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Episode details

Radio 4,26 Feb 2023,28 mins

Tom Bullough on writing about the climate crisis, and Richard Wright's lost novel

Open Book

Available for over a year

In 2020 the writer Tom Bullough set out to walk along Sarn Helen, the old Roman Road that runs from the south of Wales to the north. From that journey he wrote a state of the nation book of non - fiction, Sarn Helen, filled with a fascinating mix of ancient history, observational nature writing and environmental activism. Johny Pitts talks to Tom Bullough about how he sees his role as a writer in the midst of the climate emergency and his deep connection to the changing landscape. Richard Wright was one of the most influential American writers of the 20th century with books like Black Boy, and Native Son, an unforgettable portrait of Bigger Thomas, a 20 year old African American man living in a Chicago slum. Despite his celebrated success one of his novels, The Man Who Lived Underground, was rejected by publishers during the 1940s and published as a short story. But now eighty years on has been restored to its original length. Johny talks to Richard Wright’s daughter, the poet and essayist, Julia Wright, about the book’s complex history. And our Editor’s Tip this month chosen by Emma Herdman of Bloomsbury is In Memoriam from Alice Winn. Book List – Sunday 26 February and Thursday 2 March Sarn Helen by Tom Bullough with illustrations by Jackie Morris Addlands by Tom Bullough Native Son by Richard Wright The Man Who Lived Underground by Richard Wright Black Boy by Richard Wright In Memoriam by Alice Winn

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