Faculty of Arts,
Chulalongkorn University
2202441
British Fiction from the Twentieth Century to the Present
Puckpan Tipayamontri
Office: BRK 1106
Office Hours: M 1–3
and by appointment
Phone: 0 2218 1780
puckpan.t@chula.ac.th
Virtual Fireside Readings
Date: Every weekday (Monday to Friday, except where indicated in
the tentative schedule below)
Time:
8:00–8:30 p.m.
Location: Zoom Meeting Room
Throughout the semester, there is a
fireside reading of British fiction every evening (exceptions are
indicated in the schedule below). Selections come from our 2202441 British
Fiction from the Twentieth Century to the Present syllabus and other
relevant stories and material. Some will be read by professional voice
actors (ex. from available audio books and voice clips), others by
volunteers. Unless indicated otherwise, readings are by participants of
that evening.
Come sit around with our twenty-first century community of storytellers
and story lovers, and travel to new places and times every night. It's a
study break that helps you study.
Links are given to the texts so that you can follow along if you wish. You
can also experiment with just listening to the story without reading along
as it is also enjoyable and gives you a different experience of it.
If you discover an audio clip to recommend, please e-mail me the link or
source so that I can post it on our shared Media List and/or include some on our schedule of
readings below.
To volunteer on an evening, please e-mail me the date you would like to read and the
selection of your choice. Several people can also work together to do
different voices/characters in the story.
Tentative Schedule (Sign up to read
by e-mailing
acharn Puckpan with the date and your selection title.)
Jan. 19: 1900s [Listen | Volunteer]
Jan. 20: 1900s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Jan. 21: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Jan. 22: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Jan.
23: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Joseph
Conrad, The Shadow-Line chapter 3 (pp. 291–93)
- Bruce Chatwin, On
the Black Hill chapter 20
Jan. 24: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Joseph
Conrad, The Shadow-Line chapter 4 (p. 323), chapter 6 (p. 358)
- Bruce Chatwin, On
the Black Hill chapter 12
Jan. 25: 1910s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Joseph
Conrad, The Shadow-Line excerpt
- Bruce Chatwin, On
the Black Hill chapter 21
Jan.
26: 1900s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Joseph
Conrad, The Shadow-Line chapter 5 (pp. 327–30)
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black
Hill chapter 26
Jan. 27: 1900s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Joseph Conrad, The Shadow-Line
chapter 5–6 (pp. 340–43)
- Bruce Chatwin, On
the Black Hill chapter 14
Jan. 28: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce
Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 15
- Agatha Christie, "The Witness for the Prosecution," 1925, narrated
by Christopher Lee; pp. 1–7 ("and asked instead a further question")
Jan. 29: 1920s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce
Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 23
- Agatha Christie, "The Witness for the Prosecution," 1925, narrated
by Christopher Lee; pp. 7 ("'And you did handle her affairs for her at
her request?'")–12 ("that must be just Janet's imagination")
Jan.
30: 1920s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black Hill
chapter 25
- Agatha Christie, "The Witness for the Prosecution," 1925, narrated
by Christopher Lee; pp. 13 ("'And that is all?'")–18 ("He wished he
felt more conviction on the point.")
Jan. 31: 1920s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce
Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 27
- Agatha Christie, "The Witness for the Prosecution," 1925, narrated
by Christopher Lee; pp. 18 ("The police court proceedings were brief
and dramatic.")–24 ("he murmured to himself as he got in")
Feb. 1: 1920s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 28
- Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway excerpt, narrated by
Virginia Leishman, Recorded Books, 2002; pp. 3 ("Mrs. Dalloway said
she would buy the flowers herself.")–5 ("this moment of June.) [3:56
min.]
- Agatha Christie, "The Witness for the Prosecution," 1925, narrated
by Christopher Lee; pp. 24 ("The trial of Leonard Vole for the murder
of Emily French aroused widespread interest.")–33 [9:00 min.]
Feb.
2: 1930s [Listen | Volunteer]
Feb. 3: 1930s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 4: 1930s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 5: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce
Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 32
- George
Orwell, Animal Farm chapter
2 (pp. 25–31
"All
were agreed that no animal must ever live there.")
Feb.
6: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 7: 1940s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 8: 1940s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Feb.
9: 1940s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Feb. 10: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- George
Orwell, Animal Farm chapter
5 (pp. 56 "Apart from the disputes over the windmill")–6 (pp. 63–73)
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 37
(pp. 189–91)
Feb. 11: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 12: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb.
13: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 14: 1940s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 15: 1940s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Feb.
16: 1940s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- George
Orwell, Animal
Farm chapter
7 (pp. 74–81 "But boxer was still a little uneasy.")
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Hide and Seek" pp. 85–89 ("but that was rather
too much to hope for.")
