Author:John Finnemore,John Finnemore,Margaret Cabourn-Smith,Full Cast

Six more episodes of BBC Radio 4’s multi-award-winning sketch show, written by and starring John Finnemore.
‘The best sketch show in years, on television or radio’ Radio Times.
John Finnemore, writer and star of Cabin Pressure and John Finnemore’s Double Acts, returns for a sixth series of his hugely acclaimed Souvenir Programme, which won him Radio Broadcaster of the Year at the 2016 Broadcasting Press Guild Awards.
Expect sketches! Expect songs! They’re what made up the previous five series, so it seems a pretty safe bet that that’s what will be in this series as well. And, well, since you ask him for some tall tales… Kicking off with a seasonal special, this series takes in TV adverts, woodland talent contests, a song about the best day of the Christmas season and what is almost certainly the greatest story a Finnemore has ever told.
Described by The Daily Telegraph as ‘funny enough to make even the surliest cat laugh’, John Finnemore’s Souvenir Programme also features Margaret Cabourn-Smith, Simon Kane, Lawry Lewin, Carrie Quinlan and, at the piano, Susannah Pearse. Duration: 2 hours 50 mins approx.
One of the most consistently funny sketch shows for quite some time
—— Tom Meltzer , The GuardianCombination of witty writing and fine performers
—— Lisa Martland , The StageSparklingly clever
—— The Daily TelegraphBy turns savvy, witty and achingly sad . . . This is a novelist at the top of his game.
—— The Mail on SundayI ran through the whole range of human emotions while reading this brilliant novel. It's a masterpiece.
—— Cathy Rentzenbrink, author of The Last Act of LoveScreamingly funny one minute and heartbreaking the next.
—— Daily ExpressA special read
—— BBC Radio 4 Front RowBoyne creates lightness out of doom, humour out of desperately sad situations, creating a compelling page-turner… a terrific read.
—— The Press AssociationAn epic novel…. Worthy of the great master of the Irish comic novel, Flann O’Brien. The Heart’s Invisible Furies proves that John is not just one of Ireland’s best living novelists but also one of the best novelists of Ireland.
—— Sunday ExpressWritten with verve, humour and heart…at its core, The Heart’s Invisible Furies aspires to be not just the tale of Cyril Avery, a man buffeted by coincidence and circumstance, but the story of Ireland itself
—— Irish TimesCompulsively readable…hard to put down
—— Irish IndependentJohn Boyne is best known for his children’s novel The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. His new novel shows he can write movingly for adults as well… the cast is enormous yet at no point do we lose interest in Cyril.
—— The Sunday TimesThe Heart’s Invisible Furies, by John Boyne, is like an Irish World According to Garp, by which I mean tender, dark, hilarious, heartbreaking—I loved it'
—— VogueIt is laugh-out-loud funny, tragic, laceratingly sharp, and full of complex and brilliantly evoked characters...page-turning, hilarious, heart-rending and hopeful. Go read it.
—— Times Literary SupplementDickensian sweep, characterisation and humour
—— Daily MailFor character, plot and psychological depth, Boyne’s novel is unsurpassed this year
—— Sunday Express[A] subtly chilling story. . . leaves the reader with an uncomfortable sense of trepidation
—— Pure M MagazineBrilliant and disturbing...The challenge of making Irish Gothic contemporary has just been met superbly
—— Jarlath Killeen, Irish Times Book ClubA powerful story about friendship and forgiveness, fans of Dorothy Koomson’s novels will enjoy the clever twists and unexpected turns, which keep the reader enthralled
—— CandisA powerful book … it’s always good to be thinking of a book long after you put it down
—— Woman’s Way (Ireland)A beautiful and clever novel
—— The Culture TripThematically taut and compulsively paced.
—— Edmund Gordon , Sunday TimesA very good novel of anxiety, embarrassment and also, somehow, the depths of Englishness.
—— Evening StandardMarvellous, original and intelligent. Kunzru writes like a master storyteller... There's simply nothing [he] couldn't manage in prose
—— Literary ReviewPublisher's description. Electrifying, subversive and wildly original, White Tears is a ghost story and a love story, a story about lost innocence and historical guilt. This unmissable novel penetrates the heart of a nation's darkness, encountering a suppressed history of greed, envy, revenge and exploitation, and holding a mirror up to the true nature of America today.
—— PenguinCompulsively readable, masterly - a tour de force
—— Rachel KushnerRiveting from the very first page, I was completely addicted... A literary thriller and a timely, unsparing excavation of the very real spectre of race in America's past and present. White Tears is proof that Kunzru is one of the finest novelists of his generation...
—— Mirza WaheedHari Kunzru is an incredibly versatile writer who is alert to the inequalities in the world... Powerful and complex, White Tears is a novel about abuses of wealth and power. Brilliantly orchestrated, unforgettable and devastating
—— Bernardine EvaristoHari Kunzru is one of our most important novelists
—— Independent on SundayKunzru's engagingly wired prose and agile plotting sweep all before them
—— New YorkerElizabeth Strout's My Name is Lucy Barton shouldn't work, but its frail texture was a triumph of tenderness, and sent me back to her excellent Olive Kitteridge
—— Cressida Connolly , The SpectatorA rich account of a relationship between mother and daughter, the frailty of memory and the power of healing
—— Mark Damazer , New StatesmanThis physically slight book packs an unexpected emotional punch
—— Simon Heffer , Daily TelegraphA novel offering more hope
—— Daisy Goodwin , Daily MailMy Name Is Lucy Barton intrigues and pierces with its evocative, skin-peeling back remembrances of growing up dirt-poor.
—— Ann Treneman , The TimesMasterly
—— Anna Murphy






