“An Anthology Held Together by Earnestness”: A Conversation with Leslie Jamison
Denise Grollmus talks to Leslie Jamison about her latest book, “The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath.”
Denise Grollmus talks to Leslie Jamison about her latest book, “The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath.”
In this monthly series, Scott Timberg interviews musicians on the literary work that has inspired and informed their music.
Scott Timberg interviews Robert Crais, prolific author of “The Wanted.”
On "Incognegro," moving between literary fiction and graphic novels, and the Harlem Renaissance.
Ralf Webb asks Hannah Sullivan about her new collection, “Three Poems,” the long poem, lyric poetry, and autofiction.
Seeking the elusive heart of Donald J. Trump.
Krista Lukas interviews Gayle Brandeis about memoirs of suicide loss, including her own, "The Art of Misdiagnosis: Surviving My Mother's Suicide."
Lauren Young talks to Winnie M. Li about her debut novel, “Dark Chapter,” and the aesthetic and political struggles of translating the nuances of recovery.
On aging rappers, Confederate statues, baseball logos, and surviving Donald Trump.
On the growing sophistication of YA fiction and its audience.
"We came into being by the grace of trees." Everett Hamner talks with Richard Powers about his latest novel, "The Overstory."
Rigoberto González talks about “What Drowns the Flowers in Your Mouth.”
Anelise Chen’s “So Many Olympic Exertions” is autofiction as exhortation.
Brad Evans speaks with political theorist Michael J. Shapiro. A conversation in Brad Evans’s “Histories of Violence” series.
RJ Newell talks to Kristin Hannah, author of “The Great Alone,” a novel set in Alaska in the 1970s.
Sarah Chihaya talks to Adrian Tomine about his writing process, Asian-American literature, and the Bay Area.