Feb. 17: 1940s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Hide and Seek" pp. 89 ("He turned to examine his
new home.")–97
Feb. 18: 1950s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 19: 1950s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb.
20: 1950s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 21: 1950s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 22: 1960s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Feb.
23: 1960s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Feb. 24: 1960s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 25: 1970s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 26: 1970s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb.
27: 1970s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
Feb. 28: 1970s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
Mar. 1: 1970s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Mar.
2: 1980s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapters 46
- Salman
Rushdie, "The Perforated Sheet," Midnight's
Children pp.
9–13 ("(It's bridge was wide.)")
Mar. 3: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black Hill chapter 50
- Salman
Rushdie, "The Perforated Sheet," Midnight's
Children pp.
13 ("My grandfather's nose: nostrils flaring")–17 ("And, also from
Tai, my grandfather heard about noses.")
Mar. 4: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Bruce Chatwin, On the Black Hill excerpt
- Salman
Rushdie, "The Perforated Sheet," Midnight's
Children pp.
17 ("Tai tapped his left nostril")–21 ("Time settles down and
concentrates on the importance of the moment.")
Mar. 5: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, "The Perforated Sheet," Midnight's
Children pp.
21 ("The house was opulent but badly lit")–23 and "Mercurochrome"
pp. 24–25 ("because he had never seen her face.")
Mar. 8: 1980s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, "Mercurochrome," Midnight's
Children pp.
25 ("His mother lay on her bed")–29 ("who didn't know two things
about anything.")
Mar.
9: 1980s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, "Mercurochrome," Midnight's
Children pp.
29 ("'Because I am an orphan'")–32 ("something was not right
here.")
Mar. 10: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, "Mercurochrome," Midnight's
Children pp.
32 ("Close-up of my grandfather's right hand")–36
Mar. 11: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, Midnight's
Children excerpt
Mar. 12: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, Midnight's
Children excerpt
Mar. 15: 1980s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, Midnight's
Children excerpt
Mar.
16: 1980s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Salman
Rushdie, "The Perforated Sheet," Midnight's Children pp. 18
("...Doctor Aziz in 1915")–21 ("Time settles down and concentrates on
the importance of the moment.")
- A.
S. Byatt, Possession
chapter 1 beginning–p. 4 ("scanned with his eyes.")
Mar. 17: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- A.
S. Byatt, Possession
chapter 1 pp. 4 ("It was immediately clear")–11 (end of
chapter)
Mar. 18: 1980s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- A.
S. Byatt, Possession
chapter 2 pp. 12–16 ("and the first tantrum")
- Timothy Mo, Renegade, or Halo2
chapter 1 pp. 9–12 ("my buckler and my blade")
Mar. 19: 1990s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- A.
S. Byatt, Possession
chapter 2 pp. 16 ("Val left him for the first time")–19
("without having to share it with Randolph Ash")
- Timothy Mo, Renegade, or Halo2
chapter 1 pp. 12 ("Ma was only fourteen years older than me")–14 ("the
youngest of Ma's barkada, Auntie Lovely-Anne")
Mar. 22: 1990s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- A.
S. Byatt, Possession
chapter 2 pp. 20 ("In the dark hall the pictures were difficult
to see.")–25
- Timothy Mo, Renegade, or Halo2
chapter 1 pp. 14 ("We were pimping for the pum-pum girls")–16
("forever wittering about")
Mar.
23: 1990s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The
Sense of an Ending
pp. 3–7 ("It took us a while to work this out.")
- Timothy Mo, Renegade, or Halo2
chapter 1 pp. 16 ("Because everyone was a transient")–17 ("No such
luck.")
Mar. 24: 1990s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 7 ("Adrian allowed himself
to be absorbed into our group")–14 ("we felt that it had missed a
powerful educative opportunity")
- Timothy Mo, Renegade, or Halo2
chapter 1 pp. 17 ("Bambi was tubercular")–19 ("a dangerous but
predictable quantity.")
Mar. 25: 1990s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Mar. 26: 2000s [Listen |
Volunteer]
Mar. 29: 2000s
[Listen | Volunteer]
Mar.
30: 2000s
[Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 33 ("Veronica
and I continued going out together")–40 ("He wasn't the sort who would
get his name or face into the newspapers")
- Clare Wigfall, "The Numbers" pp. 1–5 ("began again at its
greiting.")
Mar. 31: 2000s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 40 ("You can
probably guess")–46 ("Annie was part of my story, but not of this
story")
- Clare Wigfall, "The Numbers" pp. 5 (Potatoes)–9 (end)
Apr. 1: 2000s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 46 ("My
parents thought of getting in touch")–53 ("a fucking terrible waste")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness "The Last Wolf" pp. 1–8
Apr. 2: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
p. 53 ("A year on")–part 2 p. 61 ("he never did run out of animals")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 1 pp. 9–19 ("the great gas towers
hove into view")
Apr. 5: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
pp. 61 ("I get on well with Susie")–68 ("end up sounding like them?")
