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Growing Up

Booker prize-winning novelist David Szalay, filmmaker Penny Woolcock and historian Laura Tisdall explore childhood, adolescence and adulthood, in conversation with Naomi Alderman.

How do the stories we inherit, and the ones we tell, shape our journey from childhood into adulthood? In Radio 4's weekly discussion programme, Naomi Alderman and guests examine the shifting boundaries between youth, experience and societal expectation across memoir, history and fiction.

Booker Prize winner David Szalay talks about Flesh, his stark, propulsive novel tracing one boy’s path from adolescence in Hungary to adulthood among London’s super rich, exploring desire, power, class and the ways childhood experiences reverberate across a lifetime.

Filmmaker and writer Penny Woolcock grew up in a British enclave in Argentina: her coming-of-age memoir, The Man Who Gave Me a Biscuit, interweaves memories of teenage rebellion with the buried histories of genocide, authoritarianism and a society built on repression.

The historian Laura Tisdall discusses We Have Come to Be Destroyed, her vivid account of growing up in Cold War Britain, revealing how young people challenged the world adults made for them - from activism and anxieties about the future, to everyday resistance against narrow expectations.

Producer: Katy Hickman
Assistant Producer: Natalia Fernandez

Release date:

42 minutes

On radio

Next Monday09:00

Broadcasts

  • Next Monday09:00
  • Next Monday21:00

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