Tag Archives: Lucienne Boyce

NEXT HULF TALK: The World at War – Saturday 29th October 2022

Join us on Saturday 29th October, 2-5pm, in the Bethesda Chapel, Park Street, Hawkesbury Upton for a fascinating and moving afternoon of talks about the impact of World War, with guest speakers from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and Ukraine, plus five authors of fiction and non-fiction inspired and informed by the First and Second World Wars, in the run-up to Remembrance Day.

The ticket price of £5 includes coffee, tea, cakes and biscuits, plus a £2 discount voucher valid against a book bought at the event.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Capacity of our beautiful historic venue is limited, so advance booking is essential to avoid disappointment.

ADVANCE BOOKING REQUIRED – BOOK YOUR TICKETS HERE!

This event is kindly sponsored by Hawkesbury Parish News

The Programme & Speakers

The keynote address on the impact of World War will be made by Simon Bendry, now Head of Education and Engagement at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

Bringing our conversation into the 21st century, Svitlana Rotayenko, who works for NATO, will speak on the context and effect of the current war in her home country, Ukraine.

Lucienne Boyce, author of The Bristol Suffragettes, will answer the question “To what extent did the First World War play a part in bringing universal suffrage to women in the UK?”

Nigel Messenger, who has done extensive voluntary work with the Royal British Legion, will talk about his fact-based novel, The MichMash Miracles, set in two different eras, about an extraordinary case of First World War battle won using techniques learned from an Old Testament story.

Also blending fact with fiction, Hawkesbury author Will Fenn (aka Bill Fairney), will talk about the inspiration for his novel Uncle Walter’s Secret, a story of espionage.

Addressing the impact of the Second World War on civilians, and in particular on women, will be two best-selling historical novelists, Clare Flynn, whose The Chalky Sea is set in Eastbourne, and Lizzie Lane, whose Tobacco Girls series features workers at the famous Wills tobacco factory in Bristol.

There will follow ample time for questions for the audience, after which the authors will be pleased to sign and sell copies of books and to chat informally to members of the audience over coffee and cake.

ADVANCE BOOKING REQUIRED – BOOK YOUR TICKETS HERE!

NEXT HULF TALK: Crime, Thriller & Mystery – 30th April 2022

Join us on Saturday 30th April, 2-5pm, in the Bethesda Chapel, Park Street, Hawkesbury Upton for this entertaining new talk.

ADVANCE BOOKING REQUIRED – BOOK YOUR TICKETS HERE!

An entertaining afternoon of author talks, readings & discussions exploring the past, present & future of Crime, Thriller & Mystery books

Kindly sponsored by Hawkesbury Parish News

About this event

In the peaceful setting of Bethesda Chapel, spend a fascinating afternoon in the company of four authors of Crime, Thriller and Mystery novels.

Author and historian Lucienne Boyce will set the scene with a brief talk about the nine-teenth-century origins of the modern detective novel, including Wilkie Collins‘ trailblazing The Woman in White .

Debbie Young will provide insights into the Golden Age of Detective Fiction in the inter-war years, including Dorothy L Sayers and Agatha Christie, who inspired her contemporary English village mysteries.

Fast forward to the present day, and A A Abbott and Valerie Keogh will discuss the development of the modern crime novel and the psychological thriller.

After the panel discussion of current trends and predictions for the future of this broad genre, there will be ample time for questions for the audience.

Once the formal part of the programme is over, the authors will be pleased to sign and sell copies of books and to chat informally to members of the audience over coffee and cake.

The ticket price of £5 includes coffee, tea, cakes and biscuits, plus a £2 discount voucher valid against a book bought at the event.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Capacity of our beautiful historic venue is limited, so advance booking is essential to avoid disappointment.

ADVANCE BOOKING REQUIRED – BOOK YOUR TICKETS HERE!

save the date graphic for HULF Talk 27 Nov 2021

New HULF Talk Event

(Saturday 27th November, 2-5pm)

This will be the first in a new occasional series of informal afternoon talks, each on a different, interesting theme, bringing authors of all kinds to Hawkesbury to share their books and interests via readings, talks and audience Q&A.

Come and explore the world with our guest authors

The inaugural HULF Talk will be a fascinating afternoon on the theme of WORLD TRAVEL & ADVENTURE, in the peaceful, light-filled Bethesda Chapel, spend a fascinating afternoon travelling the world through the books of four local authors.

