Podcast appearances and mentions of Stuart Kelly

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Best podcasts about Stuart Kelly

Latest podcast episodes about Stuart Kelly

Writers, Ink
The one where Ewan Morrison explains how being a hippie, swinger, part-time Marxist prepper with his own nuclear bunker has helped shape his fiction.

Writers, Ink

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2023 50:10


Join hosts J.D. Barker and Christine Daigle as they welcome guest host JP Rindfleisch IX to the studio. Then stick around as Christine chats with award-winning author and screenwriter Ewan Morrison. Described as the "most fluent and intelligent Scottish writer of his generation" by Booker Prize judge Stuart Kelly, Ewan Morrison is the author of Tales From The Mall, Close Your Eyes, and Nina X, which won the 2019 Saltire Society Scottish Fiction Book of the Year award. His eighth and latest novel, How To Survive Everything, a darkly comic thriller about a teenage girl abducted by her doomsday survivalist father, is available now in paperback. Links: J. D. Barker - http://jdbarker.com/ Christine Daigle - https://www.christinedaiglebooks.com/ JP Rindfleisch IX - https://www.jprindfleischix.com/ Ewan Morrison - https://www.ewanmorrison.com/ Best of BookTook - https://bestofbooktok.com/ J. Thorn's Rubrics for Writers - https://theauthorlife.com/free-tools/ Music by Nicorus - https://cctrax.com/nicorus/dust-to-dust-ep Voice Over by Rick Ganley - http://www.nhpr.com and recorded at Mill Pond Studio - http://www.millpondstudio.com Audio production by Geoff Emberlyn - https://twitter.com/gmbrlyn Website Design by Word & Pixel - http://wordandpixel.com/ Contact - https://writersinkpodcast.com/contact/ *Full disclosure: Some of the links are affiliate links. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/writersink/support

RNIB Talking Books - Read On
244: Wigtown Book Festival 2021

RNIB Talking Books - Read On

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 65:07


Robert Kirkwood travels to a real life book festival for the first time in a few years! Read On this week was recorded on location at the Wigtown Book Festival and features... Booker Shortlisted author Graham Macrae Burnet on his new novel, Case Study (Starts at 1.56) Comedian Robin Ince on The Importance of being Interested (11.11) Girl on the Train author, Paula Hawkins on A Slow Fire Burning; (25.53) Autograph Hunter Adam Andrusier on Two Hitlers and a Marylin (31.41) We get the Books of My Life from literary editor of the Scotsman, Stuart Kelly. (48.13) Plus as an online bonus we also get the Books oy My Life from Graham Macrae Burnet (58.20)

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Michel Faber: The ‘Evil Is In The ‘Etail (2020 Event)

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2021


One of Scotland’s most gifted and unpredictable writers, Michel Faber has always defied categorisation. His previous novels including Under the Skin, The Crimson Petal and the White and The Book of Strange New Things have been described as ‘unbelievably clever,’ ‘wildly entertaining’ and ‘impossible to put down.’ Now he returns with D, his most shape-shifting book yet. Like The Wizard of Oz, Faber’s novel is a political adventure that will be enjoyed by children and adults alike. Its heroine is brave, resourceful Dhikilo who lives in a faded English seaside town. When the letter ‘d’ suddenly disappears from the alphabet and only Dhikilo notices it’s gone, she embarks on a journey to the land of Liminus to get the ‘d’ back. Reminiscent of Charles Dickens and of Lewis Carroll, Michel Faber’s fable is a delightful sideways look at the evils of our times. He joins us to discuss Dhikilo’s wild odyssey with literary critic Stuart Kelly in this event recorded for the 2020 Book Festival.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Maggie O'Farrell: Giving New Life to Shakespeare's Son (2020 Event)

