Collected: The Podcast
Welcome to our fortnightly podcast, where we delve into the vibrant world of contemporary writers and the literary life they lead. Offering a deeper and more nuanced perspective on the writing journey, we go beyond the surface often presented in the media. This season, we're thrilled to feature an exceptional lineup of special guests, including best-selling author and Women's Prize founder Kate Mosse, poet and artist Ella Frears, Royal Court Associate Playwright Ishy Din, WritersMosaic Director Colin Grant, and the award-winning author Deepa Anappara. Plus, enjoy extracts from our archive, showcasing our writers reflecting on their creative processes. Join us...
Elif Shafak, award-winning & international best-selling novelist, essayist and activist
Elif Shafak, the internationally acclaimed Turkish-British author of 21 books joins host Doug Johnstone on a deep dive into the RLF sound archive. Responding to other writers' observations, she reflects on her approach to structure, the role of activism in her writing, what it means to write a book that won't be read for 100 years, and her love of heavy metal music.
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Matt Carr, fiction and non-fiction writer, journalist and podcaster
Presenter Paul Dodgson is joined by Matt Carr, whose wide-ranging curiosity has led him to write books on topics as diverse as the history of terrorism, the conquest of Patagonia and Charles Darwin. As a lifelong Hispanophile, Matt also writes fiction and nonfiction often focused on themes from Spanish and Latin American culture, history, and politics.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse, author and genocide survivor
French-Rwandan writer Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse joins host Sonia Faleiro and responds to clips from the RLF archives, using them as ways into her creative process. This moving discussion, which features frank descriptions of violence, reveals how the will to survive can inspire storytelling, the importance of sharing survivors' accounts, and how this can build fellowship and community in the wake of profound trauma.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Ian Seed, translator, short-story writer and prose poet
Host Jonathan Tulloch is joined by award-winning poet, translator, short-story writer, essayist and editor Ian Seed, to explore what makes a prose poem, how translating can influence writing and the power of redrafting.
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Blake Morrison, poet, memoirist and critic
Blake Morrison joins Julia Copus to respond to material from the RLF archives, and reflect on his work and process. They discuss how he grew into being more confessional in his writing, how he encourages students to overcome their fears when writing memoir and how he has come to write in such an extraordinary range of genres.
© Royal Literary Fund
www.rlf.org.uk
Marianne Colbran, TV scriptwriter turned criminologist
Presenter Doug Johnstone is joined by Marianne Colbran, whose work explores how media presentations of crime and the police differ from reality. They discuss finding your voice in academic writing, the pressures of TV writers' rooms and how an unexpected stint as a magazine sex expert launched Marianne's writing career.
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#490: Pragya Agarwal, behavioural and data scientist, and founder of The 50 Percent Project
Academic Pragya Agarwal joins host Sonia Faleiro on a deep dive into the Royal Literary Fund archives, using the recordings to reflect on her work drawing attention to the spaces where women have been rendered invisible, the role that science writing can play in combatting climate change and the inequalities embedded in the publishing industry.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Caroline Sanderson, Associate Editor of The Bookseller, critic, non-fiction author
Ann Morgan is joined by Associate Editor of The Bookseller, critic, non-fiction author and regular Collected presenter Caroline Sanderson, whose new book Listen With Father has just hit the bookshop shelves. Together, they discuss programming literary festivals, finding a new way of writing about music and bereavement, and how books journalism has changed over the past 25 years.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Jonathan Edwards, Award-winning poet on why rejection hits writers so hard
Award-winning poet Jonathan Edwards delves into the Royal Literary Fund's sound archives with host Julia Copus, using other writers' reflections to explore his views on the role of teachers, what happens when a poem really lives and why rejection hits writers so hard.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Rosemary Jenkinson, writer, playwright, poet, essayist, memoirist and cultural commentator
Host Jonathan Tulloch is joined by short-story writer, playwright, poet, essayist, memoirist and cultural commentator Rosemary Jenkinson, who writes edgy work often based on people she meets in the pub, and has braved intimidating situations to record untold stories from the Northern Irish Troubles.
