The return of the British Library’s celebration of strange, uncanny and horrifying writing.
Saturday 1 – Sunday 2 November
About Tales of the Weird: An Autumnal Festival
Tales of the Weird: An Autumnal Festival is back for a full weekend at the British Library. Inspired by the Library’s cult Tales of the Weird series of gothic, supernatural and horror fiction the event features some of our finest writers, directors and fans of the strange, as well as the very latest Tales of the Weird editions.
Full programme details below.
One day and weekend in-person tickets available. To get a weekend ticket add both days to your basket to get a discounted rate. Online tickets are weekend passes (inclusive for Saturday and Sunday).
First release tickets currently on sale also include our Saturday night headline event An Evening with Andrzej Sapkowski, for which separate tickets are also available.
Monday features a special online-only World Wide Weird event on Monday 3 November featuring Mariana Enríquez and Mona Awad.
Book signings will be taking place throughout the event.
Ages 16 and over only.
Your support
The British Library is a charity. Your support helps us open up a world of knowledge and inspiration for everyone. Please consider adding a donation to your basket.
Full programme
Saturday 1 November – The First Day
Hosted by Robin Ince.
12.00 – 13.15: Session to be unveiled
13.45 – 15.00: Weird Gatherings
M John Harrison and Leon Craig, with Sam Leith.
M John Harrison’s writing has always defied genres, and his recently re-published tale of three students and a dark ritual, The Course of the Heart, is one of his most extraordinary. Leon Craig’s brand new The Decadence follows a young group into the most gothic of houses, where their break for freedom turns to chaos.
15.30 – 16.45: After Midnight: The Chilling Stories of Daphne Du Maurier
Suzi Feay, Kim Newman, Bidisha, Alice Lowe.
On a sharp December day, the wind changes and the birds begin to gather. In the twisting alleyways of Venice, a grieving couple catch a glimpse of their lost child. A woman returns home to find no trace of her existence. We dare to revisit the dark, unsettling stories of Daphne du Maurier.
17.15 – 18.30: The Panel of Weird
Alice Lowe, Jeremy Dyson, Prano Bailey-Bond, with Johnny Mains.
Some of our most exceptional creators of strange and horrifying screen worlds unearth the books, the television and the films that have shaped and shaken them. Director, screenwriter and actor Alice Lowe’s films range from Sightseers to her latest Timestalker; Jeremy Dyson is the behind-the-scenes member of The League of Gentlemen and the creator and co-writer of the Ghost Stories show and film. The eerie and beautiful short films, and debut feature Censor by director Prano Bailey-Bond have been acclaimed around the world.
19.00 – 20.15: An Evening with Andrzej Sapkowski
In conversation with the author of The Witcher series, which has sold over 30 million copies worldwide, inspired the hit Netflix series and its landmark video games.
Sunday 2 November – The Second Day
12.00 – 13.30: The Weirdness of Place
Andrew Michael Hurley, Iain Sinclair and Sarah Hall, with Travis Elborough.
Three exceptional writers explore the cities, the towns, the rural and wild places that overwhelm their storytelling. Fifty years ago, writer, poet and filmmaker Iain Sinclair published the cult classic Lud Heat: A Book of the Dead Hamlets, igniting psychogeography in British writing as it created a visionary map of East London’s lost energies. The dilapidated seaside town of Andrew Michael Hurley’s new Saltwash follows the unsettling countrysides and coasts of his The Loney and Starve Acre. Landscape and its effect on people, is at the heart of Sarah Hall’s novels and stories and in her latest novel Helm, a Cumbrian wind is even the central character.
14.00 – 15.00: Chasing The Dark: Encounters With The Supernatural
Ben Machell, with Suzi Feay.
Fascination with strange phenomena and paranormal activity has a long history in Britain. In the middle of the 19th century, the craze for spiritualism – seances, clairvoyants, telepath and ectoplasm led to the creation of investigative body the Society for Psychical Research. Ben Machell talks to Suzi Feay about the story of the Society’s Tony Cornell, who from 1952 and 2004 was Britain’s most diligent parapsychologist... and what he uncovered.
15.30 – 16.45: All The Fear Of The Fair
Edward Carey, Edward Parnell, Elf Lyons.
A new British Library Tales of the Weird collection edited by Ghostland author Edward Parnell has brought back to life sixteen enchanted, nightmarish tales of circus, spectacle and sideshow. Step right up if you dare as he is joined on stage by comedian and clown Elf Lyons and playwright and novelist Edward Carey, author of The Iremonger trilogy and Edith Holler, the tale of brilliant 12-year-old Edith who is cursed to never leave her family's tumbledown theatre.
17.15 – 18.30: A Descending Chill
Joe Hill, Keith Rosson and V. Castro with Lisa Tuttle.
As the evening closes in around the British Library, our horror writers emerge. On rare visits from the US we have Joe Hill and Keith Rosson, authors of the darkly shocking and fantastical new King Sorrow and Coffin Moon respectively, joined by Mexican American storyteller V. Castro, whose books draw on everything from folk tales and urban legends to sex and science fiction.
19.00 – 20.15: Session to be unveiled
Monday 3 November – The Third Day
19.00 – 20.00: World Wide Weird: Mariana Enríquez and Monda Awad
A special online-only conversation with some of the world’s finest and most unsettling authors. Live from Argentina we welcome the incomparable Mariana Enríquez, whose most recent works include Somebody is Walking on Your Grave, an extraordinary gothic journey through the world’s cemeteries, and the haunting stories of A Sunny Place for Shady People. She is joined from Canada by Mona Awad, author of cult classic novel Bunny which blended sharp satire with fairytale horror, and its brand new, wickedly intoxicating successor, We Love You, Bunny, dubbed ‘Frankenstein by way of Heathers’.