
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The twentieth-century author Christopher Isherwood, made famous by his 1930s work in Berlin, approached his writing about queerness, politics and religion with frankness and wit. The writer repeatedly fictionalised himself and his friends in his novels. Katherine Bucknell, the editor of four volumes of Isherwood’s diaries and letters, explains that it was his mother’s own diaries that first introduce us to the character of Isherwood. Using a wealth of unpublished material, Bucknell reveals the drama and complexity of the author’s inner world in an epic new biography.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4.8
2525 ratings
The twentieth-century author Christopher Isherwood, made famous by his 1930s work in Berlin, approached his writing about queerness, politics and religion with frankness and wit. The writer repeatedly fictionalised himself and his friends in his novels. Katherine Bucknell, the editor of four volumes of Isherwood’s diaries and letters, explains that it was his mother’s own diaries that first introduce us to the character of Isherwood. Using a wealth of unpublished material, Bucknell reveals the drama and complexity of the author’s inner world in an epic new biography.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
127 Listeners
78 Listeners
41 Listeners
74 Listeners
107 Listeners
147 Listeners
73 Listeners
53 Listeners
288 Listeners
64 Listeners
18 Listeners
244 Listeners
37 Listeners
125 Listeners
119 Listeners
10 Listeners
31 Listeners
88 Listeners
37 Listeners
18 Listeners
9 Listeners
3 Listeners
13 Listeners
5 Listeners
89 Listeners