
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The castaway in Desert Island Discs this week is the poet and writer James Fenton. He'll be talking to Sue Lawley about his early life as a boy chorister, the death of his mother when he was just 10 and about his experiences as a foreign correspondent. It was in this capacity that he travelled with the Viet Cong when they captured Saigon, and fled from the Khmer Rouge when they entered Phnom Penh.
He has also worked as a political and literary journalist and as a theatre critic. He'll be ruminating on the joys of his present incarnation as Professor of Poetry at Oxford University.
[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]
Favourite track: Requiem Dies Irae by Giuseppe Verdi
By BBC Radio 44.6
14711,471 ratings
The castaway in Desert Island Discs this week is the poet and writer James Fenton. He'll be talking to Sue Lawley about his early life as a boy chorister, the death of his mother when he was just 10 and about his experiences as a foreign correspondent. It was in this capacity that he travelled with the Viet Cong when they captured Saigon, and fled from the Khmer Rouge when they entered Phnom Penh.
He has also worked as a political and literary journalist and as a theatre critic. He'll be ruminating on the joys of his present incarnation as Professor of Poetry at Oxford University.
[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]
Favourite track: Requiem Dies Irae by Giuseppe Verdi

7,867 Listeners

1,076 Listeners

404 Listeners

5,513 Listeners

1,800 Listeners

1,885 Listeners

1,061 Listeners

153 Listeners

60 Listeners

1,672 Listeners

1,188 Listeners

3,222 Listeners

1,061 Listeners

775 Listeners

1,041 Listeners

82 Listeners

126 Listeners

3,400 Listeners

767 Listeners

959 Listeners

296 Listeners

52 Listeners

171 Listeners

502 Listeners

29 Listeners