Intellectual, accessible, and provocative literary conversations.
Friends of Michael
Longtime friend and editor of Bookworm, Alan Howard, returns to host this episode, the last of 10 shows to journey through Bookworm’s 33 years and offer a retrospective look at Michael’s accomplishments on behalf of writers and readers. For decades Michael has read almost all of a writer’s work, not just the book which has been most recently published. Howard has watched writers glow as they realize that they’ve been seriously witnessed by the ultimate Bookworm. All of the writers on today’s show have become friends of Michael’s and of Bookworm. We’ll hear from rock band Sparks (brothers Ron and Russell Mael), Art Spiegelman, Françoise Mouly, Ann Beattie, Susan Sontag, and Dennis Cooper.
9/20/2023 • 54 minutes, 57 seconds
Chapter 9: Grief and Loss
Close friend of Michael Silverblatt’s and Bookworm editor for 30 years, Alan Howard guest hosts this episode on grief and loss. When the two met more than 33 years ago, Michael’s first words were, “What are you reading?” It was a question that brought Howard back to literature. Over the years, Michael did the same for thousands of listeners. With Bookworm, he was determined to return literary fiction and poetry to the center of the zeitgeist. In the process, he faced the realities of loss and grief. In conversation after conversation with writers he was forging collegial friendships with, loss itself was a frequent topic of those friendships and conversations. We’ll hear from Marilynne Robinson, Joan Didion, Jim Krusoe, Steve Erickson, Dave Eggers, and Mary Ruefle.
9/13/2023 • 40 minutes, 6 seconds
The Story of America, Pt. 3
Prolific author Dave Eggers, founder of McSweeney's, co-founder of 826 National, and other significant projects, first met Micheal Silverblatt in 2000, upon the publication of his first book –– a critically acclaimed memoir whose title he calls, "obnoxious." They formed a friendship over 22 years of conversation. This episode, the third in a series to examine what novelist Russell Banks called the Story of America, is guest-hosted by Eggers. We’ll hear excerpts of Bookworm shows that discuss this story from E.L. Doctorow, Valeria Luiselli, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and Gore Vidal.
8/30/2023 • 33 minutes, 53 seconds
The Story of America, Pt. 2
Prolific author Dave Eggers, founder of McSweeney's, co-founder of 826 National, and other significant projects, first met Micheal Silverblatt in 2000, upon the publication of his first book –– a critically acclaimed memoir whose title he calls, "obnoxious." They formed a friendship over 22 years of conversation. In this episode, Eggers picks up the thread through what novelist Russell Banks called the Story of America. We’ll hear from Edward P. Jones, Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, and Marilynne Robinson as they speak about slavery, race, and history.
8/23/2023 • 31 minutes, 56 seconds
The Story of America, Pt. 1
Claudia Rankine, award-winning poet and author of Citizen: An American Lyric, a book-length poem about the pernicious racism of American daily life, hosts the first of a three-part episode on the story of America, as told through literary fiction. Over the decades Michael Silverblatt spoke with hundreds of writers about America — its foundation, its history, its challenges, and its culture. This episode reveals the story of America as the story of race. We’ll hear from David Foster Wallace, Russell Banks, Toni Morrison, Joyce Carol Oates, William H. Gass, Joan Didion, and Claudia Rankine herself.
8/16/2023 • 37 minutes, 18 seconds
The Confederacy of Bookworms
Guest host Mary Corey, teacher of American history at UCLA and author of "The World Through a Monocle" about The New Yorker Magazine, teaches a course on American popular culture that explores the blurry lines between perceived high culture and what we think of as popular culture. In this episode, Corey takes us through excerpts of Bookworm conversations with lauded boho rocker Patti Smith, writer and brilliant wit Fran Lebowitz, and outré filmmaker John Waters. Each of these rebel artists has left a mark on our national culture and all of them are serious readers, making up a confederacy of Bookworms.
8/9/2023 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Poetry
Poet, author, and co-founder of The Song Cave, Alan Felsenthal guest hosts this episode’s focus on poetry. As a close friend and mentee of Michael Silverblatt’s, Felsenthal recalls Michael’s revelation that he had trouble finding his way into poetry until he had several formative experiences, including one he described in 2019 during a Walt Whitman tribute. We’ll hear from that tribute with poet Pattiann Rogers reading Whitman. We’ll also hear from poets John Ashbery, Coral Bracho, Forrest Gander, and Lucille Clifton.
8/8/2023 • 34 minutes, 36 seconds
The Nobel Laureates, Pt.2
The Nobel Prize in Literature has been awarded annually since 1901 to an author from any country who has, in the words of the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, “In the field of literature produced the most outstanding work in an idealistic direction.” Michael Silverblatt spoke with eight Nobel Prize laureates. In part 1 of the Laureates show, we heard from four of them. In this second part, we’ll be hearing excerpts from: Kazuo Ishiguro, Mario Vargas Llosa, Doris Lessing, Czesław Miłosz, and Robert Hass speaking about Milosz.
8/2/2023 • 28 minutes, 31 seconds
The Nobel Laureates, Pt.1
The Nobel Prize in Literature has been awarded annually since 1901 to an author from any country who has, in the words of the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, “In the field of literature produced the most outstanding work in an idealistic direction.” Michael Silverblatt spoke with eight Nobel Prize laureates. In part 1 of The Nobel Laureates, we’ll be hearing from four of them: Toni Morrison, Wole Soyinka, Orhan Pamuk, and Seamus Heaney.
8/2/2023 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
The Arc of Bookworm
This episode takes us through the arc of Bookworm’s existence: Michael started the program with worries about the future of literature, found hope in the up-and-coming new writers, and proceeded to highlight authors of diverse backgrounds, cultures, and geographies.
7/26/2023 • 29 minutes
Michelle Huneven: ‘Search’
Los Angeles-based author Michelle Huneven joins Evan Kleiman to discuss her latest book, “Search.” In this engaging and funny literary fiction novel, main character Dana Potowski writes a memoir that describes the steps of her Unitarian Universalist Church congregation’s year-long search for its new minister and the challenges they encounter.
5/12/2022 • 28 minutes, 31 seconds
Natalia Molina: ‘A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community’
Natalia Molina tells the story of Nayarit, her grandmother’s Mexican restaurant, a space that became a cherished hub for immigrants and the LGBTQ community in Echo Park.
5/5/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Emily Skillings and John Yau: John Ashbery’s “Parallel Movement of the Hands: Five Unfinished Longer Works” (Re-air)
Editor/poet Emily Skillings and poet/critic John Yau speak about an iconic poet of the 21st century, John Ashbery, and his posthumous book, “Parallel Movement of the Hands: Five Unfinished Longer Works.”
4/28/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Rita Dove: “Playlist for the Apocalypse” (Re-air)
Rita Dove’s new book of poetry, “Playlist for the Apocalypse,” goes in many different historical and personal directions.
4/21/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Robert Jones, Jr.: “The Prophets” (Re-air)
The debut novel of Robert Jones, Jr., “The Prophets,” is lyrical prose about the dimensionality and interiority of people.
4/7/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Paul Tran’s wildly impressive debut poetry book, ‘All the Flowers Kneeling’
Paul Tran says that poetry can live on a page. This show discusses the abundant life in their debut poetry book, “All the Flowers Kneeling.” Tran joins guest host Shawn Sullivan to explore the book’s four sections as well as its notes.
3/31/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Tobias Wolff on Harry Crews’ ‘A Childhood: The Biography of a Place’
Writer Tobias Wolff speaks about a dark book that remains loving, Harry Crews 1978 classic “A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.” Wolff wrote the foreword to its Penguin Classics re-release, which joins a number of Crews’ works in the series.
3/24/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Tao Lin’s ‘Leave Society’ shifts the author’s perspective to love and kindness
Acclaimed novelist, poet, and essayist Tao Lin (“Taipei,” “Shoplifting from American Apparel”) speaks about growing as a writer, and growing his idea of himself in a book, including his latest, “Leave Society,” about the blurred lines between life and fiction.
3/17/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Zac Smith’s ‘Everything is Totally Fine,’ the book that reopened Tao Lin’s Muumuu House
Author Zac Smith speaks about the extreme juxtaposition of the very short, dense, and clipped stories in his new book, “Everything is Totally Fine.” He says that by removing a lot of exposition, he was able to create intense emotions in a small space. His energetic and thoughtful stories of absurdity and minutiae are things that could not be said any other way, and usually don’t get said. Plus, special guest Tao Lin explains why “Everything is Totally Fine” inspired him to reopen his Muumuu House imprint after it was closed for more than ten years.
3/10/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Brit Bennett: The Vanishing Half
Brit Bennett pushes questions of race and color to their extremes in her new novel, The Vanishing Half.
3/3/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Sarah Manguso’s ‘Very Cold People’ and life’s overwhelming small moments
A distinguished writer of books in various forms — poetry, essay, memoir — Sarah Manguso embarks on her first novel with “Very Cold People,” a striking work about what it means to be human. She discusses how she came to be the person and writer she seems to be now, and why it was necessary to write fiction to make the kind of book about Massachusetts she wanted to make. This deeply moving novel portrays being overwhelmed by the small moments of life, and documents the experience of being a criticized child.
2/24/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Sheila Heti: “Pure Colour”
At the beginning of Sheila Heti’s new book, “Pure Colour,” God looks at a first-draft world he should get around to changing. The reader meets protagonist Mira, who bonds with a woman named Annie. Then Mira’s father dies, and his soul enters her; astonishingly, their combined selves become a leaf on a tree. Annie longs to bring Mira out of leaf form. Annie is what Mira calls a fixer. “Pure Colour” is a singular book that needs to be accepted rather than interpreted. Sheila Heti speaks about how she couldn’t think or write in the same way she did before the death of her own father.
2/17/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Tom Bissell: ‘Creative Types: and Other Stories’
Journalist and author Tom Bissell’s new short fiction collection, “Creative Types: and Other Stories,” is about people trying to solve the problem of being themselves. Seven short stories describe the kinds of lives lived in Los Angeles with thoroughness, audacity, and complexity.
2/10/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Tessa Hadley: “Free Love”
Tessa Hadley’s new book, “Free Love” (Harper), is set in 1967 London at the beginning of the counterculture movement that swept the world. The protagonist, Phyllis, steps out of one sense of herself into another. She is a conservative mother of two until she crosses paths with the younger Nicky.
2/3/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Antoine Wilson: “Mouth to Mouth”
Canadian-American author Antoine Wilson discusses the work he put into writing entertaining pages for his new short book, “Mouth to Mouth” (Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster), and the propulsive story is not finished until the very last sentence.
1/27/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
John Keene: “Punks: New & Selected Poems” (The Song Cave)
“Punks: New & Selected Poems” is expansive poetry from John Keene, one of our time’s most notable writers. Seven sections offer different perspectives on what poetry can be: queer and Black, and much more than that. He joins Bookworm to discuss the difference between his prose and poetry.
1/20/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
In Memory of Joan Didion: 'Blue Nights'
After the deaths of her husband, John Gregory Dunne, and her daughter, Quintana, Joan Didion wrote "Blue Nights," the most personal and poetic book of her career. From 2011, she talks about aging, death, and the act of complete surrender that this devastating book required.
1/13/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Honoree Fanonne Jeffers: “The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois” (Part 2)
Honoree Fanonne Jeffers discusses writing about the full range of a community, its sexuality and gender, in her first fiction novel, “The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois.”
1/6/2022 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Honoree Fanonne Jeffers: “The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois” (Part 1)
Master poet Honoree Fanonne Jeffers discusses her fiction debut, “The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois.”
12/30/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Stephen Sondheim: Finishing the Hat
Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics (1954-1981) with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines and Anecdotes (Knopf)A collection of lyrics from the first half of Stephen Sondheim's career, along with insights into the art of songwriting for the theater. In this 2010 conversation, he explains why a song that may be "perfect" can be wrong for its dramatic moment in a show. This famous perfectionist reveals how much can go wrong.
12/23/2021 • 29 minutes
Dave Eggers: “The Every” (Part 2)
Dave Eggers further discusses his new book, “The Every.”
12/16/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Dave Eggers: “The Every” (Part 1)
“The Every” is the new book by Dave Eggers, a follow-up to his book “The Circle.”
12/9/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Louise Erdrich: “The Sentence”
Every bookstore is haunted, and Louise Erdrich’s new book, “The Sentence,” is about one.
12/2/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Sandra Cisneros: “Martita, I Remember You/Martita, te recuerdo”
“Martita, I Remember You/Martita, te recuerdo” is a bilingual new book by Sandra Cisneros.
11/25/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Diane Williams: “How High? – That High”
Idiosyncratic short story writer Diane Williams discusses her new book, “How High? – That High.”
11/18/2021 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Mary Gaitskill: “The Devil's Treasure”
Mary Gaitskill’s "The Devil’s Treasure” features sections from her previous novels and an unfinished novel, commentary, illustrations, and a story inspired by a dream her younger self had.
11/11/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Teresa K. Miller with Carol Muske-Dukes “Borderline Fortune”
Teresa K. Miller discusses “Borderline Fortune,” which won her the National Poetry Series, when she was about ready to give up on herself.
11/4/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Atsuro Riley: “Heard-Hoard”
Atsuro Riley says he wrote “Heard-Hoard” with a kind of pacing he could feel in his body.
10/28/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Jackie Kay: “Bessie Smith: A Poet's Biography of a Blues Legend”
Jackie Kay’s “Bessie Smith: A Poet's Biography of a Blues Legend” is a terrific mixture of memoir and biography.
10/21/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Rabih Alameddine: “The Wrong End of the Telescope”
Rabih Alameddine speaks about being in love with the characters in his new novel, “The Wrong End of the Telescope."
10/7/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Richard Powers: “Bewilderment”
Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award-winning Richard Powers discusses his new novel, “Bewilderment,” which has been longlisted for the Booker Prize and National Book Award.
9/23/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Dennis Cooper: “I Wished”
Santa Claus, James Turrell, “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter,” John Wayne Gacy, and, most of all, George Miles: these are parts of Dennis Cooper‘s discussion of his new book, “I Wished.”
9/16/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Alice McDermott: “What About the Baby?: Some Thoughts on the Art of Fiction”
Alice McDermott discusses the madness in fiction and her new book, “What About the Baby?: Some Thoughts on the Art of Fiction.”
8/26/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Richard Powers: The Overstory
About the interdependence between humans and trees, Richard Powers found a place for the non-human in literary fiction with his new book, The Overstory.
8/19/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Ron and Russell Mael: “Annette”
Ron and Russell Mael of Sparks discuss the small and significant differences between their original material and the final movie, “Annette.”
8/12/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Rikki Ducornet: “Trafik”
Rikki Ducornet speaks about writing in dreamtime for her new sci-fi book, “Trafik.”
8/5/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Yaa Gyasi: “Transcendent Kingdom” and “Homegoing” (Part 2)
Part two of two, a continuation of Yaa Gyasi’s discussion about the extraordinary explorations of her books “Homegoing” and “Transcendent Kingdom.”
7/29/2021 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Yaa Gyasi: “Transcendent Kingdom” and “Homegoing” (Part 1)
Part one of two in which Yaa Gyasi discusses the myriad complexities of her novels “Transcendent Kingdom” and “Homegoing.”
7/22/2021 • 30 minutes
Jack Skelley: “Dennis Wilson and Charlie Manson”
Jack Skelley speaks about his new book, “Dennis Wilson and Charlie Manson,” and the bad Beach Boy’s intersection with a serial killer.
7/15/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Emily Skillings and John Yau: John Ashbery’s “Parallel Movement of the Hands: Five Unfinished Longer Works”
Editor/poet Emily Skillings and poet/critic John Yau speak about an iconic poet of the 21st century, John Ashbery, and his posthumous book, “Parallel Movement of the Hands: Five Unfinished Longer Works.”
7/8/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Amy Gerstler: “Index of Women”
Amy Gerstler's new book of poetry, “Index of Women,” is the product of a heart the world broke.
7/1/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Joshua Cohen: 'The Netanyahus'
Joshua Cohen speaks about “The Netanyahus: An Account of a Minor And Ultimately Even Negligible Episode in the History of a Very Famous Family,” his new book that’s funny and tragic at the same time.
6/24/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Joan Silber: 'Secrets of Happiness'
Joan Silber writes about life's strange surprises in her new book, “Secrets of Happiness."
6/17/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Robert Coover and Art Spiegelman: “Street Cop”
Not a comicbook, but literally illustrated text, “Street Cop,” written by Robert Coover and inhabited by Art Spiegelman.
6/10/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Edward St. Aubyn: 'Double Blind'
Edward St. Aubyn discusses his new book, “Double Blind,” and writing about the problems with consciousness that have long fascinated his consciousness.
6/3/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Domenico Ingenito: 'Beholding Beauty: Saʿdi of Shiraz and the Aesthetics of Desire in Medieval Persian Poetry'
Domenico Ingenito speaks about his book, “Beholding Beauty: Saʿdi of Shiraz and the Aesthetics of Desire in Medieval Persian Poetry.”
5/27/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Brad Gooch: Rumi's Secret
Biographer Brad Gooch reveals that he traveled 2500 miles to trace Rumi's footsteps, learned Persian and spent eight years to write “Rumi's Secret: The Life of the Sufi Poet of Love.”
5/20/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Sandi Tan: 'Lurkers'
Sandi Tan speaks about writing “Lurkers” with a gut feeling, and following an emotional momentum.
5/13/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Rachel Cusk: “Second Place”
Rachel Cusk’s “Second Place” wants to render the sensations and apprehensions of living that are pretty much beyond language.
5/6/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
George Toles: 'Status Update'
“Status Update,” the mini-narratives of George Toles, accompanied by magnificent art responses from Cliff Eyland.
4/29/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Rachel Kushner: “The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020”
Rachel Kushner’s “The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020” is a career-spanning collection of nineteen essays.
4/22/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Rita Dove: “Playlist for the Apocalypse”
Rita Dove’s new book of poetry, “Playlist for the Apocalypse,” goes in many different historical and personal directions.
4/21/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Wayne Koestenbaum: “The Cheerful Scapegoat”
Wayne Koestenbaum’s first book of short fiction, “The Cheerful Scapegoat,” is a spectacularly odd and original collection of whimsical, surreal, baroque, ribald, and heartbreaking fables.
4/15/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Kazuo Ishiguro: “Klara and the Sun”
Kazuo Ishiguro’s “Klara and the Sun” is a novel focused on a small group of people in a robot future.
4/8/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
A Kazuo Ishiguro Retrospective
A retrospective of Kazuo Ishiguro, the 2017 Nobel laureate in literature.
4/1/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Robert Jones, Jr.: “The Prophets”
The debut novel of Robert Jones, Jr., “The Prophets,” is lyrical prose about the dimensionality and interiority of people.
3/25/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Carol Edgarian: “Vera”
Carol Edgarian’s “Vera” is the story of a strong, capable, and independent girl whose voice is the voice of the book.
3/18/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
A Tribute to Lawrence Ferlinghetti: “Time of Useful Consciousness”
A tribute to the co-founder of the highly influential independent bookstore and publisher City Lights, renowned poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti.
3/11/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Viet Thanh Nguyen: “The Committed”
Viet Thanh Nguyen discusses his new novel, “The Committed,” the follow-up to his Pulitzer-winning “The Sympathizer,” and the second entry in a planned trilogy. It brings Nguyen’s storytelling further into the philosophy of refugees, feminism, communism, anti-communism and more—the terror of both the American war in Vietnam and the French presence in Vietnam, along with the Vietnamese presence in America andFrance. This is duality enacted as a writing method; this is a union between theory and fiction. A novel of ideas and politics and history and theory, but also a crime novel. A novel you’re not born knowing how to read, and you might have to reread it, this is exciting contemporary literature.
3/4/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Ann Beattie: A Wonderful Stroke of Luck
Ben’s life falls down around him, and he’s the protagonist, in A Wonderful Stroke of Luck, by master writer Ann Beattie.
2/25/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
David Duchovny: “Truly Like Lightning”
David Duchovny speaks about his new novel, “Truly Like Lightning,” and its plot that matters.
2/18/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
George Saunders “A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life” (Part 2)
Part two of two: George Saunders speaks about his new book, “A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life."
2/11/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
George Saunders: “A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life” (Part 1)
The first in a two-parter with George Saunders discussing his new book, "A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life."
2/4/2021 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Rebecca Sacks: “City of a Thousand Gates”
Rebecca Sacks discusses her novel, “City of a Thousand Gates,” which explores the Palestinian-Israeli conflict by testing its boundaries.
1/28/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Eileen Myles: “For Now (Why I Write)”
Those who read to write will want to hear Eileen Myles talk about “For Now,” which is part of the "Why I Write" series from Yale University Press.
1/21/2021 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Alan Felsenthal and Peter Cole discuss Harold Bloom’s “Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles: The Power of the Reader’s Mind over a Universe of Death”
Venerated critic Harold Bloom’s final book “Take Arms Against a Sea of Troubles: The Power of the Reader’s Mind over a Universe of Death” is discussed by the poets Alan Felsenthal and Peter Cole.
1/14/2021 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Susan Taubes, introduction by David Rieff: “Divorcing”
David Rieff discusses “Divorcing” by Susan Taubes: the reimagined end of an autobiographical marriage.
1/7/2021 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Garth Greenwell: Cleanness
Garth Greenwell discusses seeking human truths by writing into an abyss, and his new novel Cleanness.
12/31/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Brit Bennett: The Vanishing Half
Brit Bennett pushes questions of race and color to their extremes in her new novel, The Vanishing Half.
12/24/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore: “The Freezer Door”
Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore’s new book “The Freezer Door” explores the idea of radical visions not predicated on dominant forms.
12/17/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Jen Craig: “Panthers and the Museum of Fire”
Jen Craig discusses writing “Panthers and the Museum of Fire,” a short and expansive book that feels immense, rich and complex.
12/10/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mary Ruefle: Dunce
Dunce, by Mary Ruefle, finds meaning everywhere.
12/3/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Douglas Stuart: “Shuggie Bain”
Douglas Stuart’s “Shuggie Bain” is not a book to miss.
11/26/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Charles Baxter: 'The Sun Collective'
The eerie realism of Charles Baxter reaches an apotheosis in his new novel, “The Sun Collective.”
11/19/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Nicole Krauss: 'To Be a Man'
Nicole Krauss speaks about subconscious magic and realism combining through the art of writing, and her new book of short stories, “To Be a Man.”
11/12/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mauro Javier Cárdenas: “Aphasia”
Mauro Javier Cárdenas discusses reimagining narrative possibilities with his new book, “Aphasia."
11/5/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Douglas Stuart: “Shuggie Bain”
Douglas Stuart’s “Shuggie Bain” is not a book to miss.
10/29/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Charles Yu: Interior Chinatown
Charles Yu’s "Interior Chinatown" is a contemporary novel about dealing with the difficulty of being whoever you are.
10/22/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Marilynne Robinson: 'Jack'
Marilynne Robinson’s “Jack” is a book that Bookworms have been eager to read: the fourth volume of her multi-award-winning Gilead novels.
10/15/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Walter Mosley: “The Awkward Black Man”
Walter Mosley’s “The Awkward Black Man” is a new book of short stories that brings readers into the middle of the experience of people today.
10/8/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Barbara Kingsolver: “How to Fly (In Ten Thousand Easy Lessons)”
Barbara Kingsolver discusses crossing genres of writing and her second book of poetry, “How to Fly (In Ten Thousand Easy Lessons).”
10/1/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Jay Parini: “Borges and Me: An Encounter”
Seventy-one-year-old Jorge Luis Borges as seen through the eyes of twenty-one-year-old Jay Parini in “Borges and Me: An Encounter.”
9/24/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Aracelis Girmay: “How to Carry Water: Selected Poems of Lucille Clifton”
“How to Carry Water: Selected Poems of Lucille Clifton,” edited by Aracelis Girmay, is a literary special treat.
9/17/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mitch Sisskind: “Collected Poems 2005-2020”
Mitch Sisskind discusses writing humorous poetry and his new book, “Collected Poems 2005-2020."
9/10/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Henri Cole: Blizzard
Henri Cole is a really sensational poet even for people who may not think poetry can be sensational. He works for the universe and he discusses his new book of poems “Blizzard” on Bookworm.
9/3/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Sarah Shun-lien Bynum: “Likes”
Sarah Shun-lien Bynum’s “Likes” is a layered book of nine short stories.
8/27/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Edmund White “A Saint from Texas”
Several kinds of novels in one, Edmund White’s “A Saint from Texas” is so good you might forget a novel can be this good.
8/20/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Elizabeth Wetmore: 'Valentine' (Part 2)
Elizabeth Wetmore’s “Valentine” is an impressive demonstration of the power of the voices of women.
8/13/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Elizabeth Wetmore: 'Valentine' (Part 1)
Elizabeth Wetmore discusses her debut novel, “Valentine,” and Southern conservatism that wants to steer clear of the uglier parts of life.
8/6/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Margot Livesey: “The Boy in the Field”
Life and story go hand in hand in Margot Livesey’s “The Boy in the Field.”
7/30/2020 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Daphne Merkin: “22 Minutes of Unconditional Love”
Daphne Merkin discusses what normative means, the concept of a normal looking life, and her new novel, “22 Minutes of Unconditional Love”.
7/23/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Zadie Smith: “On Beauty”
From the archives: obliquely about Zadie Smith's "On Beauty", this intense, abstract conversation is about what a novel is.
7/16/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Alex Halberstadt: "Young Heroes of the Soviet Union: A Memoir and a Reckoning"
History, autobiography, travelogue—a hybrid form—"Young Heroes of the Soviet Union: A Memoir and a Reckoning", by Alex Halberst.
7/9/2020 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Scott Spencer: “An Ocean Without a Shore”
Scott Spencer’s new novel, “An Ocean Without a Shore,” is about a life seeped in unfulfilled desires.
7/2/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Horacio Castellanos Moya: Senselessness
The co-producer of Bookworm, Shawn Michael Sullivan, was able to rebroadcast one of his favorite shows, between Michael Silverblatt and Horacio Castellanos Moya, regarding Senselessness.
6/18/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Fowzia Karimi: Above Us the Milky Way
Fowzia Karimi speaks about the art of the novel, and designing Above Us the Milky Way.
6/11/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mark Z. Danielewski: The Little Blue Kite
Mark Z. Danielewski’s The Little Blue Kite is a generous and big-hearted children’s book about creating a spacious mind, with room for others.
6/4/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Edited by André Naffis-Sahely The Heart of a Stranger: An Anthology of Exile Literature
Anthologist André Naffis-Sahely says he provided a historical perspective to The Heart of a Stranger: An Anthology of Exile Literature.
5/28/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Victoria Chang: Love, Love (Part 2)
Victoria Chang discusses Love, Love, her children’s novel written in verse—poetry written for children.
5/21/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Victoria Chang: Obit (Part 1)
Victoria Chang’s Obit is a poetry book about the impact of death on the living.
5/14/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Benjamin Moser: Sontag: Her Life and Work
Benjamin Moser recently won a Pulitzer Prize for his biography Sontag: Her Life and Work. In this show from the archives, he talks about Susan Sontag‘s ideology: reading more books, going to more plays, traveling more, learning more, taking learning seriously, and taking culture seriously.
5/7/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Daniel Kehlmann: Tyll
Daniel Kehlmann describes his new novel, Tyll, as dark, frightening, and murky—in a good way.
4/30/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Rob Doyle: Threshold
Youthful nihilism, contradictory impulses, preferences and desires catch up with Rob Doyle in his explicitly autobiographical novel Threshold.
4/23/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Ariana Reines: A Sand Book
Ariana Reines discusses her A Sand Book poetry being centered around a theme of hiding: running away and trying to escape.
4/16/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Charles North: Everything and Other Poems
Charles North describes Everything and Other Poems as “messy poetry” without the formal demands of his earlier work.
4/9/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Harry Dodge: My Meteorite: Or, Without the Random There Can Be No New Thing
Harry Dodge’s My Meteorite: Or, Without the Random There Can Be No New Thing shifts its scale from the cosmos to viruses.
4/2/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Rebecca Solnit: Recollections of My Nonexistence
Recollections of My Nonexistence is a personal, cultural, political, and journalistic hybrid narrative about the formative years in the life of Rebecca Solnit.
3/26/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Stephen Wright: Processed Cheese
Stephen Wright’s Processed Cheese finds hilarity in the tragedy of contemporary life.
3/19/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Jenny Offill: Weather
Jenny Offill’s Weather is a book about people living very much in our times.
3/12/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Steven Sater: Alice By Heart
Steven Sater’s Alice By Heart wants to reaffirm the power of the imagination, and inspire readers to reignite the wonder in themselves.
3/5/2020 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Charles Yu: Interior Chinatown
Charles Yu’s "Interior Chinatown" has won the 2020 National Book Award for fiction. In February 2020, Charles Yu spoke with KCRW's Michael Silverblatt in a live edition of Bookworm.
2/27/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Translators Suzanne Jill Levine, Jessica Powell, and Katie Lateef-Jan: The Promise and Forgotten Journey by Silvina Ocampo
A discovery readers have been waiting for, more Silvina Ocampo finally translated into English: The Promise and Forgotten Journey.
2/20/2020 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Tobias Wolff: This Boy’s Life
One of the first books within a huge movement that restored respectability to memoirs, This Boy’s Life celebrates its thirtieth anniversary, and Tobias Wolff celebrates thirty years since being on Bookworm.
2/13/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Fanny Howe: Love and I
Love and I, poems by Fanny Howe, about love, the failure of love, and the transformation of love over the years.
2/6/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Garth Greenwell: Cleanness
Garth Greenwell discusses seeking human truths by writing into an abyss, and his new novel Cleanness.
1/30/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Daniel Mendelsohn: Ecstasy and Terror: From the Greeks to Game of Thrones
Daniel Mendelsohn’s Ecstasy and Terror: From the Greeks to Game of Thrones is an uncommon collection of essays that intertwine the personal with the intellectual and critical.
1/23/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Jonathan Blum: The Usual Uncertainties
Jonathan Blum wrote characters with open destinies, in stories with open endings, for his new book of short stories, The Usual Uncertainties.
1/16/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Ben Lerner: The Topeka School
Ben Lerner’s Leaving the Atocha Station and 10:04 find their synthesis in The Topeka School, the third in his Hegelian trilogy.
1/9/2020 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
André Aciman: Find Me
In André Aciman’s Find Me, strokes of luck are destiny.
1/2/2020 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Deborah Eisenberg: Your Duck Is My Duck
Again Deborah Eisenberg demonstrates herself as a masterful and electric writer, in her new collection of seven stories, Your Duck Is My Duck.
12/20/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Adina Hoffman on 'Ben Hecht: Fighting Words, Moving Pictures'
Adina Hoffman’s "Ben Hecht: Fighting Words, Moving Pictures" is about a man of multitudes.
12/19/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Chris Ware: Rusty Brown
Chris Ware’s Rusty Brown depicts life the way it is: jam packed with details, the closer you look the ever more there is.
12/12/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Lawrence Weschler: And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?: A Biographical Memoir of Oliver Sacks
And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?: A Biographical Memoir of Oliver Sacks by Lawrence Weschler is a book that can only be itself.
12/5/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Ocean Vuong: On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
From the archives, Ocean Vuong speaks of leaving his thumbprint on his new novel On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous. Alternate modes of storytelling are discussed, as are narratives without intrinsic conflict. On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is a letter from a son to a mother who doesn’t read English; it is about finding joy in innovative and creative survival.
11/22/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Lynda Barry: Making Comics
Lynda Barry’s Making Comics is a how-to graphic novel guide for people who gave up on drawing.
11/21/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Jeanette Winterson Frankissstein: A Love Story
Jeanette Winterson’s Frankissstein: A Love Story is about time travel and body travel.
11/14/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Lynda Barry and Chris Ware: Making Comics and Rusty Brown
Lynda Barry and Chris Ware discuss the culture of comics, and their new books, Making Comics and Rusty Brown.
11/7/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
John Freeman and Robin Coste Lewis Freeman’s: The Best New Writing on California
John Freeman and Robin Coste Lewis discuss Freeman’s: The Best New Writing on California.
10/31/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Harold Bloom: The Shadow of a Great Rock: A Literary Appreciation of the King James Bible
In tribute, from the archives, a conversation with Harold Bloom (1930-2019) in his apartment to talk about his book, The Shadow of a Great Rock: A Literary Appreciation of the King James Bible. A discussion officially about the great King James translation of the Old and New Testaments. But when you talk with Harold Bloom, you talk about everything—politics, poetry, teaching, aging, reading and ultimately, respect.
10/24/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Benjamin Moser: Sontag: Her Life and Work
Benjamin Moser’s Sontag: Her Life and Work is interested in the writing and ideas of Susan Sontag.
10/17/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Salman Rushdie: Quichotte (Part 2)
Salman Rushdie’s Quichotte is explored as a modern take on the novel Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, with the opera Don Quichotte by Jules Massenet a strong influence.
10/10/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Salman Rushdie: Quichotte (Part 1)
Salman Rushdie’s Quichotte depicts the pleasures of fiction.
10/3/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Emma Donoghue: Akin
The structure of Emma Donoghue’s Akin leads the reader through one surprise after another.
9/26/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Cathleen Schine: The Grammarians
Language-loving twin sisters discover themselves united by passion but separated by needs in The Grammarians, the eleventh book by Cathleen Schine.
9/19/2019 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Mary Ruefle: Dunce
Dunce, by Mary Ruefle, finds meaning everywhere.
9/12/2019 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Katya Apekina: The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish
Katya Apekina’s novel The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish has a dark sense of humor, and an interest in the soul.
9/5/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Sarah Rose Etter: The Book of X
Sarah Rose Etter’s The Book of X belongs to a literary conversation about the grotesque and surreal.
8/29/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Peter Orner: Maggie Brown & Others
Characters with DNA, blood and soul populate forty three stories and a novella by Peter Orner: Maggie Brown & Others.
8/22/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Toni Morrison: Beloved
From the archives, a highly resonate conversation with Toni Morrison about transfiguring love, as portrayed in her novel Beloved.
8/15/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Toni Morrison Tribute
Nobel Laureate, Toni Morrison passed away this week at 88 years of age. Bookworm is rebroadcasting a 2009 conversation with her about her novel, A Mercy.*
8/8/2019 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Howard Rodman: The Great Eastern
Literary legends Captain Ahab and Captain Nemo are pitted against each other by real life engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel in Howard Rodman’s The Great Eastern.
8/1/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ariana Reines: A Sand Book
The poetry in Ariana Reines's A Sand Book is centered around the theme of hiding: running away and trying to escape.
7/19/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ocean Vuong: On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
Ocean Vuong speaks of leaving his thumbprint within his new novel On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous.
7/18/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
David Trinidad, Amy Gerstler, Ruth Greenstein: Punk Rock is Cool for the End of the World: Poems and Notebooks of Ed Smith
Editor/poet David Trinidad, poet Amy Gerstler, and publisher Ruth Greenstein reflect on the dynamic mind behind Punk Rock is Cool for the End of the World: Poems and Notebooks of Ed Smith.
7/11/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
David Trinidad: Swinging on a Star
David Trinidad’s Swinging on a Star is a two-part collection of poems that put the human in pop culture.
6/27/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Laila Lalami: The Other Americans
Laila Lalami’s The Other Americans is a polyphonic novel about social class and identity, with a revelation in every chapter.
6/20/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Seth: Clyde Fans
A stunning graphic novel by one of the medium’s greatest creators, Seth’s Clyde Fans is about people living in a memory fog, and the strange reverie that life takes on when one grows older.
6/13/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ann Beattie: A Wonderful Stroke of Luck
Ben’s life falls down around him, and he’s the protagonist, in A Wonderful Stroke of Luck, by master writer Ann Beattie.
6/6/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Dave Eggers: The Parade
The Parade, by Dave Eggers, is a book of creeping dread, where every worst thing is possible, and rational reason leads one to expect that the worst is not over.
5/30/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Richard Powers: The Overstory
About the interdependence between humans and trees, Richard Powers found a place for the non-human in literary fiction with his new book, The Overstory.
5/23/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Terrance Hayes: American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin
Seventy sonnets written in the first two hundred days of Trump's presidency, American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin, by Terrance Hayes, flies out of the cages of literary, cultural, and historical forms. Warning: Today's episode contains strong language that some listeners may find offensive.
5/16/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Nafissa Thompson-Spires: Heads of the Colored People
The stories in Heads of the Colored People, by Nafissa Thompson-Spires, try to capture what’s human in what otherwise may only be trends.
5/9/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Tayari Jones: An American Marriage
Her fourth book, which took her six years to write, An American Marriage brought Tayari Jones to the attention of Oprah’s Book Club.
5/2/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
John Lanchester: The Wall
John Lanchester’s The Wall is a wild love story with a dystopian backdrop.
4/25/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Nathan Englander: kaddish.com
In Nathan Englander’s kaddish.com, a secular Jewish son experiments with the task of shepherding his father’s soul safely to rest.
4/18/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Chris Cander: The Weight of a Piano
Chris Cander’s The Weight of a Piano explores characters with passionate attachments to things that have been lost.
4/11/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Valeria Luiselli: Lost Children Archive
Valeria Luiselli's Lost Children Archive tells the story of a family by combining the American road trip subgenre with the Latin American tradition of an inward journey.
4/4/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Elizabeth McCracken: Bowlaway
Her nature oppositional, Elizabeth McCracken’s Bowlaway is a sad, funny, hilarious, and melancholic novel.
3/28/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Yiyun Li: Where Reasons End
In Yiyun Li’s Where Reasons End, a mother discovers a place where she can talk to her son who committed suicide.
3/21/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Marlon James: Black Leopard, Red Wolf: The Dark Star Trilogy
Marlon James discusses the endlessly beautiful and brutal world of Black Leopard, Red Wolf, the first novel in The Dark Star Trilogy.
3/14/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Chloe Aridjis: Sea Monsters
Sea Monsters is a fascinatingly consistent and exquisitely shaped novel by Chloe Aridjis.
3/7/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Dennis Cooper and Zac Farley: Permanent Green Light
Bookworm alumnus Dennis Cooper, and collaborator Zac Farley, discuss the creative impulses behind their film Permanent Green Light.
2/28/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Sam Lipsyte: Hark
A novel that presents ambiguity as a constant feature of modern life, Hark is a book full of tensions, written with Sam Lipsyte’s fine grain strangeness, and absent of easy answers.
2/21/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Amanda Sthers: Holy Lands
A writer of ten novels in French, Holy Lands is the first novel by Amanda Sthers to appear in English, translated by herself.
2/14/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Tosh Berman: Tosh: Growing Up in Wallace Berman’s World
Tosh Berman’s memoir, Tosh: Growing Up in Wallace Berman’s World, is a depiction of culture brought into Los Angeles from the rest of the world: reinvented to be here.
2/7/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mary Ruefle: My Private Property
Mary Ruefle reads the entirety of her glorious and gruesome essay about shrunken heads, the title essay in her book My Private Property.
1/31/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Diane Williams: The Collected Stories of Diane Williams
The original and indescribable writing of Diane Williams is showcased in over three hundred dazzling new and previously published shorts fictions from six releases, The Collected Stories of Diane Williams.
1/24/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Deborah Eisenberg: Your Duck Is My Duck: Stories
Again Deborah Eisenberg demonstrates herself as a masterful and electric writer, in her new collection of seven stories, Your Duck Is My Duck.
1/17/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
John Wray: Godsend
John Wray discusses writing about the extremes of subjectivity, and breaking the reader of expectations in his new novel, Godsend.
1/10/2019 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Jeff Jackson: Destroy All Monsters: The Last Rock Novel
Jeff Jackson’s Destroy All Monsters: The Last Rock Novel comes at the same story from radically different angles that echo and rewrite each other.
1/3/2019 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Edward M. Burns and Jim Gauer: Questioning Minds: The Letters of Guy Davenport and Hugh Kenner
A voluminous correspondence of an intellectual friendship between two literary geniuses, Questioning Minds: The Letters of Guy Davenport and Hugh Kenner, edited by Edward M. Burns.
12/20/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Katharine Weber: Still Life with Monkey
Dramatic, emotional, and philosophical, Katherine Weber’s, Still Life with Monkey, is a profound book written in the old style, with depths orchestrated by the author.
12/13/2018 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Barbara Kingsolver: Unsheltered
In Barbara Kingsolver’s Unsheltered, characters feel as if they did what was right in life, but get a bad deal at the end of their lives.
12/6/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Leland de la Durantaye: Hannah Versus the Tree
Mythical and lyrical, written in love, Leland de la Durantaye’s debut novel Hannah Versus the Tree is original work that speaks to our moment.
11/29/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Brian Phillips: Impossible Owls
The restless imagination of Brian Phillips brings lyrical essays to a narrative border in his debut book, Impossible Owls.
11/15/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Eileen Myles: Evolution
Evolution is a collection of all-new material by Eileen Myles, whose inspired poetry is a form of communication.
11/8/2018 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ben Fountain: Beautiful Country Burn Again
Ben Fountain writes with equal opportunity vexation, trying to make sense of what we’re doing in our lives, in his new book Beautiful Country Burn Again.
11/1/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Susan Orlean: The Library Book
Susan Orlean’s The Library Book is about the cultural institution of libraries, with each chapter a source of its own excitement.
10/25/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Tommy Orange: There There
Beauty and despair woven into their history, twelve multigenerational urban Native Americans find ways to live in Tommy Orange’s There There.
10/18/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Gary Shteyngart: Lake Success
Gary Shteyngart’s Lake Success is about a hedge-fund manager billionaire who has lost track of what he once cared about and loved.
10/11/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Patrick deWitt: French Exit
French Exit by Patrick deWitt, a vastly amusing novel about a spider woman.
10/4/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Edward St. Aubyn: The Complete Patrick Melrose Novels
Edward St. Aubyn’s Never Mind, Bad News, Some Hope, Mother’s Milk, and At Last: The Complete Patrick Melrose Novels, recently adapted into a five-episode limited series on Showtime.
9/27/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Joshua Cohen and Samuel Nicholson: ATTENTION: Dispatches from a Land of Distraction
Samuel Nicholson edited three of Joshua Cohen’s books at Random House, including his recent collection of nonfiction, ATTENTION: Dispatches from a Land of Distraction.
9/20/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Joshua Cohen: ATTENTION: Dispatches from a Land of Distraction
Joshua Cohen’s collection of nonfiction, ATTENTION: Dispatches from a Land of Distraction, examines the effect of the internet and technology on the human mind.
