Harriett Gilbert | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Rose Bruford College |
Occupation(s) | Writer, academic and broadcaster |
Father | Michael Gilbert |
Harriett Sarah Gilbert (born 25 August 1948) is an English writer, academic and broadcaster, particularly of arts and book programmes on the BBC World Service. She is the daughter of the writer Michael Gilbert. Besides World Book Club on the World Service, she also presents A Good Read on BBC Radio 4. Before the programme was cancelled, she also presented the BBC World Service programme The Strand .
Born in Hornsey, London, Gilbert was educated at the French Lycée in London and at a succession of boarding schools. "Growing Pains" was her contribution to Truth, Dare or Promise: Girls Growing Up in the Fifties (1985), a collection of autobiographical writing. [1] After graduating from drama school, she worked as an actor. [2] She also worked as a nanny, a waitress, an artist's model and a clerk-typist. She began to write in her twenties. [3]
She nominated A High Wind in Jamaica by Richard Hughes, first read to her by her father when she was eight, as a life-changing book. [4] The one piece of advice her father, the writer Michael Gilbert, gave her about writing was: "For God's sake, don't use adverbs." [5]
From 1983 to 1988, she was literary editor of the New Statesman and, before that, of City Limits (1981–83). [2] She has also contributed to Time Out , The Guardian , and The Washington Post .
From 1992, she lectured in the Department of Journalism at the City University, London, where until 2008 she was also the programme director of the MA Creative writing (novels) course. [6]
She wrote two short animated films, directed by Marjut Rimminen: The Stain (1992) and Many Happy Returns (1997).
Gilbert presents one programme on BBC World Service radio: World Book Club , broadcast on the first Saturday in each month. About presenting for the World Service, Gilbert has said: "I think I'm doing the dream job, I just love it, and I can't think of anywhere else I'd like to be." [7]
Gilbert has introduced the World Service arts documentary series Close Up. [8] In 2008 she stood in as presenter of the arts programme The Ticket. [9] [ failed verification ] She previously presented the World Service's dedicated book programme The Word . [10] Besides this she has presented arts programmes for BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 3 and BBC Four television.
In 2011, she replaced Sue MacGregor as presenter of the Radio 4 book programme A Good Read . [11]
Writer and broadcaster Michael Rosen called her "one of the very best presenters of arts programmes on radio or TV". [12] The Financial Times said of her, "the splendid Harriett Gilbert [...] painfully shows up certain would-be arty Radio 4 colleagues". [13]
She is the author of six novels, including Hotels With Empty Rooms and The Riding Mistress. Her non-fiction books include A Women's History of Sex and The Sexual Imagination from Acker to Zola . She scripted the short animated film The Stain (1991). [14] [15]
As of 2009, although she has not published a novel since 1983 she hoped to return to writing. [16]
She was a judge of the 2011 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. [17]
She comes from a family of writers: her father Michael Gilbert wrote crime fiction; her paternal grandfather, Bernard Gilbert, was a poet, novelist and playwright; her paternal grandmother, Berwyn Cuthbert, was a journalist; and her younger brother, Gerard Gilbert, is also a journalist. [18] Harriett Gilbert lives in London with her painter husband, Robin Hazlewood. [18]
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The Word was a weekly half-hour radio programme on the BBC World Service about books and writers. Its final edition was in October 2008. Once a month its slot was taken over by World Book Club, in which listeners submitted questions to a famous writer. Both programmes were presented by Harriett Gilbert. World Book Club continues to be broadcast once a month on Saturdays.
World Book Club is a radio programme on the BBC World Service. Each edition of the programme, which is broadcast on the first Saturday of the month with repeats into the following Monday, features a famous author discussing one of his or her books, often the most well-known one, with the public. Since the programme began in 2002 it has been presented by Harriett Gilbert.
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The Strand was the BBC World Service's daily arts show. It was launched on Monday 27 October 2008. The last weekday edition was aired on Friday 29 March 2013, and the last weekly summary on the subsequent weekend. It was regularly hosted by Harriett Gilbert, Mark Coles, Audrey Brown – who also presented the BBC's flagship African News and Current Affairs programmes Focus on Africa and Network Africa, Anna McNamee, and Bidisha. The programme's title came from the Strand, a busy street in London close to the World Service's former studios at Bush House on Aldwych.
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