Hay Festival Podcast

Welcome to the Hay Festival Podcast where we release remixed conversations with the world's greatest writers and thinkers from our festivals around the world.

You can find us on Apple, Spotify, Amazon and wherever else you stream or download podcasts.

Social media: @hayfestival #ImagineTheWorld

Series 6 brings you highlights from recent Festival events along with back-stage conversations with some of the world’s greatest writers and thinkers on their personal interests and influences.

S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Bonus Episode - A Child's Christmas in Wales, Hanan Issa responds to Dylan Thomas

A Child’s Christmas in Wales by Dylan Thomas became an instant classic when he recorded it on vinyl in 1952. Snow falls gently, anticipation fills the air, and Thomas' lyrical account of his childhood Christmases in a small Welsh town comes to life with humour and wit. Seventy years on and with the support of Literature Wales, Hay Festival has commissioned Wales’ National Poet Hanan Issa to offer her own contemporary response to the famous work. Enjoy...

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S6 Ep16 Janina Ramirez on sleeping on command, artefacts, and burial plans

Broadcaster and historian Janina Ramirez talks to Kavita Puri about reappraising women’s roles in medieval history with her new book Femina. She then joins Poppy Evans for a chat about life outside of work, including an elaborate burial plan to confuse future archaeologists.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep15 Onjali Q Raúf on nostalgia, volunteering and seeking a better world

Children’s author and activist Onjali Q Raúf talks about the inspirations behind her bestselling books and her work with refugees as well as reminiscing about childhood with Poppy Evans.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep14 Jim Al-Khalili on teaching, technology and science in everyday life

Physicist Jim Al-Khalili discusses his guide to leading a more rational life The Joy of Science with Glyn Morgan, before chatting to Poppy Evans about teaching, technology and his everyday life.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep13 Rebecca Mead on swimming, work ethics and profiling Margaret Atwood

Rebecca Mead’s reflection of leaving America to return to her native land, Home/Land raises poignant questions about place. She discusses these with lawyer Philippe Sands, before joining Poppy Evans backstage to talk about culture, swimming and shadowing Margaret Atwood after the 2016 election.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep12 Damon Galgut on his 2021 Man Booker Prize winner The Promise

Damon Galgut’s 2021 Booker Prize-winning novel charts a country in transition and a family in crisis. He discusses The Promise with author Elizabeth Day, as well as talking to Poppy Evans about everyday observations and rituals.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep11 Kate Humble on everyday life, cooking, and impostor syndrome

Wildlife writer and broadcaster Kate Humble talks about her debut cookbook Home Cooked with photographer Andrew Montgomery and Kitty Corrigan, before discussing everyday life, her failings at crafts and impostor syndrome with Poppy Evans.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep10 Liz Hyder on working at Hay Festival, magicians and illustrating

Writer Liz Hyder discusses her new book The Gifts and how fiction illuminates the world with Sophie Haydock and Rebecca F John, before catching up with Poppy Evans about her time working at Hay Festival, and where she finds inspiration for her books.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep9 David Baddiel on comedy influences, procrastinating and saying yes

Comedian and writer David Baddiel joins Simon Schama to talk about his book for people on the right side of history, Jews Don’t Count, before speaking to Poppy Evans about the cassette tape that led him to comedy, writing practices and saying yes to new opportunities.

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S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

S6 Ep8 Jess Phillips on childhood games, life in the public eye and fitness

Labour MP Jess Phillips tells Hugh Muir the inside story of Westminster with her book Everything You Really Need to Know About Politics: My Life as an MP. Afterwards Phillips speaks to Poppy Evans about childhood and life outside of parliament.

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S6 Ep7 Joanne Harris on writing rituals, hypnotic triggers and childhood influences

S6 Ep7 Joanne Harris on writing rituals, hypnotic triggers and childhood influences

Writer Joanne Harris talks to Sophie Raworth about her latest novel A Narrow Door before joining Poppy Evans off-stage to talk about her many eclectic interests outside of work; including writing amulets, staying in hotels and lucid dreaming.