9/13/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mary Cappello, James Morrison, Jean Walton Buffalo Trace: A Threefold Vibration
Buffalo Trace: A Threefold Vibration, by Mary Cappello, James Morrison, and Jean Walton, is a trio of novella-length autographical essays about graduate school students who love to read.
9/6/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Joshua Mattson: A Short Film About Disappointment
Joshua Mattson’s experimental debut novel, A Short Film About Disappointment, pulls the rug out from under the reader.
8/30/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
B. Catling: The Vorhh Trilogy (Part 2)
B. Catling further discusses learning to write The Vorhh Trilogy by being within it.
8/23/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
B. Catling: The Vorhh Trilogy (Part 1)
In B. Catling’s The Vorrh Trilogy, a vast surrealist tapestry comes into being; cooperating with the reader’s desire.
8/16/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Christian Kracht: The Dead
Christian Kracht’s The Dead is an expectations bending book with more tricks than a circus.
8/9/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Lydia Millet: Fight No More
Lydia Millet’s Fight No More is a book of improvised stories about people who live improvised lives in Los Angeles.
8/2/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
David Sedaris: Calypso
David Sedaris is hilarious but that’s just the obvious. He discusses the art of melancholy, and mortality, topics in his new book of humorous stories, Calypso.
7/26/2018 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Joseph McBride with Nicola Lubitsch: How Did Lubitsch Do It?
Nicola Lubitsch joins film historian Joseph McBride to discuss her father, Ernst, and McBride’s book about him, How Did Lubitsch Do It?
7/19/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Presenting The Organist from McSweeney's
We share an episode of a KCRW podcast produced in collaboration with McSweeney's.
7/13/2018 • 33 minutes, 23 seconds
Lauren Groff: Florida
Characters in Lauren Groff’s collection of stories, Florida, try to meet the challenges of staying alive while life becomes more and more difficult.
7/12/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
A.M. Homes Days of Awe: Stories
In Days of Awe: Stories, A.M. Homes writes about characters who turn out not to be who they hoped to be, and unable to escape who they are.
7/5/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Rita Bullwinkel: Belly Up
Bewildered imagination finds a home in the stories of Rita Bullwinkel's Belly Up.
6/28/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: Warlight (Part 2)
Michael Ondaatje’s Warlight alters the rules about how big a novel’s canvas can be; it gives the feeling of completeness without telling all the secrets.
6/21/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: Warlight (Part 1)
Michael Ondaatje fully embraces the fun of storytelling in this miracle of a novel, Warlight.
6/14/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mary Gaitskill: Somebody with a Little Hammer
Mary Gaitskill’s collection of essays, Somebody with a Little Hammer, explores prismatic perspectives on rich topics, including literature.
6/7/2018 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Linda Spalding: A Reckoning
Linda Spalding’s novel, A Reckoning, based on her family history, describes past nightmares that trickle into today.
5/31/2018 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Shauna Barbosa: Cape Verdean Blues
The poetry of Cape Verdean Blues is organic, melancholic, and gorgeous. Shauna Barbosa starts with feeling, shines with honesty, and questions everything.
5/24/2018 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: A Book of American Martyrs
Joyce Carol Oates discusses A Book of American Martyrs, a novel about what women are going to make of the American dream.
5/17/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Leslie Jamison: The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath
Leslie Jamison’s The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath is a book about the nightmare of feeling not enough, Jamison travels all 360 degrees of wanting to be the best and the worst, and has a great struggle to live in the middle ground.
5/10/2018 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Rachel Kushner: The Mars Room
Rachel Kushner discusses The Mars Room, a novel set in a women’s correctional facility, a dazzling novel full of surprising details that can’t be forgotten.
5/3/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Carol Muske-Dukes: Blue Rose
Carol Muske-Dukes discusses her book, Blue Rose. The poetry is written at the highest level but it’s about daily life: poetry as life story.
4/26/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Christine Schutt: Pure Hollywood
Christine Schutt says her writing takes place in a danger zone. In Pure Hollywood, one novella and ten stories, she writes beyond weird, at a level that both frightens and empowers.
4/19/2018 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Junot Diaz: Islandborn
Devastatingly beautiful, soulful, a fulfillment of a promise to his goddaughter, Junot Diaz’s Islandborn offers a new map into children’s books.
4/12/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Lynne Tillman: Men and Apparitions
A novel trapped in the mind of a very unusual man. Lynne Tillman writes with wit that makes the reader dance.
4/5/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Sean Penn: Bob Honey Who Just Do Stuff
A transcendent apocalyptic satire, an outrageous improvisation of a book, embedded with the rhythms of American prose, Sean Penn discusses his first novel, Bob Honey Who Just Do Stuff.
3/29/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Roberta Allen: The Princess of Herself
Roberta Allen says every truth can work as fiction. She discusses writing into the essence of a story. The Princess of Herself is interconnected stories of familiar but monstrous people not normally written about.
3/22/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Ann Beattie and Richard Bausch: The Complete Stories of Peter Taylor
Two brilliant writers talk about a brilliant writer: Ann Beattie and Richard Bausch discuss the haunted dreamscapes of the short fiction of Peter Taylor.
3/15/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Mokhtar Alkhanshali and Dave Eggers: The Monk of Mokha
For The Monk of Mokha, Dave Eggers writes the story of Mokhtar Alkhanshali bridging the country of his ancestors with the country where he lives. This is a conversation about the fate of immigrant life in America.
3/8/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
André Aciman: Call Me by Your Name / Enigma Variations
André Aciman takes the intensity, complexity, and variety of his Call Me by Your Name still further in his new novel, Enigma Variations.
3/1/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Scott McClanahan: The Sarah Book / Crapalachia: A Biography of Place
Scott McClanahan discusses two of his close-to- the-bone and personal novels: The Sarah Book and Crapalachia: A Biography of Place.
2/22/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Víctor Terán and David Shook: Like A New Sun: New Indigenous Mexican Poetry
Víctor Terán and David Shook discuss the music of Isthmus Zapotec and poetry translated for Like A New Sun.
2/15/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Matthew McIntosh: theMystery.doc
Matthew McIntosh’s theMystery.doc asks a reader to consider what a book is, while exploring how a book can be like life.
2/8/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Jane Gillette: The Trail of the Demon and Other Stories
Jane Gillette describes the wicked writing of her first book, The Trail of the Demon and Other Stories.
2/1/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Ursula LeGuin
Revisiting Ursula LeGuin, the immensely popular author who changed science fiction and fantasy for millions of readers. She died this month at the age of 88.
1/25/2018 • 29 minutes, 1 second
Isabel Allende: In the Midst of Winter
Storytelling queen Isabel Allende wrote a time-crossing, culture-hopping chamber piece that gives faces to immigration during these dark times for literature, In the Midst of Winter.
1/18/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Chris Kraus: After Kathy Acker: A Literary Biography
In her stunning After Kathy Acker: A Literary Biography, Chris Kraus wrote not of theory but of writing, creativity, and the depth a writer has to go to form an identity.
1/11/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Joe Hagan: Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine
In Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine, Joe Hagan explores the countercultural rise of the late-60s rock and roll teen society.
1/4/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Morgan Parker: There Are More Beautiful Things than Beyoncé
Morgan Parker says that the poems in her book There Are Things More Beautiful than Beyoncé take a stand against the clichés of the dominant culture.
12/28/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Anne Fadiman: The Wine Lover's Daughter
Anne Fadiman discusses topics from The Wine Lover’s Daughter: wine, literature, and her father Clifton.
12/21/2017 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
William H. Gass Tribute
The great novelist, essayist and prose stylist William H. Gass died last week at 93. This tribute show is composed of excerpts from previous Bookworm conversations with Gass.
12/14/2017 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Charmaine Craig: Miss Burma
A moody historical novel, Miss Burma by Charmaine Craig explores history as it is inscribed in the souls of a rather special Burmese family.
12/7/2017 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Jennifer Egan: Manhattan Beach
Without spoilers, we discuss the intricate surprises and complex modes of disclosure in Jennifer Egan's new novel Manhattan Beach.
11/30/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Wallace Shawn: Night Thoughts
This show features a dramatic and emotional reading by writer/actor Wallace Shawn of an excerpt from Night Thoughts, his book-length essay. (REPEAT)
11/23/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mark Danielewski: The Familiar, Volume 5
The Familiar, Volume 5: Redwood, by Mark Danielewski, closes Season One of a serial novel imagined as a vast TV series.
11/16/2017 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Sparks (Part II)
The second conversation with brothers Ron and Russell Mael of the band Sparks, along with stripped-down versions of two songs from their new album Hippopotamus.
11/9/2017 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Sparks (Part I)
Sparks plays stripped-down acoustic versions of art rock songs off their new album Hippopotamus, along with a classic song, and the theme to Bookworm, Where Would We Be without Books.
11/2/2017 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Eileen Myles: Afterglow (a dog memoir)
Beloved writer Eileen Myles didn't make up the dog but she did make up Afterglow (a dog memoir).
10/26/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Kazuo Ishiguro
We sample 25 years of Bookworm conversations with Kazuo Ishiguro, the 2017 Nobel Prize Laureate for literature.
10/19/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Stephen Greenblatt: The Rise and Fall of Adam and Eve
Following his National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize celebrated The Swerve, in the elaborately readable The Rise and Fall of Adam and Eve Stephen Greenblatt explores reasons why the story of Genesis has seized the imagination.
10/12/2017 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Nicole Krauss: Forest Dark
Nicole Krauss took a risk by writing about two protagonists who never meet. Krauss says she let herself follow the characters of Forest Dark into the unknown.
10/5/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Andrew Sean Greer: Less
In his novel Less, Andrew Sean Greer discusses filterless writing and the idea of getting what you want in a world bent on not giving you what you want.
9/28/2017 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Matthew Klam: Who Is Rich?
Matthew Klam reveals that his novel Who is Rich? ponders the meaning of wealth. Is richness having a big bank account or is it being happy with your lot in life?
9/21/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mark Z. Danielewski: The Familiar
Mark Danielewski says he wants to give words to animals, to plants, to the waves of the ocean. His vast serial novel The Familiar begins with a young girl rescuing a cat.
9/14/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
George Saunders: Lincoln in the Bardo (Part II)
Known for the outrageous comedy of his acclaimed short stories, George Saunders says that daring to write this novel about grief, loss and the journey of the soul was like jumping off a cliff. [REPEAT]
9/7/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
George Saunders: Lincoln in the Bardo (Part I)
Lincoln in the Bardo dramatizes a grieving President Lincoln as he visits the grave of his beloved son Willie, who died at age eleven. In the novel, the buried dead believe they're not dead -- "they're sick and refer to their coffins as "sick boxes." [REPEAT]
8/31/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Danzy Senna: New People
In her novel New People, Danzy Senna relishes kicking political correctness to the curb. She believes that irony and humor are more effective than earnestness when writing about race and gender
8/24/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ryan Gattis: Safe
Ryan Gattis reveals that one day he got a call, asking if he'd like to watch a former gang member crack a safe. Thus, the novel Safe was born.
8/17/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Deborah Treisman: The Dream Colony
The Dream Colony: A Life in Art is a posthumous memoir that captures the dazzling verbal gifts of Los Angeles art curator Walter Hopps.
8/3/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Arundhati Roy: The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
Trained as an architect, Roy reveals that she structured her novel The Ministry of Utmost Happiness like an Indian metropolis where ancient neighborhoods collide with modern urban planning.
7/27/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jim Gauer: Novel Explosives
Quantum physics, the theory of relativity, and the miracle of the solar system fuel Novel Explosives, Jim Gauer’s ambitious and challenging novel.
7/20/2017 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Joshua Cohen: Moving Kings
In the family novel, Moving Kings, Joshua Cohen weaves together the tragedy of Israeli occupation with an American housing crisis.
7/13/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Peter Cole: Hymns & Qualms
Poet and translator Peter Cole reveals that his intention is to yoke together beauty and terror in his new book Hymns & Qualms: New and Selected Poems and Translations.
7/6/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Zachary Mason: Void Star
Zachary Mason insists that Void Star is not cyber-punk Although it is set more than 100 years in the future during climate catastrophe, he describes the novel as literary fiction that uses science fiction and genre elements.
6/29/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Alan Felsenthal: Lowly
Alan Felsenthal's first book of poetry, Lowly, moves in the direction of the visionary, the mystical and the metaphysical.
6/22/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Yiyun Li: Dear Friend, from My Life, I Write to You in Your Life
Written about a time when she was hospitalized for depression, Yiyun Li's Dear Friend, from My Life, I Write to You in Your Life is a combination of memoir and essay. She believes that cherished writers saved her from sorrow and suicidal ideation.
6/15/2017 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Colm Tóibín: House of Names
In his novel House of Names, Colm Tóibín finds, in adapting Greek tragedy, a home for all of his old concerns and room for new ones, too.
6/8/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Claudio Magris: Blameless
In Claudio Magris' Blameless, a museum of the implements of war and destruction is created to inspire peace. But this conversation is not just about war and peace.
6/1/2017 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Brad Gooch: Rumi's Secret
Biographer Brad Gooch reveals that he traveled 2500 miles to trace Rumi's footsteps, learned Persian and spent eight years to write Rumi's Secret: The Life of the Sufi Poet of Love.
5/18/2017 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Richard Bausch: Living in the Weather of the World
Has the feeling of doom become our weather? If so, Richard Bausch says he contends with contemporary life by writing about people coping with loss and sorrow.
5/11/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ron Padgett: Motor Maids across the Continent
Poet Ron Padgett reveals that in the 1960s, he found a dusty novel in a Manhattan bookstore. Originally written for teenage girls during World War I, Padgett has been playfully rewriting it ever since.
5/4/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Steven Moore: My Back Pages
Steven Moore has gathered his book reviews and essays that take us from the Beats and the Fifties to practically yesterday or even tomorrow.
4/27/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Julian Talamantez Brolaski: Of Mongrelitude
Talamantez Brolaski is trans-gender and describes himself as a multi-gendered, racial and linguistic mongrel. His poems chart a journey out of pain, confusion and darkness into a visionary state.
4/20/2017 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Elif Batuman: The Idiot
Selin, the heroine of Batuman’s autobiographical first novel, The Idiot, is an 18-year-old Harvard freshman of Turkish-American descent. Set in 1995, the novel observes the rise of internet culture.
4/13/2017 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
George Toles: Paul Thomas Anderson
Screenwriter and critic George Toles' study of writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson focuses on his more recent films, including Punch-Drunk Love, There Will Be Blood and The Master. Toles values tracking his deepest personal experiences while watching a movie.
4/6/2017 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Emil Ferris: My Favorite Thing Is Monsters
My Favorite Thing Is Monsters, Emil Ferris' debut graphic novel, is the diary of a ten-year-old girl obsessed with monsters who also believes she herself is a werewolf.
3/16/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Gary Groth on Fantagraphics and the art of the graphic novel
Gary Groth, editor of Fantagraphics, publisher of some of the most notable graphic novels today, discusses the rise of comics, what makes a good graphic novel, and what his selection process is like.
3/9/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Álvaro Enrigue: Sudden Death
Álvaro Enrigue's Sudden Death is the wild tale of a tennis match between the poet Francisco de Quevedo and the artist Caravaggio that transcends time and involves other historically transformative, and often combative, figures. Enrigue, who calls his impulse to write "visceral and erratic," was angered into starting this book by the 2008 financial crisis.
3/2/2017 • 30 minutes
Rachel Cusk: Transit
Rachel Cusk's novel Transit is the second in a planned trilogy. Cusk believes that humans have an innate grasp of form, a gift that makes us story-tellers. But the stories we tell ourselves can become traps.
2/23/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Steve Erickson: Shadowbahn
In Erickson's intense, absorbing novel, the Twin Towers suddenly re-appear in the Dakota Badlands. This road novel is a trip through a phantom country where the American dream was never realized.
2/15/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Michael Tolkin: NK3
The North Koreans have tested a weapon called NK3, a weaponized nano-bacterium designed to confuse South Koreans. The test has spread around the world. As a result, the world has lost its memory.
2/9/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ron Padgett: Collected Poems
Padgett's poems stand in for the poems written by a bus driver in the Jim Jarmusch movie Paterson. Padgett experiences writing poetry as a natural activity, rather like brushing his teeth.
2/2/2017 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Ottessa Moshfegh: Homesick for Another World (Part II)
In the second half of our conversation with Ottessa Moshfegh, the author discusses her discomfort in this world but admits that there is a touch of self-parody in the title of this collection of stories.
1/26/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ottessa Moshfegh: Homesick for Another World (Part I)
In the first of two conversations with Ottessa Moshfegh, the author reveals that she doesn't feel comfortable in this world. Her characters long for another world, as does Moshfegh.
1/19/2017 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Lynne Tillman: The Complete Madame Realism and Other Stories
Lynne Tillman's The Complete Madame Realism and Other Stories, is a unique blend of short fiction, essays, and philosophical musings that defy categorization.
1/12/2017 • 30 minutes, 1 second
Don DeLillo: Zero K
In Don DeLillo's latest novel, Zero K, the practice of cryonics or freezing oneself to be awakened later, is in full, but secret swing.
1/5/2017 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Colson Whitehead: The Underground Railroad
Colson Whitehead's new great American novel depicts a real underground railroad that transports a fugitive slave to stops that defy time and history, highlighting the daily struggles of black people, past and present.
12/29/2016 • 30 minutes, 29 seconds
Patrick Ness: A Monster Calls
Patrick Ness' A Monster Calls – about a boy facing tremendous conflict with a bully at school, well-meaning inattentive teachers, and a dying mother – was actually already a story begun by another writer, who died before finishing it.
12/22/2016 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Rabih Alameddine: The Angel of History
Rabih Alameddine's The Angel of History takes place as much in the protagonist's head as it does in a psych ward where he checks himself in for a bit of rest while he battles the voices in his head.
12/15/2016 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mitch Sisskind: Do Not Be a Gentleman When You say Goodnight
Mitch Sisskind's Do Not Be a Gentleman When You Say Goodnight is a distillation of nearly fifty years of brilliant comic writing.
12/8/2016 • 28 minutes, 56 seconds
Peter Orner: Am I Alone Here?
When novelist Peter Orner's father died, he found himself unable to write. At the same time, his marriage fell apart. He consoled himself by reading and started to write responses to the literature that gave him comfort.
12/1/2016 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Kate Tempest: The Bricks that Built the Houses
Rapper, poet, playwright and now novelist, Kate Tempest always knew she would write The Bricks that Built the Houses as an accompaniment to the characters in her record Everybody Down. (Rebroadcast)
11/24/2016 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
TC Boyle: The Terranauts
TC Boyle's The Terranauts centers around eight earth explorers who lock themselves up in E2, a biodome created to mimic earth and test the viability of a self-sustained environment. But what happens between the eight terranauts and their mission control has a bigger impact on sustainability than science had counted on.
11/17/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Tessa Hadley: The Past
Tessa Hadley's book, The Past, has at its center a summer vacation home, and the four middle-aged siblings who come together to decide whether to sell it or not.
11/10/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Ann Patchett: Commonwealth
Ann Patchett's latest novel, Commonwealth, follows fifty-two years in the life of a large family. The idea of the book came to her because as a bookstore owner, she saw that what was missing from the shelves was the story of a big, modern family.
11/3/2016 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Jonathan Safran Foer: Here I Am
The hero of Here I Am is a pun-loving television writer who is pummeled by the loss of everything he values. This novel expands a family crisis into a global crisis which threatens the state of Israel.
10/27/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Nicholson Baker: Substitute
Nicholson Baker's Substitute: Going to School with a Thousand Kids was born of a desire to write a book articulating his theories about education – theories based on having had kids in school. Realizing his premise was weak, as he'd never been a teacher, he embarked on the adventure of a lifetime by becoming a substitute teacher.
10/20/2016 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Nadja Spiegelman: I'm Supposed to Protect You from All This
Since memory is not only malleable but unreliable, which version of the truth will prevail?
10/13/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Jacqueline Woodson: Another Brooklyn
Another Brooklyn, award-winning Young Adult novelist Jacqueline Woodson's first novel for adults in twenty years, tells the story of childhood friends as they grow into women.
10/6/2016 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Marisa Silver: Little Nothing
An ugly young dwarf girl transforms first into a beauty, then into a tall woman, then into a wolf.
9/29/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Affinity Konar: Mischling
In Auschwitz, the infamous Dr. Mengele conducted horrifying physical and psychological experiments on concentration camp prisoners. Affinity Konar's Mischling (meaning mixed blood) is the story of twin sisters who find themselves imprisoned in Dr. Mengele's "zoo."
9/22/2016 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Adam Fitzgerald: George Washington
Adam Fitzgerald's poetry in George Washington: Poems comes across as playful while exploring the concept of Americana and what that means.
9/8/2016 • 30 minutes, 23 seconds
Krys Lee: How I Became a North Korean
Krys Lee's first novel dramatizes boundaries and borders – not just political ones but those that complicate human relationships.
9/1/2016 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Joe McGinniss Jr: Carousel Court
A married couple wind up in a wasteland of foreclosed houses and abandoned homes.
8/25/2016 • 30 minutes, 23 seconds
Tom McCarthy: Satin Island
Tom McCarthy's Satin Island features a protagonist who, as his company's corporate anthropologist, has been given the enormous task of compiling a report summing up the modern era.
8/18/2016 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Tom Lutz: Drinking Mare's Milk on the Roof of the World
In his travels to more than 100 countries – some dangerous, some surprisingly not – Tom Lutz finds that the more places he goes, the more the world leaves him a little bit lost.
8/11/2016 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Michelle Latiolais: She
Neither a novel nor a collection of stories, the "fictions" in She weave together a composite view of Los Angeles.
8/4/2016 • 30 minutes, 25 seconds
Constantine Phipps: What You Want
A tale of the ordinary, everyday quest for contentedness -- written entirely in heroic couplets.
7/28/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Vivian Gornick: The Odd Woman and the City
Vivian Gornick's memoir The Odd Woman and the City takes us on a tour of a life that is lived by walking, observing and talking. Gornick keeps her eyes open, and does she ever have a mouth on her!
7/21/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Geoff Dyer: White Sands
Paradoxically, Geoff Dyer begins his attempt to locate America by first traveling to Tahiti. There, he discovers that Gauguin’s vision of it no longer exists – if it ever really did. Can he find the soul of America in its landscapes?
7/14/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Louise Erdrich: LaRose, Part II
In part two of this conversation about LaRose – Louise Erdrich's novel about an act of restorative justice that tests the boundaries between two families – the discussion explores the non-linear form the novel moves in towards seeking balance and resolution.
7/7/2016 • 30 minutes, 25 seconds
Louise Erdrich: LaRose, Part I
In Louise Erdrich's LaRose, a terrible tragedy forces two families to resort to a form of traditional "restorative justice" in which one son must be given to replace the loss of another. Erdrich talks about this act as an attempt at restoring balance in a tight knit community where healing can take generations.
6/30/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: The Man Without a Shadow
Joyce Carol Oates raises questions about memory – ethics, what it means to love, identity, and the ability to engage, and takes us on a trip down memory lane with a reading from a previous memoir recounting her favorite bad-for-you childhood foods.
6/23/2016 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
A. Scott Berg: Max Perkins
A. Scott Berg's Max Perkins: Editor of Genius is the biography of Maxwell Perkins, a long time Scribner editor who worked with the likes of Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Thomas Wolfe.
6/9/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
John Keene: Counternarratives
John Keene takes classic American narratives and stands them on their heads. In North and South American tales, he writes about the "others" (Indians, blacks, queers) to re-examine stories we think we know.
6/2/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
John D'Agata: The Making of the American Essay
Despite 20 years of study, John D'Agata believes that we're still in the "Wild West" of coming to terms with the essay, its long heritage and its creation.
5/26/2016 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Valeria Luiselli: The Story of My Teeth
Originally commissioned to write a novel for Jumex, a Mexican beverage company and supporter of the arts, Luiselli instead chose to write a novel for Jumex's factory workers.
5/19/2016 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
Garth Greenwell: What Belongs to You
Greenwell's first novel examines the relationship between an American teacher in Bulgaria with a male prostitute.
5/12/2016 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
David Means: Hystopia
After four acclaimed short story collections, Means' first novel takes on the Vietnam War.
4/28/2016 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Helen Macdonald: H Is for Hawk
Helen Macdonald's new book is her account of working through her grief over her father's death by adopting and training a goshawk.
4/21/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Christopher Sorrentino: The Fugitives
The characters of Christopher Sorrentino's novel are unreliable narrators. They're liars who hide the truth, not only from themselves but ultimately from the reader.
4/14/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Greg Jackson: Prodigals
Greg Jackson's new collection of eight stories follows the lives of youngish people of privilege on their journey to deconstruct just what their destination is supposed to be. But his characters might be running up against the mystery of themselves.
4/7/2016 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Brian Blanchfield: Proxies
Blanchfield's essays reveal truths about a queer poet in the post-AIDS era.
3/31/2016 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Dana Spiotta: Innocents and Others
Dana Spiotta's Innocents and Others tells the feminist story of how women make do in a male-dominated world through two female filmmaker best friends, and a third, troubled woman adept at beguiling powerful Hollywood men.
3/24/2016 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
David Remnick and Deborah Treisman on fiction in the New Yorker
David Remnick and Deborah Treisman, editor and fiction editor, take us through the fiction at the New Yorker and how it has changed over the years.
3/17/2016 • 30 minutes, 29 seconds
Joshua Cohen: Book of Numbers
Joshua Cohen's The Book of Numbers follows the rise of the Internet through a protagonist he modeled after some of the web's biggest shapers, including Google's Sergey Brin, but mostly Apple's Steve Jobs.
3/10/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Elizabeth McKenzie: The Portable Veblen
Elizabeth McKenzie's half screwball romantic comedy and half critique of the conspicuous consumption of the leisure class, featuring a heroine named after the depressive American economist Thorstein Veblen and a cast that includes advice-giving squirrels.
3/3/2016 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Mark de Silva: Square Wave
Philosopher Mark de Silva's debut novel shows what a novel can do when it goes off the beaten track.
2/25/2016 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Darryl Pinckney: Black Deutschland
Darryl Pinckney talks about the attraction of leaving America to discover how to be an African-American in America.
2/18/2016 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Ryan Gattis: All Involved
Ryan Gattis' new book, All Involved, is really a reconstitution of the L.A. riots from a person who wasn't there.
2/11/2016 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Larissa MacFarquhar: Strangers Drowning
Larissa MacFarquhar writes about do-gooders who practice effective altruism. They don't care what others think of their extreme choices. They care about being effective.
2/4/2016 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Edmund de Waal: The White Road
Edmund de Waal takes us on a vast journey into the history and heart, skin and bones of porcelain.
1/28/2016 • 30 minutes, 29 seconds
Bruce Bauman: Broken Sleep
Bruce Bauman's new novel is like a family with everyone, including the reader, struggling to find a place, a home, a sense of community.
1/21/2016 • 30 minutes, 14 seconds
Supplication: Selected Poems of John Wieners
Poets and editors CAConrad, Robert Dewhurst, and Joshua Beckman talk both about groundbreaking, boldly gay poet/activist, John Wieners, and about the process of compiling and honoring such a prolific poet with the selected works book.
1/14/2016 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Rick Moody: Hotels of North America
Hotel reviews that really, become reviews on life.
1/7/2016 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Salman Rushdie: Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights
Salman Rushdie's version of The Arabian Nights, his attempt to understand what the through-line of the collection of classic tales is and partly as a portrait of the human race and its salvation. (Repeat)
12/31/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Paul Murray: The Mark and the Void
Paul Murray's comic novel dramatizes an economic crisis in his native Ireland, one that imperils the vitality of Dublin's culture.
12/24/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Eileen Myles: I Must Be Living Twice
Poet, fiction writer, essayist and dramatist Eileen Myles on success, the relevancy of poetry and surviving as a poet
12/17/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Isabel Allende: The Japanese Lover
Allende brings her emotional wisdom to the love lives of three generations of post World War II Asian and Jewish characters.
12/10/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Sandra Cisneros: A House of My Own
Sandra Cisneros, now in her sixties, looks back at her journey to find her voice, in a candid memoir woven from prose, photographs, and essays.
12/3/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Jonathan Franzen: Purity
Jonathan Franzen's latest book is an exploration of intensely intimate relationships and the inevitability of their destructive effects.
11/26/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Gary Indiana: I Can Give You Anything but Love
The outlandish and unguarded Gary Indiana has written what can be described as an "anti-memoir." He doesn't like memoirs but has written one himself, partly because he has lived a real life all over the world: he actually has something to write about.
11/19/2015 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Mary Karr: The Art of Memoir
Is it common practice to lie in a memoir? Not for accomplished memoirists, according to Mary Karr. The Art of Memoir, in part a how-to book, distills 30 years of teaching and writing memoir.
11/12/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Joy Williams: The Visiting Privilege
The writer's writer, Joy Williams, has written a book that spans her body of work – from familiar stories to new ones, showcases her deep, natural understanding of the process of writing.
11/5/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Patrick deWitt: Undermajordomo Minor
Patrick deWitt's latest book follows his penchant for building humiliation into his novels.
10/29/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Bill Clegg: Did You Ever Have a Family
Bill Clegg makes the transition from memoirist to novelist. His book and its title are a statement on the kindness of strangers and the necessity to fashion one's own family.
10/22/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Ann Beattie: The State We're In
In The State We're In: Maine Stories, Ann Beattie deftly and effortlessly takes the ingredients that make up short stories and shakes them up to create something new and beautiful.
10/15/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Bonnie Nadzam and Dale Jamieson: Love in the Anthropocene
Fiction writer Bonnie Nadzam and environmental philosopher, Dale Jamieson, worked together to write Love in the Anthropocene, a collection of five short stories that describe a very near future in which nature as we know it no longer exists.
10/1/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Dodie Bellamy: When the Sick Rule the World
In this collection of prose pieces, Bellamy explodes the essay form into poetry, personal memoire and literary analysis
9/17/2015 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
William T. Vollmann: The Dying Grass, Part II
The Dying Grass: A Novel of the Nez Perce War is the fifth book in Vollman's seven-book series about loss and transformation of the North American continent, this novel dramatizes a power grab disguised as a race war between Native Americans and settlers.
9/10/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
William T. Vollmann: The Dying Grass, Part I
The rise of corporate America begins with the ruthless acquisition of Indian land in this massively researched epic which evokes the language, the food, and the lost customs of the Nez Perce. This is the first of two conversations about William Vollman’s novel of the 1877 war that destroyed the Nez Perce.
9/3/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Allison Green: The Ghosts Who Travel with Me
A conversation with the author and Emily Goldman of Ooligan Press.
8/27/2015 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Louisa Hall: Speak
Louisa Hall's novel Speak considers the Alan Turing test: how do we know if what we are communicating with via machine is human?
8/20/2015 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
Mira Gonzalez and Tao Lin: Selected Tweets
Mira Gonzalez and Tao Lin's Selected Tweets is a compendium of tweets -- often dark and dispairing, but also bitingly funny -- written over the course of ten years, sometimes under their own names, sometimes using assumed names.
8/13/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
E. L. Doctorow: Homer & Langley
In this comic and affecting novel based on the lives of the Collyer brothers — one a blind pianist, the other a hoarder and inventor — Doctorow creates an ironic allegory of modern America.
8/6/2015 • 30 minutes, 30 seconds
Harper Lee: Go Set a Watchman
Michael Silverblatt in conversation with Bookworm producer Connie Alvarez about the recent book by the late author. Harper Lee died today at the age of 89.
7/30/2015 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Linda Rosenkrantz: Talk
In 1965, a young Linda Rosenkrantz had the novel idea to tape record her friends on the beach in East Hampton. The result was Talk, in which anything could become a subject for conversation – it was all discussed.
7/23/2015 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Christian Kracht: Imperium
Christian Kracht's Imperium: A Fiction of the South Seas is a satirical parable that sees fanaticism as the root of German culture and imperialist culture in general.
7/16/2015 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Amy Gerstler: Scattered at Sea
Amy Gerstler's new book of poems is an exploration of getting lost, the unknown, mortality and remembrance.
7/9/2015 • 30 minutes
Vendela Vida: The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty
Vendela Vida's new novel is a story of identity, a recurring mystery in her work. We get to the bottom of why identity is her obsession.
7/2/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Aleksandar Hemon: The Making of Zombie Wars
This darkly nihilistic book masquerading as a comedy is as much a commentary on society as it is the story of a bad script-writer.
6/25/2015 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
Alan Cheuse: Prayers for the Living
The "voice of NPR book reviews" takes a singular opportunity – the discussion of his own novel with KCRW's bookworm, Michael Silverblatt.
6/18/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Maggie Nelson: The Argonauts
The Argonauts is a work of "auto-theory" in which theory is put to the test against life experience.
6/11/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Atticus Lish: Preparation for the Next Life
Atticus Lish's debut novel won the 2015 PEN/Faulkner Award for First Fiction, demonstrating that he waited 40 years to become a natural.
6/4/2015 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
Valeria Luiselli: Faces in the Crowd
Valeria Luiselli's first novel reminds us of what it's like to be young and in love with literature.
5/28/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Per Petterson, Ethan Nosowsky and Geir Berdahl on Publishing
We talk to author Per Petterson, editor Ethan Nosowsky, and publisher Geir Berdahl about the what it takes to bring a book to life and about the changing world of publishing.
5/21/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Thomas McGuane: Crow Fair
Thomas McGuane's new book of stories is a demonstration model of his verbal surprises and his deep insight into his characters.
5/14/2015 • 30 minutes, 14 seconds
Per Petterson: I Refuse
Per Petterson's I Refuse is a beautiful and lyrical symphony of sadness, grief and loss.
5/7/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Kazuo Ishiguro: The Buried Giant
Kazuo Ishiguro starts the interview about his new book as a look at the concept of societal memory.
4/30/2015 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Luis Alberto Urrea: Tijuana Book of the Dead, and The Water Museum
The border between poetry and fiction is dismantled when the poet/author is Luis Alberto Urrea.
4/23/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
David Vann: Aquarium
In talking about his new novel, David Vann tells us how the characters were born of staring for hours at different delicate fish until they revealed who he was supposed to write about.
4/16/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Charles Baxter and the 'Hidden Bookshelf'
Charles Baxter takes us through the pleasure of discovering books for what might be called the "hidden bookshelf."
4/9/2015 • 30 minutes, 15 seconds
Charles Baxter: There's Something I Want You to Do
Charles Baxter examines the elements of virtue and vice in his new collection of short stories.
4/2/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Rachel Kushner: The Strange Case of Rachel K
Rachel Kushner talks about the earliest impulses that inspired her first novel Telex from Cuba. She wanted a new concept of time, she needed to find a voice to create that highly subjective and changeable thing--the past.
3/26/2015 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Claudia Rankine: The Racial Imaginary
The discussion takes up writers who write about the racial "other." Can every writer do it successfully? Are there writers who shouldn't or can't? When is it appropriate and necessary?
3/19/2015 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Claudia Rankine: Citizen, An American Lyric
In discussing Claudia Rankine's Citizen, an American Lyric, we discuss the way racism catches us all.
3/12/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: The Sacrifice
Joyce Carol Oates shapes a novel from the Tawana Brawley scandal of the 1980's.
3/5/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Peter Cole: The Invention of Influence
In Peter Cole's poetry, the Jewish mystical tradition gives rise to transmission of the spiritual vision.
2/26/2015 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
Chang-rae Lee: On Such a Full Sea
The possibility of a romantic adventure novel written in the repressive language of a dictatorship like China's would be entirely heartbreaking if it weren’t so funny. It would be very funny if it weren’t so heartbreaking.
2/19/2015 • 30 minutes, 23 seconds
David Shields and Caleb Powell: I Think You're Totally Wrong
Can we truly understand another human being?
2/12/2015 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
Alain Mabanckou: Letter to Jimmy
Letter to Jimmy is Congolese author Alain Mabanckou’s book-length letter to James Baldwin.
2/5/2015 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
Richard Ford: Let Me Be Frank with You
Frank Bascombe, who's been making appearances since Ford's breakthrough novel, appears again in Richard Ford's latest novel.
1/29/2015 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Lydia Millet: Mermaids in Paradise
Lydia Millet's new novel is fast-moving and funny -- except when it isn't.
1/22/2015 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
Colm Tóibín: Nora Webster
Colm Tóibín discusses his deeply personal story of a provincial Irishwoman who sets aside motherhood to grapple with grief.
1/15/2015 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Todd Colby: Splash State
What is a Splash state? Poet Todd Colby tells us a splash state is the golden moment when his writing hits its ecstatic stride.
1/8/2015 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Goli Taraghi: The Pomegranate Lady and Her Sons
Iranian author Goli Taraghi's recent collection translates many of her short stories of the past forty years into English for the first time.
12/25/2014 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Marilynne Robinson: Lila
Bookworm is joined by Marilynne Robinson to discuss Lila ( Farrar, Straus, and Giroux), the latest in a series of novels set in the backdrop of the dustbowl years.
12/18/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Martin Amis: The Zone of Interest
Acclaimed novelist Martin Amis returns to discuss The Zone of Interest, a mordant exploration of love in a place that is meant to crush the soul in a concentration camp.
12/11/2014 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Robert Duncan and Jess
A conversation about the artist Jess and poet Robert Duncan who were the center of an underground art scene in San Francisco.
12/4/2014 • 30 minutes, 3 seconds
Françoise Mouly, Ian Falconer, and Neil Gaiman: Kid’s Books
What makes a good kid’s book?
11/20/2014 • 30 minutes, 3 seconds
Ben Lerner: 10:04
Ben Lerner is a novelist/poet who writes about the way we live now, which is not the way we used to live.
11/13/2014 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Sarah Waters: The Paying Guests
The title of Waters’ new novel is a euphemism for “lodgers,” here used by the protagonist’s family to mask the shame of taking on tenants following WWII.
11/6/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
John Darnielle: Wolf In White Van
Darnielle titled his novel after a back-masked message in Larry Norman’s song “Six Sixty Six.” He reflects on our desire to locate meaning where there might be none.
10/30/2014 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Jonathan Coe: Expo 58: A Novel
Unlike Coe’s other comedic novels, here the humor has a nostalgic feel, reminiscent of 1950s British films like Hitchcock’s The Lady Vanishes.
10/23/2014 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
David Mitchell: The Bone Clocks
Mitchell’s new novel follows his protagonist from 1984-2040; he reflects on mortality in a world that doesn’t much smile upon the aging process.
10/16/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Charles Burns: Sugar Skull
This is the third in a trilogy of graphic novels by Burns in which the seemingly normal happenings of his protagonist Doug's life take an unsettling Freudian turn.
10/9/2014 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Dylan Landis: Rainey Royal
Landis’ novel, a series of chronological short-stories, follows the lives of three vulnerable, precocious girls as they pass through adolescence in 1970s New York.
10/2/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Richard Flanagan: The Narrow Road to the Deep North
Flanagan’s Booker-nominated novel, titled after a travelogue written by 17th century Japanese poet Basho, follows the building of the Burma-Siam Railway during WWII.
9/25/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Prison Noir
Our discussion of this anthology, written by incarcerated men and women, divides between the shocking realism of the stories and Oates’ experience as editor of the collection.
9/11/2014 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Donald Antrim: The Emerald Light in the Air
Antrim’s collection of stories stems from his own experience with psychosis; we all have our turn in the barrel, he notes, and sometimes you're really turned upside down.
9/4/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Kevin Birmingham: The Most Dangerous Book: The Battle for James Joyce’s Ulysses (Part II)
What exactly made Ulysses so dangerous? Like an eye into the future, this difficult, all-consuming book still seems radical almost a century after its publication.
8/28/2014 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Kevin Birmingham: The Most Dangerous Book: The Battle for James Joyce’s Ulysses (Part I)
Kevin Birmingham delves into the history of censorship surrounding the publication of James Joyce’s Ulysses for its seemingly seditious, immoral content.
8/21/2014 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
William T. Vollmann: Last Stories and Other Stories (Part II)
William T. Vollmann has authored a wide array of works of nonfiction as well as fiction. Who is this literary chameleon, and where is his life’s work going?
8/14/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
William T. Vollmann: Last Stories and Other Stories (Part I)
Vollmann leads us to the “wall of ill” that separates life from death. We dissect Vollmann’s opening remarks to the reader, brimful of images both dark and sweet.
8/7/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Lynne Tillman: What Would Lynne Tillman Do?
Tillman says a writer shouldn’t be ahead of one’s time but ‘of’ one’s time. She wishes to open doors, break down barriers, and make us aware of how thoughts are formed.
7/31/2014 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Edward St. Aubyn: Lost For Words
St. Aubyn’s novel parodies the upsurge of interest in literary prizes: what do these prizes have to do with literature, and are the books that win ones we should read?
7/24/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Francine Prose: Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932
Prose’s protagonist, Lou Villars, is based on the athlete and Gestapo interrogator Violette Morris, who was photographed with her lover in a Parisian nightclub in 1932.
7/17/2014 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Alice Notley: Negativity's Kiss
The heroine of Alice Notley's noir epic poem is named Ines. This is short for "inessential," which is what Notley says the poet is, and, really, what we all are.
7/10/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Karl Ove Knausgaard: My Struggle (Part II)
Knausgaard’s third volume focuses on childhood. He says what he knows of people he knows from books. He continues in this tradition of telling with the written word.
7/3/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Karl Ove Knausgaard: My Struggle (Part I)
Reflecting on his autobiographical novels, Knausgaard says literature should be about life; in writing, he attempts to find meaning within the banality of the everyday.
6/26/2014 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Michael Carroll: Little Reef, and Edmund White: Inside a Pearl
An exciting first for Bookworm, recently married literary-couple Michael Carroll and Edmund White join us for a double-interview.
6/19/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
László Krasznahorkai: Seiobo There Below
Do we have a need for a connection with heaven and hell? Krasznahorkai's novel is a valuation of human life seen from heaven and hell through the eyes of a Taoist goddess.
6/12/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Lydia Davis: Can't and Won't
Intellectual, accessible, and provocative literary conversations.
6/6/2014 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Sjon: The Whispering Muse
Sjón places classic epics side-by-side with Icelandic sagas of past centuries. We discuss how literature comes from literature and one story gives birth to the next.
5/29/2014 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Mona Simpson: Casebook
We are never prepared to discover our parents are fallible; Simpson's protagonist investigates his parents' lives but most of what he uncovers he doesn't wish to know.
5/22/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Jeff VanderMeer: Annihilation, Authority, Acceptance
VanderMeer's trilogy chronicles expeditions orchestrated by a government agency called the Southern Reach into a dangerous landscape where reality and unreality blur.