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021


‘Hamnet and Hamlet are in fact the same name, entirely interchangeable in Stratford in the late sixteenth century.’ This epigraph to Maggie O’Farrell’s new novel, Hamnet, dispels any doubt that Shakespeare’s son and his most celebrated character are meaningfully linked. In a short but scorchingly emotional book, O’Farrell brings us into the 16th century world of Shakespeare’s family living in Stratford. It is the time of the bubonic plague and with one of the family members falling into a fever, the novel charts the emotional journey of Shakespeare’s wife Agnes as trauma approaches. Surely Maggie O’Farrell’s most accomplished novel to date, Hamnet centres around the emotional life of a deeply intuitive woman, charting the terrain of her grief at the loss of a child. Join the Edinburgh-based writer as she discusses her latest critically acclaimed novel with Scottish author and journalist Stuart Kelly in this event recorded live at the 2020 Book Festival.

Not Too Busy To Write
Episode 1 - Who are we and how on earth are we managing to write at the moment

Not Too Busy To Write

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2021 67:02


In the first episode of Not Too Busy To Write, Ali and Penny introduce themselves and how they came to writing and ask the big question - how the hell are they managing to write at the moment? This episode was recorded in London in January 2021 during lockdown (not, as Penny accidentally says, January 2001!!!) and between them Ali and Penny have a whole lot of kids and complications. Books mentioned https://www.waterstones.com/book/hamnet/maggie-ofarrell/9781472223791 (Hamnet - Maggie O'Farrell) https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-creative-habit/twyla-tharp/9780743235273 (The Creative Habit - Twyla Tharp) https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-rules-do-not-apply/ariel-levy/9780349005324 (The Rules Do Not Apply - Ariel Levy) Other links https://www.edbookfest.co.uk/media-gallery/item/maggie-o-farrell-giving-new-life-to-shakespeare-s-son (Maggie O'Farrell interviewed by Stuart Kelly for EIBF) Ali can be found on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/ali_millar_writes/ (@ali_millar_writes) and via her website https://www.alimillar.com/ (alimillar.com) Penny can be found on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/pennywincer/ (@pennywincer )and via her website https://www.pennywincerwrites.com/ (pennywincerwrites.com)

VOCM Shows
Feb 6th - Alyse Stuart, Kelly Blidook, Richard Alexander, Mary Shortall - Provincial Election

VOCM Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2021 45:17


Feb 6th - Alyse Stuart, Kelly Blidook, Richard Alexander, Mary Shortall - Provincial Election by VOCM

The Bo and KO Show
The U.S. Open Preview Pod and Winnings Draft

The Bo and KO Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 73:34


Bo and KO are joined by recurring guests Kylee Bonneville and Thatcher Weldon as well as our buddy Stuart Kelly (@stuartkellygolf) to discuss golf after the restart, trends going into the US. Open, Winged Foot. Each person then chooses six golfers for their team- and the team that earns the most collective money at Winged Foot this weekend wins the prize. You can find Ky at @kyoncourse on Instagram and TwitterYou can find Stuart at @stuartkellygolf on InstagramYou can find Thatcher on a pop tennis court in Bakersfield and at Bakersfield Pop Tennis on Youtube.

Good Weekend Talks
The Kellys' kindness mission

Good Weekend Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2020 52:41


Jane Cadzow's story reveals how Ralph and Kathy Kelly turned their family's tragedies into a remarkable crusade to help others. Jane is then joined in conversation by Good Weekend editor Katrina Strickland, along with Ralph Kelly himself, who is chief executive of Stay Kind, the foundation set up to protect young people like his sons – Thomas Kelly, who was killed in a one-punch attack at age 18, and Stuart Kelly, who also tragically died at age 18 – to discuss how the foundation became a national movement of kindness. This story was published in April 2019. Discussion starts at 31:30. Become a subscriber: our supporters power our newsrooms and are critical for the sustainability of news coverage. Becoming a subscriber also gets you exclusive behind-the-scenes content and invitations to special events. Click on the links to subscribe https://subscribe.theage.com.au/ or https://subscribe.smh.com.au/ Please take the time to rate & review us on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your pods. We love to hear your thoughts and it makes it easier for the rest of the podcast world to find us. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Running in Production
Zego Lets You Easily Buy Insurance by the Hour

Running in Production

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2020 73:30


Stuart Kelly goes over creating an insurance company with Django. They've issued over 290 million hours of insurance so far. It's all hosted on AWS.

