Christopher Douglas, co-writer and star of Ed Reardon's Week, adapts George Gissing's classic novel set in a school turning out new waves of salaried stenographers and secretaries. Show more
Christopher Douglas, star of Ed Reardon's Week, adapts George Gissing's novel about a school for stenographers in a satire on Victorian attitudes to the cerebral new woman. Show more
Keiko has never had a boyfriend and has worked in the same Tokyo convenience store for 18 years. An ode to nonconformity and a parody of the plight of the 30-something single woman Show more
Douglas Coupland's hit, comic 90s novel about a group of coders leaving Microsoft for the freedom of a Silicon Valley start-up. Fresh new dramatisation by Theo Toksvig-Stewart Show more
By Studs Terkel, adapted by Sarah Wooley. An adaptation of the oral history classic that brought us the fascinating, thought-provoking voices of working America in the 1970s. Show more
Using a mash-up of the novels This Slavery and Miss Nobody. Ethel Carnie was the first English working class novelist. She was a mill worker from the age of 11 to 20 years old. Show more
Author, activist and poet, Ethel Carnie is cited as the first English working class novelist. This adaptation uses a mash up of two of her novels; Miss Nobody, and This Slavery. Show more
Douglas Coupland's hit, comic 90s novel about a group of coders leaving Microsoft for the freedom of a Silicon Valley start-up. Fresh new dramatisation by Theo Toksvig-Stewart. Show more