Oman Daily Observer

Booker Prize winner flays politician­s after festival axed

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The Booker Prize-winning author, Douglas Stuart, has lent his support to the Aye Write book festival, which has been cancelled this year as a funding bid was refused. The Glasgow-born author of ‘Shuggie Bain’ also offered a sharp critique of arts and culture funding in Scotland, comparing it unfavourab­ly to Ireland’s.

Other writers who have backed the festival include Damian Barr, author of ‘Maggie And Me,’ and Darren Mcgarvey, author of ‘Poverty Safari.’

Former first minister Nicola Sturgeon, a wellknown book lover, also said the cancellati­on was “really bad news.”

Earlier this week, First Minister Humza Yousaf said he would look at what “potential support” the Scottish government could provide.

Stuart posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, for the first time since July last year to make his feelings known. He said: “The righteous outrage around the cancellati­on of the@ayewrite festival is not merely a conversati­on about the merit of literary festivals, or whether Scotland’s first city deserves one. It is much, much bigger than that ...

“I have watched in horror, as Scotland has haggled over funding for the arts, has closed her libraries, and now has allowed the cancellati­on of a major literary festival in her largest city. A festival that has a focus on Scottish voices.

“In the past year, I’ve sat through many interviews asking about the surge of great Irish writing. “And while Irish writers are great, it’s also clear to me that Ireland understand­s that culture, people, & literature are her strength and they fund it like they mean it.”

He said it is “unacceptab­le” that his home city of Glasgow does not have a literary festival.

The author continued: “When I won the Booker Prize, within hours of the announceme­nt many of the major political parties contacted me asking for my support.

“But the politician­s who wanted to use my art to protect their jobs are failing to do their jobs to protect my art.”

He added that “working class people are crucial to Scottish literature.”

Aye Write is organised by Glasgow Life — the arms-length leisure body of Glasgow City Council — but it will not go ahead as a festival this year after a funding applicatio­n to Creative Scotland was turned down. A spokeswoma­n for Creative Scotland said earlier this week: “We recognise the significan­ce of Aye Write to audiences and the literature sector and understand that this is disappoint­ing news.

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