Noon & 8pm & 4am

PLAYS/DRAMA

THE CARNIVAL OF DEATH PART II BY L. RON HUBBARD

Fans of classic Golden Age dramas will not be disappointed with this story of undercover narcotics agent Detective Bob Clark investigating the discovery of headless bodies in the seamy side of L.A.

1pm & 9pm & 5am

IN CONVERSATION…SANDRA CISNEROS

Sandra Cisneros, the author of The House on Mango Street and Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories, is a poet and fiction writer. Self described as a “terrorist,” “anarchist,” and a “Chicana feminist,” she has said, “I’m trying to write stories that haven’t been told. I feel like a cartographer. I’m determined to fill a literary void.” Ms. Cisneros, who received a Lannan Literary Award for Fiction, read the story “Eleven” and from work in progress on October 8, 1996. Ms. Cisernos was interviewed by poet, novelist, and essayist Dorothy Allison.

 2pm & 10pm & 6am

POETS & POETRY

LOUISE GLUCK was appointed the 2003 Poet Laureate of the U.S. and received a Pulitzer Prize for her work in 1993. In this program, she reads three new unpublished poems as well as a selection of poems from previous volumes, before joining in conversation with fellow poet, James Longenbach.

 3pm & 11pm & 7am

ALTERNATIVE RADIO – Pandemics, Democracies & Dictatorships

Here at Audiobook Radio we are keen to provide a range of voices – very literally as well as in terms of opinions and views of the world. This strand created by Alternative Radio does just that. We will hear from some of the most informed minds and greatest social activists of our time whose take on justice and power does not chime with those that hold the power and don’t provide justice for all so we rarely get to hear from them in mainstream media. Different opinions always help inform our own and we are always eager to hear from listeners about this or any other strand. Contact us on the tab at www.audiobookradio.net.

Today’s talk is given by Nader Hashemi, the Director of the Centre for Middle East Studies and teacher of Middle East and Islamic politics at the Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver. The coronavirus pandemic has led to many thousands of deaths and tremendous economic dislocation. In this climate of fear, authoritarian regimes from Saudi Arabia to Hungary, from Russia to Turkey, from Iran to the Philippines use the crisis as a pretext to curtail civil liberties, expand police power and surveillance, silence their opponents, settle old scores, muzzle the press and jail dissidents. How can people in democratic societies effectively respond to the current crisis?

4pm & Midnight & 8am

The Damon Runyan Theatre

New York has given rise to many authors who record and memorialise its streets and people.  Damon Runyon is one such author who brings the New York story and its cast of characters to vibrant life.  His tongue-in-cheek tales of gamblers, hustlers, actors, gangsters and dolls appeal to our sense of what we think we know.  Their colorful monikers; ‘Big Jule,’ ‘Harry the Horse Thief,’ ‘Good Time Charlie,’ or ‘The Seldom Seen Kid’ immediately give life to his sparkling words. And life is bigger, exuberant; better.

The veteran Radio actor John Brown voices the recurring ‘Broadway’ character so central to every episode which today are Touching for a Pal and Princess O’Hara.

 5pm & 1am & 9am

THE PODCAST HOUR – THE JO SHOW

Audiobookradio is delighted to launch a new strand, namely the Podcast Hour.  Our first podcast is the Jo Show presented by silky voiced Jo Sands and features a wide range of creatives with plenty to say….she calls it soul sipping maybe because her guests do some soul searching as Jo always gets to the parts that other interviewers don’t reach as you are about to find out.  Today her guest is BZ Cullins, a highly sought-after voice talent, actor, producer, narrator, director, and voice coach. His voice can be heard endorsing numerous familiar brands from McDonalds to Coca Cola and he chats about walking in purpose, passion, and patience.

6pm & 2am & 10am

HOLLYWOOD STAGE

Hollywood is indelibly printed in our minds as a go to place for entertainment and has been for decades. We take you back in time as director and producer Irving Cummings unveils Mrs Miniver starring GREER GARSON who shows why she deserved an Oscar nomination for her title role in this moving war story.

