Like each year, Festival will showcase an impressive range of authors, thinkers, and cultural icons, including Indian historian Anirudh Kanisetti, known for his deep dive into South Asian history, whose latest book, The Age of Wrath: A History of the Delhi Sultanate, explores the rise, rule, and impact of the Delhi Sultanate on medieval India, and bestselling British novelist David Nicholls, celebrated for works like One Day, that pivots around a poignant and evocative love story spanning two decades, and has inspired a Hollywood film and more recently,a widely-watchedNetflix series.
The roster of speakers goes on to include historian and writer Ira Mukhoty, who brought the untold stories of powerful women from India’s Mughal Empire in Daughters of the Sun and in her latest book, The Lion and The Lily: The Rise and Fall of Awadh, tells a nuanced and richly layered account of the rise and fall of Awadh in the eighteenth century against the background of the international struggle between Britain and France. Canadian-American author and journalist John Vaillant, famed for his exploration of the conflict between nature and humankind in The Golden Spruce, who in his latest book, Fire Weather: The Making of a Beast, takes readers on a riveting journey through the intertwined histories of North America’s oil industry and the birth of climate science, to the devastation brought about by modern forest fires, and lives forever irrevocably impacted by these disasters.The book, a Pulitzer finalist and on the New York Times Top Ten list, won the 2024 Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing and the 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction.
The Festival will also welcome Sri Lankan-American novelist V. V. Ganeshananthan, whose works address the complex legacies of the Tamil-Sri Lankan experience and whose latest book, Brotherless Night, is a novel set during the Sri Lankan Civil War, exploring the personal and political turmoil of a young woman navigating her way through the violence. Her evocative storytelling won her the prestigious Carol Shields Prize for Fiction in 2024. There will also be Miriam Margolyes,British-Australian writer and actress, best known for her role as Professor Sprout in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, who recently released her memoir,Oh Miriam: Stories from an Extraordinary Life, where she shares candid anecdotes from her life, including her experiences with famous personalities and behind-the-scenes stories from her career.
The Festival will featurejournalist& author Nathan Thrall, whoselatest book,A Day in the Life of Abed Salama: A Palestine Story, is a gripping portrayal of a fateful day in Palestine that upends lives, loves, enmities, and histories in an act of tragic violence, that won the 2024 Pulitzer Prize. Harvard academic Stephen Greenblatt will shed light on hislatest book, Second Chances, co-authored with Adam Phillips, which examines the human capacity for renewal, as seen through Shakespeare and Freud, highlighting human resilience and the complexities of recovery.
Acclaimed authors Andre Aciman, best known for Call Me by Your Name, whose latest work is Roman Year: A Memoir, a deeply romantic memoir of his time in Rome while on the cusp of adulthood;Cauvery Madhavan, whose novels explore personal and family dynamics and the migrant identity; and British theoretical physicist Claudia De Rham, author of A Place in the Sun, will also share their narratives. Also featured are Irenosen Okojie, British-Nigerian writer whose works blend magical realism with contemporary themes, and economist Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan, whose exploration of risk and uncertainty has reshaped global thinking. With speakers such as Indian author Prayaag Akbar, whose novel Leila explores themes of dystopia and social justice, and whose latest book Mother India,centres around the complexities of modern India through the lives of two young people in Delhi,along withand Sri Lankan academic Maithree Wickramasinghe, whose latest book is In My Mother’s House: Civil War in Sri Lanka,that delves into the profound impact of the Sri Lankan civil war on families, identity, and the broader social fabric of the country.
Attendees can also look forward to a session with Tina Brown, whose work includes The Palace Papers, that looksinto the British royal family’s challenges and changes after Princess Diana, covering key events like the rise of Kate Middleton and Harry and Meghan’s royal exit. Ukrainian-born Italian journalist, chief foreign-affairs correspondent at The Wall Street Journal, Yaroslav Trofimov,a 2024 Pulitzer finalist, whose Our Enemies Will Vanish, a powerful account of Ukraine’s resistance to the Russian invasion, and Nobel Laureate Venki Ramakrishnan, whose latest book, a groundbreaking exploration of the science of why and how we age and die,Why We Die: The New Science of Ageing and the Quest for Immortality, will be in the spotlight at this truly enlightening Festival.