5/15/2014 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Jeff Jackson: Mira Corpora
For Jeff Jackson, starting a novel is an invocation. There's an idea that telling our stories is cathartic but sometimes what you've really done is turn up the volume.
5/8/2014 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Emma Donoghue: Frog Music
Emma Donoghue found the San Francisco she uncovered while researching for her novel far more modern than the Dublin she grew up in a century later.
5/1/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Lorrie Moore: Bark
Lorrie Moore's darkly humorous stories follow middle-aged men and women in states of lonely desperation trapped by the absurdities of their everyday lives.
4/24/2014 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Dustin Long: Bad Teeth
Dustin Long speaks of the disappointment his generation has grown to expect at having prepared for a life that isn't there.
4/17/2014 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Michelle Huneven: Off Course
Love can become a false Eden. Michelle Huneven's protagonist retreats to the Sierras to write her dissertation but upon accepting a lover begins to dwell in their affair.
4/10/2014 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
John Banville (Benjamin Black): Black-Eyed Blonde
Irish author John Banville has written a new novel under his crime-fiction pseudonym, Benjamin Black, and in the guise of Raymond Chandler.
4/3/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Robert Bly and Marion Woodman
Robert Bly and Marion Woodman "The; Maiden King" (Holt) Why do fairy tales, legends and myths continue to transmit wisdom? Poet Bly and analyst Woodman interpret a Russian fairy tale
3/28/2014 • 28 minutes, 47 seconds
John Irving: Trying to Save Piggy Sneed
Trying to Save Piggy Sneed (Ballantine)
3/28/2014 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Robert Hoffman
Northern Lights The playwright discusses, and performs from, his new work.
3/28/2014 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Jay Parini
The Last Station
3/28/2014 • 28 minutes, 33 seconds
Yiyun Li: Kinder than Solitude
Originally from Beijing, Yiyun Li thought she would be a scientist. Writing in her non-native English, she addresses the emotional brutality of our time.
3/27/2014 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
T.C. Boyle: Stories II
T.C. Boyle's latest book demonstrates the breadth of his years as a story-teller. Now in his 60's he is turning towards the uncertainties of age and our planet's destiny.
3/20/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Warren Lehrer: A Life in Books
Warren Lehrer's interest in the look and shape of books has led him to become "an illuminated novelist." We discuss the future of books, authorship and print itself.
3/13/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Valerie Martin: The Ghost of the Mary Celeste
Valerie Martin on her fascination with the ship Mary Celeste, found floating with no crew off the coast of Spain in 1872. She says she does not believe in ghosts, but…
3/6/2014 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Hilton Als: White Girls
Hilton Als' first book in 14 years is a series of essays that defy easy categorization. His "white girls" are neither necessarily girls nor white….
2/27/2014 • 30 minutes, 7 seconds
Richard Powers: Orfeo
Richard Powers says his new novel reveals that there's little difference between a passion and an idea.
2/20/2014 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Jaime Hernandez and Junot Diaz: This Is How You Lose Her
Junot Diaz says Jaime Hernandez's illustrations for the deluxe new edition of his acclaimed collection of stories make their collaboration "rise to the level of jazz."
2/13/2014 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Jonathan Blum: Last Word
Blum on publishing his first book, and the riddle of a moral contained in its inscrutable 13-year-old antihero, a Bartlebian computer whiz with a vengeful streak.
2/6/2014 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Gary Shteyngart: Little Failure
Shteyngart wrote his memoir when he realized that his life story mirrored that of the 20th century, the saga of one failed superpower giving way to another failing one.
1/30/2014 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Alfred Starr Hamilton: A Dark Dreambox of Another Kind
Ben Estes, Alan Felsenthal and Amanda Nadelberg read poems from Alfred Starr Hamlton's "Dreambox" and reflect on their experience editing this unsung enchanter.
1/23/2014 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Denis Scheck, German literary critic and host of 'Druckfrisch'
Esteemed German literary critic Denis Scheck joins us for a special international "meeting of the minds" to appraise the state of book criticism today.
1/16/2014 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
James McCourt: Lasting City
James McCourt's novelistic memoir collages together vignettes of personal and queer community history in the New York City of mid-century.
1/9/2014 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Junot Diaz: This Is How You Lose Her
Our master of seductive street-slang on seduction and its relation to fiction. Can a writer seduce you? Junot Díaz describes what he calls "the shock of representation."
12/26/2013 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Joe Sacco: The Great War: July 1, 1916
A trenchant "comic journalist" depicting the horrors of human conflicts, Joe Sacco's latest work is an astonishing panorama of the Battle of the Somme...
12/19/2013 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Erica Jong: Fear of Flying
On
its 40th-anniversary, Jong clarifies "Fear of Flying's" earnest philosophical
motives, and identifies her literary influences, from Shakespeare to Pauline
Réage.
12/12/2013 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Will Self: Umbrella
Self’s striking novel about loss, language, and perception after the First World War -- and a bold departure from the satirical mode he is best known for.
12/5/2013 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Joan Didion on 'Blue Nights'
After the deaths of husband and daughter, Joan Didion wrote the most personal and poetic book of her impressive career...
11/28/2013 • 30 minutes, 8 seconds
James Franco: Actors Anonymous
James Franco says literature was his emotional and intellectual escape valve from the alternate reality of filmmaking, performance, and celebrity.
11/21/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Allan Gurganus: Local Souls
Allan Gurganus says the three novellas that comprise his new book, "Local Souls," were written as modern fables or fairy tales.
11/14/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Alice McDermott: Someone
Alice McDermott once felt a fear that her new novel would be seen as just another of her perfect Irish American novels. Instead it leaps from the page.
11/7/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Andre Dubus, III: Dirty Love
Four linked novellas explore the poignant interior lives of small-town characters who are usually unseen and unknown.
10/31/2013 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Nicholson Baker: Traveling Sprinkler
Nicholson Baker, poet of small accuracies, shows us how if you assemble enough of these small accuracies, you've got a novel.
10/24/2013 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Jonathan Lethem: Dissident Gardens
Jonathan Lethem’s latest chronicles a lost generation of Jewish socialists who lived in Queens in the mid-twentieth century.
10/17/2013 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Alexander Maksik: A Marker to Measure Drift
An aristocratic Liberian woman is left bereft and exiled on a remote Aegean island during her country's second civil war…
10/10/2013 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Rebecca Solnit: The Faraway Nearby
Part memoir, part literary criticism, part self-analysis, Rebecca Solnit's latest is an inter-genre meditation on the ways our lives are orchestrated by stories.
10/3/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Van Dyke Parks: Songs Cycled
Van Dyke Parks on his multifaceted career as a lyricist, composer, arranger, producer and instrumentalist, on the heels of his first studio album in nearly twenty years.
9/26/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Russ Kick: The Graphic Canon, Volume 3
This garden of literary and visual delights, edited by Russ Kick, wondrously illustrates the arc of 20th century literature by over 80 graphic artists.
9/19/2013 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Mark Slouka: Brewster
Mark Slouka explores passion as an alternative to irony in the creation of dramatic, lyrical prose.
9/12/2013 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Margaret Atwood: Maddaddam
Margaret Atwood's Maddaddam completes the dystopian trilogy that began with "Oryx and Crake" and "The Year of the Flood."
9/5/2013 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Cathleen Schine: Fin and Lady
Cathleen Schine says that she – and her writing – survive by seeing the humor in her life.
8/29/2013 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Peter Orner: Last Car over the Sagamore Bridge
Peter Orner says his poignantly distilled, often tiny short stories are attempts to "create silence on the page."
8/22/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Andrew Sean Greer: The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells
Greer on his heroine's late wish to escape the troubled 1980's, his experience inhabiting a female narrative voice and the gender traveling implicit in his latest novel.
8/15/2013 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Linda Spalding: The Purchase
Linda Spalding on her historical novel, the story of an abolitionist in Antebellum America forced to buy a slave, and the inherent conflicts of spirit and commerce.
8/8/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Tao Lin: Taipei
The author of "Shoplifting from American Apparel" on writing his latest novel, written in meticulously careful prose.
8/1/2013 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
James Kelman: Mo Said She Was Quirky
Scottish writer James Kelman on his penchant for internal dialogue and his a working-class romance set in modern-day London.
7/25/2013 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Anne Carson: Red Doc>
Canadian poet and professor Anne Carson on cultural life in the wake of classical knowledge, and her poetry novels Autobiography of Red and the follow-up, Red Doc>.
7/18/2013 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Tom Drury: Pacific
Tom Drury latest novel follows a resident of his fictional Grouse County who has moved to Los Angeles to reunite with his mother, co-star of a New-Agey TV series.
7/11/2013 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Isabel Allende: Maya's Notebook
A troubled teen who seeks refuge from the demon of addiction is also a symbol for a host of social ills in post-socialist Chile and present-day America.
7/4/2013 • 30 minutes
David Sedaris: Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls
Reading David Sedaris is like watching an aerialist. His famed humor pieces take escalating risks while never failing to bring off smooth, astonishing landings.
6/27/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: Americanah
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie prefers thorny, resistant characters to likeable ones. She talks about why readers shouldn't settle for characters that are less than difficult.
6/20/2013 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Marisa Silver: Mary Coin
Inspired by an iconic American image, Marisa Silver's Mary Coin imagines the fabric of life behind Dorothea Lange's depression-era photograph, "Migrant Mother."
6/13/2013 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Alice Fulton: Cascade Experiment
Alice Fulton wants to "dirty" lyric poetry by making it bear witness to the grievous geo-politics of the present.
6/6/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Rae Armantrout: Just Saying
Rae Armantrout's poems apprehend the world as a place charged by the nonexistent supernatural. For her, the eerie thing is that ghosts don't exist.
5/30/2013 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Pura Lopez-Colome and Forrest Gander: Watchword
Pura Lopez-Colomé's poetry, translated by Forrest Gander, envisions the body as a mystically rich reservoir of experience and language.
5/23/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Aleksandar Hemon: The Book of My Lives
Aleksandar Hemon takes us though his life from his childhood in Sarajevo -- from the public tragedy of warfare to the private catastrophe of the loss of his child.
5/16/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Margaret Atwood on Innovation
Margaret Atwood has embraced the frontiers of online literary culture. She reflects on her exploration of literary innovation and why Hermes is the patron of the new(s).
5/9/2013 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Rachel Kushner: The Flamethrowers
A novel of multiple voices, motorcycles, and swift zigzags between separate times and places.
5/2/2013 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
David Shields: How Literature Saved My Life
David Shields explores the power of the written word in his new book of essays.
4/25/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Mohsin Hamid: How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia
Mohsin Hamid mocks the self-help genre in his new novel.
4/18/2013 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Sam Lipsyte:The Fun Parts
The brazen, satirical stories in Sam Lipsyte's latest book incite reactions that run the gamut from anger to outrage to sheer hilarity.
4/11/2013 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: The Accursed
Set on the Princeton campus in 1905, a penetrating social commentary masquerades as a classic American Gothic.
4/4/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: The Cat's Table
Ondaatje discusses his turn from concealment to revelation and reflects on the magic of youth.
3/28/2013 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Jess Walter: We Live in Water
How did Jess Walter make the leap between his romantic novel, "Beautiful Ruins," and the end-of-the-world sadness of his stories in "We Live in Water?"
3/21/2013 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Eloise Klein Healy: A Wild Surmise
The recently named the first poet laureate of the City of Los Angeles reads selections from her new collection and reflects on what it means to be a poet of place today.
3/14/2013 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Luis Alberto Urrea, Part Two
Luis Alberto Urrea ("The Hummingbird's Daughter" and "Queen of America") continues to discuss his saga inspired by the life of Teresita Urrea, "the Mexican Joan of Arc."
3/7/2013 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Luis Alberto Urrea: The Hummingbird's Daughter and Queen of America
Luis Alberto Urrea's "Queen of America," completes the two-volume saga that began with "The Hummingbird's Daughter." Both follow the journey of a Mexican curandera...
2/28/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
George Saunders: Tenth of December, Part Two
In this second interview, George Saunders delves further into the dark-comic twists and turns of his recent short story collection. (Part 2 of 2)
2/21/2013 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Nick Flynn: The Reenactments
Nick Flynn on the strange days on the set of Being Flynn, a film adapted from his personal memoir, and starring Robert De Niro and Paul Dano.
2/14/2013 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Jamaica Kincaid: See Now Then
Jamaica Kincaid's first novel in ten years is an emotionally bare story about the erosion of a marriage.
2/7/2013 • 29 minutes, 18 seconds
George Saunders: Tenth of December, Part One
George Saunders reflects on writing, "infinitely" revising, and how he finds the voices for his luminous but smudged characters. (Part 1 of 2)
1/31/2013 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Ange Mlinko: Shoulder Season; Marvelous Things Overheard
Poet Ange Mlinko reads poems from her forthcoming collection and talks about the way that poetry braids difficulty and pleasure.
1/24/2013 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Lydia Millet: Magnificence
In Lydia Millet's novels, characters pass from the comedy of daily life to the beauty of visionary experience.
1/17/2013 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Amy Wilentz: Farewell, Fred Voodoo: A Letter from Haiti
Journalist Amy Wilentz's admiring and sober portrait of post-earthquake Haiti...
1/10/2013 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Antoine Wilson: Panorama City
The aimless hero of Antoine Wilson's second novel takes the world at face value and wishes to impart wisdom to his unborn son, after a life of suspended childhood himself.
1/3/2013 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Oliver Sacks: Hallucinations
Oliver Sacks on the neuropsychology and literature of hallucination, and what this disorienting medical condition reveals about the nature of the mind and human condition.
12/27/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Charles Burns: The Hive
Burns reflects on the eerie spaces and dark themes that populate his graphic novels, as well as the nature of suspense that does not necessarily resolve into explanation.
12/20/2012 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Mark Z. Danielewski: The Fifty Year Sword
A ghost story about the weave of storytelling itself, written in sparse fragments of dialogue punctuated by faint embroidery, grim illustrations, and blank spaces.
12/13/2012 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Christine Schutt: Prosperous Friends
Two artists find themselves in an inexplicable and unhappy marriage in Christine Schutt's new novel written in hypnotic prose.
12/6/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Scott Shepherd and John Collins: Gatz
A conversation with cast members about this revelatory new take on F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, "The Great Gatsby."
11/29/2012 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
David Mitchell: Cloud Atlas
David Mitchell traces the consequences of greed from the beginnings of imperialism far into the future and the end of civilization...
11/22/2012 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Chris Kraus: Summer of Hate
Novelist and social critic Chris Kraus on her latest novel, where romance and social redemption collide in post-Patriot Act America.
11/15/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Chris Ware: Building Stories
Graphic novelist Chris Ware stretches the notion of the book to fantastic proportions in his latest publication...
11/8/2012 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Craig Nova: The Constant Heart
Craig Nova's fourteenth novel conveys readers into dark and discomforting realms of the unseen, where human organs are harvested for sale on the black market...
11/1/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Martin Amis: Lionel Asbo
British novelist Martin Amis discusses how a writer makes a good character endearing when readers want to root for the villain in his new work.
10/25/2012 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Susanna Moore: The Life of Objects
Susanna Moore is interested in the things her characters don’t know. Her new novel is a story of innocence and dread.
10/18/2012 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Lawrence Norfolk: John Saturnall's Feast
British writer, Lawrence Norfolk on his new novel of historical fiction and how his desire to write about love and need relates to his epicurean tale of appetite and hunger.
10/11/2012 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Robert Hass: What Light Can Do
Former US Poet Laureate, Robert Hass explores certain obsessions in his first collection of essays.
10/4/2012 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Michael Chabon: Telegraph Avenue
In his new novel, how did Michael Chabon dare to speak for black characters and black neighborhoods? Is this novel audacious and usurping? His answers may surprise you.
9/20/2012 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Joshua Cohen: Four New Messages
The prolific young writer talks about his new book, as well as Internet culture, language and fiction.
9/13/2012 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Neal Stephenson: Some Remarks
Neal Stephenson, a sort of contemporary Dickens (from Seattle,) talks about essays and other writing; science fiction and mainstream literature.
9/6/2012 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Mary Ruefle: Madness, Rack, and Honey
Mary Ruefle brings refreshment and beauty to basic instincts and, in the process, creating mystery, surprise and, well, yes, poetry.
8/30/2012 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: Time of Useful Consciousness
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, 93-year-old renowned Beat generation poet and co-founder of City Lights Booksellers, on his latest adventure, a dire warning for America.
8/23/2012 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
John Irving: In One Person
Academy Award-winner John Irving returns with a compelling novel, a tormented portrait of desire and secrecy.
8/16/2012 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Sheila Heti: How Should a Person Be?
Neo-feminist Sheila Heti on her novel and journal, a how-to book and a philosophical treatise. Heti wants to undo coherence and, in many ways, she has.
8/9/2012 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Jess Walter: Beautiful Ruins
Walter on his much acclaimed new work, a completely pleasurable summer read -- and not your typical Hollywood novel.
8/2/2012 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Laszlo Krasznahorkai: Satantango
Bookworm Michael Silverblatt and co-interviewer Jim Krusoe talk with the Hungarian author and screenwriter about modernist novels and filmmaker Bela Tarr.
7/26/2012 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Jim Krusoe: Parsifal
Jim Krusoe talks about his new novel, where a sacred fool searches for his own private holy grail and perhaps saves the world from destruction.
7/19/2012 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Victoria Nelson: Gothicka
Victoria Nelson writes about the rise of the supernatural into mainstream popular culture. Vampires and werewolves, no longer monsters, have become heroes.
7/12/2012 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Dave Eggers: A Hologram for the King
A middle-aged, American salesman experiences the challenges of the post-industrial economy. He travels to Saudi Arabia, hoping to sell Internet technology to its King.
7/5/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Richard Ford: Canada, Part 2
The second of a two-part conversation with Richard Ford about his writing style and the themes of his robust, new novel.
6/28/2012 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Richard Ford: Canada, Part 1
The first of a two-part conversation about Richard Ford's seventh novel, the powerful story of a teenager, a bank robbery and life’s contradictory experiences.
6/21/2012 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Ben Fountain: Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk
Pushcart and O. Henry Prize-winner Ben Fountain talks about heroes, war, and street language in his new novel.
6/14/2012 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Cees Nooteboom: Self-Portrait of an Other
Dutch author, Cees Nooteboom discusses the translation process and his poems of myth and landscape inspired by the drawings of Berlin artist, Max Neumann.
6/7/2012 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Susan Orlean: Rin Tin Tin-The Life and the Legend
Susan Orlean on her moving account of how an orphaned puppy from France became a Hollywood movie star and a beloved canine icon.
5/31/2012 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Hari Kunzru: Gods Without Men
British Indian writer Hari Kunsru on his new novel that explores loss, spiritual reconnection and sacrifice.
5/24/2012 • 30 minutes
Adam Levin: Hot Pink
Adam Levin on how behavior, B.F. Skinner, and his own training to be a therapist influenced his wild and crazy collection of stories.
5/17/2012 • 30 minutes
Etgar Keret: Suddenly, A Knock on the Door
Israeli writer Etgar Keret talks about the explosive and funny stories that voyage into the fantastic in his new book.
5/10/2012 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Peter Behrens: The O'Briens
Peter Behrens on his epic family saga, a compelling tale of Irish immigration during the first half of the twentieth century.
5/3/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Heidi Julavits: The Vanishers
Heidi Julavits on female rivalry and the psychic bonds between mothers and daughters in her imaginative new novel.
4/26/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
William H. Gass: Life Sentences
Eighty-seven-year-old, William Gass discusses his new book of essays on the art of crafting words into prose.
4/19/2012 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Krys Lee: Drifting House
Krys Lee on her collection of short stories about immigrants leading two lives: the ones they left behind, and new lives they can't quite inhabit.
4/12/2012 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Jeanette Winterson: Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
Jeanette Winterson on her new memoir that details how she survived being adopted by a dominating and wildly eccentric Pentecostal mother.
4/5/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Moshe Kasher: Kasher in the Rye
The true tale of a white boy from Oakland who became a drug addict, criminal,
mental patient, and then turned 16.
3/29/2012 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Edward St. Aubyn: The Patrick Melrose Novels, Part II
Edward St. Aubyn on his a five-book series, The Patrick Melrose Novels. (Part Two of two)
3/22/2012 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Edward St. Aubyn: The Patrick Melrose Novels, Part I
Edward St. Aubyn on his a five-book series, The Patrick Melrose Novels. (Part One of 2)
3/15/2012 • 29 minutes, 15 seconds
Ben Marcus: The Flame Alphabet
What if language turned on its human users? Ben Marcus his novel, a dark story about language and the breakdown of language.
3/8/2012 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Jonathan Lethem and Steve Erickson: The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick
Jonathan Lethem and Steve Erickson discuss science fiction-prophet, writer Philip K Dick.
3/1/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Edmund White: Jack Holmes and His Friend
Can a gay man and a straight man be friends? Edmund White explores the gay-straight axis in Jack Holmes & His Friend.
2/23/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Ayad Akhtar: American Dervish
Ayad Akhtar on coming-of-age as a Muslim in Milwaukee. We discuss the nature of cultural understanding and misunderstanding, sexual and spiritual awakening.
2/16/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Wayne Koestenbaum: Humiliation
Most everyone has a skeleton in the closet. Wayne Koestenbaum talks about those gruesome and hideous moments most of us would rather not remember.
2/9/2012 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Steve Erickson: These Dreams of You
Steve Erickson latest novel seeks to find a haven in the midst of our economic despair and our fears of global catastrophe.
2/2/2012 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Annie Leibovitz: Pilgrimage
Leibovitz's first photo book of objects and landscapes is a triumphant array of iconic images. We talk about her opinions on light, digital imagery and distilling time.
1/26/2012 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Ismet Prcic: Shards
This first novel follows the narrator who just happens to be named Ismet Prcic from Bosnia to America, from a radical theater group to a creative writing program.
1/19/2012 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Dennis Cooper: The Marbled Swarm
Dennis Cooper on the inarticulate emotions that underlie the razzle-dazzle of secret corridors, lush language, brutality and desire.
1/12/2012 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Jonathan Lethem: The Ecstasy of Influence
Autobiographical essays and Jonathan Lethem on his favorite books, spending time with James Brown and the writer's role as public intellectual.
1/5/2012 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Peter Gizzi: Threshold Songs
This book of poetry is the product of great grief in Peter Gizzi's life: the death of his mother, his brother and his best friend...
12/29/2011 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Paul La Farge: Luminous Airplanes
Paul La Farge on his innovation of the novel form. His new novel, though it is published between covers, only represents one third of the book. The other two-thirds...
12/22/2011 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Stephen Greenblatt: The Swerve
The true story of the historical detective whose work uncovered the 1000 year-old poem that shook the early Christian world and marked the beginning of the Renaissance...
12/15/2011 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Jeffrey Eugenides: The Marriage Plot
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jeffrey Eugenides on his new novel, in which he learned to "do" character.
12/1/2011 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
W.S. Merwin: The Shadow of Sirius
A rebroadcast of an engaging conversation with our great octogenarian laureate, W.S. Merwin.
11/24/2011 • 30 minutes
Ann Beattie: Mrs. Nixon
With little known about Pat Nixon, Ann Beattie decided to write a novel in the form of a writer's manual, she used Mrs. Nixon as a model of how to create a character.
11/17/2011 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Tony D'Souza: Mule
Tony D'Souza reveals the life events that led him to write a novel about a solid, middle-class kid who becomes a drug mule...
11/10/2011 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Lawrence Weschler: Uncanny Valley
The veteran contributor to The New Yorker and McSweeney's distills his knowledge about how to structure the essay—from cultural comedies to political tragedies.
11/3/2011 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Russell Banks: Lost Memory of Skin
The author of Affliction and The Sweet Hereafter takes breathtaking risks in exploring a morally complex story. The protagonist is a renegade and convicted sex offender...
10/27/2011 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Harold Bloom: The Shadow of a Great Rock
We visited Harold Bloom to talk about his new book, but when you talk with Bloom, you talk about politics, poetry, teaching, aging, reading and ultimately, respect...
10/20/2011 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Justin Torres: We the Animals
This sequence of short stories, or prose poems, or vignettes (author Justin Torres is open to all three descriptions) adds up to a little novel about an underclass family....
10/13/2011 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Kevin Wilson: The Family Fang
Wilson's goofy, sweet-hearted first novel is about a family of performance artists. The Fang family's siblings are struggling to leave their parents behind in order to lead a normal life...
10/6/2011 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Hector Tobar: The Barbarian Nurseries
Araceli Ramirez, the heroine of Héctor Tobar's new novel, is a nanny is accused of kidnapping her charges, when she is, in fact, taking them to their grandfather....
9/29/2011 • 30 minutes
Maggie Nelson: The Art of Cruelty-A Reckoning
Modern and post-modern art have gone up to a level of transgressive and theoretical border play that leave many viewers bewildered or repelled...
9/22/2011 • 30 minutes
Simon Reynolds: Retromania-Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past
The Bookworm learns about retro culture from a master of rock criticism. Simon Reynolds meditates on the aspects of global music that have led to endless recycling....
9/15/2011 • 30 minutes
Rikki Ducornet: Netsuke
An explorer of sensuality and violator of taboos, Rikki Ducornet allows a predatory psychoanalyst to narrate her new novel...
9/8/2011 • 30 minutes
Jesse Ball: The Village on Horseback, and The Curfew
Tales of romance and adventure inspire Jesse Ball's novellas and prose poems....
9/1/2011 • 30 minutes
Jon-Jon Goulian: The Man in the Gray Flannel Skirt
At age sixteen Jon-Jon Goulian started to wear women's clothes — he couldn't say why. At age forty he wrote this memoir to account for his fascination with androgyny...
8/25/2011 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Art Spiegelman: MetaMaus
After twenty-five years, Art Spiegelman gathers his thoughts about his prize-winning, ground-breaking graphic novel, MetaMaus
.
8/18/2011 • 30 minutes
Dana Spiotta: Stone Arabia
A deep and ultimately heartbreaking look at family relationships, love, identity and memory—all against the heyday of LA rock 'n' roll, new wave and punk...
8/11/2011 • 30 minutes
Sapphire: The Kid, Part 2
The author of Push, on which the film Precious was based, has a new novel, The Kid, told from the point of view of Precious' son, Abdul...(Part 2 of 2)
8/4/2011 • 30 minutes
Sapphire: The Kid, Part 1
The author of Push, on which the film Precious was based, has a new novel, The Kid, told from the point of view of Precious' son, Abdul...(Part 1 of 2)
7/28/2011 • 30 minutes
UpClose: Sapphire
WEB EXCLUSIVE! Michael Silverblatt felt challenged when Sapphire's
publisher mentioned that The Kid "might not be your kind of thing..."
7/24/2011 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 22 seconds
Dora Malech: Say So
Dora Malech explores the violence of relationships...
7/21/2011 • 30 minutes
Chris Adrian: The Great Night
Oncologist and novelist Chris Adrian talks about how his need to tell and hear stories has helped him through his difficult work with children.
7/14/2011 • 30 minutes
John Sayles: A Moment in the Sun
John Sayles on how a writer gathers knowledge, the language, the unusual perspectives and the humanity to illuminate the whole arc of our history...
7/7/2011 • 30 minutes
Geoff Dyer: Otherwise Known as the Human Condition
Novelist and essayist Geoff Dyer celebrates his first published essay in the New Yorker. He tells us how his amateur interest in jazz led him to write a book...
6/30/2011 • 30 minutes
Louis B. Jones: Radiance
Radiance (Counterpoint)
Mark Perdue, a physics professor who we first met in Louis B. Jones' Particles of Luck, is at the farther fringe of a complete nervous breakdown..
6/23/2011 • 30 minutes
John Steppling on theater, 'Fever Dreams'
The occasion of a Los Angeles theater festival offers playwright John Steppling (Phantom Luck) the chance to talk about theater in general and what's wrong with it.
6/16/2011 • 30 minutes
Ann Patchett: State of Wonder
Ann Patchett has written a book you can't put down. State of Wonder is a version of Conrad's Heart of Darkness, set in South America in the heart of the jungle...
6/9/2011 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Francine Prose: My New American Life
My New American Life is the immigrant story told in a new way. Francine Prose's touching and funny character, Lula, is used to suffering -- she comes from Albania...
6/2/2011 • 30 minutes
Howard Jacobson: The Finkler Question
The Finkler Question is the winner of this year's Booker Prize, an amazing novel in that it's many things at once: comic, melancholic, philosophical and paradoxical.
5/26/2011 • 30 minutes
Joyce Carol Oates: A Widow's Story
Unable to sleep after her husband, Ray Smith, died three years ago, Joyce Carol Oates spent the night keeping a journal of her day to day thoughts and experiences...
5/19/2011 • 30 minutes
Eileen Myles: Inferno (A Poet's Novel)
Fearless Eileen Myles discusses her fears in this autobiographical novel.
5/12/2011 • 30 minutes
Diane Ackerman: One Hundred Names for Love
When Diane Ackerman's husband, Paul West, suffered a stroke, the couple had to learn a new way to communicate. That led him to write a new form of novel — an aphasic novel.
5/5/2011 • 30 minutes
Marjorie Garber: The Use and Abuse of Literature
While the Bookworm and Harvard literary theorist Marjorie
Garber disagree about nearly everything, theirs is one of the most diverting literary debates you'll likely hear.
4/28/2011 • 30 minutes
Manuel Munoz: What You See in the Dark
What You See in the Dark (Algonquin)
Manuel Muñoz imagines a crime of passion set in the Central Valley, which he deviously juxtaposes with the mayhem of Hitchcock's Psycho.
4/21/2011 • 30 minutes
David Lipsky and Rick Moody: David Foster Wallace's 'The Pale King'
When David Foster Wallace died, he left behind drafts of a rich and complex novel. Writers Rick Moody and David Lipsky discuss Wallace's achievement, The Pale King...
4/14/2011 • 30 minutes
Michelle Latiolais: Widow
Widow: Stories (Bellevue Literary Press)Michelle Latiolais wrote some of these stories before the death of her husband, some later. Her emotional register changed markedly after his death...
4/7/2011 • 30 minutes
Ann Beattie: The New Yorker Stories
The New Yorker Stories (Scribner)This collection, which spans the years 1974-2006, contains all of the Anne Beattie stories published in the New Yorker – from the very first one, accepted after 17 rejections....
3/31/2011 • 30 minutes
Carlos Fuentes: Destiny and Desire, Part II
A second program with Carlos Fuentes, this one about culture and politics: Will narco-politics defeat government? Will a "New Deal" be negotiated to help the ni-nis? (Part I of this two-part conversation airs on March 17.)
3/24/2011 • 30 minutes
Carlos Fuentes: Destiny and Desire, Part I
Destiny and Desire (Random House)
The great Mexican writer modestly confides that yes, he has completed a new novel but it's really the same story, just with new characters... (Part I of this two-part conversation airs on March 24.)
3/17/2011 • 30 minutes
Ralph Sassone: The Intimates
The Intimates (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Ralph Sassone, a first novelist, on the vicissitudes of — what else — the first novel.
3/10/2011 • 30 minutes
T.C. Boyle: When the Killing's Done
When the Killing's Done (Viking)T.C. Boyle's newest novel contains elements of sea-adventure story and eco-thriller. Bringing together the themes of his life's work, he explores the interstices of the green-movement and the animal rights community...
2/24/2011 • 30 minutes
Mark Richard: House of Prayer No. 2: A Writer's Journey Home
House of Prayer No. 2: A Writer's Journey Home (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday)Busy writing for film and television, for his first book in over a decade, Mark Richard provides a decidedly unconventional autobiography, a spiritual journey through some of the most unusual underworlds the soul can encounter...
2/17/2011 • 30 minutes
Tatjana Soli: The Lotus Eaters
The Lotus Eaters (St. Martin's Griffen)
Ten years ago when Tatjana Soli began to write her novel about female journalists in Viet Nam, she was warned that it might not sell. Instead, this prophetic tale about America's foreign wars was chosen one of the most important books of last year...
2/10/2011 • 30 minutes
Joseph McElroy: Night Soul and Other Stories
Night Soul and Other Stories (Dalkey Archive Press)Joseph McElroy is well regarded as one of the most demanding living American writers. His work is usually innovative and difficult. But in this collection of short stories, his first, stories of tenderness, often about care for children, predominate.
2/3/2011 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Isabel Allende: Paula
How can writing provide consolation? Writer Isabel Allende talks about her daughter's death and the events and feelings that led to the publication of this memoir.
1/27/2011 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
T.C. Boyle on the environment
The novels of T.C. Boyle are well known for addressing complex concerns about the environment and endangered species. In this brief interview, we prepare for the February publication of Boyle's most exciting environmental novel, When the Killing's Done.
1/26/2011 • 15 minutes, 26 seconds
David Levithan: The Lover's Dictionary
The Lover's Dictionary (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
David Levithan has written a dictionary for lovers. The entries in it could apply to any romantic relationship, and yet, as you will hear in this conversation, the specificity of the entries gives the characters unanticipated depth.
1/20/2011 • 30 minutes
David Vann: Caribou Island
Caribu Island (Harper Collins)
David Vann builds his first novel out of dire materials: his father took his own life, and his stepmother's parents died in a murder/suicide...
1/13/2011 • 30 minutes
Salman Rushdie: Luka and the Fire of Life
Luka and the Fire of Life (Random House)
Once again, Salman Rushdie writes a fable, this time for his second son, who has had the time to take in Haroun and the Sea of Stories and feel envy for his brother to whom that book was dedicated...
1/6/2011 • 30 minutes
Mary Ruefle: Selected Poems
Selected Poems (Wave Books)When you hear Mary Ruefle reading her poems, you will quickly become entranced by their accessibility: they are funny and heartbreaking—simultaneously...
12/30/2010 • 30 minutes
Jaimy Gordon: Lord of Misrule
Lord of Misrule (McPherson)
Jaimy Gordon is a recently-discovered American novelist with an original voice and vision. Her National Book Award-winning novel, Lord of Misrule, is set at Indian Mound Downs, a rinky-dink racetrack in Wheeling, West Virginia, a place where "scarred and lonely dreamers in the American grain" dream of better luck someday....
12/16/2010 • 30 minutes
Nicole Krauss: Great House
Great House (Norton)
Nicole Krauss is more sensitive to emotional textures and to characters than she is to conventional plot. Here, she speaks about how the careful maneuverings of feelings and the details that provoke feeling help to generate a structure for her new novel.
12/9/2010 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Leslie Marmon Silko: The Turquoise Ledge
The Turquoise Ledge: A Memoir ( Viking)
The Sonoran desert, its creatures and features, its ants and plants, becomes the classroom for that most trans-human of lessons. Poet, novelist and essayist Leslie Marmon Silko provides a memoir of her education outdoors.
12/2/2010 • 30 minutes
Breyten Breytenbach on His Literature, Anti-Apartheid Activism
Voice Over: A Nomadic Conversation with Mahmoud Darwish (Archipelago); Intimate Stranger (Archipelago); Notes from the Middle World (Haymarket Books)
As a writer, South African-born Breyten Breytenbach is an activist. As an activist he functions as something like a conscience. As a participant in the global response to apartheid, he was imprisoned for seven years, and his writing comes from the anguished nightmares of his imprisonment. His is the art of passionate dissent; his prose and poetry are in service of a more "human" human race.
11/25/2010 • 30 minutes
Lan Samantha Chang: All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost
All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost (Norton)
This short novel emerged virtually whole — unique in the writing life of its author, Lan Samantha Chang. Perhaps this is because the book is about the writing life...
11/18/2010 • 30 minutes
Susan Straight: Take One Candle Light a Room
Take One Candle Light a Room (Pantheon)
The complexities of race and community are at the center of Susan Straight's lively discussion about family, memory, migration and history...
11/11/2010 • 30 minutes
Mona Simpson: My Hollywood
My Hollywood (Knopf)
Mona Simpson's new novel corkscrews its way into the heart of a Santa Monica marriage, a marriage in which child raising duties are agreed to be divided fifty-fifty between husband and wife. Instead, they are divided fifty-fifty between wife and nanny...
11/4/2010 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Monique Truong: Bitter in the Mouth
Bitter in the Mouth (Random House)
Monique Truong is an intransigent—she will not settle for anyone's desire to interpret or in any way falsity the world she knows. This time Vietnamese-born Truong sets to revealing the lies implicit in the question, "What is it like to grow up Asian in America?"
10/28/2010 • 30 minutes
Tom McCarthy: C
Tom McCarthy's C (Knopf) is one of those post-modern novels designed to drill a hole in your head and help you inventory the contents of your mind...
10/21/2010 • 30 minutes
Charles Yu: How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe
How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe (Pantheon)
Charles Yu's sweeter-spirited vision of how vintage science fiction can be used to imagine our world. Caught in a computer game, the hero seeks to escape his chronic melancholy. It just so happens that our hero's name is the same as the author's...
10/14/2010 • 30 minutes
Rick Moody: The Four Fingers of Death
The Four Fingers of Death (Little, Brown)
Rick Moody creates a sleazoid end-of-the-world saga, basing his story on a cheapo so-bad-it's-good sci-fi classic...
10/7/2010 • 30 minutes
Howard Norman: What Is Left the Daughter
What Is Left the Daughter (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Howard Norman's Wyatt Hillyer has good reason to be blocked: His parents committed
suicide within an hour of one another; his love has been unrequited; he
assisted in an unpremeditated hate crime...
9/30/2010 • 30 minutes
Gary Shteyngart: Super Sad True Love Story
Super Sad True Love Story (Random House)
Can Lenny and Eunice find love in a futuristic America in which computer screens instantly and constantly reveal economic status and sexual "hotness" quotients?
9/23/2010 • 30 minutes
Maile Meloy: Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It
Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It (Riverhead Books)
Maile Meloy’s stories go shooting off in such surprising and unpredictable directions that a reader might think, "every which way is the only way she wants it..."
9/16/2010 • 30 minutes
Vendela Vida: The Lovers
The Lovers (Harper Collins/ Ecco)
Vendela Vida has crafted another mysterious and beautiful novel about a woman's identity. This woman, Yvonne, is middle-aged, the oldest woman whose tightly-knit personality Vida has unraveled so far.
9/9/2010 • 30 minutes
Paul Muldoon and special guests, Sparks
First, Sparks on Bookworm's new theme songs. Then poet Paul Muldoon (Maggot, from Farrar, Straus & Giroux) on how writing poems differs from writing song lyrics..
9/2/2010 • 30 minutes
Craig Nova: The Informer
The Informer (Shaye Areheart Books)
Craig Nova has written a frightening novel about corruption in pre-Nazi Berlin. Especially frightening is Nova's perception that those times are so similar to ours...
8/26/2010 • 30 minutes
Martha McPhee: Dear Money
Dear Money (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
In Martha McPhee's comic novel, a wizard of Wall Street promises he can change a novelist from a desperate bohemian into a "Master of the Universe," in a brief eighteen months. In this conversation, we explore the mis-marriage of aesthetics and greed...
8/19/2010 • 30 minutes
David Mitchell: The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Extended interview with David Mitchell
Glowing front-page reviews and profiles proclaim David Mitchell to be "the real thing" and his new novel, The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet (Random House), a masterpiece.
8/12/2010 • 43 minutes, 8 seconds
D.A. Powell and Linda Gregerson: Chronic
Chronic (Graywolf)
The Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award offers an impressive $100,000 prize to a poet entering the major phase of his/her career. We speak to this year's winner, D.A. Powell, and the chair judge, Linda Gregerson, to find out about poetry awards and how they are determined...
8/5/2010 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Jane Smiley: Private Life
Private Life (Knopf)
Jane Smiley explores lives limited by repression, narrow scope and boundless ego, describing the sadness of
a genius whose work never catches on, and the frustration of a wife whose husband never achieves his potential—and who barely discerns her own
7/29/2010 • 30 minutes
Peter Carey
Parrot & Olivier in America (Knopf)
Australian-born Peter Carey celebrates his years in America with a larking, picaresque novel based on Toqueville's Democracy in America...
7/22/2010 • 30 minutes
Aimee Bender
The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake (Doubleday)
A little girl is able to taste sadness in her food. Her brother, who has become emotionally withdrawn, is able to turn himself into inanimate objects. Aimee Bender shows how by using the techniques of fairy tales, legends and magic realism, her novels and stories about family dysfunction are transformed into narratives about growth and change.
7/15/2010 • 30 minutes
Favorite Books: John Waters and Elif Batuman
Role Models (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) and The Possessed (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
John Waters’ gives a passionate description of his favorite books, and for good measure, Elif Batuman gives a lively count-down of her favorite Russian novels.
7/8/2010 • 30 minutes
Isabel Allende: Island Beneath the Sea
Isabel Allende's historical novel about slavery and the Haitian revolution becomes a springboard for a conversation about global injustice and the re-emergence of slavery.
7/1/2010 • 30 minutes
Zachary Mason
The Lost Books of the Odyssey (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Higher mathematics and logic problems have long intrigued fiction writers, including Zachary Mason. Both Lewis Carroll (the Alice books) and Vladimir Nabokov (Lolita) had a profound love of logic and chess..
6/24/2010 • 30 minutes
Jean-Philippe Toussaint
Self-Portrait Abroad (Dalkey Archive); Running Away (Dalkey Archive)
French fiction had become austere and theoretical until Jean-Philippe Toussaint took it in the direction of the wacky, even goony. His earlier stories focused on characters retreating from contemporary life, but that has given way to work with a light, lyrical approach...
6/17/2010 • 30 minutes
Yann Martel
Beatrice & Virgil (Spiegel & Grau)
After recognizing that most holocaust literature is centered on personal testimony, Yann Martel decided to create an allegory about the holocaust — a different approach to this traumatic material...
6/10/2010 • 30 minutes
David Shields and Ander Monson on the New Prose
Reality Hunger: A Manifesto (Knopf) and Vanishing Point: Not a Memoir (Graywolf Press)
New web technologies (and the ever-increasing availability of information) have made possible a new kind of writing. This prose uses fact and randomness rather than story and structure. Two active practitioners wave the banner for the new.
6/3/2010 • 30 minutes
Ian McEwan
Solar (Doubleday)
Along the way in our conversation about bad morals and good intentions, Ian McEwan dabbles in the background subjects of his new novel...
5/27/2010 • 30 minutes
Anne Carson
Nox (New Directions)
Anne Carson's brother ran away, and she never saw him again. After learning of his death some twenty years later, she assembled Nox as a form of grieving....
