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Jeremy Hardy Feels It
Jeremy Hardy Feels It
Oct 2, 2024 8:21 PM

Author:Jeremy Hardy,Jeremy Hardy

Jeremy Hardy Feels It

Jeremy Hardy returns with a brand new series that not only seconds that emotion but explains it too. Yes, BBC Radio 4's most passionate polemicist returns to the airwaves with a new format which promises to be both personal and profound, and to present sides of Jeremy you won't have heard before. He may even sing. (He won't sing.)

The News Quiz and I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue regular, proud progenitor of ten series of Jeremy Hardy Speaks To The Nation, and winner of numerous awards and almost certainly the Nobel Prize for Chemistry, Jeremy is famous for lines like:

"Kids should never be fashion slaves, especially in the Far East. My 12-year old daughter asked me for a new pair of trainers. I told her she was old enough to go out and make her own."

and -

"Islam is no weirder than Christianity. Both are just Judaism with the jokes taken out."

His unique world view once lead him to be likened to "an incendiary vicar". Gillian Reynolds called him, "an idealist, a dissenter, a polemicist and moralist - he's a salutary reminder that jokes can, and should, be about big things."

The show is produced by Jeremy's long-standing accomplice, David Tyler, whose radio credits include Cabin Pressure, John Finnemore’s Double Acts, Thanks A Lot, Milton Jones!, Marcus Brigstocke's The Brig Society, Kevin Eldon Will See You Now, Armando Iannucci's Charm Offensive, Giles Wemmbley Hogg Goes Off, The Castle, The 99p Challenge, Deep Trouble, My First Planet, Radio Active and Bigipedia. His TV credits include Paul Merton - The Series, Spitting Image, Absolutely, The Paul Calf Video Diary, Coogan's Run and exec producing Victoria Wood's Dinnerladies.

In the four shows, Jeremy is feeling - in turn - happy, sad, fearful and finally, hopeful!

Reviews

I loved Gone. It will stay with me for a long time

—— Cerys Matthews

A remarkable and original memoir . . . thrilling

—— Barbara Ellen , Observer

Intense, elegiac and completely mesmerizing ... a beautifully pitched memoir which hits many different registers

—— The Bookseller (Book of the Month)

Riveting . . . her story of bereavement and resilience, and the determination to pursue one's art no matter what obstacles stand in one's way, is as enchanting as Kym's recording of a Brahms concerto

—— Glamour

A remarkable story of love and loss . . . Also a gripping thriller that contains a hint of scandal, as well as money, villains and a secret

—— Helen Davies , Sunday Times

Fascinating . . . a tragic musical love affair . . . told in admirably lucid and uncluttered prose

—— Adam Sweeting , The Arts Desk

A movingly uncertain memoir of obsession, love and loss . . . Kym has an easy, elegant way of describing music

—— Financial Times

Deeply moving

—— Sarah Foot , Daily Mail

This book makes for a devastating but ultimately redemptive read. It is much more than a story about a lost violin: it is about who we are, how we love, how we grieve

—— Clemency Burton-Hill , Mail on Sunday

Gone is an extraordinary memoir of violinist and child prodigy Min Kym as she grows to understand her gift

—— Good Housekeeping

A story to pluck at your heartstrings

—— The Times

Swiftly, skilfully drawn

—— Spectator

The memoir is both intensely raw- Kym's agony is at times so vivid it is hard to read on- and beautifully crafted

—— The Lady

An incredibly moving story

—— Radio 3 In Tune

A happy book

—— Jane Garvey , BBC Radio4 Woman's Hour

What joy. A big-hearted, beguiling story full of charm, gentleness and humour and peopled with glorious characters. A love song to beauty on the margins, friendship, and the intrinsic power of music.

—— Keggie Carew, author of DADLAND

I especially adored the music bits; fascinating snippets about everyone from Liszt to Led Zep.

—— Wendy Holden , Daily Mail

An uplifting read, full of humour and authentic characters.

—— Press Association

This nostalgia hit will lift your spirits.

—— Closer Magazine

I loved Rachel Joyce's The Music Shop.

