THE FIRST ever Hay Festival Digital came to a triumphant close last night, earning close to half a million event streams over two weeks of events.

Book lovers tuned in from around the world to engage and converse with writers, and with each other, in interactive events.

People from more than 69 countries joined free sessions featuring over 100 award-winning writers, global policy makers, historians, Nobel Prize-winning economists, pioneers and innovators, under the theme #ImagineTheWorld.

Just a few of the highlights over the fortnight included an exclusive preview of Stephen Fry’s next book, Troy, and David Mithell’s upcoming Utopia Avenue, an all-star Wordsworth 250 anniversary gala, a one-off film screening by Ali Smith, a Shakespeare megamix performed by Helena Bonham Carter and Dominic West, conversations with novelists Maggie O’Farrell and Anne Enright, artist Grayson Perry, former US ambassador to the UN Samantha Power, writer Lisa Taddeo.

A free digital Programme for Schools ran 18-22 May for KS 2, 3 and 4 pupils, mixing storytelling and live performances to inspire a love of reading for pleasure. Speakers included Waterstones Children’s Laureate Cressida Cowell; broadcaster Konnie Huq, award-winning writers Patrice Lawrence, Mohammad Khan and Lucy Worsley, rising stars Onjali Q Rauf, Sue Cheung and Dean Atta, illustrator Liz Pichon, and activists Laura Bates and Laura Coryton.

Events, originally streamed via the Festival’s Crowdcast channel, are now available to view over on Hay Player, which is home to the Festival’s full audio and video archive.

Hay Festival Medals were awarded to writer and dramatist Inua Ellams for Poetry, journalist and writer Lydia Cacho for Journalism, and two-time Booker Prize-winning novelist Hilary Mantel for prose. Meanwhile, following a public call-out for submissions, organisers at the close of the Festival released an #ImagineTheWorld reading list of 20 titles to offer inspiration and vision for the months ahead.

Hay Festival Digital was supported by principal sponsor Baillie Gifford and principal global partner the Welsh Government, while the Programme for Schools is also sponsored by the Welsh Government.

Director Peter Florence said: “The combination of intimate conversations and the global audience able to participate online has reinvented the festival. We’ve had hundreds of thousands of viewers who’ve never been to Hay before. We’ve seen writers and actors and scientists respond to the technology with imagination and daring. And my brilliant colleagues have aced the innovation and the delivery. We’re going to absorb the wonders of all this and think carefully and quickly about how to move forward. It seems like a moment of adventure and opportunity.”

Broadcaster Sandi Toksvig, closing out the final Festival session, said: “This has been an extraordinary experiment. Going to Hay is one of the great glories of my life. I love it. But this has been watched by over half a million people, all around the world, many for the first time. These are dark times but Hay Festival represents the obverse. It’s the place of stimulating conversation, of soothing words, and reminding ourselves of the glory of the human imagination. And we really, really need this now.”