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S6 Ep6 Natalie Haynes on reimagining Greek myths, knitting and comedy

S6 Ep6 Natalie Haynes on reimagining Greek myths, knitting and comedy

Classicist and comedian Natalie Haynes reimagines the story of Medusa, putting the woman back at the centre of the story with her trademark passion, wit and feminism. She then joins Poppy Evans to talk about the crush that led her to comedy, knitting and other influences in her life.

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S6 Ep5 Devi Sridhar on Covid, becoming a personal trainer, and guilty pleasures

S6 Ep5 Devi Sridhar on Covid, becoming a personal trainer, and guilty pleasures

Global health expert Devi Sridhar delivers the John Maddox Lecture at Hay Festival with her new book Preventable: The Politics of Pandemics and How to Stop the Next One. She joins Poppy Evans for a chat about becoming a personal trainer, eating cake and reading romantic fiction.

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S6 Ep4 Alan Titchmarsh on childhood memories, Nelson Mandela’s tomato plants, and broadcasting

S6 Ep4 Alan Titchmarsh on childhood memories, Nelson Mandela’s tomato plants, and broadcasting

Gardener, broadcaster, and novelist Alan Titchmarsh talks to Alex Clark about his latest novel The Gift before heading backstage to discuss his earliest gardening memories, designing a garden for Nelson Mandela and more with Poppy Evans.

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S6 Ep3 Suzanne O’Sullivan on writing a novel, psychosomatic disorders, and reality TV

S6 Ep3 Suzanne O’Sullivan on writing a novel, psychosomatic disorders, and reality TV

Award-winning neurologist Dr Suzanne O’Sullivan talks to writer Oliver Balch about her book The Sleeping Beauties and travelling the world to investigate so-called mystery illnesses, before joining Poppy Evans backstage to talk about storytelling and the influences on her work.

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S6 Ep2 Marcus du Sautoy on football algorithms, prime numbers, and creativity

S6 Ep2 Marcus du Sautoy on football algorithms, prime numbers, and creativity

Leading mathematician Marcus du Sautoy discusses his book Thinking Better – The Art of the Shortcut with neurologist Hannah Critchlow at Hay Festival 2022, before joining Poppy Evans backstage to talk more about his influences

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S6 Ep1 Cressida Cowell on finding dragons, Shakespeare, and the urge to explore

S6 Ep1 Cressida Cowell on finding dragons, Shakespeare, and the urge to explore

Poppy Evans talks to bestselling author and illustrator Cressida Cowell about the influences behind her writing, from childhood adventures on an island to Shakespeare’s ambiguity, with a sneak peek of her new book series, Which Way to Anywhere.

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Series 5 brings you excerpts from some of the most memorable events from our archive.

S5 Ep12 Simon Sebag Montefiore: Written in History: Letters That Changed the World

S5 Ep12 Simon Sebag Montefiore: Written in History: Letters That Changed the World

The historian selects letters that have changed the course of global events or expressed a timeless idea – whether passion, rage or humour – from ancient times to the 21st century. Some are noble and inspiring, some despicable and unsettling, some are exquisite works of literature, others brutal, coarse and frankly outrageous; many are erotic, others heartbreaking. His correspondents range from Elizabeth I and Catherine the Great to Mandela, Stalin and Picasso, from Fanny Burney and Emmeline Pankhurst to Ada Lovelace and Rosa Parks, Frida Kahlo, Leonard Cohen, Lincoln, Trump and Suleiman the Magnificent.

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S5 Ep11 Jennifer Saunders: Bonkers: My Life in Laughs

S5 Ep11 Jennifer Saunders: Bonkers: My Life in Laughs

The writer and actor’s life is full of riotous adventures: Jennifer talks accidentally enrolling on a teacher training course with a young Dawn French, dressing up as punks and scaring people on the underground, bluffing her way to each BBC series, and shooting Ab Fab with Joanna Lumley.

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Dawn French talks to Miranda Sawyer

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S5 Ep10 Malala Yousafzai, featuring an excerpt from Ziauddin Yousafzai

S5 Ep10 Malala Yousafzai, featuring an excerpt from Ziauddin Yousafzai

The Pakistani activist and writer Malala Yousafzai won the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize for her work in favour of the right of children, particularly girls, to education. Aged 17 when she received the award, she became the youngest ever person to receive a Nobel in any category. A BBC blogger since 2009, she has been a persistent critic of the Taliban in her country, which resulted in an attempt on her life when she was on a bus near her home in Pakistan in 2012. She studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Lady Margaret Hall College, Oxford, and has an honorary doctorate from Kings College University, Halifax, Canada.