—— Lenny Henry , Radio Times

Rachel Joyce has established a reputation for novels that celebrate the dignity and courage of ordinary people and the resilience of the human spirit.

—— Observer

A tender novel about heartache and redemption, full of humour and perceptive observations,

—— Daily Express

Delicately observed... this one both charms and stings... A romance about a lonely muso [and] a love letter to the power of vinyl.

—— Metro

Book of the day

—— The Independent

A sensitive, sweetly melancholic story of music, connection and community

—— S Magazine

BOOK OF THE WEEK: An uplifting read…full of humour and authentic characters

—— Midweek Extra

Breezily written, heart-warming and unashamedly sentimental… [a] modern fairy tale

—— Mail on Sunday

Rachel Joyce returns to some of the themes in her bestselling debut The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry: loss, the past and the bonds that can be forged with strangers. This time the pilgrimage is through music.

—— Press Association

A quirky, romantic fairy tale perfect for summer.

—— You Magazine

My Christmas pick: I love any novel by Rachel Joyce, whose The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry was a huge success. Now she has created another Pied Piper of the heart in Frank, the proprietor of The Music Shop...This bewitching love story sings out the unique beauty of every human being, leaving you uplifted.

—— Bel Mooney , Daily Mail

The Music Shop is a one gulp, super-satisfying read. Love it, love it, love it.

—— Sir Lenny Henry

Joyce, a British actress and playwright, whose first novel, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, was longlisted for the Man Booker, continues to enchant and break hearts with her lovable misfits trying to survive in a modern world determined to pass them by. Irresistible.

—— Beth Anderson , Library Journal

An unforgettable story of music, loss and hope. Fans of High Fidelity, meet your next quirky love story. Vinyl fans, hold onto your turntables - Joyce's latest is a buoyant homage to the healing power of music well-played.

—— PEOPLE magazine

‘The Music Shop’ is an unabashedly sentimental tribute to the healing power of great songs, and Joyce is hip to greatness in any key…. [The novel] captures the sheer, transformative joy of romance — ‘a ballooning of happiness.’ Joyce’s understated humor…offers something like the pleasure of A.A. Milne for adults. She has a kind of sweetness that’s never saccharine, a kind of simplicity that’s never simplistic…. I wouldn’t change a single note. Rachel Joyce, if music be the food of love, write on!

—— The Washington Post

Rachel Joyce’s charming and deceptively simple fourth novel chronicles an offbeat love story between a mystery woman and an ardent, if lonely, collector and gently explores the power of memory and music and the certainty of change…. love, friendship, and especially the healing powers of music all rise together into a triumphant crescendo…. This lovely novel is as satisfying and enlightening as the music that suffuses its every page.

—— The Boston Globe

Magnificent…. Joyce’s novel is intellectually and emotionally satisfying on every possible level. If you love words, if you love music, if you love, this is 2018’s first must-read, and it will be without question one of the year’s best.

—— Top Pick in Fiction, January 2018 , BookPage

Joyce has a knack for quickly sketching characters in a way that makes them stick…. This is a touching, sometimes funny book about surviving change, the power of music and the importance of having a community — wacky or not. As with all of Joyce’s books, it will surprise you.

—— Minneapolis Star Tribune

Joyce…continues to enchant and break hearts with her lovable misfits trying to survive in a modern world determined to pass them by. Irresistible.

—— Library Journal

Magical…. [Rachel] Joyce has a winner in this deceptively simple love story…. Joyce’s odes to music…and the notion that the perfect song can transform one’s life make this novel a triumph.

—— Publishers Weekly

Whether on foot, as in her novel The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, or track by track, on this unlikely musical odyssey, Joyce excels in enveloping readers in epic journeys of lost connections and loving reunions.

—— Booklist

[Rachel] Joyce sets up a charming cast of characters, and her spirals into the sonic landscapes of brilliant musicians are delightful, casting a vivid backdrop for the quietly desperate romance between Frank and Ilse. From nocturnes to punk, this musical romance is ripe for filming.

—— Kirkus Reviews
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