5/20/2010 • 30 minutes
Sam Lipsyte: The Ask
In the midst of all his scandalous anger and shenanigans, it's the shape of a great sentence that keeps Sam Lipsyte's interest in writing fiction at fever pitch.
5/13/2010 • 30 minutes
Chang-rae Lee: The Surrendered
The Surrendered (Riverhead)
Renowned for his novels about repressed, withdrawn characters, Chang-rae Lee new novel explores new ground....
5/6/2010 • 30 minutes
John D'Agata: About a Mountain
In a culture whose major activities include consumption and the production of waste, John D'Agata ponders the adjacency of Las Vegas and a proposed nuclear waste dumping ground...
4/29/2010 • 30 minutes
Elif Batuman: The Possessed
Elif Batuman never intended to study literature, learn Russian,or learn to speak Uzbek. That's no life for a grown up!. And yet she fell passionately in love with literature...
4/22/2010 • 30 minutes
John Ashbery
Planisphere (Ecco)
John Ashbery has made a dumbfounding statement: he is afraid that sometimes "the language gets in the way of the music of a poem." This is dumbfounding because what is there in poetry other than language?
4/15/2010 • 30 minutes
Adam Haslett
Union Atlantic (Doubleday)While Adam Haslett's new novel tracks the underground movements of big money and global management, he still has his novelist's eye on the intimacies, even the perversities, of eccentric individuals...
4/8/2010 • 30 minutes
Joshua Ferris
The Unnamed (Little, Brown)
Josh Ferris, who won a huge audience with his hilarious office novel, Then We Came to the End, has done an about-face — he's left the office....
4/1/2010 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Barbara Epler
New Directions, the press that began by publishing Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams and Tennessee Williams and which today gives us Roberto Bolaño, W. G. Sebald and Anne Carson, deserves celebration. Editor in Chief Barbara Epler takes us on a guided tour of American’s pre-eminent literary publisher...
3/25/2010 • 30 minutes
John McPhee
Silk Parachute (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)John McPhee, our nation’s premier essayist—the man who helped raise creative non-fiction to an art form—speaks about the intricacy of his writing process...
3/18/2010 • 30 minutes
Patti Smith, Part II
Just Kids (Ecco)
In the second of this two-part interview we hear about Patti Smith as a bookworm. You probably know about her love for Rimbaud, but did you know she worships the Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov and his great novel, The Master and Margarita? A voracious reader, Smith has written three unpublished novels and has created hundreds of visual pieces. She speaks of her unbounded appetite for creativity.
3/11/2010 • 30 minutes
Patti Smith, Part I
Just Kids (Ecco)
Poverty and insanity are terrible things—but then there is bohemian poverty and insanity, and these are infused with the romance of becoming an artist. In the first of this two-part interview, Patti Smith speaks of her youth in New York, when she and Robert Mapplethorpe sought to manifest their artistic ambitions...
3/4/2010 • 30 minutes
Javier Marias, Part II
Your Face Tomorrow, Volume 3: Poison, Shadow and Farewell (New Directions)Our conversation with Javier Marías continues. What if ten minutes of espionage took a hundred pages to fully describe? Here we explore time and consciousness in what will possibly be the greatest trilogy of our new century.
2/25/2010 • 30 minutes
Javier Marias, Part I
Your Face Tomorrow, Volume 3: Poison, Shadow and Farewell (New Directions)What if Henry James — the patron saint of convolution — could be resurrected? What if he wrote a novel of espionage so complex it became a trilogy? Spanish writer Javier Marías has stepped in and taken on the epic task...
2/18/2010 • 30 minutes
Rita Dove
Sonata Mulattica (Norton)
Beethoven once dedicated a sonata to a half-African musician—then revoked the dedication. Why? In her book-length poem, Rita Dove attempts an imaginative historical reconstruction of what happened.
2/11/2010 • 30 minutes
Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
The TOON Treasury of Classic Children's Comics (Abrams ComicArts)
TOON Books and Raw Books co-editors Spiegelman and Mouly tunneled through archives and private collections to create this perfect anthology of classic children's comics, the spunky kids and sassy animals you may envision at the edges of your memory. Walk down memory's backs streets with us when we explore the golden age of someone else's childhood.
2/4/2010 • 30 minutes
Jonathan Lethem
Chronic City (Doubleday)
Jonathan Lethem began his career with Philip K. Dick-inspired science fiction, then he turned to writing the more realistic books that brought him to prominence. Here, we discuss the fusion of the two...
1/28/2010 • 30 minutes
Rudolph Wurlitzer, Part II
Nog (Two Dollar Radio); Flats / Quake (Two Dollar Radio)
When Flats and Quake were published, the sixties were ending, and these novels can be said to chronicle the death of a dream. (Part I airs January 14)
1/21/2010 • 30 minutes
Rudolph Wurlitzer, Part I
Nog (Two Dollar Radio); Flats / Quake (Two Dollar Radio)
In this first of two interviews, Wurlitzer takes us time-traveling back to the late 1960's when Nog was published and his first screen plays (Two Lane Blacktop, Glen and Randa)
found their way onto the screen... (Part II airs January 21)
1/14/2010 • 30 minutes
Barbara Kingsolver
The Lacuna (Harper)
What do Leon Trotsky, Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera have to do with an invented author of Mayan and Incan historical romances?
1/7/2010 • 30 minutes
Wallace Shawn: Essays & Grasses of a Thousand Colors
Wallace Shawn’s newest play intermingles fact and fantasy in such a bizarre and original way that one would have to see (or even read) the play two or three times to get things (relatively) straight. Shawn discusses innovative theater in relation to his political beliefs as expressed in his new collection of essays.
12/31/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Orhan Pamuk, Part II
The Museum of Innocence (Knopf)The Nobel Prize helped to set the fiction of Orhan Pamuk (and Turkish literature in general) in a contemporary global frame. Our conversation centers on the problem of national versus global literatures...
12/24/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Orhan Pamuk, Part I
The Museum of Innocence (Knopf)Infidelity and adultery are two of the great subjects of the novel tradition — think of Anna Karenina or Madam Bovary. In this conversation, Turkish Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk discusses his own stunning contribution to this tradition.
12/17/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
A.S. Byatt
The Children's Book (Knopf)As the vast array of subjects presented in A.S. Byatt's The Children's Book parades past — puppetry, women's rights, Fabianism, Peter Pan, education, children's fiction, the history of pottery glazes — one can't help but wonder: how does it all hold together?
12/10/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Tao Lin: Shoplifting from American Apparel
Though he’s had five books published, Tao Lin is not yet thirty. Yet, for all his industriousness, he expresses the apathy and emptiness felt by many of his generation.
12/3/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Brenda Hillman
Practical Water ( Wesleyan)
Brenda Hillman's work has been described as difficult and experimental, but we beg to disagree. Here, we hear some of her most accessible poems; discuss her work with Code Pink, a feminist activist group; and try to describe the way to read a so-called "difficult" poem.
The live broadcast of this interview will be pre-empted by special holiday programming, but will be available in the KCRW archives.
11/26/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Margaret Atwood: The Year of the Flood
Margaret Atwood thinks she has done something new: her novel takes place simultaneously with Oryx and Crake — her nightmare novel about the biotechnological future...
11/19/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
James Galvin
As Is (Copper Canyon)One of our most tender poets (tough but tender), James Galvin, investigates his growing tendency toward poems that express his bitterness— toward politics, environmental despoilment, big business. Still he affirms, in poems that breathe with sweet relief, the ongoing possibility of love.
11/12/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Nicholson Baker
The Anthologist (Simon & Schuster)The polymath Nicholson Baker has been able to create a version of himself in the figure of accomplished poet Paul Chowder...
11/5/2009 • 28 minutes, 59 seconds
Nick Laird
Glover's Mistake (Viking)
In this novel of love, manipulation and deception, Nick Laird attempts one of the trickiest strategies in the novelist's tool kit. He structures a book so that readers come to understand things the characters remain blind to.
10/29/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Lorrie Moore: A Gate at the Stairs
A Gate at the Stairs (Knopf) Lorrie Moore has written three collections of short stories and two rather short novels. Now, after eleven years of work, she has published a longer novel and survived to tell the tale...
10/22/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Carlos Ruiz Zafon
The Angel's Game (Doubleday)Spanish writer Carlos Ruiz Zafón has attracted an international audience with his series of metaphysical thrillers.
10/15/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Dennis Cooper
Ugly Man (Harper Collins)
Although we've followed the career of Dennis Copper from the ground up, in this conversation, he acknowledges a new influence—the master director of French film comedy, Jacques Tati.
10/8/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Alvaro Uribe and Cristina Rivera-Garza
Best of Contemporary Mexican Fiction (Dalkey Archive) This new anthology makes clear that magical realism is only a tiny segment of what’s been happening in Mexican fiction over the last half-century. In this conversation with its editor, Álvaro Uribe, and Cristina Rivera-Garza, one of the writers whose work appears in the book, we uncover a cavalcade of styles and influences, as well as a host of writers whose names will be new to American readers.
10/1/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman
Road Show, a recording of the musical (Nonesuch, PS Classics)
Stephen Sondheim is right — his new musical, Roadshow, is not gloomy. Sondheim and his collaborator, playwright John Weidman, discuss the many revisions of the musical that has evolved in an extraordinary way, and may yet become an American classic...
9/24/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Clancy Martin
How to Sell (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Clancy Martin's first novel reads like a piece of sleaze, but it turns
out — surprise! — to be a philosophical novel about the problems of
appearance and reality...
9/17/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Colum McCann
Let the Great World Spin (Random House)
Darkened by intimations of 9/11, Column McCann's generous extravaganza of a novel
brings together the lives of strangers who witness a high-wire artist
dancing between the two World Trade Center towers...
9/10/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Reif Larsen
The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet (Penguin Press)
Reif Larsen's T. S. Spivet, twelve-year-old genius cartographer, compulsively maps everything...
9/3/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Glen David Gold
Sunnyside (Knopf)What a charming raconteur Glen David Gold is, with his anecdotes about the movies, theories about identity and celebrity, and knowledge of World War I...
8/27/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Eduardo Galeano: Mirrors
Eduardo Galeano has written a history of the world in brief chapters, each one devoted to an iconic incident...
8/20/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jim Krusoe
Erased (Tin House Books)
In this wild and woolly conversation, Jim Krusoe reveals that
his zany, unpredictable, hilarity-inspiring novels are, well,
descriptions of the human condition (at least as how he sees it).
8/6/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Anne Waldman
Manatee /Humanity (Penguin Poets)
Anne Waldman guides us through this book-length poetry-and-prose
meditation on endangered species by describing an initiation ceremony
designed to instill a deeper sense of compassion....
7/30/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Wray
Lowboy (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
John Wray's novel about a schizophrenic boy's quest for sex
and/or love flirts violently with the thriller form...
7/23/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Wells Tower
Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Wells Tower is the most talked-about new story writer to emerge on the
literary scene. This conversation focuses on the weird details he uses
to illuminate a mostly conventional narrative arc...
7/16/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Matthea Harvey
Modern Life (Graywolf Press)
Like dangerous toys or perilous amusement park rides, Matthea Harvey's
poems careen into the unknown...
7/9/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Brad Gooch: Flannery
While we take a mini-tour of Flannery O'Connor's life and writing, biographer Brad Gooch describes his difficulties in gaining access to the author's inner life.
7/2/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Matthew Dickman
All-American Poem (American Poetry Review)Kate Tufts Discovery Award-winner Matthew Dickman writes emotional and accessible poetry...
6/25/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Geoff Dyer: Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi
Geoff Dyer on the secrets that structure his new novel (which might, on the surface, seem like two novellas)....
6/18/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mary Gaitskill
Don’t Cry (Pantheon)The extraordinary levels of empathy and sadness in Mary Gaitskill’s new stories provide the basis for this intense discussion of the emotional subtexts of her fiction.
6/11/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
An Oulipo Mini-Anthology
Jacques Roubaud, Ian Monk, Daniel Levin Becker, Marcel Bénabou, Anne F. Garréta and Hervé Le Tellier When members of the Oulipo convened in New York, Bookworm was there to record this mini-anthology of the transcendentally witty, sometimes hilarious goings-on.
6/4/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jacques Roubaud
The Loop (Dalkey Archive)
Jacques Roubaud describes the mesh of image and memory that makes up his fascinating, newly translated, unclassifiable book.
5/28/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Ashbery
...on his translation of Pierre Martory's The Landscapist (The Sheep Meadow Press)
As John Ashbery remembers his early years in Paris, he reflects on French poetry and about the very special case of his long-time friend, Pierre Martory.
5/21/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Gary Indiana: The Shanghai Gesture
Out of fantasias of the past (Fu Manchu novels, exotic Hollywood films, documents of "friendly" imperialism from the twenties to the forties), Gary Indiana concocts the nightmare present of The Shanghai Gesture..
5/14/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Elizabeth Alexander
Praise Song for the Day: A Poem for Barack Obama’s Presidential Inauguration (Graywolf); American Sublime (Graywolf)
When Elizabeth Alexander presented Barack Obama's inaugural
poem, few of us had considered that in the history of the United States
there had been only three previous inaugural poets...
5/7/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Yusef Komunyakaa
Warhorses: Poems (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)The extraordinary part of this interview is the opportunity to hear Komunyakaa's
voice as he reads his poetry. These poems are about love and war
simultaneously, traumatic upheavals that may often be conjoined in this
poet's vision of life.
4/30/2009 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Joanna Scott
Follow Me (Little, Brown)It has been said that life is like a river, and the river in this novel
twists and turns, changes direction and may even be inhabited by river
fairies...
4/23/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Abdellah Taia
Salvation Army (Semiotext(e))
In Abdellah Taïa's family and in his native country, homosexuality is surrounded by
silence. All sorts of behaviors are tolerated if they are not spoken of, an intolerable circumstance for a writer...
4/16/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
T.C. Boyle
The Women (Viking)This richly layered conversation with T.C. Boyle centers on the subjects of art and arrogance. The Women
is a biographical novel, a fiction derived from the life of Frank Lloyd
Wright, focused particularly on Wright's up-and-down experiences with
women.
4/9/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
A Whitman Tribute
Eamon Grennan: Matter of Fact (Graywolf)Major Jackson: Hoops (Norton)Pattiann Rogers: Wayfare (Penguin)
Three poets join us on Bookworm to celebrate Walt Whitman. They read from Leaves of Grass,
describe Whitman's influence on their work, read their own poems, and,
in general, paint a raucous, friendly, informal portrait of the Good
Gray Poet — America's greatest.
4/2/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robin Romm
The Mercy Papers: A Memoir of Three Weeks (Scribner)
Fact and fiction. Robin Romm has written a book of short stories and now a memoir arising from one central event: her mother’s gradual death by cancer...
3/26/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Frank Bidart, Part II
Watching the Spring Festival: Poems (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
For Frank Bidart, the act of reading poetry aloud involves the entire body... (Part I of this interview aired March 12.)
3/19/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Frank Bidart, Part I
Watching the Spring Festival: Poems (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
The word most frequently used to describe Frank Bidart’s poetry is “intense.” (Part II of this interview airs on March 19.)
3/12/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Haskell
Out of My Skin (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
An existential novel (think Camus’ The Stranger) LA-style. When
a celebrity impersonator trains the hero in the art of impersonation, identity confusion ensues...
3/5/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Rae Armantrout
Versed (Wesleyan University Press)Rae Armantrout has been associated with the Language-centered
poets of the eighties, a group often accused of overly cerebral poetry
derived from theory. Now, her work is found in the most widely read
magazines that publish poetry...
2/26/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Micheline Aharonian Marcom
The Mirror in the Well (Dalkey Archive)
Micheline Marcom's works squeeze themselves between uncomfortable alternatives: Is her new novel, The Mirror in the Well, erotic or pornographic?
2/19/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Sparks: The Art of the Popular Song
Kimono My House (Island Def Jam); Exotic Creatures of the Deep (Lil' Beethoven)After years of yearning, Bookworm talks with his favorite rock band about the art of writing pop songs. Join us in this celebration of their 21st album, Exotic Creatures of the Deep.
2/12/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Azar Nafisi
Things I've Been Silent About: Memories (Random House)Azar Nafisi is one of the most powerful advocates literature has. After writing Reading Lolita in Tehran,
her memoir about reading forbidden books in a repressive culture, she
has taken on a new source of repression—the family.
2/5/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Toni Morrison, Part II
A Mercy (Knopf)In this second half of our two-part interview with Toni Morrison, the conversation continues in an attempt to discover the way a novel is built.
1/29/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Sarah Shun-lien Bynum
Ms. Hempel Chronicles (Harcourt)What is a middle-school teacher? Is Ms. Hempel the old-maid meanie we
remember fearing in childhood? Or is she, as she believes, a barely-out-of-college young woman on the threshold of life?
1/15/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Amitav Ghosh
Sea of Poppies (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
With Sea of Poppies, a trilogy begins! Few know that the opium that fueled the Opium Wars was grown and processed in India...
1/8/2009 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Marilynne Robinson, Part II
Home (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Marilynne Robinson's recent novels concern two ministers and
their families. Here, we discuss her most-troubled character, Jack
Boughton, a man who would have been called a ne'er-do-well when words
like ne'er-do-well were common...
12/25/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Marilynne Robinson, Part I
Home (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Marilynne Robinson had not published a novel in twenty years when she wrote Gilead, which went on to win the Pulitzer Prize. How peculiar, interesting and lovely that she should follow it so quickly with Home...
12/18/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
An American Bookworm in Paris, Part V
Jerk, a play, from a story by Dennis Cooper, directed by Gisèle VienneOur series closes with American writer Dennis Cooper, who lives
and writes in Paris. His work is believed to continue the French
lineage of poète maudits (outlaw poets) a tradition that includes
Baudelaire, Rimbaud and Sade.
12/11/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jonathan Carroll
The Ghost in Love (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Although he would never want us to say so, Jonathan Carroll's novels are like metaphysical self-help books for the supernaturally inclined.
12/4/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
David Foster Wallace
Web exclusive: The terrible and sad impact of David Foster Wallace's suicide caused us to want to remember him as he first appeared in the KCRW studios, fresh from the publication of his breakthrough novel, Infinite Jest. He was brilliant and charming—and his death is an enormous loss to American literature.
11/26/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Sarah Vowell
The Wordy Shipmates (Riverhead)What brought the indomitable Sarah Vowell to write a book about the Puritans? A couple of Thanksgiving episodes of The Brady Bunch and Happy Days, to be sure, but also...
11/20/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
An American Bookworm in Paris, Part IV
Grégoire Bouillier The Mystery Guest: An Account (Farrar Straus & Giroux) and Report on Myself (Houghton Mifflin)Olivier Cadiot Colonel Zoo ( Green Integer)Marc Cholodenko Mordechai Schamz (Dalkey Archive)Finally at ease in Paris, the Bookworm encounters three French
novelists and attempts to navigate the tangle of philosophy, artifice,
intertextuality and hilarity that exemplifies the art of the new French
novel.
Note: More installments of an American Bookworm in Paris will air over the next few months.
11/13/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Diane Johnson
Lulu in Marrakech (Dutton)Here's a conversation about ambivalence, ambiguity and judgment in a
comic or satiric novel. Usually, we would know exactly where the author
stands, but not with Diane Johnson...
11/6/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Francine Prose: Goldengrove
Francine Prose is full of surprises in speaking of her newest
novel, Goldengrove It's narrated by a thirteen-year-old girl whose sister has
drowned....
10/30/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
James Wood
How Fiction Works (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)This conversation is characterized by indirection. Critic James Wood seems to be responding to accusations made against him by other reviewers...
10/23/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
An American Bookworm in Paris, Part III
Pierre Alféri: Oxo (Burning Deck) and Natural Gaits ( Sun & Moon)
Emmanuel CarrèreClass Trip & The Mustache (Picador) and The Adversary: A True Story of Monstrous Deception (Picador)In this episode of our ongoing series, the American Bookworm leaves
philosophy and politics and makes his way to his true loves: poetry and
fiction...
Note: More installments of an American Bookworm in Paris will air over the next few months.
10/16/2008 • 30 minutes
Art Spiegelman
Breakdowns (Pantheon)Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@&*! is the subtitle of this new book, and we talk about the kind of young %@&*! Art Spiegelman was...
10/9/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Horacio Castellanos Moya
Senselessness, translated by Katherine Silver (New Directions)Castellanos Moya's first novel to be translated into English is a jet black tragic-comedy...
10/2/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
David Markson
The Last Novel (Shoemaker & Hoard)David Markson has invented his own "personal genre." His novels
present collaged panoramas of the travails of art and artists—the bad
reviews, the rivalries, the life-long neglect, the impoverished deaths. His juxtapositions can be comic or tragic.
9/25/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Annie Proulx
Fine Just the Way It Is: Wyoming Stories 3 (Scribner)Annie Proulx's new collection is a stew of tall tales, romantic sagebrush sagas, and genuinely affecting stories of survival on the range.
* Language Advisory
9/18/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
An American Bookworm in Paris, Part II
Camille de Toledo: Coming of Age at the End of History (Soft Skull)The young French critic, novelist and filmmaker Camille de Toledo tells the sad /exuberant story of young French intellectuals growing up at the end of everything.
9/11/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
An American Bookworm in Paris, Part I
Sylvia Whitman, of Shakespeare and Company, a bookstore popular with Americans in Paris
Francois Cusset French Theory: How Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze & Co. Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States (University of Minnesota Press)
Our tour begins at Shakespeare and Company, a bookstore with a long
tradition of helping American writers in Paris. Then, it's on to François Cusset
and how French Theory found its bastion and stronghold in American
Universities.
9/4/2008 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
A Celebration of the Work of Swiss Writer Robert Walser
A tribute to the great (and virtually unknown) Swiss writer Robert Walser, who
influenced Kafka and inspired Hermann Hesse. Writers Susan Bernofsky, Deborah Eisenberg and Wayne Koestenbaum read, discuss and worship Walser, a writer who is like a mouse
that roared—small and fragile but out-of-this-world outrageous
8/28/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Francoise Mouly
Editor of Toon Books Françoise Mouly describes the new children's books she's bringing into the world...
8/21/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Art Spiegelman (local)
Breakdowns: Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@&*! (Pantheon)A sneak preview of the new Art Spiegelman book, which collects Art's early underground commix and includes his next autobiographical sequence...
8/14/2008 • 16 minutes, 6 seconds
Donald Ray Pollock (national)
Knockemstiff (Doubleday)Knockemstiff, Ohio, inspires Donald Ray Pollock to explore the miseries and ferocities of small-town life.
8/14/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Andrew Sean Greer: The Story of a Marriage
A wonderful young novelist, Andrew Sean Greer, writes about enormous and basic truths that his characters choose to conceal...
8/7/2008 • 30 minutes
Salman Rushdie: The Enchantress of Florence
In this new novel, Salman Rushdie explores Renaissance Florence and the reign of Akbar in India, in order to describe a world on the verge of discovering that all its beliefs are incorrect...
7/31/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Rudolph Wurlitzer
The Drop Edge of Yonder (Two Dollar Radio)Where has Rudy Wurlitzer been for the last fifteen years? The mental traveler takes another vision quest, this time into the Old American
West...
7/24/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Tobias Wolff
Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories (Knopf)Tobias Wolff has re-written his famous stories many times—even
after they've been published...
7/17/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Coral Bracho and translator Forrest Gander
Firefly under the Tongue: Selected Poems (New Directions)Coral Bracho, a major Mexican poet, writes ecstatic visionary
poetry that has been translated into English for the first time. Our
program marks another first—she has never before agreed to an
interview...
7/10/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Brian Hall
Fall of Frost (Viking)Brian Hall takes on a fictional life of
our great Robert Frost, giving language to the poet's inner life.
7/3/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Keith Gessen
All the Sad Young Literary Men (Viking)Keith Gessen, one of the founding editors of the hip,
intellectual journal n+1, has written his first novel. It's about the
struggles of young people to break into the world of their aspirations,
in this case, the literary intelligentsia of New York City...
6/26/2008 • 30 minutes
Zachary Lazar
Sway (Little, Brown)Zachary Lazar's novel is about the Rolling Stones, Charles Manson, Kenneth Anger and the dark side of the Sixties. In this conversation, we try to gauge how much "sympathy for the devil" the era generated—from sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll to satanic ritual murders.
6/19/2008 • 30 minutes
Richard Price
Lush Life (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)This high-voltage interview with Richard Price (he spiels, riffs, and shoots off sparks) gives a rare insight into the way he orchestrates the complex of simultaneous perception in his writing. He proceeds with a strong sense of dread—ready for an attack from any and every direction.
6/12/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Isabel Allende: The Sum of Our Days
Isabel Allende's second memoir is written to her daughter Paula who died. We discuss storytelling as a form of memory, a way of preserving the present.
6/5/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Clayton Eshleman
An Alchemist with One Eye on Fire (Black Widow Press)When The Bookworm explains that reading Eshleman's intense and visceral work brings up initial feelings of disgust, Eschleman responds that his poetry is a matter of initiation and transformation.
5/29/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Bruce Weigl and Brian Turner
Declension in the Village of Chung Luong (Ausable Press) and Brian Turner Here, Bullet (Alice James Books)Bruce Weigl is a poet who served in Vietnam. Brian Turner wrote poetry while serving in Iraq. Theirs is the poetry of war as written by on-site observers.
5/22/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
David Shields: The thing about life is that one day you'll be dead
The thing about life is that one day you’ll be dead (Knopf)David Shields wrote this book to relieve his terrible fear of death. He compares this fear with his ninety-something-year-old father's vigor and confidence. Although the book is full of facts about aging and death, it has the odd effect of making you feel thrilled to be alive.
5/15/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jim Krusoe
Girl Factory (Tin House)In Jim Krusoe's strange and funny new novel, six women are being preserved in acidophilus in the basement of a frozen yogurt shop. The innocent hero's attempts to save these kidnapped beauties are disastrous.
5/8/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Peter Carey
His Illegal Self (Knopf)The excitement of Peter Carey's new novel is rendered through a
specific stylistic choice: He integrates two wildly different voices
into the sentences, creating a vibrant stereo-effect. The result is
amazing--the novel's action seems to be taking place about six inches
from your face.
5/1/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ariana Reines
Coeur de Lion (Mal-o-mar); The Cow (Fence Books)
This astonishing young poet—still in her twenties—is surely destined to be one of the crucial voices of her generation.
4/24/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Colm Tóibín: Mothers and Sons
Colm Tóibín candidly describes the inspirations for the stories in his first collection. Sometimes a landscape is enough to trigger a story, sometimes an anecdote or a bit of family lore.
4/17/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Anne Enright
The Gathering (Grove)
In Anne Enright's Booker Prize-winning novel about a family wake, the narrator remembers, lies, invents and imagines with equal ardor.
4/10/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Arnon Grunberg
The Jewish Messiah (Penguin)
Unsettling, profane and goofy, Arnon Grunberg’s
novel takes politically incorrect risks with contemporary Jewish culture.
4/3/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
William T. Vollmann
Riding toward Everywhere (Ecco)William Vollmann decided to spend as much time as possible viewing the stars from the flatbed of a moving train. He’s a “fauxbo” not a hobo, and he movingly describes his need to find freedom by hopping a train–without any destination in mind.
3/27/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
David Rieff
Swimming in a Sea of Death: A Son's Memoir (Simon & Schuster)David Rieff accompanied his mother, Susan Sontag, through the medical ordeals that led to her death. We explore the death of this great writer, a woman who resisted consolation and maintained—to her last days—an enormous appetite for life.
3/20/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Geraldine Brooks
People of the Book (Viking)The art of detection unravels the secrets of the Sarajevo Haggadah. What does the miraculous survival of this medieval codex tell us about the survival of both culture and history?
3/13/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Lewis Hyde
The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World (Vintage)How does the creative person function in a market culture? In the 25 years since The Gift was first published, this question has become increasingly more difficult to answer.
3/6/2008 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Eileen Myles and Maggie Nelson
Sorry, Tree (Wave Books) and Something Bright, Then Holes (Soft Skull Press) and Women, The New York School, and Other True Abstractions (University of Iowa Press)
Critic David Lehman has called the New York School of Poetry "the Last Avant Garde." Poet and critic Maggie Nelson suggests it might better be considered "one of the first gay avant gardes," since its original members included Frank O'Hara, John Ashbery and James Schuyler. We examine the role of women in the New York School: Barbara Guest, Alice Notley, Bernadette Mayer and Eileen Myles. How did these women pave the way for today's women poets, who, like Maggie Nelson, are conscious of gender and its effects on poetry?
2/28/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Hass
Time and Materials: Poems 1997–2005 (Ecco)
If it can still be said that a poet can have a humanizing influence on his culture, Robert Hass is such a poet. Here, as we discuss the poems in his National Book Award-winning collection, the beautiful, moving humanity of Hass' voice emerges, making us wish we were better people.
2/21/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Cees Nooteboom
Lost Paradise (Grove)
In this duel of interpretations, Dutch writer Nooteboom (who has been repeatedly shortlisted for the Nobel Prize) shows the whipper-snapper Michael Silverblatt that there are simpler, clearer, realer reasons for the angels in Lost Paradise than the over-interpreting Silverblatt wants to believe.
2/14/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Oliver Sacks: Musicophilia
Oliver Sacks explores the brain's affinity for music by examining the extraordinary ways our brains adapt in response to musical aberrations.
2/7/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Russell Banks
The Reserve (Harper)Russell Banks, one of the great living American novelists, uses the 1930's novel of passion and betrayal -- with its allied seductions, madness, and adultery -- to explore America's class system; the relationships between art, politics and wealth; and the despoiling of the American Landscape. (An abridged version of this interview will be heard live on KCRW due to our semi-annual subscription drive. It will be archived in its entirety online.)
1/31/2008 • 15 minutes, 59 seconds
Edmund White: Hotel de Dream
Did Stephen Crane attempt to write a gay companion piece to his Maggie: A Girl of the Streets? Literary rumor says he tried. At any rate, now Edmund White has written it for him.
1/24/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
James McCourt: Now Voyagers
This big, hilarious and joyful book has been twenty-five years in the making. Fran Lebowitz called it "The Decline and Fall of Western Civilization set to music."
1/17/2008 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
David Plante
ABC (Pantheon)
In this novel, a series of unlinked personal, familial and global catastrophes leads unrelated victims to search for order. Mysteriously, the "order" they discover is alphabetical order. So many cultures begin their alphabets with ABC. Why? What revelation is concealed in the alphabet's code?
1/10/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ann Patchett: Run
The family in Ann Patchett's Run unites rich with poor, black with white. The novel is a thriller—but the mystery at its heart is the mystery of spiritual grace...
1/3/2008 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
George Saunders: The Braindead Megaphone
This conversation provides a mini-course in short-story writing, George Saunders-style and explores the construction of short fiction from the ground up.
12/27/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Carol Muske-Dukes
Channeling Mark Twain (Random House)This novel revives the belief that poetry has a close connection to personal and political liberation.
12/20/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Steve Erickson: Zeroville
Steve Erickson's breakthrough novel Zeroville is about the The Movies — not the movie business, not the wheels and deals— but The Movies themselves.
12/13/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mario Vargas Llosa
The Bad Girl (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)We take the occasion of the publication of Mario Vargas Llosa's new novel, The Bad Girl, to air this previously unheard interview in which the great Peruvian novelist describes the effects of "El Boom" –- magic realism and its relatives -- on the literature of Latin America...
12/6/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Millard Kaufman
Bowl of Cherries (McSweeney's)
Millard Kaufman has written a classic comic novel that belongs in the tradition that runs from Charles Dickens to Evelyn Waugh.
11/29/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ron Padgett: Joe
Joe is Ron Padgett's intimate and affectionate biography-memoir of his friend of four decades, artist-poet Joe Brainard.
11/22/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Alter
The Book of Psalms: A Translation with Commentary (Norton)
Biblical scholar Robert Alter faces a barrage of questions: What are psalms? Who wrote them? If they are prayers, why does he consider them poems?
11/15/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Junot Diaz: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
This wide-ranging yet intimate conversation with Junot Díaz explores many difficult subjects...
11/8/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Veronica Gonzalez
twin time: or how death befell me (Semiotext(e))
The heroine of twin time is a woman whose life is surrounded by mystery. Who is her father? Where is her mother? Why did no one tell her she has a twin brother?
11/1/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Rupert Thomson
Death of a Murderer (Knopf)
A factual series of murders provides the background for this novel: the
Moor Murders that haunted the British imagination in the 1960's.
10/25/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Alice Sebold
The Almost Moon (Little, Brown)
Alice Sebold wrote The Lovely Bones, one of the most beloved and
lovable books in recent years. How did she prepare herself for the
onslaught she'll face with The Almost Moon, a book which, for all its
quality, is resolutely in the realm of unlovability.
10/18/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ana Castillo
The Guardians (Random House)
This is a novel about borders in which borders disappear: the border
between old and young, between secular and sacred, between states—but
not the border between the U.S. and Mexico.
10/11/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
William Gibson
Spook Country (Putnam)Along with the
most sophisticated future-predictions, speculations about the sociology
of cities, and adventures in virtual post-realities, William Gibson has finally
learned how to get his characters from one room to another.
10/4/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Viken Berberian
Das Kapital: A Novel of Love and Money Markets (Simon & Schuster)Viken Berberian writes in a post-modern apocalyptic vein about billionaire stock traders, terrorists and nationalists.
9/27/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Marianne Wiggins
The Shadow Catcher (Simon & Schuster)
With its fascinating combination of history, biography, memoir and essay, is The Shadow Catcher a novel?
9/20/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Miranda July
No one belongs here more than you and Learning to Love You More, co-author Harrell Fletcher (Prestel)
Miranda July's film Me and You and Everyone We Know
captured the mood of a generation –- and its attention. In this first
book of stories, we find the same fear of paralysis, the same
narcotized, sleepwalker affect. Why does Miranda July, a tireless
whirlwind, identify with these listless characters?
9/13/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Nathan Englander
The Ministry of Special Cases (Knopf)Nathan Englander uses desapareacidos
to stand for all kinds of disappearance. Here, we focus on yet another:
his own.
9/6/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Naeem Murr
The Perfect Man (Random House)Naeem Murr's work has been described as perverse—but he insists that
this perversity seems ordinary to him.
8/30/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: Divisadero
Michael Ondaatje's novels come together through obsession and intuition. He works in the dark, not knowing where he is
heading, juxtaposing disparate materials, noticing echoes and
recurrences.
8/23/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Helena Maria Viramontes
Their Dogs Came with Them (Atria)
Helena Maria Viramontes has written about L.A.-based Latino culture before -- but who could have expected this epic work about a neighborhood that is divided by a
freeway, cut off and lost in Los Angeles. Viramontes explores the explosive insights that gave her the ability to grow as a novelist.
8/16/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Alice Sebold
The Almost Moon (Little Brown)Alice Sebold (The Lovely Bones) gives a sneak preview of her new novel, coming out this fall...
8/9/2007 • 14 minutes, 38 seconds
Kurt Vonnegut
A Man without a Country (7 Stories)The late Kurt Vonnegut has
been astonishing us sincethe 1960's. Here, in the rebroadcast of a 2006 interview, he speaks as a socialist
disappointed by human behavior, our country and our times. He "wants to
go home. (This interview will be not be heard on KCRW as it will be pre-empted by our semi-annual subscription drive.)
8/9/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Richard Flanagan
The Unknown Terrorist (Grove)
Richard Flanagan felt that his last novel, Gould's Book of Fish,
widely acclaimed a masterpiece, had burnt him out. Here, he discusses
the things he did to reenergize.
8/2/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jim Crace
The Pesthouse (Doubleday)
Jim Crace
makes lies masquerade as truth in this post-apocalyptic tale of
toxified America.
7/26/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jonathan Lethem
You Don't Love Me Yet (Doubleday)
The pleasures of the lightweight and the free-spirited.
7/19/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Kiran Desai
The Inheritance of Loss (Grove)
Booker Prize-winner Kiran Desai says she prefers "messiness" to perfection--it's more human, and it fits her subject better.
7/12/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mark Slouka: The Visible World
Can a novelist uncover a secret?
7/5/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Ashbery and Ron Padgett on the works of Pierre Reverdy
Haunted House (Ashbery); Prose Poems
(Padgett) (both from Black Square Editions)
The haunted, lonely prose-poetry of Pierre Reverdy has attracted many translators. Two of America's most extraordinary poets read and discuss their translations...
6/28/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Lydia Davis
Varieties of Disturbance (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Lydia Davis writes elegant prose pieces in which
basic confusions are described with authority and clarity.
6/21/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Joanna Scott
Everybody Loves Somebody (Back Bay Books)Joanna Scott claims her collection of stories is a history of love, from World War I to the present.
6/14/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: The Gravedigger's Daughter
Oates's most autobiographical novel and the culmination of her career-long themes and obsessions.
6/7/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Christine Schutt
A Day, A Night, Another Day, Summer (Harcourt)
Prose impressionist Christine Schutt describes the painstaking intensity that allows her to perfect her cadences and the precision of her imagery. Her stories are built up draft upon draft, variation upon variation, until Schutt achieves a density that is both poetic and conclusive.
5/31/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Banville (as Benjamin Black): Christine Falls
Booker Prize-winning novelist John Banville has written the first in a series of thrillers, and he's even taken on an alias or, at least, a nom de plume.
5/24/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Ashbery
A Worldly Country (Ecco)
In this landmark conversation, John Ashbery talks about his fascination with nonsense and fantasy, beginning with Lewis Carroll's Alice books. Those books involve incomprehension, parody and an extreme use of non sequitur--qualities that for Ashbery define the way we live now.
5/17/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Brian Selznick
The Invention of Hugo Cabret (Scholastic Press)
The design and composition of this five hundred page picture book took Brian Selznick many years' work. Here, we talk about the influence of movies, especially French movies, especially the work of pioneer Georges Méliès. The talk about Méliès leads us to the spiritual mentors that haunt Selznick's vivid imagination.
5/10/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Howard Norman
Devotion (Houghton Mifflin)
Betrayal and forgiveness are subjects here. Howard Norman's signature melancholy pervades this exploration of romance, and he shows us how even people who are perfect for one another have a need to betray and forgive--but not forget, never forget.
5/3/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
C.K. Williams
Collected Poems (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)C.K. Williams' Collected Poems covers a lifetime's
concern with ethics and personal morality. As his work proceeds, he
develops a quality of consciousness and empathy that some would
describe as a soul. In this conversation, this accessible and
plainspoken poet plumbs the depths, as we trace his concerns from poem
to poem.
4/26/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Vikram Chandra
Sacred Games (Harper Collins)Gangsters, detectives, Bollywood movie stars--Chandra mobilizes the machinery of a thriller in order to reveal Bombay at its most various. Fascinating then, to hear him describe his novel as a mandala of perceptions in which characters reflect the worlds they move through, the plot enacting the clash between different beliefs about reality.
4/19/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Norman Mailer, Part II
The Castle in the Forest (Random House)
In the second of this two-part conversation about the bureaucratic, dim-witted culture that characterized the German provinces of Hitler's childhood, Mailer reveals that his narrator, an assistant to the devil, is himself a bureaucrat. Bureaucracy becomes the model for the world of this novel, down to the smallest detail—the beehives kept by Hitler's father. Mailer waxes hilarious about the sexual behavior of bees.
4/12/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Norman Mailer, Part I
The Castle in the Forest (Random House)
Now in his eighties, Norman Mailer has forsaken the violence and declarative sentences of his signature style for the gradual somber analytics of a style like that of Thomas Mann. In this first of a two-part interview, we discuss this unexpected change and his new novel's subject: the childhood of Adolf Hitler.
4/5/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Stone
Prime Green: Remembering the Sixties (Ecco)
Robert Stone has written novels that are said to be the best descriptions of the American 1960's. In this memoir, he travels back to revisit those troubled times...
3/29/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Colum McCann
Zoli (Random House)The Romani poet, Zoli, is the latest heroine in Colum McCann's ongoing quest to understand the function of art.
3/22/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Martin Amis: House of Meetings
House of Meetings (Knopf)
Martin Amis has written a Russian novel--not just a Russian novel but a novel about the Gulags.
3/15/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Vendela Vida
Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name (Ecco)
The possibility that there are those who choose to escape or evade their identities enters our exploration of Vendela Vida's quest-for-identity novel.
3/8/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Gore Vidal
Point to Point Navigation (Doubleday)
Using his recent memoir as springboard, Gore Vidal nimbly leaps from the history of prose narrative to the contemporary decline of culture in America.
3/1/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Isabel Allende: Ines of My Soul
Isabel Allende uncloaks Inés, a shrouded figure from the chronicles of Chilean history. She was a conquistadora, a conspirator--but also a healer.
2/22/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Alice McDermott: After This
Alice McDermott is a writer who believes in loading each facet of her work with resonance and significance, while composing an accessible, highly readable narrative.
2/15/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Brian Evenson
The Open Curtain (Coffee House)
The mystery at the heart of The Open Curtain derives from a violent, concealed episode in Morman history.
2/8/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Dave Eggers
What is the What: The Autobiography of Valentino Achak Deng (McSweeney's)
Autobiography, epic, documentary, novel--Dave Eggers explores the many facets of his
protean new work.
2/1/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mary Gordon
The Stories of Mary Gordon (Pantheon)
Mary Gordon
makes distinctions. She writes only about characters who interest her,
people she would be willing to meet and spend time with.
1/25/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Richard Ford
The Lay of the Land (Knopf) is Richard Ford's third novel about Frank Bascomb, his sportswriter-turned-realtor.
1/18/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Anne Carson
Grief Lessons: Four Plays by Euripides (New York Review Books)
Anne Carson's translations of four plays by Euripides are dynamic, intense and were written to be performed.
1/11/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Philip Levine
Breath (Knopf)
Philip Levine reminisces about his childhood--about how a working class boy came to poetry.
1/4/2007 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Greil Marcus
The Shape of Things to Come: Prophecy and the American Voice (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
In this conversation about how America disappoints its prophets and betrays its promises, it's surprising to hear that Greil Marcus continues to maintain faith in the American dream and America's future. Whether the subject is "Twin Peak's" reflection of the Salem witch trials or the band Pere Ubu's rattle-trap prophecies, Marcus' vision is idealistic, even optimistic.
12/28/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jennifer Egan: The Keep
Jennifer Egan researched classic Gothic fiction to develop a style that would deepen the terrors at the core of her new novel...
12/21/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Chris Adrian: The Children's Hospital
Author Chris Adrian, a pediatrician and theologian, imagines a future in which a
children's hospital becomes an ark that survives the flood at the end
of the world...