We open this episode with an excerpt from an event at Winter Weekend 2018 from Malala’s father, Ziauddin Yousafzai. For more than 20 years, Ziauddin Yousafzai has been fighting for equality – first for Malala, his daughter – and then for all girls throughout the world living in patriarchal societies. Taught as a young boy in Pakistan to believe that he was inherently better than his sisters, Ziauddin rebelled against inequality at a young age. And when he had a daughter himself he vowed that Malala would have an education, something usually only given to boys, and he founded a school that Malala could attend.

Malala Yousafzai in conversation with Lydia Cacho
Ziauddin Yousafzai talks to Rosie Boycott

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S5 Ep9 Peter Scott-Morgan: Peter 2.0: The Human Cyborg

S5 Ep9 Peter Scott-Morgan: Peter 2.0: The Human Cyborg

Peter, a brilliant scientist, is told he will lose everything he loves – his husband, family, friends. He has Motor Neurone Disease, a condition universally considered to be terminal. He is told it will destroy his nerve cells and that within two years, it will take his life, too. But face-to-face with death, he decides there is another way and using science and technology, he navigates a new path that will enable him not just to survive, but to thrive. This is true story about the first person to combine his very humanity with artificial intelligence and robotics to become a full Cyborg. His discovery means that his terminal diagnosis is negotiable, something that will rewrite the future. By embracing love, life and hope rather than fear, tragedy and despair he will become Peter 2.0.

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Peter 2.0: The Making of a Cyborg

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S5 Ep8 Ruth Coker Burks: All the Young Men

S5 Ep8 Ruth Coker Burks: All the Young Men

A gripping and triumphant tale of human compassion, All the Young Men is the true story of a young, single mother who finds herself driven to the forefront of the AIDS crisis and who risks everything to give victims back their humanity. In 1986, 26-year-old Ruth Corker Burks visited a friend in hospital when she noticed that the door to one of the patient’s rooms is painted red. The nurses were reluctant to enter, drawing straws to decide who will tend to the sick person inside. Out of impulse, Ruth herself entered the quarantined space and begins to care for the young man who cries for his mother in the last moments of his life. And in doing so, Ruth’s own life changes forever. Ruth goes from being an ordinary young mother in Hot Springs, Arkansas to an accidental activist, the only person willing to help the young men afflicted by the growing AIDS crisis in her deeply conservative community.

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S5 Ep7 Ed Miliband: Go Big: How to Fix Our World

S5 Ep7 Ed Miliband: Go Big: How to Fix Our World

Think of any problem that we face and you may be surprised to learn that there is already a solution out there. We just need to know where to look – and have the courage to think big. Everywhere, people are devising ingenious ways to tackle everything from inequality and the climate crisis to the challenges of housing, technology and demographic change. Based on his podcast Reasons to Be Cheerful, Ed Miliband investigates transformative schemes and why they work. He demonstrates that a different world is possible and we can get there by implementing the best, most ambitious solutions on a large scale. The opportunity for change is immense. It’s time to Go Big. Natalie Haynes is an author and broadcaster.

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Reasons to be Cheerful with Ed Miliband and Geoff Lloyd

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S5 Ep6 Raynor Winn: The Salt Path

S5 Ep6 Raynor Winn: The Salt Path

The walker discusses her mesmerising and inspirational memoir: just days after Raynor learns that Moth, her husband of thirty-two years, is terminally ill, their home is taken away and they lose their livelihood. With nothing left and little time, they make the brave and impulsive decision to walk the 630 miles of the sea-swept South West Coast Path, from Somerset to Dorset, via Devon and Cornwall. Carrying only the essentials for survival on their backs, they live wild in the ancient, weathered landscape of cliffs, sea and sky. Yet through every step, every encounter and every test along the way, their walk becomes a remarkable journey.

