Hotel
Checking in with Ian McMillan are Eimear McBride on her new novel Strange Hotel, Andy Miller on Anita Brookner's classic Hotel Du Lac, and Roger Luckhurst on corridors.
Welcome to Hotel Verb. Checking in with Ian McMillan this week are novelist Eimear McBride. Eimear won the Goldsmiths Prize and the Bailey's Women's Prize for Fiction for her debut novel 'A Girl is A Half-Formed Thing'. Since then, she's spent a lot of time in hotels, inspiring her new novel 'Strange Hotel' (Faber), in which the hotel becomes a metaphor for middle age.
Joining Eimear is Andy Miller, author of 'The Year of Reading Dangerously' and presenter of the Backlisted Podcast. Andy Miller celebrates his favourite author, Anita Brookner, and her Booker Prize-winning classic novel, 'Hotel du Lac'
And Roger Luckhurst is the author of 'Corridors: Passages of Modernity', on corridors, 'Monster hotels', and the fictional hotel corridors that populate our imaginations.
Presenter: Ian McMillan
Producer: Jessica Treen
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Andy Miller
Andy Miller is the author of ‘the Year of Reading Dangerously’ and the host of the Backlisted Podcast. We asked him to look through his bookshelves in search of the hotel in literature. He brings us the hotel as seen by the staff in the short story ‘A Dedicated Man’ by Elizabeth Taylor and the ‘excellent hotel’ at the centre of Anita Brookner’s Booker Prize Winning novel ‘Hotel du Lac’.
Roger Luckhurst
Roger Luckhurst is the author of ‘Corridors: Passages of Modernity’. He explains how is interest in the corridor as more than a way of getting from a to b began with writing about The Shining, and how Stanley Kubrick created one of the mot enduring corridors in fiction in the Overlook hotel. We also meet the hotel detectives and find out about ‘Monster hotels’ and ‘Corridor Dread’. Roger Luckhurst is Professor in Modern and Contemporary Literature at Birkbeck.Â
Eimear McBride
In Eimear McBride’s new novel ‘Strange Hotel’, we travel around the world, from Paris to Prague to Auckland, but remain firmly in a serious of near-identical hotel rooms with an unnamed woman who finds herself struggling to keep her thoughts at bay. Eimear McBride won the Goldsmith’s Prize and the Bailey’s Prize for her debut novel ‘A Girl is Half-formed Thing’, and the James Tait Black award for The Lesser Bohemians. All her books are published by Faber.
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