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UK Events
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Friday 27 March: University East Anglia Live, The Enterprise Centre, Norwich
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Saturday 28 March: Oxford Literary Festival, Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford
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Sunday 29 March: Southbank Centre, Purcell Rooms, London
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Monday 30 March: Topping Bookshop, Bath
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US Events
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Tuesday 31 March: Center for Fiction with Ellen McLaughlin, Brooklyn, NY
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Wednesday 1 April: Philadelphia Free Library with Emily Wilson, Philadelphia, PA
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Thursday 2 April: Politics & Prose, Washington, DC
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Friday 3 April: Porter Square Books @ Lesley University’s The Marran Theatre, Cambridge, MA
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Saturday 4 April: Writers on a New England Stage @ The Music Hall in partnership with New Hampshire Public Radio, in conversation with host Nick Capodice, Portsmouth, NH
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Saturday 18 April: Chicago Humanities Festival, Chicago, IL
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Monday 27 April: Baylor College of Medicine with Ricardo Nuila, Houston, TX
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Monday 27 April: Inprint Margaret Root Brown Reading Series with Melanie Lawson, Houston, TX
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Tuesday 28 April: Texas Book Festival with Bret Anthony Johnston, Austin, TX
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Wednesday 29 April: Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX
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Thursday 30 April: Miami Literary Society, Miami, FL
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Thursday 30 April: Books & Books, Miami, FL
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Son of Nobody by Yann Martel
“The past is never done with: always the song continues”
Harlow Donne has devoted his life to the Classical world. When a chance comes up to study an obscure collection of papyrus fragments at Oxford University, he seizes it. Though it means leaving his daughter and fracturing marriage back home in Canada, this is the kind of career break he desperately needs.
In the depths of the Bodleian Library, Harlow discovers a lost account of the Trojan War, a glimpse into the founding of Western civilization itself. He names the epic poem The Psoad, after its protagonist, a Greek commoner identified as Psoas of Midea, but known to all as son of nobody.
As sole translator and interpreter of The Psoad, Harlow dedicates the poem and its footnotes to his daughter, Helen. Under his gaze, the text unlocks echoes of Ancient Greece into the present day, and a personal message to his beloved child appears. Despite the two-thousand-year gap between the two, a thread hasn’t frayed: the universal song of homesickness and regret, of ambition, love, and grief.
In this masterpiece of myth, history, and domesticity, Son of Nobody explores how stories become facts, the price we pay to share them, and how we live—then, now, and always.