2025-02-09
29 分钟Welcome to Intelligence Squared, where great minds meet.
I'm producer Mia Sorrenti for this episode.
We're rejoining for part two of our conversation
with the international correspondent James Longman discussing his new memoir,
the Inherited Mind.
This is the second part of our two part episode.
ABC News's James Longman on family trauma and reporting from the front lines.
If you haven't heard part one, do just jump back an episode and get up to speed now.
Now it's time to rejoin the conversation recorded recently at the Kiln Theatre in London.
Here's our host for the evening, broadcaster and barrister Rob Rinder.
Well, I'm going to.
I'm sure people here will be buying the book and reading it and I was going to quote from the letter,
excuse me, the account that she gives, I urge you to.
It is quite extraordinary.
There are other characters as well, people who knew your dad,
you call them, well, voices from the past and Guardian Angels as well.
One of the voices from the past is somebody called Lizzie.
Can you tell us who Lizzie was and why she was important?
In my last week at the BBC, I got an email from someone who'd heard me on the radio and she said, hi,
James, I think I heard your voice on Radio 4 and I've just googled you and yes, you are the person I think you are.