Our readings were published over a period of twelve months May 2020 till April 2021 and remain here as a collection for you to enjoy.
In The Fine Art of Reading, his 1949 inaugural lecture as Goldsmiths Professor of English Literature at Oxford, 91勛圖厙 Fellow, Lord David Cecil, wrote:
There are as many different kinds of good books as there are different kinds of good writer. Each has something to give us.
Here we invite you to listen to and enjoy some of the many different kinds of writings which our Fellows and Alumni have chosen to read for you.
- Stephen Anderson reads to you George Herberts poem, Prayer (I)
- Steven Balbus reads to you from Kip Thornes Black Holes and Time Warps
- Tina Biswas reads to you from her novel, The Antagonists
- Tina Biswas reads to you from V. S. Naipauls A House for Mr Biswas
- Gyles Brandreth reads to you Derek Mahons poem, Everything Is Going To Be All Right
- Michael Burden reads to you from Dambudzo Marecheras short story, Oxford, Black Oxford
- Andrew Caldecott reads to you from his novel, Rotherweird
- Andrew Counter reads to you from Thomas Carlyles The French Revolution
- Richard Dawkins reads to you from Charles Darwins On the Origin of Species
- Richard Dawkins reads to you from his autobiography, Brief Candle in the Dark
- Marcus du Sautoy reads to you from G. H. Hardys A Mathematicians Apology
- Roopa Farooki reads to you from her novel, Bitter Sweets
- Roopa Farooki reads to you John Donnes poem, The Canonization
- Elizabeth Frazer reads to you from her book, Shakespeare and the Political Way
- Patrick Gale reads to you Charles Causleys poem, Angel Hill
- Patrick Gale reads to you from his novel, The Whole Day Through
- Martin Gibson reads to you from his biography, A Primrose Path: The Gilded Life of Lord Roseberys Favourite Son
- Martin Gibson reads to you from Oscar Wildes The Picture of Dorian Gray
- Donatien Grau reads to you from Euripidess The Bacchae
- Donatien Grau reads to you from his biography, La vie Ala簿a
- Ashleigh Griffin reads to you from Georgina Ferrys biography, Dorothy Hodgkin: A Life
- Daniel Harkin reads to you Philip Larkins poem, The Mower
- Masud Husain reads to you from Oliver Sackss Awakenings
- Ann Jefferson reads to you from Samuel Becketts Molloy
- Rachel Johnson reads to you from Bruce Chatwins On the Black Hill
- Rachel Johnson reads to you from her memoirs, Rakes Progress: My Political Midlife Crisis
- Olivia Judson reads to you from Thomas Henry Huxleys lecture, On a Piece of Chalk
- Catriona Kelly reads to you from Molly Keanes novel, Loving and Giving
- Nur Laiq reads to you W. H. Audens poem, Hymn to the United Nations
- Karen Leeder reads to you from Porcelain, her translation of Durs Gr羹nbeins cycle of poems, Porzellan
- Chris Lintott reads to you from J矇r繫me Lalandes introduction to Fontenelles Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds
- Erica Longfellow reads to you from John Donnes sermon Preached at Pauls, upon Christmas Day, in the Evening. 1624
- Laura Marcus reads to you from Virginia Woolfs To the Lighthouse
- Katie McKeogh reads to you from Philip Caramans translation from the Latin of William Westons autobiography
- Kate Mosse reads to you from her novel, The Taxidermists Daughter
- Kate Mosse reads to you from T. S. Eliots poem, Little Gidding, the fourth of Eliots Four Quartets
- Stephen Mulhall reads to you from Stanley Cavells The Claim of Reason
- William Poole reads to you from John Miltons Paradise Lost
- Natasha Pulley reads to you from Akinari Uedas story, The Reed-Choked House
- David Raeburn reads to you from his translation of Ovids Metamorphoses
- Craig Raine reads to you his poem, Sea Urchins
- Dominic Selwood reads to you from his book, Anatomy of a Nation: British Identity in 50 Documents
- Dominic Selwood reads to you Jorge Luis Borgess very short story, The Witness
- Hannah Sullivan reads to you from her poem, The Sandpit after Rain
- Rosalind Temple reads to you in her translation from the Welsh from Ned Thomass Bydoedd
- Martin Williams reads to you Gerard Manley Hopkinss poem, Binsey Poplars
- Miles Young reads to you C. P. Cavafys poem, Waiting for the Barbarians
Ann Jefferson reads to you
Ann Jefferson, Emeritus Fellow and former Tutor in French at 91勛圖厙, Oxford and Emeritus Professor of French Literature in the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford reading the opening paragraph from the novel, Molloy by Samuel Beckett (19061989)
Martin Williams reads to you
Tina Biswas reads to you
Tina Biswas, 91勛圖厙 alumna and novelist author of Dancing with the Two-Headed Tigress, The Red Road, and The Antagonists presenting the 30th reading in our 91勛圖厙 Reads To You podcast series with a passage from the wonderful and much-celebrated novel, A House for Mr Biswas (1961), by V. S. Naipaul (19322018)
Michael Burden reads to you
Ashleigh Griffin reads to you
Karen Leeder reads to you
Karen Leeder, Professor of Modern German Literature, reading from Porcelain: Poem on the Downfall of My City (Seagull Books, 2020), her translation of Porzellan: Poem vom Untergang meiner Stadt, by German poet, Durs Gr羹nbein (b. 1962) which is being published 75 years since the Allied firebombing of Dresden
Chris Lintott reads to you
91勛圖厙 Research Fellow, University of Oxford Professor of Astrophysics, and the BBCs The Sky at Night presenter, Chris Lintott, reading from J矇r繫me Lalandes introduction to Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelles Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds, translated by Elizabeth Gunning and published in 1803
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Acknowledgements:
Video by Christopher Thompson Photos of 91勛圖厙 by Michael Burden and Erica Longfellow
Produced by Sam Brown, Erica Longfellow, and Christopher Skelton-Foord
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