Roger May

  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 28 hrs 28 mins

    The classical civilizations of Greece and Rome dominated the world for centuries and continue to intrigue and enlighten us with their inventions, whether philosophy, politics, theatre, athletics, celebrity, science or the pleasures of horse racing. Robin Lane Fox's spellbinding history, spans almost a thousand years of change from the foundation of the world's first democracy in Athens to the Roman Republic and the Empire under Hadrian.

    Bringing great figures such as Homer, Socrates, Cicero, Alexander, Antony and Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, Augustus and the first Christian martyrs to life, exploring freedom, justice and luxury, this wonderfully exciting tour brings the turbulent histories of Greece and Rome together in a masterly study.

    History - Ancient
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 11 hrs 50 mins

    When the coffin of murdered pub landlady Nora Tilden is exhumed, there's a grim discovery - the twisted corpse of a young black man, killed and dumped in the grave on the night Nora was buried 28 years earlier. DI Peter Shaw, DS George Valentine and their team are put on the case, but are baffled by this brutal murder.

    Detective & Mystery Stories
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 12 hrs 30 mins

    September 1992, 15 year-old Norma Jean Judd disappears from her home never to be seen again. Exactly eighteen years later Norma Jean's twin, Bryan, is pulled from the searing heat of a hospital incinerator. Could his death somehow be linked to his sister's disappearance? For DI Shaw and DS Valentine, the case proves their most intriguing yet.

    Detective & Mystery Stories
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 10 hrs 25 mins

    Harvey Ellis is found dead - viciously stabbed at the wheel of his truck which is stranded in a blizzard. For DI Peter Shaw and DS George Valentine it's only the start of an infuriating investigation. The crime scene is melting, the murderer has vanished, the witnesses are dropping like flies. And the body count is on the rise...

    Detective & Mystery Stories
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 10 hrs 20 mins

    On a hot August day in 1994, young man is stabbed and left to bleed to death on an uninhabited island off the North Norfolk coast. The case is never solved. Twenty years later, Marianne Osbourne is found dead in her bed, a wartime cyanide pill lodged in her throat. Is there a link to the 1994 murder? DI Peter Shaw is in charge of the case.

    Detective & Mystery Stories
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 9 hrs 44 mins

    In the late summer of 1944, SS-Obergruppenführer Wilhelm 'Willi' Bittrich found himself in the Netherlands surveying his II SS Panzer Corps, which was in a poor state having narrowly escaped the defeat in Normandy. He was completely unaware that his command lay directly in the path of a major Allied thrust: the 17 September 1944 launch of the largest airborne and glider operation in the history of warfare.

    Codenamed Operation Market Garden, it was intended to outflank the German West Wall and 'bounce' the Rhine at Arnhem, from where the Allies could strike into the Ruhr, Nazi Germany's industrial heartland.

    This new book explores the operation from the perspective of the Germans as renowned historian Anthony Tucker-Jones examines how they were able to mobilise so swiftly and effectively in spite of depleted troops and limited intelligence.

    War - WW2
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 17 hrs 30 mins

    London, 1911. The streets ring to the cheers for a new king's coronation, and to the cries of suffragist women marching for the vote. Connie Callaway wants more than the conventional comforts of marriage - she is determined to fight for the greatest cause the world has ever known.

    General Fiction
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 16 hrs 6 mins

    In the summer of 1849, Garibaldi, legendary hero of guerrilla wars in South America and future architect of a united Italy, was finally forced to concede defeat in his defence of a revolutionary Roman republic. After holding the besieged city for four long months, it was clear that only surrender could prevent slaughter and destruction at the hands of a huge French army. But Garibaldi was determined to turn defeat into moral victory.

    On the evening of 2 July, riding alongside his heavily pregnant wife Anita, he led 4,000 men out of the city to continue the struggle for national independence elsewhere. Hounded by both French and Austrian armies, they crossed the mountainous Appenines and after endless skirmishes and adventures arrived in Ravenna on 2 August with just 250 survivours. The group commandeered fishing boats on the Adriatic coast in an attempt to reach the revolutionary republic of Venice, but were intercepted by the Austrian navy. Anita was seriously ill. Garibaldi's companions split up. Most were rounded up and executed, but the hero himself escaped, travelling back across Italy in disguise until he could finally embark from Genova, first for Africa, then the USA. Ten years later, his revolutionary campaign in Sicily would be the catalyst that brought about the unification of Italy.

    History - European
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 5 hrs 30 mins

    Dramatisations and readings of Sheridan Le Fanu's best-known Gothic masterpieces

    One of the leading ghost story writers of the Victorian era, Sheridan Le Fanu is renowned for his chilling tales of mystery and horror. His pioneering lesbian vampire novella Carmilla was a major influence on Bram Stoker's Dracula, and spawned numerous film adaptations including Hammer Horror's Karnstein Trilogy.

    Opening this anthology is a dramatisation of that classic tale, starring Anne-Marie Duff as Laura, the lonely girl living in a solitary Austrian castle, who strikes up a dangerous friendship with the mysterious, bewitching Carmilla. It is followed by Ian MacDiarmid's reading of 'Schalken the Painter', the eerie story of a 17th Century Flemish artist in love with his master's daughter.

