Bookworm

KCRW
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Jan 18, 2007 • 30min

Richard Ford

The Lay of the Land (Knopf) is Richard Ford's third novel about Frank Bascomb, his sportswriter-turned-realtor.
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Jan 11, 2007 • 30min

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.
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Jan 4, 2007 • 30min

Philip Levine

Breath (Knopf) Philip Levine reminisces about his childhood--about how a working class boy came to poetry.
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Dec 28, 2006 • 30min

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.
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Dec 21, 2006 • 30min

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...
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Dec 7, 2006 • 30min

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...
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Nov 30, 2006 • 30min

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...
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Nov 23, 2006 • 30min

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...  
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Nov 16, 2006 • 30min

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.
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Nov 9, 2006 • 30min

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

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