Author and historian Lucienne Boyce will set the scene with a brief talk about the mythical and idyllic undiscovered country still sought by explorers as recently as the eighteenth century, including an evocative reading from her historical novel, To the Fair Land.

HULF Founder and Director Debbie Young will chair a panel of three real-life adventurers, who will share their experience of travel at some of the highest and lowest points on Earth, including readings from their travel memoirs:

  • Steve Berry, renowned yeti hunter, author of Straight Up: Himalayan Tales of the Unexpected
  • Mark Horrell, mountaineer, author of Seven Steps from Snowdon to Everest
  • John Ruthven, marine film producer and cameraman, author of The Whale in Your Living Room

After the panel discussion, the authors will be pleased to sell signed copies of books (perfect Christmas presents for any would-be or actual adventurers in your life) and chat informally to members of the audience over coffee and cake, which will be for sale throughout the event from the pop-up Bookshop Cafe in the Bethesda Chapel’s Schoolroom.

Hawkesbury Upton Literature Festival is a series of not-for-profit book-related events run by Debbie Young. This is a HULF Mini event.

IMPORTANT NOTE: ADVANCE BOOKING REQUIRED

Guest numbers will be limited for social distancing purposes, so advance booking is essential to be avoid disappointment. The £5 ticket will entitle you to a free coffee or tea and £2 off the price of any book bought on the day. Admission on the day will depend on advance ticket sales and cannot be guaranteed.

ORDER YOUR TICKET HERE

Please click this link to order your ticket via Eventbrite.

If you have any questions about the event, please don’t hesitate to message us via our Contact page.

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MORE ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

LUCIENNE BOYCE

Lucienne Boyce is an award-winning historical novelist (To The Fair Land, the Dan Foster Mysteries), women’s suffrage historian (The Bristol Suffragettes), biographer (currently writing a biography of suffrage campaigner Millicent Price), speaker and blogger. 

Website: www.lucienneboyce.com

STEVE BERRY

Born in Shillong, just south of the Bhutanese border, Steve has returned to the Himalaya many times as leader of numerous treks and expeditions. His main passion is the Himalaya and he has trekked extensively throughout the entire range, including Bhutan, Ladakh, the kingdom of Zanskar, Nepal, and Tibet. In recent years he has been seeking the whereabouts of the Yeti and has appeared in two films on British television. The search continues!!

Website: www.mountainkingdoms.com

MARK HORRELL

For nearly 20 years Mark Horrell has been exploring the world’s greater mountain ranges and keeping a diary of his travels, as well as writing one of the most credible Everest opinion blogs on the net. He writes about trekking and mountaineering from the often silent perspective of the commercial client. As a writer he strives to do for mountain history what Bill Bryson did for long-distance hiking.

Website: www.markhorrell.com

JOHN RUTHVEN

John Ruthven is the only producer to work full time on both ‘Blue Planet I and II’ series. His career highlights range from producing iconic images of blue whales to directing drama inside a WW2 U boat or following venomous snakes throughout Asia. Multi-award winning, with most recently a BAFTA for ‘people’s must-see TV moment’, one that he wrote and produced with the Blue Planet team, and an Emmy for the best environmental film in USA.

LinkedIn profile: linkedin.com/in/johnruthven

Outreach to Wotton Arts Festival

book book pages bookcase browse

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

We’re delighted to have entered a new relationship with Wotton Arts Festival, which takes place each April at our nearest market town of Wotton-under-Edge.

Next year, Wotton Arts Festival will celebrate its fiftieth anniversary, and its committee has invited Hawkesbury Upton Literature Festival to be a part of it by providing an outreach literary event.

After an initial meeting, it’s been agreed that we will actually provide two events as part of its 2020 programme:

  • a historical novelists’ debate on the theme “My era’s better than yours” – a lively panel of authors each championing the era in which their books are set
  • a children’s Meet the Author event enabling young people to talk to authors writing for their age group

Each of these events will be managed by HULF Director Debbie Young, with historical novelist Lucienne Boyce chairing the debate and children’s author Kate Frost (who also writes for adults) directing the children’s activities. More details, including the names of other participating authors, will be announced nearer the time. Both events will take place on Saturday 2nd May, exactly a week after HULF 2020.

For more information about Wotton Arts Festival, a week-long programme of events that takes place late April/early May and its impressive forty-nine year history, visit its website: www.wottonartsfestival.org.uk.