In Good Company with Dan Jones and Impact
How are you really? Wellbeing & Resilience tips with Stuart Kelly

In Good Company with Dan Jones and Impact

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2020 21:56


Wellbeing is not just about helping individuals to manage the increased pressures of today's working environment, it's also about organisations looking at their working culture and environments. In this podcast Dan and Sports and Performance Psychology expert Stuart Kelly explore practical tips we can all apply to ensure we are working and living at our full potential. To learn more, please visit https://www.impactinternational.com

Brewed in Bangkok | Stories From Thailand's Capital
BiB037: Getting the Word Out with Stuart Kelly

Brewed in Bangkok | Stories From Thailand's Capital

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2019 81:13


On this episode of Brewed in Bangkok, Siddhant has a chat with Stuart Kelly, who is a Public…

Breaking the Underdog Curse for Chiropractic
How Ireland is Adjusting to Chiropractors with Stuart Kelly

Breaking the Underdog Curse for Chiropractic

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2019 41:39


Believe it or not, the entire country of Ireland only has approximately 100 Chiropractors. The professionals and the services they provide are unregulated and they just recently lost their ability to x-ray patients. In an atmosphere such as this, raising public awareness is key to helping chiropractic offices thrive. Today, Dr. Stuart Kelly joins the podcast to discuss the steps he is taking to bring international speakers to Ireland’s chiropractic stage and the early influences that led him to become a Chiropractor and a Life Coach. He shares the mindful practices that allow him to balance his life and practice, and help him avoid the dreaded burnout period.          During this episode, we discuss the importance of partnering with other countries to bring about regulation and growth, how seminars and other events can raise awareness of your purpose, and the benefits of finding the right mentor early in your career.   Key Takeaways: After having a back injury healed by a chiropractor, a 17-year-old Stuart decided to attend a program at ACC. [2:19] Stuart explains the limited chiropractic influences available to him during his studies. [8:07] After some soul searching and a few Demartini moments, Stuart was determined to build his practice based on his values. [14:17] Becoming certified as a Life Coach brought balance to Stuart’s life and practice. [23:03] Tips to reduce burnout and increase life satisfaction. [27:36] Stuart hopes this years ‘I Chiro’ event will raise chiropractic awareness in Ireland. [31:31]   Learn More: Premier Chiropractic I Chiro Event — For information and to register The Shift Unplugged Seminar — Gold Coast May 31 - June 1 Dr. Don MacDonald The Underdog Curse: The Cause, The Cure and The Road to Success @DrDonMacDonald on Twitter Dr. Don MacDonald on Facebook

Real Voices of Scale-up
Zego: Harry Franks

Real Voices of Scale-up

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018


We sat down with Harry Franks, Co-Founder and CCO at Zego to hear his views on disrupting the traditional insurance industry, building a world class team and empowering gig economy workers to do more. In 2016 Harry Franks, Sten Staar and Stuart Kelly set out to reinvent commercial insurance for self-employed people. They launched Zego and started with an hourly policy for scooter drivers which meant that drivers no longer had to pay for insurance they didn’t need. Instead they could get flexible cover for the hours they worked. Zego has since launched plenty more products, all designed to enable gig economy workers make insurance work for them.

Evidence and Answers
Episode 624 – Understanding Postmodernism Pt 2

Evidence and Answers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2018 25:36


What is postmodernism? What are its basic tenets? Do the ideas of Postmodernism pose a threat to Christianity? Listen as Dr. Stuart Kelly and Pat Zukeran discuss the basic ideologies of postmodernism, the challenges it poses to Christianity and how to refute the false ideas presented in the postmodern era.

Evidence & Answers
Episode 624 – Understanding Postmodernism Pt 2

Evidence & Answers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2018 25:36


What is postmodernism? What are its basic tenets? Do the ideas of Postmodernism pose a threat to Christianity? Listen as Dr. Stuart Kelly and Pat Zukeran discuss the basic ideologies of postmodernism, the challenges it poses to Christianity and how to refute the false ideas presented in the postmodern era.

