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The Yellowplush Papers
The Yellowplush Papers
Jul 21, 2025 1:57 AM

Author:William Makepeace Thackeray,Adam Buxton,Full Cast

The Yellowplush Papers

Series of five comic tales by William Makepeace Thackeray, adapted by Stephen Wyatt, recounting the rise and fall of early-19th century footman Charles Yellowplush.

Episode 1: Charles attracts the attention of an elegant gentleman, Frederick Altamont, who is pursuing the lovely Mary. Charles does his best to matchmake, until the awful truth about Altamont comes to light. With full cast. Directed by Jessica Dromgoole.

Episode 2: Charles helps his new employer Captain Rook, a wily and roguish cardsharp, to fleece a rich but naive gentleman. With full cast. Directed by Abigail le Fleming.

Episode 3:Charles finds himself in Paris in attendance on a young aristocrat of very dubious morals who has fled England to escape his creditors. With full cast. Directed by Jessica Dromgoole.

Episode 4: When a fashionable society novelist comes to stay at Diddlesex Towers, he inspires Charles to undertake an ambitious and scandalous enterprise. With full cast. Directed by Jessica Dromgoole.

Episode 5: Charles suddenly finds himself a very rich man. He leaves service and embarks on a life of opera, society dinners and balls. And goes a little mad. With full cast. Directed by Jessica Dromgoole.

©2013 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd (P)2013 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd

Reviews

A brilliant read. As he did with his Raven novels, Kristian weaves a colourful, authentic world in which to set his tale...and he has done it with confidence and real flair. Full of tragedy and triumph, honour and treachery, The Bleeding Land is a thrilling tour-de-force

—— BEN KANE

Expertly plotted, full of passion and bloody drama...a book that will appeal to passionate, compassionate readers, men and women alike, fans of C J Sansom as much as fans of Conn Iggulden. Read it: you'll love every page

—— MANDA SCOTT

With powerful protagonists, a gripping story and rollicking action, I can strongly recommend this tour-de-force. Outstanding

—— ANTHONY RICHES

Giles Kristian has made an effortless transition from Viking warriors to the often tricky emotional landscape of the English Civil War. Visceral, brutal and genuinely moving, this is historical fiction at its thrilling best

—— SAUL DAVID

Astounding . . . one of the most compelling narrators I've ever encountered

—— Stylist

It is once in a blue moon that an author creates a voice quite as alive and as startling as Mary's. Leyshon deserves to be showered with awards

—— Sunday Express

Brilliant, devastating and unforgettable

—— Easy Living

Spare and beautifully crafted, compelling. Like a love letter to the power of words

—— Marie Claire

An astounding read. Like the best bits of Hardy's Tess of the D'Ubervilles . . . Mary is one of the most compelling narrators I've ever encountered . . . packs a powerful punch . . . a very British gem

—— Stylist

I loved it. Charming, Brontë-esque, compelling, special and hard to forget. I loved Mary's voice - so inspiring and likeable. Such a hopeful book

—— Marian Keyes

Haunting, distinctive voices. Mary's spare simple words paint brilliant pictures in the reader's mind. Leyshon's imaginative powers are considerable

—— Independent

Leyshon is a master of domestic suspense . . . Slender but compelling, the charm is to be found as much in its spare, evocative style as in the moving candour of its narrator

—— Observer

Masterful - crude, violent and poetic by turns... Its banter, outrage and razor wit sing off the page. A film, one suspects, isn't far off

—— Arifa Akbar , Independent

It's brilliant and even more thrilling than its predecessor

—— Simon Humphreys , Mail on Sunday

A brilliantly funny, scary, sweeping novel with all the energy of Welsh's debut, but imbued with a wider sense of political and social engagement

—— Doug Johnstone , Independent on Sunday

I'm not sure that in 2012 there will be a single novel, never mind half a dozen, with more verve or nous or life in it than Skagboys. Ye kin pure tell they Booker gadgies'll no huv the baws but...

—— Anthony Cummins , Literary Review

Trainspotting may be a masterpiece but Skagboys is the reason the artist painted it, and sometimes that's the most compelling story

—— Joanna McGarry , Stylist

A cracking read.

—— Time Out

Skagboys is a compelling tale...a seriously entertaining piece of work

—— Peter Murphy , Irish Times

Skagboys, technically, is a prequel to the Leith author's brilliant 1993 debut...the result is a longer, deeper and more affecting work, one which explains and explores the circumstances under which Renton, Sick Boy, Tommy, Spud and Begbie - a roll call as familiar as Disney's Seven Dwarves for readers of a certain age - became the characters they did... It's an undeniably funny book, funny in that three-wit way of being at once visceral and true. Welsh's knack for dialogue - both ineternal and conversational - remains virtuosic and often exhilarating. It makes for characters you can't help but care about even the psychopaths and amoral chancers like Begbie and Sick Boy... Welsh's finest work to date

—— Ben Machell , The Times

One of the most significant writers in Britain. He writes with style, imagination, wit and force.

—— Times Literary Supplement

The voice of punk, grown up, grown wiser and grown eloquent.

—— The Times

It was never going to be light reading, but Welsh's vigour, wit and energy still make it compulsive

—— Charlotte Sinclair , Vogue

While you can place him in a literary tradition which flows from Alasdair Gray and James Kelman (and maybe Joyce before that), Welsh remains a lapsed punk, hung up on the Velvets and Iggy Pop

—— Alastair McKay , Evening Standard

Like Trainspotting, Skagboys thrusts along with the exuberance of its episodic stories. Welsh hasn't lost his flair for comic set pieces

—— Robert Collins , Sunday Times

Welsh somehow manages to be both the Zola of Therese Raquin, and Dostoevsky's Underground Man, ranging between quasi-scientific perspective and a more immersed, troubling one. That he does so for the most part in a furious low Scots vernacular - filthy, or fulthy, and hugely funny at times - may seem remarkable

—— Keith Miller , Daily Telegraph

If you too loved the colloquial tangle of Trainspotting, you'll find a similar rhythm in Skagboys

—— Andrew Collins , Word Magazine

Welsh revisits his old demons to give us the Trainspotting prequel...Expect more of the same raw wit and energy.

—— Toni & Guy

Engaging, heartfelt and brutal.

—— welovethisbook.com

Quite simply a masterpiece…at least as assured and vibrant in its characterization as Trainspotting, Skagboys is even more on the money politically… this novel more than any other , (including its brilliant predecessor) stands as our spiritual and moral history.

—— The Scotsman

There is enough of what Welsh does well — needle-sharp dialogue, vivid characters and a certainty of place — to make Skagboys his best work in many years…an essential read.

—— Timothy Mo , Irish Examiner

Welsh always spins his yarns with grisly élan.

—— Extra Time

I ended up charmed beyond measure, if that is the right word for a novel whose odd moments of poignance are regularly booted into touch by death, disillusionment and dereliction.

—— D J Taylor , Spectator

Every bit as impressive as Trainspotting

—— Daily Telegraph

Visceral, tragic and comic, with Welsh’s schlock-shock appeal

—— Arifa Akbar , i

If you enjoyed Trainspotting, you will adore this prequel... I think that Welsh has achieved the impossible and produced a prequel that betters the main text

—— Nudge

Filthy, furious and very funny, this is Welsh back on blistering top form

—— Mail on Sunday
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