Deborah Levy: Why the Novel Matters
Prize-winning novelist, playwright and memoirist Deborah Levy delivers the 2024 New Statesman/Goldsmiths Prize Lecture, on the unique potential of the novel.
Last few tickets
The Goldsmiths Prize celebrates fiction that breaks the mould, and in its annual lecture series leading authors their thoughts on the art of the novel.
For her talk, Deborah Levy argues that the novel uniquely gives close attention to the ways we negotiate with reality, which is the core of all writing and living.
In this personal manifesto on why the novel matters, she contends that it is the form that can most freely unmask the co-existence of immense power and vulnerability in its human protagonists.
After her lecture, Levy takes part in a conversation with Tom Gatti, executive culture editor at The New Statesman.
Presented in partnership with the Goldsmiths Prize and The New Statesman
Need to know
This event is also live-streamed and available to view for free on YouTube. More details to follow.
Times & tickets
Dates, times and prices
Dates & times
24 Oct 2024, 7.45pm
Run time
1 hour and 15 minutes (approx)
All timings are approximate and subject to change
Standard entry
from £15.00*
* Excludes £3.50 booking fee.
Book as early as you can to ensure the best choice of tickets. Ticket prices may be adjusted without notice to reflect demand.
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For your visit
This event is held at the Purcell Room Southbank Centre
The Purcell Room is located in the Queen Elizabeth Hall, which is open from 90 minutes before events start until they finish. It’s closed at all other times.
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The Purcell Room is an auditorium located within our Queen Elizabeth Hall.
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