Events

Stories, Food & Rhythms of the African-Caribbean Diaspora – POSTPONED

POSTPONED – we regret to announce that this event has been postponed. We hope to reschedule for October 2026, more information to follow soon.

 

Join us for an evening of sharing stories, food and music of the African-Caribbean Diaspora.  

 

Featuring:  

  • Contributions from local writers and storytellers 
  • A short film about the impact of Hurricane Beryl on the island of Carriacou, created by local musician and producer Nigel Cudjoe (Savvy) of Saving Grace Music 
  • Music from local performers including the Huddersfield Community Gospel Choir, DJ and dancing 
  • Free buffet included in the ticket price 

 

Friday 15 May 

6pm-10pm 

Huddersfield Mission, 3-13 Lord Street HD1 1QA 

£7.50 advance, £10 on the door (includes free buffet), free ticket for essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 18+ 

 
Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

Vince Cable – Eclipsing the West

In partnership with the University of Huddersfield. Subtitled event.

In this fascinating talk, Vince Cable will discuss what the rise of the Asian superstates means for our future. The international order is crumbling and the Western-dominated world we’ve known for the past 300 years is coming to an end. In his incisive new book, Eclipsing the West: China, India and the forging of a new world, Vince Cable examines the impact of these two countries, which account for more than a third of the world’s population. How will they navigate their growing roles on the world stage and what are the implications for commerce, international law and the fight against climate change?  

Vince Cable is a Visiting Professor at London School of Economics and Political Science and a Distinguished Fellow at the Overseas Development Institute. A former MP, he was leader of the Liberal Democrats from 2017-2019, and was UK Secretary of State for Business Innovation and Skills and President of the Board of Trade. He has a PhD in economics from the University of Glasgow and in the 1990s worked as Chief Economist for Shell. His books include The Storm (2009), After the Storm (2015), Open Arms (2017), Money and Power (2021) and The Chinese Conundrum (2022). 

ACCESSIBILITY – This event will have live subtitling by Stagetext to make it more accessible to those who are deaf, deafened or hard of hearing. See below for travel and parking information. 

Sponsored by  

Tuesday 12 May 

6.15pm-7.15pm 

Diamond Jubilee Lecture Theatre, Charles Sikes Building, University of Huddersfield, Firth Street, Huddersfield HD1 3BN  

£7 (£5), free for University staff and students and for Essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.accessable.co.uk/huddersfield-literature-festival/access-guides/charles-sikes-building-diamond-jubilee-lecture-theatre  

Book tickets

 

Access, travel and parking information 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

 

Public transport The University has its own bus stop by campus. For timetables, tickets and routes visit  the Metro website. 

Transpennine Express provides regular services in and out of Huddersfield, as does National Rail. The University is a 10-minute walk from the train station, or there are taxis outside the station. 

Parking The University’s Firth Street and Wakefield Road car parks will be open for the public to park from 5.30pm on the event date (usual opening time 6pm). Please note: parking is only payable by signing up to the RingGo App, which you can set up ahead of your visit or by phoning an automated service on the day – details for both are on information boards in the car parks. There is no option for cash or contactless card payment at these car parks. 

Alternative parking The Kingsgate Centre car park is open until 11.30pm.  

Blue Badge parking There are a limited number of blue badge parking spaces on the University of Huddersfield campus. For more information, call: 01484 422 288. 

Campus Map – Charles Sikes building is no 9 on the map

University of Huddersfield campus map

 

Golden Thread of Seva – Sikh Heritage in Huddersfield

Golden Thread of Seva – Sikh Heritage in Huddersfield is an exciting multidisciplinary presentation that brings together performance, visual art, photography, and spoken word to explore the lived history of the Sikh community in Huddersfield. 

 

The presentation features a performative unveiling of five large-scale banners, each representing a different chapter of Sikh migration, labour, family life, faith, and community building in the UK. These visual works are accompanied by original poetry that reflects on memory, identity, Seva, and growing up between cultures. 

