Home
/
Fiction
/
Home Front: The Complete BBC Radio Collection Volume 1
Home Front: The Complete BBC Radio Collection Volume 1
Oct 28, 2024 12:16 AM

Author:Katie Hims,Shaun McKenna,Sebastian Baczkiewicz,Sarah Daniels,Richard Monks,Lucy Catherine,Michael Bertenshaw,Keely Beresford,Ami Metcalf,Freddie Fox,Toby Jones,Harriet Walter,Mark Stobbart,Full Cast

Home Front: The Complete BBC Radio Collection Volume 1

Series 1-5 of the groundbreaking BBC Radio 4 drama charting life on the home front during World War One

First heard on radio between 4 August 2014 and 9 November 2018, each episode of Home Front is set exactly one hundred years before the broadcast date, and each follows one character’s day. Together they create a mosaic of experience from a wide cross-section of society, mixing historical fact with enthralling fiction to explore how ordinary people coped with daily life in wartime Britain.

The story begins in Folkestone, as the first troops march off to the front lines. Soon, families such as the Grahams and the Wilsons begins to feel the impact of war, as the wounded return and first Belgian refugees, then Canadian troops, arrive in the seaside resort. In addition, the White Feather and suffragette movements grow in popularity, and a tide of grief increasingly leads people to thoughts of the hereafter.

Industrial Tynemouth, meanwhile, is experiencing a quite different war. The factories and shipyards are at peak production, and more women are joining the workforce. At the munitions factory, owner Geoffrey Marshall and his family must adapt to the changing times – as must workers like Fraser and Edie Chadwick.

Tackling themes including the outbreak of war, recruitment, industry, profiteering and spiritualism are some of radio’s foremost dramatists including Katie Hims, Sebastian Baczkiewicz and Shaun McKenna. Among the extensive cast are Michael Bertenshaw, Keely Beresford, Freddie Fox, Ami Metcalf, Edmund Wiseman, Barbara Flynn, Mark Stobbart andToby Jones, with Dame Harriet Walter making a cameo appearance as Emmeline Pankhurst.

Reviews

Grips from start to finish . . . Munich captures the mood of the times: the suspicion and the fear, the political intrigue, the swagger of the Nazi machine and the widespread elation at the mistaken belief that war has been averted. Superb.

—— Simon Humphreys , Mail on Sunday

Harris’s cleverness, judgment and eye for detail are second to none . . . his research is so impeccable that he could have cut all the spy stuff and published Munich as a history book. Harris’s treatment of Britain’s most maligned prime minister is so powerful, so persuasive, that it ranks among the most moving fictional portraits of a politician that I have ever read

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times

An intelligent thriller . . . with exacting attention to historical detail

—— The Times, BOOKS OF THE YEAR

A gripping account of the negotiations between Britain and Germany in 1938 before the outbreak of war

—— Guardian

Atmospheric and fast-paced literary thriller . . . [it] grips from start to finish . . . Superb

—— Mail on Sunday

Unputdownable to the point of being dangerous: the house could have been on fire while I was reading and I wouldn’t have noticed

—— Jake Kerridge , Sunday Express

Harris makes the reader gasp at every turn, with a truly moving portrayal of Chamberlain as a man who did the wrong thing for the right reason

—— Daily Express, BOOKS OF THE YEAR

A brilliantly constructed spy novel set amid the politicking of Chamberlain’s last-ditch negotiations with Hitler

—— Ben East , Observer

A tantalising addition to the inexhaustible game of “what if”?

—— Anthony Quinn , Guardian

A wonderful tale of personal relationships and political drama…This is a very, very good read

—— Vince Cable , Spectator, BOOKS OF THE YEAR

I enjoyed romping through Robert Harris’ Munich

—— Nick Curtis , Evening Standard, BOOKS OF THE YEAR

Taut and finely paced novel . . . superbly observed . . . it is hard not to break out in a cold sweat just reading it….The details of railway carriages, hotel rooms, 10 Downing Street and even the Fuhrerbau in Berlin are faultless . . . an utterly compelling and fantastically tense historical thriller by a writer at the very top of his game.

