

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

Jun 15, 2006 • 30min
Yannick Murphy
Here They Come
(McSweeney's)
Memory, instinct and aesthetics combine to recreate childhood in Yannick Murphy's new novel...

Mar 2, 2006 • 30min
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.

Dec 29, 2005 • 30min
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.

Dec 22, 2005 • 30min
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...

Dec 15, 2005 • 30min
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.

Dec 8, 2005 • 30min
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.

Dec 1, 2005 • 30min
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!

Nov 24, 2005 • 30min
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.)

Nov 17, 2005 • 30min
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....

Nov 10, 2005 • 30min
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.


