Author:William Makepeace Thackeray,Stephen Fry,Emma Fielding,Full Cast

Stephen Fry narrates this BBC Radio 4 full-cast dramatisation of the famous Victorian comic novel.
Orphan Becky Sharp and wealthy Amelia Sedley are best friends at Miss Pinkerton's Academy for Young Ladies. On leaving school, ambitious, social-climbing Becky looks for a rich man to support her, while the sweet-natured Amelia meets her old friend Dobbin, who is instantly captivated.
Becky takes a job in the service of Sir Pitt Crawley, and uses her charm to hook his dashing son. However, marriage to Captain Rawdon of the Guards does not provide the fortune she seeks. Meanwhile, Amelia rejects the faithful Dobbin and becomes engaged to the handsome George Osborne – but destiny has some shocks in store for her, too.
As time goes by, the girls' fortunes rise and fall. War, financial disaster and the ruin of her reputation leave the resourceful Becky undaunted, but Amelia finds it harder to bear fate's blows. It will be many years before their story is played out, and their futures finally decided...
William Makepeace Thackeray's classic satire of passion and ambition, first published in 1847 and 1848, is a deliciously ironic portrait of English society and its mores. This engaging 2004 radio production, published for the first time on audio, features a distinguished cast including Emma Fielding as Becky Sharp, Katy Cavanagh as Amelia and Toby Jones as Jos Sedley.
Duration: 5 hours approx
Roth's best novel yet
—— London Review of BooksI had only to read the two opening sentences to realize that I was once again in the hands of a superbly endowed storyteller
—— New York Review of BooksFurther evidence that Roth can do practically anything with fiction. His narrative power - the ability to delight the reader simultaneously with the telling and the tale - is superb
—— Washington PostHis prose is immaculate yet curiously plain and unostentatious, as natural as brething
—— Al AlvarezOne would have to look very hard to find a wryer, more lovingly detailed account of intellectual and sexual innocence abroad
—— Jay Parini , New York TimesAn alert, witty, unpredictable novel which brings a sharp fresh eye to bear on English character and English compromises
—— ObserverMetroland is a delicious book, sharp and witty and observant
—— The ListenerOne of the best accounts of clever English schoolboyhood I've read
—— Times Educational SupplementFlighty, playful… Barnes succeeds in vividly recreating teenage precociousness, particularly what it feels like to be a young male encountering love and sex
—— Los Angeles TimesA dazzling entertainer
—— New YorkerConsummately elegant
—— Sunday TimesHe writes perceptively about the shift from self-absorbed teenager to adult.
—— The TimesIf all works of fiction were as thoughtful, as subtle, as well constructed and as funny as Metroland there would be no more talk of the death of the novel
—— New StatesmanIt's one of the best accounts of clever English schoolboyhood I've read
—— Times Educational SupplementIrony and imagery are deployed with a finesse even Flaubert wouldn't wince at...consummately elegant
—— Sunday Times






