Thursday 2 May 2013

Dreaming Spires and authors that inspire...despite the snow



I had the opportunity, courtesy of the Oxford Literary Festival organisers and Eleanor at Four Communications, to talk with some fellow authors and even persuade one or two of them to chat about their work on camera.

Meg Rosoff of "The Way I Live Now" fame gave a characteristically witty and open interview which you can see here...www.altopico.com and is an absolute delight in person. Kate Mosse, whose book Labyrinth has sold four million copies will be next to appear on the Alto Pico site. She's a wonderful storyteller, warm and very articulate...look out for her soon.

It was also a privilege to chat to Antony Beevor, historian and author of the gripping Stalingrad. I wondered how he'd achieved that narrative drive in his writing, that great sense of story, and epic story at that. By hard work it turns out, not least the experience of writing novels before he turned to history.

And then there was Joanne Harris, the writer of Chocolat most famously, but a terrifically talented all-rounder able to write in a number of genres with apparent ease. I'm not a fan of the Johnny Depp film, but please read the book if you haven't already. Joanne's style is something special, I mean the language itself. I wish I could emulate the rich, rhythmic flow of words. Hat's off.

Joanna Trollope, Lionel Shriver and a nost of other great writers were also at this most prestigious and relaxed of festivals, braving snow falls and cold winds in the Christ Church quad and the inpressive Sheldonian Theatre to meet readers, writers and enthusiasts.

Thank you to them all.

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