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Tessa Hadley, author of novels, short stories and non-fiction
Celebrated author Tessa Hadley, in conversation with presenter Caroline Sanderson, delves into the Royal Literary Fund's sound archives, using the recordings to reflect on the challenges of the writing life and her work spinning psychologically astute domestic dramas.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Alex Wong, literary critic and poet
Julia Copus is joined in the studio by Alex Wong, a literary critic and poet who writes without being able to visualise images.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Laura Barnett, bestselling novelist and writing teacher
Internationally bestselling author Laura Barnett delves into the Royal Literary Fund's sound archives with presenter Ann Morgan, exploring writer's block, the perils and perks of publication day, and how swapping the city for the countryside affects writing.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Howard Linskey, crime writer
Presenter Doug Johnstone is joined in the studio by fellow crime writer Howard Linskey to chew the fat about the writing life and share his surprising, non-linear approach to storytelling.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Deepa Anappara, award-winning novelist and journalist
Edgar award-winner Deepa Anappara delves into the Royal Literary Fund archives with presenter Sonia Faleiro, and shares how she battled self-doubt, discrimination and grief on the journey to and through publication.
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
www.rlf.org.uk
Ishy Din, playwright and screenwriter
Presenter Juliet Gilkes Romero is joined by playwright and screenwriter Ishy Din, who reflects on how his upbringing on Teesside and work as a cab driver shaped his instinct for storytelling.
You can find more of Ishy's work on WritersMosaic.
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
www.rlf.org.uk
Bonus Episode: The RLF Dramatic Writers Discussion
In this bonus episode, RLF trustee Mark Lawson explores the challenges new and established dramatic writers face today as the Royal Literary Fund celebrates the announcement of the first recipient of the Robert Holman Award this #WorldTheatreDay. The discussion features the award-winning playwrights and founder of The Friends of Robert Holman, David Eldridge (Festen, Market Boy, Under the Blue Sky, Beginning, Middle) and friend of Holman, Simon Stephens (Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, Vanya), in addition to Juliet Gilkes Romero, RLF Fellow and National Theatre Writer in Residence (The Gift, The Whip, Day of the Living), I...
Ella Frears, genre-busting poet and visual artist
Poet and artist Ella Frears delves into the Royal Literary Fund's sound archives, using other writers' reflections to explore her craft and career, and discuss the creation of her latest hit work: a page-turning, book-length poem in the form of an email to an estate agent. With RLF Collected host, Julia Copus.
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www.rlf.org.uk
Holly Race, novelist and screenwriter
Presenter Jonathan Tulloch is joined in the studio by novelist and screenwriter Holly Race, who uses fantasy and historical inspiration to interrogate issues of class, privilege, gender bias and political extremism. She shares the extraordinary success story behind her latest novel.
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
www.rlf.org.uk
Colin Grant, author, Writers Mosaic director and historian
Presenter Juliet Gilkes Romero is joined in the studio by WritersMosaic director, author, historian and former BBC radio producer Colin Grant. They delve into the RLF archives and explore one of Grant's favourite clips from Collected's sister platform.
Music by Andy Glen. Research by Nicola Baldwin. Post-production by James Robertson. Produced by Ann Morgan.
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
www.rlf.org.uk
Paul Dodgson, memoirist, and song and scriptwriter
Presenter Sonia Faleiro is joined in the studio by Paul Dodgson, a writer, radio producer, musician and teacher with a special interest in life-writing and scriptwriting.
Music by Andy Glen. Research by Nicola Baldwin. Post-production by James Robertson. Produced by Ann Morgan.
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
www.rlf.org.uk
Kate Mosse, founder of Women's Prizes and bestselling author with Caroline Sanderson
The internationally bestselling author and co-founder of what is now the Women's Prize for Fiction delves into the Royal Literary Fund's sound archives, using the recordings to reflect on the highs and lows of her career.
The Map of Bones by Kate Mosse is published on 10 Oct by Mantle (Pan Macmillan) and is available as a hardback, ebook and audio recording. Kate's live one-woman stage show, Labyrinth, will be on tour in 2025. Dates and info can be found here:
www.labyrinthlive2025.com
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© Royal Literary Fund. All rights r...
Sylvia Patterson, award-winning author and music journalist
Presenter Doug Johnstone launches the new Collected podcast in the company of award-winning author and music journalist Sylvia Patterson.
www.rlf.org.uk
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
Music by Andy Glen. Research by Nicola Baldwin. Post-production by James Robertson. Produced by Ann Morgan.
Trailer - Collected: The Podcast from the Royal Literary Fund is back!
Welcome to our fortnightly podcast, where we delve into the vibrant world of contemporary writers. New episodes of Collected from the Royal Literary Fund launch on 19 January.
Subscribe now and explore the world of writers today. Available wherever you get your podcasts.
www.rlf.org.uk
© Royal Literary Fund. All rights reserved.
Music by Andy Glen. Research by Nicola Baldwin. Post-production by James Robertson. Produced by Ann Morgan.