 

Alongside the performance, a photographic talk traces the social and cultural history of the Sikh community in Huddersfield, drawing on archival material, personal stories, and contemporary images. Together, the banners, photographs, and poems create a layered narrative that honours overlooked histories while celebrating resilience, contribution, and intergenerational legacy. 

 

Presented by multidisciplinary artist and academic Hardeep Sahota, this work offers audiences an immersive and reflective journey through heritage, place, and belonging, connecting past and present through art, story, and collective memory. 

 

Hardeep Sahota is a British South Asian performing arts practitioner, academic and cultural producer based in Kirklees. With over three decades of experience across dance, music, visual arts, and community-based practice, his work weaves together scholarship, creativity, and cultural heritage. Rooted in collaboration, cultural exchange, and innovation, he leads ambitious interdisciplinary projects that bring professional artists and communities together, nurture emerging talent, and create inclusive pathways into the cultural sector, while connecting local stories to global cultural conversations.  

 

Saturday 9 May 

6pm-7pm 

Attic, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Queen Street, Huddersfield HD1 2SP 

£7 (£5 conc), free for essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age Guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.thelbt.org/your-visit/access/  

Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

Workshop: Conquer the Blank Page!

Conquer the Blank Page! A two-hour idea-generation workshop and writing session. 

 

Join bestselling indie author Rachael Hardcastle for a creative workshop designed to spark inspiration and build your confidence.  

 

In the first hour, you’ll explore some practical techniques for idea generation, along with an overview of classic story archetypes and structure to help shape your stories with purpose and power. 

 

The second hour offers a supportive space to write your first few pages  alongside fellow new writers, share thoughts, ask questions, and exchange advice. Whether you’re planning your first story or refining an ongoing project, you’ll have the opportunity to build contacts and draw on Rachael’s 15 years of experience in the self-publishing industry. Conquer the blank page, and start your writing journey in a supportive, friendly environment.  

 

This workshop is perfect for aspiring authors, those looking to adopt a new hobby and anyone seeking creative inspiration.  

 

Signed copies of Rachael’s open and honest guide to successful self-publishing will also be on sale, alongside a selection of her bestselling fiction books.  

 

Rachael Hardcastle is an Amazon international #1 bestselling author. She writes mostly fantasy and adventure books for young adults and teens – her stories are fun, fast-paced and addictive. Rachael understands that through writing, we face our darkest fears, explore infinite new worlds and realise our true purpose. Creative writing helps us to understand what that purpose is. Since starting her self-publishing experience in 2010, Rachael has worked with many individuals to help make their dreams of publishing a book a reality, including school children! Her imprint, Curious Cat Books, has been responsible for producing gorgeous children’s books, memoirs and more since 2017. 

 

https://www.rachaelhardcastle.com/ 

 

 

Sunday 10 May 

11am-1pm 

Amped, 29 Zetland Street, HD1 2RA 

£9 (£7 conc), free for essential carers accompanying a ticket holder (Early bird tickets £8 (£6 conc) available to midnight on Monday 6 April. )

Age Guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.accessable.co.uk/huddersfield-literature-festival/access-guides/amped 

 

Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

 

Val McDermid – Silent Bones

Bestselling crime writer Val McDermid has sold over 19 million books worldwide, with TV adaptations of her novels including Wire in the Blood and Karen Pirie (both ITV). 

 

Val will be chatting to Helen Scott about her latest Karen Pirie novel Silent Bones 

 

When a landslide on a Scottish motorway reveals the body of journalist Sam Nimmo, DCI Karen Pirie and her Historic Cases Unit must find out who buried him, and why.  

