4.2 • 824 Ratings
🗓️ 25 November 2024
⏱️ 28 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
TOKYO EXPRESS by Seichō Matsumoto, translated by Jesse Kirkwood, chosen by Sir Ian Blatchford THE LETTERS OF ABELARD AND HELOISE, translated by Betty Radice, chosen by Charles Fernyhough SOLDIERS OF SALAMIS by Javier Cercas, translated by Anne McLean, chosen by Harriett Gilbert
Director of the Science Museum group and president of the Royal Literary Fund, Sir Ian Blatchford, chooses a cult classic from 1958 for his good read. A double love suicide wrapped up in suspicious government corruption and a whodunnit hinging on train timetables, Sir Ian makes the case for one of his favourite books.
Travelling to the middle ages for Charles Fernyhough's pick, The Letters of Abelard and Heloise were once much more widely known than they are today. Charles, an amateur medievalist alongside being an author, musician and Professor of Psychology at Durham University, recommends this book as one of the greatest love stories of all time. The letters of Heloise he especially believes should be celebrated, as they showcase a great early feminist philosopher and writer.
Presenter Harriett Gilbert's good read takes readers into the Spanish Civil War: Soldiers of Salamis by Javier Cercas, from 2001. This is a book exploring the role of memory when unpicking the past, and asks questions about whether we can ever remember what really happened. What will the others make of it?
Producer: Eliza Lomas for BBC Audio, Bristol Join the book club on Instagram, @agoodreadbbc
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0:00.0 | On a winter's night in 1974, a crime took place that would obsess the nation. |
0:07.0 | It was an extraordinary news story. |
0:09.0 | The story of an aristocrat, Lord Lucan, who's said to have killed the family Nanny, |
0:14.0 | mistaking her for his wife, then somehow just disappeared. |
0:18.0 | One of the great mysteries in English criminal history. We're still looking for |
0:21.7 | Lucan. It's honestly one of the most powerful stories of my lifetime. I'm Alex Fontunzelman. This is |
0:27.8 | the Lucan Obsession. Listen on BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds, music, radio,s. Hello, we're talking books. |
0:38.9 | My guests and I have each chosen one we really like. |
0:41.4 | We've all read the others' choices. |
0:43.3 | What will we make of them? |
0:44.8 | Now, let's see. |
0:46.2 | With me today is first Sir Ian Blatchford, |
0:48.7 | director of the Science Museum group. |
0:51.1 | Among his many other appointment, since November 2020, |
0:53.9 | he's been president of the Royal |
0:55.3 | Literary Fund and with Tilly Blythe, his co-author of The Art of Innovation, based on their |
1:01.6 | Radio 4 series of the same name. With Ian is the writer and psychologist Charles Ferniho, |
1:07.9 | whose non-fiction books include most recently The Voices Within. |
1:11.9 | Charles has also published two novels, and at Durham University, he directs the Centre |
1:16.8 | for Research into Inner Experience. |
1:19.7 | Ian Blatchford, would you go first? What are you recommending we read? |
1:23.3 | So my choice is Tokyo Express by the Japanese writer Seko Matsumoto, |
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