7 February 2025
We have been regular attenders of the Edinburgh International Book Festival since 1995, usually taking in a few sessions each August while we are in Edinburgh for the Fringe. But we tend to find that the majority of the authors featured in the festival programme are unfamiliar to us. Although we've never been to the Hay Festival, we are enthusiastic users of its extensive online archive which is so big it seems to include all our favourite writers. We first discovered the Hay Player during lockdown when we watched the recording of Natalie Haynes' bravura summary of the whole of the Trojan War in just over an hour, 'Troy Story' (reviewed here in July 2020). Hay Anytime contains thousands of audio and film recordings from the past 20 years of the Hay Festival and costs £20 for an annual subscription. We've recently watched talks and interviews from the past couple of Hay Festivals about some of our favourite recent books - including Jasper Fforde talking about 'Red Side Story' (reviewed here in April 2024), Mick Herron reflecting on his 'Slough House' series of comic spy novels (reviewed here between November 2023 and June 2024) and William Dalrymple discussing 'The Anarchy' (reviewed here in June 2023). And in his May 2024 Hay Festival interview, the American author Amor Towles (author of 'A Gentleman in Moscow', reviewed here in September 2021 and 'The Lincoln Highway', reviewed here in February 2022) gives one of the clearest, most interesting explanations of the process of writing fiction that I've heard. There are so many gems in the Hay Anytime archive you are sure to find something for you. Highly recommended.
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