Digital Immortality
Is online memory preservation a form of healthy grieving or digital necrophilia?
Is online memory preservation a form of healthy grieving or digital necrophilia?
Tori and her guest co-host Patrick A. Howell, enjoy talking to accomplished author, respected humanist, acclaimed professor, and gadabout Tom Lutz.
Jake Marmer talks intergalactic longing and Jewish mysticism.
Ian Ross Singleton finds living color in “The Death of Samusis, and Other Stories” by Pavel Lembersky.
Nessa Rapoport discusses her second novel, a saga about Jewish sisterhood.
Andrew Malmuth talks with Paul Lichterman about his ethnography of civic action in Los Angeles.
Tracie Morris interviews poet Anaïs Duplan about his new work, “Blackspace: On the Poetics of an Afrofuture.”
A film about the marquee trial of the 1960s counterculture fails to explain its enduring relevance.
Andy Fitch talks with Susan Liautaud about the role of ethics in today's technologically changing society.
Sara Black McCulloch follows the history of radio panic leading up to Andrew Patterson’s 2020 film "The Vast of Night."
Joel Rhone reads “What It Is: Race, Family, and One Thinking Black Man’s Blues” by Clifford Thompson in context.
Bob Blaisdell talks with writer Karl Ove Knausgaard.
The prolific author has produced, sometimes under pseudonyms, a rich harvest of taut, stylish thrillers.
A story of Lincoln’s economy with the truth demonstrates the same fault itself.
Fernanda Melchor’s novel “Hurricane Season” invokes the themes of the classic naturalist novel.
Kate Tsurkan explores the post-Maidan prose of Andriy Lyubka and Oleg Sentsov.