
Engaging conversations are set to happen under the Nantucket sun during the islandβs 13th annual book festival. From June 13-16, the Nantucket Book Festival will host panel discussions, social events, and author readings at various local venues. Featuring 23 authors, including Margaret Atwood, Kwame Alexander, Safiya Sinclair, and Erik Larson, the program invites readers to connect with stories and the writers behind them.
βIf you have all of our books from the lineup of the festival this year stacked up, youβd be transported to so many different places,β said Tim Ehrenberg, president of the Nantucket Book Foundation. βYouβd go to the Civil War times with Erik Larsonβs βThe Demon of Unrest.β Youβd go to the Golden Age of piracy with Katherine Howe. Youβd go to a contemporary jail cell in [Lara Love Hardinβs] βThe Many Lives of Mama Love.β Youβd go to Jamaica in [Safiya Sinclairβs] βHow to Say Babylon.β Through all these stories, youβve lived these lives and stepped into someone elseβs shoes for a secondβ¦ youβre changed a little bit for the better.β
The majority of events are free and require no preregistration. Discussions are set to flow organically, allowing speakers to guide their direction. βWe think that the most authentic and interesting conversations come out of what the author and their interviewers/interlocutors want to speak about,β said Kaley Kokomoor, executive director of the Nantucket Book Foundation.
The programming kicks off on Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Nantucket Atheneum, the islandβs public library. Conversations will delve into true crime writing with author Casey Sherman and event co-chair and presenting author Sara DiVello; a chat on pirates, witches, and the experience of being a writer with best-selling author Katherine Howe and Ehrenberg; and more.
Friday events begin at 9 a.m. with a conversation between best-selling author Larson and Boston Globe Media CEO Linda Henry. Larson will discuss his newest book, released in April, βThe Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War,β about the five consequential months after Abraham Lincoln was elected president. Henry will also join New York Times best-selling author Ben Mezrich at 4 p.m., discussing his latest book, βBreaking Twitter: Elon Musk and the Most Controversial Corporate Takeover in History.β
Expected to be one of the festivalβs most popular events this year, a conversation between Atwood; Heather Reisman, founder and CEO of Canadian bookstore chain Indigo; and Louise Dennys, Atwoodβs publisher and editor at Penguin Random House Canada, will take place at 7:30 p.m. at First Congressional Church. Atwood has written more than 50 books, including the 1985 classic βThe Handmaidβs Taleβ and two Booker Prize-winning novels, 2000β²s βThe Blind Assassinβ and 2019β²s βThe Testaments,β a sequel to βThe Handmaidβs Tale.β Her most recent book, the short story collection βOld Babes in the Woods,β came out in March 2023.
Friday programming will end at 7:30 p.m. with a ticketed event β a buffet dinner at the White Elephant Hotel ballroom, allowing guests to talk with visiting authors. The $350 ticket helps fund the weekβs free programming, as well as support the foundationβs year-round initiatives, including author visits to local schools, a bookmobile, a new childrenβs book festival, and an annual award for young writers.
Saturdayβs sessions include an 11 a.m. panel at the Methodist Church, with Alexander, who is also an Emmy-winning producer, discussing his 2023 memoir βWhy Fathers Cry at Night.β Alexander serves as a visiting author at local schools for the foundation. At 2 p.m., Boston-based historian and award-winning author Kerri Greenidge discusses her 2022 book, βThe Grimkes, A Legacy of Slavery in an American Family.β At the Dreamland Main Theatre Saturday night, Alexander and Sinclair will present the foundationβs Young Writer Award, honoring high school students who participated in an essay competition.
Closing out the weekend, Sunday panels at the Atheneum Great Hall and Dreamland include Sinclair in conversation with Nantucket Book Foundation co-founder and festival co-chair Mary Haft, discussing Sinclairβs book about her upbringing in Jamaica with her Rastafarian father. That night, Cisco Brewers will host a gathering for readers and writers to enjoy food, drinks, and music.
βThere are few to almost no free events on Nantucket in the summertime, and so to have such a swath of cultural, intellectual brilliance to the island thatβs accessible to anyone who wants to walk in off the street is, I think, really unique and important,β Kokomoor said. βWe add something to the Nantucket cultural scene that was missing before this festival.β
Find the full schedule of events at nantucketbookfestival.org.
Maria Jose Gutierrez Chavez can be reached at mariajose.gutierrez@globe.com.