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Life On Air: A History of Radio Four
 
 
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Life On Air: A History of Radio Four [Hardcover]

David Hendy
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 544 pages
  • Publisher: OUP Oxford; First Edition edition (27 Sep 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0199248818
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199248810
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16 x 3.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 361,114 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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David Hendy
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Product Description

Review

...meticulously documented... a magnificent chronicle. (Laurie Taylor, THES )

An unalloyed treat... If Radio 4 is a great four-funnelled liner, radiating serene intelligence and self-control, this is the ship's secret logbook. Life on Air is a gem. (Libby Purves, The Times )

Filled with riveting detail and anecdote, constantly illuminating ... endlessly engrossing. (Stefan Collini, Guardian Review )

Hendy has explored those relating to Radio 4 in its first two decades very thoroughly indeed. (Stefan Collini, Guardian Review )

Hendy's book will certainly sort the sheep from the goats among listeners (Kate Chisholm, Daily Telegraph )

Hendy charts in masterly detail the improbable evolution of a network. (John Tusa, Times Literary Supplement )

Hendy examines a many-faceted national treasure with the cool eye of a jeweller and the ardour of a proper fan. (Libby Purves, The Tablet )

Revelatory. (Advance praise from Ned Sherrin, broadcaster )

Eminently readable, utterly reliable, on occasions painfully frank, it is a joy to read. (Advance praise from Gillian Reynolds, Radio Critic of the Daily Telegraph )

A tremendous read: impeccable research used with wit and insight about a national treasure. (Advance praise from Jean Seaton, Official Historian of the BBC )

This is the reverse of sexed up. (Valerie Grove, Literary Review )

[An] academically rigorous, but eminently readable book that rightly sub-titles itself A History of Radio 4 (Jenni Murray, Daily Mail )

engrossing and highly entertaining reading...this is a rich book about a rich subject (Camden New Journal )

[A] fine, meticulous history (Financial Times )

There is a nugget of surprising and entertaining fact on every page. (Lisa Mullen, Time Out )

Jean Seaton, Official Historian of the BBC

'A tremendous read: impeccable research used with wit and insight about a national treasure.'

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
It would be hard to overstate the importance of David Hendy's brilliant work of cultural history. Widely recognised in academic and BBC circles as the finest work of British radio history, the award winning book is based on detailed use of archive material and is at the same time highly readable. Hendy himself trained as a Mediaeval historian before working at the BBC as a producer. He manages to combine real historical prowess with a charmingly engaging style. The book is a very significant breakthrough in cultural history, providing the reader with penetrating analysis of this quintessentially English institution. I could not recommend this highly enough! Hugh Chignell, Assistant Prof. of Broadcsting History, Bournemouth University.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Skipping to the chapter Pleasures at the end of Life on Air, is quite simply like putting Radio 4 on and finding you are at the beginning of a gripping drama, a heated debate or a review of a film that sounds a "must see". David Hendy uses this last chapter to share with us the emotional responses Radio 4 always brings out in its' listeners, who, despite having favourite "hate" bits stick with it pretty much through thick and thin as a much valued background to their daily lives. I loved the poetic bits used here : Carol Ann Duffy talks about the Shipping Forecast's power late at night, listened to in the dark as Hendy says "the power lay in it being like a sudden utterance carried through the air, unbidden but somehow consoling - darkness outside. Inside the radio's prayer - Rockall. Malin. Dogger. Finisterre." And did you know that we don't have Finisterre any more on the shipping forecast and it's been replaced with Fitzroy? or that German Bight used to be Heligoland? Or that when a BBC controller tried to axe it in 1995 as it was no longer useful to sailors who used automatic weather reports there was a considerable public outcry and he relented? Not a shout out loud revelation to be sure, but one that is typical of this brilliantly researched, beautifully written book. Life on Air isn't about trash celebs or DJs but it is filled with riveting detail and fine analysis about why this quirky, idiosyncratic and ultimately very British institution is still as popular as it is. It shows that David Hendy has been a producer at the BBC working on among other things Analysis and the World Tonight - this book is for the thoughtful reader who relishes fine writing. David Hendy won the much coveted Longmans History book of the year for this in 2008 and it is easy to see why.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Dissertation time 3 Mar 2009
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Like the reviewer below, I too was disappointed. Radio 4 has provided the backdrop to so many of our lives, including Today, PM, Letter from America, the Archers, Woman's Hour, Home Truths and so on. I was hoping for a book that delighted in the programmes and the characters that made them, but what we were served up with was a heavy undergraduate dissertaion focussing on the history, and eventually the reader just gets bogged down that it becomes less Life On Air and more Coming Up For Air. Shame..
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