With the Rev Dr Robert Tosh.
With John Humphrys and Anna Ford.
7.25, 8.25 Sports News
7.45 Thought for the Day With George Austin.
8.40 Yesterday in Parliament
With Chris Dunkley.
A Testbed production. Rptd Sunday 6.15pm WRITE TO: Feedback, PO Box 2100, London W1A 1QT. FAX: (0171) [number removed]
The story of Britain from the Romans to the 20th century. 120: Hogarth, the Price of Gin and Pitt the Elder For details see Monday
Amy Tan , Chinese-American author of The Joy Luck Club, talks to
Sarah Dunant about her latest novel, The Hundred Secret Senses.
Serial: Mother of Pearl. Final part. For details see Monday
Presented by Joanna Pinnock.
Featuring Britain's most common mammal - more numerous than humans and yet hardly ever seen - the short-tailed field vole.
Producer Julian Hector
Repeated Sunday at 8.00pm
WRITE TO: The Natural History Programme, BBC. Bristol BS8 2LR
Reports on consumer and social affairs.
Editor Huw Marks
WRITE TO: [address removed] for f actsheet No 5, enclosing sae. PHONE: to raise issues for investigation (0171) [number removed]
Presented by Derek Cooper.
Producer Sheila Dillon. Rptd Mon 7.20pm
With Nick Clarke.
Editor Kevin Marsh
Repeated from yesterday 7.05pm
The conclusion of Brian McCabe 's dramatisation of Lewis Grassic
Gibbon's novel about a girl growing to womanhood in Kincardineshire in the years before the Great War. Repeated from Sunday 2.30pm
Laurie Taylor and guests round off the week with topical comment and reports from around Britain.
Tim Marlow visits a Maggie Hambling exhibition as she makes her first bronze sculptures and sees Stanley, Pam Gems 's new play about Stanley Spencer.
Producer Neil Trevithick
By Fay Weldon
Josie is 132 years old. She is a privileged Heaven on Earther, existing way above the underclass on Earth.
Read by Oliver Ford Davis.
(Repeated next Sunday)
Presented by Kevin Bocquet and Jackie Hardgrave.
Editor Margaret Budy. WRITE TO: PM
Letterline, BBC Broadcasting House, London W1A 1AA. PHONE: (0171) [number removed]
David Stafford presents this week's leisure and heritage magazine, with a feature on the art of the jigsaw puzzle. Producer David Prest
Wedding bells?
Written by Peter Kerry. Director Keri Davies Editor Vanessa Whitburn. Rptd Mon 1.40pm ARCHERS ADDICTS FAN CLUB: send sae to
[address removed]
Christopher Serle presents his selection of extracts from BBC radio and television over the past seven days. Producer Matt Thompson
Repeated Sunday at 3.30pm
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs a topical discussion in Shrewsbury, Shopshire, with guests Victoria Glendinning , biographer and novelist; Sir Bernard Ingham , journalist and broadcaster; the Rt Hon Francis Maude , former
Financial Secretary to the Treasury; and Labour MP Dennis Skinner.
Producer Nadine Grieve. Rptd tomorrow 1.10pm
Presented by Marcel Berlins. Producer Simon Coates
Letter from America by Alistair Cooke
The 1996 New Hampshire primary
15 minutes on BBC Radio 4 FM
Available for over a year
The importance of the New Hampshire primary election in the race to become president is the subject of a discussion by Alistair Cooke.
Repeated Sunday at 9.15am
A celebration of Samuel Taylor
Coleridge's poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. Contributors include
David Bedford, Michael Bogdanov , General Sir John Hackett , Pauline Stainer and Richard Holmes. With readings from the poem by Ral ph Richardson and Richard Burton. Repeated from Saturday 7.20pm
With Robin Lustig. Editor Rod Liddle
By Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Final episode.
For details see Monday
With Sally Grace , Toby Longworth , Jon Glover and Peter Silverleaf , Producer Kathy Smith
Repeated tomorrow at 6.25pm
Alistair Beaton and guests with some satirical food for thought. Producer Andrew Johnston
Nicholas Farrell reads the last part of J G Ballard's classic adventure.
For details see Monday