#Performances
#About the event
Duration: 60 minutes
The past few years have seen women raising their voices for social change; in Meg Bignell’s warm, generous new novel, they are also required to harmonise. Birds of a Feather doyennes Rebecca Sparrow and Jane Sullivan join Meg to discuss this gloriously Australian tale of motherhood, independence and solidarity between women in the unmissable book club event of the year.
Supported by Sequel Books.
#Sponsored by
Sequel Books

#Artists
Jane Sullivan
Jane Sullivan is the founder of Scholarly, an online learning platform that supports QCE English students. She is also co-founder of four hugely popular online book clubs: Rebel Readers Alliance, The Bluestockings Society, The Midnight Readers, and Birds of a Feather Book Club. Jane is an experienced English teacher, registered celebrant, book club coordinator, public speaker, online course developer, and mum to four young sons who she hopes will share her love of reading. Whether you're a parent looking for some thrilling reads for your primary aged child, or you'd like your teen to join a safe online community that offers more than just books, or you’re keen to connect with other grown-ups that love to have wholehearted conversations about books and stories, Jane and her co-captain Rebecca Sparrow have a book club for just about anyone. Jane is thrilled to bring her unique blend of biblio-zest and literary nous to the Brisbane Writers Festival.
Meg Bignell
Meg Bignell is the author of four novels published by Penguin Random House — The Sparkle Pages, Welcome to Nowhere River, The Angry Women’s Choir, and The Good Losers. She has also authored one non-fiction book — Tasmanian Gardens (Thames and Hudson). The Angry Women’s Choir was shortlisted for the 2023 Margaret and Colin Roderick Literary Award and won the People’s Choice Award for Fiction at the 2025 Tasmanian Literary Awards. Meg has written, directed and performed for cabaret, film, stage and television, and in the 2000s was Tasmania’s weather presenter for the Nine Network. Meg lives on a farm on Tasmania’s east coast with her husband, three children, one dog and one thousand cows.










