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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for ENSFR
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260305T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260308T170000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260205T113624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260205T113632Z
UID:3323-1772697600-1772989200@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Aldeburgh Literary Festival
DESCRIPTION:The Aldeburgh Literary Festival was started in 2002 by John and Mary James of The Aldeburgh Bookshop. It has featured an extraordinary variety of talks\, from the local to the global\, the serious to the hilarious\, the scientific to the philosophical. The Festival is proud to be located in Aldeburgh at the Jubilee Hall and we are delighted that our audience fills the streets of Aldeburgh with visitors and conversation in a winter weekend.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-aldeburgh-literary-festival/
LOCATION:Jubilee Hall\, Crabbe Street\, Aldeburgh\, Ipswich\, IP15 5BN\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260309T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260309T183000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260302T180137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260302T180137Z
UID:3387-1773075600-1773081000@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: ENSFR reading group\, March meeting
DESCRIPTION:The next short fiction reading group meeting will take place (via Zoom) on Monday 9th March at 5pm (UK time). Below\, you can find information on how to join the online meeting room. I have attached an iCalendar file that you can add to your calendar. \nDuring the meeting\, we will be discussing Paul’s reading suggestion: the short story “The Pain Cave” by Lauren Groff. It is a very short story at just two pages long. You can access the short story from this link: https://granta.com/the-pain-cave/ \nOur conversation will focus on the following key questions that Paul has selected: \n\nHow does the story portray family relationships\, and what ideas about family life emerge through the narrator’s reflections?\nWhat picture of childhood does the story create\, and how does the narrator’s view of children shape the emotional tone of the narrative?\nIn what ways does the story use nature—its beauty\, harshness\, or indifference—to deepen its themes or challenge the narrator?\nWhat meanings do you think Groff intended by choosing the title “The Pain Cave\,” and how does it resonate with both the physical and emotional journey in the story?\nDoes the narrator strike you as someone who understands herself clearly\, or do you sense blind spots or contradictions in her self‑perception? What moments in the story shaped your view?\n\nJoin the Zoom here: \nhttps://us06web.zoom.us/j/83325132386?pwd=pccLzay1p6eLKg9PxP5C2HRJwqFLz6.1
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-ensfr-reading-group-march-meeting/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260413T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260413T170000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260413T140352Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260413T140352Z
UID:3473-1776067200-1776099600@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Haunted Book Club Live\, The Old Nurse's Tale
DESCRIPTION:Tickets £15 General / £10 low income / under 21 plus eventbrite fee – book here. \nFor enjoyers of eerie tales\, curious to know more about the stories that make their skin crawl. Join Norton’s Narrator Gav Cross and author John Reppion as they delve into the stories behind some of your favourite spine-tingling tales. Whether you’re a seasoned ghost story expert or a newcomer to the realm of creepy fiction\, Haunted Book Club welcomes all new members with open (and possibly skeletal) arms. \nSit in the midst of this historic library\, once frequented by Elizabeth Gaskell\, and listen to her short story The Old Nurse’s Tale. How do things and buildings can retain memories of anguished people and tragic events. Who or what is haunted the maid and little girl? \nJoin in the conversation or sit quietly in the dark. Whatever you choose. Keep glancing over your shoulder… \nHaunted Book Club brings its first Live event to the Portico Library\, a continuation of their bi-weekly live online podcast: \nhttps://linktr.ee/haunted_bookclub \n12+ Suggested 90 mins plus an interval.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-haunted-book-club-live-the-old-nurses-tale/
LOCATION:The Portico Library\, 57 Mosley Street\, Manchester\, M2 3HY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260420T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260420T183000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260413T134205Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260413T134205Z
