• Rachel Joyce: The Homemade God

    Gail's, Whiteladies Road 52 Whiteladies Road, Bristol

    We are delighted to support this event organised by Penguin Random House and GAIL's Bakeries

    Full details and tickets available from Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/in-conversation-with-rachel-joyce-tickets-1561609298449

    Step into the cosy charm of GAIL’s Bakery for an inspiring afternoon with bestselling author Rachel Joyce, as part of our Great Reads Collection in association with Heron Books . Rachel will share the story behind her latest novel, The Homemade God, offering candid insights into her creative process, the joys and challenges of writing, and the imaginative world she brings to life.

  • Jay Griffiths and Gareth Howell-Jones: How Animals (Including Hedgehogs) Heal Us

    Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United Kingdom

    Please note a change to this event: Jay Griffiths is unwell and unable to attend. The event will go ahead with Gareth Howell-Jones and we are so looking forward to hearing about his writing as well as to hear his kind reading of Jay's talk on her behalf. 
    Jay Griffiths explores how animals can have a role in every level of healing, from the individual to the collective, guiding us in how we might create societies that are healthier, fairer and kinder. How Animals Heal Us puts animals at the heart of a restorative vision of health.

    In Your Lowly Hedgehog Knows, Gareth Howell-Jones looks at the simple, everyday things around us – trees, woodlice, cats, people and, of course, hedgehogs – to develop a radical and heartening world-view based on nature rather than cultural traditions.

    Together, they reimagine our place in nature with wonder, hope and a lot of humour.

  • Searching for My Slave Roots: From Guyana’s Sugar Plantations to Cambridge

    Arts Complex, University of Bristol Arts Complex Woodland Road, Bristol, United Kingdom

    Dr Malik Al Nasir will talk about his new book 'Searching for My Slave Roots: From Guyana's Sugar Plantations to Cambridge'

    We are delighted to provide a book stall at this event, organised by the University of Bristol.

    Author and award-winning researcher, Malik Al Nasir will be discussing, Searching for my Slave Roots: From Guyana’s Sugar Plantations to Cambridge, a powerful exploration of ancestry, enslavement, and legacy.

    Set across Liverpool, Glasgow, Demerara and Berbice, the book traces Malik’s family history, revealing ancestors who were both enslaved and slaveholders, and uncovering the complex interconnections between trauma, privilege, and the institutions shaped by slavery.

    The author will be in conversation with Dr Richard Stone.

    Arts Complex, Lecture Theatre 2, 11 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TB

  • Celsius – a life and death by degrees with Ian Hembrow with Bristol Humanists

    Bristol Grain Store Bristol YHA, 14 Narrow Quay, Bristol

    Best-known for the 100-point ‘centi-grade’ temperature scale that bears his name, Anders Celsius was a scientist of astonishing breadth. From the Northern Lights to air pressure and sea levels, he unravelled the mysteries of many of nature’s greatest phenomena during his short life. His mind, methods and manners contain powerful lessons for how humans live in the 21st century and beyond – if we’re inclined and willing to listen.

    Ian Hembrow's book, Celsius: a life and death by degrees, is the first full-length English language biography of this world-changing Swedish scientist. Longlisted for the 2025 Wolfson History Prize, it tracks not just Celsius’ life and times, but also the author’s journey to uncover his story.

    Ian Hembrow is a Bristol-based author and Humanist celebrant, who has written widely including for The Guardian, New Statesman and the Oldie. His previous books, Making Medicines Safe & Rare Events are on global medicines safety.

  • Rosa Vasquez Espinoza: The Spirit of the Rainforest

    Life Sciences Building Life Sciences, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol, United Kingdom

    We will be providing a book stall at Rosa's event with the University of Bristol. Anyone who came to her talk in the shop earlier this year will know what a fascinating book The Spirit of the Rainforest is and what brilliant research and work Rosa carries out. We can't wait to hear more. 

    Dr. Rosa Vásquez Espinoza is a Peruvian Amazonian-Andean scientist, conservationist, National Geographic Explorer, and award-winning artist. She blends science with indigenous knowledge to protect biodiversity and culture.

    4pm in the Life Sciences building, BS8 1TQ. More details and link to follow. 

  • Julian Baggini: How the World Eats with Bristol Humanists

    Bristol Grain Store Bristol YHA, 14 Narrow Quay, Bristol

    We welcome back Bristol’s philosopher, Julian Baggini to explore the timely issue of How the World Eats.

    How we live is shaped by how we eat. You can see this in the vastly different approaches to growing, preparing and eating food around the world: the hunter-gatherer Hadza in Tanzania whose sustainable lifestyle is under threat in our crowded planet is in stark contrast to “developed” societies whose food is produced in vast intensive enterprises. Most of us now rely on a complex global food web of production, distribution, consumption and disposal, which is now facing unprecedented challenges.

    The need for a better understanding of how we feed ourselves has never been more urgent. Julian Baggini’s exploration takes him from cutting-edge technologies, such as new farming methods, cultured meat, GM and astronaut food, to the ethics and health of ultra processed food and aquaculture, as he takes a forensic look at the effectiveness of our food governance, the problem of food wastage and the effects of commodification.

    This event is at YHA Bristol in the Conference Room. The venue is fully accessible - please check at reception for use of the lift.