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S5 Ep5 Eric Ngalle Charles: I Feel at Home Away from Home

S5 Ep5 Eric Ngalle Charles: I Feel at Home Away from Home

Eric Ngalle Charles is a poet, author and playwright who has claimed asylum in Wales. His uplifting story describes how literature and creative writing helped him to overcome his hasty departure from Cameroon when he was 17, how he survived being a victim of human trafficking and living on the streets in Russia before eventually coming to live in Wales. He talks to author Jenny Valentine.

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Eric Ngalle Charles performs Death on the Third Floor at Hay Festival 2019

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S5 Ep4 Leïla Slimani: Adèle

S5 Ep4 Leïla Slimani: Adèle

Leïla Slimani is the first Moroccan woman to win France’s most prestigious literary prize, the Prix Goncourt, which she won for the shocking thriller and global best-seller, Lullaby. She discusses her work and her novel Adèle with lawyer Philippe Sands.

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Leïla Slimani in conversation with Sophie Hughes, Hay Festival Arequipa 2019

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S5 Ep3 Carole Cadwalladr: Damned Lies and Big Data

S5 Ep3 Carole Cadwalladr: Damned Lies and Big Data

Carole Cadwalladr won the Orwell Prize and the Reporters Without Borders Award among many others for her investigative journalism in The Observer into the subversion of the democratic process and the impact of big data analytics and interventions on the EU Referendum and the American Presidential Election of 2016. She discusses her work with Oliver Bullough.

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Carole Cadwalladr discusses the political landscape at Gwlad in 2019

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S5 Ep2 Ethan Hawke: A Bright Ray of Darkness

S5 Ep2 Ethan Hawke: A Bright Ray of Darkness

Actor, writer and director Ethan Hawke talks to author David Mitchell at Hay Festival 2021 about his first novel in nearly 20 years: A Bright Ray of Darkness. A young man makes his Broadway debut as his marriage implodes – a blistering story about love, fame and the healing power of art.

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David Mitchell talks to John Mitchinson at Hay Festival Digital 2020

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S5 Ep1 Clemency Burton-Hill: Year of Wonder

S5 Ep1 Clemency Burton-Hill: Year of Wonder

Award-winning violinist, broadcaster, author and journalist Clemency Burton-Hill discusses the joys of classical music with Peter Florence at Hay Festival 2018. Clemency’s book Year of Wonder is a personal selection of 365 pieces of music for classical music geeks and novices alike.

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Hay Festival 2021 Opening Gala: A Night of Hope
Clemency’s Hay Festival playlist

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For Series 4 of the Hay Festival Podcast we have asked some of the speakers who appeared at Hay Festival 2021 to select their own personal Hay moments from the festival archive.

S4 Ep10 Hay Festival 2021 Gala Evening

S4 Ep10 Hay Festival 2021 Gala Evening

For the last episode of this series, stars of literature, stage and screen come together to celebrate the unique power of words in our very special Hay Festival 2021 Gala. Join host Natalie Haynes for this evening of joy and celebration with guests including Stephen Fry, Louise Brealey, Hafsa Zayyan, Maggie Aderin-Pocock, Rob Brydon, Clemency Burton-Hill, Juno Dawson and many more.

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S4 Ep9 Mererid Hopwood

S4 Ep9 Mererid Hopwood

Poet and Professor of Languages Mererid Hopwood selects Ifor ap Glyn from Hay Festival 2017, who took Hedd Wyn as his theme for the Gwyn Jones Hay Festival Lecture, Rutger Bregman discussing his book Humankind with Lily Cole at Hay Festival 2020 and Daniel Williams, Leanne Wood and Michael Sheen discussing the work of Raymond Williams at Hay Festival 2021.

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S4 Ep8 Rufus Mufasa

S4 Ep8 Rufus Mufasa

Artist, poet, rapper, literary activist and songwriter Rufus Mufusa selects Caleb Femi talking about his astounding debut collection to Max Porter from the Hay Book of the Month, November 2020, Kayo Chingonyi accepting the International Dylan Thomas Prize from Hay Festival 2018, and the award winning poet and linguaphile Mererid Hopwood from Hay Festival 2020.

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S4 Ep7 Liz Hyder

S4 Ep7 Liz Hyder

The award winning author of Bearmouth Liz Hyder selects Jackie Morris and Robert Macfarlane talking Lost Spells at the Winter Weekend 2020, the magnificent mathematician Marcus du Sautoy from Hay Festival 2013, and the incomparable Lemn Sissay performing his poetry at Hay Festival 2017.

