Brilliant Fiction

Brilliant Fiction

From international luminaries to local heroes, the programme is packed with stellar fiction. What makes something brilliant? You’re bereft when you read the last line? Or is it a character whose voice you can hear long after you’ve closed the page?*

Here’s a taste of some of the brilliant writers coming to our stages this year.

From Scotland we welcome back Andrew O’Hagan with his state of the nation novel Caledonian Road, shot through with his imitable wit and humour; and Lorraine Kelly (from the telly) is joining us with her debut novel The Island Swimmer. New novels from Graeme Macrae Burnet, Kate Atkinson, Louise Welsh, and a debut novel from comics legend Grant Morrison (and many more) show Scotland’s letters to be in a very healthy state indeed.

The extraordinary Rachel Cusk brings us the highly anticipated Parade, and we feature new books from award winners and Festival favourites including Elif Shafak, Colm Tóibín, Sarah Perry, David Nicholls, Kevin Barry, and 2023 Booker Prize-winner, Paul Lynch with Prophet Song, a devastating vision of an alternate Ireland at war.

At the Book Festival we pride ourselves on presenting the finest international fiction that truly allows readers to travel imaginatively and understand the world around us. This year, Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail and Chigozie Obioma’s The Road to the Country tackle war and its devastating outcomes, and we’re joined by Sámi-Swedish writer Linnea Axelsson, Indigenous Australian writers Tony Birch and Melissa Lucashenko, and writer and translator Anton Hur. We’ll also enjoy a very special visit from Itamar Vieira Junior, timed with the staging of After the Silence, a production based on his bestselling novel Torto Arado, at Edinburgh International Festival. And a dazzling line-up from the US includes short story pioneer Lorrie Moore, and the unmatchable Lauren Groff.

*If you’re interested in how your mind creates voices for characters, don’t miss our amazing ReaderBank project.

 

Tony Birch & Fred D’Aguiar: The Secrets We Tell

Sunday 18 August 14:00 - 15:00

  • Attend in person
Silence breaks. Truths materialise. And those coaxed into invisibility emerge from the shadows. Deirdre Osborne leads award-winning Aboriginal Australian author Tony Birch and British-Guyanese poet and novelist Fred D’Aguiar in a conversation about their…
  • Attend in person
Both The Alternatives by Caoilinn Hughes and Private Rites by Julia Armfield centre around the relationships between sisters meeting after their parents’ death. But more than that, they are novels of ideas: about climate change, about the choices we make…
 

Howard Jacobson: Like a Bolt Out the Blue

Sunday 18 August 15:15 - 16:15

  • Attend in person
  • Watch online
  • Captioned
What happens when love surprises you later in life? How long can it last? Howard Jacobson, Booker-prize-winning author of The Finkler Question and author of more than twenty books besides, explores this, and more, in What Will Survive of Us: a tender new…
  • Attend in person
In Rachelle Atalla’s The Salt Flats, six strangers journey to a retreat in the salt flats of Bolivia, desperate to find a cure for their various ills. Ali Millar’s debut novel Ava Anna Ada is set during a scorching summer when the past comes calling for…
 

Álvaro Enrigue & Chigozie Obioma: History and Myth

Sunday 18 August 16:00 - 17:00

  • Attend in person
The year is 1519 and Conquistador Hernán Cortés and his troops ride into Tenoxtitlan, today’s Mexico City. This is You Dreamed of Empires, Álvaro Enrigue’s hallucinatory, revelatory, colonial revenge story. Chigozie Obioma’s The Road to the Country is an…
  • Attend in person
Two powerful new voices in Scotland’s literary scene come together to discuss their debuts with Catherine Wilson Garry. In Lynsey May’s Weak Teeth, Ellis’s life is spiralling out of control as she attempts to navigate grief, difficult relationships, and…