    Le Fanu's suspenseful Gothic thriller, Uncle Silas, about a young heiress placed under the guardianship of her father's disgraced brother, is dramatised with a full cast including Teresa Gallagher, George Cole, Joan Sims and Dorothy Tutin. Also featured is The Le Fanu Ballads, a supernatural portmanteau drama bridging Le Fanu's era and our world today. Based on the short stories 'The Watcher', 'Madam Crowl's Ghost', 'Schalken the Painter' and 'Mr Justice Harbottle', and set in a basement nightclub in Dublin, it stars Paul Chahidi, Haydn Gwynne and Jonathan Forbes.

    One unabridged readings conclude our collection. In 'The Ghost and the Bonesetter', read by Sean Barrett, a terrified house-sitter receives an unusual request from the tyrannical spirit of a local squire.

    Ghost Stories
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 5 hrs 28 mins

    In this hilarious, inspiring and provocative series of essays, Kingsley Amis introduces every reader to the wonders and value of science fiction writing.

    From the extraordinary ideas but sexless science of Jules Verne to the power of H. G. Wells's terrifying storytelling; from the brilliance of bad science fiction writing to the potency of their important ideas; from a portrait of the average SF reader to Amis's sad prediction that this genre will never make it in film or television, New Maps of Hell is a warm and witty exploration of a world many readers may be yet to discover.

    Arts General
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 13 hrs 30 mins

    As the sun set slowly on the British Empire in the years after the Second World War, the nation's stately homes were in crisis. Tottering under the weight of rising taxes and a growing sense that they had no place in twentieth-century Britain, hundreds of ancestral piles were dismantled and demolished. Perhaps even more surprising was the fact that so many of these great houses survived, as dukes and duchesses clung desperately to their ancestral seats and tenants' balls gave way to rock concerts, safari parks and day trippers.

    From the Rolling Stones rocking Longleat to Christine Keeler rocking Cliveden, Noble Ambitions takes us on a lively tour of these crumbling halls of power, as a rakish, raffish, aristocratic Swinging London collided with traditional rural values. Capturing the spirit of the age, Adrian Tinniswood proves that the country house is not only an iconic symbol, but a lens through which to understand the shifting fortunes of Britain in an era of monumental social change.

    History - British
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 11 hrs 20 mins

    Unpublished at the time of her death, 'The Professor' is the first novel written by Charlotte Brontë, and the seed of her later books, 'Jane Eyre' (7377) and 'Villette' (8644). Told from the point of view of William Crimsworth, Brontë's hero escapes from a humiliating clerkship in a Yorkshire mill to find work as a teacher in Belgium, where he falls in love with an impoverished student-teacher.

    Classic Fiction
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 1 hr 20 mins

    Featuring some of his most famous and best-loved poems - including Jabberwocky and The Hunting of the Snark - as well as lesser-known gems such as Brother and Sister and My Fairy, this selection illustrates Carroll's fondness for impish satire, verbal wizardry and pure imagination.

    Key Stage 2
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 6 hrs 58 mins

    Graham Greene's 'long journey through time' began in 1904, when he was born into a tribe of Greenes based in Berkhamstead at the public school where his father was headmaster. In A Sort of Life Greene recalls schooldays and Oxford, adolescent encounters with psychoanalysis and Russian roulette, his marriage and conversion to Catholicism, and how he rashly resigned from The Times when his first novel, The Man Within was published in 1929. A Sort of Life reveals, brilliantly and compellingly, a life lived and an art obsessed by 'the dangerous edge of things'.

    Biography - Art Music & Literature
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 13 hrs 15 mins

    Moving from Vienna to London's West End, the battlefields of France, and the hotel rooms of Geneva, this is the story of young English actor Lysander Rief. He meets Sigmund Freud in a cafe´, begins to write a journal, enjoys secret trysts with Hattie Bull, and appears - miraculously - to have been cured of his neurosis.

    Contemporary Fiction
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 25 hrs 21 mins

    In 1941 and 1942 the British and Indian Armies were brutally defeated and Japan reigned supreme in its newly conquered territories throughout Asia. But change was coming. New commanders were appointed, significant training together with restructuring took place, and new tactics were developed. A War of Empires by acclaimed historian Robert Lyman expertly records these coordinated efforts and describes how a new volunteer Indian Army, rising from the ashes of defeat, would ferociously fight to turn the tide of war.

    Until now, the Indian Army's contribution has been consistently forgotten and ignored by many Western historians but Robert Lyman proves how vital this hard-fought campaign was in securing Allied victory in the east. Detailing the defeat of Japanese militarism, he recounts how the map of the region was ultimately redrawn, guaranteeing the rise of an independent India free from the shackles of empire.

     

    War - General
  • Read by: Roger May

    Duration: 13 hrs

    Carlo Demirco's mastery of the extraordinary new art of creating ice creams has brought him wealth, women, and a position at the court of Louis XIV. Then Carlo is sent to London, along with Louise de Keroualle, an impoverished lady-in-waiting. But soon he must decide ...where do his loyalties lie? X rated, explicit sexual content.

    Contemporary Fiction
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