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S4 Ep6 Guto Harri

S4 Ep6 Guto Harri

Journalist and broadcaster Guto Harri selects the magnificent Maya Angelou from Hay Festival 2002, Dr David Jarret discussing a good death and Poet and Chair of Welsh and Celtic studies Mererid Hopwood exploring language at Hay Festival 2020.

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S4 Ep5 Tahmima Anam

S4 Ep5 Tahmima Anam

Writer, novelist and columnist Tahmima Anam selects her very first Hay event back in 2012 with Helena Kennedy, Joan Bakewell, Martin Rees and Anita Anand, Shahidul Alam speaking at Hay Festival Dhaka in 2014 and the novelist, cultural commentator and founder of Palfest, Ahdaf Soueif talking to George Alagiah at Hay Festival 2017.

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S4 Ep4 Natalie Haynes

S4 Ep4 Natalie Haynes

Writer, broadcaster and comedian Natalie Haynes has chosen Colm Toibin and Lisa Dwan giving a rehearsed reading of Pale Sister in 2018, Troy Story, the Trojan War from a female perspective, an event she presented with Chris Riddell at Hay Festival 2020, and star gazer Maggie Aderin Pocock’s event from the Winter Weekend in 2018.

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S4 Ep3 Dylan Moore

S4 Ep3 Dylan Moore

Welsh writer and former Hay Festival International Fellow selects the inimitable American Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison from 2014, the much missed and remarkable Jan Morris from 2009 and a conversation he held with Diana de la Vega at Hay Festival Cartagena in 2019.

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S4 Ep2 Rosie Goldsmith

S4 Ep2 Rosie Goldsmith

Former BBC journalist, writer, presenter and director of the European Literature Network Rosie Goldsmith selects the incomparable Clive James from 2007, the Man Booker International Prize winner Olga Tokarczuk from 2010 and the David and Ben Crystal double act from the Winter Weekend in 2014.

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S4 Ep1 Danny Dorling

S4 Ep1 Danny Dorling

The Professor of Geography at the University of Oxford and author of Slowdown: The End of the Great Acceleration, selects Adam Rutherford on the Book of Humans from 2019, Matt Hancock talking to Amol Rajan pre-Covid in 2018 and Jeanette Winterson giving the Raymond Williams lecture in 2016.

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In Series 3 of the Hay Festival Podcast we celebrate the Hay interviewer. We have asked some of our regular interviewers to choose their own personal Hay moments from the festival archive.

S3 Ep10 Laura Bates

S3 Ep10 Laura Bates

Founder of the Everyday Sexism project and author Laura Bates selects Jeanette Winterson talking Shakespeare from Hay 2016, Ali Smith’s 2005 interview with Francine Stock and writer and political activist Gloria Steinem from Hay Festival Digital 2020.

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S3 Ep9 Claire Armitstead

S3 Ep9 Claire Armitstead

Associate Editor for Culture at The Guardian Claire Armitstead selects poet, writer, musician and activist Akala, speaking about his memoir Native, Professor of Psychology Sarah-Jayne Blakemore on the secret life of the teenage brain, both from Hay Festival 2018, and the award-winning Indian novelist Amitav Ghosh from 2019.

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S3 Ep8 Oliver Bullough

S3 Ep8 Oliver Bullough

Journalist and author Oliver Bullough selects the Serbian revolutionary Srdja Popovic from 2015, Nobel Prize winner Svetlana Alexeivich and author Tom Bullough from Hay Festival 2016, and the magical and musical Julia Donaldson from 2017.

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S3 Ep7 Kitty Corrigan

S3 Ep7 Kitty Corrigan

Magazine Journalist Kitty Corrigan selects nature writer and farmer John Lewis-Stempel from 2015, award-winning British-Turkish novelist Elif Shafak from 2013, and one of the major poets of the 20th Century and Nobel Prize winner for literature, the magnificent Seamus Heaney from Hay Festival 2006.

