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  • Pictured:<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016032.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016029.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016015.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016008.jpg
  • Pictured:<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016033.jpg
  • Pictured:<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016034.jpg
  • Pictured: Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016031.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley <br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016030.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016028.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016027.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016025.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016026.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016024.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016023.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016022.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016021.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016019.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016020.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016018.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016017.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016016.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016014.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016013.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016012.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016011.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016009.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016010.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016006.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016007.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016005.jpg
  • Pictured:<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016002.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016004.jpg
  • Pictured:<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016001.jpg
  • Pictured: Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt,<br />
<br />
Dancers Tobias Batley and Martha Leebolt, who take the lead roles in 1984,  performed in full costume ahead of the premier of the ballet in the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. 31 March 2016 tonight. The ballet runs until Saturday 2 April.<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | Edinburghelitemedia.co.uk
    SCT_EEm_1984_ballet_GER31032016003.jpg
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark with her new book due for release in June - “The House by the Loch”<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: General view of browsing books<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: Kirsty Wark<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: General view of browsing books<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Journalist Kirsty Wark is photographed ahead of the Christian Aid week George Street book sale. Items on sale include first editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, a second edition of Walter Scott's Rob Roy and a signed first edition limited edition copy of TS Elliott's Dante. The sale will take place on Saturday. St Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, Edinburgh<br />
<br />
Pictured: General view of browsing books<br />
<br />
Alex Todd | Edinburgh Elite media
    EEm_Christian_Aid_Auction_AT_0905201...JPG
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • The magic and wonder of childhood is the subject of a new exhibition of photographs at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery (SNPG) this autumn. When We Were Young delves into the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland to explore how the lives of children have fascinated photographers from the earliest days of the medium to the present. <br />
<br />
More than 100 images, which capture children at play, at work, at school and at home reveal how the experience of being a child, and the ways in which they have been represented, have changed radically in the past 175 years.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Joanna Cameron-Barr the senior girl in David Williams' "Senior and Junior Girl" from "Pictures from No Man's Land", 1984
    EEM_When We Were Young_RD_121017_000...JPG
  • Pictured: Adeline Amar admires  Music from the Balconies (1984)<br />
Ed Ruscha exhibition. Titled, Music from the Balconies, it is the artist's first exhibition at the gallery for a decade<br />
<br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 28 Aprl 2017
    SCT_EEm_Ed_Ruscha_exhibition_Edinbur...jpg
  • Pictured: Annie Ernaux<br />
<br />
Annie Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 with Les Armoires vides (Cleaned Out), an autobiographical novel. In 1984, she won the Renaudot Prize for another of her autobiographical works La Place (A Man's Place), an autobiographical narrative focusing on her relationship with her father and her experiences growing up in a small town in France, and her subsequent process of moving into adulthood and away from her parents' place of origin.[6][7]<br />
<br />
Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to concentrate on autobiography.[8] Her work combines historic and individual experiences. She charts her parents' social progression (La place, La honte), her adolescence (Ce qu'ils disent ou rien), her marriage (La femme gelée), her passionate affair with an eastern European man (Passion simple), her abortion (L'événement), Alzheimer's disease (Je ne suis pas sortie de ma nuit), the death of her mother (Une femme), and breast cancer (L'usage de la photo).[9] Ernaux also wrote L'écriture comme un couteau (Writing as Sharp as a Knife) with Frédéric-Yves Jeannet.[9] <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 21 August 2019
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_Edinburgh_GER_...jpg
  • Pictured: Annie Ernaux<br />
<br />
Annie Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 with Les Armoires vides (Cleaned Out), an autobiographical novel. In 1984, she won the Renaudot Prize for another of her autobiographical works La Place (A Man's Place), an autobiographical narrative focusing on her relationship with her father and her experiences growing up in a small town in France, and her subsequent process of moving into adulthood and away from her parents' place of origin.[6][7]<br />
<br />
Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to concentrate on autobiography.[8] Her work combines historic and individual experiences. She charts her parents' social progression (La place, La honte), her adolescence (Ce qu'ils disent ou rien), her marriage (La femme gelée), her passionate affair with an eastern European man (Passion simple), her abortion (L'événement), Alzheimer's disease (Je ne suis pas sortie de ma nuit), the death of her mother (Une femme), and breast cancer (L'usage de la photo).[9] Ernaux also wrote L'écriture comme un couteau (Writing as Sharp as a Knife) with Frédéric-Yves Jeannet.[9] <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 21 August 2019
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_Edinburgh_GER_...jpg
  • Pictured: Annie Ernaux<br />
<br />
Annie Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 with Les Armoires vides (Cleaned Out), an autobiographical novel. In 1984, she won the Renaudot Prize for another of her autobiographical works La Place (A Man's Place), an autobiographical narrative focusing on her relationship with her father and her experiences growing up in a small town in France, and her subsequent process of moving into adulthood and away from her parents' place of origin.[6][7]<br />
<br />
Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to concentrate on autobiography.[8] Her work combines historic and individual experiences. She charts her parents' social progression (La place, La honte), her adolescence (Ce qu'ils disent ou rien), her marriage (La femme gelée), her passionate affair with an eastern European man (Passion simple), her abortion (L'événement), Alzheimer's disease (Je ne suis pas sortie de ma nuit), the death of her mother (Une femme), and breast cancer (L'usage de la photo).[9] Ernaux also wrote L'écriture comme un couteau (Writing as Sharp as a Knife) with Frédéric-Yves Jeannet.[9] <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 21 August 2019
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_Edinburgh_GER_...jpg
  • Pictured: Annie Ernaux<br />
<br />
Annie Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 with Les Armoires vides (Cleaned Out), an autobiographical novel. In 1984, she won the Renaudot Prize for another of her autobiographical works La Place (A Man's Place), an autobiographical narrative focusing on her relationship with her father and her experiences growing up in a small town in France, and her subsequent process of moving into adulthood and away from her parents' place of origin.[6][7]<br />
<br />
Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to concentrate on autobiography.[8] Her work combines historic and individual experiences. She charts her parents' social progression (La place, La honte), her adolescence (Ce qu'ils disent ou rien), her marriage (La femme gelée), her passionate affair with an eastern European man (Passion simple), her abortion (L'événement), Alzheimer's disease (Je ne suis pas sortie de ma nuit), the death of her mother (Une femme), and breast cancer (L'usage de la photo).[9] Ernaux also wrote L'écriture comme un couteau (Writing as Sharp as a Knife) with Frédéric-Yves Jeannet.[9] <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 21 August 2019
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_Edinburgh_GER_...jpg
  • Pictured: Annie Ernaux<br />
<br />
Annie Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 with Les Armoires vides (Cleaned Out), an autobiographical novel. In 1984, she won the Renaudot Prize for another of her autobiographical works La Place (A Man's Place), an autobiographical narrative focusing on her relationship with her father and her experiences growing up in a small town in France, and her subsequent process of moving into adulthood and away from her parents' place of origin.[6][7]<br />
<br />
Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to concentrate on autobiography.[8] Her work combines historic and individual experiences. She charts her parents' social progression (La place, La honte), her adolescence (Ce qu'ils disent ou rien), her marriage (La femme gelée), her passionate affair with an eastern European man (Passion simple), her abortion (L'événement), Alzheimer's disease (Je ne suis pas sortie de ma nuit), the death of her mother (Une femme), and breast cancer (L'usage de la photo).[9] Ernaux also wrote L'écriture comme un couteau (Writing as Sharp as a Knife) with Frédéric-Yves Jeannet.[9] <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 21 August 2019
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_Edinburgh_GER_...jpg
  • Pictured: Annie Ernaux<br />
<br />
