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Episode details

Radio 4,14 Mar 2021,28 mins

Viet Thanh Nguyen; Lanark at 40; Costume and Power

Open Book

Available for over a year

Elizabeth Day talks to Viet Thanh Nguyen about his novel The Committed. The story continues the journey of his unnamed protagonist from his 2015 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Sympathiser. A Vietnamese refugee and double agent, he arrives in Paris to be immediately swept up in a gangland world of drugs, violence, and street warfare. Both a thriller and a novel of ideas, it addresses the role of colonial powers, ideology, and generational upheaval. Writers Andrew O'Hagan and Kirstin Innes discuss Alasdair Gray's Lanark. First published forty years ago, it was heralded as a modernist masterpiece and significantly changed the course of modern Scottish writing. This year was the inaugural "Gray Day", an annual celebration of his work, and to mark it we hear why Lanark still has much to offer readers today. And novelist Lucy Jago explores the ways in which in historical fiction women have used clothes to project the power that the public sphere often denied them. Book List – Sunday 14 March and Thursday 18 March The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen The Committed by Viet Thanh Nguyen Lanark: A Life in Four Books by Alasdair Gray Mayflies by Andrew O’Hagan Scabby Queen by Kirsten Innes A Net for Small Fishes by Lucy Jago Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel Pamela by Samuel Richardson Orlando by Virginia Woolf Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro

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