 

Meanwhile, in Edinburgh, new evidence reopens a closed case and the accidental death of a hotel manager starts to look like murder. Karen and her team begin to untangle a web of lies, one that connects their murder cases with Scotland’s rich and powerful. They will be tested to their limits – and possibly beyond… 

 

Val McDermid is an international number one bestselling author whose books have been translated into more than 40 languages. Her multi-award-winning series and standalone novels have been adapted for TV and radio, most notably the Wire in the Blood series featuring clinical psychologist Dr Tony Hill and DCI Carol Jordan. The Karen Pirie novels have also been adapted for a major ITV series. She divides her time between Fife and Edinburgh. 

Sponsored by:

Kirklees College

Sunday 17 May 

2.30pm-3.30pm 

North Light Gallery, 78 Armitage Road, Armitage Bridge, Huddersfield HD4 7NR 

£12 (£10 conc) free for Essential carers accompanying a ticket holder 

Age guidance: 14+ 

Access information: contact the venue on 01484 340 003 

Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

Emily Brontë Reappraised

THIS EVENT HAS SOLD OUT!

Emily Brontë is one of our best-known writers, but also one of the most enigmatic. Her only novel,Wuthering Heights, has been adapted across all media forms. The latest film adaptation, directed by Emerald Fennell, and starring Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie, is yet another interpretation.  

 

Dr Claire O’Callaghan’s Emily Brontë Reappraised – the only new biography of Emily to be published during the last 20 years – brings new insight into how we read and remember one of literature’s most enigmatic writers. It has just been re-published in a new expanded form. 

 

Join Claire and fellow Brontë expert Dr Michael Stewart as they dismantle the myths that have long obscured Emily Brontë’s life and art, revealing a bold, passionate, and politically attuned writer whose work still resonates today. Rediscover Emily Brontë for our times. 

 

Saturday 9 May 

4pm-5pm 

Attic, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Queen Street HD1 2SP 

£9 (£7 conc) free ticket for essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.thelbt.org/your-visit/access/  

Book tickets

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

Ancient: Reviving the Woods That Made Britain

Join Luke Barley, the National Trust’s senior adviser on woodland, on a journey into the woods, to discover the trees that made Britain. 

 

Ancient woods are Britain’s richest habitats: rare fragments of our landscape that teem with life from soil to canopy. They live in our collective imagination as quiet places, best left pristine and untouched. But their story has always been one of interdependence with people. Now, as ever, these woods need the thoughtful intervention of humans to survive. 

 

With the benefit of over 20 years’ experience rehabilitating ancient woodland, Luke Barley reveals what we stand to gain, as individuals and as a society, by rekindling our ancient connection with these special places. 

 

“A wonderful ramble beneath the boughs. Barley listens, translates and spins their beautiful ancient yarns.” Chris Packham 

 

Luke Barley is the National Trust’s senior adviser on woodland and previously worked as a ranger in some of England’s most iconic landscapes, including the Lakes and the Peak District. He is particularly interested in ancient woodland and the profound connection between its human history and rich ecology – the subject of his first book. 

Sponsored by:

Sleigh & Story Certified Accountants

Sunday 10 May 

2.30pm-3.30pm 

Marsden Mechanics, 16 Peel Street, Marsden HD7 6BW 

£8 (£7 conc), free for University of Huddersfield staff and students, free for Essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 12+ 

Access guide: https://www.accessable.co.uk/huddersfield-literature-festival/access-guides/marsden-mechanics-hall  

Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

Polari: Celebrating LGBTQ+ Writing Talent

Enjoy entertaining, heartwarming and thought-provoking performances from a diverse and talented line-up of LGBTQ+ writers.  

 

Hosted by bestselling author and journalist Paul Burston, the evening will showcase the work of the QPOC poet, artist and teacher Jay Gadhia, the poet and theatre maker Roma Havers, and the writer, researcher and historian Jane Traies. 

 

The event will start at 7pm with a 15-minute break, approx finish time 8.45pm.  

 

Other events with these writers: Jane Traies will also take part in a Q&A on her film 3,000 Lesbians Go to York which we are showing on Saturday 9 May, and Paul Burston will be teaching a creative writing workshop, also on Saturday 9 May. See our Events page for more details. 

