Why I Really Like This Book
These are podcasts about forgotten fiction, for curious readers, and for anyone who likes old books. Sometimes they're stories, sometimes they're not. Most of the authors write in English; and sometimes they don't. But all the books I talk about, I really really like. I hope you will too.
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My name is Kate Macdonald: I'm an English lecturer, and a lifelong browser in second-hand bookshops. I post weekly (sometimes fortnightly) ten-minute podcasts on a Friday, on the books I really like which I think deserve new readers. NEW! Hear a PodAcademy interview with me about forgotten fiction here. Subscribe now through the RSS feed button below, or the iTunes link above. The music for the podcast intro is by The Tribe Band. Lucy Marsh did the drawing and Matthias Opsomer lettered it. Patrick Belk and Martin Fowler hold my tech safety net.

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Questions? Send me a message by mailing me at kate [dot] brussels [at] yahoo [dot] com.

Past Episodes

First Series

Margery Allingham
John Buchan
Colette
Monica Dickens
Laura Esquivel
Kate Fox
John Galt
Helene Hanff
Molly Izzard
Tove Jansson
Rudyard Kipling
C S Lewis
A G Macdonell
Adam Nicolson
Peter O'Donnell
Barbara Pym
Arthur Quiller-Couch
Mary Renault
Vern Sneider
Angela Thirkell
John Updike
Laurens Van der Post
Sylvia Townsend Warner
Dornford Yates

New Series

Erskine Childers
Constance Maud
Rose Macaulay
Nancy Mitford
George Orwell
T H White
Dorothy L Sayers

Categories

detective fiction
the great outdoors
anti-romance
memoir
cooking
people-watching
the life of the place
fantastical
private classes
thrills and spills
always amusing
getting educated
strong women
thinking too much
simply heaven

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Britain topples into the Second World War, and Barsetshire braces itself to deal with invaders: refugees, evacuees, foreigners, the lower-classes, and even socialists. Angela Thirkell's view of the war from the upper-class county perspective is a vision of the past as one part of it would have liked it to have been. She delights in caricature, satire, cutting down to size, and savage attacks on those who damage the glories of English civilisation. Pulling together, not shirking your turn in the communcal evacuees' canteen, being polite to the rude and being pleasant to the revolting are all part of the British Home Front at war. For readers who can do their own blackout and can cook rabbit stew.

Direct download: Angela_Thirkell_and_Cheerfulness_Breaks_In.mp3
Category:the life of the place -- posted at: 12:30 AM
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