Henley Literary Festival 2022 Preview

Henley Literary Festival is back for 2022 with a combination of in person and live-streamed events running from 1st to 9th October. Tickets go on sale to the public on Monday 18th July, following a priority booking period for Friends of the Festival.

Henley-on-ThamesThis year’s events take place in Henley Town Hall, the Baillie Gifford Marquee at Phyllis Court and the Kenton Theatre. For those who can’t attend in person, in many cases there is an option to purchase a ticket to access a live-stream of the event.

Here is a selection of events from this year’s programme that caught my eye, some of which I’ve already secured tickets for.


Saturday 1st October

LandlinesRaynor Winn, author of The Salt Path and The Wild Silence, talks about her latest book, Landlines, which describes her experience of walking the Cape Wrath Trail through Scotland with her husband, Moth.

Freya Berry & Yara Rodrigues Fowler discuss their novels The Dictator’s Wife and There Are More Things.

Ruth Jones talks about her latest novel, Love Untold.

Act of OblivionSunday 2nd October

Robert Harris discusses his new historical novel, Act of Oblivion, a 17th century manhunt.

Ann Cleeves talks about The Rising Tide, the 10th book featuring Northumbrian detective Vera Stanhope.

Nina Stibbe & Bonnie Garmus discuss their novels One Day I Shall Astonish the World and Lessons in Chemistry.

Lucy Worsley talks about Agatha Christie: A Very Elusive Woman, her biography of the world famous crime writer.

Monday 3rd October

The Ticket Collector from BelarusMike Anderson & Neil Hanson talk about their book The Ticket Collector from Belarus, the true story of the UK’s only war crimes trial.

Norman Scott talks about An Accidental Icon which describes, in his own words, how he found himself at the centre of a political scandal.

Keith Brymer Jones, potter and judge on TV’s The Great Pottery Throwdown, talks about his memoir Boy In A China Shop: Life, Clay and Everything.

Tuesday 4th October

OutcastBestselling author Chris Ryan talks about his latest action thriller, Outcast. (I’ve read it and it’s great.)

Sir Anthony Seldon discusses his book, The Path of Peace, which describes his walk along the 1,000km route of WW1’s Western Front.

The ever popular Michael Joseph Proof Party features authors Fran Littlewood and Claire Daverley whose debut novels, Amazing Grace Adams and Talking At Night will be published in 2023.

For ‘Locally Criminal’, local authors Amanda Jennings, Robert Thorogood and Vera Morris get together to talk about their latest crime novels.

Wednesday 5th October

Miss DiorJustine Picardie talks about Miss Dior, her biography of Resistance hero, Catherine Dior, sister of the renowned designer Christian Dior.

Ray Mears discusses how we can enhance our experience of the natural world in his latest book, We Are Nature.

This year’s ‘Crime and Wine’ features crime writers Lisa Jewell, Ajay Chowdury and Elly Griffiths… and there’s wine courtesy of Laithwaites.

Thursday 6th October

Still LifeBestselling writers Patrick Gale and Sarah Winman discuss their books, Still Life and Mother’s Boy.

Broadcasting legend David Dimbleby talks about his autobiography, Keep Talking.

Gill Hornby talks about her latest novel, Godmersham Park.

For ‘Book Club Thursday’, authors Clare Pooley, Justin Myers and Mike Gayle discuss their latest novels.

Friday 7th October

One Of Our Ministers Is MissingFormer politician Alan Johnson talks about his latest novel, One Of Our Ministers Is Missing.

Henley resident Irvine Welsh discusses his latest novel, The Long Knives.

Saturday 8th October

Kit de Waal talks about her memoir, Without Warning & Only Sometimes: Scenes from an Unpredictable Childhood.

Prizewinning author Melvyn Bragg discusses his memoir, Back in the Day.

Sunday 9th October

Astronaut Tim Peake talks about his nonfiction book for children, The Cosmic Diary of Our Incredible Universe.


I hope this taster has given you an appetite for browsing the Henley Literary Festival website to see the full programme of events, including events for children. And anytime you’re in Henley, I can recommend a visit to The Bell Bookshop, the Festival’s partner bookseller.

Are you hoping to attend a literary festival this year?

#BookReview Think of Me by Frances Liardet

Think of MeAbout the Book

1942, Alexandria, Egypt. Covered in dust, Yvette and James hold hands for the first time as bombs explode above them. As the war rages on, they will find their way back to each other time and again, their love a beacon for their survival. After the war, their happiness takes root in England and blossoms, until a tragic event drives a wedge between them. The way back to one another is uncharted territory that both must be brave enough to face.

1974. Ten years after his wife’s death and with his son now at university, James craves change. He moves to the beautiful English village of Upton not thirty minutes from the city where he brought his bride Yvette, nearly twenty-five years ago. There he discovers a scarf that lights the dark edges of his memory. Could it be Yvette’s? As James makes a new home for himself and gently presses into the feelings the scarf evokes, he begins to unlock new revelations about his past that change everything he believes. Revelations that just might give James a new reason to live and the possibility of new love at last, after ten years alone.

Format: Hardback (384 pages)     Publisher: 4th Estate
Publication date: 12th May 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I finished Think of Me a few weeks ago but I’ve been putting off writing my review because I’m not sure I can do justice to it. But here goes….

A book that switches between multiple timelines can be difficult to pull off successfully but Frances Liardet does it brilliantly. There are some very clever touches that connect events in the past and present in a subtle and surprising way. (There was one particular moment where my response was ‘Oh, that’s that person’.) Using a journal as part of the narrative structure is another thing I’ve had problems with in other books, but not in this one. It works perfectly as a means for James, and us the reader, to discover Yvette’s story bit by bit, and I loved that the author kept one important element of it to the very last pages.

The emotional element of the story is handled in a way that is never sentimental and feels very true to the way relationships can change over the years.  The book explores how people can block out things that are difficult for them to face and how things unsaid can be just as damaging as those that are said.  The ‘Sources’ section at the end of the book reveals how the author’s own experience allowed her to handle one particular element of James and Yvette’s story with such empathy and insight.  It was heartbreaking to see that when they needed each others support the most it was as if a great chasm had developed between them.

I loved the relationship between James and his son Tom, a mixture of deep affection and gentle teasing that is also challenged by some of the things that are revealed. Although there’s sadness and suffering in the book, it ends with a sense of hope and the possibility of new beginnings. As one of the characters to whom James becomes close observes, ‘You know […] things can change. Even if they lie in the distant past. Even if they are shocking, ugly. It’s a matter of seeing them in a new light’.

I absolutely loved Think of Me and I’m sure it’s going to be one of my books of the year. If you don’t have a tear in your eye as you read the last chapter I’ll be surprised.

My thanks to Rachel Quin and 4th Estate for my review copy.

In three words: Moving, powerful, captivating

Try something similar: The Visitors by Caroline Scott

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Frances LiardetAbout the Author

Frances Liardet is a child of the children of the Second World War. She has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia and studied Arabic at Oxford before traveling to Cairo to work as a translator. She currently lives in Somerset, England, with her husband and daughter, and runs a summer writing session called Bootcamp.

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