Evidence and Answers
Episode 623 – Understanding Postmodernism Pt 1

Evidence and Answers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 25:51


What is postmodernism? What are its basic tenets? Do the ideas of Postmodernism pose a threat to Christianity? Listen as Dr. Stuart Kelly and Pat Zukeran discuss the basic ideologies of postmodernism, the challenges it poses to Christianity and how to refute the false ideas presented in the postmodern era.

Evidence & Answers
Episode 623 – Understanding Postmodernism Pt 1

Evidence & Answers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 25:51


What is postmodernism? What are its basic tenets? Do the ideas of Postmodernism pose a threat to Christianity? Listen as Dr. Stuart Kelly and Pat Zukeran discuss the basic ideologies of postmodernism, the challenges it poses to Christianity and how to refute the false ideas presented in the postmodern era.

2017 Edinburgh International Book Festival (edbookfest)

UNLIKELY FRIENDSHIPS One of the most acclaimed writers of his generation, poet, memoirist and novelist John Burnside today treats us to two new works. The hugely praised Ashland & Vine is the beautifully woven tale of an unlikely friendship between a grieving, semi-alcoholic widow and the elderly woman of whom she hopes to record the family history; Still Life with Feeding Snake is a poetry collection which hovers with great assurance on the brink of epiphany. Chaired by Stuart Kelly.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

One of the most acclaimed writers of his generation, poet, memoirist and novelist John Burnside treats us to two new works. The hugely praised Ashland & Vine is the beautifully woven tale of an unlikely friendship between a grieving, semi-alcoholic widow and the elderly woman of whom she hopes to record the family history; Still Life with Feeding Snake is a poetry collection which hovers with great assurance on the brink of epiphany. Chaired by Stuart Kelly, this event was recorded live at the 2017 Edinburgh International Book Festival.

London Review Bookshop Podcasts
First Love: Gwendoline Riley and Katherine Angel with Joanna Biggs

London Review Bookshop Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2017 46:46


Gwendoline Riley was at the bookshop to talk about her new novel, First Love, an exploration of marriage as battleground. Anne Enright described her previous novel, Opposed Positions, as ‘more than up to the job of writing the wasted hinterlands of the human heart’; Stuart Kelly called it ‘a continual joy’. Riley was in conversation with Katherine Angel, author of Unmastered: A Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell (Penguin 2012); the discussion was chaired by Joanna Biggs, author of All Day Long (Profile 2015) and editor at the London Review of Books. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Saturday Review
From the Edinburgh Festivals: The best of theatre, literature, comedy, surrealist artists, Tickled film and Herman Koch

Saturday Review

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2016 41:54


From the Edinburgh Festivals: Tom Sutcliffe and his guests discuss their selection of what's on offer this year. The National Theatre of Scotland's Anything That Gives off Light and Cheek by Jowl's Russian language Measure for Measure Hermann Koch's new novel Dear Mr M, Surrealist Encounters at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art The documentary film Tickled about the peculiar, secretive world of competitive tickling which has surprising menace lurking beneath the surface. Also the guests present their personal choices from the enormous range of art on offer across the city Tom Sutcliffe is joined by Denise Mina, Louise Welsh and Stuart Kelly. The producer is Oliver Jones.

2015 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Tom McCarthy at Edinburgh International Book Festival (edbookfest)

2015 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2015 56:00


Is Tom McCarthy a J G Ballard for the 21st century? Or is he just bullshitting? McCarthy would probably claim he’s somewhere in between. The Man Booker shortlisted author’s hugely entertaining, densely imaginative novel Satin Island introduces us to U, a ‘corporate anthropologist’ commissioned to write an epoch-defining Great Report, only to be overwhelmed by images and information. McCarthy explains his ideas to Stuart Kelly in this event, recorded live at the Edinburgh International Book Festival.’