12/7/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Edward P. Jones
All Aunt Hagar's Children (Amistad)
Edward P. Jones' magnificent new book of stories takes up characters from his earlier collection, Lost in the City. Minor, background characters become central; children unlearn the lessons of their parents; time somersaults; and legends become truth...
11/30/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Geoff Dyer: The Ongoing Moment
Geoff Dyer's The Ongoing Moment presents a series of improvisations and responses to photography, particular photographs and ideas about photography...
11/23/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Clifford Chase
Winkie (Grove)
After all this fiddle about souls and truth, finally a nice straightforward novel about a teddy bear who comes to life and is accused of terrorism. Chase talks about memory and childhood, as we explore the role toys play as they pass from generation to generation, and the way America was transformed as it moved from the racism of the fifties to the terrorism of today.
11/16/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Zadie Smith
On Beauty (Penguin)
Obliquely about On Beauty, this intense, abstract conversation is about what a novel is and how it represents a particular culture, and about what a culture is and how it can create the illusion of identity. The search for identity, Smith maintains, is a delusion. The search for beauty and truth depends upon destroying the lie of identity
11/9/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Michael Tolkin
The Return of the Player (Grove)
In this conversation, the subject of the immorality of Hollywood gives way to the subject of the immorality of wealth, which in turn, surprisingly, gives way to the question of whether the soul exists. If the soul does not exist, is there any immorality? Do fictional characters have souls? Gradually we uncover the moral equations underlying Tolkin's universe.
11/2/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Marisha Pessl
Special Topics in Calamity Physics: A Novel (Viking)
While Marisha Pessl's first novel has a bright and witty narrative voice, it has mysterious depths and a hidden Nabokovian counterstructure. We explore the author's ambitions and her decision to keep the book's secrets well-hidden.
10/26/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Andrew Holleran
Grief (Hyperion)
Andrew Holleran has written a beautiful, somber novella about loss. His narrator has come to Washington, D.C. to teach a course about AIDS literature. He is grieving the death of his mother and finds solace in the letters of Mary Todd Lincoln....
10/19/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Chris Kraus: Torpor
Chris Kraus takes her aim at the traditional bourgeois novel about marriage and family and delivers a book full of bullet-holes... What is left standing?
10/12/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mark Z. Danielewski
Only Revolutions (Pantheon)
There’s no mistaking a novel by Mark Danielewski for any other. This new one can be read forward, backward and upside down. It has multi-colored inks; two sewn-in bookmarks (green and gold); and a circular structure. Here, we explore how the book’s design reflects the joy-ride/killing spree of its two perpetual teenagers as they careen through time and space.
10/5/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Wole Soyinka
You Must Set Forth at Dawn (Random House) Nobel Prize-winning African playwright Wole Soyinka explores the myths of exile and return that underlie his most recent memoir. He contrasts European and African cosmologies, and describes his passionate activism as a quest influence by the gods.
9/28/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Updike, Part 2
Rabbit Angstrom: The Four Novels (Everyman's Library) A New York Times poll indicated that John Updike's quartet of Rabbit novels is one of the five most important achievements in fiction in the past quarter century.
9/21/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Updike, Part 1
Terrorist (Knopf) The subject of John Updike's recent bestseller required that he contrast his own reliance on faith with the more violent faith of a young Islamic terrorist. This first of a two-part conversation explores the dark side of empathy and identification.
9/14/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Stacey Levine
Frances Johnson (Clear Cut Press)
Using the model of the "nurse romances" of the 1950's, Stacey Levine has concocted a small-town romance--with a difference. The undercurrents of sexuality, repression and gender uncertainty rise to create flood tides. We discuss the nightmarish emissions from the unconscious that rock this seemingly placid novel.
9/7/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
W. S. Merwin
Present Company (Copper Canyon); Summer Doorways (Shoemaker and Hoard)
For his first visit to Bookworm, the eminent American poet, W. S. Merwin, explores the sequence of odes in which he addresses everything from inanimate objects to his own soul...
8/31/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Uzodinma Iweala
Beasts of No Nation (Harper Collins)
Forcing himself to inhabit the terrifying heart of amorality and violence, Uzodinma Iweala has created the first-person voice of a child-soldier.
8/24/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
Big Fat Little Lit (Puffin)Back by popular demand! Editors Spiegelman and Mouly talk about how they recruited and supervised the many artists and writers who created these "comics for kids..."
8/17/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Carlos Fuentes
The Eagle's Throne
Carlos Fuentes casts a satiric eye on Mexican politics and, by extension, on global politics, skewering the art of politics in its entirety...
8/10/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: High Lonesome
When you've written as many stories as Joyce Carol Oates, the process of choosing just sixty of them for an omnibus is daunting. Here, Oates explores those choices...
8/3/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
T.C. Boyle
Talk Talk (Viking)When T. C. Boyle sits down to write a thriller, none of the usual rules apply. He starts with a young deaf woman, a computer animator and an identity thief and creates a novel about communication. We explore some of the buried connections that take him beyond the thriller form into an exploration of the things that keep human identity intact.
7/27/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
David Mitchell
Black Swan Green
(Random House)
David Mitchell, one of the younger generation of British writers, provides a jolt of energy to the coming-of-age novel. First off, this novel ends just when the rite-of-passage traditionally begins...
7/20/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Irving Feldman
Collected Poems: 1954-2004 (Schocken) During our conversation, Irving Feldman talks about everything from religion to cannibalism, from poetic diction to the structure of families. This intense discussion explores the poet's imagination and convictions, while revealing his passionate intellect.
7/13/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Alice Quinn
Edgar Allan Poe and the Juke-Box: uncollected poems, drafts, and fragments by Elizabeth Bishop, edited and annotated by Alice Quinn (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Alice Quinn, the poetry editor of the New Yorker, assembled this volume of drafts and fragments from Elizabeth Bishop's notebooks and archives. The result is an extraordinary free association about Bishop: her childhood, her sexuality, her influences...
7/6/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
John Yau
Paradiso Diaspora (Penguin)In a searching inquiry into the language of poetry, John Yau talks about avoiding autobiography while creating poetry that reflects his Chinese-American background--the influence of what he calls "Ing Grish." We explore the evolution of a dream language that is, in itself, an aesthetic of diaspora.
6/29/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Leonard Cohen
Book of Longing (Ecco)
Leonard Cohen talks about his early years as a poet in Montreal; his novel, Beautiful Losers; his songs; and now, ten years since his last book and fifty years since his first, the vicissitudes and recoveries that led to the art, lyrics and poems in his new Book of Longing.
6/22/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Yannick Murphy
Here They Come
(McSweeney's)
Memory, instinct and aesthetics combine to recreate childhood in Yannick Murphy's new novel...
6/15/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
David Foster Wallace: Consider the Lobster and Other Essays
David Foster Wallace insists on a conversation where what can be said must be said honestly (along with a sidebar defining honesty), sincerely (ditto defining sincerity), and with full consideration of how media affect honesty and sincerity (ditto media). Given these requirements, we discuss Wallace's new collection of essays with an eye to how he attempts the nearly impossible task of telling the truth.
3/2/2006 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Pinsky
The Life of David (Schocken)Robert Pinsky, a former poet-laureate, writes a biography-tribute to the Biblical King David, the poet warrior. Our conversation circles the subject of heroism as it is manifested in the contradictory character of King David--the most paradoxical figure in the Old Testament.
12/29/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Stanley Crawford
Petroleum Man (Overlook)
In Stanley Crawford's satire of corporate greed, a "gas-guzzling" super-magnate writes a loving description of every car he has ever owned. What is more, he intends to leave this chronicle of automotive ownership to his (largely indifferent) grandchildren...
12/22/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Coover, Part 2 of 2
A Child Again (McSweeney's) In part two of the interview, Coover lays bare the illusions and delusions that his stories about childhood and growth are meant to dispel. He reads from a story about Puff, the dragon, and speculates about how older knights slay the dragons of their later years.
12/15/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Coover, Part 1 of 2
A Child Again (McSweeney's) Robert Coover, a reigning master of experimental narrative, gives a two-part interview for this, his long-anticipated first visit to Bookworm. In part one, Coover offers an overview of his career, revealing that even from the first his themes, intentions and methods were fully imagined. He then worked on these retold fairy tales and comic political allegories sometimes for a decade or more before completion and publication.
12/8/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Peter Maresca and Art Spiegelman
Little Nemo in Slumberland: Splendid Sundays 1905-1910 (Sunday Press)A celebration of the great Winsor McCay's Sunday funnies! Why? Because Nemo in Slumberland has been printed in its original full-color and actual size for the very first time!
12/1/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Mary Caponegro
The Complexities of Intimacy (Coffee House) The very contrary Mary Caponegro doesn't write or think like anyone else. She is a complete original. In the course of this interview, the snowballing perplexities of fusing logic and madness emerge with great force. Each of her stories is a triumph against nearly insuperable odds--but what a triumph! This interview will not air on KCRW (as it will be pre-empted by special Thanksgiving programming.)
11/24/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Richard Howard
Inner Voices: selected poems 1963-2003; Paper Trail: selected prose 1965-2003 (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Richard Howard's extraordinary urbanity and sophistication are evident as he explores his influences: Henry James' winding syntax, Proust's evocation of a lost past, Whitman's teeming democracies....
11/17/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Salman Rushdie: Shalimar the Clown
Shalimar the Clown (Random House)Although the history of Kashmir provides the backdrop of Salman Rushdie's new novel, it is a larger-than-life romance with larger-than-life characters--a version of Romeo and Juliet and the Ramayana. In this conversation, he describes the ways in which an historical conflict can determine the course of love.
11/10/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jane Smiley
Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Novel (Knopf)
Two novel-lovers share their deep passions for reading. Jane loves the realists; Michael the Bookworm loves the inventors. But more than anything, they love "a lengthy written narrative with a protagonist" the novel.
11/3/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Campbell McGrath
Pax Atomica: poems (Ecco)
Campbell McGrath has figured out how to perform a wonderful trick: he writes ecstatic comic poetry about the decline of America...
10/27/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Christopher Sorrentino
Trance (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Christopher Sorrentino takes the Patty Hearst saga as the springboard for an exploration of the mass hypnosis of American culture. This novel about inter-generational warfare is written by the son of formidable avante-gardiste Gilbert Sorrentino.
10/20/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Missing Mom
Joyce Carol Oates says this novel was written as a tribute to her mother, who died last year. Clearer, simpler, less literary than Oates' other books, it was meant to be a novel her mother would have enjoyed....
10/13/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
George Saunders: The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil
The author of The Very Persistent Gappers of Fripp decided he'd try to write another satire-fantasy.
10/6/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Colm Tóibín: The Master
The Master
(Scribner)
The winner of this year's Los Angeles Times award for fiction reveals the difficulties of writing about the life of Henry James...
9/29/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Francine du Plessix Gray
Them: A Memoir of Parents (The Penguin Press) After an affair with the great Russian poet Mayakovsky, Francine du Plessix Gray's mother married a man who became a kingpin in the Cond- Nast fashion magazine empire. All the high fashion and social elite of New York are discussed, but they pale beside the evocation of true genius. Mayakovsky and poetry triumph over commerce.
9/22/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Louise Erdrich: The Painted Drum
Louise Erdrich's beautiful short novel emerged over a period of ten years, after an older story suddenly suggested deeper meanings...
9/15/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Kazuo Ishiguro: Never Let Me Go
Kazuo Ishiguro never tells more than he has to -- his stripped-down narratives are filled with absence and mystery.
9/8/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Michel Houellebecq
H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life (Believer Books) The controversial French writer on his early influence, H. P. Lovecraft, the American writer of classic horror fantasies. Houellebecq discusses their shared, essentially anti-human stance and then quietly, poignantly reveals his own pessimistic philosophy.
9/1/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Umberto Eco
The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana
(Harcourt)
The loss of memory is Umberto Eco's subject here. After a stroke, an antiquarian bookseller remembers every book he's read--but he remembers nothing about himself....
8/25/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Nicole Krauss: The History of Love
The History of Love: A Novel (Norton)
Memory is the subject of many novels, but Nicole Krauss' subject is the transmission of memory: how do you tell another person about the things that are no longer there?
8/18/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Bret Easton Ellis
Lunar Park (Knopf) Beginning as an autobiography, Lunar Park turns into a classic horror novel. The haunted house, however, is spooked by Bret Ellis- personal demons, and the past comes alive in creepy ways that go way beyond autobiography.
8/11/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Bookworm Series Finale (Part 10 of 10)
Maya Angelou believes that a writer who tells the truth can be read by anyone. James Baldwin, for example, can be enjoyed by black, white, Muslim or Jewish readers -- indeed by anyone who values reading the truth...
8/4/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Beyond Identity--A Dark Vision (Part 9 of 10)
Tom Wolfe discusses neuroscience and its view that there is no such thing as identity. Margaret Atwood talks about the coming threat to identity by cloning and genetic experimentation. Irish writer John Banville rails that identity does not exist.
7/28/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Hispanic Identity in Writing (Part 8 of 10)
Sandra Cisneros and Nina Marie Martínez
The two Hispanic women explain how they've been put into the cage of multiculturalism, sometimes by the way they view themselves, but primarily by publishers and readers, to the extent of being expected to read only certain kinds of literature. When the names Thomas Pynchon and Marguerite Duras come up, the conversation takes a turn, and the satisfactions of broad, deep reading are embraced...
7/21/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Asian Identity in Writing (Part 7 of 10)
Susan Choi, Maxine Hong Kingston and Don Lee
American-born writers of Asian descent explore the challenge of forging identity, while living "between cultures."
7/14/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Sexuality and Literary Theory (Part 6 of 10)
James McCourt, Camille Paglia, Alan Hollinghurst and Edmund White
James McCourt discusses the emergence of "queer identity" and gives an overview of French literary theories and their influence on multiculturalism, while Camille Paglia explains the destructive nature of such theories. Booker Prize winner Alan Hollinghurst, who writes about the gay experience, reveals that he reads very little popular gay literature. Edmund White explains how he has turned away from the aesthetic and has embraced social realism in his desire to document the AIDS crisis.
7/7/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jewish Identity in Writing (Part 5 of 10)
Cartoonist and graphic novelist Art Spiegelman explains how writers' identities are revealed in their work, that reading a book is like crawling into the writer's head. Cynthia Ozick and Jonathan Rosen talk about the immigrant experience and the Jewish American novel...
6/30/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
African Americans and Identity in Writing (Part 4 of 10)
Rita Dove, Edward P. Jones, Alice Walker and Jayne Cortez
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Rita Dove reads her thrilling poem "Hattie McDaniel Arrives at the Coconut Grove" and discusses black identity and American culture. Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Edward P. Jones talks about the history of slavery; Pulitzer Prize and American Book Award-winner Alice Walker explains that writing must address a worldwide crisis; and poet, spoken-word artist and activist Jayne Cortez talks about the Watts Writers' Workshop of the 1960's.
6/23/2005 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Place and Identity (Part 3 of 10)
J. D. McClatchy has traveled the US visiting the homes of classic American writers. Joan Didion talks about her native California; Jonathan Lethem describes growing up in Brooklyn; and Toni Morrison describes the creation of an imaginary home, a hotel, in her most-recent novel.
6/16/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
The Creation of Identity (Part 2 of 10)
We hear from E. L. Doctorow and Norman Mailer, but the focus is on Russell Banks, a white, male, American writer, who started his career in a specific part of the world, the American Northeast. He has explored identity throughout his career, using it as a narrative tool. He believes that good writing transcends the mythology of identity....
6/9/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Escaping the Cage: Identity, Multiculturalism and Writing
Russell Banks, Susan Sontag, Maya Angelou, Camille Paglia, Stephen Greenblatt, Tom Wolfe and David Mitchell
In the first of this 10-part series, Escaping the Cage: Identity, Multiculturalism and Writing, we sample the range of attitudes toward identity, identity politics and multiculturalism. Among the highlights: Angelou describes an emotional encounter with Tupac Shakur, Sontag rejects self-expression as a writing goal, and Paglia embraces multiculturalism while scolding academics for losing literature in a welter of special interests...
6/2/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Matthew Zapruder and Joshua Beckman
American Linden (Tupelo)
Your Time Has Come (Verse)
Poets Matthew Zapruder and Joshua Beckman discuss the formation of a new literary press, Wave, and then branch out into an exploration of the improbable economics of life as a poet....
5/26/2005 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Jonathan Safran Foer: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
The young Jonathan Safran Foer (28) offers an even younger narrator (9) whose father died in the bombing of the World Trade Center.
5/19/2005 • 29 minutes, 8 seconds
Jonathan Williams
Jubilant Thicket: new and selected poems (Copper Canyon)
Jonathan Williams alternates between playing the role of elder statesman and that of rambunctious old cuss. You can hear it in his poetry...
5/12/2005 • 29 minutes, 15 seconds
Ian McEwan
Saturday (Doubleday)
Ian McEwan's first book since his stunning Atonement, is one of the first novels written in response to 9/11 and worldwide threats of terrorism. It explores of the forces of order and chaos that shape contemporary society....
5/5/2005 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Roberto Calasso
K. (Knopf) Roberto Calasso--scholar, publisher, polymath--delves into the works of Franz Kafka more deeply than anyone ever has. In this conversation, we explore the demonic and metaphysical elements of Kafka's world. Calasso describes one of the happier interludes in Kafka's life, in the process adding new dimensions to the word -Kafka-esque.-
4/28/2005 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Gilbert Sorrentino
In Lunar Follies (Coffee House), one of his genre-defying extravaganzas, Gilbert Sorrentino describes outlandish art shows, all of them taking place in galleries named for mountain ranges and craters of the moon...
4/21/2005 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Steve Erickson: Our Ecstatic Days
We explore the hallucinatory intensity of Steve Erickson's visionary novel born out of the anxiety provoked by the imagined loss of a child....
4/14/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Martha Kinney, Derek McCormack and Dennis Cooper
The Fall of Heartless Horse by Martha Kinney (Akashic); Grab Bag by Derek McCormack (Akashic)
Two young writers and their editor tell about their new books for a new publishing house: McKinney, in the style of a Scottish border ballad, chronicles the fall of a suburban family, while McCormack employs wicked understatement to celebrate a depraved childhood...
4/7/2005 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Camille Paglia
Break, Blow, Burn: Camille Paglia Reads Forty-three of the World's Best Poems (Pantheon)
Firebrand Paglia devotes her energies to a vibrant demonstration of how to read poetry, attacking the theorists who've made understanding a poem preposterously complex, and passionately defending the poems she's chosen that represent poetry at its greatest....
3/31/2005 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Marilynne Robinson, Part II
Gilead (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)In the second part of our conversation, we explore the historical and social forces that shape Marilynne Robinson's narrator, John Ames, and, by extension, the Protestant Church...
3/24/2005 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Marilynne Robinson, Part I
Gilead (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)The loveliness of life, life itself as a blessing, is the subject of Marilynne Robinson's beautiful book. In this first of a two-part conversation, we discuss her narrator, a preacher, and his troubled relations with the world and the people around him.
3/17/2005 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Stephen Greenblatt: Will in the World
A wizard of a storyteller, Greenblatt combines prodigious historical research and encyclopedic knowledge to conjure a vision of life and love in Elizabethan England.
3/10/2005 • 29 minutes, 12 seconds
Cynthia Ozick
Heir to the Glimmering World (Houghton Mifflin)Eccentric and beautiful, Cynthia Ozick's novel is about an immigrant family's attempts to preserve a dying esoteric tradition....
3/3/2005 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Mark Helprin
The Pacific and Other Stories (Penguin)
Mark Helprin's critics--who mainly regard him as a political conservative and, therefore, a traitor to imaginative literature--have made him into a martyr. Here, he fends off the slings and arrows to say what he believes a writer to be, and describes the values he wants his work to embrace.
2/24/2005 • 29 minutes, 14 seconds
Joy Williams: Honored Guest
Joy Williams, specialist in what should be called sorrowful hilarity, reads from her work Honored Guest. Pretty soon we discover that what we would call a sacrificial victim, she calls an honored guest...
2/17/2005 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Dave Eggers
How We Are Hungry: Stories (McSweeney-s) Dave Eggers begins by describing his book as an object (it-s designed to look like a Moleskine Journal). From there, we jump to the idea of stories as entries, improvs, breaking the rules as they go. Then, of course, we go on to influences Monty Python, Donald Barthelme, and, and, and...
2/10/2005 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Susan Sontag
The Volcano LoverNovelist, essayist and driving intellectual force, Susan Sontag, died late last year. In her memory, we offer this conversation, first broadcast in October 1992. On this first visit to Bookworm, she spoke with great enthusiasm about her novel, The Volcano Lover and how she came to write -- of all things -- a romance.
2/3/2005 • 30 minutes
August Kleinzahler
Cutty, One Rock: Low Characters and Strange Places, Gently Explained (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
A a single, perfectly placed phrase brings an essay about the death of August Kleinzahler's brother to a heart-breaking, unforgettable conclusion...
1/27/2005 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Alan Hollinghurst
The Line of Beauty (Bloomsbury) Allan Hollinghurst-s Booker Prize-winning novel pits the aesthetic sensibility against the deprivations of Margaret Thatcher-s London-here seen as the protagonist-s largely frustrated war against ingrained social gay-bashing.
1/13/2005 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Russell Banks
The more closely you investigate Russell Banks' powerful new novel, The Darling, the stranger it becomes. Set in Liberia, it explores its heroine's narcissistic wound....
1/6/2005 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Orhan Pamuk
Snow (Knopf)
Turkey's preeminent novelist, Orhan Pamuk, has decided to write a political novel-without a political agenda. The result resembles -- but not quite -- the great metaphysical novels he's written previously...
12/23/2004 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Courtney Angela Brkic
The Stone Fields
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Courtney Angela Brkic recruited her forensic skills to help exhume and identity bodies from besieged villages in Bosnia. She is American born, of Serbo-Croatian lineage. This conversation, then, is about the pain of ancestral memory and the consequences of direct contact with the dead.
12/16/2004 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Louis de Bernières
Birds without Wings (Knopf)
In a conversation about the birth of the conflicts that beset us, Louis de Bernières (Corelli's Mandolin) talks about a Turkish village where difference is so ordinary that a Muslim religious leader can ask a Catholic priest for advice...
12/9/2004 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Kem Nunn
Tijuana Straits (Scribner)
The inventor of "surf-noir," Kem Nunn, describes how the evil of the world offers an opportunity for a writer of thrillers to structure a tale of redemption.
12/2/2004 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Don Lee: Country of Origin
Country of Origin (Norton)
Multi-racial ethnicity underlies the mystery in this literary thriller by Korean-American writer Don Lee, who spent much of his childhood first in Japan and then in Korea....
11/25/2004 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Carlos Ruiz Zafon
The Shadow of the Wind (Penguin)Spaniard Carlos Ruiz Zafón discusses the way he utilizes "modern narrative technologies" to re-tool the traditional novel and create a work filled with history, terror and love--but also with uncertainty, deconstruction and despair.
11/18/2004 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
William H. Gass: Reading Rilke
The greatest living writer of prose in English explores his deepest influence: Rainer Maria Rilke. In this conversation, we witness the interpretation of two modern masters.
11/11/2004 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
William T. Vollmann
Rising Up and Rising Down (McSweeney's; abridged, Harper Collins)
William Vollmann's mammoth inquiry is a study of the history of violence, which fills seven large volumes...
11/4/2004 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Dan Chaon
You Remind Me of Me (Ballantine)
However close Dan Chaon's characters come, they can't quite connect. Disconnection rules: in families, in dreams. Even fortunate coincidences subside into spiritless accidents...
10/28/2004 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Steve Almond
Candyfreak: A Journey through the Chocolate Underbelly of America (Algonquin) The author traveled our country visiting the stalwart independent manufacturers of classic candies. His beautifully written, wacky essay provokes this melancholy conversation about America's sweet tooth.
10/21/2004 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Marianne Wiggins
Evidence of Things Unseen (Simon & Schuster)
Marianne Wiggins returned to live in America after many years in England. Having written two turbulent, disturbing books, her new one, set in American between the world wars, is a surprise...
10/14/2004 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
A Tribute to Czeslaw Milosz
Czeslaw Milosz, the great Polish Nobel Prize-winning poet, died in August. He was a great humanist who believed in the power of poetry to affect the world and whose own work left an imprint on his century.
10/7/2004 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Angus Fletcher
A New Theory of American Poetry: Democracy, the Environment, and the Future of Imagination (Harvard University Press) Angus Fletcher, the literary critic as seer, carefully discerns the difference between American poetry and its more bombastic British forbears. Fletcher demonstrates how, true to the spirit of democracy, Whitman devised an anti-hierarchical style, altering poetry forever.
9/30/2004 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Alex Garland
The Coma (Riverhead) Alex Garland explores the metaphysical underpinning of his pared-down skeletal novel. He feels he took a big risk and expects to be attacked. We offer him, instead, the possibility of being understood.
9/23/2004 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Craig Nova
Cruisers
(Shaye Areheart Books)
The dark precisions of Craig Nova's Cruisers provoke anxiety. Tension mounts; the book feels like a thriller, but one of a very high order...
9/16/2004 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Karen Joy Fowler
The Jane Austen Book Club (Putnam) Karen Joy Fowler's comic romance is filled with sly references to Jane Austen's novels. Is Fowler paying homage or challenging Jane with this look at contemporary attitudes toward love and sex among a group of Janeites?
9/9/2004 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
David Bezmozgis
Natasha and Other Stories (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
David Bezmozgis captures the lives of Jewish immigrants in Canada. The difficulty of starting a new life in a new place is reflected by the prose style, which is tough, spiky and even belligerent...
9/2/2004 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
John Banville: Shroud
Michael Silverblatt flew to Dublin for the one hundredth anniversary of Bloomsday, June 16, 1904, the day and night immortalized in James Joyce's Ulysses. He took the opportunity to talk with John Banville and poet Seamus Heaney...
8/26/2004 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Seamus Heaney
Electric Light (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Nobel prize-winning poet Seamus Heaney celebrates the humanity of Joyce's vision...
8/19/2004 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Art Spiegelman
In the Shadow of No Towers (Pantheon)Because Art Spiegelman lives within walking distance of the site
of the Twin Towers, his graphic novel about 9/11 captures the panicky
race to make sure his children are safe, that the world hasn't ended,
and, most of all, to ensure that his dread and paranoia don't dissipate
in easy ideas about "healing."
8/12/2004 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
Walter Abish
Double Vision: A Self Portrait (Knopf)
Walter Abish's most-admired novel, How German Is It, was written before the writer had ever set foot in Germany. This new book, non-fiction, finds Abish on German soil, defending his imaginary Germany...
8/5/2004 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Micheline Aharonian Marcom
The Daydreaming Boy (Riverhead)Micheline Aharonian Marcom explores the moral, cultural and sexual consequences of genocide...
7/29/2004 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Jim Shepard
Project X (Knopf); Love and Hydrogen
(Vintage)
Jim Shepard's fondness for the little guy, the day-dreaming Walter Mitty type is the focus of this conversation, leading to the big question...
7/22/2004 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
E. L. Doctorow: Sweet Land Stories
This lovely new collection features con men, killers, cult leaders, baby stealers and the occasional prophet. E.L. Doctorow reveals his affection for these disparate, desperate Americans and offers a reason for the centrality of women in these stories.
7/15/2004 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Rebecca Solnit
River of Shadows (Penguin); Hope in the Dark (Nation)
In her poetic biography, Rebecca Solnit uses the figure of photographer Edward Muybridge to discuss a whole range of metaphysical issues...
7/8/2004 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Martin Amis: Yellow Dog
Yellow Dog (Miramax)
While examining the mysteries of Martin Amis' enigma-turned-thriller, we speculate about the future of the literary novel...
7/1/2004 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Suzan-Lori Parks
Getting Mother's Body (Random House)
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks talks about her first novel, rejecting an art of concealment for one that celebrates rollicking immediacy and oddball truth...
6/24/2004 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Guy Maddin
From the Atelier Tovar: Selected Writings
(Coach House)
When the emerging avant-garde filmmaker Guy Maddin published his journals, the connection between his life and his wacky operatic visionary movies was bound to come out....
6/17/2004 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Harold Bloom: The Best Poems of the English Language
With solemnity, grace and a little defensiveness, this Grand Old Man of Letters reads, discusses and defends his choices...
6/10/2004 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Alice Walker
Now Is the Time to Open Your Heart (Random House)
She's at it again! This time, Alice Walker takes to the rain forest for the most-recent leg of her spiritual journey. We meet shamans, visit Hawaiian grief circles, and learn the secrets of ethno-botany...
6/3/2004 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Lucie Brock-Broido
Trouble in Mind: Poems (Knopf) The ecstatic and ghoulish poetry of Lucie Brock-Broido is stitched together from fragments of poetic history. In this case, she writes a whole suite of poems from titles that Wallace Stevens listed in a notebook but never used. How does she arrive at her very original voice when quotation and appropriation are her constant strategies?
5/27/2004 • 29 minutes, 15 seconds
Andrew Sean Greer: The Confessions of Max Tivoli
The hero of The Confessions of Max Tivoli is born an old man who ages backwards -- not an unusual fantasy premise.
5/20/2004 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
Melissa Pritchard
Melissa Pritchard's Late Bloomer is funny. She's taken her ongoing interest in creativity and transformation, and placed it in counterpoint to a lively parody of New Age spirituality. New questions arise...
5/13/2004 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Edwidge Danticat
The Dew Breaker (Knopf)
What happens when a Haitian "dew breaker" (torturer) moves to America and conceals his identity? In this collection of interrelated stories, Edwidge Danticat explores the twin legacies of torture and secrecy...
5/6/2004 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Chris Abani
GraceLand
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
In Chris Abani's GraceLand, a teenage Elvis-impersonator in Lagos, Nigeria lives in poverty as he pursues an American pop-culture dream of success....
4/29/2004 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
David St. John
The Face (Harper Collins)
Rapid tonal shifts, teetering rhetorical mixtures of irony and self-pity, and overwhelming instability characterize David St. John's The Face, a novella in verse...
4/22/2004 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Octavia Butler
Kindred (Beacon) Although Octavia Butler was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship (-genius- grant-) in 1995 because of her science fiction, she does not consider her breakthrough novel, Kindred, to be sci-fi. Indeed, Butler celebrates the 25th anniversary of that book with a review of the many paradoxes that surround her work: contradictions and reversals that have placed her among the distinguished literary novelists of our time.
4/15/2004 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Benjamin Weissman, with editor Dennis Cooper
Headless (Little House on the Bowery/Akashic Books)
Dennis Cooper is editing a new-fiction series for Akashic Books. Benjamin Weissman's Headless is one of the first of the new releases. Together, writer and editor discuss the poles of Weissman's work...
4/8/2004 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Doris Lessing: The Grandmothers
Doris Lessing, one of our most sage and canny living writers discusses the real stories behind her fiction....
4/1/2004 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Rita Dove
American Smooth (Norton)
When her house burned down, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Rita Dove decided to learn formal ballroom dancing...
3/25/2004 • 28 minutes, 42 seconds
Clayton Eshleman
Juniper Fuse: Upper Paleolithic Imagination and the Construction of the Underworld (Wesleyan) An exploration of Upper Paleolithic cave painting leads poet Clayton Eshleman to this meditation about hell and rebirth. This book, in poetry, prose and picture, marks the culmination of a thirty-year investigation of Pre-history.
3/18/2004 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
James McCourt: Queer Street
Although camouflaged as a social history, James McCourt's "Queer Street" is a memoir of sexual initiation and awareness...
3/11/2004 • 29 minutes, 17 seconds
Maxine Hong Kingston
The Fifth Book of Peace (Knopf) A fire at home destroys her manuscript and reminds Maxine Hong Kingston of the firebombing of Vietnam. She extends the analogy of private loss and public tragedy to arrive at a novel whose purpose is to promote personal serenity and global peace.
3/4/2004 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Stuart Dybek
I Sailed with Magellan (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Dream and reality are side by side in Stuart Dybek's short stories--but with a twist. As the sexual dreams of his adolescent characters are shaped by reality, those characters are transformed...
2/26/2004 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Tobias Wolff
Old School (Knopf)This conversation illustrates the care Tobias Wolff takes with narrative revelation: every step reveals character, each twist and turn provides a clue to the nature of the mysteriously disagreeable man who narrates this first novel by master storyteller Wolff.
2/19/2004 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Toni Morrison
Love (Knopf)Nobel laureate Toni Morrison shows how the careful arrangement of specific detail in her newest fiction, Love, forces the reader to participate in its structure.
2/12/2004 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Elmore Leonard: Mr. Paradise
Mr. Paradise (Morrow)
Raffish characters, extreme events and lewd jokes are signatures of the widely praised Elmore Leonard style....
2/5/2004 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Susan Choi
American Woman
(Harper Collins)
The critics loved Susan Choi's novelization of the Patty Hearst saga, but they barely mention the book's center, told from the point of view of the Asian-American woman who helped hide Hearst and her kidnapper comrades...
1/29/2004 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Jhumpa Lahiri
The Namesake (Houghton Mifflin)
Pulitzer Prize-winning short-story writer Jhumpa Lahiri defines her beliefs about writing: directness, simplicity, reality and emotional truth are her guideposts. How appropriate then that India-born Gogol, the hero of this new novel, should want to change his name....
1/22/2004 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Edmund White: Fanny
Edmund White turns himself into Mrs. Trollope, the Victorian traveler who, in her last year, narrates a biography of her scandalous friend, the feminist Fanny Wright....
1/15/2004 • 29 minutes, 58 seconds
DBC Pierre
Vernon God Little (Canongate) DBC Pierre (the dark horse underdog who surprised the literary world by winning the 2003 Booker Prize) divulges the hidden workings of his rebellious Columbine-inspired novel: His narrator, a disguised St. Peter, retells Christ's story, using a uniquely profane American vernacular.
1/8/2004 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Remembering George Plimpton
This interview, originally broadcast on March 5, 1998, will not be heard on KCRW so that we may present special holiday programming.
1/1/2004 • 30 minutes, 3 seconds
Remembering Edward Said
Over the course of his career, Edward Said produced compact and thrilling works that revolutionized the field of literary criticism. In his memory, Bookworm offers a conversation, first broadcast in 2002, in which Said talks about literature, critical theory, and exile.
12/25/2003 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Pete Dexter
Train (Doubleday)
12/18/2003 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Edward P. Jones
12/11/2003 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Jonathan Lethem
The Fortress of Solitude (Doubleday)
12/4/2003 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Susan Sontag
Where the Stress Falls (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Where does the stress fall in the life of a writer-intellectual? Susan Sontag examines the difference between exploring the interior of a subject and exploring the interior of the explorer...
11/27/2003 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Joan Didion
Where I Was From (Knopf)
Joan Didion takes deadly aim at the dream of California embodied, for example, in her own first novel, Run River. As she takes a more discerning look, she discovers even less innocence, less altruism than the early settlers could have imagined.
11/20/2003 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Vendela Vida and Julie Orringer
And Now You Can Go (Knopf) and How to Breathe Underwater (Vintage)
11/13/2003 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Chuck Palahniuk: Diary
Chuck Palahniuk takes on some rather aggressive questions about American culture and the artist...
11/6/2003 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Kevin Young
Jelly Roll (a blues) (Knopf); Blues Poems (Everyman's Library)
Kevin Young, who has edited a terrific anthology of blues poetry, uses blues traditions as the basis for his own recent work...
10/30/2003 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Rikki Ducornet
Gazelle (Knopf) Where will the magical Rikki Ducornet take us next? In Gazelle, the Arabian Nights recur, as a thirteen -year-old girl wanders in 1950's Cairo, reveling in the scents and exotic perfumes that lead to her unusual career as an anatomist of mummies. Ducornet leads us deeper into the realm of the senses than ever before. (Note: This interview will be pre-empted on KCRW by special programming.)
10/23/2003 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
John Kaye
The Dead Circus (Atlantic Monthly Press) John Kaye grew up in Los Angeles. His novel, The Dead Circus, is set in that city and delves beneath the surface of the classic L.A. noir thriller. What effect does all this dread and anomie have on the real people who actually live in the City of Angels?
10/16/2003 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Janette Turner Hospital
Due Preparations for the Plague (Norton) Janette Turner Hospital's extraordinary fiction is beginning to gain recognition in America. Due Preparations for the Plague, a thrilling study of an airplane hijacking and its effects on the children of its victims, is overpowering in its intensity--generating terrifying imagery that will not easily be forgotten. In this conversation, Hospital explores how her strict religious upbringing in Australia has affected her worldview: she lusts for danger and the destruction of hierarchy.
10/9/2003 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Heidi Julavits: The Effect of Living Backwards
Heidi Julavits' first book was a bleak novel. Her second book's vision is lighter, but the subject remains dark: a terrorist training cell…
10/2/2003 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Ahdaf Soueif
The Map of Love (Vintage)
London-based author Ahdaf Soueif, praised as an "Egyptian George Eliot," describes the impact of middle-eastern and global history on her narratives....
9/25/2003 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Barbara Gowdy
The Romantic (Metropolitan) This very intimate interview focuses on the adolescent desire for magic in romance and the adult discovery that it may not exist. The author describes her own romantic arc and discloses that, both as a writer and as a lover, she depends entirely on intuition.
9/18/2003 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Yann Martel: Life of Pi
Booker Prize-winning author Yann Martel makes a distinction between the playful, surprise-filled surface of his novel and its spiritual purpose...
9/11/2003 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Joseph McElroy (Part 2 of 2)
Relationships and marriage, violence and loss, houses and homes are the deeply conventional subjects that occupy this unconventional novel. In the second part of a two-part interview, Joseph McElroy shows how his oblique techniques evoke and mirror the emotional intricacies of our daily lives.
9/4/2003 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Joseph McElroy (Part 1 of 2)
Joseph McElroy, one of the innovative masters of narrative, gives a rare two-part interview. This week, we talk about the way the novelist strives to represent the workings of consciousness, and the new techniques necessary to create a facsimile of the way memory is structured.
8/28/2003 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Carol Muske Dukes
Sparrow (Random House)This collection of elegies for actor David Dukes, the poet's late husband, inspires a conversation about death, role-playing and ghosts. Most surprising, we discover an unexpected spectral visitation in one of the poems.
8/21/2003 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
Little Lit: It Was a Dark and Silly Night (Harper Collins)A new Little Lit is always an event, and this one has work by the dreaded Lemony Snicket and a fabulous four-page Breughel-like phantasmagoria by the Where's Waldo? guy. This volume of comix for kids -- the third -- definitely does justice to its name!
8/14/2003 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Margaret Atwood: Oryx and Crake
Margaret Atwood on her nightmare novel about the biotechnological future...
8/7/2003 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
Siri Hustvedt
What I Loved
(Holt)
A harrowing subject: the child of an artist giving way to crime, drugs and dishonesty. A harrowing conversation with author Siri Hustved: is the child's amorality genetic or did post-modern art corrupt him?
7/31/2003 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Alice McDermott: Child of My Heart
An unusually tender conversation with Alice McDermott about grace, imagined here as the act of putting others before oneself...
7/24/2003 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Monique Truong
The Book of Salt (Houghton Mifflin)
The Vietnamese cook in the famous Paris house of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas narrates Monique Truong's first novel...
7/17/2003 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Robert Stone
Bay of Souls
(Houghton Mifflin)
Robert Stone's novel that features intrigue, romance, violence and voodoo...
7/10/2003 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Jane Smiley
Good Faith (Knopf)
An ebullient book about fraud and deception-the eighties, Jane Smiley-style.
7/3/2003 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Don DeLillo: The Body Artist
Cosmopolis (Scribner's) and The Body Artist (Scribner's)
In this, the second of a two-part interview, Don DeLillo explores his most enigmatic creation: the weird gnome at the heart of his last novel, The Body Artist.
6/26/2003 • 30 minutes, 25 seconds
Don DeLillo: Cosmopolis
The deadpan master of post-modern dysfunction-comedy takes an ordinary New York traffic jam and transforms it into a funeral procession that guides his protagonist to defeat and death.
6/19/2003 • 30 minutes, 25 seconds
John Murray
A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies
(Harper Collins)
A young doctor who has worked in developing countries, John Murray has written a collection of stories in which chaos and order wrestle for domination...
6/12/2003 • 29 minutes, 10 seconds
Kate Moses
Wintering: A Novel of Sylvia Plath (St. Martin-s) Kate Moses attempts and achieves the impossible: she weaves Sylvia Plath-s imagery and intensity into an interior landscape illuminating the last week of the great poet-s life. In the process, Moses creates a convincing portrait of a hypothetical Plath-one who has earned a mastery of her demons and a place in the Pantheon.
5/29/2003 • 29 minutes, 14 seconds
ZZ Packer
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere (Riverhead)
With her extraordinarily confident language, newcomer ZZ Packer confronts issues of race, class and education that have flummoxed more-experienced writers...
5/22/2003 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Jessica Shattuck
The Hazards of Good Breeding (Norton) Jessica Shattuck skewers the narrow-minded prejudices of the Boston aristocracy. How did Shattuck, the daughter of a liberal lawyer and niece of a prominent literary critic, find the tenderness and insight necessary to give her characters human depth?
5/15/2003 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
John D'Agata: The Next American Essay
This remarkable anthology presents a picture of what the American essay is, and what, with any luck, it may become.
5/8/2003 • 29 minutes, 13 seconds
William Gibson
Pattern Recognition (Putnam)
William Gibson, the inventor of cyber-punk, says that his new novel, though set in the future, is realistic...
5/1/2003 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Norman Mailer
The Spooky Art
(Random House)
Norman Mailer, the lion at eighty, stayed lair-bound long enough to assemble this collection of his thoughts about writing..
4/24/2003 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Louise Erdrich: The Master Butchers Singing Club
For the first time, Louise Erdrich writes about the European side of her heritage. Her new novel is about the confrontation of German and Native American cultures in North Dakota between World Wars...
4/17/2003 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Brian Hall
I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company (Viking) Brian Hall-s novel of Lewis and Clark turns the extraordinary expedition upside down to find its dark underside-the ignorance, racism and despair at the heart of the American wilderness adventure.
4/10/2003 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
A. S. Byatt (Part II)
A Whistling Woman (Knopf)In the second of this two-part interview, Dame Byatt talks about the interaction of chance and design in her newly completed quartet.
4/3/2003 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
A. S. Byatt (Part I)
A Whistling Woman (Knopf)Dame Antonia Byatt began a quartet of novels twenty years ago with The Virgin in the Garden. She completes this huge project with A Whistling Woman.
3/27/2003 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Geoff Dyer: Yoga for People Who Can't Be Bothered to Do It
A wild and beautiful writer, Geoff Dyer goes to Rome where he "basically did nothing all day"....
