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Tagged with “family” (12) activity chart

  1. Richard Ford reads ‘The Student’s Wife’ by Raymond Carver

    "The Student’s Wife" is from Raymond Carver’s first story collection, Will You Please Be Quiet, Please, published in America in 1976. You could say it’s from Ray’s "early period" – written possibly as early as the late 60s, when he was one side or the other of 30 years old. Its verbal resources are spare, direct, rarely polysyllabic, restrained, intense, never melodramatic, and real-sounding while being obviously literary in intent. (You always know, pleasurably, that you’re reading a made short story.) These affecting qualities led some dunderheads to call his stories "minimalist", which they are most assuredly not, inasmuch as they’re full-to-the-brim with the stuff of human intimacy, of longing, of barely unearthable humour, of exquisite nuance, of pathos, of unlooked-for dread, and often of love – expressed in words and gestures not frequently associated with love. More than they are minimal, they are replete with the renewings and the fresh awarenesses we go to great literature to find. When they were first published in Britain by Collins Harvill, they made a great sensation that quickly spread all over the world, and made Ray (who was lovable, anyway) adored as the great story writer of his generation. Which he was. And is.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/audio/2012/dec/23/richard-ford-raymond-carver-wife

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 5 months ago

  2. Paul Auster’s “Winter Journal”

    Paul Auster remembers the car accident that nearly killed him and his family. It’s one of a series of brushes with death from his new book, "Winter Journal." Auster also recalls dirty fights as a child, sitting next to his mother’s lifeless body as an adult, the crumbling of his first marriage and the slow breakdown of his own body over time. Paul Auster joins us to talk about aging, death and the power of the written word.

    http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201209191000

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 8 months ago

  3. 5by5 | The Incomparable #74: I’m Definitely Not a Girl

    5by5 - The Incomparable #74: I’m Definitely Not a Girl

    http://5by5.tv/incomparable/74

    —Huffduffed by merlinmann one year ago

  4. 92Y Podcast: Kurt Vonnegut Reads Breakfast of Champions - 92Y Blog - 92nd Street Y - New York, NY

    Highlights from the 92nd Street Y universe.

    http://blog.92y.org/index.php/item/kurt_vonnegut_breakfast_of_champions_podcast/

    —Huffduffed by merlinmann 2 years ago

  5. Raymond Carver: A Writer’s Life

    The Times of London called Raymond Carver the "Chekhov of Middle America." Carver’s tremendous influence on subsequent writers and the short story form is legendary. We discuss his life and work with Carol Sklenicka, author of the new biography, "Raymond Carver: A Writer’s Life."

    http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/kqedforum/~3/HCs0WA76zAo/R912071000

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago

  6. On Point: How Cooking Made Us Human

    We were apes before we were humans. But humans were the onetime apes who ultimately mastered fire and cooked.

    Primatologist and anthropologist Richard Wrangham says that in evolutionary terms, that made all the difference. And not just because it put flambé on the menu.

    Fire meant proto-humans could cook. Cooking, he says, meant they could get dense, empowering nourishment. Then came bigger brains, a different body and — voila! — homo sapiens. Complete, he says, with a social structure built around that fire.

    http://www.onpointradio.org/2009/09/how-cooking-made-us-human

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago

  7. Sergei Dovlatov’s “The Colonel Says I Love You”

    From the New Yorker fiction podcast: David Bezmozgis reads Sergei Dovlatov’s "The Colonel Says I Love You" and discusses it with The New Yorker’s fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago

  8. Cultural Obituaries: The Death of Boom Culture? (with Walter Benn Michaels, David Simon, Susan Straight, and Dale Peck)

    Fiction in the Age of Inequality

    Now that markets have proven a flawed index of our economic well being, our cultural life needs to look beyond the pat certainties of laissez faire ideology. Among the ills afflicting the American novel at the height of boom culture, Walter Benn Michaels argues, was a curatorial obsession with past oppressions—from slavery to the Holocaust to memoir-style accounts of family abuse. Writers should now be asking less about what it meant to oppose the Holocaust, he contends, and more about what it means to support free trade.

    David Simon, creator of The Wire, and Susan Straight, author of Highwire Moon, join Michaels and novelist-critic Dale Peck to discuss the social vision of contemporary storytelling.

    http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/pep/pepdesc.cfm?id=5236

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 4 years ago

  9. BBC World Book Club: Toni Morrison Reads From and Discusses Beloved

    In front of an audience at the South Bank Arts Centre, London, Harriett Gilbert talks to Toni Morrison about her prize-winning book Beloved.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 4 years ago

  10. Wells Tower reads Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned

    The hotly-tipped American writer reads the title story from his debut collection of short fiction

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/audio/2009/apr/09/books-podcast-wells-tower-short-story

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 4 years ago

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