Annie Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 with Les Armoires vides (Cleaned Out), an autobiographical novel. In 1984, she won the Renaudot Prize for another of her autobiographical works La Place (A Man's Place), an autobiographical narrative focusing on her relationship with her father and her experiences growing up in a small town in France, and her subsequent process of moving into adulthood and away from her parents' place of origin.[6][7]<br />
<br />
Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to concentrate on autobiography.[8] Her work combines historic and individual experiences. She charts her parents' social progression (La place, La honte), her adolescence (Ce qu'ils disent ou rien), her marriage (La femme gelée), her passionate affair with an eastern European man (Passion simple), her abortion (L'événement), Alzheimer's disease (Je ne suis pas sortie de ma nuit), the death of her mother (Une femme), and breast cancer (L'usage de la photo).[9] Ernaux also wrote L'écriture comme un couteau (Writing as Sharp as a Knife) with Frédéric-Yves Jeannet.[9] <br />
<br />
Ger Harley | EEm 21 August 2019
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_Edinburgh_GER_...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Karine Polwart, Ali Smith, Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Palestinian author Nayrouz Qarmout appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival with best selling Scottish crime writer Val McDermid, Scottish singer-songwriter Karine Polwarth and writer Ali Smith.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Karine Polwart, Ali Smith, Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Palestinian author Nayrouz Qarmout appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival with best selling Scottish crime writer Val McDermid, Scottish singer-songwriter Karine Polwarth and writer Ali Smith.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Karine Polwart, Ali Smith, Nayrouz Qarmout and Val McDermid.<br />
<br />
Palestinian author Nayrouz Qarmout appears at the 2019 Edinburgh International Book Festival with best selling Scottish crime writer Val McDermid, Scottish singer-songwriter Karine Polwarth and writer Ali Smith.<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media. Her political, social and literary articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and online. She has also written screenplays for several short films dealing with women’s rights. She is a social activist and a member of several youth initiatives, campaigning for social change in Palestine.<br />
<br />
Born in Inverness, Ali Smith’s first published book was Free Love and Other Stories (1995), which won the Saltire First Book of the Year Award. From this successful debut, her career continued to climb – her 2001 novel Hotel World, for instance, has received much critical acclaim, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Hotel World was adapted for the stage and performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2007. Smith recently returned to short stories with The First Person and Other Stories (2008), an emotional and funny exploration of storytelling. ‘She's a genius’, said Alain de Botton of Smith; ‘genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense’.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_Edinburgh_International_Book_Fes...JPG
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Charles Cumming<br />
<br />
Charles Cumming (born 5 April 1971) is a British writer of spy fiction. Cumming was born in Ayr in Scotland, the son of Ian Cumming (b. 1938) and Caroline Pilkington (b. 1943).<br />
<br />
He was educated at Ludgrove School (1979–1984), Eton College (1985–1989) and the University of Edinburgh (1990–1994), where he graduated with 1st Class Honours in English Literature. In 1995, Cumming was approached for recruitment by the United Kingdom's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) but did not go on to work for them.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
    SCT_EEm_Book_Festival_ Edinburgh_GER...jpg
  • Pictured: Nayrouz Qarmout<br />
<br />
Nayrouz Qarmout is a Palestinian writer and activist. Born in Damascus in 1984, as a Palestinian refugee, she returned to the Gaza Strip, as part of the 1994 Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement, where she now lives. She graduated from al-Azhar University in Gaza with a degree in Economics. She currently works in the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, raising awareness of gender issues and promoting the political and economic role of women in policy and law, as well as the defence of women from abuse, and highlighting the role of women’s issues in the media.
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  • The magic and wonder of childhood is the subject of a new exhibition of photographs at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery (SNPG) this autumn. When We Were Young delves into the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland to explore how the lives of children have fascinated photographers from the earliest days of the medium to the present. <br />
<br />
More than 100 images, which capture children at play, at work, at school and at home reveal how the experience of being a child, and the ways in which they have been represented, have changed radically in the past 175 years.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Joanna Cameron-Barr the senior girl in David Williams' "Senior and Junior Girl" from "Pictures from No Man's Land", 1984
    EEM_When We Were Young_RD_121017_000...JPG
