Ashley Pharoah, Novels in verse, Chris Watson
Ashley Pharoah on his new BBC drama. Plus Ros Barber and Sarah Crossan discuss writing novels in verse and sound artist Chris Watson talks about his new project, The Town Moor.
Ashley Pharoah, writer of Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes, discusses his latest creation for BBC TV - The Living and the Dead. Set in rural Somerset in 1894, this supernatural drama follows Nathan Appleby, a reluctant gentleman farmer who is obsessed with proving the existence of the afterlife, as he investigates hauntings, paranormal happenings and ghostly visitations.
Writer Sarah Crossan has won the 2016 Bookseller YA prize for her novel One. It's the story of conjoined twins, written in verse. Ros Barber's debut novel The Marlowe Papers is a fictional account of the life of Christopher Marlowe, also written in verse. They talk to Kirsty about writing novels which take the form of series of poems.
Sound artist Chris Watson, who has worked alongside David Attenborough on many of his BBC nature series, discusses his new project The Town Moor - A Portrait in Sound. Over the course of a year he documented the sounds of the ancient and vast grazing common at the heart of Newcastle, and will be presenting the audio portrait as a 'dark' cinema experience at the Tyneside Cinema.
Presenter: Kirsty Lang
Producer: Rebecca Armstrong.
Last on
Chapters
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Ashley Pharoah
Duration: 09:42
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Novels as poems
Duration: 09:34
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Chris Watson
Duration: 08:41
Ashley Pharoah
The Living and the Dead begins on on BBC 1 on Tuesday 28 June and is available on BBC iPlayer on Friday 10 June.
Novels as poems
Image of Sarah Crossan courtesy of Bloomsbury.
Chris Watson
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Interviewed Guest | Ashley Pharoah |
| Interviewed Guest | Sarah Crossan |
| Interviewed Guest | Ros Barber |
| Interviewed Guest | Chris Watson |
| Presenter | Kirsty Lang |
| Producer | Rebecca Armstrong |
Broadcast
- Wed 15 Jun 2016 19:15BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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