UID:3456-1776704400-1776709800@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Short Fiction Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The next ENSFR short fiction reading group meeting will take place (via Zoom) on Monday 20th April at 5pm (UK time). Below\, you can find information on how to join the online meeting room. I have attached an iCalendar file that you can add to your calendar. \nDuring the meeting\, we will be discussing my reading suggestion: the short story “The Debutante” by Leonora Carrington. It is a very short story at just 2\,5 pages long. You can access the short story from this link: https://biblioklept.org/2014/01/05/the-debutante-a-short-story-by-leonora-carrington/ \nOur conversation will focus on the following key questions that I have selected: \n\nWhat is the tone of this short story (e.g.\, serious/funny/…)?\nIs there a sentence in this short story that you particularly like or find particularly important? Why?\nDo you as a reader identify with the main character?\n“The Debutante” has a concern for appearance\, for the social significance of acting in particular ways\, culturally approved as “feminine” behaviour. Can you find evidence of this concern in the short story?\nCan you describe the relationship between the pairs “nature and culture” and between “human beings and animals” in this short story?\nWhat do you think of the short story’s ending?\n\nThose who are interested in exploring the work further might want to watch Elizabeth Hobbs’ short\, animated film based on Carrington’s short story (https://vimeo.com/940848616). It is not mandatory to watch the film in preparation for the meeting. \n  \nJoin Zoom Meeting \nhttps://us06web.zoom.us/j/82016619781?pwd=rvpnvMHbD3oAcdooYh7luRWP75pb2T.1 \nMeeting ID: 820 1661 9781 \nPasscode: 013348
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-short-fiction-reading-group/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260504T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260508T180000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260505T103935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T103935Z
UID:3513-1777881600-1778263200@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Flash in Translation Workshop Series May 2026
DESCRIPTION:Event: Flash in Translation Workshop Series May 2026 \nThe ENSFR and PesText International Literary and Cultural Festival jointly organise a workshop series over the week of May 4\, 2026. The event brings together student and more experienced writers from Poland\, Slovakia\, the Czech Republic\, Hungary\, the UK and Austria. In preparation for the event\, participants wrote a piece of flash fiction about “City and Nature” and will continue to work on their texts in groups during the workshop days. \nThree online workshops are open to the interested public: \n• Reading and Development Workshop on May 6: 11 am CET / 10 am UK time\no Participants share and discuss their work\no Writer’s Reading \n• Development and Translation Workshop on May 7: 12 pm CET / 11 am UK time\no Continues the previous workshop with a focus on translation Development Of Writer’s Ideas with Actors \n• Open Performance Workshop on May 8: 4 pm CET / 3 pm UK Time\no Short performances and improvisations based on the flash fiction submissions\no Performances of Writer’s work \nWe are very much looking forward to seeing some of you there!
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-flash-in-translation-workshop-series-may-2026/
LOCATION:online
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260516
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260518
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260413T140953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260413T140953Z
UID:3480-1778889600-1779062399@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: European Writers’ Festival 2026
DESCRIPTION:The European Writers’ Festival returns for its third edition in 2026\, now established as a biennial event. This year’s festival promises to expand and evolve\, bringing together a new constellation of distinguished authors from across Europe. \nThe festival will take place from 16-17 May\, 2026\, at the British Library in London\, featuring two full days of panels\, performances\, and discussions. Organised by EUNIC London in partnership with the European Literature Network and the British Library\, with support from the Delegation of the European Union to the United Kingdom\, the event will showcase a diverse lineup of authors who will engage audiences on pressing contemporary issues. \nBuilding on the tradition of the 2024 edition—which brought together 30 authors from countries including Austria\, Belgium\, Bulgaria\, Cyprus\, Czech Republic\, Estonia\, France\, Greece\, Hungary\, Italy\, Latvia\, Lithuania\, Netherlands\, Poland\, Portugal\, Romania\, Slovakia\, Slovenia\, Spain\, Sweden\, Turkey\, Ukraine\, and the UK—the 2026 festival will continue to foster dialogue and understanding through the written word.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-european-writers-festival-2026/
LOCATION:The British Library\, 96 Euston Rd\, London\, NW1 2DB
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260519T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260519T190000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260206T164444Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260207T110620Z
UID:3350-1779213600-1779217200@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Meet the Commonwealth Short Story Prize Team
