Having missed the past two Sydney Writers' Festivals (2024 and 2025) as they clashed with my overseas travel, I was desperate to get back to this world of books and writers that I love so much.
The 2026 program was released in March and I quickly purchased tickets to sessions spanning six days during which I will be seeing a wide range of authors including: Randa Abedel-Fattah; Jacinda Ardern; Robbie Arnott; Tony Birch; Nick Bryant; Shannon Chandran; Susan Choi; Roddy Doyle; Mariana Enriquez; AC Grayling; Lev Grossman; Chris Hammer; Mick Herron; Tayari Jones; Lily King; RF Kuang; Antoinette Lattouf; Yann Martel; Kate McClymont; Charlotte McConaghy; Dervla McTiernan; Suzie Miller; Amy Remeikis; Heather Rose; Niki Savva; David Szalay; Tasma Walton and Charlotte Wood. What fun!
I have taken some time off work, packed some snacks, and have switched into book-nerd mode. Over the coming days I will publish a series of posts about my time at the festival, starting here with the early sessions I attended on 19 and 20 May 2026.
The Story That Changed My Life
I am kicking off SWF2026 with a session with acclaimed journalists - Kate McClymont (SMH/The Age), Anton Enus (SBS World News), Avani Dias (ABC Four Corners), Lyse Doucet (BBC), Lorena Allam (The Guardian) and Patrick Radden Keefe (The New Yorker) - speaking about the stories that transformed their careers.
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| Kate McClymont |
Kate McClymont's story that changed her life was about street poles in Sydney. It was back in 1999 and there was a contract to design and manufacture street poles for the City of Sydney Council. Two engineers told McClymont that they has been approached by sons of Member of NSW Parliament Eddie Obeid and told that they would ensure they got the Olympic contract if the Obeid's got the pole contract. It sounded dodgy so McClymont started investigating this. She soon uncovered widespread corruption and spent the next decade or so writing stories about the disgraced Obeid, despite the defamation suits, intimidation and threats. Her career as a journalist flourished, all thanks to a seemingly innocuous story about street poles.
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| Avani Dias |
Avani Dias was stationed in India as ABC's Bureau Chief from 2021-2024. There she filed stories on the Modi government, which outwardly claimed to be democratic, but was actually clamping down on free speech and silencing journalists. After reporting on the alleged assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Canadian Sikh (which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau claimed was a state sanctioned assassination), Dias faced intimidation by the Modi government. She had her passport flagged and was told her press credentials and visa would not be renewed. Dias spoke passionately about the importance of a free press and the attempts to silence the media both overtly through bullying and arrest and more subtly through intimidation.
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| Lyse Doucet |
Canadian journalist Lyse Doucet was a dynamic presence, choosing to walk about the stage rather than speak from the podium. She spoke about 'the angels of journalism' who helped guide her career, from a young reporter in Africa to eventually being stationed in Afghanistan for the BBC. She was animated, humorous and distinctly Canadian! I enjoyed her insights to the challenges of working as a foreign correspondent, especially in countries which are not friendly to journalists or women. Her most recent book -
The Finest Hotel in Kabul: A People's History of Afghanistan - has been shortlisted for the
2026 Women's Prize for Non-Fiction.
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| Anton Enus |
Anton Enus grew up in South Africa during apartheid. His early years as a journalist were spent covering the uprisings and massacres. He described reporting from massacres and how they became so commonplace that some of his fellow journalists became numbed to the brutality. He spoke of an elderly woman who had lost her loved ones and how here was a woman who was already dispossessed and downtrodden and then destroyed by violence. Enus described the excellent producers he had which stressed the importance of their work and the need for truth in story telling. He also recommended some excellent books on this time in Africa.
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| Lorena Allam |
Lorena Allam described her work at the Guardian on
The Killing Times - a project mapping and uncovering Colonial Frontier War massacres. Working with University of Newcastle researchers, Allam helped uncover the stories of massacres by colonists and the Native Police, and documented stories of their descendants. This is an important work of truth-telling and reconciliation. Allam is descended from the Yuwaalaraay and Gamilaraay people, and has recently been appointed as a Professor in Truth-Telling Research at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research at the University of Technology Sydney.
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| Patrick Radden Keefe |
I was super excited to hear from Patrick Radden Keefe as I have just finished his brilliant book
London Falling (2026). Radden Keefe wanted to be a journalist since he was a teenager, and after many rejection letters from
The New Yorker, he was eventually given a job. He was asked to wrote a long-form piece on the Amy Bishop case, where Bishop had been denied tenure at the University of Alabama and so pulled out a gun and shot six of her colleagues, killing three. Radden Keefe was not so interested in the mass shooting, which are unfortunately commonplace in America, but he soon learned there was more to this case and that Bishop had shot and killed someone before. His story was published on 3 February 2013 in as 'A Loaded Gun'. He explained that this story taught him a lot about the craft of journalism and about human nature, and the lessons he learned have carried him throughout his career.
Overall, a brilliant panel to start my SWF2026!