    Everyone is welcome. The event is FREE to members of Bristol Humanists. Others are asked for a contribution of £5/£2 (concessions)

  • Meera Sodha: Dinner

    Bristol Lido Oakfield Place, Bristol

    Bristol Lido are running a supper club with the great Meera Sodha. Details of what is set to be a glorious feast are on their website and we are delighted to support the event by bringing copies of Meera Sodha's Dinner.  https://www.lidobristol.com/supper-clubs/dinner-with-meera-sodha/  

  • Thomas Halliday: Otherlands with Bristol Humanists

    Bristol Folk House 40a Park St, Bristol

    Otherlands is an epic, exhilarating journey into deep time, showing us the Earth as it used to exist, and the worlds that were here before ours. Travelling back in time to the dawn of complex life, and across all seven continents, award-winning palaeobiologist Thomas Halliday gives us a mesmerising up-close encounter with eras that are normally unimaginably distant.

    Dr Thomas Halliday is a paleobiologist, specialising in mammal evolution and phylogenetics (the science of working out how organisms are related). He has been a researcher and a graduate student at the University of Bristol and at University College London, and as a postdoctoral researcher at University College London and the University of Birmingham. He was an Honorary Fellow at the University of Birmingham and is an Associate with the Natural History Museum. He is also an international croquet player.

    Darwin Day has been celebrated since the 1930's, marking the birthday (Feb 12th) of arguably the world's greatest ever scientist, Charles Darwin, the father of evolution by natural selection. Bristol Humanists has held a Darwin Day annual lecture by a noted scientist for the last 10 years. Significant previous Darwin Day lecturers have included Adam Rutherford, Angel Saini, Nichola Raihani & Anil Seth

    Tickets can be booked at: https://wegottickets.com/event/685110/

  • Tracy Maton: The Artful Anna Harris

    Clifton Library 13 Princess Victoria St, Bristol, United Kingdom

    We are very much looking forward to supporting this event organised by the Friends of the Clifton Library celebrating The Artful Anna Harris by Tracy Maton.

    About the book:
    When the vivacious Sofia Carstairs arrives in her sleepy country village, Anna knows her life will never be the same again. Her new best friend is carefree, elegant and intoxicating. Her life doesn't revolve around church flower arrangements or Sunday lunches with the in-laws. Sofia reminds Anna of the person she used to be, before she worked so hard to fit in that she practically disappeared. But is it enough to just be Sofia's friend? Anna wonders what it would be like to be Sofia, if only for a little while.
    But once Anna starts pretending, she finds it easy to pretend the rules don't apply to her. How far will Anna go to get what she wants? And what will she do to those who stand in her way?

    Tracy will discuss her love of the morally ambiguous character and why she decided to write her own. An award-winning children’s writer, The Artful Anna Harris is her first thriller for adults.

    Book your tickets through the Clifton Library: https://public.foccal.com/event/515

  • Marianne Power and Jan Day at the Alma Tavern Theatre

    Alma Tavern Theatre 18-20 Alma Vale Rd, Bristol

    We are delighted to support this conversation event between writers, Marianne Power and Jan Day at the Alma Tavern Theatre Full details and booking through the Alma Tavern's website: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/almatheatrecompany/2044804    

  • Eloise Kane: Wilderlands – The Human History of Wild Britain

    Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United Kingdom

    We are very excited to host Eloise Kane to celebrate her new book Wilderlands: The Human History of Wild Britain. Please join us for a discussion of the book, followed by a Q&A and book signing. The event is free but please RSVP to read@heronbooks.co.uk. Space is limited and in demand! About the book When was Britain last truly wild? And what, if anything, remains? This is the unexpectedly human history of wild Britain. Eloise Kane unearths 12,000 years of our changing relationship with and influence on the landscape. Through prehistory, Roman occupation, the Middle Ages and beyond, we see the unfamiliar beasts of our old wild make way for species such as brown hare and fallow deer, now romanticised as eternal symbols of the British countryside, but introduced much later than we might think. Places free from our influence haven't existed for a very long time. But Eloise Kane invites us to rethink our definition of the wild - not as separate from us. Seen anew as the result of millions of human lives lived, Wilderlands demonstrates how we are integral to the ecology and biodiversity of our land, with the power to shape its future. About the author Eloise Kane is an archaeologist. She is a Visiting Fellow at the Royal Agricultural University, an Associate Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and previously served as Honorary Treasurer of the Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology. Her research interests are in landscape, environmental, and animal history/archaeology – historic parks, hunting landscapes, country houses, woodlands, animal sports, and the relationship between humans and the wild. She lives on the edge of Salisbury Plain with a small menagerie of children and beasts.

  • Jay Griffiths: Wild Medicine with Bristol Talks

    Bristol Folk House 40a Park St, Bristol

    We are very pleased to support this event organised by Bristol Talks with Jay Griffiths and Michael Malay: a revelatory and exuberant discussion about our relationship to the living world, mischievous, vital and wild.

    Jay has written several award-winning books, including Wild: An Elemental Journey and Pip Pip: A Sideways Look at Time. In her latest work, How Animals Heal Us, she explores how animals heal us as individuals with their vitality, humour and empathy. They offer social remedies too: wolves may be teachers of ethics; bees take collective decisions and monkeys have a sense of justice.

    In conversation with celebrated local author of Late Light, Michael Malay, Jay will reflect on the big questions that have always permeated her writing, considering time and the rich wisdoms of Indigenous cultures, and the necessity of challenging the status quo.

    Doors open at 7pm. The Folk House bar will be open and we will provide a book stall. The talk is from 7.30-8.30pm. Tickets are available from the Bristol Talks website.