DESCRIPTION:The ENSFR is delighted to welcome representatives of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for a conversation about the Prize\, its history\, the 2026 shortlist\, and wider discussions around the state of the contemporary short story. The speakers include Razmi Farook (Director-General of the Commonwealth Foundation) and Emma D’Costa (Consultant to the Foundation) who managed the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for many years and remains a valued advisor and consultant for the prize. \nThe judging process for the 2026 Commonwealth Short Story Prize is underway. The shortlist will be announced in April\, the regional winners in May\, and the overall winner will be announced during the award ceremony in June 2026. The 2026 judging panel is chaired by award-winning British novelist and dramatist Louise Doughty. Louise’s fellow judges\, drawn from the five regions of the Commonwealth\, are: South African journalist\, author and short story writer Fred Khumalo (Africa); Bangladeshi writer\, translator and essayist Rifat Munim (Asia); Padlei Inuk Canadian poet\, novelist and scholar Norma Dunning (Canada and Europe); short story writer\, novelist and lawyer Sharma Taylor from Jamaica (Caribbean); and poet\, illustrator and author Maxine Beneba Clarke from Australia (Pacific). \nThe Commonwealth Short Story Prize is managed by the Commonwealth Foundation\, and was set up in 2012 to inspire\, develop and connect writers and storytellers across the Commonwealth. The Prize replaced the Commonwealth Short Story Competition (1996-2011). \nPlease join this online event via Teams: Stories Without Borders: Meet the Commonwealth Short Story Prize Team | Meeting-Join | Microsoft Teams.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/stories-without-borders-meet-the-commonwealth-short-story-prize-team/
LOCATION:Teams
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260520T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260520T203000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260413T134930Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260413T134930Z
UID:3458-1779303600-1779309000@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Victorian Short Story Reading Group: ‘The Idyl of the Island’
DESCRIPTION:Join the Victorian Short Story Reading Group to discuss ‘The Idyl of the Island’\, by Susan Frances Harrison. \n\n\n\n\nThe Victorian Short Story Reading Group has regular meetings to explore some of the exciting material from the golden age of the British short story\, which began during the latter part of the nineteenth century. \nCurrent Theme: Colonial Short Stories: Canada \nThe group will consider and discuss tales of and from Canada. These will cover portrayals of new settlers\, indigenous first nations people\, the landscape\, and the flora and fauna. \n‘The Idyl of the Island’\, by Susan Frances Harrison \n(First published in The Week\, a Canadian literary periodical\, 1886) \nA sleeping\, unnamed lady\, becomes the subject of the male gaze. The gentleman\, transfixed by beauty\, wishes to claim both the lady and the island as his own\, raising parallels to colonialism\, which we can discuss. \nUpon registration you will receive a link to an on-line copy of the text and\, as it is a short story group\, it will require no more than an evening’s preparation to read the required material. \nSessions take place monthly between October and June at a venue in Chiswick\, London\, W4 1TT\, between 7 and 8.30 pm. At each session there is a brief introduction to the work\, followed by a group discussion in a relaxed atmosphere\, with wine and nibbles supplied.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-victorian-short-story-reading-group-the-idyl-of-the-island/
LOCATION:The Victorian Society\, 1 Priory Gardens\, Chiswick\, W4 2PD
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260531T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260531T203000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260413T135718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260413T135718Z
UID:3465-1780254000-1780259400@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: An Evening with Colm Tóibín
DESCRIPTION:To mark the publication of Colm Tóibín’s highly anticipated short story collection The News from Dublin (Picador)\, Writing on the Wall is delighted to reveal that the acclaimed Irish author will appear at WoWFEST26 on Sunday 31 May\, chaired by Professor Frank Shovlin. \nTóibín will discuss The News from Dublin\, a striking and deeply moving sequence of stories that span continents and generations\, from wartime Ireland to Barcelona\, Argentina and beyond. Moving between lives marked by exile\, secrecy and loss\, these luminous narratives explore family ties\, displacement\, and the enduring pull of home and memory. \nBorn in Enniscorthy in 1955\, Tóibín is the author of numerous acclaimed novels and short story collections\, including The Empty Family\, Brooklyn\, The Master\, The Magician and Long Island. A three-time Booker Prize finalist\, he has received the David Cohen Prize for Literature\, served as Laureate for Irish Fiction (2022–2024)\, and was Chancellor of the University of Liverpool until 2017. \nHe will be joined by Frank Shovlin\, Professor of Irish Literature at the University of Liverpool’s Institute of Irish Studies and an acclaimed critic and editor. Shovlin is renowned for his scholarship on James Joyce and John McGahern\, including The Letters of John McGahern (Faber & Faber) and the forthcoming biography John McGahern: A Writing Life.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-an-evening-with-colm-toibin/
