Field Ramble

Fieldzine

A pod for those who love the latest in fiction, non fiction and poetry. Field is a  platform for new and exciting work from across the UK and beyond. If you like what you hear find out more about Field at www.fieldzine.com. You can subscribe and support Field's work via patreon at www.patreon.com/fieldzine for just £3 per month. 

  1. 6H AGO

    Field Ramble with James Meek and Ece Temelkuran

    Send a text This month Canongate publish Nation of Strangers, the third ‘instalment’ in a series by Turkish novelist, essayist and journalist Ece Temelkuran. Following on from How To Lose A Country and Together it is, once more, rooted in Ece’s forced displacement from her homeland. Recorded last December at Canongate’s offices Sam met Ece to discuss this deeply personal and unflinching account of being ‘unhomed’. Nation of Strangers is centred on a loss that will resonate deeply with anyone who struggles - in the face of rising global authoritarianism - to recognise the country they call home. Written as a set of letters to a stranger it embraces humility and love as a rejection of the politics of cynicism and asks us once we recognise what is happening, (fascism) what choice do we have but to act? 'Her most ambitious an dazzling book yet.' BRIAN ENO 'Ece Temelkuran is a brilliant thinker, and her work here is as conceptually illuminating as it is beautifully written .... both a call and a comfort, a book that made me feel so much less alone.' OMAR EL AKKAD Meanwhile, Lara meets up with James Meek to hear about his latest novel ‘Your Life Without Me’; a tale of loss, provocation and the radical discomfort of the new. Centred around a single act of destruction (the attempted demolition of St Paul’s Cathedral) it is a book which asks how much of the past we can hold on to if we are to build a future worth living in. And whether change is inherently and unavoidably destructive. Praise for the novels of James Meek  'A story so original and so fully imagined.' HILARY MANTEL  'The language is so fresh and crisp and sparkling.' PHILIP PULLMAN Music used in this episode: Norfik - Realization Ida Urd & Ingrid Høyland- Duvet Ian Hawgood - I Don’t Think We Belong Here Norfik - Denial @fieldzine www.fieldzine.com www.patreon.com/fieldzine

    59 min
  2. 10/30/2025

    Field Ramble with Ece Temelkuran

    Send a text Next February, Canongate will publish Nation of Strangers, the third instalment in a series by Turkish novelist, essayist and journalist Ece Temelkuran. Ahead of its publication we met to discuss the two books that precede it, ‘How To Lose A Country’ and ‘Together - A Manifesto Against A Heartless World.’ Both deal with what Ece has termed ‘cloud fascism’ - the gradual then sudden everywhereness and nowhereness of global autocracy. Rooted in her own experience of the Erdogan regime’s corruption and unrelenting assault on human rights, both books detail the dark drift toward fascism and the determination and dignity needed in resistance. In this wide ranging conversation, the first of two interviews, we discuss the normalisation of shamelessness, the dangers of pseudo-understanding, the fight for institutions and the essential value of stories, something Ece describes as ‘natural penicillin for diseases of the soul. ‘ Ece Temelkuran is an award-winning Turkish novelist, political thinker and public speaker whose work has appeared in the Guardian, New York Times, Le Monde, La Stampa, El Pais, New Statesman and Der Spiegel.  Her novels have been published in several languages and adapted for the stage. ‘One of the most acute and perceptive analysts of the furtive growth of fascism. Everyone should know about this.’ PHILIP PULLMAN ‘This is essential.’ MARGARET ATWOOD ‘Temelkuran is a brilliant writer, finding humour, hope and humanity in the darkest corners of our current malaise. Together lifted my heart and my spirits.’ BRIAN ENO ‘A potent mix of fierce urgency but unyielding calmness.’ THE IRISH TIMES Music used on this episode is Room 2 by 36  @fieldzine www.fieldzine.com www.patreon.com/fieldzine

    39 min
  3. 08/22/2025

    Field Ramble with Hannah Patterson

    Send a text On this episode we hear from playwright Hannah Patterson about her debut novel Ungone. It’s another gem from the mighty Rough Trade Books, the story of a single decision and the strange new world that grows from it.  Hannah’s central character Eve is recently returned from an Antarctic research trip to grapple with the decline of her ageing mother. Unable to visit her at the care home in which she lives, she employs Erin, a total stranger, to go instead, pretending to be her. The act has profound consequences for all three women as the fixed positions of family slip, old ties are loosened and new bonds are formed.  The transience of contemporary life is woven throughout Ungone. The characters navigating a precarious, collapsing world, the unyielding edifices of family seeming ever stranger for it. A curious tension, captured in the prominent prefix of the title that frees the word from its meaning.  “So astute, so shrewd… The theme—can we be someone else?—is beautifully laid out.”—DAVID HARE “Ungone is as original as it is thrilling and as beautiful as it is haunting. A whip-smart examination of the complexities of end-of-life care and our sense of duty to the ones we love. It is a poignant and fascinating novel, masterfully written.” —HARRY MACQUEEN (writer/director of Supernova) PREORDER: UNGONE  https://roughtradebooks.com/collections/books/products/ungone-hannah-patterson UP NEXT:  The wonderful Emma Warren with her latest book ‘Up The Youth Club.’ Until then, big love x   If you enjoyed the pod, subscribe and leave us a review x @fieldzine www.fieldzine.com www.patreon.com/fieldzine

    22 min
  4. 08/07/2025

    Field Ramble with Sarah Hall

    Send a text Sarah Hall needs little introduction. Twice nominated for the Man-Booker Prize and the first and only writer to win the BBC National Short Story Award twice, she has written ten highly acclaimed novels and short story collections.  This August she returns with her latest novel Helm, the multi-millennial tale of the strange and seductive wind which haunts the Eden Valley of her native Cumbria. The story is one that she has been unable to walk away from; a twenty year project spanning much of her career as a novelist. It is also the first to carry a maker’s mark, a guarantee of its provenance from both author and publisher (Faber) that Helm is entirely human written.  In our wide-ranging interview we discuss the dangers presented by AI to the arts, the struggles faced in capturing such an elusive presence on the page and the enduring pull of this particular story for her. ‘Sarah Hall’s new novel Helm is incandescently good. It is sexy and funny and erudite and strange, and the prose is dizzyingly good. Up there with her best.’  Sarah Perry ‘I’m awed … I wouldn’t think a novel could be at once so taut and so multifarious, expanding one’s sense of what fiction can do.’  Sarah Moss ‘Sarah Hall’s writing has conquered the body and the soul and now it conquers the wind itself. She gets better with every word she writes.’  Daisy Johnson Music: Ian Hawgood - A Delicate Connection Not Lightly Broken  Search Field Ramble in Spotify and iTunes  Please subscribe & leave us a review while you’re there. x                @fieldzine www.fieldzine.com www.patreon.com/fieldzine

    34 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

A pod for those who love the latest in fiction, non fiction and poetry. Field is a  platform for new and exciting work from across the UK and beyond. If you like what you hear find out more about Field at www.fieldzine.com. You can subscribe and support Field's work via patreon at www.patreon.com/fieldzine for just £3 per month.