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S3 Ep6 Dylan Jones

S3 Ep6 Dylan Jones

The author and editor of GQ selects the remarkable Tracy Emin speaking in 2017, Simon Schama on the Story of the Jews, an epic tale of endurance against destruction, from Hay Festival 2014 and Brigadier James Cowan, who commanded the Black Watch in Iraq and the multinational 11 Brigade in Helmand from 2011.

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S3 Ep5 Francine Stock

S3 Ep5 Francine Stock

The writer and broadcaster selects Ted Hughes from 1998, reciting poetry while the wind battered the Hay marquees, the indomitable Jody Williams in 2013, Astronomer Royal Martin Rees in 2016 and the magnificent Maya Angelou from 2002.

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S3 Ep4 Stephanie Merritt

S3 Ep4 Stephanie Merritt

The best-selling historical thriller writer (SJ Parris) choices include Wallander author Henning Mankell from 2011, Toni Morrison talking about her novel Beloved in 2014 and the irrepressible Jilly Cooper from 2018.

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S3 Ep3 Sarfraz Mansoor

S3 Ep3 Sarfraz Mansoor

The journalist and author of Greetings from Bury Park selects three distinctive and distinguished actors; Harry Belafonte from 2012, Charlotte Rampling in 2017 and the inimitable Peter Falk speaking in 2007.

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S3 Ep2 Georgina Godwin

S3 Ep2 Georgina Godwin

The broadcast journalist chooses The Tiger who came to Tea author Judith Kerr speaking in 2017, Toni Morrison talking to Razia Iqbal in 2014 and her brother and author Peter Godwin speaking at Storymoja in Nairobi in 2013.

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S3 Ep1 Philippe Sands

S3 Ep1 Philippe Sands

The Professor of Law and author of Baillie Gifford Prize winning East West Street and Sunday Times bestseller The Ratline selects President Jimmy Carter from 2008, the Director of Public Prosecutions, now Leader of the Labour party, Keir Starmer speaking in 2012 and interpreter Amanda Galsworthy in 2013.

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S2 Ep10 The Future of Europe

S2 Ep10 The Future of Europe

Five inspiring women writers Elif Shafak, Leila Slimani, Kapka Kassabova, Janne Teller and Hilary Cottam offer their visions for the future of Europe on the event of our digital Hay Festival Europa28.

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S2 Ep9 The Next Big Things – 10 Years of Emerging Science from the Royal Society

S2 Ep9 The Next Big Things – 10 Years of Emerging Science from the Royal Society

Royal Society Research Fellows Rachel Lowe, Gemma Modinos, Adi Kliot, Aquila Mavalankar, Nicole Grobert and Alicia El Haj discuss their work at the forefront of science.

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S2 Ep8 Theology

S2 Ep8 Theology

Desmond Tutu, Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, Gene Robinson, Marie-Elsa Bragg and Gene Robinson talk faith, tradition, conflict and hope.

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S2 Ep7 Education Education Education

S2 Ep7 Education Education Education

Tara Westover, author of bestseller Educated, teacher and author Margaret White and Senior Director of the Global Learning Lab and author of Natural Born Learners, Alex Beard explore how we learn.

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S2 Ep6 Ageing

S2 Ep6 Ageing

Journalist-politicians Joan Bakewell and Camilla Cavendish, and Sarah Harper, the Director of the Oxford Institute of Ageing, reflect on a time of super-centenarians, third and fourth ages, and what keeps us vital.

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S2 Ep5 Climate change in a time of Coronavirus

S2 Ep5 Climate change in a time of Coronavirus

Ed Hawkins, Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac, Nick Stern and Gabrielle Walker give some perspective on the ways in which the pandemic is changing the term of reference for dealing with the climate crisis.

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S2 Ep4 War Poetry

S2 Ep4 War Poetry

A reflection on poetry and the Great War, sampling the Josephine Hart Poetry Hour and our Armistice anthology, The Echoes Last So Long with actors Eileen Atkins and Dan Stevens and poets Margaret Atwood, Tishani Doshi, Mererid Hopwood, Ulrike Almut Sandig and Owen Sheers.

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S2 Ep3 Artificial Intelligence

S2 Ep3 Artificial Intelligence

A very brief introduction to machine learning, neural networks, darkest fears and wild intelligence as dreamed into being by Ada Lovelace and Alan Turing. Garry Kasparov and Stephen Fry, Beth Singler, James Scott, Ian McEwan, Marcus du Sautoy, Nigel Shadbolt and Margaret Boden share insights into Artificial Intelligence, fiction and (then) fact.

