
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Matthew Sweet talks to Booker-nominated novelist Julia O’Faolain about her new memoir and growing up with her father, a celebrated writer and a radical dissident. Helen Wallace reviews George Benjamin’s and Martin Crimp’s new opera, ‘Written on Skin’. Professor Nora Crook explains how she discovered who really censored Shelley’s notorious poem, ‘The Revolt of Islam’. Marcus Chown reviews The Challenger, a new docu-drama about the investigation into the 1986 space shuttle disaster. And we debate whether the use of words like ‘unacceptable’ and ‘inappropriate’ are part of a tendency to avoid casting strong moral judgements.
By BBC Radio 44.3
286286 ratings
Matthew Sweet talks to Booker-nominated novelist Julia O’Faolain about her new memoir and growing up with her father, a celebrated writer and a radical dissident. Helen Wallace reviews George Benjamin’s and Martin Crimp’s new opera, ‘Written on Skin’. Professor Nora Crook explains how she discovered who really censored Shelley’s notorious poem, ‘The Revolt of Islam’. Marcus Chown reviews The Challenger, a new docu-drama about the investigation into the 1986 space shuttle disaster. And we debate whether the use of words like ‘unacceptable’ and ‘inappropriate’ are part of a tendency to avoid casting strong moral judgements.

7,639 Listeners

301 Listeners

1,080 Listeners

1,046 Listeners

5,520 Listeners

1,799 Listeners

604 Listeners

1,763 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

1,920 Listeners

488 Listeners

582 Listeners

135 Listeners

128 Listeners

164 Listeners

244 Listeners

182 Listeners

210 Listeners

3,177 Listeners

1,002 Listeners

146 Listeners

119 Listeners

86 Listeners

328 Listeners