I feel very privileged that this year I was invited to participate in the Hay Festival in Kells. I am not usually nervous about the 'performance' side of writing - schools, writing workshops, festivals etc. - but for some reason I was nervous about this one.
Turned out there was no need. The Hay Festival staff and volunteers in Kells were, one and all, wonderful. So welcoming, helpful and efficient. They made it all feel so easy. And the white rose at the end of each session was a lovely touch.
I enjoyed the two different sessions I ran - one which was storytelling and reading and the other which was a writing workshop. The workshop was challenging as I had all ages there - an age range I think of about seventy years. But I think it all worked. In the space of an hour there is really not a whole lot you can teach anyone about writing - as I said to the organisers the most I could aim to do was to fan a small breeze across a writing spark that was already there in every one of the people who attended. I hope I managed to do that.
The town had a lovely feel to it over the festival - a strong sense of involvement from everyone living there. The people who took writers and performers to their sessions were all volunteers from the community, and many of them doubled up as informal tour guides to the town. Mine did anyway! Shop windows were full of books and posters, the pharmacy proclaiming that there was 'No Hay Fever in our Hay Festival', Granny Lil's Sweetshop offering free Cross Stitch Lessons, the opticians with books by Seamus Heaney and Dervla Murphy in the window and much much more.
So, thank you the Hay Festival, thank you to Kells and thank you to those who came to my sessions - I loved meeting you.