
Queen Camilla unveils star-studded lineup for her literary festival - with Rivals author Jilly Cooper and Bridgerton creator Julia Quinn set to attend
The Queen is taking her highly anticipated literary festival to Chatsworth this year, with a star-studded line-up of authors for a celebration that will delight bookworms across the country.
The Queen's Reading Room, the literary charity launched by Camilla, 77, in 2023, announced that the festival will see authors Jilly Cooper, Helen Fielding, Richard Osman, Natasha Brown, and Jojo Moyes carrying out interviews and panel discussions.
Taking place on 19 and 20 September, with tickets going on sale today, the festival celebrates and promotes the transformative power of books.
Over the last two years, the festival has attracted audiences from as far away as the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
In its first two-year tenure at Hampton Court Palace in 2024, it sold nearly 20,000 tickets.
Even more famous faces are expected to take part in this year's events, with Lorraine Kelly set to interview Jilly Cooper and actress Celia Imrie speaking to Richard Osman.
Journalist Reeta Chakrabarti will interview Natasha Brown, author of Assembly.
Bridgerton fans are in for a treat with special themed panel discussion featuring none other than Julia Quinn, the author of the beloved series herself.
Samantha Shannon, Sarah Winman, Joanna Cannon, Kristin Hannah, Peter James, Rupert Everett, Robert Harris, Peter Frankopan, Sebastian Faulks, Lady Anne Glenconner, Gyles Brandreth, Sarah Waters, and Alan Titchmarsh have also all been confirmed to take to the festival stage.
The location in which the festival is being held also has a special literary meaning; Chatsworth, in Derbyshire, is the famous backdrop for the film adaptation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.
This year also marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen, which will be celebrated with a special screening of Pride and Prejudice in the Chatsworth Garden to open the festival.
Visitors will have the opportunity to immerse themselves in the life and legacy of one of the greatest novelists in English literature via a pop-up exhibition of Jane Austen artefacts.
The exhibition is curated especially for The Queen's Reading Room by Jane Austen's House, an independent museum located in what used to be her cottage in Hampshire.
To end the festival, visitors will enjoy a showing of Sense and Sensibility in the garden.
Vicki Perrin, chief executive of The Queen's Reading Room, said: 'After the success of last year's Queen's Reading Room Festival which saw us fill over 10,000 seats in a single day, we are delighted to be bringing our flagship event back for 2025 - this time to the magical surrounds of Chatsworth.
'As a charity, we are committed to ensuring that everybody can access our events.
Bridgerton fans are in for a special treat - series author Julia Quinn will take part in a special discussion panel at the festival
'We are therefore so excited by the opportunity of connecting with more audiences in the UK at Chatsworth and are immensely grateful to Chatsworth House Trust for hosting us - it's clear that, like us, they are deeply committed to championing creativity and the joy of books.
'Whether you're a fan of romance or fantasy, crime fiction or historical fiction - there really is something for everybody at The Queen's Reading Room Festival and we can't wait to see you there!'
Jane Marriott, director of Chatsworth House Trust, added: 'We are delighted to welcome The Queen's Reading Room Festival to Chatsworth, and to share this exciting celebration of storytelling with our local communities and guests from across the UK and the world.
'We often say that Chatsworth is more than a house; it's a place of creativity and community, learning and ideas.
'This partnership between our two charities demonstrates how true this is, and we can't wait for the festival to begin.'
Queen Camilla previously said her hopes for her literary charity is that it 'will be something that everybody can delve into, and find something that suits them, and enjoy it'.
The charity, which reaches more than 12 million people in 174 countries, also published neuroscientific research in 2023 that found that reading for just five minutes a day can reduce stress levels by almost 20%.
Earlier this year, The Queen's Reading Room launched a medal to recognise people who are championing literature in local communities.
The King and Queen held a event to celebrate the launch at Clarence House in March, attended by a slew of famous actors and authors including Sigourney Weaver, Richard E Grant, Helena Bonham Carter, Dame Joanna Lumley, Antony Horowitz and Kate Atkinson.
'Through literature, we experience life through another's eyes, we are comforted, strengthened, we laugh, we cry, we travel to different lands, and we escape the real world.
'In short, books and those who create them, make life better…much better – so thank you!' the Queen said.
Camilla is a longstanding campaigner on literacy and encouraging reading, and is patron of organisations including the National Literacy Trust, First Story, Corma Beanstalk and Booktrust.
Last year, a report published by the National Literary Trust found that reading rates are the lowest on record, with one in two adults not reading a book at all in the last year.
The Queen's Reading Room Medal aims to highlight the work of 'reading heroes' across the country who are working to help their communities overcome that reading crisis.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Dragonfly review – haunting, genre-defying drama of lonely city living
Twenty years ago, Paul Andrew Williams announced himself as a smart new British talent with his ferocious gangland picture London to Brighton, and his creativity has continued in film and TV ever since. His new film is a haunted, social-realist drama with elements of Mike Leigh but also moments of thriller and even horror. Williams isn't shy of stabbing us with an old-fashioned jump scare towards the end, which in fact challenges the audiences with its refusal of categorisation. There are two superb lead performances from Andrea Riseborough and Brenda Blethyn and an outstanding supporting turn from Jason Watkins. Dragonfly is about loneliness and alienation and about the eternal mystery of other people, the fear of intimacy and the unknowable existence of urban neighbours. Elsie, played by Blethyn, is an older woman who is quite capable of independent living in her bungalow, but a recent fall and an injured wrist has meant that her middle-aged son (Watkins), all too obviously to compensate for not visiting that often, has paid for daily visits from a private agency nurses. They are overworked and not doing an especially good job. Really, she doesn't need these nurses and by enduring them, Elsie is shouldering the burden of her son's guilt. Meanwhile nextdoor neighbour Colleen, played by Riseborough, is a continuingly strange presence. She is a melancholy, withdrawn figure, evidently on benefits and living with her huge American bull terrier, uncompromisingly named Sabre. Williams shows us that she is effectively living in a kind of platonic relationship, or mariage blanc, with this dog; the film periodically gives us startling shots of Sabre's colossal body in a kind of domestic nakedness sprawled on Colleen's bed. In a manner that may be insidious or predatory or just friendly and compassionate, Colleen befriends Elsie; the latter overcomes her initial nervousness of Sabre and she appreciates Colleen's forthright offer of help. Colleen goes down to the shops to get groceries for Elsie and after a few such trips they agree that what would be easiest would be if Colleen simply gets Elsie's debit card and Elsie gives her the pin number. Of course, the film allows us to suspect the worst and then suspect the worst of ourselves for suspecting it. Colleen seems to be unhappy and damaged but well-meaning, especially when she (for a laugh) buys them both a two-way radio so they can easily keep in contact – but then uses this radio to talk to Elsie late at night and semi-intentionally to allow bewildered Elsie to hear what's happening in Colleen's house. It is a riveting dual portrait of two gloomy people who really have, in a strange and dysfunctional way, found a new way of interacting and – importantly – this is a triangular relationship: Elsie, Colleen and the vast Sabre. But with a terrible inevitability, Elsie's uptight busybody son John (Watkins) arrives and there are awful consequences to a conversation he has with Colleen which Williams only shows us in long shot, withholding the truth about what he's saying. It's a stark, fierce, wonderfully acted film. Dragonfly screened at the Tribeca film festival.


Sky News
2 hours ago
- Sky News
EuroMillions: UK's biggest lottery prize is still up for grabs
There is still the chance for someone to secure the biggest lottery prize the UK has ever seen, after Friday's EuroMillions draw had no winners. The jackpot had rolled over to an estimated £208m, after Tuesday's £199m draw - which also would have been a record-breaking amount - had no winners. The winner would instantly become richer than Adele and Harry Styles, while also bagging the top spot on the National Lottery's biggest wins list. Housing raffles take UK by storm - how likely are you to win? Andy Carter, senior winners' adviser at Allwyn, said: "The EuroMillions jackpot is now capped, so any money that would have gone into increasing the jackpot now boosts prizes in the next winning prize tier. "We could see multiple UK players banking huge prizes for matching just the five main numbers and one Lucky Star." The previous largest prize pot was won by an anonymous UK ticket-holder, who took home £195m on 19 July 2022. Just two months earlier, Joe and Jess Thwaite, from Gloucester, won £184,262,899 with a Lucky Dip ticket. At the time, Joe was a communications sales engineer, and Jess ran a hairdressing salon with her sister. Mr Thwaite said he woke up at 5am as usual, and checked his phone to see an email saying, "Good news, you have won a prize". But he did not immediately wake his wife, choosing to let her sleep in. "I saw how much and I didn't know what to do," Mr Thwaite said. "I couldn't go back to sleep, I didn't want to wake Jess up, so I just laid there for what seemed like forever. I spent some time searching for property with no budget limit, which was a novelty!" When his wife woke up, she assumed the National Lottery app was wrong. 1:24 In February last year, Richard and Debbie Nuttall were revealed as the UK winners of a £61m EuroMillions jackpot - who at first thought they had only won £2.60. The couple from Lancashire split the £123m prize with a winner in Spain.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Arrgh you joking? Tesco pensioner stuns shoppers by bringing his pet PARROT with him to buy groceries
On a balance of probabilities, parrots are more likely to be spotted walking the plank than walking down the ready meals aisle of a major supermarket. But that was exactly the scene that greeted one customer, who was left stunned after spotting a pensioner with a colourful parrot perched upon his shoulder in his local Tesco. Named Bella, the 12-year-old exotic bird prompted the stunned man to capture his unusual encounter on video. Posting the footage to X, the astonished man can't help but exclaim, 'That is something unbelievable. Oh my God,' as he spots the red-and-green macaw. 'See the parrot, man, in Tesco,' he continues. After approaching the otherwise unperturbed owner, the man says: 'How are we uncle, you OK? Lovely parrot, man. How old is it?' After being told the bird is aged 12, the curious bystander asks whether the bird speaks. 'She does when she wants,' replies her owner. Man brings his parrot along with him on his Tesco shop 🦜🛒 (TikTok: mr_w1cked1) — UB1UB2 West London (Southall) (@UB1UB2) June 6, 2025 He went on to add that she could fly off 'if she wants to', but remained firmly on the man's shoulder as he casually walked down each aisle to pick up his groceries. 'That is good man, you've trained her well,' the surprised customer told the bird owner, before bidding him farewell. Green-winged macaws are the second largest parrots next to the hyacinth macaw and can reach flight speeds of up to 35mph. They have a very powerful beak which can generate a pressure of 2000 psi (pounds per square inch) and have the ability to crack open incredibly hard-shelled nuts, such as Brazil nuts with ease. Parrots mainly eat seeds, fruits, blossoms, buds, leaves, berries, nuts and sometimes bark - and do indeed enjoy the occasional cracker as well.