BBC HomeExplore the BBC
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.


Accessibility help
Text only
BBC Homepage
BBC Radio
BBC Radio 4 - 92 to 94 FM and 198 Long WaveListen to Digital Radio, Digital TV and OnlineListen on Digital Radio, Digital TV and Online

PROGRAMME FINDER:
Programmes
Podcasts
Schedule
Presenters
PROGRAMME GENRES:
News
Drama
Comedy
Science
Religion|Ethics
History
Factual
Messageboards
Radio 4 Tickets
Radio 4 Help

Contact Us

Like this page?
Send it to a friend!



OPEN BOOK
MISSED A PROGRAMME?
Go to the Listen Again page
Open Book banner
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
17 February 2008
Listen to this programme in full
Helen Dunmore

Bernhard Schlink, author of The Reader, on his new novel; Gissing's classic New Grub Street revisited; and the first review of a completely blank book.
Bernhard Schlink

In 1997 Bernhard Schlink, a German law professor, had a surprise international bestseller when the English translation of his novel The Reader was published. This story about a concentration camp guard made Schlink the first German novelist to top the New York Times bestseller chart. This month Schlink's first novel since The Reader reaches British bookshops. Homecoming tells the story of a publisher's attempt to find a novel which has obsessed him since childhood, and like its predecessor deals with Germany's continuing attempts to come to terms with the events of the Third Reich. Bernhard Schlink talks to Mariella Frostrup about his generation's interest in these events, the relationship between his life as a writer and his profession as a legal academic.

Bernhard Schlink: Homecoming is published in hardback by Orion.

Memoir Writing for Beginners

One of this month's more unusual publications is a completely blank book. Entitled My Story, it's a memoir-writing kit aimed at the complete beginner, and comes with a small paperback offering instruction and advice. Mariella is joined by the biographer and memoirist Miranda Seymour to discuss how the would-be autobiographer can get started.

My Story is published by Headline.

Politicians' Audio Books

Last week's Grammy awards ceremony in Los Angeles featured an unlikely literary stand-off in the Spoken Word category, when former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter were beaten to the prize by the Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama. To discuss why all America's leading politicians seem to be making audio books these days, Mariella is joined from New York by the critic John Freeman.

Bill Clinton's audio book Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World is published by Random House.

New Grub Street

In 1891 the novelist George Gissing published one of the classic fictional treatments of literary life. New Grub Street is a satirical, sometimes melodramatic, novel about two writers, Edwin Reardon and Jasper Milvain, and their desperate attempts to earn enough to stay alive by the pen alone. Mariella is joined by two fans of the book, the writer and critic D. J. Taylor, and Christopher Douglas, the co-writer and star of the Radio 4 comedy Ed Reardon's Week, who explains his own debt to Gissing.

George Gissing: A Life, by Paul Delany, is published by Weidenfeld and Nicolson.

New Grub Street, by George Gissing, is widely available in paperback.
E-mail Open Book with your queries or comments about the programme.

    Listen Live
    Audio Help

    Open Book

    Mariella Frostrup

    Arts message boards

    Drama and Readings

    Join the discussion: share your critique of recent drama on Radio 4.

    Arts

    Art, literature, poetry, film, music: tell us what's caught your ear.

    See also

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites



    About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy