 250) The Loft (capacity 300) Bloomberg Stage (capacity 150) The Big Top For Little People (capacity 100) OTHER CITY VENUES precinct. From Circular Quay, walk down George Street and turn right on Hickson Road. Follow Hickson Road under the Harbour Bridge and around past the hotel, Pier One Sydney Harbour, to the Festival precinct. BUS Millers Point bus services 431 and 433 stop at Railway Square, QVB and Wynyard station and travel down George Street through The Rocks to Millers Point. It’s a 10-minute walk from Millers Point to the Walsh Bay precinct. Buses run about every 20 minutes. Route 998 runs from 9pm to 4.30am every Friday and Saturday night, from Hickson Road Walsh Bay to Circular Quay, Wynyard and Town Hall stations. Buses run every 30 minutes and there’s a bus stop outside Pier 4/5. SYDNEY WRITERS’ FESTIVAL SHUTTLE BUS From Thursday to Sunday, May 22-25, a Sydney Writers’ Festival shuttle bus will run a return service from Circular Quay to the Festival precinct at Walsh Bay. Buses depart about every 15 minutes between 9am and 6.15pm from the First Fleet Park stop on George Street. The first stop is opposite Sydney Theatre, and the second stop is outside Pier 4/5. Buses then return directly to Circular Quay. The last scheduled return service to Circular Quay The School of Humanities and Communication Arts and the Writing and Society Research Centre are world leaders in the fields of literary studies, performing arts and creative writing.* We are ranked in the top 150 universities in the QS World University Rankings for English Language & Literature. departs from Walsh Bay at 6.15pm. The cost is $2 for a Circular Quay return ticket on the SWF shuttle bus. As this is a charter service, one-way tickets, Travel10s, concession cards and pensioner day tickets will not be accepted. BICYCLES Bicycle parking is provided under the awning on Pier 2. PARKING The closest paid parking is at InterPark on 26 Hickson Road (next to Sydney Theatre) and Wilson Carpark at Towns Place, near the junction of Hickson Road and Towns Place. Limited metered parking is available on Hickson Road. WALSH BAY PRECINCT VENUES Sydney Theatre 22 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay Sydney Theatre (capacity 850) Richard Wherrett Studio (capacity 100) Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay Sydney Dance 1 (capacity 400) Sydney Dance 2 (capacity 160) Sydney Dance Lounge (capacity 80) Philharmonia Studio (capacity 100) Wharf Theatre 2 (capacity 200) The Bar at the End of The Wharf (capacity 120) City Recital Hall Angel Place Angel Place, Sydney Sydney Opera House Joan Sutherland Theatre Bennelong Point, Sydney Sydney Town Hall 483 George Street, Sydney The Concourse 409 Victoria Road, Chatswood State Library of NSW Macquarie Street, Sydney Museum of Contemporary Art 140 George Street, The Rocks Sydney Observatory Watson Road - Observatory Hill, The Rocks The Mint 10 Macquarie Street, Sydney Macleay Museum, University of Sydney Gosper Lane (off Science Road). University of Sydney ABC Studios 700 Harris Street, Ultimo Brett Whiteley Studio 2 Raper Street, Surry Hills FOOD BOOKS MUSIC VENUES The Food Society 91 Riley Street, Darlinghurst Red Lantern on Riley 60 Riley Street, Darlinghurst Osteria Bella Manfredi Restaurant Level G, Harbourside, The Star, 80 Pyrmont Street, Pyrmont Setting Agendas, Creating Culture WRITING THEORY AND PRACTICE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN SYDNEY We not only think about culture, we create culture: we are home to Giramondo Publishing, an award-winning independent publisher of Australian poetry and fiction, and to the Sydney Review of Books, Australia’s premier literary review site. UWS is pleased to continue our long-standing sponsorship of the Sydney Writers’ Festival. For further information on our research and academic programs please visit www.uws.edu.au/writing or www.uws.edu.au/hca Writing and Society Research Centre sydneyreviewofbooks.com *ERA Ranking 2010 & 2012