Exclusive: Portrait of a Times Editor and BBC Presenter at Work / 1


On Sunday I drove from London to Wiltshire. Just after Stonehenge I turned off the A303 and continued for a short distance until I came into a village.

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There was scaffolding on the front of the first house and a cattle grid at the gates. I drove across, then along the driveway.

I had come to start work on a new portrait.

(I call this series Portraits of Interesting People in their Offices, or Poipitos.)

The Interesting Person in question is a woman, author of a terrific book, formerly a very senior editor on The Times and presenter of simply oodles of BBC radio programs, including flagships on Radio 4 and the World Service.

On the drive, I had listened to her discussing her book on a 90-minute podcast.

I was full of questions and observations.


After getting a cup of coffee in the kitchen, we went into her office.

I stood by the garden door making drawings directly on the iPad - rough sketches of the room, of the last cherry blossoms in the garden outside and of her desk, where her own book lay beside a vase of daffodils:


Loose, energetic drawing of a desk, with laptop piled on books and a vase of daffodils beside a table lamp.

While I sketched she worked at her desk.

The laptop was piled on top of books, with a camera on a tripod behind it. I guessed that must be the arrangement she used to record the podcast I listened to.

As I sketched, she read aloud occasionally from something new she had found, relating to the subject of her book.

The book has already been published, but she keeps on top of the research because occasionally she is challenged by someone (a man, typically) who will insist that evidence supporting the case the book makes is out of date.

“I’m able to tell them the very latest,” she said.


Then we went to the kitchen to join her husband for lunch: Greek-style stuffed chicken (lots of oregano).

And after lunch I drove home. As usual, traffic on the A303 was very slow near Stonehenge.

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Tomorrow, I’ll send you more about this – but only if you opt in by clicking the link below.

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Till next time.

JPF

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John-Paul Flintoff

📖 7 Books in 16 languages 📚 including: How To Change The World A Modest Book About How To Make An Adequate Speech.

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