A furious mother, Bee Rowlatt, was forced to stuff her child into the luggage rack of a packed train travelling from York to London King s Cross despite paying £180 for the tickets.
Key Highlights The Jaipur Literature Festival 2022 takes place from 5th – 14th March in a hybrid format with its on-ground extravaganza from 10th – 14th March at Clarks Amer, Jaipur, Rajasthan Jaipur Music Stage runs parallel to the Festival from
Now that the Jaipur Literary Festival (JLF) in London is over, one needs a few days to reflect on what one learned from an intense weekend fizzing with ideas and discussions on a dizzying range of topics. ZEE JLF at the British Library in London has become a firm and welcomed fixture in the UK’s annual calendar. The literary festival, which originated in Jaipur a decade ago as a unique celebration of writing about South Asia, has extended its reach with international editions spread across destinations as diverse as Belfast, Houston, New York, Colorado, Toronto, and Adelaide. Lovers of words and literature are able to escape from the stresses of their daily lives to hear a host of famous authors talk about their books and exchange views on issues that matter to us all and analyze the significance and impact of historical events.
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( [ID] => 18987 [post author] => 23 [post date] => 2018-06-15 15:29:11 [post date gmt] => 2018-06-15 15:29:11 [post content] => Ellora Sutton is an MA student from Hampshire. She has won the
Mslexia Poetry Competition, the Artlyst Art to Poetry Award, and the Pre-Raphaelite Society Poetry Competition. She tweets @ellora sutton.
Ellora is the first-prize winner of the Carol Ann Duffy challenge on Young Poets Network, judged by Mari Hughes-Edwards, and celebrating Duffy s legacy as Poet Laureate. She is also the first-prize winner of Bailey Blackburn s 2018 August challenge #2 on found poems and the third Bloodaxe Archive challenge, The Re-Re-Re-Drafting Challenge. Ellora is also the second-prize winner in August challenge #4 on the poetics of interrogation, written and judged by Foyle Young Poet Kara Jackson in 2019. She is the third-prize winner of the Ode to (Small) Joy challenge and August Challenge #2: Fairy Tale Poetry