 

About Polari Founded by author and journalist Paul Burston in a bar in Soho in 2007, award-winning literary salon Polari showcases and celebrates the best in LGBTQ+ poetry and writing. The Polari Prize is the UK’s only book prize for LGBTQ+ writing. It comprises three awards: Book of the Year, Debut book and children’s/YA prize. 

 

Paul Burston is curator and host of award-winning LGBTQ+ literary salon Polari and founder of the Polari Prize book awards for LGBTQ+ writers. In 2016, he featured in the British Council’s Global List of ‘33 visionary people promoting freedom, equality and LGBT rights around the world’. Paul is the author of six novels and five non-fiction books, and the editor of two short-story collections. His bestselling memoir We Can Be Heroes: A Survivor’s Story was published in 2023. 

 

Jay Gadhia is a QPOC poet, artist and teacher. He has always written but has only recently developed his spoken word / performance poetry. His artwork and poetry tend to focus on the Asian queer experience and explore cultural and racial history. A great deal of his work focusses on faith, as well as unpicking the complications of relationships. 

 

Roma Havers is a queer poet, theatre-maker and unsolicited go-go dancer – from your hometown but living in Manchester with their partner, allotment and every stone they’ve ever pocketed. Commissioned by Orchestra’s Live, Manchester City of Literature and Manchester Museum, among many others, they are known for their ‘joyful, communal and tender’ work. They have been published in Ink Sweat and Tears, Verve Poetry Prize (Shortlisted), The North and Under the Radar. Alongside their poetry work, they have produced writer development programmes, mentored many poets and produced work for performance including their show LOB, which toured the North West and Belfast in 2022, with their play Helmet with Laughter Lines being longlisted for the Bruntwood Playwriting prize the same year. They were winner of the 2024 Northern Writers’ Award for Poetry with The Natural Way, their first collection with Carcanet Press. 

 

Jane Traies is a queer historian, writer and storyteller whose work focuses on preserving the stories of marginalised women’s lives. Her best-known book, Now You See Me, is a collection of older lesbian life stories. Her second life-history collection, Free to Be Me, captures the stories of a group of lesbian and bisexual women seeking asylum in the UK. Writing jointly with Jacky Bratton, Jane is also half of the sapphic historical novelist Jay Taverner. Their latest title, Liberty, is the fourth adventure in the ‘Brynsquilver’ series. Jane’s latest book, Three Thousand Lesbians Go to York, tells the story of the York Lesbian Arts Festival, the UK’s largest and longest lasting gathering of lesbian, bi and queer women, and of Libertas!, the bookshop that founded it. A treasure trove of inclusive queer history, 3000 Lesbiansincludes the memories of Jackie Kay, Stella Duffy, Sarah Waters, Val McDermid, Horse McDonald, festival founder Jenny Roberts and many others who attended or organised the festival. 

 

Friday 8 May  

7pm-8.45pm 

Amped, 29 Zetland St, HD1 2RA 

£9 (£7 conc), free for University of Huddersfield staff and students & essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age Guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.accessable.co.uk/huddersfield-literature-festival/access-guides/amped 

Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

We Came By Sea

Every day and every night when the sea was calm they came, and most days the newspapers and the websites said the same thing: ‘migrants’ in ‘small boats’ were crossing the English Channel. Rescuers were ‘overwhelmed’, coastal towns were ‘up in arms’. Over and over, the headlines and the photographs told us this story. 

 

But no story has only one side, as Horatio Clare discovered when he began his journeys between Dover and Calais, where he met and listened to the volunteers who help thousands of people every year, from the lifeboat crews mounting operations to the countless unrecognised, uncelebrated British people who are giving their all to help the vulnerable and desperate. 

 

We Came by Sea bears witness to hope and humanity. It is a journey through an unexamined nation – a nation which is every bit as great and good as the people in the dinghies believe it to be. This is not the story that we have been told, but it is a true story. 

