“If you’ve ever been young, in love, and desperate to live an authentic
life, this book is for you: a ravishing memoir about a young man’s quest
for art, meaning, and a place to call home.”—Anthony Doerr, author of All
the Light We Cannot See
Rob Spillman, the award-win...
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Host Kathleen Stephenson speaks with writer Danielle Dutton about her novel,
"Margaret the First," which dramatizes the life of Margaret Cavendish, the
eccentric 17th-century Duchess. Margaret wrote and published volumes of
poems, philosophy, feminist plays, and utopian ...
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Host Pamela Santos speaks with writer Helen Oyeyemi about her new short story
collection "What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours."
Helen Oyeyemi has lived in London for most of her life. She wrote her first
novel, The Icarus Girl, while she was still at school, her second novel,...
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Host Bethany Grabow talks with Jesse Andrews, author of the new book The
Haters. This hilarious and touching story follows Wes Doolittle and his
friends as they escape the oppression of jazz band camp and set off on a road
trip in search of a venue to play an epic concer...
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A go-for-broke essay collection that blends cultural close reading and dicey
autobiography. Past compunction, expressly unbeholden, these twenty-four
single-subject essays train focus on a startling miscellany of topics —Foot
Washing, Dossiers, Br’er Rabbit, Housesitting...
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Host Ken Jones talks with Dmae Roberts, author of the new book The Letting Go
Trilogies: Stories of a Mixed-Race Family.
The book takes the form of a series of personal essays, in which Dmae writes
about her biracial identity as the child of a Taiwanese mother and white
Ok...
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Deep in gambling debt, the celebrated Brazilian writer Beatriz Yagoda is last
seen holding a suitcase and a cigar and climbing into an almond tree. She
abruptly vanishes. In snowy Pittsburgh, her American translator Emma hears
the news and, against the wishes of her boyf...
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Late in the Day, Ursula K. Le Guin’s new collection of poems (2010–2014)
seeks meaning in an ever-connected world. In part evocative of Neruda’s
Odes to Common Things and Mary Oliver’s poetic guides to the natural world,
Le Guin’s latest give voice to objects that may not s...
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Host Bethany Grabow talks with Cat Winters, author of the new book The Steep
and Thorny Way. This historical fiction, loosely based on
Shakespeare’s Hamlet, follows protagonist Hanalee as she navigates rural
Oregon in the 1920’s as a biracial teen coming to terms with he...
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Host Ken Jones talks with Stephanie Storey, author of the new book Oil and
Marble: A Novel of Leonardo and Michelangelo. The novel depicts the fierce
rivalry between these two great artists as they struggle to complete their
masterworks -- the Mona Lisa and the David -- ami...
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