LOCATION:The Black-E\, The Black-E\, 1 Great George Street\, Liverpool\, L1 5EW
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260601T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260601T190000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260519T105431Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260519T105431Z
UID:3529-1780333200-1780340400@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: ENSFR reading group\, June meeting
DESCRIPTION:The next short fiction reading group meeting will take place (via Zoom) on Monday 1st June at 5pm (UK time). Below\, you can find information on how to join the online meeting room. I have attached an iCalendar file that you can add to your calendar. \nDuring the meeting\, we will be discussing Julie-Ann’s reading suggestion: the short story “Death by Landscape” by Margaret Atwood. You can access the short story from this link: \nhttps://223141929335512656.weebly.com/uploads/1/7/0/9/17093284/deathbylandscape_atwood.pdf \nOur conversation will focus on the following discussion points that Julie-Ann has selected: \n\nThe story opens in a domestic interior but moves to a landscape of ‘wilderness’. How are these two contrasting spaces integral to the story?\nIs there a power dynamic in the friendship between Lois and Lucy?\nWhat is significant about the presentation of the camp and the language Atwood uses?\nDoes this story fit the category of bildungsroman?\nHow does Atwood explore ideas of colonisation?\nIn the following quote bodily absence is made significant. How does this idea relate to the wider societal conceptualisation of the female body through art\, culture and mass media? How are female bodies represented elsewhere in the story?\n\n“But a dead person is a body; a body occupies space\, it exists somewhere. You can see it; you put it in a box and bury it in the ground\, and then it’s in a box in the ground. But Lucy is not in a box or in the ground. Because she is nowhere definite\, she could be any where.” \n\nStructurally the story moves from present to past to present\, using character memory to explicate the main story. How does ‘framing’ the past within the present impact ideas and meanings?\nThe story ends with a mystery? Is the reader invited to play detective?\n\nThose who are interested in exploring the work further might want to read Atwood’s collection Wilderness Tips which also features “Death by Landscape”. Many of the other short stories in the collection are worth reading in conjunction\, particularly “True Trash”. This is a recommendation by Julie-Ann. It is not mandatory to read further short stories for the meeting. \n— \nInes Gstrein is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. \nTopic:  Short Fiction Reading Group – June 2026 \nTime: Jun 1\, 2026 05:00 PM London \nJoin Zoom Meeting \nhttps://us06web.zoom.us/j/85116499205?pwd=hx6KiEeoOcdhPibo4Egw3770UQhger.1
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-ensfr-reading-group-june-meeting/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260605
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260617T171945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260617T171945Z
UID:3572-1780617600-1782863999@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: I’ve Never Read Elizabeth Gaskell Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Elizabeth Gaskell’s House marked the 10th anniversary of its restoration and opening to the public with a bold new exhibition called I’ve Never Read Elizabeth Gaskell\, as part of a project supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund.\nThree young writers – Georgia Affonso\, Princess Arinola Adegbite and Guruleen Kahlo – were awarded inaugural writers’ residencies at Elizabeth Gaskell’s House\, Manchester’s only literary house\, and it is their endeavours that take centre stage. \nThey began their journey having never read Elizabeth’s work\, but by spending time at the house they have been immersed in her writing and role as a social reformist. Through their eyes visitors will also be able to discover just how much there is to the inspiring world of Elizabeth Gaskell. \nCreated in partnership with The Writing Squad and Manchester City of Literature. Please check the library opening times before planning your visit.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-ive-never-read-elizabeth-gaskell-exhibition/
LOCATION:Rochdale Central Library\, Rochdale Central Library\, Number One Riverside\, Smith Street\, Rochdale\, OL16 1XU
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260623T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260623T210000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260617T165622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260617T165622Z
UID:3557-1782241200-1782248400@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Ben Pester and Keith Ridgway at Bàrd Books