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Is Tom McCarthy a J G Ballard for the 21st century? Or is he just bullshitting? McCarthy would probably claim he’s somewhere in between. The Man Booker shortlisted author’s hugely entertaining, densely imaginative novel Satin Island introduces us to U, a ‘corporate anthropologist’ commissioned to write an epoch-defining Great Report, only to be overwhelmed by images and information. McCarthy explains his ideas to Stuart Kelly in this event, recorded live at the Edinburgh International Book Festival.

The Essay
Brigadoon

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2015 14:12


Unthank, Brigadoon, Thrums. Scottish literature is filled with place names that can't be found in a gazeteer or GPS. The literary critic Stuart Kelly explores the imaginary locations that have provided the settings for some of Scotland's greatest novels. He concludes his visit to imaginary Scottish places with a visit to Brigadoon.

The Essay
Duncairn

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2015 14:19


Brigadoon, Unthank, and today Duncairn. Literary critic Stuart Kelly explores the fictional Scottish cities that never appear on any map.

The Essay
Thrums

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2015 14:16


Brigadoon, Unthank, Thrums. There are places in Scottish literature which are missing from gazetteers or GPS. Literary critic Stuart Kelly explores the imaginary places where Scotland's finest writing is set. Today he travels to JM Barrie's imaginary "Thrums.".

The Essay
Show Me the Way to Tillietudlem

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2015 14:13


Unthank, Brigadoon, Thrums. Scottish literature is filled with place names that can't be found in a gazeteer or GPS. The literary critic Stuart Kelly explores the imaginary locations that have provided the settings for some of Scotland's greatest novels. Today, the novelist John Galt, little known outside Scotland, whose books provide some of the wittiest portraits of 19th-century Scottish life.

Book Talk
The Narrow Road to the Deep North by Richard Flanagan

Book Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2014 27:37


This month, the Book Talk panel has been discussing the 2014 Man Booker Prize winner, Richard Flanagan's The Narrow Road to the Deep North. Taking its title from one of the most famous books in Japanese literature, written by the great haiku poet Basho, Flanagan's novel has as its heart one of the most infamous episodes of Japanese history, the construction of the Thailand-Burma Death Railway in World War II.In the despair of a Japanese POW camp on the Burma Death Railway, surgeon Dorrigo Evans is haunted by his love affair with his uncle's young wife two years earlier. Struggling to save the men under his command from starvation, from cholera, from beatings, he receives a letter that will change his life forever. Joining Sasha de Buyl are Literature Manager at Creative Scotland, Jenny Niven, and former Booker prize judge and literary critic, Stuart Kelly.The panel discusses the many different facets of a novel called ‘graceful and unfathomable' by the Telegraph, including its many scenes of torture and violence and the stripping back of concepts of traditional masculinity.Through the podcast, they explore what sort of book deserves to win a Booker prize and whether Flanagan's Narrow Road has earned its weighty title. Despite winning the Man Booker Prize, the novel was nominated for a Bad Sex award. Were Flanagan's descriptions jarring for the panel?Flanagan is seen as a powerhouse of literary fiction in today's market – does he mark a turn in the tide for the ‘Culture Cringe' generation of Australian culture?If you're reading, or have read, the book, what did you think? How do you think it compares to Flanagan's previous books? Book Talk is produced by Colin Fraser of Culture Laser Productions.

The Radio 3 Documentary
How Did Scotland's Artists Turn Nationalist

The Radio 3 Documentary

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2014 42:50


Scotland goes to the polls on the 18th September to decide its constitutional future. Why do so many of Scotland's writers and artists support the Yes Campaign? Stuart Kelly investigates.

