

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

May 7, 2015 • 30min
Per Petterson: I Refuse
Per Petterson's I Refuse is a beautiful and lyrical symphony of sadness, grief and loss.

Apr 30, 2015 • 30min
Kazuo Ishiguro: The Buried Giant
Kazuo Ishiguro starts the interview about his new book as a look at the concept of societal memory.

Apr 23, 2015 • 30min
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.

Apr 16, 2015 • 30min
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.

Apr 9, 2015 • 30min
Charles Baxter and the 'Hidden Bookshelf'
Charles Baxter takes us through the pleasure of discovering books for what might be called the "hidden bookshelf."

Apr 2, 2015 • 30min
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.

Mar 26, 2015 • 30min
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.

Mar 19, 2015 • 30min
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?

Mar 12, 2015 • 30min
Claudia Rankine: Citizen, An American Lyric
In discussing Claudia Rankine's Citizen, an American Lyric, we discuss the way racism catches us all.

Mar 5, 2015 • 30min
Joyce Carol Oates: The Sacrifice
Joyce Carol Oates shapes a novel from the Tawana Brawley scandal of the 1980's.


