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  • Writers Make Hi-Tech Link To Book Festival

    WRITERS MAKE HI-TECH LINK TO BOOK FESTIVAL
    Tim Cornwell - Arts Correspondent ([email protected])

    Scotsman, United Kingdom
    June 15 2007

    NORMAN Mailer and Alice Munro are among the writers appearing at this
    year's Edinburgh International Book Festival - but they won't turn
    up in person.

    Catherine Lockerbie, the director, explained that the writers will
    be interviewed from the United States and Canada live on stage in
    Edinburgh, via a high-definition broadband link.

    In what she claimed as a world festival "first", both will talk to
    and sign books for about 50 members of the audience.

    The 'LongPen' technology allowing this to happen is the brainchild
    of Canadian writer Margaret Atwood, who even claims it's a "green"
    device because it cuts down on global travel. She will be using it
    herself to interview her compatriot Alice Munro, widely seen as one
    of the world's finest short story writers, in her Ontario home.

    Controversial American novelist Norman Mailer, world- famous ever
    since the publication of The Naked and the Dead in 1948, is, at 84,
    too unwell to fly to Edinburgh. He will be interviewed by leading
    Scottish novelist Andrew O'Hagan.

    The festival unveiled its 2007 line-up for 11-27 August yesterday.

    With 600 authors from more than 40 countries, there is a strong
    international flavour. Strands will focus on China and its
    extraordinary growth, and on India, with the 60th anniversary of
    independence and the 150th anniversary of the Mutiny.

    Ms Lockerbie called it the "biggest, most international and most
    Scottish programme in the book festival's history", that proved how
    culture and festivals "are crucial to this country's identity, image,
    economic health, international reputation and sense of self".

    International visitors include the former Cambodian child soldier and
    land mines campaigner, Loung Ung; the Turkish intellectual Elif Shafak,
    prosecuted for referring to Armenian genocide in one of her novels;
    and the top Basque writer Bernardo Axtaga.

    Last year, the festival netted three Nobel prize winners. This year
    it has none, and the festival's thrust is aimed at "writers of the
    world" rather than celebrities.

    Coups include the actor and writer Alan Bennett, who appeared in
    Edinburgh in Beyond the Fringe in 1960, but rarely makes festival
    appearances.

    Charles Spencer, brother of Diana, will talk about his history of
    the swashbuckling Prince Rupert of the Rhine. Singer Billy Bragg
    talks on The Progressive Patriot, his book on what it means to be
    English, and British. Others are the US novelist Joyce Carol Oates,
    the Nigerian-born Booker Prize winner Ben Okri and last year's biggest
    seller, the broadcaster Andrew Marr.

    On the Scottish front authors range from Iain Banks to Alexander
    McCall Smith and the poet John Burnside. Other highlights include
    Ian McEwan, Doris Lessing, and General Sir Michael Rose on his new
    book on how American revolutionaries fighting British forces used
    the same techniques as Iraqi insurgents.

    In another example of new technology put to good literary use, Lucy
    Hawking is bringing the science adventure book she wrote with her
    father, Professor Stephen Hawking, to the children's section of the
    festival. Her father will take questions live from the audience by
    text message, with the answers appearing on screen.

    A lively children's section will look at graphic novels for the first
    time, with Alan Grant and Cam Kennedy, who produced a graphic version
    of Kidnapped.
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