DESCRIPTION:Join author Ben Pester and Keith Ridgway with Barry Pierce to discuss their new books \n\n\n\n\nDoors 630pm\, event start 7pm prompt \nBEN PESTER is the author of the short story collection Am I in the Right Place? (2021) and the novel The Expansion Project (2025)\, which was shortlisted for the Nero Book Awards and the Goldsmiths Prize. \n“Pester is a genius of capturing the vicissitudes of contemporary life” LUKE KENNARD \nSail Away Land is the space where we might go when we’re no longer alive (sometimes only temporarily). In this uncommon and disarming collection\, the characters go ‘there’ with or without knowing it. Maybe they have been living there all along without noticing – just like they hadn’t really noticed that everyone is carrying a shiny black suitcase. \nThese stories are about normal things – losing the people we’re closest to\, forgiving them\, finding love and managing to hold onto it – but also about going to parties through a door in the back of a colleague’s head\, housebreaking in search of a sister’s ghost\, and asking the strangers in the kitchen to resurrect you at midnight. \nLike brilliant and strange anxiety dreams in prose\, the stories in Sail Away Land are full of temporal weirdness\, life and non-being\, psychological acuity\, imagination and wit\, all while being effortlessly\, seductively readable and incredibly moving. \n“Moving deftly between corporate weirdness\, the anxiety of rejection\, and the warm haze of childhood memory\, Sail Away Land is just how I like my short story collections: playful and particular. I feel lucky to have read it.” SABA SAMS \nKeith Ridgway is a Dubliner living in London. His novels include A Shock\, which won the 2021 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction and was shortlisted for the Goldsmith’s Prize; Hawthorn & Child; and Animals. His first novel The Long Falling was filmed by Martin Provost as Où Va La Nuit in 2011. He has been awarded the Prix Fémina Étranger and Premier Roman Étranger\, the O Henry award and the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Dooneen is published by Fitzcarraldo Editions and by New Directions. \nThe astonishing Irish literary magician Keith Ridgway pulls from his hat the Great Dublin Novel for the 21st century \nBartholomew Port\, known to all as Mew\, steps into the bushes in a London park and steps out of the bushes in a Dublin one. Not only that—there are no cars; there are moving footpaths; there is no church; everything seems quite queer. Home by invitation\, he has arrived in a Dublin that is alive with song\, with rumor\, with tunnels\, with ghosts\, and with an unmistakable sense of insurgency. In this suspiciously timeless city that breathes an old revolutionary air\, Mew fiercely misses his beloved Mootie\, back home in London. \nAn unraveling\, an impossibility\, a gathering of voices\, and a single dream\, Dooneen is the layered\, allusive and wildly original new novel from Keith Ridgway\, “one of Ireland’s best writers\, in a country with no shortage of them” (The Times).
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-ben-pester-and-keith-ridgway-at-bard-books/
LOCATION:Bàrd Books\, 341-343 Roman Road\, London\, E3 5QR
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260701T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260701T200000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260617T171013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260617T171555Z
UID:3562-1782932400-1782936000@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Sara Baume & Emily LaBarge discuss Opening Night
DESCRIPTION:Shortly after the pandemic lockdown Sara Baume came across a painting in a pop-up exhibition in a renovated West Cork shed. Fascinated by it\, she became determined to make the painter’s acquaintance – although a native of North Dakota the artist Mollie Douthit was now living and working in rural Ireland. Bonded by a common love of nature and a commitment to their respective artistic practices\, they began to meet regularly\, to talk\, to eat and to swim. What would it be like\, Baume wondered\, to write a book in the style of Mollie’s painting? Opening Night is the result. She will be in conversation with Emily LaBarge\, author of Dog Days.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-sara-baume-emily-labarge-discuss-opening-night/
LOCATION:London Review Bookshop\, 14 Bury Pl\, London\, WC1A 2JL
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260822T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260822T143000
DTSTAMP:20260706T190142
CREATED:20260617T171352Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260617T171352Z
UID:3567-1787405400-1787409000@ensfr.univ-angers.fr
SUMMARY:Event: Lucy Caldwell & Nell Stevens\, Short Story Magic
DESCRIPTION:BBC National Short Story Award-winning Lucy Caldwell (author of Openings and These Days) and Nell Stevens (author of The Original and Somerset Maugham Award-winning Mrs Gaskell & Me) are both masters at catapulting you into characters’ lives\, conjuring entirely new worlds in a matter of pages. In this conversation they discuss their new story collections\, Devotions and The Good Time\, talking stories of love\, grief\, haunted lives\, emotional crossroads\, and irresistible humour with Di Speirs.
URL:https://ensfr.univ-angers.fr/event/event-lucy-caldwell-nell-stevens-short-story-magic/
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR