Episode details

World Service,21 Dec 2016,5 mins
Utopian inspirations: 971 by Lea Sauer
Utopia: Mr More's Wondrous IslandsAvailable for over a year
It is five centuries since a book full of novel, playful, perhaps futuristic ideas was first published in what is now Belgium: Utopia by Thomas More. To mark the anniversary, BBC World Service has asked three young authors to take More's mythical island as a starting point for a new short story. This is one of them, 971 by Lea Sauer, translated from the German by Daniel Stächelin. The story is set in Guadeloupe and the reader is Martina Laird. After having lived in Guadeloupe, Paris and Finland, Lea Sauer began her studies in Creative Writing at the Deutsche Literaturinstitut in Leipzig, Germany, in 2015. Her story 'Nothing right before the Rue Saint-Blaise' ('Nichts kurz vor der Rue Saint-Blaise') was shortlisted for the PEN International/New Voices Award 2015. Her book Métro was published by SuKultur in 2016. She currently lectures at the University of Siegen on French literature and is working toward her PhD, studying the flâneur.
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