with Abdal Hakim Murad.
with James Naughtie and Peter Hobday. And at 7.40 find out the winner of the Radio Times/Today Young Radio Reporter competition.
7.25, 8.25 Sports News
7.45 Thought for the Day with Richard Harries.
* See This Week: page 7
Stuart Simon looks back over nearly 20 years with Radio 4's File on 4. A Bell Radio production
Melvyn Bragg talks to guests including Professor Frank Close and John Gribbin , author of Schrodinger's Kittens. Producer Ruth Gardiner
A new spiritual anthology. Journeys, read by Eleanor Bron , Ian McDiarmid and David Rintoul. Producer Jocelyn Boxall
Jenni Murray meets the playwright Sharman MacDonald. Serial: The
Normal Man (3), by Susie Boyt.
Abridged in eight parts by Elizabeth Bradbury. Read by Sophie Thompson. Producer Sally Feldman
with Vincent Duggleby. Producer Virginia Eastman LINES OPEN 10.00am
with Daire Brehan.
The last of three semi-finals in the music quiz conducted by Ned Sherrin. Producer Jo Clegg. Rptd Wednesday 6.30pm
with Nick Clarke.
Repeated from Friday
A four-part detective series by Nigel Baldwin , set in Amiens in 1791. David Calder plays Lt Gen Lacroix , trying to police France despite the Revolution. 2: To Be a Pilgrim. Lacroix calls on the local sorceress to help him solve what appears to be a ritual killing.
Original music by Paula Gardner performed by Mark Edwards , Jeanette Masocchi. Ron Parry and Paula Gardner. Director Alison Hindell
with Laurie Taylor and guests.
Lynne Walker sees a new production of Mozart's Don Giovanni at ENO and talks to Derek Jacobi as he takes the lead in Hadrian VII.
Producer Erika Wright. Revised rpt 9.30pm
by Philip Norman. Our teenage hero has been asked out on his first date.
A friend suggests Skiffle Night at the local emporium. Read by Oliver Cotton. Producer Peter Kavanagh
with Chris Lowe and Linda Lewis.
Presented by Barry Took.
Repeated from Saturday 12.25pm
TB caused by B and B?
Repeated tomorrow at 1.40pm
Presented by Derek Cooper.
by Friedrich Durrenmatt.
When Arnolph Archilochos advertises for a wife, his world turns upside down.
Dramatised by Peter Thomson
Jonathan Bean has become the honorary white son of the Adamba family in northern Ghana. Every winter he heads off from Yorkshire to spend two months in his adopted home. This time he's taken a tape recorder so he can tell An Everyday Story of Village Folk.
Revised repeat of 4.05pm
with Robin Lustig.
Writing under the pen name of Olivia, Dorothy Bussy describes the liaisons and jealousies at a girls' finishing school in France. Susan Bovell reads the first of four episodes.
Abndged by Debbie Jones. Producer Sue Wilson