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S2 Ep2 Romeo and Juliet

S2 Ep2 Romeo and Juliet

Could you have married your first love? Why does it matter who played Peter? What if Juliet wakes 27 lines earlier? Sarah Crossan, Germaine Greer, Abigail Rokison-Woodall, Erin Sullivan, Tahmima Anam and Stephen Fry share insights into Shakespeare’s play.

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S2 Ep1 Global Health

S2 Ep1 Global Health

In this first episode of the new series we glean insight and analysis of the historical and contemporary context of Global Health, zoonotic disease and pandemics from experts including Mary Dobson, Jeremy Farrar, Thomas J Bollyky, Devi Sridhar, Chelsea Clinton and Sally Davies.

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S1 Ep10 Hilary Mantel

S1 Ep10 Hilary Mantel

The novelist Hilary Mantel discusses The Mirror and the Light, the third book in her Thomas Cromwell trilogy with Peter Florence. The interview was recorded at Hay Festival Digital on 30 May 2020, where Hilary was awarded the Hay Festival Medal for Prose.

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S1 Ep9 Gloria Steinem & Laura Bates

S1 Ep9 Gloria Steinem & Laura Bates

The legendary and deeply inspiring writer and activist Gloria Steinem discusses her memoir The Truth Will Set You Free, But First It Will Piss You Off: Thoughts on Life, Love and Rebellion with the founder of The Everyday Sexism Project.

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S1 Ep8 Michael Morpurgo

S1 Ep8 Michael Morpurgo

Michael Morpurgo’s compelling Hay Library Lecture is a marvel of storytelling, an impassioned argument for the rights of every child to have access to books and education, and a celebration of his novel I Believe in Unicorns.

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Hay Festival Podcast

S1 Ep7 Matthew Francis

Matthew Francis’ re-telling of the first four stories of the Welsh classic The Mabinogi is the first to situate it in poetry, and captures the magic and strangeness of this medieval Celtic world. Permeating the whole sequence is a delight in the power of the imagination to transform human experience into works of tragedy, comedy and wonder. Chaired by Daniel Hahn.

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Hay Festival Podcast

S1 Ep6 Hallie Rubenhold

A conversation with the social historian Hallie Rubenhold describing how she mined untapped Victorian sources to illuminate the stories of the women murdered by Jack the Ripper in her Baillie Gifford Prize-winning The Five.

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Hay Festival Podcast

S1 Ep5 Caitlin Moran

A compelling and hilarious rallying call for our times from superstar journalist and author Caitlin Moran tackling topics as pressing and diverse as a women-only language, flawed heroes, and the reasons the internet is like a drunken toddler, in conversation with Stephanie Merritt.

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Hay Festival Podcast

S1 Ep4 Judi Dench & Richard Eyre

For #WorldBookDay, the day of Shakespeare’s birth, here's actress Judi Dench talking about her Shakespearean work and celebrating her album of great speeches, Exits and Entrances.

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Hay Festival Podcast

S1 Ep3 Yuval Noah Harari

How did humans turn themselves from hustling African apes into the rulers of planet earth? The Israeli historian and philosopher Yuval Noah Harari looks at the secrets of our success and explores the themes of his bestselling debut Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind in conversation with Rosie Boycott at Hay Festival Cartagena in January 2016.

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Hay Festival Podcast

S1 Ep2 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

The Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, author of Half of a Yellow Sun, Americanah and We Should All Be Feminists talks about how she discovered Gabriel García Márquez. She responds to his statement “I am a journalist above everything else” in an intriguing exploration of how imagination turns historical fact into fictional truths.

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S1 Ep1 Stephen Fry & Philippe Sands

S1 Ep1 Stephen Fry & Philippe Sands

Stephen Fry and the international human rights lawyer Philippe Sands discuss his award-winning book East West Street, a compelling family detective story and exploration of the legal principles that defined the Nuremberg War Trials. It's riveting and exacting and you'd expect that, of course. But it's also hilarious, and the laughter is the light in this deep darkness.

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