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Patrick Radden Keefe, Anton Enus, Lorena Allam, Lyse Douset, Kate McClymont, Avani Dias |
Show Me The Truth Gala
The theme for SWF2026 is 'Show Me The Truth'. This gala featured incredible storytellers - Robbie Arnott (
Dusk, Limberlost), Nikita Gill (
Hekate), Lily King (
Heart the Lover), Scottish poet Michael Pederson (Muckle Flugga) - along with Kirli Saunders of Cooee music. Each spoke about how writers distil the truth in a world of misinformation.
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| Yvonne Weldon AM |
What a wonderful opening event! It began with a stirring Welcome to Country by Yvonne Weldon AM, the first Aboriginal Council member in the City of Sydney. Weldon spoke of reconciliation and the role each of us play in bringing people together. She also spoke of the controversy around Welcome to Country and the misunderstanding some in the community have about its purpose.
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| Tania Brown and Kirli Saunders as Cooee |
The session then started with a performance by Cooee, where Kirli Saunders' poetry has been put to music. Accompanied by Tania Bowra on guitar, Saunders sang two songs about displacement and femicide. They were really moving. Saunders then spoke about truth in a fascinating way - beginning by listing all the depressing topics in our news feeds - war, genocide, rising costs, homelessness, domestic violence, poorly behaved leaders - and how putting the phone down and getting outside is the tonic. She spoke of connecting with country and with ourselves. She then delivered a wonderful poem/story in both her language and the 'colonial tongue' which was so moving. I had not known of her beforehand, but definitely want to check out her collections of poetry.
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| Michael Pedersen |
Scottish author Michael Pedersen then spoke his truth about friendship. He was delightfully witty, and with his thick Scottish accent I am sure only a handful of us understood him fully. He spoke of the sudden loss of his friend Scott and how this has made him double down on friendship. He spoke of the differences between male and female friendships, and how lonely life can be without friends. It was a timely reminder of the need to keep in touch with loved ones and not take friends for granted.
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| Robbie Arnott |
Next up was Tasmanian author Robbie Arnott. He spoke the truth about colonial Tasmanian history, the devastation faced by First Nations people and the damage done by British soldiers. He contrasted the story children have been taught in schools with the facts about the frontier wars. In among this history lesson, he shared some other truths - like about his sister's ex-boyfriend 'Terrible Nathan', taking a European woman on a date to a cinema in Hobart, and how to correctly pronounce Launceston. I loved his quip about how he promised to share truths, but did not promise they would all be interesting!
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| Lily King |
American author Lily King spoke about how she lives in a land where truth is hard to find. She spoke of the devastating impact of the current administration and how people live in constant fear. The corruption, divisiveness and open hostility is unbearable. King spoke about the impact of this on her writing and how she believes that authors need to be the truth tellers. Along the way she spoke about her recent best-seller - the brilliant
Heart the Lover - and how she had previously attempted to write a political thriller. King's truth was heartfelt and a reminder of how we must preserve our democracy and protect it against divisive political forces.
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| Nikita Gill |
Finally, Irish-Indian poet and playwright Nikita Gill took the stage and spoke her truth. What resonated for me from Gill's session was a conversation she had with her grandfather before he died, where he asked her what her legacy would be. She attempted to answer and he stopped her, saying she should 'let things percolate' before rushing to answer. Wise advice. I am interested in checking out her verse novel
Hekate.
I didn't know what to expect from this session, but I am so glad I went. It was joyous, uplifting evening full of interesting ideas. I cannot wait to spend the next few days immersed in this world of thought-provoking, creative minds.
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Kirli Saunders, Tania Brown, Nikita Gill, Lily King, Michael Pedersen, Robbie Arnott, Anne Mossop (SWF Artistic Director) |
My SWF2026 Experience
Read more about my time at SWF2026 here:
- Early Sessions - Lorena Allam, Robbie Arnott, Avani Dias, Lyse Doucet, Anton Enus, Nikita Gill, Lily King, Kate McClymont, Michael Pedersen, and Patrick Radden Keefe.
- Day One - Robbie Arnott, Nick Bryant, Barrie Cassidy, Rosalind Dixon, AC Grayling, Tayari Jones, Yann Martel, Amy Remeikis, Niki Savva, David Szalay, Tasma Walton
- Day Two - Michael Mohammed Ahmed, Matt Alt, Jacinda Ardern, Rebecca Armitage, Susan Choi, Bora Chung, Roddy Doyle, Mariana Enriquez, Kate Evans, Mick Herron, Yann Martel, Charlotte McConaghy, Suzie Miller, David Szalay, and Charlotte Wood.
- Day Three - Randa Abdel-Fattah, Michael Mohammed Ahmad, Roddy Doyle, Kate Evans, Jan Fran, Lev Grossman, RF Kuang, Antoinette Lattouf, Dervla McTiernan, Garth Nix, Hayley Scrivenor.
- Day Four - Michael Bennett, Tony Birch, Troy Bramston, Shankar Chandran, SA Crosby, Chris Hammer, Mick Herron, Fran Kelly, Sisonke Msimang, Ben Quilty, Amy Remeikis, Hayley Scrivenor, Amy Thunig-McGregor, Jack Toohey, Michael Williams.