Book Talk
The Hope of the Future

Book Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2014 35:44


An exciting new year has begun, and, appropriately, we're looking to the future in this, our first edition of Book Talk for 2014! Host Ryan Van Winkle sits down with three very different people to chat about what the future may hold for books and for Scotland.To get things started, literary critic and Man Booker Prize judge Stuart Kelly discusses the most recent Booker winner, Eleanor Catton's The Luminaries and why it should be on everyone's to-read list this year. Find out how considering the future informs his judging decisions, what books he's most looking forward to this year and what recent changes allowing American books to be considered could mean for the Man Booker Prize.Are mind-reading books the future of literature? Sci-fi author Hannu Rajaniemi seems to think so. The author of The Quantum Thief is not content to merely dream about fantastical inventions--he wants to create them as well. He and his collaborator are working on something they call neurofiction: a system that joins neuroscience with stories by measuring the brain activity of a reader and changing the direction of the story they're engaged in accordingly. A Choose Your Own Adventure for the 21st century!Finally, Lesley Riddoch, author of Blossom, discusses the future of Scotland at the dawn of a momentous year for the country. Why, she wonders, is a country with so much promise so troubled? And what can be done about it? Quite a bit, as it turns out. Learn more about Lesley's hopes for the country and what can be done to make Scotland a fairer, even more vibrant place to live.

Book Talk
The Luminaries

Book Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2013 21:20


Book Talk is seeing out 2013 with a bang, tackling Eleanor Catton's 800+ page Man Booker Prize Winner, The Luminaries. Sasha de Buyl is joined by Lois Wolfe, head of development at the National Library of Scotland, and literary critic and Man Booker judge Stuart Kelly to discuss Catton's challenging tome.Set in the New Zealand goldfields in the mid-1860s, the story follows Walter Moody, a prospector who hopes to make his fortune but instead stumbles into a complex series of unsolved crimes, including a disappearance, an attempted suicide and the unexpected appearance of an unlikely fortune. The story unfolds not just as a mystery, but as a rich historical portrait of the mid-19th century goldrush boom and bust and the towns and people that rose and fell with it.Does Catton's novel live up to its wild praise? Find out how our panellists felt about it, its unusual structure and heavy use of the zodiac and why they refer to this as an 'HBO novel.'

Books and Authors
Open Book: Norse Myths; Penelope Lively; Suzanne Berne

Books and Authors

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2013 27:50


David Vann and Stuart Kelly on Norse myths, Penelope Lively on where she writes and Suzanne Berne talks about her latest novel The Dogs of Littlefield.

2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Kristen Iversen at Edinburgh International Book Festival

2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2013 57:18


Riveting and horrifying in equal measure, Kristen Iversen’s memoir of growing up next to the Rocky Flats nuclear facility near Denver, Colorado describes the secrecy surrounding a plant which made plutonium warhead triggers for the US nuclear arsenal. Full Body Burden is a fascinating story of successive radiation leaks and cover-ups set against a coming-of-age memoir and in this event, recorded live at the 2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival, Iversen tells her story to Stuart Kelly.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Riveting and horrifying in equal measure, Kristen Iversen’s memoir of growing up next to the Rocky Flats nuclear facility near Denver, Colorado describes the secrecy surrounding a plant which made plutonium warhead triggers for the US nuclear arsenal. Full Body Burden is a fascinating story of successive radiation leaks and cover-ups set against a coming-of-age memoir and in this event, recorded live at the 2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival, Iversen tells her story to Stuart Kelly.

2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Chris Ware at Edinburgh International Book Festival

2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2013 56:08


In Chris Ware’s first appearance at the Book Festival he discussed his critically acclaimed graphic novel Building Stories and why comics are a language, not a genre with event chair and comics fan Stuart Kelly. Building Stories is a box set of differently-sized comics, booklets, broadsheets, posters and a cloth bound book has been described as ‘a graphic novel on the scale of James Joyce’s Ulysses’. This event was introduced by Roland Gulliver and recorded live at the 2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

In Chris Ware’s first appearance at the Book Festival he discussed his critically acclaimed graphic novel Building Stories and why comics are a language, not a genre with event chair and comics fan Stuart Kelly. Building Stories is a box set of differently-sized comics, booklets, broadsheets, posters and a cloth bound book has been described as ‘a graphic novel on the scale of James Joyce’s Ulysses’. This event was introduced by Roland Gulliver and recorded live at the 2013 Edinburgh International Book Festival.

Books and Authors
Open Book: Sir Walter Scott special from The Royal Opera House

Books and Authors

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2013 27:55


Mariella Frostrup presents a special programme from The Royal Opera House on the prolific and influential Scottish novelist Sir Walter Scott, in the company of biographer Stuart Kelly, authors Denise Mina and Allan Massie and actor Emun Elliott.

2012 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Robert Macfarlane at Edinburgh International Book Festival

2012 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2012 59:52


In The Old Ways, shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson prize, the celebrated author Robert Macfarlane sets off from his Cambridge home to follow the ancient tracks, drove-roads and sea paths that form part of a vast network of routes criss-crossing the British landscape and its waters, and connecting them to the continents beyond. The result is an immersive, enthralling exploration of the ghosts and voices that haunt old paths, of the stories our tracks keep and tell, of pilgrimage and ritual, and of songlines and their singers. Above all his book is about people and place and the subtle ways in which we are shaped by the landscapes through which we move. Told in Macfarlane's distinctive voice, the book folds together natural history, cartography, geology, archaeology and literature. In this event, recorded live at the 2012 Edinburgh International Book Festival, he talks to Stuart Kelly, the literary editor of Scotland On Sunday.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Robert Macfarlane (2012 event)

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2012


In The Old Ways, shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson prize, the celebrated author Robert Macfarlane sets off from his Cambridge home to follow the ancient tracks, drove-roads and sea paths that form part of a vast network of routes criss-crossing the British landscape and its waters, and connecting them to the continents beyond. The result is an immersive, enthralling exploration of the ghosts and voices that haunt old paths, of the stories our tracks keep and tell, of pilgrimage and ritual, and of songlines and their singers. Above all his book is about people and place and the subtle ways in which we are shaped by the landscapes through which we move. Told in Macfarlane's distinctive voice, the book folds together natural history, cartography, geology, archaeology and literature. In this event, recorded live at the 2012 Edinburgh International Book Festival, he talks to Stuart Kelly, the literary editor of Scotland On Sunday.

Great Lives
Walter Scott

Great Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2012 28:13


Tory MP author and adventurer Rory Stewart champions the life of Sir Walter Scott. Presenter Matthew Parris is joined by Scott's biographer Stuart Kelly. Scott arguably invented the idea of Scottishness and marketed it to the world. But now he is virtually unread and he stands accused of saddling Scotland with tartan tat and Highland kitsch. Rory Stewart argues that Scott's version of Scottish identity represents a valid alternative to today's Scottish nationalism. Producer: Jolyon Jenkins From 2012.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

The reissue of his early novels as Penguin Classics in 2011 underlines his status as a giant of American literary postmodernism. Stories like Spanking the Maid, Gerald's Party and Pricksongs and Descants show that a mordant – and morbid – humour are part of his genius. One former student described Coover as 'the most generous, rabidly intelligent, accessible, erudite and hilarious teacher I have ever met.' Another said 'Coover is flame retardant'. Recorded live, in conversation with Scotland's own literary firebrand Stuart Kelly, at the 2011 Edinburgh International Book Festival.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Audrey Niffenegger (2011 event)

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2011


Michigan-born writer and artist, Audrey Niffenegger is the author of the runaway bestseller The Time Traveler’s Wife. In this event she chats to Stuart Kelly about her various books, the most recent of which is a graphic novel, The Night Bookmobile. The novel uses Niffenegger’s Chicago base as a backdrop to the tale of a woman who stumbles upon a magical mobile library which reflects her own reading tastes to the letter. But when the bookmobile finally moves on to the next destination, she becomes obsessive and haunted. This event was recorded live at the 2011 Edinburgh International Book Festival.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

In 2010, major new literary voice Tom McCarthy joined us in Edinburgh to launch his new book, C, in which McCarthy’s hero embarked on a strange, Pynchonesque journey across the 20th century, from a Bohemian spa and the First World War, to a climax in an Egyptian catacomb. Listen to McCarthy and chair Stuart Kelly in an audio recording of this remarkable event.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

In a surprise Book Festival event announced after the 2010 programme went to print, A S Byatt charmed her substantial audience to the full. Chaired by writer and literary critic Stuart Kelly, this was an engaging and appealing event of intriguing questions and even more intriguing answers.