3/20/2003 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Colum McCann
Dancer (Metropolitan)
Colum McCann deserts the working-class backgrounds of his Irish novels to write a fictional life of Rudolph Nureyev. He invents a dancing prose style-floating, glittering, suspended in bright air. We discover how the subject, Nureyev, taught McCann a new way to write.
3/13/2003 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Hubert Selby, Jr (Part II)
The nightmare continues. After the success of Last Exit to Brooklyn, Selby pursues his bleak vision in Waiting Period...
3/3/2003 • 30 minutes
Hubert Selby, Jr. (Part 1)
In the first of a two-part interview, Hubert Selby, Jr, now in his seventies, reviews and relives the tumult created by his debut novel, Last Exit to Brooklyn.
2/27/2003 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Ron Padgett: You Never Know
Ron Padgett tells the story of three writers who traveled from Tulsa to Manhattan and became the leaders of the second generation of the New York School of Poetry.
2/20/2003 • 29 minutes, 58 seconds
Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex
Jeffrey Eugenides' multi-generational novel in which a Greek-American family, replete with elements of Greek tragedy (incest, hermaphroditism), witnesses American history.
2/13/2003 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Kim Deitch
The Boulevard of Broken Dreams (Pantheon) In a special edition of Bookworm, Art (Maus) Spiegelman joins us to introduce Kim Deitch, -one of the best kept secrets in comics for over 35 years.- Deitch-s graphic novel is a double extravaganza-a comic about the making of animated cartoons.
2/6/2003 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Jonathan Franzen: How to Be Alone
In this edgy conversation, author Jonathan Franzen and his interviewer take positions, argue, reverse positions and start again...
1/30/2003 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Mary Robison
Tell Me (Counterpoint); Why Did I Ever (Counterpoint)
Mary Robison returns to her student days of writing stories for John Barth's workshop, and the days of being edited by Roger Angell, for The New Yorker, and by Gordon Lish, for book publication at Knopf. These teachers and editors both shaped and thwarted her enigmatic, instinctually accurate style...
1/23/2003 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Sandra Cisneros: Caramelo
In this moving interview, Sandra Cisneros reveals the connection between history and family history: the processes of memory....
1/16/2003 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: I'll Take You There
Joyce Carol Oates' I'll Take You There (Ecco) appears to be a novel about college in the 1960s and interracial dating. At its heart, though, it pits skeptical against mystical philosophy...
1/9/2003 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Tristan Egolf
The Skirt and the Fiddle (Grove) When young Egolf-s first novel, The Lord of the Barnyard, was published, he was compared to writers he-d never read or heard of. Now, his second novel, a breezier, easier book, is being compared to his first. In this conversation, we talk about the vibrant smells of both his books-a tour through the sewers and gutters of bohemia.
1/2/2003 • 29 minutes, 58 seconds
Michael Chabon
Summerland (Hyperion/Miramax Books)
A magical conversation with Michael Chabon about children's literature...
12/26/2002 • 30 minutes, 1 second
Frances Sherwood
The Book of Splendor (Norton) History, hilarity, romance and spirituality find a meeting place in the Prague of 1601. A simple Jewish orphan falls in love with a golem, and an emperor searches for the secret of eternal life: Frances Sherwood explores the path from history to fantasy, from societal regulation to sexual liberation.
12/19/2002 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Paul Auster
The Book of Illusions
(Holt)
Paul Auster expresses his preference for mysterious clarity over "clever" literary effects in The Book of Illusions, a metaphysical thriller about a mysterious filmmaker...
12/12/2002 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Nick Tosches
In the Hand of Dante (Little, Brown)
Nick Tosches, a veteran tough guy, tells us what happens when the original manuscript of The Divine Comedy falls into the hands of the Mafia...
12/5/2002 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Adam Haslett
You Are Not a Stranger Here (Doubleday)
Viewed together, the short stories in Adam Haslett's bravura first collection present a fugue of obsessions and concerns: mental illness, surrogate parents, suppressed or uncontrollable desires, and the search for a way to order experience....
11/28/2002 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Anthony Lane
Nobody's Perfect (Knopf)
We pursue the New Yorker's critic through the dark woods of his literary and cinematic interests, finally emerging into a clearing as Anthony Lane reveals his longstanding love for the world of Jeeves and Bertie Wooster, Mr. Mulliner and Blandings Castle...
11/21/2002 • 30 minutes
Mary Woronov
Niagara (Serpent?s Tail) The Amazon dominatrix of Warhol-superstardom has become an impressive novelist, specializing in primal Noir fiction. Her feminist archetypes, her dangerous sexualized landscapes, her fantasies of revenge and retribution all reveal the strategies of an artist who transforms rage into visions of liberation.
11/14/2002 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Gilbert Sorrentino, Part I
Having returned to his native Brooklyn after a more than 20 years in California, Gilbert Sorrentino's new books span the continent with an unrelenting experimental style...
10/31/2002 • 30 minutes, 10 seconds
Ben Marcus: Notable American Women
Ben Marcus, a younger member of the avant-garde, talks about some of the devices that have structured his books...
10/24/2002 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
James McCourt: Wayfaring at Waverly in Silver Lake
Novelist James McCaourt constructs the complicated personality of a movie goddess in retreat.
10/17/2002 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Dennis Cooper
My Loose Thread (Canongate Books)In his most vulnerable and emotionally accessible novel, Dennis Cooper explores the mind of a boy who is like one of the Columbine killers. He talks about the world the boy imagines-and our compassion enlarges as the boy-s consciousness shuts down.
10/10/2002 • 29 minutes, 13 seconds
Rick Moody: The Black Veil
Rick Moody explores his dark ancestry, which includes the Puritan minister who inspired a famous Hawthorne story...
10/3/2002 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Francine Prose: The Lives of Muses
Francine Prose's The Lives of the Muses is a series of "brief lives" of women who inspired famous men: Alice of Alice in Wonderland, Yoko Ono, Mrs. Salvador Dali, the pre-Raphaelites...
9/26/2002 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Dave Eggers
McSweeney-s Books Dave Eggers (A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius) has invested in his beliefs and started up a press. He publishes the popular -lit-mag- McSweeney-s and a whole line of books by authors he admires. We explore and evaluate this unusual inventory.
9/19/2002 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Oliver Sacks: Oaxaca Journal
Wherever Oliver Sacks goes, the nature of consciousness is his subject...
9/12/2002 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Charles Simic
Night Picnic: Poems (Harcourt)
Pulitzer Prize-winner Charles Simic examines his work under
the lens of political terror and the subsequent experience of
immigration...
9/5/2002 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Alice Sebold
The Lovely Bones (Little Brown)
In Alice Sebold's eerie and fascinating first novel, a murdered girl reveals a double mystery: the nature of heaven (from where she narrates her story) and the nature of earth (where her family remembers her and her murderer remains uncaught).
8/29/2002 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Michael Frayn
Spies (Metropolitan Books) An elderly man reviews his childhood, discovering more than he could have possibly known as a child. Michael Frayn shows us that while children may play at being spies, adults are actual spies who explore the past and unearth secrets that alter their own identities.
8/22/2002 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Oscar Hijuelos: A Simple Habana Melody
Oscar Hijuelos gives us a sentimental rumba-and a return to his first inspiration: Cuban music.
8/15/2002 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Jonathan Safran Foer: Everything Is Illuminated
Jonathan Safran Foer's literary debut commanded lavish praise and immediate popularity.
8/8/2002 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Maya Angelou
A Song Flung Up to Heaven (Random House)
Maya Angelou has completed her extraordinary autobiography, which began with I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Here, she speaks about the people she knew when she started out as a writer, how she learned to write (she was a dancer), and who she is now.
8/1/2002 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Viken Berberian: The Cyclist
Viken Berberian's first novel attempts to take us inside the head of a failed suicide bomber, exploring his connection to the subject and the models in music and poetry that brought him closer to this dissociated and shattered personality...
7/25/2002 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Lydia Davis
Samuel Johnson Is Indignant (McSweeney's)
Lydia Davis' stories are miniatures. Acutely observed specificities are tautly rendered. Such intimate detail provides a keyhole view of how sanity gives way to obsession, and obsession gives way to wild comedy.
7/18/2002 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Ian McEwan
Atonement (Doubleday)
Ian McEwan explores both the technique and passion of his novel-his extraordinary assumption of a woman's voice and her malicious acts that violate the social fabric.
7/11/2002 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Edward Hirsch
The Demon and The Angel: Searching for the Source of Artistic Inspiration (Harcourt) Duende is like -soul,- an inner essence that aligns the artist with demonic or angelic inspiration. Edward Hirsch traces the manifestations of duende from Spanish poetry to Action Painting, from Rilke to Jackson Pollack.
7/4/2002 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Howard Norman
The Haunting of L.
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
At a certain point in this conversation, the author is referred to as "my ghost, Howard Norman..."
6/27/2002 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Jim Krusoe
Iceland (Dalky Archive) Jim Krusoe pits his dear-but-doltish narrator against a surreal, disaster-prone universe, creating a unique comedy of the little man versus authorial imagination.
6/20/2002 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Jonathan Dee
While writing Palladio (Doubleday) another of his complex novels of ideas, Jonathan Dee discovered his gift for creating complex human characters-and altered the course of his writing career.
6/13/2002 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Edna O'Brien
In the Forest (Houghton Mifflin)
Edna O'Brien's predilection for darkness, Greek tragedy and the terrifying fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm achieves its riskiest manifestation in her new novel, In the Forest...
6/6/2002 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Cees Nooteboom
All Souls Day (Harcourt)
Although afternoon television talk shows have made us all too familiar with the stages of grief, Cees Nooteboom's philosophical novel offers a different perspective...
5/30/2002 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Peter Carey
True History of the Kelly Gang (Vintage)Peter Carey captures the fated life of the Australian outlaw-hero Ned Kelly in thrilling run-on sentences: the world looms up, sudden and alive in phrase after breathless phrase. Here, he talks about the evolution of this springing, spirited voice.
5/23/2002 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
John Burnham Schwartz
Claire Marvel
(Doubleday)
John Burnham Schwartz has written a contemporary romance, complete with obsession, nightmare and a
life-altering vacation in a deserted French barn-but with a catch...
5/16/2002 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
David Mitchell
Number 9 Dream
(Random House)
David Mitchell, a radiant and gifted young writer, places his work at the center of a barrage of influences...
5/9/2002 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Richard Ford
A Multitude of Sins (Knopf)
Richard Ford, finds in adultery, his most recent subject, traces of old Emersonian independence. But he still considers his newest heroes to be "hurtling to their doom."
5/2/2002 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Marc Estrin
Insect Dreams: The Half Life of Gregor Samsa
(BlueHen Books)
This first novel by enterprising novelist Marc Estrin
introduces Gregor Samsa, Kafka's famous roach, to the monstrosities of the twentieth century....
4/25/2002 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Library of America
Library of America (Geoffrey O'Brien, editor in chief and Max Rudin, publisher) Library of America is a publisher whose mandate is to keep American classics in print. To celebrate its 20th anniversary, we'll explore the Library's surprising new definitions of what is American and what is classic. Are crime novels, screenplays, song lyrics and the work of Russian -migr-s included? For more information about the publisher, go to LibraryOfAmerica.org.
4/18/2002 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
William Kennedy
Roscoe (Viking)
Truth, when it disappears from one's public life, also tends to be unavailable in one's personal life. Pulitzer prize-winner William Kennedy talks about his greatest rascal yet, a politician to whom the word truth is anathema...
4/11/2002 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Curtis White
Requiem
(Dalky Archive Press)
Curtis White has created comedy from degeneration by counterpointing Biblical stories, biographies of Classical composers, and the e-mailed sexploits of pornographic web-site users..
4/4/2002 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Robert Creeley
Just in Time: Poems 1984-1994 (New Directions)
On the occasion of a Lannan Lifetime Achievement Award, Robert Creeley discusses the many influences on his singular poetry: Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, Charles Olson, Louis Zukofsky and Robert Duncan. In addition, he talks about the love of family and friends that has united his influences and his past into a "company."
3/28/2002 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Sigrid Nunez
For Rouenna (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Sigrid Nunez's books reveal the secrets of lives that have fallen through the cracks....
3/21/2002 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Ron Koertge
Geography of the Forehead (University of Arkansas Press) In the sweet mayhem of Ron Koertge's hilarious poems, a surreal vision collides with the sadness of daily life. Koertge talks about his transformation from a "smarty; pants" poet into a gentler wise-cracker.
3/14/2002 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
An Isaac Babel Celebration
The Complete Works of Isaac Babel (Norton)
We inaugurate Bookworm's Book Club with a celebration of the Russian master, Isaac Babel. We'll focus on the paradox of his disturbing laconic style: the lyric joy of a Jew describing Cossack violence...
3/7/2002 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Jane DeLynn
Leash (Semiotexte) As always, Jane DeLynn leaves a trail of magnificent broken taboos behind her. Here, she confesses that she can go no further in her unbroken chain of transgressions. Hear this dark comic novelist at her turning point. Where do you go after the abyss?
2/28/2002 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Steve Martin
Shopgirl (Hyperion)
When Steve Martin brought out his first novella, Shopgirl praise from the writing community (Salman Rushdie, for example) indicated that he can be taken seriously...
2/21/2002 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Susan Sontag
On Summer in Baden Baden by Leonid Tsypkin (New Directions)Susan Sontag talks about the discovery of lost and forgotten masterpieces, in particular, this novel, never published in America, about an odd vacation in the life of Fyodor Dostoevski...
2/14/2002 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Art Spiegelman & Francoise Mouly, editors
Little Lit: Strange Stories for Strange Kids (Harper Collins) Spiegelman and Mouly discuss their exciting treat for kids of all ages-the newest Little Lit, with weird illustrated tales by the likes of Paul Auster, Maurice Sendak and Jules Feiffer.
2/7/2002 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Allen Kurzweil
The Grand Complication (Hyperion) A genuinely odd discussion about the consequences of scholarly book-loving. That is, a conversation about manipulation, games-playing, sexual repression and sadism in the lives of Kurzweil's characters who continue their unwholesome adventures beyond the intrigues and enigmas of his first novel, A Case of Curiosities.
1/31/2002 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Mario Vargas Llosa
The Feast of the Goat
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
In Mario Vargas Llosa's brilliant novel about the Trujillo regime, the Dominican Republic stands for all tyrannized nations and the 1960's stand for any period of political domination and unrest...
1/24/2002 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Allan Gurganus: The Practical Heart
Allan Gurganus talks intimately about the people who introduced him to art and literature during his childhood.
1/17/2002 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Isabel Allende: Portrait in Sepia
Isabel Allende on war, love, autobiography, patriarchy, feminism and sex.
1/10/2002 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Edward Said
Power, Politics, and Culture: Interviews with Edward W. Said (Pantheon); The Said Reader (Vintage)
A passionate conversation about exile, literature and critical theory. Palestinian-born Edward Said discusses his work: from his early philosophical criticism, through critique of imperialism, to his recent memoir.
1/3/2002 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
John D'Agata: Halls of Fame
The inventor of a new style of lyrical essay writing, John D'Agata talks about the classical traditions he draws upon and the special American loneliness that resonates in his unusual sentences...
12/27/2001 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Coleman Barks
The Soul of Rumi (Harper San Francisco)
Rumi's ancient mystical poetry swings between ideals of transcendence and destruction. Coleman Barks explores the extreme polarities that underlie the work...
12/20/2001 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Jonathan Franzen: The Corrections
When The Corrections appeared, it was immediately nominated as a candidate for The Great American Novel. Jonathan Franzen discusses his manner of writing, his method of construction, and the possibility that his book advocates a family values-based neo-conservatism.
12/13/2001 • 29 minutes, 58 seconds
W. G. Sebald
Austerlitz (Random House)What Thomas Mann was to the 1940's and Albert Camus to the 1950's probably places the German writer W. G. Sebald in relation to our new century. In this conversation, Sebald describes the source of his rare prose tone and explores the invisible presence of the concentration camps in his work.
12/6/2001 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Joan Didion
Political Fictions (Knopf)
We discover that the strategy underlying Joan Didion's essays also provides the foundation for her fiction. She rejects the human need for stories with clear resolutions and, instead, searches out the messy realities that stories conceal.
11/29/2001 • 30 minutes, 10 seconds
Richard Flanagan
Death of a River Guide (Grove)
In this novel, a drowning river-guide in Tasmania relives his life as it recedes before him. Author Richard Flanagan insists that reality in his island homeland is stranger still...
11/22/2001 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
David Means: Assorted Fire Events
David Means, the young winner of the Los Angeles Times Fiction Award discusses his interest in redemption, an impulse that transforms his tightly calibrated realistic fiction into a moral tightrope-walk.
11/15/2001 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Henry Bromell
Little America (Knopf)
Author Henry Bromell, the son of a CIA agent, discusses the traps, secrets and patricidal rivalries that can turn father-son relationships into metaphors for espionage...
11/8/2001 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
John Barth, Part II
Coming Soon!!!
(Houghton Mifflin)
More on the spectacular fictional inventions of John Barth-including dual narrators, Muse-author collaborations, and stories so complexly interconnected that they mirror the spiraling structure of the universe. (Part II of a two-part interview)
11/1/2001 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
John Barth, Part
Coming Soon!!! (Houghton Mifflin)
A full-scale celebration of the career of John Barth, one of America's greatest comic writers. His experiments with form, his crazy circumlocutions and contractions of language and, in particular, his creation of double-gendered narration are explored, explained, exhibited and exclaimed over.(Part I of a two-part interview)
10/25/2001 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
T. A. Shippey
J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century (Houghton Mifflin) With the film of Lord of the Rings hard upon us, Professor Shippey recalls Tolkien and his interest in language and epic poetry. As a special treat, Shippey sings Tolkien's school song, which, disguised, makes its way into the Sagas of Middle Earth.
10/18/2001 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Salman Rushdie: Fury, Part II
In part two of this interview with Salman Rushdie, we consider the wilder aspects of Fury: the influence of science fiction, surrealism and film. Special attention is paid to the blurring distinction between humans and machines and the painful irony implicit in the difficulty of making such a distinction. (Part one aired October 4.)
10/11/2001 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Salman Rushdie: Fury, Part I
In the first of a two-part interview, Salman Rushdie explores the politics, psychology and sociology of his first America-set novel, Fury.
10/4/2001 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Li-Young Lee
Book of My Nights (BOA Editions)
Li-Young Lee's poetry has moved beyond the details of his Chinese upbringing to an investigation of what he calls "primal silence..."
9/27/2001 • 30 minutes, 4 seconds
New American Short Stories
Dan Chaon, Among the Missing (Ballantine); Adrienne Sharp, White Swan, Black Swan (Random House) Marisa Silver, Babe in Paradise (Norton)
Three young writers, each publishing a first book with a major press, explore the terrain of contemporary short-story writing, from personal backgrounds to their desires to break with tradition...
9/20/2001 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Walter Mosley
Fearless Jones (Little Brown)
Walter Mosley is best known for his noir mysteries. With books set in the black communities of Los Angeles, he writes the hidden histories of race, sensuality, crime and cultural aspiration....
9/13/2001 • 30 minutes
Arnon Grunberg
Silent Extras (St. Martin's) The young Dutch writer who created a sensation in Europe with his first novel, a sort of Amsterdam-set Catcher in the Rye, talks about the perils of recognition and his continuing need to evade seriousness. Read an excerpt from this book.
9/6/2001 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Ann Patchett
Bel Canto (Harper Collins)
Ann Patchett knows that a novel is an author's private kingdom-problems the world can't solve can be solved within the pages of a book...
8/30/2001 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Ethan Canin
Carry Me Across the Water (Random House)
Ethan Canin offers his ideas about fatherhood, memory and the betrayal children inevitably feel at the hands of their parents...
8/23/2001 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Nick Hornby
How to Be Good (Riverhead)
Nick Hornby, author of High Fidelity and About a Boy, has made a shift: the gifted comic novelist has adopted a woman's voice to examine marriage, fidelity, happiness and, finally, moral goodness.
8/16/2001 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Carol Muske-Dukes
Life after Death (Random House)Carol Muske-Dukes began to write a dark comedy about death. Slowly, she discovered that compassion was reshaping her book, giving it depth and complexity...
8/9/2001 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Micheline Aharonian Marcom
Three Apples Fell from Heaven
(Riverhead)
Micheline Aharonian Marcom's stunning first novel imagines the Armenian genocide...
8/2/2001 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Ann Lauterbach
If in Time, Collected Poems 1975-2000 (Penguin)
Ann Lauterbach believes that one of the primary functions of poetry is the demystification of the world's cliches and the creation of new wonders...
7/26/2001 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Ariel Dorfman
Blake's Therapy (7 Stories Press)
Ariel Dorfman describes his goal: to subvert the techniques of melodrama and thriller-writing in order to penetrate illusion and arrive at reality with a capital R.
7/19/2001 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Carl Phillips
The Tether (Farrar, Straus & Giroux); Pastoral (Gray Wolf)
Strongly influenced by the Metaphysical poets, Carl Phillips writes a mixture of erotic and devotional poetry...
7/12/2001 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Louise Erdrich: The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse
The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse (Harper Collins)
Louise Erdrich mixes elements of her German and Native American ancestry to create a collage of history, mythology and good old-fashioned storytelling....
7/5/2001 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
John Felstiner, translator
Selected Poems and Prose of Paul Celan
(Norton)
John Felstiner
has produced a superb translation of works by the great Holocaust poet Paul Celan...
6/28/2001 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Nicholson Baker
Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper (Random House)Nicholson Baker has been on a crusade to preserve intact our books and newspapers. In Double Fold, he exposes the efforts of some of the greatest enemies of paper.
6/21/2001 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
John Balaban, translator
Spring Essence: The Poetry of Ho Xuan Huong (Copper Canyon Press)
Ho Xuan Huong was an 18th century Vietnamese poet and concubine. Poet John Balaban served as a conscientious objector in Vietnam during the war. We explore the complex destinies that led him to learn Vietnamese and to translate Ho's complex, erotic poems.
6/14/2001 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Jack Fuller
The Best of Jackson Payne (Knopf)
A conversation with author Jack Fuller, who happens to be the president of the Tribune Publishing Company, and Steve Wasserman, editor of the Los Angeles Times Book Review, about concern journalistic ethics, conflicts of interest, and art.
6/7/2001 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Amitav Ghosh
The Glass Palace (Random House)Amitav Ghosh's ambitions are Tolstoyan. He chronicles the tragedies of the British Empire in India and Burma. His mission: to reconcile large historical themes with his novelistic interest in the intimate details of personal destiny.
5/31/2001 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Dagoberto Gilb
Woodcuts of Women (Grove)
Dagoberto Gilb's stories have enormous poetic vitality, yet he feels that he suffers from a lack of recognition. Has his status as a Latino inhibited his acceptance by the literary establishment?
5/24/2001 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Lois-Ann Yamanaka
Father of the Four Passages (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
In this novel, the distance between autobiography and fiction is minimal. Lois-Ann Yamanaka is living with the problems of raising an autistic child; she has written about the struggle. Does writing help?
5/17/2001 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Amy Tan
The Bonesetter's Daughter (Putnam)
During the writing of The Bonesetter's Daughter, Amy Tan endured both the death of her mother and the death of her editor...
5/10/2001 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Melanie Rae Thon
Sweet Hearts (Houghton Mifflin)Melanie Rae Thon's new novel is very strange: it's narrated by a woman who cannot hear and has not witnessed the events she describes. Her condition inspires our conversation about suffering, grace and the presence of God.
5/3/2001 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Manil Suri
The Death of Vishnu
(Norton)
In his first novel, Manil Suri reenacts the Bhagavad-Gita in modern Bombay....
4/26/2001 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Bernard Cooper
Guess Again (Simon & Schuster)
Bernard Cooper explores the temptations he faces in his writing: a yearning for permanence and security rivaled by a sneaking affection for odd, transient and unique experiences...
4/12/2001 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Ann Beattie: Perfect Recall
Expressing outright admiration for this new collection of stories, Bookworm attempts to pin down Ann Beattie's elusive techniques...
4/5/2001 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Matthew Klam: Sam the Cat and Other Stories
Matthew Klam discusses the sexcapades of the stud muffins and alleycats of his post-moral stories, truly the most audacious chronicle of sexual discomfort since the stories of John O'Hara...
3/29/2001 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Jerome Rothenberg
Jerome Rothenberg, editor A Book of the Book: Some Works and Projections About the Book and Writing (Granary) Who knows what books will look like ten years from now! While e-books and new technologies loom, poet, anthologist and ethnopoeticist Jerome Rothenberg offers alternative ways to think about books: as sacred objects, storage machines, objects d'art.
3/22/2001 • 29 minutes, 17 seconds
Richard Powers: Plowing the Dark
Richard Powers' intensity and sincerity blaze through as he discusses science, personal sacrifice and the common mis-assumption that cerebral writers are without passion.
3/15/2001 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Ursula LeGuin
Ursula LeGuin The Telling (Harcourt Brace) Ursula Le Guin believes that science fiction writers create new worlds in order to understand this one. We discuss the death of literacy and the use of religious fanaticism to limit civil rights in her world of the future. Read about this Book
3/8/2001 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Mona Simpson
Off Keck Road (Knopf)
Mona Simpson's delicately textured and beautifully detailed novella about small-town life in Wisconsin provides the occasion for this conversation about women, romance and the decision not to marry.
3/1/2001 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Thomas Lynch
Bodies in Motion and at Rest (Norton)
As a result of his two professions (poet and funeral director), Thomas Lynch has an unusual attitude toward tradition, decorum and memory...
2/22/2001 • 16 minutes, 13 seconds
Eduardo Galeano: Upside Down
Eduardo Galeano's denunciation of our multinational globalized future is characteristically brilliant, whimsical-devastating.
2/15/2001 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Chris Ware: Jimmy Corrigan
The comic book, Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth (Pantheon), is Bookworm's nominee for the past year's most interesting novel!
2/8/2001 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Gore Vidal
The Golden Age (Doubleday)
With the completion of his American Empire series, author Gore Vidal reflects upon our national destiny...
2/1/2001 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
William T. Vollmann
The Royal Family (Viking)
William Vollmann's growing sense of mystical Christianity is bringing him closer to Dostoevsky...
1/25/2001 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Joy Williams: The Quick and the Dead
In Joy Williams' The Quick and the Dead, bleak and wicked comedy hides the book's religious mission, demonstrating how God and Devil can be mistaken for one another...
1/18/2001 • 29 minutes, 13 seconds
Myla Goldberg
Bee Season (Doubleday)
This is Myla Goldberg's haunting first novel, about a Jewish family torn apart by manias born of spiritual mysticism on the one hand, and fear and silence on the other....
1/11/2001 • 9 minutes, 28 seconds
Ha Jin
The Bridegroom (Pantheon)
Ha Jin, a Chinese writer who came to America in 1985, has published seven books of fiction and poetry in English. What are the consequences of giving up a native language? Can writing transform the anger generated by the Cultural Revolution into art?
1/4/2001 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Heidi Julavitz: The Mineral Palace
This remarkable first novel offers an occasion to pay tribute to its late editor, and to salute its young author, whose imagery and vision promise an unusual career.
12/28/2000 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Tony Earley
Jim the Boy
(Little Brown)
Tony Earley has been hailed as a new American master, and, indeed, he has written a classic rite-of-passage novel...
12/21/2000 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Kazuo Ishiguro: When We Were Orphans
Kazuo Ishiguro pits a child's naïve dream of becoming a master detective against the larger mysteries of adultery, death and war....
12/14/2000 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Michael Chabon
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay (Random House)
Michael Chabon's novel about escape artists, super heroes and the Golden Age of Comics is a complete entertainment...
12/7/2000 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Chris Ware and Daniel Clowes
The work of novelists Chris Ware and Daniel Clowes is characterized by complexity, beauty and sophistication. Guess what? They write comics!
11/30/2000 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Amy Gerstler: Medicine
Amy Gerstler regards her poetry as a sort of spell to ward off danger. Her new book deals with the tragedies that cannot be evaded by magic.
11/16/2000 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Russell Banks: The Angel on the Roof
The house of fiction has many rooms. Russell Banks talks about the life- choices that led him to occupy his particularly gritty sublet.
11/9/2000 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Margaret Atwood: The Blind Assassin
While revealing her passion for storytelling, cunning Margaret Atwood
carefully avoids the secret mechanisms of her engrossing new novel, "The Blind Assassin."
11/2/2000 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Mark Strand: Chicken, Shadow, Moon and More
Chicken, Shadow, Moon and More
(Turtle Point)
We defy you not to laugh when you hear these poems from the previously sepulchral laureate Mark Strand...
10/26/2000 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
Little Lit: Folklore and Fairy Tale Funnies (Harper Collins)In this second interview about Little Lit, its creators, Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly, remind us that comic books are not just for adults. They talk about the new maturity that leads underground artists to take the safety pins out of their noses and use them in their babies' diapers.
10/19/2000 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: Anil's Ghost
The reticent Michael Ondaatje becomes more revealing. Here he goes so far as to formulate his artistic credo and even makes comments that truly define his unusual vision.
10/12/2000 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Diane Johnson
Le Marriage (Dutton)
The bird-like flutings of Diane Johnson's amused voice animate this merry duet about France, comedy, depravity and marriage.
10/5/2000 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Sherman Alexie
Sherman Alexie The Toughest Indian in the World (Grove Atlantic) Sherman Alexie is the cynical, irreverent Indian writer (he does not use the term Native American) whose rough, funny stories have led to more than one brush with the tribal elders. Hear him laugh at the kind of people who romanticize "the; rez."
9/28/2000 • 29 minutes, 9 seconds
Zadie Smith
Zadie Smith White Teeth (Random House) Young Zadie Smith's dizzying comic take on multi-racial London. Her background, she says, was so mixed that P.G. Wodehouse's pure-bloods seemed to her to be foreign and "exotic.;"
9/21/2000 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Mark Strand: A Blizzard of One
NOTE: Poet Mark Strand has died at the age of 80. He was a Pulitzer prize-winning poet and Poet Laureate of the United States. He appeared on Bookworm in 2000.
A brow-furrowing conversation with a former poet laureate Mark Strand...
9/14/2000 • 28 minutes, 48 seconds
Jane Smiley
Horse Heaven (Knopf)
At a gallop, Jane Smiley tells us everything she knows about horse breeding, horse racing, horse trading...
9/7/2000 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Francine Prose: Blue Angel
Blue Angel pivots on a question of academic sexual harassment...
8/31/2000 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
J.R. Salamanca
J.R. Salamanca That Summer's Trance (Welcome Rain Press) Salamanca's first book in fourteen years, That Summer's Trance, a shimmering book about love, desire and betrayal, bears the erotic imprint and the tragic sense of life that readers first encountered in his classic novel Lilith
8/24/2000 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Art Spiegelman & Francoise Mouly
Little Lit: Folklore and Fairy Tale Funnies (Harper Collins)Author Art Spiegelman and editor Francoise Mouly introduce Little Lit, their new collection of comics by world-renowned children's book artists and underground cartoonists-all based on fairy tales, all for kids, all in color and beautiful beyond belief.
8/10/2000 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
David Foster Wallace: Brief Interviews with Hideous Men
Our Heartbreaking Group of Staggering Geniuses comes to its conclusion with "Grandmaster" Wallace: a conversation about difficulty , gender, transgression and the use of received ideas-all earmarks of staggering genius.
8/3/2000 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
George Saunders: Pastoralia
In George Saunder's dystopian theme parks, the American Dream festers and thrives fertilized by self-help movements and Big Brother type cults.
7/27/2000 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Bret Easton Ellis
Bret Easton Ellis Glamorama (Knopf) Ellis, a godfather to the new fiction scene, describes what it-s like to have one foot in each of two generations. He comes from the minimalists (the Raymond Carver gang), but his recent book, Glamorama, is a step in the new direction--complex, ironic, deconstructive, maximalist.
7/20/2000 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Donald Antrim
Donald Antrim The Verificationist (Knopf) Donald Antrim-s weird sensibility instinctually concocts hierarchical societies that ritually reject and expel their zanies and oddballs: in other words, him. The supremely evasive Antrim describes the new group of writers he is not so sure he is a part of.
7/13/2000 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Mark Danielewski: House of Leaves
Mark Danielewski builds a haunted house out of the pages of his first novel. It has dark passages, ghostly echoes (of the great books of the past) and a monster at its center.
7/6/2000 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Dennis Cooper
Period (Grove)Dennis Cooper is one of the originators of the new fiction. We look at the violently sexual five-book series he recently completed with Period. We focus on its interior design, its aesthetics and, in particular, the sense of integration Cooper feels at the conclusion of his ten-year project.
6/29/2000 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Dave Eggers
Bookworm is excited to celebrate the emergence of a vibrant new generation of fiction writers by talking to the new -staggering geniuses- and some of their forebears. This series, which begins June 22nd, is named in tribute to Dave Eggers- groundbreaking best-seller A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius. Dave Eggers A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (Simon & Schuster) The publication of AHWOSG caused readers to sit up and take notice of a new generation of American writers, many of whom are published in Dave Eggers- magazine McSweeney-s. Their common concerns include sincerity (and the lack thereof), difficulty (and its challenge to readers), and extravagance (a 700-page novel in this crowd is par for the course). In this new interview, Dave Eggers on the new crew.
6/22/2000 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Jon Davis
Jon Davis Scrimmage of Appetite (University of Akron Press) Jon Davis is a recent discovery. His poems are beginning to win recognition and awards... unusual for a wildly comic poet in a poetry culture that usually rewards somber meditative works. We discuss the dangers that come with unbridled imagination.
6/15/2000 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
Evan S. Connell
Evan S. Connell Deus Lo Volt! Chronicle of the Crusades (Counterpoint) Evan S. Connell, who rarely grants an interview, discusses both the savagery of Holy Wars and his elegant fictionalizing of bloody history.
6/8/2000 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Kate Wheeler
Kate Wheeler When Mountains Walked (Houghton Mifflin) Prize-winning short-story writer Kate Wheeler describes the ordeal of tackling her first novel. Ordeal it was, bringing her into South American jungles and shattering her Buddhist calm.
6/1/2000 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Margot Livesey
Margot Livesey The Missing World (Knopf) With an alarming, but quiet malice and wit, Livesey dissects the dark motives underlying her sinister world view.
5/25/2000 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Eliza Minot
Eliza Minot The Tiny One (Knopf) Literary sibling rivalry: Eliza, the younger sister of Susan, offers her slant on a family we've met before in her sister's novels.
5/18/2000 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Jorie Graham
Swarm (Ecco, Harper Collins)
In an unprecedented impulse to clarify, Pulitzer Prize-winner Jorie Graham offers an elaborate interpretation of her stunning new book-length poem.
5/11/2000 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
E.L. Doctorow
City of God (Random House)
Doctorow unravels the signs and omens of a new order of faith in his visionary millennial novel.
5/4/2000 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Kenward Elmslie
Kenward Elmslie Cyberspace (Granary Books) Kenward Elmslie, our wildest poetic genius, takes no hostages when he explodes into cyberspace in this book-length poem-extravaganza.
4/27/2000 • 28 minutes, 59 seconds
Richard Slotkin
Richard Slotkin Abe (Holt) The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn starring young Abe Lincoln? What does this exploration into our 16th president's childhood reveal about American literature and heroism?
4/20/2000 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Timothy Findley
Timothy Findley Pilgrim (Harper Collins) Timothy Findley insists on Jung's dispassionate anti-humanist attitudes in Pilgrim, his confrontation with the frontiers of madness and history. Why? There is more in heaven and earth than there is dreamt of in your philosophy, Dr. Jung.
4/13/2000 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
David Eggers
David Eggers A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (Simon & Schuster)We approach this anti-memoir about the death of both of the author's parents with an eye on this question of distinction: when does heartbroken facetiousness become heartlessness?
4/6/2000 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
James Quandt
James Quandt, editor of Robert Bresson (University of Indiana Press) The recent death of Robert Bresson, the legendary French film director, provides the occasion for this tribute to Bresson's purity of style and the power of his literary adaptations. James Quandt, film curator and editor of an anthology of essays on Bresson, is our guest.
3/30/2000 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Susan Sontag
In America (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)With In America, Susan Sontag embarks on an exploration of America through the eyes of a great Polish actress. What is an American? What is the role of a woman in the American imagination? A conversation about the invention and re-invention of a woman's identity. This is the last in our nine-part series "Women, Writing and the Imagination."
3/23/2000 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Blonde
The life of Marilyn Monroe inspires Joyce Carol Oates, vast accomplishment in Blond and provides an opening for our conversation about a feminine icon. Part 8 of the nine-part series "Women, Writing and the Imagination."
3/16/2000 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Ana Castillo
Ana Castillo Peel My Love Like and Onion (Doubleday) Castillo's new novel is about an aging and crippled flamenco dancer. We talk about the powerful sensuality that keeps the dancer vital despite age, infirmity and the demands of an exacting art. Coming from a family of curanderas, Castillo focuses, as well on her experiences with "the; healing arts." Part 7 of the nine-part series "Women;, Writing and the Imagination".;
3/9/2000 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Jamaica Kincaid
Jamaica Kincaid on "the feminine arts," from reproduction to literary creation. Part 6 of the nine-part series "Women, Writing and the Imagination."
3/2/2000 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Gioia Timpanelli
Gioia Timpanelli Sometimes the Soul (Vintage) Storytelling iswhat later becomes literature, says professional storyteller GioiaTimpanelli. Here, she looks at her novellas and their roots in fairy tales,myths and the oral tradition. Part 5 of the nine-part series "Women;, Writing and the Imagination".;
2/24/2000 • 29 minutes, 14 seconds
Rikki Ducornet
Rikki Ducornet The Fan-Maker?s Inquisition (Holt) Rikki Ducornetclaims that the imagination has no gender and no limitations. In aninvestigation of its dangers, we focus on the Marquis de Sade, theextermination of the Maya and erotic art. Part 4 of the nine-part series "Women;, Writing and the Imagination".;
2/17/2000 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Pamela Houston
Pamela Houston A Little More About Me (Norton) Houston identifiesherself as a ?human animal? and her writing as an exploration of thedistance she feels from conventional ideas about gender. Part 3 of the nine-part series "Women;, Writing and the Imagination".;
2/10/2000 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Annie Leibovitz
Annie Leibovitz Women (Random House) The photographer talks abouther identification with her subjects: women and what their faces say aboutwomen?s lives. Part 2 of the nine-part series "Women;, Writing and the Imagination".;
2/3/2000 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Isabel Allende: Daughter of Fortune
In the first of a series on women's writing and imagination, Isabel Allende uses feminist terms to describe her history of the California Gold Rush. (Part 1 of 9)
1/27/2000 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Roddy Doyle
Roddy Doyle A Star Called Henry (Viking) Roddy Doyle, novelist of the Irish working class, takes a picaresque gallop through "the; Troubles" in an historical novel about an inconveniently heroic sod.
1/20/2000 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Frank McCourt
Frank McCourt 'Tis: A Memoir (Scribner) America's favorite Irishman talks about the dubious luxury of writing his second memoir while on airplanes and in waiting rooms--the hurtle from the tragic to the anecdotal.
1/13/2000 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Michael Frayn
Michael Frayn Headlong (Metropolitan) This British comic novel links an art-theft caper to both a philosophical inquiry into authenticity and an historical analysis of Breughel's painting. Frayn on the art of historo-philosophic comedy.
1/6/2000 • 29 minutes, 18 seconds
James Galvin
Fencing the Sky
(Holt)
Western American novelist James Galvin contrasts the eternal values of the natural world of his youth with the rapacity of the "land pimps" who infest the New West.
12/23/1999 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Scott Turow
Scott Turow "Personal; Injuries" (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) This master of the legal thriller talks about the complexity of his characters-a complexity achieved by an understanding of law morality and story-telling.
12/16/1999 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Jamaica Kincaid: My Garden
Jamaica Kincaid's beautiful notes on gardening uncover the same imperialistic and racist assumptions she exposes in her fiction.
12/9/1999 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Chuck Palahnuik: Fight Club
The author of Fight Club gives an intense and raw description of his world view.
12/2/1999 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Jonathan Lethem
Motherless Brooklyn
(Doubleday)
The western, the hard-boiled mystery, the sci-fi epic; these are the screens behind which Jonathan Lethem's oedipal dramas loom.
11/18/1999 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Kurt Vonnegut
Kurt Vonnegut "Bagombo; Snuff Box" (Putnam) Kurt Vonnegut began by writing conventional short stories. Here, he talks about the development of his wild style, his comic voice and his moral code.
11/11/1999 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Chang-rae Lee: A Gesture LIfe
Chang-rae Lee says the Asian-American experience is written about "in a yellow light." Here, he turns off that light to penetrate a harsh reality.
11/4/1999 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: Handwriting
Michael Ondaatje, discussing his poetry, explores the mystery of language itself--the language of his birth, its ancient poetry and mythologies.
10/28/1999 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Paul Auster
Timbuktu (Holt)
In life, as in his metaphysical mystery novels, the elegant Paul Auster implies and evades, implies and evades -- as he does in his newest novel, featuring a talking dog.
10/21/1999 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Wayne Johnston
Wayne Johnston "The; Colony of Unrequited Dreams" (Doubleday); "The; Divine Ryans" (Anchor) In each of these novels a secret is revealed-a secret history in one, a family secret in the other. But why has this Canadian novelist, of the quality of Robertson Davies or Margaret Artwood, remained a secret to Americans?
10/14/1999 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
Sylvia Brownrigg
Sylvia Brownrigg "The; Metaphysical Touch" (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) In this novel, a romance, of sorts, is struck up via the internet. This, then, is a conversation about the creation of characters, how they reveal themselves, how they invent themselves, and what they tell us about that invisible presence, their author.
10/7/1999 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Edward Hirsch
Edward Hirsch "How; to Read a Poem: And Fall in Love with Poetry" (Harcourt Brace). Some poems are so strong that they leave permanent impressionson the reader; the poems Edward Hirsch introduces are meant to alter the soul.
9/30/1999 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Charles Simic
Jackstraws (Harcourt Brace)
Award-winning poet Charles Simic on the objects (stones, forks, dolls) that form the internal puppet theater of his imagination.
9/23/1999 • 29 minutes, 17 seconds
Ron Hansen
Ron Hansen "Hitler;?s Niece" (Harper Collins). Ron Hansen?sreconstruction of Hitler?s affair with Geli Raubal gives us a glimpse of acreepy, hypothetical menage ---rois: the novelist in bed with innocence andmonstrosity.