 

Shortlisted for the Nero Book Awards 2025.  

 

Horatio Clare is a critically acclaimed author and journalist. His first book, Running for the Hills, won the Somerset Maugham Award. His second book, Truant, was heralded by The Irish Times as a ‘stunningly well-written memoir.’ A Single Swallow was shortlisted for the Dolman Travel Book of the Year while Down to the Sea in Ships won the Stanford-Dolman Travel Book of the Year in 2015. Horatio’s first book for children, Aubrey and the Terrible Yoot, won the Branford Boase Award for debut children’s book. He has written two books about mental health: Heavy Light and Your Journey Your Way. Previously with Little Toller books Horatio has published Orison for a Curlew and Something of his Art. He lives in West Yorkshire. 

 

Praise for We Came by Sea 

 

“I would read anything Horatio Clare wrote. His prose is always brilliant, and by turns funny, furious and heart-piercingly compassionate. He lights up – no, he scintillates – any subject that finds itself in receipt of the gift of his attention.”   

Robert Macfarlane 

 

“It feels comforting and right to have a writer of Clare’s skill turn attention to this topic, and he does not avoid referencing corruption and other wrongdoing by those in power.”  

Sally Hayden, The Irish Times 

 

“[Clare’s] job, executed wonderfully well, is to help us to think calmly and intelligently about those arriving in small boats, to consider giving them a chance and to recognise that we have more in common with them than we might imagine.”  

Maggie Fergusson, The Spectator 

 

Saturday 9 May 

2pm-3pm 

Attic, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Queen Street HD1 2SP 

£8 (£7 conc) free ticket for University of Huddersfield staff and students and essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.thelbt.org/your-visit/access/  

Book tickets

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

The ‘Chocolat’ Experience – with Joanne Harris

THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT!!

 

The million-copy bestselling author of Chocolat, Joanne Harris, teams up with World Master Chef David Greenwood-Haigh to lead you through a chocolate-tasting experience. Plus a performance of scenes from Vianne, Joanne’s most recent novel in the Chocolat story and an author Q&A. 

 

Everyone attending this event will receive a limited-edition tin of Xocolati Rub, created especially for the event by David. Drinks will be available to purchase from the theatre bar. 

 

Joanne Harris (OBE, FRSL) was born in Barnsley in 1964, of a French mother and an English father. She studied Modern and Mediaeval Languages at Cambridge and was a teacher for 15 years, during which time she published three novels, including Chocolat (1999), which was made into an Oscar-nominated film starring Juliette Binoche. Since then, she has written over 20 more novels, plus novellas, short stories, game scripts, the libretti for two short operas, several screenplays, a stage musical (with Howard Goodall) and three cookbooks. Her books are now published in over 50 countries and have won a number of British and international awards. A passionate advocate for authors’ rights, she lives in Huddersfield with her husband and works from a shed in her garden. 

 

David Greenwood-Haigh’s journey through the world of hospitality and chocolate spans more than four decades. A Fellow of the Institute of Hospitality, a Disciple of Escoffier, and a World Master Chef with the Craft Guild of Chefs, David is a multi-award-winning chef, who brings his experience and insight to Yorkshire kitchens and cocoa farms in West Africa. As a Department for Business and Trade (DTI) Export Champion, David advocates for small-scale producers; he also judges for some of the most prestigious food awards in the world and has collaborated with global food giants. His mission is to inspire, to guide, and to open doors for the next generation of chefs, chocolatiers, and cocoa change-makers. https://www.coeurdexocolat.com/ 

 

Saturday 16 May 

5pm-6.30pm 

Cellar, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Queen Street, Huddersfield HD1 2SP 

£10 (£8 conc) free for essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 14+ 

Access Guide: https://www.accessable.co.uk/huddersfield-literature-festival/access-guides/the-cellar 

Book tickets

 

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.