
London Belongs to Me
The series that looks at books, plays and stories and how they work. Ian Sansom celebrates Norman Collins鈥檚 evocative portrait of London on the brink of war.
Ian Sansom celebrates the evocative portrait of London on the brink of war that Norman Collins paints in his 1945 novel London Belongs to Me.
The book centres around the lives of the inhabitants of 10 Dulcimer Street, a down-at-heel south London boarding house, and spans the two years from December 1938 to December 1940. Deftly mixing comedy and tragedy, Collins invites us into the lives of these disparate characters, a handful of seemingly unremarkable people whose minor triumphs and bruising setbacks combine to provide a poignant and compelling account of the human face of history, away from the headlines and the corridors of power.
Ian Sansom is a novelist, journalist and broadcaster. He is the author of more than 20 books, including the Mobile Library and the County Guides series of detective novels and his work has been translated into more than a dozen languages. He has worked as a columnist for The Guardian and The Spectator and currently writes for the TLS, The Irish Times and The Dublin Review. He is a regular broadcaster on 91热爆 Radio 4 and Radio 3. He was formerly the Director of the Oscar Wilde Centre at Trinity College Dublin and a professor and Head of English at Queen鈥檚 University Belfast.
Contributors:
Ed Glinert, writer, lecturer and historical tour guide
Katherine Cooper, writer, academic and broadcaster
Readings from London Belongs to Me by Norman Collins (Penguin Books, 2008)
Reader: Ewan Bailey
Sound: Sean Kerwin
Researcher: Henry Tydeman
Production Coordinator: Nina Semple
Producer: Torquil MacLeod
Executive Producer: Caroline Raphael
A Pier production for 91热爆 Radio 4
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Opening Lines
John Yorke unpacks the themes behind the stories in Radio 4's weekend afternoon dramas.