9/16/1999 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Susan Minot
Susan Minot "Evening;" (Knopf). The past recaptured! Susan Minot haswritten a swoony, lyrical novel about loss. We talk about that rare thing: aromantic novel that is literary (and close to perfection).
9/9/1999 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Peter Matthiessen
Bone by Bone (Random House). On the culmination of his momentous trilogy, Peter Matthiessen speaks about history, fiction and the destiny of an American anti-hero.
9/2/1999 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
David St. John
The Red Leaves of Night (Harper Collins).
As David St.John's poems grow more elegant, they become more sexual and obsessive...
8/26/1999 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Annie Proulx
Close Range: Wyoming Stories (Scribner)Annie Proulx has written an ominous of Western tales -- tall tales, rodeo bragging, cowboy love stories -- profusely illustrated and emotionally dark...
8/19/1999 • 17 minutes, 20 seconds
David Foster Wallace
Brief Interviews with Hideous Men (Little, Brown)Witness the uproarious frenzy of definition when David Foster Wallace cuts loose and tries to make a straightforward statement about the hideous men (and women) in his new book.
8/12/1999 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Arthur Sze
Arthur Sze "The; Redshifting Web: Poems 1970-1998" (Copper Canyon) ArthurSze on the fascinating intersection of astrophysics and Asian metaphysics. Hiswork embodies a sense of time that is both ancient and post-modern.
8/5/1999 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Andre Dubus III
Andre Dubus III "House; of Sand and Fog" (Norton) Andre Dubus III is the son of a prize-winning Catholic author. How does the son write about the extreme conflicts of life without the resource of his father's faith?
7/29/1999 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Carolyn See
Carolyn See "The; Handyman" (Random House) Carolyn See solves the problems of love, life and art by wittily applying practicality, compassion and humor. In her new book, she offer what every woman needs: a handyman.
7/22/1999 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Lorrie Moore
Lorrie Moore "Birds; of America" (Knopf) Lorrie Moore shows how her short stories compare with the ballads of Tin Pan Alley. That is: how do you give misery and lovesickness the bounce of a popular tune?
7/15/1999 • 29 minutes, 3 seconds
Salman Rushdie: The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Part II
Part II of a two-part interview. An epic love story? From Salman Rushdie?! How and why Rushdie, the great cynic, surmounts the worn conventions of boy-meets-girl.
7/8/1999 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Salman Rushdie: The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Part I
Gods and goddesses-from those of Greece and India, to the media pantheon of Rock and Roll-underlie The Ground Beneath Her Feet. Salman Rushdie on the uses of myth. (Part I of a two-part interview. )
7/1/1999 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Nathan Englander
Nathan Englander "For; the Relief of Unbearable Urges" (Knopf)Jewish-American fiction takes a riveting new direction in the work ofNathan Englander, who was brought up Hasidic on Long Island. Thetwenty-nine year old writer breaks your heart when he reads from his story"The; Tumblers."
6/24/1999 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Steven Watson
Steven Watson "Prepare; for Saints: Gertrude Stein, Virgil Thomson and the Mainstreaming of American Modernism" (Random House) "Four; Saints inThree Acts" by Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson was a modernistsneak-attack, the result of cunning and deliberation. Here's how they did it.
6/17/1999 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Sue Miller
Sue Miller "While; I Was Gone" (Knopf) Sue Miller's new novel has an odd morality ? could it be that generations of preachers have influencedher thought?
6/10/1999 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Alex Garland
Alex Garland "The; Tesseract" (Riverhead) In this unusual interview, the popular young English novelist (The Beach) presents the secret purpose of his work: a closely reasoned defense of atheism.
6/3/1999 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Lois Ann Yamanaka
Heads by Harry
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Asian-American Lois-Ann Yamanaka evokes the melding of native traditions with tourist pop culture that characterized her Hawaiian childhood.
5/27/1999 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Ian McEwan
Amsterdam
(Doubleday)
Articulate and sinister Booker Prize-winner Ian McEwan discusses the role of pathology (and that poet of pathology, Sigmund Freud) in his work.
5/20/1999 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Thom Jones
Thom Jones "Sonny; Liston Was a Friend of Mine" (Little Brown) Thom Jones, famous for his short stories, brings his trademark dementia and wooziness to a discussion of his own writing.
5/13/1999 • 29 minutes, 18 seconds
David Remnick and Mary F. Corey: Through a Monocle
Social historian Mary F. Corey joins David Remnic, the new editor of the New Yorker, for a look at the world as it was projected by this influential magazine in the 1950's.
Through a Monocle: The New Yorker at Mid-Century (Harvard). A social historian joins the new editor of the New Yorker for a look at the world as it was projected by this influential magazine in the 1950's.
5/6/1999 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Curtis White
Memories of My Father Watching TV (Dalkey Archive)
This novel describes a man who remembers his father mostly through the TV shows they watched together...
4/29/1999 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Marina Warner
Marina Warner "No; Go the Bogeyman" (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) The dark side of fairy tales. A conversation about the cultural persistence of the threateners of children, ogres, cannibals, vampires and kidnapers-with a special guest appearance by Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
4/22/1999 • 29 minutes, 17 seconds
Harry Mathews
Harry Mathews "Oulipo; Compendium" (Atlas) Poet-novelist Harry Mathews discusses a unique literary movement and shows how strong emotion can penetrate even the most whimsical and arbitrary forms.
4/15/1999 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Bret Easton Ellis
Bret Easton Ellis "Glamorama;" (Knopf) He has been rejected by critics and reviled by Gen X, yet Bret Easton Ellis reaches to the core of an eerie American phenomenon: the postmodern fusion of terror and irony.
4/8/1999 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Mitch Sisskind
Mitch Sisskind "Divine; Deception: The Inner Gender of Gender" (Earl University Press) A maverick scholar unravels the secret hoaxes that have masked the sexuality of many authors of Western Literature-from the Bible to the internet.
4/1/1999 • 30 minutes, 1 second
Nuruddin Farah
Nuruddin Farah "Secrets;" (Arcade) An extraordinary conversation about the Somali author's language and family. The sounds of a mother's speech patterns initiate a web of recollection-magic realism from a deep, personal wellspring.
3/25/1999 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Kevin Killian
Kevin Killian "Poet; Be Like God: Jack Spicer and the San Francisco Renaissance" (Wesleyan/New England) Jack Spicer was the maddest, loneliest and most inspired poet on the Berkeley arts scene. His biographer makes sense of Spicer's techniques for rearranging the senses.
3/18/1999 • 29 minutes, 18 seconds
Irvine Welsh
Irvine Welsh "Filth;" (Norton) From anarchism (Trainspotting) to fascism (Filth): Irvine Welsh on his gallery of outsiders.
3/11/1999 • 29 minutes, 6 seconds
T. C. Boyle
T.C. Boyle Stories
(Viking)
T.C. Boyle describes the styles and attitudes that have earned him a trademark in the writing of short stories.
3/4/1999 • 17 minutes, 33 seconds
A. L. Kennedy
A. L. Kennedy "Original; Sin" (Knopf) The first American publication ofthis lively and quirky member of the new Scottish renaissance. Talk aboutthe war between the sexes! Better yet, talk about a powerful new voice.
2/25/1999 • 29 minutes, 18 seconds
Tom Stoppard and Marc Norman: Shakespeare in Love
Re-imagining Shakespeare's life as a high-flying farce in Shakespeare in Love. We talk about gender, comedic structure and challenge of putting Shakespeare on the screen.
2/18/1999 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
David Remnick: King of the World
The new editor of the New Yorker on the techniques of the profile. How does one journalist master sports writing for his book on Ali, having won a Pulitzer for his anatomy of the new Russia?
2/11/1999 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Tom Wolfe
A Man in Full (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
As a New Journalist, Tom Wolfe infiltrated sub-cultures: the Merry Pranksters,U.S. Astronauts, New York painters. In his novels, he aims for the bigpicture -- the whole cultural machine...
2/4/1999 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Cathleen Schine
Cathleen Schine "The; Evolution of Jane" (Holt) A comedy of manners turns into a nightmare of subjectivity. Cathleen Schine on moving from third-to-first person narration-that is, from manners to madness.
1/14/1999 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Mark Richard: Charity
Charity (Doubleday)
An extended metaphor describes Mark Richard's fiction: the world as a charity ward where the deformed, the anguished and the damned seek rescue--or is it redemption?
1/7/1999 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Howard Norman
The Museum Guard
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Howard Norman has won awards for his extraordinary, quiet fiction, but he has rarely discussed its meanings...
12/24/1998 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Dodie Bellamy
The Letters of Mina Hacher (Hard Press)
Post-modern feminism! Deconstructed Gothic horror! A character from Bram Stoker's Dracula meets the San Francisco literary scene...
12/17/1998 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Andrea Barrett
Andrea Barrett, author of The Voyage of the Narwhal (Norton). An Arctic expedition provides the setting for a confrontation between a reticent man of science and a raging egoist.
12/10/1998 • 6 minutes, 42 seconds
Michael Byers
Michael Byers, author of The Coast of Good Intentions (Houghton Mifflin). This young short-story writer makes a really impressive debut. A look at his landscape (Washington state's coastline) and his influences ("steal; from the best").
12/3/1998 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
A Month of Milosz: Old Age and Influence
This month, at 87, Czeslaw Milosz sees the publication of his newest book, A Roadside Dog. (Part four of four)
11/24/1998 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
A Month of Milosz: Post-War
The Captive Mind and the move to California. (Part three of four)
11/19/1998 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
A Month of Milosz: Young Adulthood
Genocide, war and the destruction of his homeland bring a dark vision into Czeslaw Milosz's poetry. (Part two of four)
11/12/1998 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
A Month of Milosz: Introduction and Childhood
Nobel Laureate Czeslaw Milosz's memories of childhood make for a poetry of ecstasy and initiation. (Part one of four)
11/5/1998 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Karen Elizabeth Gordon
Karen Elizabeth Gordon, author of Torn Wings and Faux Pas (Pantheon) . The uniquely crazy lexicographer discusses her fairy-tale dictionary-explosion novels.
10/29/1998 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Toni Morrison
In this exclusive interview on the subject of her classic novel Beloved (Knopf), Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison discusses areas of the writer's imagination that can't be captured by the film.
10/22/1998 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Kenward Elmslie
Kenward Elmslie, author of Routine Disruptions (Coffee House Press). Finally--a collection of poems that ranges across wizard-poet Elmslie's career. Be sure to hear "Girl; Machine" -- an entire Busby Berkeley musical in a single poem. Hands down, Bookworm's favorite living American poet.
10/15/1998 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
Peter Hedges
Peter Hedges, author of An Ocean in Iowa (Hyperion). The author of What's Eating Gilbert Grape has written a new novel of childhood angst. Hedges explores his access to childhood memories and the difficulties of being a minister's son.
10/8/1998 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Ann Beattie: Park City
A selection of stories--classic and new--by Ann Beattie, a woman who changed the emotional color of American fiction...
10/1/1998 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Lydia Davis
Almost No Memory (Ecco)
Lydia Davis, the author of peculiar miniature prose pieces reads and discusses her explorations of the space between the intellect and the physical world.
9/24/1998 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Daniel Menaker
Daniel Menaker, author of The Treatment (Knopf). Daniel Menaker on his comedy of morals. It's a New York novel with all the trimmings: psychoanalysis, prep schools and the death of the New York intellectual way of life.
9/17/1998 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Jane Smiley
The All-True Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton (Knopf).
Just one of the implications in this historical novel is that women disciplined their slaves more harshly than did male slave-owners. How has the author come to this conclusion? Jane Smiley on writer's intuition.
9/10/1998 • 29 minutes, 2 seconds
Nicholson Baker
The Everlasting Story of Nory (Random House)
The secret of Nicholson Baker's newest novel (a collaboration with his pre-adolescent daughter) is revealed in this interview taped before a live audience.
9/3/1998 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Rose Tremaine
Rose Tremaine, author of The Way I Found Her (Farrar, Straus & Giroux). An English schoolboy's infatuation with a mysterious older Russian novelist is charted in a novel whose tone shifts from coming-of-age enchantment to uneasy sexual guilt.
8/27/1998 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
John Irving: A Widow for One Year
John Irving speaks about loss--of marriage, children, parents, love, and explores his work's greatest paradox.
8/20/1998 • 30 minutes, 6 seconds
Richard Price
Richard Price, author of Freedomland (Broadway). A high-wire thriller for the peak of the summer. Richard Price brings wild style and dare-devil, Lenny Bruce-like riffs to his urban nightmares. It's a best-seller even an aesthete can love.
8/13/1998 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Norman Mailer
The Time of Our Time
(Random House)
Some of the greatest prose highs of this American century are found in this vast anthology by Norman Mailer.
8/6/1998 • 30 minutes, 1 second
C. S. Godshalk
C. S. Godshalk, author of Kalimantaan (Holt). A startling first novel, set in Borneo, about the wars between order and nature. While the author claims the book is about love, this interview shows it to be equally about disappointment and loss.
7/30/1998 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Mark Doty
Mark Doty, author of Sweet Machine (Harper Flamingo). Mark Doty reveals why his mandarin poetry is becoming, well, sleazier.
7/23/1998 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Jane DeLynn
Jane DeLynn, author of Bad Sex Is Good (Painted Leaf Press). The urbane Jane DeLynn discourses on the difficulty of everything--from sex to simply breathing.
7/16/1998 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Robert Stone
Damascus Gate
(Houghton Mifflin).
Robert Stone explores the underlying holiness of all faith--from the fanatic's to the mystic's, from the con-man's to the addict's...
7/9/1998 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Dorothy Allison
Dorothy Allison, author of Cavedweller (Dutton). Dorothy Allison's arrival as a significant voice in mainstream American fiction provokes questions of identity and the limits of truthfulness. How far can she go?
7/2/1998 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Timothy O'Grady
Timothy O'Grady author of I Could Read the Sky (Harvill). A collaborative novel consisting of prose by Tim O'Grady and photographs by Steve Pike, I Could Read the Sky is a devastating account of the lives of Irish workers in England. O'Grady explores his own uprooted nature and how he discovered his "voice.;"
6/25/1998 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Stephen Kessler
A Tribute to Julio Cort---r. Stephen Kessler, the translator of Save Twilight (City Lights), the first volume of Cort---r's poetry to appear in English, discusses the great South American fabulist--his life, his lunacy, his politics, his surrealism, and his cat.
6/18/1998 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Russell Banks: Cloudsplitter
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The fictionalized life of abolitionist Frederick Douglass is
the jumping-off point for a conversation about the white writer's contribution
to a discussion of race....
6/11/1998 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Gore Vidal
The Smithsonian Institution
(Random House)
The urbane Gore Vidal on the emotional center of his newest "invention"...
5/28/1998 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Aharon Appelfeld
Aharon Appelfeld, author of The Iron Tracks (Schocken). The Israeli writer reveals the story behind the writing of his newest novel, a fable about the life of a concentration camp survivor who obsessively revisits the scenes of his imprisonment.
5/21/1998 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Alice McDermott: Charming Billy
Alice McDermott's prose captures the suburban Irish-American family. How does her dense, constricted, complex writing-style reflect the lives of these everyday folk?
5/14/1998 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Jim Crase
Jim Crase, author of Quarantine (Farrar, Straus & Giroux). This novel of faith by an atheist follows Jesus through his forty-day fast in the desert. It is a rare accomplishment--a realistic novel about a miracle worker, a farce about devotion.
5/7/1998 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Martin Amis: Night Train
Night Train
(Crown)
Suicide is the solution to the mystery in Martin Amis' noir thriller with existentialist undercurrents.
4/30/1998 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Helen Vendler
The Given and the Made, The Breaking of Style, Soul Says (Harvard) How does a poet change styles? What turns an autobiographical incident into a poem? Helen Vendler on some of the basic issues of modern poetry.
4/23/1998 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Maureen Howard
Maureen Howard, author of A Lover's Almanac (Viking). The latest from Maureen Howard's over-loaded "data; base" is a new novel about love--and biology, art, destiny, astrology, process, history.
4/16/1998 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
David Malouf
David Malouf, author of Conversations at Curlow Creek (Vintage). The award-winning Australian writer searches for a lost child--a search that has mysteriously occupied Malouf for his entire writing life.
4/9/1998 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Amos Oz
Amos Oz, author of Panther in the Basement (Harcourt Brace), reminisces about Israel on the eve of its independence: a portrait of the author as book-loving adolescent.
4/2/1998 • 30 minutes, 4 seconds
Robert Olen Butler
Robert Olen Butler The Deep Green Sea (Holt) In this obsessional erotic fantasy about cross-cultural incest, Butler displays the full range of his fictional themes--but does his mythomania bear any relation to truth?
3/26/1998 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Jonathan Coe: The House of Sleep
Jonathan Coe, a young English writer, has the temperament of a dark, experimental, comic novelist, but he chooses to stay within certain acceptable conventions. A conversation about safety and risk.
3/19/1998 • 29 minutes, 15 seconds
Arthur Golden
Arthur Golden Memoirs of a Geisha (Knopf) A Harvard-educated man writes the fictional life of a famous courtesan. A Westerner reveals the secrets of Asia. How does a writer assume the authority to transcend gender and culture?
3/12/1998 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
George Plimpton
George Plimpton Truman Capote (Doubleday) Plimpton, the founding father of the modern literary interview and for years the editor of The Paris Review, talks about the nature of the literary interview and the art of biography.
3/5/1998 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Miroslav Holub
Miroslav Holub Shedding Life (Milkweed) The renowned Czech poet and immunologist explores the border between art and science, questions the beloved tenets of humanists--and reveals his own latent tenderness.
2/26/1998 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
Tess Gallagher
Tess Gallagher At the Owl Woman Saloon (Scribner) Tess Gallagher reveals her "witching;" techniques that transform talk into literary language. She also speaks candidly about her relationship with Raymond Carver and explains how each influenced the other's work.
2/19/1998 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
David Grossman
David Grossman The Zig Zag Kid (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) The Israeli writer tells the story of how a book written for his son's coming-of-age became a cross-over hit--an adult best-seller in Israel.
2/12/1998 • 29 minutes, 12 seconds
A. S. Byatt
The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye (Random House)Why do adults need fairy tales? What is, at its essence, the heart of a story? The answers appear as international wise-woman A. S. Byatt unravels the "fairy stories for adults" in her most-recent book.
2/5/1998 • 17 minutes, 40 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Man Crazy
An unusually revealing conversation about female masochism and creativity: Oates on the harrowing of the flesh, penitence and salvation.
1/29/1998 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Art Spiegelman
Open Me...I'm a Dog (Harper Collins)In this discussion of a "mind trip" for children, Art Spiegelman reads from his new children's book--with running commentary from the Bookworm.
1/22/1998 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Don DeLillo: Underworld
The infrequently interviewed Don DeLillo discusses his epic novel, Underworld, particularly the movement toward sincerity and simplicity that characterizes the book's climactic chapters.
1/15/1998 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Jamaica Kincaid: My Brother
A close look at the waves of passion and neutrality that comprise the style of this elegy on the death of Jamaica Kincaid's brother.
1/8/1998 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Deborah Eisenberg
All Around Atlantis
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
This unusual writer, who takes a full year to complete each story, has completed seven -- enough to fill her third book.
12/29/1997 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Harold Brodkey Part 2
The Runaway SoulTwo interviews: Brodkey discuses life, literature and his new novel.
12/27/1997 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Edmund White: The Farewell Symphony
This final book of Edmund White's trilogy about gay life in New York provides gossip, tragedy and, of course, brilliant writing.
12/11/1997 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Cal Bedient
Cal Bedient, Candy Necklace (Wesleyan) This book, the poet's first, comes as the culmination of years of criticism and teaching. Here, an in-depth discussion of one poem leads to a conversation about modernism, metaphor and madness.
12/4/1997 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Jim Krusoe
Blood Lake (Boaz)Jim Krusoe's stories locate us between an episodic and choppy daily life and an interior world of unimaginably constant anxiety. How does this acrobat of comedy and anguish maintain his balance?
11/20/1997 • 29 minutes, 18 seconds
Susan Straight
The Gettin'Place (Anchor)Susan Straight, chronicler of the underclass, can be counted on for rich character delineation and lots of atmosphere. In The Gettin Place, She faces the demands of a complex plot. Can she tell a story?
11/13/1997 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Helen Vendler
Helen Vendler The Art of Shakespeare's Sonnets (Harvard) Surprising and accessible, Vendler, one of America's most respected critics, separates the lovelorn Shakespeare who appears in the sonnets from the masterful poet who wrote them.
11/6/1997 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
Mona Simpson
A Regular Guy (Vintage)
The search for family in Mona Simpson's novels is nearly a sacred quest...
10/30/1997 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Arundhati Roy
The God of Small Things (Random House) Arundhati Roy talks about the price of success in India's literary circles - and about the "small; things" that compensate for disaster.
10/23/1997 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Michelle Huneven
Round Rock (Knopf) Michelle Huneven brings the worldly realism of John Steinbeck up to date in a new novel: a story of growth, compassion and knowledge.
10/16/1997 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Brian Hall
The Saskiad (Houghton Mifflin) Brian Hall, the author of one of the great novels of adolescence, speaks about the sexual awakening of his narrator.
10/9/1997 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Alain de Botton
How Proust Can Change Your Life: Not A Novel (Pantheon) The "Stendhal; of the dating scene" Alain de Botton talks about French literature, the virtues of moderation - and happiness.
10/2/1997 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Ron Padgett: New & Selected Poems
Poet Ron Padgett discusses his selected poems.
9/25/1997 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Steve Erickson: Amnesiascope and American Nomad
Steve Erickson's novels dramatize the disintegration of the American dream, using a prose style that is itself dreamlike.
9/18/1997 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Caryl Phillips
The Nature of Blood (Knopf) In her latest novel, Caryl Phillips contrasts slavery and genocide in the lives of Jews and Africans over several centuries. A discussion about the parallel history of prejudice.
9/11/1997 • 28 minutes, 58 seconds
Dennis Cooper
Guide (Grove). With an aesthetic reflective of hallucinogenic disorientation and the sensory overload of rock and roll, Dennis Cooper talks about the transformation of chaos into art.
9/4/1997 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Robert Antoni
Blessed Is the Fruit (Holt) Robert Antoni, the Caribbean novelist on place, aesthetics and gender, plus a spellbinding reading from his novel.
8/28/1997 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Alice Walker
Anything We Love Can Be Saved: A Writer's Activism (Random House)
The ever-provocative Alice Walker discusses the nature of a writer's social responsibilities.
8/21/1997 • 16 minutes, 38 seconds
Frederic Tuten
Van Gogh's Bad Cafe (Morrow) Frederic Tuten, the author of Adventures of Chairman Mao on the Long March talks about his Pop Art novel of the sixties and the history of the Art novel through the nineties.
8/14/1997 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Anne Carson
Plain Water (Knopf); Glass, Irony and God (New Directions)
A truly intimate interview about the value of intelligence in the face of passion. Canadian poet Anne Carson has found a new boundary for poetry to explore.
8/7/1997 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Rick Moody: Purple America
Nuclear energy, nuclear family: does the metaphor of fission apply equally to both? Rick Moody on the disintegration of values and the reintegration of fiction.
7/31/1997 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Whitney Otto
The Passion Dream Book (Harper Collins) Whitney Otto, author of How to Make an American Quilt, discusses her new novel and the competing demands of family life and art.
7/24/1997 • 29 minutes, 58 seconds
Cees Nooteboom
Roads to Santiago
(Harcourt, Brace)
The European award-winning novelist Cees Nooteboom explores the metaphysics of travel...
7/17/1997 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Norman Mailer
The Gospel According to the Son (Random House)
Norman Mailer reads "Lazarus Raised from the Dead" and discusses his version of The New Testament as told by Jesus himself.
7/10/1997 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
E. L. Doctorow
Ragtime (Plume)We look back on E.L. Doctorow's Ragtime, its publication, its structure, its long-lasting surprises and its most recent transformation--as a work of musical theater.
7/3/1997 • 29 minutes, 17 seconds
Amy Bloom
Amy Bloom Love Invents Us (Random House)Amy Bloom, a therapist by profession, candidly discusses her popular short stories and the challenges of writing her first novel.
6/26/1997 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Kenward Elmslie
Kenward Elmslie Postcards on Parade (Bamberger Books) Elmslie is our singing poet. Here, the New York School icon rummages through his song book and comes up with everything from country western anthems to surreal dramatic playlets with musical backgrounds.
6/19/1997 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Robert Stone
Bear and His Daughter
(Houghton Mifflin)
These collected stories by Robert Stone anticipated developments in American fiction by at least a decade...
6/12/1997 • 30 minutes, 7 seconds
Orhan Pamuk
The New Life (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk's imagination evokes the powerful lure of fairy tales. His books bring the magic of childhood reading into the sphere of adult disenchantment.
6/5/1997 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Vikram Chandra
Vikram Chandra Love and Longing in Bombay (Little, Brown) The Gods, virtues and storytelling of traditional Hindu culture are at the heart of the stories in Vikram Chandra's new book--and are the focus of this conversation about Indian writing and its audience.
5/29/1997 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Mark Twain
Mark Twain The Oxford Mark Twain (Oxford University Press) In honor of the publication of a twenty-nine volume set of Twain, Leslie Fiedler, Charles Johnson and the set's editor, Shelley Fisher Fishkin join in a roundtable celebration of the American Shakespeare.
5/22/1997 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
David Foster Wallace: A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again
On a luxury cruise or at a state fair, David Foster Wallace is an ideal reporter on the disintegration of the Actual.
5/15/1997 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Literary Presses
Literary Presses Serious literature faces a double crisis: the disappearance of funding and the indifference of mainstream publishing. A coalition of literary presses springs to the rescue!
5/8/1997 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Alan Warner
Alan Warner Morvern Caller (Anchor) A member of the New Scottish Renaissance talks about the literary nature of the movement, as opposed to the drugs, the raves and the trainspotting reported in the media.
5/1/1997 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Francine Prose: Guided Tours of Hell
Francine Prose began her career in the magical-realist mode. Now her books are
cynical and dark. In Guided Tours of Hell she tells why.
4/24/1997 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Diane Johnson
Le Divorce
(Dutton)
In this satire of American behavior abroad, Diane Johnson exhibits a lethal distaste for innocence.
4/17/1997 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Mitch Sisskind
Closing the Circle A show about an implausible miracle -- a link between art and commerce. Closing the Circle is an Oulipean tale of air travel. With funds earned by the book, Mitch Sisskind is developing a radio station devoted entirely to literature.
4/3/1997 • 29 minutes, 9 seconds
Melanie Rae Thon
Melanie Rae Thon First, Body (Houghton Mifflin) Thon has been chosen as one of the top American writers under forty. A discussion of her stories as a confluence of realistic prose and expressionistic poetry.
3/27/1997 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Jamaica Kincaid: The Autobiography of My Mother
Jamaica Kincaid, who grew up in poverty on Antigua, discusses the cultural contradictions of late capitalism and her ambivalent acceptance of American wealth.
3/20/1997 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Margaret Atwood: Alias Grace
The servant-girl novel, that staple of Victorian fiction, is reinvented by Atwood in her most compelling novel to date, "Alias Grace."
3/13/1997 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
John Edgar Wideman
The Cattle Killings (Houghton Mifflin) As a writer, John Edgar Wideman finds himself at the intersection of African-American experience and High Modernist experimentation. A talk about ethnicity and the avant-garde.
3/6/1997 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Lee Smith
The Christmas Letters (Algonquin) Lee Smith actively loves her characters; her warmth towards them drives their stories. A conversation about fiction writing as a natural activity-- with roots in childhood, family gossip and country music.
2/20/1997 • 30 minutes, 4 seconds
Tobias Wolf
The Night in Question (Knopf)
Tobias Wolff on the ethical questions that animate the dramatic heart of his stories. An intense analysis of fiction's relation to truth.
2/13/1997 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Michael Ondaatje: The English Patient
Man Booker-Prize winner Michael Ondaatje seems to be one of the very few writers who appreciates the screen adaptation of his work...
2/6/1997 • 16 minutes, 14 seconds
Michael Lally
Michael Lally Can't Be Wrong (Coffee House Press) Michael Lally--part Frank Sinatra, part William Saroyan--is an auditory seducer. This poet will leave you panting.
1/30/1997 • 29 minutes, 10 seconds
Robert Olen Butler
Robert Olen Butler Tabloid Dreams (Holt) The characters from supermarket tabloids reveal their inner truths in Pulitzer Prize-winner Butler's poetic stories..
1/23/1997 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Elena Poniatowska
Elena Poniatowska Tinisima (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) Mexico's "premiere; woman of letters" on Tina Modotti--photographer, model, revolutionary--the subject of this biographical novel.
1/16/1997 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Paul Theroux
Paul Theroux My Other Life (Houghton Mifflin) This autobiography is a supernatural story in disguise--hear Paul Theroux's Dr. Jekyll explain the demonic nature of Paul Theroux's Mr. Hyde.
1/9/1997 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Brad Gooch: The Golden Age of Promiscuity
Brad Gooch reveals the structure of the heroic quest that underlies this misunderstood and frequently reviled novel.
12/26/1996 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
Junot Diaz: Drown
Junot Diaz's stories render the young-immigrant experience in harsh, unforgettable rhythms. Here he discusses the art of telling the truth.
12/19/1996 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Sigrid Nunez
Naked Sleeper (Harper Collins)
Sigrid Nunez on gender and narrative strategy, the sub-genre known as the "woman's weepie."
12/12/1996 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Frank McCourt
Frank McCourt Angela's Ashes (Scribner) Memories have becomes trendy, but Frank McCourt's emotional masterpiece bucks the trend. A conversation about how this powerful work -- comprised of comedy and pain, told in the beautifully sustained tones of an Irish tenor -- finally came to be.
12/5/1996 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Joan Didion
The Last Thing He Wanted (Knopf)
Part II of a special two-part interview with a novelist whose works have defined the essences of American places (Los Angeles, Miami, New York)
and times (the sixties, the seventies, the eighties).
11/21/1996 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Joan Didion
The Last Thing He Wanted (Knopf)Part I of a special two-part interview with a novelist whose works have defined the essences of American places (Los Angeles, Miami, New York) and times (the sixties, the seventies, the eighties). Topics include the influences of T.S. Eliot, Joseph Conrad, Ernest Hemingway, and her contemporary, Joyce Carol Oates, the nature of resonance and the role of accident and intuition in the writing of novels.
11/14/1996 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Ellen Brodkey
Ellen Brodkey This Wild Darkness: The Story of My Death by Harold Brodkey (Metropolitan Books) Ellen Brodkey, widow and editor, joins Bookworm in a memorial to the life and death of American writer Harold Brodkey on the occasion of the publication of his AIDS journal.
11/7/1996 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
E. Annie Proulx
Accordion Crimes (Scribner)In her newest book, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Annie Proulx presents an historical cavalcade: her vision of the violence that has been perpetuated against emergingminority cultures.
10/31/1996 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Thom Jones
Thom Jones Cold Snap (Little Brown) More than a decade passed between the author's stint at the Iowa Writers' Workshop and the publication of his first book. How does a writer endure the hard times?.
10/24/1996 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Lucille Clifton
Lucille Clifton The Terrible Stories (BOA Editions) Her influences, inclinaiton toward short poems and decision to tell "the; terrible stories" are discussed by the poet.
10/17/1996 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Terry Tempest Williams
From Idea to Publication: Nature Writing Today A panel discussion with author Terry Tempest Williams, Refuge (Ecco); Orion Magazine editor George Russell; and literary agent Elizabeth Grossman.
10/10/1996 • 30 minutes, 37 seconds
Richard Shelton
Going Back to Bisbee Richard Shelton (University of Arizona Press) The winner of the Western States Book Award for creative non-fiction discusses his memoir of the desert of the American Southwest.
10/3/1996 • 28 minutes, 55 seconds
Robert Michael Pyle
Nature and Childhood Robert Michael Pyle The Thunder Tree (Houghton Mifflin) and Scott Russell Sanders Writing from the Center (Indiana University Press) The writers discuss how adult mentors affect a child's attitude toward the natural world and how writing penetrates one's inner wilderness--the wilderness of imagination.
9/19/1996 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Robert Hass
What is Nature Literacty? Robert Hass Sun Under Wood (Ecco)David Abram The Spell of the Senuous (Pantheon)Alison Hawthorne Deming Science and Other Poems (Louisiana State University Press) Has literacy alienated us from nature? If written language is the cause of separation, can nature-writing provide a way to re-connect? The panelists strive to answer those questions, exploring early oral cultures and the development of the written alphabet.
9/12/1996 • 28 minutes, 57 seconds
Barry Lopez
Barry Lopez Field Notes (Avon) Can nature-writing heal the rift between civilzation and nature? Does activism disturb the making of art? National Book Award winner Lopez discusses the cultural tradition of nature writing.
9/5/1996 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Reynolds Price
Reynolds Price Three Gospels (Scribners)On the harshness of faith and the rigors of translation: To most people, the Gospels have the mellifluous sound of the King James version. Novelist Reynolds Price translates two of the Gospels from the original Greek, and the results are startling.
8/29/1996 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Richard Ford
A summit conference on Richard Ford's Pulitzer Prize-winning Independence Day, said to be full of arrogance and irony, is actually about compromise and sincerity.
8/8/1996 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Robert Bly
Robert Bly The Sibling Society (Addison Wesley)The relationship between interpretation and story-telling stands, in this conversation,for the relationships between meaning and action, old and young, responsibility and shallowness.
8/1/1996 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Grace Paley
Grace Paley The Collected Stories (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) The invaluable, funny, mischief-makerGrace Paley speaks of Jews, men, politics, children and the voices that have entered her permanent, memorable stories.
7/18/1996 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Barbara Guest
Barbara Guest Selected Poems; Fair Realism (Sun & Moon) "What; is Truth?" is the central questionof Modern Poetry. Barbara Guest approaches that question delicately, wittily and unpretentiously.
7/11/1996 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
David Shields: Remote
Remote (Knopf)
6/27/1996 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Nicholson Baker
The Size of Thoughts: Essays and Other Lumber (Random House)
6/20/1996 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Duff Brenna and Jennifer Egan
Duff Brenna: The Holy Book of the Beard and Jennifer Egan: Emerald City and Other Stories
6/13/1996 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Jane Smiley
Moo (Ballantine)
6/6/1996 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Hans Magnus Enzenberger
Hans Magnus Enzenberger Civil Wars (The New Press) The eminent German poet and culture critic explores the future of literacy and literary culture. A spiky new Asian-American voice tells de-centered tales of Honolulu pop culture.
5/30/1996 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Zamora Zinmark
Zamora Zinmark Rolling the R's (Kaya Production) A spiky new Asian-American voice tells de-centered tales of Honolulu pop culture.
5/23/1996 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Yellow Bay Workshop
Yellow Bay Writer's Workshop Bill Kitteredge and Annick Smicth, the founding directors of the Yellow Bay Writer's Workshop in Montana, tell about what goes on at one of the most spirited summer writing workshops in America.
5/16/1996 • 28 minutes, 54 seconds
Mark Doty
Mark Doty Heaven's Coast, Atlantis (Harper Collins) Poet Mark Doty's memoir is an expression of grief over his lover's death. How do prose and poetry compare as vehicles for emotion?
5/2/1996 • 28 minutes, 54 seconds
William Kittredge
Who Owns the West? William Kittredge, the big-hearted, grouchy guru of the literary non-fiction movement, talks about the American West and good writing.
4/25/1996 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Ron Hansen
Atticus Ron Hansen has written a noir novel with theological underpinnings. Is the moral novelist a moral man?
4/18/1996 • 29 minutes, 1 second
David Foster Wallace: Infinite Jest
David Foster Wallace has written the ultimate mega-meta novel, a 1078-page whopper. The surprise is that this mind-stunner may capture the imagination of a new generation of readers.
4/11/1996 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Jeff Noon
Pollen Adventures in cyberspace. A first--Bookworm goes sci.fi. with the author of Vurt! Is there a boundary between science fiction and literature?
4/4/1996 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Robert Hass
Human Wishes After an analysis of the role that pleasure and pain play in his poetry, our poet laureate discusses contemporary literary criticism.
3/30/1996 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Alan Lightman
Good Benito; Einstein's Dreams Lightman discusses loneliness: the curse of the scientist and the rest of us, as well.
3/23/1996 • 27 minutes, 8 seconds
Dale Peck
The Law of Enclosures A discussion about the strategies of structure--how Peck disassembles chronology to tell the story of an unhappy marriage.
3/16/1996 • 28 minutes, 45 seconds
Oscar Hijuelos
Mr. Ives' Christmas
Oscar Hijuelos on the difficulty of writing a contemporary tale of faith.
3/9/1996 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Salman Rushdie: The Moor's Last Sigh
The Moor's Last Sigh
Part I: The focus is on Salman Rushdie's writing: its themes, structures, techniques and styles. The subjects include mothers, love, cartoons, James Joyce and, only occasionally, the fatwa.
Part II: Rushdie on the art of layering: the organization of the swarms of characters, stories and styles that crawl, teem and fly through The Moor's Last Sigh.
3/2/1996 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Ron Padgett and Garrett White on Blaise Cendrars
Translators Ron Padgett and Garrett White on the work of the rip-roaring, fire-snorting French poet, Blaise Cendrars.
2/24/1996 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Barry Unsworth
Morality Play History and fiction-writing. The Booker Prize winner talks about how he uses the past as a commentary on the present.
2/17/1996 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Philip Graham
How to Read an Unwritten Language Graham began by writing prose poems, graduated to short stories and has no produced a novel. It's a special sort of a novel--mystical, philosophical and respectful of the language of inanimate objects.
2/10/1996 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Jack Gilbert
The Great Fires:Poems 1982-1992The poet and adult passion: An improvisation on the nature of love, poetry's moral function and the finality of death.
1/27/1996 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Norman Mailer
Portrait of Picasso as a Young Man
Norman Mailer's examination of Picasso provokes a discussion of three Mailer obsessions: women, art and crime.
1/20/1996 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Zombie and What I Lived For
In two new novels, Joyce Carol Oates has created disturbing male narrators. How do such dark creations affect the author's life?
1/13/1996 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Amy Tan
The Hundred Secret Senses
Amy Tan, an instinctual writer, discusses the gradual steps she has taken toward mastering the craft of novel-writing.
1/9/1996 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Theodore Roszak: The Memoirs of Elizabeth Frankenstein
The politics of gender. When Theodore Roszak re-writes Mary Shelly, is he committing an act of gender aggression?
12/28/1995 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Rick Moody: The Ring of Brightest Angels around Heaven
A conversation with Rick Moody about the literary values of Generation X.
12/25/1995 • 28 minutes, 54 seconds
Kaye Gibbons
Kaye Gibbons Sights Unseen (Putnam) A child searches for its mother in three of Kaye Gibbon's novels. What is the significance of these quests?
12/18/1995 • 29 minutes, 6 seconds
Jay Gummerman
Jay Gummerman Chez Chance (Pantheon) Gummerman speaks about the lives of the disenfranchised dreamers in this, his first novel.
11/20/1995 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Mary Karr
The Liar's Club The award-winning poet discusses the structure of her autobiography. Does her poet---s ear affect the telling of a life?
11/13/1995 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Ann Beattie: Another You
Another You is Ann Beattie's richest, most-complex novel to date...
11/6/1995 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Rikki Ducornet
Phosphor in Dreamland An exploration of the underside of fantasy: its politics, psycho-sexual elements and its internal geography.
10/30/1995 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Helena Maria Viramontes
Under the Feet of Jesus Viramontes talks about the Latina writer's obligation to choose art and truth over political correctness.
10/23/1995 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Sherman Alexie
Reservation Blues The hip young novelist on his desire for fame, accessibility and rock stardom.
10/16/1995 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Stephen Dixon
Interstate An interview about emotion in fiction. Dixon discusses his Dostoyevskyan ambition to render his complex extremity of feeling about the death of a fictional child.
10/9/1995 • 29 minutes, 3 seconds
Michael Ryan
Secret Life The poet discusses the difficulties of writing accurately and artistically about his ongoing recovery from sexually obsessive behavior.
10/2/1995 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Mark Helprin
Memoir from Antproof Case
Mark Helprin on the legacy of fathers...
9/25/1995 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Peter Ackroyd
The Trial of Elizabeth Cree Penny-dreadfuls, transvestitism, the English Opium Eater, Thomas de Quincey and Grand Guignol are touched on in this conversation about the underside of the Victorian Age.
9/18/1995 • 29 minutes, 47 seconds
Richard Ford
Independence Day
In this conversation about one novelist's development, Richard Ford describes the emotional confidence he needed to complete his break-through novel.
9/11/1995 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Ana Castillo
My Father Was a Toltec The barriers of language, ethnicity, class and gender: the challenges faced by a Latina writer.
9/4/1995 • 30 minutes, 10 seconds
Betty Comden
Off Stage Betty Comden who, with Adolph Green, his written for some of the theater's great clowns--Phil Silvers, Bert Lahr, Judy Holliday, Rosalind Russell, Nancy Walker--discusses the art of the musical comedy lyric.
8/28/1995 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Russell Banks: Rule of the Bone
This novel of punk-adolescence recalls the great American coming-of-age novels. In the examination of the voice of Bank's hero, homage is paid to his literary ancestor--Huck Finn...
8/21/1995 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Norman Mailer
Oswald's Tale
Norman Mailer on the skills a novelist brings to the assembly of a historical record...
8/10/1995 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Eduardo Galeano
(Getty Series) Galeano discusses journalism, testimony, folklore and history-writing. He shows how each reveals a facet of the life of the writer-revolutionary.
8/7/1995 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Anchee Min
(Getty Series) The author talks about the aftermath of the Cultural Revolution and her quest to discover a way to write truthfully about Mao's China.
7/31/1995 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Greg Sarris & Dorothy Allison
(Getty Series) A conversation about "Them;" and "Us.;" Allison and Sarris talk about illegitimacy and the status of the "outsider;" in both American culture and autobiographical writing.
7/24/1995 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Isabel Allende
History, imagination and memory: Allende states that she does not make a distinction between reality and imagination and then discusses their fusion in her work. (Getty Series)
7/17/1995 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Quincy Troupe
(Getty Series)Troupe, who co-authored the controversial, award-winning autobiography of Miles Davis, speaks about the process of inhabiting another person's memories. He explores music as a structuring principle of memory and reveals the musical origins of his own poetry.
