Sunday 16:00-16:30, repeated Thursday 16:00-16:30, except first Sunday in the month when it is replaced by Book Club.
Open Book spotlights new fiction and non-fiction, picks out the best of the paperbacks, talks to authors and publishers, and unearths lost masterpieces.
This week
Sunday 12th August 2007
Elif Shafak, author of The Bastard of Istanbul, who faced trial in Turkey because of the content of the novel
Elif Shafak Should the darker episodes of Turkey’s history be ignored, or are there possibilities for reconciliation if that past is acknowledged and absorbed?
Elif Shafak was put on trial in Turkey for the crime of ‘insulting Turkishness’ for approaching this question in her most recent novel The Bastard of Istanbul.
She talks to Kathryn Hughes about how she still loves Turkey, and how writing in English changes her novels.
The Bastard of Istanbul – Elif Shafak Publisher: Viking (to be published on 27th September 2007)
Teenage voices Are adults able to write in an authentic teenage voice?
Justin Shaw and Danny King, who have both attempted this in their new novels join Kathryn to reveal how they re-entered the heads of their teenage selves and whether novels just propagate the myth that all teenage boys in Britain are feral and uncontrollable.
The Illumination of Merton Browne – J M Shaw Publisher: Sceptre
School for Scumbags – Danny King Publisher: Serpent’s Tail
Virginia Woolf’s servants Despite being a supporter of the Labour Party, Virginia Woolf had a troubled relationship with her domestic staff.
Alison Light reveals some of the servants who enabled the Bloomsbury group to put all their energy into writing.
Mrs Woolf And The Servants – Alison Light Publisher: Fig Tree
Seasonal Publishing Katherine Rushton of the Bookseller Magazine joins Kathryn to explain why you are more likely to find cookery books being published in the autumn, and literary fiction in the spring.