West Port Book Festival Podcasts
[West Port] Scott-land

West Port Book Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2010 42:06


No-one has been as famous as Walter Scott and become as forgotten. He was so popular that, if you could read in the early 19th Century, you had read Scott. And yet nowadays nobody reads him. Nor do we really respect him. Literary editor and author Stuart Kelly reads from his new book "Scott-land" which deals with the man who invented a nation. By parts witty and touching, Stuart Kelly will have you rushing out the door to brush up your Ivanhoe or revisit the classic Old Mortality.

West Port Book Festival Podcasts
[West Port] Collective Nouns with Stuart Kelly

West Port Book Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2010 30:25


Author and literary editor Stuart Kelly is a closet fan of collective nouns, those brilliant and brain-bending terms that allow us to junk a dullard 'group' or 'flock' for many more interesting and apt alternatives. Author of upcoming "Scott-land" (Birlinn) and veteran of West Port 09 with his wonderful "Book of Lost Books", Stuart's event appeals to those who appreciate the linguistic greatness of a murder of crows, or the disparity between Sir Walter Scott's influence and his status.

West Port Book Festival Podcasts
[West Port] The Book of Lost Books with Stuart Kelly

West Port Book Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2010 53:21


In The Book of Lost Books, Stuart Kelly reaches into the recesses of history to trace books, great or perhaps otherwise, that have been lost, stolen, incinerated, abandoned or mutilated through the ages.

2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival

Mark Millar candidly discusses comics, graphic novels and Hollywood with Stuart Kelly in this sold-out Book Festival event. His bestselling comic Kick-Ass is being made into a film this year; Wanted 2 is in development after the success of his blockbuster adaptation; and there is talk of a re-imagined Superman appearing on the big screen. He's also working on the next instalment of his controversial American Jesus graphic trilogy. Irreverent, iconoclastic, inimitable, Mark Millar's unique brand of energetic storytelling is not to be missed.

Scottish Poetry Library Podcast
[SPL] March 6th: Stuart Kelly

Scottish Poetry Library Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2010 32:25


Ryan chats with editor and author Stuart Kelly about the poet John Berryman and they muse the current state of modern poetry, its future, the purpose of the critic and chew the literary cud. Presented by Ryan van Winkle. Produced by Colin Fraser. Incidental music by Ewen Maclean. Follow us on Twitter: @anonpoetry & @byleaveswelive. Mail us: splpodcast@gmail.com

Scottish Poetry Library Podcast
[SPL] February 5th: Carry A Poem launch

Scottish Poetry Library Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2010 32:17


Colin heads down to the launch of the 2010 One City One Edinburgh literature campaign, which this year is focusing on the poems we carry with us and includes a free collection of poems given out all across the city called "Carry A Poem". Including snippets from Ken Cockburn, Ron Butlin, Stuart Kelly, Sara Grady and charming couple Mark and Elena Fraser. Ryan also asks Colin what his Carry A Poem choices would be. Find out more at http://www.carryapoem.com and follow them on Twitter @carryapoem Presented by Ryan van Winkle. Produced by Colin Fraser. Incidental music by Ewen Maclean.

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts
StAnza Podcast 2009 20th March - Day 3

Stanza Poetry Festival Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2009 31:10


The choicest cuts from today's StAnza poetry festival. Includes an interview with and poetry from Swiss based sound poetry outfit Trio Pas Lundi; a chance to hear from StAnza lecturer Jay Parini on his memories of Alastair Reid and Jorge Luis Borges; excerpts from today's Poetry Breakfast on the state of Scottish poetry including Stuart Kelly and Roddy Lumsden, experimental poetry from Peter McCarey and a Dalek Love Song.