7/10/1995 • 28 minutes, 54 seconds
Sandra Cisneros
(Getty Series) Cisneros describes an autobiographical childhood incident and demonstrates how she transformed it into her most popular short story, "Eleven.;"
7/3/1995 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
A. S. Byatt
The Matisse Stories
Author A.S. Byatt defends art-for-art's-sake against the incursions of multi-cultural politics.
6/26/1995 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Carolyn See
Dreaming A nuts-and-bolts conversation about truth-telling and family history.
6/19/1995 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Bradford Morrow
Trinity Fields A conversation about secrets--political, personal and spiritual--and how they drive a story.
6/12/1995 • 29 minutes, 11 seconds
Michael Chabon
Wonder Boys
Young Michael Chabon discusses his feelings about the blocked, frustrated writers and editors who people his new novel...
5/29/1995 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Mary Woronov & Ronald Tavel
After Warhol: Two survivors of the original Warhol Underground Films (Chelsea Girls, Vinyl, Kitchenette, etc.) discuss artistic life after Andy.
5/22/1995 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Steve Dickison
(marketing manager of Small Press Distribution) How to find out about the vibrant writers emerging today? How to find their books? A conversation with someone who knows the answers--about small presses and how they fit into the current book-selling scene.
5/15/1995 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
David Bowman
Let the Dog Drive The author's indefatigable adventures drove his wild book from the obscurity of an unknown press to cult status and major-league paperback publication.
5/8/1995 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Sandra Cisneros: Loose Woman
Poetry, memory and the Chicana writer. Author Sandra Cisneros talks about identity, the sexual revolution and self-motivation.
5/1/1995 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
James Kelman
How Late It Was, How LateThe Scottish novelist whose recent book won the Booker Prize discusses current Scottish literature, the influence of the supernatural story and the fiction of the lower class.
4/24/1995 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
James Kelman
4/23/1995 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
John McPhee
Assembling California; The Ransom of Russian Art
Essayist John McPhee talks about the essay as literature.
4/17/1995 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Paul West
4/10/1995 • 29 minutes, 10 seconds
Cees Nooteboom
The Following Story
Death and metamorphosis play important roles in Cees Nooteboom's award-winning new novel...
4/3/1995 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Wilfredo Nolledo
But for the Lovers Nolledo---s long-out-of-print cult novel has been republished, provoking a conversation about literary destiny, and the complex position of a Philippine-born novelist writing in America.
3/27/1995 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Gioconda Belli
The Inhabited Woman Activism, magic realism, Pablo Neruda, incantation, politics and history in the work of Gioconda Belli.
3/20/1995 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
William H. Gass: The Tunnel
Author William H. Gass discusses the evolution and style of his thirty-years-in-the-making new novel, finally published this month.
3/13/1995 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Ian Frazier
Family In this conversation about autobiography, history and the texture of memory, the author discusses the dangers he faced in using a passionate, sincere style.
3/6/1995 • 29 minutes, 10 seconds
Thom Gunn
Collected Poems The award-winning poet reads from his work and discusses the formal structures behind his informal subject matter.
2/27/1995 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
John Gregory Dunne
Playland
(Random House)
What has happened to innocence? A discussion of power and victimization in the thrillers of John Gregory Dunne.
2/20/1995 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Art Spiegelman
The Wild Party: The Lost Classic by Joseph Moncure March (Pantheon Books)A talk -- about illustration and jazz-age poetry; political correctness and eroticism -- with the Pulitzer prize winning author of Maus.
2/13/1995 • 29 minutes, 14 seconds
John Edgar Wideman
Fatheralong The author on memory, paternity and ethnicity.
2/6/1995 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Tim O---Brien
In the Lake of the Woods An argument: Who tells the story--the politician, the novelist or the killer?
1/30/1995 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Bret Easton Ellis
The Informers Host Michael Silverblatt and author Ellis agree to avoid controversy and content, and instead discuss style, character, intention and technique.
1/23/1995 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Anne Lamott
Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life The lovable Anne Lamott reveals the techniques she uses to teach fiction to writers who are beginning to face creative and emotional blocks.
1/16/1995 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Fran Lebowitz
The Fran Lebowitz Reader On American humor: James Thurber, Robert Benchley, Dawn Powell--plus a digression on humorists who write children---s books.
1/9/1995 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Doris Lessing: Under My Skin
A discussion of autobiography: Doris Lessing on self, memory and history.
1/2/1995 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Ned Rorem
Knowing When to Stop A demanding conversation with a modern composer about setting poetry to music, featuring a love duet with text by Frank O---Hara.
12/26/1994 • 29 minutes, 1 second
Joseph Heller
Closing Time Has Yossarian sold out? Can a sequel to Catch-22 be written? How does Heller feel about the fate of his later novels?
12/19/1994 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Eileen Myles: Chelsea Girls
A conversation about personal voice, sexuality and the New York school of poetry.
12/12/1994 • 29 minutes, 7 seconds
Louis de Bernières
Corelli's Mandolin
A discussion about having it both ways: How Louis de Bernières maintains the passion of the traditional novel while exploring the complexities of post-modernism...
12/5/1994 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Benjamin Weissman
Dear Dead Person
Violence, comedy, style, the influence of modern German literature and the importance of extremity are today's subjects in our conversation with Benjamin Weissman.
11/28/1994 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Pauline Kael
For Keeps America---s greatest pop-culture critic talks about her new collection of movie reviews--a retrospective of a lifetime of passionate response.
11/21/1994 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Susan Straight
Blacker than a Thousand MidnightsStraight talks about mothering by day, writing deep into the night, and knowing enough to see into the life of a young, black father.
10/24/1994 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
Howard Norman
The Bird Artist
Howard Norman's new novel about fatal romance and aesthetic distance has surprised critics and attracted a wide audience.
10/17/1994 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Erica Jong: Fear of Fifty
The writer discusses the evolution of her style and explores the gulf between political correctness and personal behavior.
10/10/1994 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
E. L. Doctorow
The Waterworks
A discussion of the morality of mad scientists, New York history, and the evolution of the plot of E.L. Doctorow's best-selling novel.
10/3/1994 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Ron Sukenick
Doggie Bag The fictional avante garde, its present and future, discussed by one of its longest standing practitioners.
9/26/1994 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Rick Moody: The Ice Storm
Rick Moody's novel of the seventies provokes a discussion of the relationship between literary fiction and the marketplace.
9/19/1994 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Craig Nova
The Book of Dreams
Craig Nova discusses the tough guy and ---noir--- novel as points of origin for his dark investigation of the California dream.
9/12/1994 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Dennis McFarland
School for the Blind Grief, suicide and death are central to Dennis McFarland---s fiction; in this interview he examines some of the reasons why.
8/29/1994 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Aram Saroyan
Editor, The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan The late Ted Berrigan---s influence on the New York School of Poets is discussed by his friend and editor.
8/15/1994 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Carol Edgarian
Rise the Euphrates The Armenian genocide provides the background for this multi-generational first-novel.
8/8/1994 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Whitney Otto
Now You See Her Aging and its metaphors are discussed by the author of How to Make an American Quilt.
8/1/1994 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Dennis Cooper
Try
Novelist Dennis Cooper discusses the aesthetics of violence and pornography and the special syntax of Generation X.
7/25/1994 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
Jane Hirshfield
The October Palace; Women in Praise of the Sacred Devotional literature, Buddhism, and the relationship between poetry and personal theology are discussed by the poet-anthologist.
7/18/1994 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Caleb Carr
The Alienist The development of American psychology at the turn of the century is the intellectual linchpin of this popular thriller.
7/11/1994 • 29 minutes, 58 seconds
Carlos Fuentes
The Orange Tree
Noted intellectual and diplomat Carlos Fuentes explores eroticism in fiction.
6/27/1994 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Jim Harrison
6/20/1994 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Daniel Halpern
Editor, Antaeus magazine Halpern talks about the life history of a literary magazine--and his own collected poetry.
6/13/1994 • 28 minutes, 51 seconds
Valerie Martin
The Great Divorce The writer discusses her complete works, from her early interest in depression and neurosis to her current interest in metamorphosis and transformation.
6/6/1994 • 28 minutes, 16 seconds
Caryl Phillips
Crossing the River Slavery is the controlling theme in this discussion of history, family and the African-American experience.
5/30/1994 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Robert Olen Butler
They Whisper The politics of gender in fiction. Pulitzer Prize winner Butler discusses the difficulties surrounding a male writer---s creation of female desires and fantasies.
5/23/1994 • 30 minutes, 27 seconds
June Jordan
Haruko/Love Poems; Technical Difficulties The author talks about the relationship between her essays and her poetry--that is, the contradictions between political progressivism and personal truth-telling.
5/16/1994 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Louis Jones
Particles and Luck Modern science and its implications for the fiction-writer: how metaphors from physics and chemistry have shaped Louis Jones--- new novel.
5/9/1994 • 30 minutes, 7 seconds
Ethan Canin
The Palace Thief
Author Ethan Canin discusses his inclination to avoid writer's tricks as he matures in his craft...
5/2/1994 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Nicholson Baker
The FermataWriter Nicholson Baker expresses his surprise at the shock with which critics have greeted this novel, in which a young man discovers that he can stop time. Sexuality, regression, ---mobius-strip--- personality structures and infantile fantasy all play a part in the discussion.
4/25/1994 • 30 minutes, 52 seconds
Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, Part II
In the second of this two-part conversation, novelist Margaret Atwood takes relates women found in poetry, fable and religion to contemporary feminist narrative.
4/18/1994 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, Part I
Author Margaret Atwood discusses her literary origins--fairy tales and romantic literature -- and The Robber Bride in the first of this two-part conversation.
4/11/1994 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Carolyn Chute
Merry Men The author of The Beans of Egypt Maine examines her development, tracing her attitudes toward poverty, politics and the writing of fiction.
4/4/1994 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Bob Ward
King of Cards Identity-formation and adolescent rites of passage are the themes of Ward---s fast-paced novel.
3/28/1994 • 29 minutes, 30 seconds
Stephen Wright
Going Native, Part II
Author Stephen Wright talks about the influence of the Black Humorists of the 1960's on his explosive 90's breakthrough novel.
3/21/1994 • 30 minutes, 9 seconds
Stephen Wright
Going Native, Part I
Drugs, violence and cartoons--in the novel by Stephen Wright that Bookworm nominates as the best of this season.
3/14/1994 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Bharati Mukherjee
The Holder of the World A discussion of multiculturalism, patriarchal literature and formal experimentation.
3/7/1994 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Paul Kafka and David Matlin
Love Enter; How the Night is Divided Two first-novelists discuss their first publications.
2/28/1994 • 28 minutes, 53 seconds
Rudolph Wurlitzer
Little Buddha
The experimental novelist of the sixties and seventies (Nog, Flats and Quake) discusses his screenwriting, from Two Lane Blacktop to Little Buddha, and the degeneration of experimental art goals in the nineties.
2/21/1994 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
Edmund White: Jean Genet (Part II)
The author traces his fiction-writing career from the artistic aspirations of Forgetting Elena to the sexual politics of The Beautiful Room is Empty.
2/14/1994 • 30 minutes, 3 seconds
Edmund White: Jean Genet (Part I)
Edmund White's biography reopens the questions of aesthetics and criminality in the life of French writer Jean Genet.
2/7/1994 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Matthew Stadler
The Dissolution of Nicholas Dee Matthew Stadler explores the role that obsession can play in developing the structure of a post-modern novel.
1/31/1994 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Amos Oz
Fima This sad-sack, Israeli Hamlet, is examined under the opposing lights of comedy and tragedy.
1/24/1994 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Frank Conroy
Body and Soul Conroy, who suffered a major writer---s block, discusses his novel about a vastly successful pianist-composer. Did writing about a successful artist break the block?
1/10/1994 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
A. M. Homes
In A Country of Mothers The author talks about perversity and normality in her work.
1/3/1994 • 30 minutes, 9 seconds
T. C. Boyle
The Road to Wellville
(Viking)
Hypocrisy, health food, ordure and the morality of fiction are the subjects of today's discussion.
12/27/1993 • 30 minutes, 41 seconds
Gordon Lish
Part II: The madman of contemporary fiction examines his influences: Beckett, Harold Bloom, Thomas Bernhart, J.D. Salinger, et al.
12/20/1993 • 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Gordon Lish
Zim Zum Part I: "Captain Fiction" talks abut the fiction he writes, the fiction he edits (at Alfred Knopf) and his career as a magazine editor (Esquire).
12/12/1993 • 29 minutes, 39 seconds
Bobbie Ann Mason
12/6/1993 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Peter Levitt
Bright Root, Dark Root The Los Angeles-based poet talks about Buddhism, spirituality and a poet's vocation.
11/29/1993 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Charlie Smith
Chimney Rock The author defends the dream-like projections of Los Angeles in his most recent novel.
11/22/1993 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Bernard Cooper
A Year of Rhymes A first novel by a prize-winning poetic essayist: The writer discusses his turn to fiction, weather and death, and his interest in simplicity and sincerity.
11/8/1993 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Harriet Doerr
Consider This, Senora The best-selling novelist talks about writing school, writers who have influenced her, and the particular nature of her characters.
11/1/1993 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Brad Gooch
City Poet The life and hoopla of the New York poet Frank O'Hara is described by his biographer.
10/25/1993 • 30 minutes, 44 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Foxfire
Joyce Carol Oates discusses issues of feminism and narrative strategy in her novel about a girl gang, set in the late 50's.
10/18/1993 • 30 minutes, 35 seconds
Jules Feiffer
The Man in the Ceiling Feiffer talks about The Man in the Ceiling--the first novel for children that he has written as well as illustrated.
10/11/1993 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Barbara Kingsolver
Pigs in Heaven
Author Barbara Kingsolver discusses political fiction: the novelist's obligation to dramatize insoluble issues without falsely resolving them.
10/4/1993 • 30 minutes, 11 seconds
John Sanford
Part II: This great neglected master remembers his friendships and relationships with writers Nathanael West and William Carlos Williams and the literary movements of the last sixty years.
9/27/1993 • 28 minutes, 5 seconds
John Sanford
Part I: The great neglected California writer, John Sanford, discusses his writing about the shame and ignominy of American history, the beauties of the land and of the English language.
9/20/1993 • 30 minutes, 44 seconds
Sue Miller
For Love Sue Miller discusses the relationship between realistic writing technique and internal conceptual structure in her new fiction.
9/13/1993 • 30 minutes, 19 seconds
James McCourt: Time Remaining
The author of cult and intellectual art-novels explores camp, metaphysics, metaphor, death and sexuality.
8/30/1993 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Anne Lamott
Operating Instructions The Northern California novelist talks about her beautifully-felt memoir of single-motherhood.
8/23/1993 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Victor Ereveyev
Part II. Ereveyev, whose work provoked a scandal, discusses Post-Glasnost Soviet Fiction.
8/16/1993 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Victor Ereveyev
A Russian Beauty Part I: The Russian Dissident novelist discusses Russian Gothic writing from Gogol on.
8/9/1993 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
Bob Shacochis
Swimming in the Volcano Michael Silverblatt moderates a conversation on the art of fiction writing between Bob Shacochis and his former student, journalist Jamie Diamond.
8/2/1993 • 30 minutes, 4 seconds
Thomas Kenneally
Woman of the Inner Sea The inner journey and transformation of a woman who has endured catastrophe is the subject of the Australian novelist's new book.
7/26/1993 • 30 minutes, 9 seconds
Carolyn Forche
Against Forgetting The award-winning poet talks about poetry's role in addressing the political atrocities of our century.
7/19/1993 • 30 minutes, 33 seconds
Oscar Hijuelos: The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez O'Brien
Oscar Hijuelos discusses the contrast between the light, happy tone of his new novel and the darkness of his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Mambo Kings.
7/12/1993 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Carol Brightman and Kevin McCarthy
Writing Dangerously The National Book Critic's Circle Award went to this biography of Mary McCarthy. Biographer Carol Brightman and Mary McCarthy's brother, Kevin McCarthy, reminisce about Mary's literary career.
6/28/1993 • 29 minutes, 37 seconds
Steve Erickson: Arc d'X
Novelist /film critic Steve Erickson discusses the unusual narrative strategies that help him to explore the contemporary abyss.
6/21/1993 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Rikki Ducornet
The Jade Cabinet Fairy tales, dreams and ecological feminism are where this writer's mythic novels originate.
6/14/1993 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Mitch Sisskind
Dog Man Stories One of the funniest writers in America writes about pit bulls and the men who raise them and talks about the language he uses to write about American cultures.
6/7/1993 • 29 minutes, 32 seconds
Mona Simpson
The Lost Father (Vintage)
For writer Mona Simpson, the search for family is a spiritual quest...
5/31/1993 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
Kate Braverman
Wonders Of The West Kate Braverman, a sort of high-priestess of fiction, discusses prose as incantation--an instrument for the transformation of reality.
5/24/1993 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Dorothy Allison
Bastard Out Of Carolina The writer talks about story telling, reality, violence, incest and working-class fiction.
5/17/1993 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
C.E. Poverman
Skin The author describes what a short story is, from inspiration to inner meaning.
5/10/1993 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
Wayne Koestenbaum
The Queen's Throat The author offers a frilly and brilliant analysis of the relationship between opera and homosexuality.
5/3/1993 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Michael Annis
(Editor of Stiletto magazine) Expensive paper, complex typographies and multicolored graphics make Stiletto the most lavish independent literary review published in the United States. Its editor delineates the editorial process.
4/26/1993 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
John Mortimer
Dunster The beloved author of the Rumpole books tells how he builds his complex plot structures and examines the basic tools of storytelling.
4/19/1993 • 29 minutes, 1 second
Carol Muske
Red Trousseau The poet explores new functions for metaphor in modern poetry: Can a poet debunk old, harmful mythologies and invent new, positive ones?
4/12/1993 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Carol Muske Dukes
Saving St. Germ
Author Carol Muske-Dukes discusses her humorous novel about a scientist who explores the nature of creation, inspiration, nuclear chemistry and feminism.
4/5/1993 • 28 minutes, 59 seconds
Nicholas Meyer
Locomotives
3/29/1993 • 29 minutes, 35 seconds
Larry Rivers
What Did I Do? The writer talks about art, gossip, sex and immorality in the career of an artist.
3/22/1993 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
Maureen Howard
Natural History Art, history and real life are the subjects of the author's investigation of America.
3/15/1993 • 30 minutes, 11 seconds
Ricardo Cortez Cruz
Straight Outta Compton The experimental novelist describes how he constructed his Rap novel.
3/8/1993 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Jim Paul
Catapult: Harry And I Build A Siege Weapon The essayist discusses his whimsical project: to construct a medieval weapon while on an arts grant and to write a book about the process.
3/1/1993 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Curtis White
The Idea of Home
Invention, surrealism and hilarity are at the center of Curtis White's novel about his home town in California.
2/22/1993 • 30 minutes, 1 second
Camille Paglia
Sexual Personae; Sex, Art and American Culture
Camille Paglia fires at contemporary criticism and literary theory.
2/15/1993 • 27 minutes, 57 seconds
Josephine Hart
Sin; Damage The writer examines the nature of guilt, tragedy and obsession.
2/8/1993 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
Leonard Michaels
Sylvia The writer discusses the morality of writing autobiographical fiction, with reference to Sylvia, his memoir about marriage and mental imbalance.
2/1/1993 • 28 minutes, 24 seconds
Mark Leyner
Et Tu, Babe The wild and crazy narcissist reads from and explains his exotic fantasy.
1/25/1993 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
James Ellroy
White Jazz The ins and outs of crime fiction are explored by this post- modernist tough guy.
1/18/1993 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Paul Auster
Leviathan
Writer Paul Auster discusses the influence of Kafka and Beckett on his work.
1/11/1993 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Maurice Sendak & Iona Opie
Brooklyn-born illustrator Maurice Sendak joins British folklorist Iona Opie to discuss the rhymes and taunts of the playground.
1/4/1993 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
Thomas McGuane: Nothing but Blue Skies
The writer discusses life in Montana as a literary style.
12/28/1992 • 30 minutes, 28 seconds
Austryn Wainhouse
(Editor and Publisher of Marlboro Press) Wainhouse, who translated all of the Marquis de Sade, discusses the influence of Sade on literature and morality.
12/7/1992 • 29 minutes, 20 seconds
Tama Janowitz
Male Crossdressers' Support Group Janowitz continues to gender-bend and cross all boundaries in the lives of her Slaves of New York.
11/30/1992 • 30 minutes, 10 seconds
Bruce McPherson
(Publisher of McPherson & Co.) McPherson's press has rediscovered the work of Mary Butts, an experimental writer of great value.
11/23/1992 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Robert Plunkett
Sex Junkie Plunkett discusses his farce about the incomprehension between gays and straights
11/16/1992 • 30 minutes, 8 seconds
William Vollmann
Fathers and Crows
Explosive writer William Vollmann talks about savagery and civilization, leveling both.
11/9/1992 • 28 minutes, 39 seconds
Cristina García: Dreaming in Cuban
Christina García's book Dreaming in Cuban explores three generations of Latina women and their emotional and political involvements.
11/2/1992 • 30 minutes, 8 seconds
Reynolds Price
Blue Calhoun Price talks about the characters in his novel and the function of immorality in fiction.
10/26/1992 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Susan Sontag
The Volcano Lover
The famed literary intellectual tells about how she came to write a romance.
10/19/1992 • 29 minutes, 46 seconds
William Kennedy
Very Old Bones; Ironweed
Writer William Kennedy discusses the hidden structure of the novels in his Albany Cycle.
10/5/1992 • 30 minutes, 8 seconds
Gilbert Sorrentino and Kelvin Christopher James
Under the Shadow; Jumping Ship
The inimitable Gilbert Sorrentino on the secret structures of his new novel. Kelvin James on his travels from Jamaica to New York and their expression in his writing.
9/28/1992 • 28 minutes, 42 seconds
Alexander Theroux
Darconville's Cat Polymath Theroux discusses his masterpiece in the light of the decline of Western culture.
9/21/1992 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Richard Bausch
Violence The minimalist discusses his novel of gathering domestic violence.
9/14/1992 • 30 minutes, 15 seconds
Kathy Acker
Portrait Of An Eye The terrifying post-punk novelist defines the aesthetics behind her radical stance.
8/31/1992 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Alice Walker
Possessing The Secret Of Joy
8/24/1992 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Richard Elman
Tar Beach Tribal Africa is superimposed on the Jewish Brooklyn of the late forties in this coming-of-age novel.
8/10/1992 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
Susan Straight
I Been in Sorrows Kitchen and Licked Out All the PotsAuthor Susan Straight discusses her new novel and the impact of violence on her, her writing and the multi-racial Riverside community in which she lives
8/3/1992 • 28 minutes, 59 seconds
Robert Stone
Outerbridge Reach
Robert Stone examines the possibilities of modern heroism.
7/27/1992 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Alice McDermott: At Weddings and Wakes
Author Alice McDermott discusses her darkly-tender, Irish-Catholic family novel--its structure and its meaning.
7/20/1992 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
Diana Darling and Bradford Morrow
Diana Darling's charming first novel is about the intrigues of Gods and humans on the island of Bali. Bradford Morrow celebrates the anniversary of his magazine, with a special issue on folktales, fairy tales and myths.
7/6/1992 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Alan Kurzweil
A Case of Curiosities A young writer from Harvard reveals how to research an historical novel.
6/29/1992 • 29 minutes, 22 seconds
Debra Eisenberg
Under the 82nd Airborne
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Short story writer Debra Eisenberg discusses the mystery of how she writes.
6/22/1992 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Carlos Fuentes
The Buried Mirror
Carlos Fuentes on international literature and the Latin American writer.
6/15/1992 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Martin Amis: Time's Arrow
Time's Arrow
The rude Londoner, Martin Amis, talks about morality and fiction.
6/8/1992 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
Matthew Stadler
Landscape Memory A young, gay novelist speaks about aesthetics.
6/1/1992 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Jane Smiley
A Thousand Acres
Jane Smiley's award-winning author discusses feminism, the problems of the American farmer and the aesthetics of fiction.
5/26/1992 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
Maurice Sendak
The beloved author of Where The Wild Things Are talks about The Nutcracker, and the process of writing a book that became a classic.
5/18/1992 • 29 minutes, 44 seconds
William Styron
Darkness Visible; Sophie's Choice Styron on depression and the vileness of the world. He tells what it's like to kill off his favorite characters and survive.
5/11/1992 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Nicholson Baker
Vox
Nicholson Baker, the author of this best-seller, talks about intimacy, sentimentality, morality and sexuality. Sparks fly!
5/4/1992 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
M. Mark
(editor of The Voice Literary Supplement and the anthology, Disorderly Conduct) The literary editor discusses her years as editor of the very modern and unconventional Voice Literary Supplement-- probably the most-exciting book review in America.
4/27/1992 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Patrick McGrath
Spider; The New Gothic Patrick McGrath is attempting to revive the Gothic Novel. Is he riding the coattails of Stephen King and Clive Barker, or is he inventing a new kind of terror?
4/20/1992 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
Leslie Marmon Silko: The Almanac of the Dead
The Almanac of the Dead
The visionary nightmare novel took of Native American author Leslie Marmon Silko years to write. Today, she talks about the difficulty of living while writing a bleak American novel.
4/13/1992 • 30 minutes, 28 seconds
David Rieff
LA., Capital Of The World The writer discusses L.A.'s future and, autobiographically, what it's like to grow up as the son of one of the world's most-prominent literary intellectuals
4/6/1992 • 26 minutes, 57 seconds
Julian Barnes
The British novelist talks about love and the creation of character in fiction.
3/30/1992 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Denis Johnson
Resuscitation Of A Hanged Man The poet and novelist speaks about evil, darkness and depression.
3/16/1992 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
A. S. Byatt
Possession
Renowned author A.S. Byatt reveals the aesthetic theory behind her fiction.
3/9/1992 • 29 minutes, 55 seconds
Sam Halpert
(editor of When We Talk About Raymond Carver) Halpert discusses the late Raymond Carver and his legacy.
3/2/1992 • 28 minutes, 40 seconds
Art Spiegelman
Maus IIWriter Art Spiegelman discusses his comic-book memoir of his father and the holocaust.
2/10/1992 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Kirkpatrick Sale and Robert Shapazian
The Conquest Of Paradise:(Director of Lapis Press)Sale, the radical, historian and ecologist, examines the myths of Christopher Columbus and the New World. Robert Shapazian talks about creating books as art objects.
2/3/1992 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Erica Taylor and Helen Schulman
The Sun Maiden:Out of Time Two talented young novelists discuss their first novels. The Sun Maiden is a futuristic novel about Los Angeles; Out Of Time, a moving, psychological story, is about the death of a young man.
1/20/1992 • 28 minutes, 30 seconds
Norman Rush
MatingThe winner of the 1991 National Book Award discusses his zany novel about feminism, Africa and anthropology.
1/13/1992 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Ken Siman and Bruce Wagner
Pizza Face:Force Majeure Ken Siman writes about the trauma of being adolescent, gay and acneed. Bruce Wagner experiences the dementia of the half-life of the Hollywood screenwriter.
1/6/1992 • 30 minutes, 13 seconds
Harold Brodkey Part 1
The Runaway SoulTwo interviews: Brodkey discuses life, literature and his new novel.
12/23/1991 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Judith Freeman
Set For LifeThe writer discusses her novel about passion and American right-wing conspiracies.
12/16/1991 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Norman Mailer, Part 2
Harlot's Ghost
Norman Mailer in the second of a two-part interview on Harlot's Ghost and other matters.
12/9/1991 • 29 minutes, 53 seconds
Norman Mailer, Part 1
Harlot's Ghost
Norman Mailer in a two-part interview on Harlot's Ghost and other matters.
12/2/1991 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
Russell Banks: The Sweet Hereafter
The author talks about grief in the art of fiction...
11/26/1991 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
David Michael Kaplan
Skating In The Dark A moving novel, in stories, about a man learning to handle his fears--of relationships, of intimacy and of experience.
11/19/1991 • 31 minutes, 14 seconds
Pauline Kael
Michael Silverblatt and a young Los Angeles writer, Chuck Wilson, talk with Pauline Kael about her book, Movie Love.
11/12/1991 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
Stephen Dobyns
11/5/1991 • 29 minutes, 25 seconds
Blanche Boyd
The Revolution of Little GirlsNovelist and lesbian Blanche Boyd discusses childhood and writing.
10/29/1991 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Bradford Morrow
The Almanac Branch The editor of Conjunctions, the post-modern literary magazine, discusses the techniques and strategies of his recent novel.
10/22/1991 • 30 minutes, 5 seconds
Martin Duberman
Cures The historian's autobiography deals with homosexuality and psychoanalysis in the America of the 1950's and 60's.
10/8/1991 • 30 minutes, 8 seconds
Mark Helprin
A Soldier of the Great War
Mark Helprin writes about aesthetics, war and love in his new novel set in Italy during World War I.
9/24/1991 • 31 minutes, 6 seconds
Amy Tan
The Kitchen God's Wife; The Joy Luck Club
As author Amy Tan examines the image of the passive, compliant, Asian-American woman, she reveals some personal secrets.
9/3/1991 • 30 minutes, 51 seconds
Whitney Otto
Wall To WallThe author makes an emotional and political journey from the Great Wall of China to the Berlin Wall on the Trans-Siberian Express.
8/26/1991 • 30 minutes, 30 seconds
Mary Morris
Wall To Wall The author makes an emotional and political journey from the Great Wall of China to the Berlin Wall on the Trans-Siberian Express.
8/13/1991 • 28 minutes, 36 seconds
Nicholson Baker
U and INicholson Baker, the American chronicler of berserk technology talks about his imaginary friendship with John Updike.
8/6/1991 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
Mark Lapin and Varley O'Conner
Pledge of Allegiance; Like ChinaTwo first novelists, currently living in California, discuss their books: Lapin's, about the McCarthy era and O'Connor's, about domestic violence.
7/30/1991 • 29 minutes, 42 seconds
Galway Kinnell
When One Has Lived A Long Time Alone The poet discusses the solitude necessary for poetry and the ways in which the imagination keeps us from suicide.
7/23/1991 • 31 minutes, 20 seconds
Edwardo Galeano
The Book of Embraces The South American surrealist turns from the terror of American history to dreams and visionary prose.
7/16/1991 • 30 minutes, 15 seconds
Joy Williams: Escapes
One of the great writers of contemporary short stories in the Flannery O'Connor tradition, Joy Williams writes about salvation, damnation and the rot of modern culture
7/9/1991 • 30 minutes, 22 seconds
Charles Palliser
Quincunx; The Sensationist The author of an enormous modern Victorian novel (Quincunx) speaks about his new work, The Sensationist, a brief, mysterious book about lust and disappearance
7/2/1991 • 28 minutes, 55 seconds
John Sayles: Los Gusanos
Writer-director John Sayles discusses the creative process and the politics shaping his novel about the Cubano exile in Florida.
6/25/1991 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Lynn Tillman
Motion Sickness The brilliant combination of the post-modern and the mundane animates the tone of this theoretical New Narrative.
6/18/1991 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Georgia Savage
The House Tibet This book about runaways, romance and incest is the first American publication of a breakthrough Australian novelist
6/11/1991 • 28 minutes, 31 seconds
Allan Gurganus: White People and Oldest Living Confederate Widow...
Alan Gurganus talks about his friendship with John Cheever and the use of autobiography in fiction--and life.
6/4/1991 • 29 minutes, 29 seconds
William Joyce
Dinosaur Bob; A Day With Wilbur Robinson William Joyce's picture books combine art nouveau and dinosaurs, 30's jazz and Dashiell Hammett.
5/21/1991 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Jonathan Carroll
Bones of the Moon; Sleeping in Flame
Carroll blends post-modernism, children's literature and science fiction to create wholly-original novels.
5/14/1991 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
Joyce Carol Oates: Because It Is Bitter, and Because It Is My Heart
Dark, passionate realist Oates' new novel explores inter-racial obsession.
5/7/1991 • 27 minutes, 45 seconds
Susan Compo and Susan Straight
Authors Susan Compo and Susan Straight discuss their novels: Life after Death and Aquaboogie. A special show contrasting two California writers Compo details Melrose punk; Straight describes the multi-racial Riverside community in which she lives.
4/30/1991 • 30 minutes, 1 second
Jane DeLynn
Don Juan In The Village International philosophical and sexual escapades of a fiction- writing lesbian.
4/23/1991 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Tim Cahill
Road Fever Mad-dog adventurer travels from the tip of South America to the Arctic, breaking the Guinness World Record
4/16/1991 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
Ted Mooney
Traffic and Laughter; Easy Travel To Other Planets A novelist of futuristic dislocations.
4/9/1991 • 29 minutes, 48 seconds
Barry Lopez
Crow And Weasel The naturalist has written a children's book based on American Indian and ecological themes.
4/2/1991 • 29 minutes, 36 seconds
Diane Wood Middlebrook and Ann Lauterbach
Ann Sexton; Clamor
Diane Wood Middlebrook discusses Ann Sexton's life as revealed in her biography. Ann Lauterbach answers the Bookworm's questions about how to understand her poetry.
3/23/1991 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
William T. Vollmann and Larry Brown
The Ice Shirt and Big Bad Love
William T. Vollmann and Larry Brown discuss their novels: Vollmann's The Ice Shirt is a vast historical fantasy inspired by Icelandic sagas. Widely admired Southern short-story writer Brown is the author of Big Bad Love.
3/19/1991 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
Michael Cunningham
A Home At The End Of The World
3/12/1991 • 30 minutes, 47 seconds
Isabel Allende: The Stories of Eva Luna
The Stories of Eva Luna (Scribner)
3/5/1991 • 29 minutes, 7 seconds
Anne Rice
The Witching Hour; Interview With A Vampire The queen of the supernaturals.
1/8/1991 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Sandra Cisneros
1/1/1991 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Allan Gurganus and Susan Chehak
Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All; Harmony
First a conversation with Alan Gurganus, then with novelist Susan
Chehak.
12/11/1990 • 30 minutes, 58 seconds
Edna O'Brien
Lantern Slides
12/4/1990 • 31 minutes, 2 seconds
Stephen Pett and Geoffrey Wolfe
Sirens;The Final Club
11/27/1990 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Mario Vargas Llosa
Mario Vargas Llosa discusses In Praise of the Stepmother; Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter and The War at End the of World.
11/20/1990 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
Michelle Latiolais
Even Now
11/13/1990 • 29 minutes, 16 seconds
Kazou Ishiguro: three novels
Kazuo Ishiguro discusses three of his novels: The Remains of the Day, A Pale View of the Hills and An Artist of the Floating World.
11/6/1990 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
David Leavitt; Alan Barnett
A Place I've Never Been;The Body and Its Dangers
10/30/1990 • 30 minutes, 11 seconds
T.C. Boyle
East Is East
10/22/1990 • 32 minutes, 5 seconds
Barry Gifford
Wild at Heart
10/16/1990 • 30 minutes, 56 seconds
Ian McEwan: The Innocent, and John Banville: The Book of Evidence
Michael Silverblatt speaks with Ian McEwan about his book, The Innocent, and John Banville about The Book of Evidence.
10/9/1990 • 29 minutes, 9 seconds
Bernard Cooper
Maps to Anywhere
10/2/1990 • 28 minutes, 56 seconds
Maurice Sendak, Part 2
9/25/1990 • 28 minutes, 52 seconds
Maurice Sendak, Part 1
9/18/1990 • 28 minutes, 45 seconds
Carol Maso and Michael Cart
The Art Lover; Ghost Dance;Michael Cart of the Beverly Hills Library
9/4/1990 • 30 minutes, 25 seconds
Paula Gun Allen and Charles Johnson
editor of Spider Woman's Granddaughters;Middle Passage
7/31/1990 • 28 minutes, 51 seconds
Susan Daitch
author of the The Colorist with her editor, Robin Desser
7/24/1990 • 28 minutes, 59 seconds
Donald Westlake
Drowned Hopes
7/17/1990 • 27 minutes, 50 seconds
Scott Turow
The Burden of Proof
7/10/1990 • 28 minutes, 16 seconds
Richard Ford
Wildlife; Rock Springs
7/3/1990 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Linda Nieman
Boomer
6/26/1990 • 27 minutes, 53 seconds
Hanif Kureishi
The Buddha of Suburbia
6/19/1990 • 27 minutes, 57 seconds
Sue Miller and Jessica Haggadorn
Family Pictures;Dog Eaters
6/12/1990 • 28 minutes, 48 seconds
Marriane Wiggins
John Dollar
6/5/1990 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Wendy Wasserstein
Bachelor Girls
5/29/1990 • 29 minutes, 14 seconds
Fay Welcon
The Cloning of Joanna May
5/22/1990 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Tim O'Brien and David Thomson
The Things They Carried;Silver Light
5/15/1990 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Martin Amis and John Guare
London Fields
A conversation with Martin Amis and John Guare about novelist Dawn
Powell
...
5/8/1990 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Kenward Elmslie Part 2
Twenty-six Bars
4/24/1990 • 29 minutes
Kenward Elmslie Part 1
4/17/1990 • 30 minutes, 31 seconds
Robert Gluck and Amy Gerstler
Reader; Bitter Angel
4/10/1990 • 29 minutes, 49 seconds
Gore Vidal
Hollywood
4/3/1990 • 27 minutes, 33 seconds
Chuck Jones
Chuck Amuck
3/27/1990 • 29 minutes, 43 seconds
John Craft and John L'Heureux
John Krafft, editor of Pynchon Notes; John L'Heureux, author of Comedians
Note: The editor's name, which has been misspelled, is actually John Krafft
.
3/20/1990 • 29 minutes, 54 seconds
Ann Beattie: Picturing Will, Part II
Picturing Will: Part II of a two-part conversation.
3/13/1990 • 29 minutes, 59 seconds
Ann Beattie: Picturing Will, Part I
Picturing Will: Part I of a two-part conversation
3/6/1990 • 29 minutes, 9 seconds
Judith Freeman; Louis Jones
Chinchilla Farm;Ordinary Money
2/26/1990 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Armistead Maupin and Mary Gordon
Sure of You;The Other Side
2/19/1990 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
Hollywood Biography; Naomi Wise & David King Dunaway
The Life and Times of Francis Coppola;Aldous Huxley in Hollywood
1/29/1990 • 29 minutes, 19 seconds
Thomas Sanchez
Mile Zero
1/22/1990 • 30 minutes, 3 seconds
Kazuo Ishiguro and Oscar Hijuelos
The Remains of the Day; The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love
1/8/1990 • 30 minutes, 15 seconds
Mark Helprin
Swan Lake
12/18/1989 • 30 minutes, 17 seconds
O'Brien; Sullivan; Sorrentino
editor, Dalkey Archive Press;The Dead Magician;Mysterioso
12/11/1989 • 29 minutes, 38 seconds
Manuel Puig
The Mystery of the Rose Banquet (a play)
12/4/1989 • 29 minutes, 34 seconds
Julian Barnes and Kazou Ishiguro
A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters; The Remains of the Day
11/20/1989 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
Oliver Sacks: Seeing Voices
Seeing Voices: A Journey Into the World of the Deaf
11/13/1989 • 30 minutes, 28 seconds
Cynthia Kadohata and Briah Kiteley
The Floating World;Still Life with Insects
11/6/1989 • 28 minutes, 47 seconds
Tracy Kidder
Among Schoolchildren
10/30/1989 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
Alice Adams
10/16/1989 • 20 minutes, 27 seconds
Sisters in Crime
10/9/1989 • 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Michael Dorris
The Broken Cord
9/25/1989 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Wizard of Oz
film's 50th anniversary w/ Aljean Harmetz, The Making of the Wizard of Oz
9/13/1989 • 30 minutes, 2 seconds
Grandstreet
9/11/1989 • 28 minutes, 23 seconds
Ishmael Reed
The Terrible Three's
8/28/1989 • 28 minutes, 54 seconds
Mary Morris; Michael Goth
The Waiting Room;owner of Phoenix Bookstore
8/21/1989 • 29 minutes, 57 seconds
Ethan Canin
Emperor of the Air
8/7/1989 • 29 minutes, 26 seconds
Amy Tan and Faith Sale
The Joy Luck Club
7/31/1989 • 29 minutes, 45 seconds
T.C. Boyle
If the River Was Whiskey
7/17/1989 • 32 minutes
Dennis Cooper
Closer
7/10/1989 • 30 minutes, 26 seconds
Greil Marcus
Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the 20th Century
7/3/1989 • 31 minutes, 46 seconds
Poets under 35
David Trinidad; Nicholas Christopher, editor of Under Thirtyfive
6/26/1989 • 30 minutes, 58 seconds
Lynn Sharon Schwartz
Leaving Brooklyn
6/9/1989 • 30 minutes, 15 seconds
Elmore Leonard; John Steppling
Bookworm Michael Silverblatt interviews author Elmore Leonard and playwright John Steppling. Then Steppling interviews Leonard.
5/22/1989 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
James Merrill; Stephen Yenser
5/15/1989 • 29 minutes, 28 seconds
Jane Vandenberg
Failure to Zig Zag
5/8/1989 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
John Irving: A Prayer for Owen Meany
5/1/1989 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Tim Cahill; Mitch Siskind
A Wolverine is Eating My Leg;
4/24/1989 • 30 minutes, 1 second
Ray Blount Jr.
4/13/1989 • 28 minutes, 46 seconds
Edrianos; Beyond Baroque
4/6/1989 • 30 minutes, 40 seconds
Literature & Puzzles
3/30/1989 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
Tobias Wolf; Doug Dutton
3/16/1989 • 30 minutes, 24 seconds
Jay Gummerman; Oakley Hall
3/9/1989 • 28 minutes, 46 seconds
Neal Gabler
Edridanos Press
3/2/1989 • 29 minutes, 11 seconds
William Kotzwinkle
2/23/1989 • 29 minutes, 27 seconds
Robert Kirgo; Eastman Lyons
2/16/1989 • 30 minutes, 6 seconds
Kendall Hailey; Sisterhood Bookstore
2/9/1989 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
David Leavitt; J Herman
2/2/1989 • 30 minutes, 14 seconds
Tim Miller; Paul Manette
1/19/1989 • 29 minutes, 52 seconds
Sandra Dykstra; A. Scott Berg
1/12/1989 • 31 minutes, 17 seconds
Douglas Messerli; John F. Baker
Michael Silverblatt speaks with Douglas Messerli, Editor in
Chief of Sun & Moon Press, winner of the 1987 Carey-Thomas Award
for Creative Publishing given yearly for the most imaginative
publishing venture of the year. Michael begins by speaking with John F. Baker, Editor in Chief of Publishers Weekly, the sponsor of the award.