

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

Sep 16, 2010 • 30min
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..."

Sep 9, 2010 • 30min
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.

Sep 2, 2010 • 30min
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..

Aug 26, 2010 • 30min
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...

Aug 19, 2010 • 30min
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...

Aug 12, 2010 • 43min
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.

Aug 5, 2010 • 30min
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...

Jul 29, 2010 • 30min
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

Jul 22, 2010 • 30min
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...

Jul 15, 2010 • 30min
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.


