Alcohol's influence on literature; James Runcie; Grace McCleen
Mariella Frostrup talks to Grace McCleen about her new novel The Professor of Poetry and, on the centenary of her birth, James Runcie celebrates the life and work of Barbara Pym.
Mariella Frostrup talks to Grace McCleen about her new novel The Professor of Poetry. MCCleen's debut novel The Land of Decoration caused tremors of excitement in the publishing world when it won the Betty Trask Award, the Desmond Elliott Prize Award, was a Richard and Judy selection and got the author included in the Waterstones 11 in 2012. Brought up in a religious sect, The Land of Decoration focused on the experiences of an isolated young girl in a similarly religious environment who tries to create her own alternative world, the eponymous land of the title. After intermittent schooling on the advice of a teacher Grace herself went on to study English at Oxford and has been , since then, torn between her love of music and prose, announcing that the three novels she's already penned will be her last. The second of these three novels The Professor of Poetry, which is just published, perhaps best illustrates McCleens split interests, telling the story of an academic, Professor Stone, enthralled to Elliots Four Quartets who rekindles an old romance after surviving a potentially fatal illness.
James Runcie celebrates the centenary of the novelist Barbara Pym's birth. Dismissed at one time as the scribe of lightweight entertainments, Philip Larkin, one of Pym's many literary admirers, said that he would sooner read a new Barbara Pym than a new Jane Austen. Pym created a world steeped in parish life, and full of delightful and colourful characters, many of whom are based on the people she met along the way, including her eventful time in Italy during the war. James Runcie himself made a bio pic of Pym's life when he was a TV producer and his own Grantchester Mysteries, with their detective priest, have been described as "Barbara Pym with sex."
One of the most popular images in contemporary literature is that of the Chardonnay swigging Bridget Jones and her constant battle with her alcohol unit intake. But Bridget is by no means the only lush in literary history - alcohol plays a part in some of the greatest classics from Kingsley Amis's Lucky Jim to Tender is the Night by F.Scott Fitzgerald. Writer and bon viveur Kevin Jackson and Olivia Laing, whose latest book is The Trip to Echo Spring, Why Writers Drink, in which she takes a road trip across the United States exploring the drinking literary legacy of writers including Ernest Hemmingway, Tennessee Williams and John Cheever, discuss whether without alcohol we would have a poorer literary legacy, and in what way writers have dispelled some of the many myths that have grown up around the perils of alcohol addiction.
Producer: Andrea Kidd.
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Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Mariella Frostrup |
Interviewed Guest | Grace McCleen |
Interviewed Guest | James Runcie |
Interviewed Guest | Kevin Jackson |
Interviewed Guest | Olivia Laing |
Producer | Andrea Kidd |
Broadcasts
- Sun 28 Jul 2013 16:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Thu 1 Aug 2013 15:30Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 FM