

Bookworm
KCRW
Intellectual, accessible, and provocative literary conversations.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 24, 2000 • 29min
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".;

Feb 17, 2000 • 30min
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".;

Feb 10, 2000 • 30min
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".;

Feb 3, 2000 • 30min
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".;

Jan 27, 2000 • 30min
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)

Jan 20, 2000 • 30min
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.

Jan 13, 2000 • 29min
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.

Jan 6, 2000 • 29min
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.

Dec 23, 1999 • 30min
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.

Dec 16, 1999 • 30min
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.


