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Anthony Burgess and Jesus of Nazareth

Anthony Burgess and Jesus of Nazareth | Writers & Books | Scoop.it
We look at Franco Zeffirelli’s epic TV series, Jesus of Nazareth, scripted by Anthony Burgess
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Podcast: Anthony Burgess' Ninety-Nine Novels: Pavane by Keith Roberts

Podcast: Anthony Burgess' Ninety-Nine Novels: Pavane by Keith Roberts | Writers & Books | Scoop.it

In 1984, Anthony Burgess published Ninety-Nine Novels, a selection of his favourite novels in English since 1939. The list is typically idiosyncratic, and shows the breadth of Burgess's interest in fiction. This podcast, by the International Anthony Burgess Foundation, explores the novels on Burgess's list with the help of writers, critics and other special guests. 


In this episode, we’re heading to an alternate universe as writer, academic and curator Glyn Morgan guides the Burgess Foundation's Graham Foster through Pavane by Keith Roberts. Published in 1968, Pavane is set in a Great Britain ruled by the Catholic Church after the assassination of Elizabeth I. The story picks up in the twentieth century, and follows a disparate group of characters as they navigate a world on the cusp of rebellion. Burgess lauds the depiction of a ‘modern England that is also medieval’ and calls the novel ‘a striking work of the imagination’. Keith Roberts was born in Kettering in 1935. He wrote thirteen novels, including The Furies, The Chalk Giants and Molly Zero. He was also an illustrator and worked on the artwork for New Worlds and Impulse magazines. He died in 2000 at the age of 65. Glyn Morgan is a writer, academic and curator based in London. He is the author of Imagining the Unimaginable: Speculative Fiction and the Holocaust (Bloomsbury) and curator of the forthcoming blockbuster immersive exhibition Science Fiction: Voyage to the Edge of Imagination, which opens at the Science Museum in London on 6 October 2022 and runs until 4 May 2023. Glyn has also edited a new volume of essays, interviews and 200 colour illustrations to accompany the exhibition (Thames and Hudson).


 ------- BOOKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE 


By Keith Roberts: The Chalk Giants (1974) 



The History of the Universal Monarchy: Napoleon and the Conquest of the World by Louis Geoffroy (1836)

Lest Darkness Fall by L. Sprague de Camp (1939)

Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (1949)

Bring the Jubilee by Ward Moore (1953)

A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr (1959)

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess (1962)

The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick (1962)

The Alteration by Kinglsey Amis (1976)

Riddley Walker by Russell Hoban (1980)

Neuromancer by William Gibson (1984)

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell (1996)

The Loney by Andrew Micheal Hurley (2014)

A Man Lies Dreaming by Lavie Tidhar (2014)

Science Fiction and Catholicism: The Rise and Fall of the Robot Papacy by Jim Clarke (2019)
-------

International Anthony Burgess Foundation


The theme music is Anthony Burgess’s Concerto for Flute, Strings and Piano in D Minor, and is performed by No Dice Collective.


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Podcast: Anthony Burgess' Ninety-Nine Novels: Two by Muriel Spark

Podcast: Anthony Burgess' Ninety-Nine Novels: Two by Muriel Spark | Writers & Books | Scoop.it

To listen on Spotify: spoti.fi/3Czyzp70 


In 1984, Anthony Burgess published Ninety-Nine Novels, a selection of his favourite novels in English since 1939. The list is typically idiosyncratic, and shows the breadth of Burgess’s interest in fiction. 


This podcast, by the International Anthony Burgess Foundation, explores the novels on Burgess’s list with the help of writers, critics and other special guests. 


 In this episode, Andrew Biswell of the Burgess Foundation speaks to writer and editor Alan Taylor about two novels by Muriel Spark: The Girls of Slender Means and The Mandelbaum Gate.

Born in 1918, Muriel Spark was a novelist, poet, essayist and biographer. Her novels are celebrated as pioneering works of postmodernism and she was twice shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She is best known for The Prime of Miss Jean Brody, which was adapted for the screen in 1969. She lived in Edinburgh, Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), New York, Rome, and latterly in Tuscany, where she died in 2006. 


 Alan Taylor is the author of Appointment in Arezzo: A Friendship with Muriel Spark. In 2018, he was the series editor of Spark’s Collected Novels, published by Polygon to celebrate her centenary. He was the founding editor of the Scottish Review of Books and the Managing Editor of the Scotsman. He is a long-standing member of the Scottish team on BBC Radio 4’s Round Britain Quiz. Madly, Deeply: The Diaries of Alan Rickman, edited by Alan Taylor, is out now.

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Polymath Anthony Burgess on James Joyce: the lost introduction

Polymath Anthony Burgess on James Joyce: the lost introduction | Writers & Books | Scoop.it
Written in 1986 as the introduction to a Dolmen Press edition of ‘Dubliners’ illustrated by Louis le Brocquy, but never used, this brilliant essay, recently found among the papers of the author, who died in 1993, appears here for the first time
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