Celebrating a love of literature, councillors give support to festival

02 Oct 2023

Bury St Edmunds Literature Festival is supported with West Suffolk councillor locality funding. Pictured are Marilyn Sayer, Diane Hind Rowena Lindberg, Donna Higgins, Kate Sawyer and Julia Wakelam

A festival which celebrates the love of literature to inspire more people to read and even to write, takes place later this month with support from local councillors.

The Bury St Edmunds Literature Festival from 20 October will have everything from poetry to polar bears, alongside tales of motherhood, race, civil war, witch trials and even a touch of the supernatural.

It’s the fifth year of the festival which includes authors from across East Anglia and aims to cater for readers of all ages.

And this year’s three-day event is being supported with locality budget funding from seven West Suffolk councillors, all of whom represent wards in the town. Councillors Donna Higgins, Diane Hind, Rowena Lindberg, Jo Rayner, Marilyn Sayer, Sarah Stamp and Cliff Waterman have given a combined total of £1400 which is being used to ensure the festival organisers can keep admission costs down especially given the continuing cost-of-living crisis. 

The festival is organised by a small committee which includes Bury St Edmunds author Kate Sawyer as well as founder and West Suffolk councillor Julia Wakelam.

“The festival is about celebrating literature, nurturing a love of reading and encouraging people to take up writing themselves,” said Kate, author of This Family and The Stranding.

“To do that we have had to grow the festival so that there’s even more to interest people, to capture their imaginations and add to that strong sense of culture that is valued in and around the Bury St Edmunds and West Suffolk.”

Julia Wakelam added “We also recognise the cost-of-living crisis is biting and we need to keep the entrance costs down so this festival can remain inclusive and accessible for people of all ages and means to come along and enjoy. That’s why we are very grateful for the support of all of our sponsors, including my fellow West Suffolk councillors.”

The festival, which runs from 20 to 22 October at the Unitarian Meeting House is free to under 18s, while admission varies between £5 to £10 for each event with discounts available to people aged under 26 and people in receipt of benefits. 

Cllr Marilyn Sayer, Cllr Diane Hind, Clllr Rowena Lindberg and Cllr Donna Higgins have all backed the Bury St Edmunds Literature Festival and are pictured with organisers - author Kate Sawyer and Cllr Julia Wakelam
 
The festival opens with an open mic poetry night with Elizabeth Cook and the announcement of the winners of this year's short story competition.  

Festival highlights include:

  • Children’s author Hannah Gold, author of The Last Bear (winner of the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize 2022 and Blue Peter Book Award 2022).
  • Marianne Levy, author of Don’t Forget to Scream, detailing her own experiences of motherhood.
  • Ashley Hickson-Lovence with his fictional telling of the life of Uriah Rennie, the football Premier League’s first black referee.
  • Kate Sawyer speaking about her Bury St Edmunds based novel This Family.
  • Annie Garthwaite, author of Cecily discussing her novel set at the opening of the War of the Roses.
  • Sunday Times bestselling author of the Ruth Galloway Mysteries, Elly Griffiths giving an interview about the crime series set in East Anglia.
  • Professor Maggie Humm and Annabel Abbs both speaking about their books on artist Gwen John.
  • A chance to hear from four new voices in fiction in East Anglia – authors Sussie Anie, Karen Angelico, Rajasree Variyar and Eva Verde.  
  • Polly Crosby and SA Harris discussing their novels set on the Suffolk coast with ghosts and mysteries aplenty.  
  • Author of the Sunday Times bestseller The Leviathan, Rosie Andrews will speak of her spellbinding mystery set during the English Civil War in 1643.
  • A panel discussion with of A. K. Blakemore, Margaret Meyer and Marion Gibson on their novels set during the witch trials of the 1600s.

For more visit Bury St Edmunds Literature Festival 

And follow the festival on social media:
Instagram:  burylitfestival
Facebook:  BuryLitFest
Twitter:  @BuryLit


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