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Martin Millar was reading from his new book, Kink Me Honey – ‘The earnest, erotic, dominant, submissive, cheerful, depressed, humorous and occasionally clumsy endeavours of Ark, Gina, Mig, Mistress Tardy, Glam Tilly and an assortment of masters, mistresses, doms, subs and slaves, in the world of kink centred around Sex Orbit, London’s most prominent fetish organisation.’
martinmillar.com / Twitter @martinmillar1

Jo Clayton is a professional storyteller who tells traditional tales from all over the world. She has performed at the Southbank Centre, Storystock Circus, Dulwich Literary Festival, schools, community venues and festivals. She is storyteller in residence at Great Ormond Street Hospital and was Practitioner in Residence at Shakespeare’s Globe. She writes original children’s fiction and short stories for adults.
storycycler.co.uk / @Storycycler

Ian Bourn uses fictional characters and the monologue form to speculate ‘how things might go’ in terms of an imagined or exaggerated autobiography, also exploring ideas of the author as the hero of his or her own story. In his new work, Subjective Interfaces, this process of creating fictional personas seems to be both exhausted and reversed as B finds that when he is forced by circumstances to be himself and in order to maintain his dignity and humour in face of the stigma of unemployment and workfare, the persona of the artist may be all that he has left.
http://www.luxonline.org.uk/artists/ian_bourn/