The South Asian Illustration and Literature
Festival is returning for its second year and will take place at Tate Britain
on 27 September, 2025. We were delighted
to catch up with its pioneering co-founders Sinead Gosai, Chitra Soundar and Sanchita
Basu De Sarkar to discuss the event. Don’t
miss your opportunity to book tickets and to be part of this hugely exciting
and important festival.
Congratulations on the second year of
SAILfest, when and where will this year's festival be held and who's able to
attend this and how please?
SINEAD: For our second year, we’re proud to be working
with Tate Publishing, where we’ll host SAIL Fest in the Clore Auditorium at
Tate Britain on Saturday 27th September. Everyone is welcome, regardless of
your heritage - as long as you have an interest in children’s publishing. We
have a number of ticket options to suit all budgets and we’d love as many
authors, illustrators, librarians, booksellers, editors, agents etc to come
along and join the conversation on the day - either in person or virtually.
Can you tell us a bit about the background
to SAILfest?
SINEAD: Sanchita Basu De Sarkar came up with the idea and
initially approached Chitra and me to get involved. It’s something we’d all
been separately having conversations about and we just decided to get together and
get stuck in. It was honestly quite crazy looking back at how quickly we
managed to pull it all together. We’re all really passionate about uplifting
and championing our community and set out to create a safe space to do that
in.
SAILfest have been doing some fantastic
work since last year's inaugural festival, what have been some of the
highlights for you and why?
SINEAD: The buzz and excitement from the first festival
has been tough to beat, but we’ve continued to run small scale events
throughout the year - we hosted a networking event towards the end of last
year, as that was something a lot of attendees were keen on continuing to make
connections in person and online and earlier this year we ran our first online
book launch and virtual networking event. I think the highlight truly was
seeing the impact and how much having that space to get together and have honest
conversations and celebrate our successes and joys together really meant.
What are some of the highlights on this
year's programme and what can attendees expect if attending?
SINEAD: We have a brilliant line up this year,
exploring the barriers and possibilities in publishing. We have a debut panel,
a panel exploring how to sustain a career in the industry and a panel talking
about how to publicise and amplify our voices. We also have some interactive
creative sessions, a book launch and a networking evening. So it’s a pretty
jammed packed day. Book your SAILFest tickets here - https://www.sailfest.org.uk/sailfest2025
This year, we’re also so excited to be partnering with
The Barbican to host a special SAIL Fest family film club event for the public,
so bring your little readers along. You can register and book your tickets here.
This year's festival is in collaboration
with Tate publishing, how did that partnership come about and what value does
it add?
CHITRA: Tate’s senior commissioning Editor Cherise
Lopes-Baker had been on a panel at our first festival and she was instrumental
in championing the festival with her publishing team and brought us together
and we’re delighted to be able to collaborate on this year’s festival. The
space allows us to open our doors to even more delegates this year. It’s
heartening to work with a publisher who is keen to support our mission to
uplift those of South Asian heritage working across the kid lit space.
With the decline in publications reported
through Reflecting Realities and the closing of Tiny Owl publishers it feels
like we're entering a potentially more challenging time for diverse and
inclusive publishing. How important is it that librarians are part of the
conversations and what role are they able to play in the industry?
SANCHITA: It is increasingly concerning and something
we’re saddened to see. Librarians can be some of the most powerful advocates
for inclusive publishing, not only as gatekeepers of what gets into readers'
hands, but also as trusted voices in shaping demand and influencing systemic
change. This can be such a huge asset to publishers. When librarians are
intentionally stocking and promoting our books, it lets publishers know there's
an audience for our stories.
CHITRA: Libraries are the beating heart of any
community and having your local library advocate for you as an author can be so
powerful because they open the author and the book to a wider audience - not
just teachers and students but for the wider community. Librarians keep a
diverse range of books visible and celebrated with communities on the ground.
And through PLR, borrowing trends and library highlights, they are able to
advocate for inclusive books with data and evidence.
ALL: Don’t forget! Book your tickets to SAIL Fest 2025
here.
A big thank you to Sinead Gosai, Chitra Soundar and Sanchita Basu De Sarkar