7pm & 3am & 11am

SHORT STORIES

PSYCHOLOGY BY KATHERINE MANSFIELD. READ BY LIZA ROSS

New Zealand’s most famous writer, who was closely associated with D.H. Lawrence and something of a rival of Virginia Woolf. Mansfield’s creative years were burdened with loneliness, illness, jealousy, alienation – all this reflected in her work with the bitter depiction of marital and family relationships of her middle-class characters. Her short stories are also notable for their use of stream of consciousness. Like the Russian writer Anton Chekhov, Mansfield depicted trivial events and subtle changes in human behaviour. This work first appeared in 1920. In this short story, a male and a female artist are so painfully self-conscious of the ebb and flow of their relationship that they cannot get together.

WHERE WAS WYCH STREET BY STACY AUMONIER. READ BY RICHARD MITCHLEY

Stacy Aumonier was born near Regent’s Park, London on 31st March 1877 and came from a family with a strong and sustained tradition in the visual arts; sculptors and painters.  On leaving school it seemed the family tradition would also be his career path as his early talents were that of a landscape painter and he exhibited paintings at the Royal Academy in the early years of the twentieth century.  However, later Aumonier began a career in a second branch of the arts at which he enjoyed a short but outstanding success—as a stage performer writing and performing his own sketches and of course, publishing short stories.  This one is a wonderful social satire and features his hallmark wit and perceptive observations on human nature.

THE MYSTERY OF THE SEMI DETACHED BY EDITH NESBIT READ BY GHIZELA ROWE

Edith Nesbit is more famously known as a writer of children’s stories but also for ghost stories.  Born in 1858 in Kennington, then part of Surrey and now London.  Her early life was one of constant house changes before meeting, age 17, Hubert Bland who she was to marry three years later – whilst she was 7 months pregnant.  Additionally, Bland kept his affair with another woman going throughout.  The two children of this relationship were raised by Edith as her own as well as their own three.  They founded the Fabian Society in 1884.  Nesbit mastered the Victorian ghost story and this one is a brilliant example which offers a glimpse into a misanthropic and incomprehensible cosmos – hostile and cruelly indifferent to the efforts of human diligence. This report is called “The Mystery of the Semi-Detached,” and it is no misnomer because unanswered questions and unoffered explanation fuel the heat of the revulsion this sketch engenders. Grim, cynical, and inexplicable, the vision of the semi-detached is perhaps more atrocious to the unwitting, helpless seer than to its slaughtered victim – Michael Kellermeyer (Vol 24)

FRIDAY 14th March

59oon & 8pm & 4am

PLAYS/DRAMA

The Constant (Part 2 of 2) by Kenley Kristofferson

The Constant is a radio play about five friends and a new city. Two years earlier, life was easy in their rural town – everyone was who they were and life was simpler. At the nexus of life’s great turning points, people either grow together or grow apart. No one could have expected that their move to the big city would affect their lifelong relationships so much, or end one of their lives.

This original show by Kenley Kristofferson is a heartfelt, grown-up coming-of-age tale with a fresh youthful sound with an expansive soundtrack featuring bands, singers and songwriters located in the region of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

Does the city change people, or do people become who they really are when they leave their small town? Does the anonymity of the city allow you to discover yourself away from the prying eyes of your hometown culture? Or does it corrupt you when you go outside the bounds of what you’ve known? We explore these issues in… “The Constant.”

 1pm & 9pm & 5am

IN CONVERSATION… TREVOR PAGLEN

Trevor Paglen is a photographer whose work deliberately blurs the lines between science, contemporary art, journalism, and other disciplines in order to fashion painstaking and unbeknownst researched methods to decipher the world in which we live. His subjects include experimental geography, state secrecy, military symbology, and visuality. He is the author of many books,, the most recent of which is The Last Pictures which explores themes of Deep Time (the idea of geologic time), politics, and art in a collection of photographs. He is interviewed by writer, historian and activist Rebecca Solnit.