  • The magic and wonder of childhood is the subject of a new exhibition of photographs at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery (SNPG) this autumn. When We Were Young delves into the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland to explore how the lives of children have fascinated photographers from the earliest days of the medium to the present. <br />
<br />
More than 100 images, which capture children at play, at work, at school and at home reveal how the experience of being a child, and the ways in which they have been represented, have changed radically in the past 175 years.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Joanna Cameron-Barr the senior girl in David Williams' "Senior and Junior Girl" from "Pictures from No Man's Land", 1984
    EEM_When We Were Young_RD_121017_000...JPG
  • The magic and wonder of childhood is the subject of a new exhibition of photographs at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery (SNPG) this autumn. When We Were Young delves into the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland to explore how the lives of children have fascinated photographers from the earliest days of the medium to the present. <br />
<br />
More than 100 images, which capture children at play, at work, at school and at home reveal how the experience of being a child, and the ways in which they have been represented, have changed radically in the past 175 years.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Joanna Cameron-Barr the senior girl in David Williams' "Senior and Junior Girl" from "Pictures from No Man's Land", 1984
    EEM_When We Were Young_RD_121017_000...JPG
  • The magic and wonder of childhood is the subject of a new exhibition of photographs at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery (SNPG) this autumn. When We Were Young delves into the collection of the National Galleries of Scotland to explore how the lives of children have fascinated photographers from the earliest days of the medium to the present. <br />
<br />
More than 100 images, which capture children at play, at work, at school and at home reveal how the experience of being a child, and the ways in which they have been represented, have changed radically in the past 175 years.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Joanna Cameron-Barr the senior girl in David Williams' "Senior and Junior Girl" from "Pictures from No Man's Land", 1984
    EEM_When We Were Young_RD_121017_000...JPG
  • Spectacular costumes from a classic children’s book, a sci-fi ballet and the Mexican underworld are showcased by University of Edinburgh students. <br />
<br />
The outfits have been designed by Performance Costume students for a jaw-dropping theatrical show. The Performance Costume Show takes place in Edinburgh College of Art’s Sculpture Court on 18 and 19 May.<br />
<br />
Children’s book favourite The Tiger Who Came to Tea is brought to life by student Gracie Martin’s art deco design. She has imagined the tiger as a 1920s gangster wearing a pinstripe suit and tie.<br />
<br />
Yan Smiley has created characters for a sci-fi ballet set in 17th century Scotland. The outfit is inspired by stained glass windows and rugged Highland landscapes.<br />
<br />
Ellie Finch has made a dazzling outfit for Maid Marian, set in contemporary Mexico. The vibrant outfit highlights iconography linked to the country’s drug cartels, with a headdress of poppies and needles and a kaleidoscopic skirt covered in prints of machine guns and cannabis leaves. <br />
<br />
Irvine Welsh’s novel Marabou Stork Nightmares was the focus of Dayna Ali’s surreal designs. She has created the Marabou Stork – half bird, half football hooligan. He has a large head and beak and wears fluorescent ‘90s sportswear with a specially made Marabou logo.<br />
<br />
Zoe Frewin has created costumes from Disney Pixar’s animation, A Bug’s Life. Inspired by George Orwell’s 1984, the insects wear uniforms and their colour denotes their class in society.
    EEM_ECA Performance Costume Show_Edi...JPG
  • Spectacular costumes from a classic children’s book, a sci-fi ballet and the Mexican underworld are showcased by University of Edinburgh students. <br />
<br />
The outfits have been designed by Performance Costume students for a jaw-dropping theatrical show. The Performance Costume Show takes place in Edinburgh College of Art’s Sculpture Court on 18 and 19 May.<br />
<br />
Children’s book favourite The Tiger Who Came to Tea is brought to life by student Gracie Martin’s art deco design. She has imagined the tiger as a 1920s gangster wearing a pinstripe suit and tie.<br />
<br />
Yan Smiley has created characters for a sci-fi ballet set in 17th century Scotland. The outfit is inspired by stained glass windows and rugged Highland landscapes.<br />
<br />
Ellie Finch has made a dazzling outfit for Maid Marian, set in contemporary Mexico. The vibrant outfit highlights iconography linked to the country’s drug cartels, with a headdress of poppies and needles and a kaleidoscopic skirt covered in prints of machine guns and cannabis leaves. <br />
<br />
Irvine Welsh’s novel Marabou Stork Nightmares was the focus of Dayna Ali’s surreal designs. She has created the Marabou Stork – half bird, half football hooligan. He has a large head and beak and wears fluorescent ‘90s sportswear with a specially made Marabou logo.<br />
<br />
Zoe Frewin has created costumes from Disney Pixar’s animation, A Bug’s Life. Inspired by George Orwell’s 1984, the insects wear uniforms and their colour denotes their class in society.
    EEM_ECA Performance Costume Show_Edi...JPG
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