
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Horatio Clare explores the castaway myth, looking at what happens to the soul and mind in the great spaces and on actual desert islands.
In this series of Essays, recorded in front of an audience at the 2019 Hay Festival, five writers respond to the themes of Daniel Defoe’s ‘Robinson Crusoe’. Often described as the first novel, it's a story which still resonates, three hundred years after it was written, but also preserves the attitudes of its time. Fiona Stafford, Horatio Clare, Alex Wheatle, Alys Conran and Daniel Hahn reflect on the novel as a tale of exotic adventure, a study of isolation and a fantasy of colonial encounter.
By BBC Radio 34.2
8282 ratings
Horatio Clare explores the castaway myth, looking at what happens to the soul and mind in the great spaces and on actual desert islands.
In this series of Essays, recorded in front of an audience at the 2019 Hay Festival, five writers respond to the themes of Daniel Defoe’s ‘Robinson Crusoe’. Often described as the first novel, it's a story which still resonates, three hundred years after it was written, but also preserves the attitudes of its time. Fiona Stafford, Horatio Clare, Alex Wheatle, Alys Conran and Daniel Hahn reflect on the novel as a tale of exotic adventure, a study of isolation and a fantasy of colonial encounter.

7,913 Listeners

143 Listeners

1,067 Listeners

5,576 Listeners

1,808 Listeners

303 Listeners

1,729 Listeners

1,018 Listeners

1,952 Listeners

488 Listeners

585 Listeners

70 Listeners

410 Listeners

306 Listeners

756 Listeners

841 Listeners

129 Listeners

62 Listeners

241 Listeners

55 Listeners

52 Listeners

181 Listeners

4,186 Listeners

3,245 Listeners