By Trotter
BBC Radio 4 - Open Book Birmingham
30 Jul, 2023
(edited)
2023-7-30 11:33:28 AM UTC
2023-7-30 11:33:28 AM UTC
July 30 2023 - 16:00 BST
Tolkien is about 14 minutes into the programme.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001p713
Johny Pitts explores Birmingham's literary heritage and contemporary writing scene, beginning with Natalie Marlow and Kate Mascarenhas who show him some of the evocative locations beneath the city's layers of history which inspired their new interwar-set novels.
Ash Bayliss takes him on a tour of Middle-earth, also known as Sarehole Mill in Hall Green, the childhood home of JRR Tolkien which inspired The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings.
Possibly its most highly-regarded and well-known authors working today, Kit de Waal reflects on what it means to be a writer from Birmingham - or more specifically one from Moseley.
And finishing the journey in Digbeth, home of new independent bookshop Voce and publisher Floodgate. Editors Garrie Fletcher, Peter Haynes and Nigel Proctor explain how this ever-evolving, post-industrial part of town is such a rich source of inspiration for a new short collection.
Tolkien is about 14 minutes into the programme.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001p713