—— James Holland , Literary Review

What distinguishes Munich is the subtlety with which it uses the formulaic elements of the genre to explore the ethics of information and functions of bureaucracy

—— New Statesman

Fascinating . . . Seamlessly weaving his fictional tale into the real events of September 1938…Harris has once again shown himself to be a master storyteller

—— Nick Rennison , BBC History Magazine

A novel of ideas and a gripping thriller… Harris is a marvellously compelling story-teller

—— Scotsman

With moral subtlety as well as storytelling skill, Harris makes us regret the better past that never happened — while mournfully accepting the bitter one that did

—— Boyd Tonkin , Financial Times

A fantastically entertaining historical novel that you won’t want to put down until you finish . . . For me, this is a better novel than Fatherland, which posited the ‘what if Hitler was still Fuhrer in 1964?’ scenario. It is altogether more grounded and serious, but equally enjoyable

—— Nudge

Exerts a powerful grip

—— Jasper Reese , The Arts Desk

It’s hard to imagine how history can be told better

—— Sport Newspaper

Lovely details. Clever Twists. Superb.

—— Evening Standard

This novel is gripping from start to finish

—— Waitrose Weekend

In recent years there have been a number of very good novels by veterans of the Global War on Terror. None is as ambitious, inclusive or powerful as Brian Van Reet's Spoils; none has this novel's range or uncanny ability to transport the reader to the battlefield and those rarely explored margins at the battlefield's ragged edge. Spoils is a fantastic debut.

—— Aaron Gwyn, author of Wynne's War

Vivid and fierce, Spoils is an eloquent exploration of humanity. Depicting a world with no obvious villains or heroes, this novel is as important as it is timely. By exploring the nuances of motivation, loyalty, and sacrifice, Van Reet exposes the connections that bind us across even the greatest divides.

—— Virginia Reeves

The brilliance of Brian Van Reet’s Spoils lies not only in the sheer forward-motion velocity of its plotting, but in the psychological terrain it explores: what a generation of young women and men went looking for in Iraq, what they found, and why that discovery matters so profoundly for the rest of us.

—— Anthony Giardina

In Spoils, Van Reet has imbued his subject with subtlety — something that it is so often stripped of, both by combatants and the media. One rarely sees a war novel by a soldier with such convincing writing on both sides of the trenches.

—— Jonathan McAloon , Financial Times

This is a great novel… Brian Van Reet [is] a special talent.

—— Nudge

An honest glimpse into the action, emotion and futility of war.

—— UK Press Syndication

The action is realistic and relentless, the writing lean and muscular, the tale harrowing, and the horrors seemingly inevitable but no less powerful for that.

—— John Walshe , Hot Press

In dazzling and propulsive prose, Brian Van Reet explores the lives on both sides of the battle lines… Depicting a war spinning rapidly out of control, destined to become a modern classic, Spoils is an unsparing and morally complex novel that chronicles the achingly human cost of combat.

—— Victoria Sadler

Spoils reeks of the fog and futility of war… It has its own blue-collar beauty as it tells its tale from three perspectives: a gay, female US soldier, an Egyptian jihadist and a US tank commander.

—— Donal O’Donoghue , RTE Guide

Brian Van Reet has firsthand combat experience to draw upon for this powerful piece of fiction, rendering it an intensely humane story, giving credible authenticity to the plot, and scenes presented to the reader… Enlightening, thought provoking and hauntingly mesmerising, I cannot recommend Spoils highly enough to anyone interested in novels about war and conflict.

—— Sharon Mills , Nudge

Every page brims with brutal authenticity.

—— The Mail on Sunday

Spoils bears eye-widening witness to valour, horror, violence, cruelty and absurdity.

—— Marcel Theroux , Guardian
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved