Events
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Franny Moyle: Mrs Kauffman and Madame Le Brun
Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United KingdomJoin us to celebrate the publication of Mrs Kauffman and Madame Le Brun: The Extraordinary Entwined Lives of Two Eighteenth-Century Painters by Franny Moyle We are delighted to welcome Franny Moyle for a talk on her fascinating new book on Angelica Kauffman and Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun. In the spring of 1790 two of the most gifted artists in Europe met in Rome and became fast friends, sharing their views on art, visiting the city’s ancient sites and making trips to the opera together over several happy weeks. The Swiss history painter Angelica Kauffman and the French portraitist Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun are no longer household names in the early twenty-first century but were much-fêted celebrities in the late eighteenth. The two had much in common: both had been child prodigies; both were members of the prestigious Academies of their respective countries; both had been celebrated court painters; both had made disastrous marriages that had drained them financially and made them the subject of scandal. Franny Moyle uses their meeting in the eternal city as the point of departure for a lavishly illustrated ‘life and times’ biography of two brilliant but neglected women artists whose lives and creative careers straddled the political upheavals of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Mrs Kauffman and Madame Le Brun allows Moyle to explore an age of political, aesthetic and social revolution via a web of connections that embraces many of the most intriguing and powerful personalities of the time – to view a whole era of changing ideas and political ferment through the prism of the intertwined tales of two remarkable, rediscovered female lives. The event is free and unticketed but seats are limited so please do RSVP in advance so that we can ensure you are sitting comfortably and your glass will be full.
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Cécile Tlili: Just a Little Dinner
Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United KingdomHeron Books is delighted to welcome Cécile Tlili to celebrate the publication of Just a Little Dinner.
Do join us to meet Cécile, enjoy a discussion with her publisher, Richard Village of Foundry Books, and get your copies signed.
The event is free. Please RSVP to read@heronbooks.co.uk so that we know how many to expect.
About the book:
In tired, hot Paris at the end of August, a group of friends, who’d rather still be at the sea, meet for a dinner in one couple’s apartment. Taking us behind the shutters of the Sixth Arrondissement, with a cast of characters that both delight and repel, fractured relationships, manipulation, bad behaviour and desperation are all laid bare in this very contemporary take on a Parisian huis clos story. What starts as just a little dinner ends up having monumental consequences for everyone. -
I Swear by John Davidson at the Everyman
Everyman Cinema 44 Whiteladies Rd, Bristol, United KingdomWe will be selling copies of I Swear at the early preview screening of the film at the Everyman, followed by a live Q&A with director Kirk Jones.
All details and booking here: https://www.everymancinema.com/film-listing/1000029002-i-swear-live-qanda/
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David Olusoga: History’s Missing Chapters
St George's, Bristol St George’s Bristol, Great George Street, Bristol, United KingdomWe are delighted to be supporting this event at St George's:
Professor David Olusoga OBE, BAFTA winning film-maker and author returns to St Georges due to popular demand.
In a brand-new talk for 2025 David examines some of history’s missing chapters to uncover how and why some events and some people are remembered and others forgotten. Taking examples from the world wars, the Industrial revolution and other pivotal moments in global history David uncovers history’s missing persons.
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Michael Taylor: Impossible Monsters
Bristol Grain Store Bristol YHA, 14 Narrow Quay, BristolDinosaurs, Darwin and the war between science and religion
We are delighted to support the Bristol Humanists' Emma Martin Lecture 2025Book here: https://wegottickets.com/event/671906/
In 1811, a twelve-year-old girl uncovered some strange-looking bones in Britain’s southern shoreline and so sparked a crisis that would engulf science and religion for the next six decades. That little girl Mary Anning, an amateur geologist, shook the establishment. By the end of the 19th century, the literal reading of the bible had been overturned, science had been liberated from religion and the secular age had begun. Impossible Monsters takes us into the lives and minds of the extraordinary men and women whose discovery of the dinosaurs revolutionised our understanding of the world, as well as those who resisted them, and those like Charles Darwin, who took great risks to construct a new account of the earth’s and mankind’s origins. It is the riveting story of a group of people who dared to think impossible things and then showed them to be true.
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Rachel Joyce: The Homemade God
Gail's, Whiteladies Road 52 Whiteladies Road, BristolWe 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.
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Poetry in Herons: Esme Allman
Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United KingdomFor our October monthly poetry reading, we are delighted to Esme Allman, author of Sweet Bone Girl.
Esme Allman is a poet, writer and theatre director from South London. Her work explores history, imagined worlds, and desire within the context of black femininity. She has been commissioned to write poems for the Barbican Centre, English Heritage, the Institute of Contemporary Art with BBC Radio 3 and BBC Radio 6, NHS Arts and Heritage, Pace Gallery, and Poetry Vs Colonialism in conjunction with the London Metropolitan Archives. Sweet Bone Girl is her debut collection of poetry.
Free entry. Come for the poetry. Stay for the poetry.Arrive at 5pm. We’ll offer you something fizzy. Usually a drink but perhaps one day it will be a sherbet fountain.
5.10-5.40ish, we’ll enjoy some poetry.
5.40-6pm, finish the fizzy things and perhaps buy the poet’s books.
Some seating. Some standing. Get in touch with us about any requirements you may have.
It is free and unticketed but it would help if you let us know that you are coming. RSVP to read@heronbooks.co.uk
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Jay Griffiths and Gareth Howell-Jones: How Animals (Including Hedgehogs) Heal Us
Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United KingdomPlease 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.
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A Round-up of All the Festive Tomfoolery
Heron Books 7a Regent Street, Bristol, United KingdomFrom parties to games to subscriptions, come and join us for all the general silliness this festive season. Wednesday 12th November – open late (until 6.30ish) in case you need a book before you head to The Mall for the Christmas lights switch-on. Thursday 27th November – party, 18.30-late at The Lansdown. Blind Justice Page playing songs inspired by books. Dressing as your favourite book cover or character encouraged. Advent calendar – first person to buy a book each day gets a free mystery proof. See you in the queue… Sunday silliness, 7th, 14th and 21st December – guess the weight of your shopping. If you’re within a gnat’s crotchet (or 50g) of the correct answer, you get a treat. Dark chocolate buttons supplied by our excellent neighbours, Smaller Footprints. Saturday 13th and 20th December – late night shopping. We’ll be open until 7pm-ish… maybe later, mulled wine depending. Book subscriptions – for those panicked by buying a present for that difficult relative/friend/special pigeon in your life, let us choose. We’ll send a book each month to the recipient. Pick from, ‘The weird and the eerie,’ ‘Nature matters,’ ‘Warm hugs in book form’ or ‘Picture books are for “grown-ups” too.’ Opening hours – Monday-Saturday, 9.30-5.30; Sunday 11-4 as always. Plus the late nights above. We close Christmas and Boxing Day. Back as normal (within the realms of ‘normal’) on 27th.
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Searching for My Slave Roots: From Guyana’s Sugar Plantations to Cambridge
Arts Complex, University of Bristol Arts Complex Woodland Road, Bristol, United KingdomDr 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
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Herons Go Partying with Blind Justice Page
The Lansdown 8 Clifton Road, Bristol, United KingdomJoin us for our annual party at The Lansdown
Come for the literarily-inspired music. Stay for the musically-inspired book chat.
Steve, aka Blind Justice Page, will be playing songs inspired by his favourite authors.
Lizzie will be dressing as her favourite book cover.
Harry will be there.
You can dress up too.
You don't have to.An initial drink or two will be provided by us. Lots more available from the good folks on the bar. This should be one to remember. If through a fuzzy haze of festive bubbles.
18.30ish start. Music from 19.00. Stay as long as you like. (Within reason.) -
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Celsius – a life and death by degrees with Ian Hembrow with Bristol Humanists
Bristol Grain Store Bristol YHA, 14 Narrow Quay, BristolBest-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.