Thursday, August 19, 2021

Drag icon, chart-topping podcasters and bestselling authors join UEA Live’s 30th anniversary line-up


Organisers of UEA Live recently announced a stellar line-up of writers and change-makers from the worlds of literature, media and politics, coming together this autumn to mark 30 years of the University’s flagship literary festival, with tickets now on sale.

 

The festival has been successfully run online for the past two seasons but is planning to return to in-person events in autumn.

 

UEA Live kicks off on Wednesday 6 October with New York Times bestselling author Lauren Groff discussing her new novel Matrix, followed by locally born LGBTQIA+ icon and RuPaul’s Drag Race UK Season 2 breakout star, Bimini Bon Boulash, chatting gender nonconformity, fashion and their debut book Release the Beast: A Drag Queen’s Guide to Life.

 

Stormzy’s Penguin Random House imprint #Merky Books will be celebrated in their mission to uplift and invest in under-represented voices and new narratives, with UEA alum Jyoti Patel, winner of the 2021 #Merky Books New Writers’ Prize, alongside Jade LB, author of Keisha the Sket – “a viral modern classic of Black British culture”, now in print 16 years after it was first serialised online.

 

Next up is Elizabeth Day – Sunday Times bestselling author, journalist, and host of the chart-topping podcast How To Fail With Elizabeth Day – in conversation with author and UEA Professor of Medical and Health Humanities, Christie Watson. Followed by acclaimed novelist Leone Ross, as she discusses her eclectic writing journey and This One Sky Day – her ‘labour of love’ third novel which was 15 years in the making.

 

Former Labour leader and author of Go Big: How To Fix Our WorldEd Miliband, will share his uplifting solutions for remaking society, and the programme will close with interdisciplinary artist, and co-founder of Malika’s Poetry Kitchen, Malika Booker, discussing the collective’s upcoming anthology, Too Young, Too Loud, Too Different.

 

Festival Co-director KR Moorhead said: “We are incredibly excited to welcome back an in-real-life audience to UEA in a safe and managed way. During times of uncertainty, we often look to writing and stories to help us make sense of who we are and where we are going. Now in its 30th year, UEA Live is more committed than ever to bringing new and varied voices to our audience, in an effort to critically and creatively explore what writing is and what it can do in the world. We hope you’ll be as excited by our autumn programme as we are.