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness
pp. 19 (The building was a tall, new block")–29 ("close to his niece's
address")
Apr.
6: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
pp. 68 ("The less time there remains in your life")–75 ("All I could
do was not use it myself")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness pp. 30 ("The gathering was held")–41 ("Jean
looked away")
Apr. 7: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an
Ending pp. 75 ("I
told her the story")–82 ("What possible evolutionary purpose could
nostalgia serve?")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 3 pp. 42–52
Apr. 8: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an
Ending pp. 82 ("I had
a friend who trained as a lawyer")–90 ("and from which side she'd
arrive")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 4 pp. 53–64 ("the opalescent eye
shine of an animal")
Apr. 9: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an
Ending pp. 90 ("But
she was there already")–97 ("on your joint and anointed heads. Tony")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness "Eastern Bosnia. Winter 1995" p. 65–chapter 5
p. 75 ("a fox had mated with his Labrador")
Apr. 12: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an
Ending pp. 97
("Whisky, I find, helps clarity of thought")–103 ("our tragedy")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness pp. 75 ("'I doubt that very much'")–84
("'This is where we start'")
Apr.
13: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
pp. 103 ("'The question of accumulation'")–110 ("that's a love song,
isn't it?")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 6 pp. 85–96 ("the fox went to sleep")
Apr. 14: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
pp. 110 ("I don't want to blame Margaret at all")–117 ("closeness I
couldn't handle")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 7 pp. 97–112 ("'Frontside axel
stall'")
Apr. 15: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 117 ("The next week was very
quiet")–122 ("the river ran upstream")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 8 pp. 113–124 ("soundlessly
together")
Apr. 16: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 122 ("Of course, I was far too
early")–128 ("There was a moon that night")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 9 pp. 125 ("In the short time they
had been talking")–136 ("'They still go looking for watermelon?'")
Apr. 19: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 129 ("Silence. Speed bump.")–135
("the other three went into the shop with the minder")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness pp. 136 ("Minutes past midnight")–148 ("He
watched until the checkpoint was lost from view")
Apr.
20: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending pp. 135 ("I got up, leaving by
biro")–142 ("he was afraid of the pram in the hall")
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 10 pp. 149–59 ("'Before we get
started'")
Apr. 21: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Julian
Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
pp. 142 ("What did I know of life")–150 (end)
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 11 pp. 160–72 ("and it had begun
with Archie")
Apr. 22: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness chapter 11 pp. 172 ("Though the next
day was Saturday,")–84 ("the blood beat of his life.")
Apr. 23: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 12 pp. 185 ("A lone street-cleaning
vehicle")–97 ("sure of foot as a ballet dancer.")
Apr. 26: 1910s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 13 pp. 198 ("A20. M25. M23.
A23.")–207 ("And he moved towards the door.")
Apr.
27: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 13 pp. 208 ("Iraq, 2009")–20 ("shook
his head. 'Strange.'")
Apr. 28: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 14 pp. 220 ("The young woman walked
into the cafe")–32 ("All of this.")
Apr. 29: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 15 pp. 233 ("A sound, a punctuation
point")–40 ("was the head of the animal")
Apr. 30: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 16 pp. 241 ("Jean came back from her
run")–52 ("'What do you want, Adama?'")
May 3: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 17 pp. 253 ("There is a time one sees
a new love")–56 ("weeping in his heart")
May
4: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 18 pp. 257 ("'We all know the facts
of the case here'")–65 ("Rosie had bitten him.")
May 5: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness
chapter 18 pp. 266 ("At the far end of the compound")–72 ("and
writhe in his hand")
May 6: 2010s
[Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness
chapter 19 pp. 273 ("In the year that followed")–79 ("a place named
Shingle Street")
May 7: 1910s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness
chapter 20 pp. 280 ("The woman opened the door of the City Road
apartment")–86 ("formed itself into a fourth presence")
May 10: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness
chapter 21 pp. 287 ("Attila walked with the dawn behind him")–92 ("he
wrote the words: 'THE PARADOX'")
May
11: 2010s [Listen | Volunteer]
- Aminatta Forna, Happiness
chapter 22 pp. 293 ("Wednesday, an hour before dawn")–300 ("the bark
of a small cherry tree")
May 12: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 23 pp. 301 ("The car to take Attila
to the conference hall")–06 ("The whole of it.")
May 13: 2010s [Listen |
Volunteer]
- Aminatta
Forna, Happiness chapter 24 pp. 307 ("March the 1st comes and
goes")–09 (end)
Home
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Fiction from the Twentieth Century to the Present
Last updated May 6, 2021