2pm & 10pm & 6am

POETS & POETRY featuring SIMON ORTIZ

This edition of Poets & Poetry features one of Native America’s most important, influential and widely respected writers and poets, namely Simon Ortiz.  He was born in 1941 and is a member of the Eagle Clan and continues to have strong cultural ties to his family, people and land that forge his work with great significance and purpose.  He reads a few of his poems and talks about his work with David Barsamian, one of America’s most tireless and wide-ranging investigative journalists who is the creator of the regular radio show Alternative Radio which you can hear on Audiobookradio most Mondays and get lots more info from the website – alternativeradio.org.  But for now, listen to the wonderful poetry of Simon Ortiz.

3pm & 11pm & 7am

ALTERNATIVE RADIO – TARIQ ALI (Part 1)

Here at Audiobook Radio we are keen to provide a range of voices – very literally as well as in terms of opinions and views of the world. This strand created by Alternative Radio does just that. We will hear from some of the most informed minds and greatest social activists of our time whose take on justice and power does not chime with those that hold the power and don’t provide justice for all so we rarely get to hear from them in mainstream media. Different opinions always help inform our own and we are always eager to hear from listeners about this or any other strand. Contact us on the tab at www.audiobookradio.net.

Today’s talk is given by Tariq Ali, the internationally renowned writer and activist, originally born in Pakistan but resident in London where he is an editor of New Left Review. A charismatic speaker, filmmaker, playwright, and novelist having written numerous books.

4pm & Midnight & 8am

The Damon Runyon Theatre

New York has given rise to many authors who record and memorialise its streets and people.  Damon Runyon is one such author who brings the New York story and its cast of characters to vibrant life.  His tongue-in-cheek tales of gamblers, hustlers, actors, gangsters and dolls appeal to our sense of what we think we know.  Their colorful monikers; ‘Big Jule,’ ‘Harry the Horse Thief,’ ‘Good Time Charlie,’ or ‘The Seldom Seen Kid’ immediately give life to his sparkling words. And life is bigger, exuberant; better.

The veteran Radio actor John Brown voices the recurring ‘Broadway’ character so central to every episode which today are Dancing Dan’s Christmas and Pick A Winner

5pm & 1am & 9am

THE PODCAST HOUR – THE JO SHOW

Audiobookradio is delighted to launch a new strand, namely the Podcast Hour.  Our first podcast is the Jo Show presented by silky voiced Jo Sands and features a wide range of creatives with plenty to say….she calls it soul sipping maybe because her guests do some soul searching as Jo always gets to the parts that other interviewers don’t reach as you are about to find out.  Today her guest is DC Gomez, USA Today best-selling author, public speaker, mentor and podcaster who has a quirky and at times dark sense of humour that can be seen across the many different genres she writes in.

6pm & 2am & 10am

HOLLYWOOD STAGE with It’s A Wonderful Life

Hollywood is indelibly printed in our minds as a go to place for entertainment and has been for decades. We take you back in time as The Hollywood ringmaster himself, CECIL B DE MILLE unveils It’s A Wonderful Life.  Reprising his film role in this memorable classic James Stewart has a perfect life. A loving wife, Mary (Donna Reed), four young children, and his own business, which he inherited from his father. Facing a financial crisis one Christmas Eve he contemplates suicide. This being Hollywood he is saved at the last moment by the intervention of his guardian angel who takes him on a tour of how the world would be without him. His friendly Main Street America town is sad, impoverished and bleak.

7pm & 3am & 11am

SHORT STORIES

MRS PACKLETIDE’S TIGER BY SAKI. READ BY BARBARA LEIGH-HUNT.

In ‘Mrs. Packletide’s Tiger,’ Saki (H.H. Munro) tackles the Victorian-Edwardian fascination with wild-game hunting, as well as the timeless drive to keep up with the Joneses. In this case, the person with whom Mrs. Packletide must ‘keep up’ is not named Jones, but Mrs. Bimberton. Mrs. Bimberton has recently traveled in one of those new-fangled contraptions, the airplane, piloted by an Algerian aviator. As a result, she has become the toast of British-occupied India.

THE FLY IN THE OINTMENT BY D.H. LAWRENCE. READ BY DAVID SHAW-PARKER.

When a teacher receives a gift just as he is about to leave his house for school, little else occupies his mind as he looks forward to his evening and the company he yearns for.