The Scotsman

Booking a stellar line-up

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Edinburgh Internatio­nal Book Festival has sometimes been criticised for going for names designed to draw a crowd, rather than important authors.

But this year’s programme will see discussion of some of the greatest issues of our times – along with some light entertainm­ent.

Actress Rose Mcgowan, who helped start the global Metoo movement, will give a speech; writers will discuss the politics of Trump and Putin and more than 50 essayists will debate what freedom means. No dumbing down there.

Among the lighter offerings, Iron Maiden frontman Bruce Dickinson will read from his memoirs and the actor Jim Broadbent will unveil his first graphic novel. For those seeking a more literary tone, the authors include Val Mcdermid, Ali Smith, AL Kennedy, Ian Rankin, Karl Ove Knausgaard and Philip Pullman.

Nick Barley, the director of the festival, should be commended for his approach. A book festival should not be a dusty, dry event. It should be, as he said, about “public discourse … a space for grassroots democracy, for us to think through why the world is the way it is”.

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