Tuesday 28 September 2010 7pm
Who needs stories?
Romesh Gunesekera in conversation with Michael Morpurgo
Chaired by Nicolette Jones

THE COSMO DAVENPORT-HINES MEMORIAL LECTURE

‘Facts alone are wanted in life’ – or so Mr Gradgrind believed.  Michael Morpurgo, former Children’s Laureate and author of over 100 books, including Private Peaceful and War Horse (currently being made into a film by Steven Spielberg), and Romesh Gunesekera, whose prize-winning novels include Reef and The Sandglass, beg to differ. In a discussion chaired by critic and writer Nicolette Jones, they talk about the influences that lured them into storytelling, and ask, what are stories for? Where do they come from? Is it true that there are essentially only a dozen or so plots, which novelists endlessly re-jig – if so, does this matter? Do grown-ups need stories less, or more, than children? And is it a good thing for fictional characters to live happily ever after?

This meeting is jointly hosted by the Royal Society of Literature and King’s College, London. It will be held in the Old Anatomy Theatre, King’s College (directions available at main, Strand entrance).