Join a celebration of a special time in Chichester musical history from the late seventies to eighties, when New Park Road Community Centre was host to the ‘RocSoc’. This was hugely popular with the young of the day, with weekly...
Striking a masterful balance between old soul and modern flair, Will Johns is one of the most distinctive and exciting British Blues performers. Born in 1973, this is a man with the music in his blood, but it’s hardly surprising...
Hailing from the East Coast of America, performance artist William Fontaine brings his unique brand of poetic storytelling to West Sussex. Provocative, playful, and unpredictable in his use of word and sound, there is only one question Fontaine asks of...
Professor Maggie Andrews talks about her latest book, Political Women: Fifteen Campaigns that Shaped Twenty-First Century Britain. Everyone has heard of the Suffragettes. Professor Andrews also explores some of the less well-known political campaigns fought by women in the last...
At around midday on the 14th February 1748, two travellers stopped for refreshment at The White Hart in Rowland’s Castle. Neither man was seen alive again. Dr Oliver Morgan reconstructs what happened to William Galley and Daniel Chater, and explores...
Readings from two award-winning writers of short fiction. Naomi Booth’s Animals at Night recently won her the reader’s award at the prestigious Edge Hill Short Story competition. Nicholas Royle’s latest book, David Bowie, Enid Blyton and the Sun Machine, is...
Bestselling historian, novelist, and television presenter, Dan Jones discusses the second instalment in his Essex Dogs Trilogy. Wolves of Winter follows the Dogs from the Battle of Crécy in 1346 to the siege of Calais the following year. Tickets £5,...