London Review Bookshop Podcast
Episodes
Perdendosi: Edmund de Waal, Norman McBeath & Alexandra Harris
21 Dec 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Perdendosi: an instruction, typically at the end of a piece, for musicians to gradually diminish in volume, tempo and tone, to the point of disappeara...
On Claude McKay: Raymond Antrobus, Paul Mendez & Kevin Okoth
14 Dec 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Claude McKay's Harlem Shadows was published in 1922 and is only now beginning to receive its due. The collection stands alongside the better-known mas...
Mohsin Hamid & Jo Hamya: The Last White Man
07 Dec 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In his fifth novel The Last White Man (Hamish Hamilton) Mohsin Hamid continues his exploration of cultural and racial displacement, commenced so brill...
Dawn Foster Forever: K Biswas, James Butler, Lynsey Hanley, Gary Younge
30 Nov 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Dawn Foster, chronicler of austerity Britain and leading voice from the housing crisis, passed away last year aged 34. Foster, author of Lean Out (Rep...
Jeremy Lee & Olivia Laing: Cooking: Simply and Well, for One or Many
23 Nov 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Chef proprietor at London’s Quo Vadis, Jeremy Lee’s commitment to locality, excellence and simplicity has made the restaurant a must-eat-at destin...
Michelle Tea and Isabel Waidner: Knocking Myself Up
16 Nov 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In Knocking Myself Up (Dey St.), Michelle Tea brings all her characteristic passion, wit and occasionally alarming candour to bear on the trials, tr...
Derek Jarman: Through the Billboard Promised Land Without Ever Stopping
09 Nov 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Now published for the very first time, Through the Billboard Promised Land Without Ever Stopping (House Sparrow Press) is Derek Jarman’s only piece ...
Remember the Details: Skye Arundhati Thomas and Preti Taneja
02 Nov 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In Remember the Details, Skye Arundhati Thomas reflects on the Indian protest movement that began in mid-2019 against xenophobic and casteist citizen...
Caroline Bird and Helen Mort
26 Oct 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Helen Mort’s latest collection, The Illustrated Woman, has just been shortlisted for the Forward Prize, the latest accolade in what has been an incr...
Small Fires: Rebecca May Johnson and Jonathan Nunn
19 Oct 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Cooking, we are told, has nothing to do with serious thought; the path to intellectual fulfilment leads directly out of the kitchen. In Small Fires ...
Signe Gjessing, Ray Monk and Max Richter on the ‘Tractatus’
12 Oct 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, published in English for the first time a century ago thanks to the efforts of his tutor at Cambridge...
On Ukraine: with Andrey Kurkov, Oksana Zabuzhko, Robert Chandler, James Meek, Peter Pomerantsev, Ilya Kaminsky, and Lyuba Yakimchuk
05 Oct 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Andrey Kurkov is the celebrated Ukrainian author of Death and the Penguin and 18 other novels. His letters from Ukraine about his family’s flight ...
Juliet Jacques with Owen Jones: Front Lines
28 Sep 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In her journalism Juliet Jacques writes about art, literature, culture and politics from a distinctive trans perspective. Front Lines (Cipher Press) c...
Victoria Adukwei Bulley & André Naffis-Sahely: Quiet/High Desert
21 Sep 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Two exciting young poets were at the shop to read from and talk about their work. Victoria Adukwei Bulley’s debut poetry collection Quiet (Faber) ci...
Geoff Dyer & Mark Ford: The Last Days of Roger Federer
14 Sep 2022
Contributed by Lukas
As he enters late middle age, Geoff Dyer turns, in The Last Days of Roger Federer, to the question of late – or, indeed, last – style. Lisa Appign...
Orwell Prize Shortlist Readings: Yara Rodrigues Fowler & Isabel Waidner
07 Sep 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Since 2019, the Orwell Prize has celebrated the best in contemporary political fiction. Yara Rodrigues Fowler and Isabel Waidner, both on the prize’...
Édouard Louis & Tash Aw: A Woman's Battles and Transformations
31 Aug 2022
Contributed by Lukas
‘Everything started with a photo. To see her free, hurtling fulsomely towards the future, made me think back to the life she shared with my father. ...
Seán Hewitt & Andrew McMillan: All Down Darkness Wide
24 Aug 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Seán Hewitt’s debut collection of poetry, Tongues of Fire (Cape), won the Laurel Prize in 2020; Max Porter praised it for its reverence to the natu...
Andrew Mellor and James Jolly: ‘The Northern Silence’
17 Aug 2022
Contributed by Lukas
At one time something of a backwater in the musical world, over the past few decades Scandinavia has become a musical powerhouse, encompassing all gen...
Anna Aslanyan & Daniel Trilling on translation in reportage
10 Aug 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Two journalists with a multilingual background – Anna Aslanyan, the author of Dancing on Ropes: Translators and the Balance of History, and Daniel T...
Elif Batuman & Merve Emre: Either/Or
03 Aug 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Elif Batuman, author of The Possessed and The Idiot, joined us to read from and talk about her latest novel Either/Or. International travel, Harvard, ...
Margo Jefferson & Colin Grant: Constructing a Nervous System
27 Jul 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Margo Jefferson talks to Colin Grant about her latest book, Constructing a Nervous System. It’s a memoir unlike any other, taking as its focus each ...
Kate Folk and Sharon Horgan: ‘Out There’
20 Jul 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Kate Folk's debut collection of short stories, Out There, combines science fiction, horror and psychological realism to explore the Kafkaesque precar...
Lauren Elkin, Deborah Levy and Alice McCrum: The Inseparables by Simone de Beauvoir
13 Jul 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Written in 1954 but unpublished until after her death, Simone de Beauvoir’s The Inseparables is an intimate portrait, based on life, of female frien...
Kaveh Akbar and Seán Hewitt: Pilgrim Bell
06 Jul 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Back in March 2018 Iranian-born Kaveh Akbar launched his debut collection Calling a Wolf a Wolf with us at the bookshop. He joined us again in digital...
Julian Barnes and Chris Power: Elizabeth Finch
29 Jun 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Julian Barnes’s latest novel Elizabeth Finch, his first since The Only Story in 2018, is very much a novel of ideas. As a student sorts through the ...
Nick Blackburn & Helen Macdonald: The Reactor
22 Jun 2022
Contributed by Lukas
From debut author Nick Blackburn, a therapist specialising in LGBTQ+ issues, comes The Reactor, a powerful new addition to the literature of grief and...
Niven Govinden & Gareth Evans: Diary of a Film
15 Jun 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Niven Govinden’s sixth novel Diary of a Film (Dialogue) follows an unnamed director through the streets of an Italian town as he muses on cinema, qu...
Preti Taneja & Lola Olufemi: Aftermath
08 Jun 2022
Contributed by Lukas
On 29 November 2019 Usman Khan murdered Saskia Jones and Jack Merritt at Fishmongers’ Hall in London. Recently released from prison after serving a ...
Celia Paul & Olivia Laing: Letters to Gwen John
01 Jun 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Although born 20 years after Gwen John’s death, Celia Paul has always felt a strong affinity with the older artist. In Letters to Gwen John (Cape)...
Helen Thompson and Ann Pettifor: Disorder
25 May 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In her latest book Disorder: Hard Times in the 21st Century (Oxford) Helen Thompson argues that while the earthquake that was the Covid-19 pandemic pr...
Pankaj Mishra and Lisa Appignanesi: Run and Hide
18 May 2022
Contributed by Lukas
After twenty years novelist and essayist Pankaj Mishra makes a triumphant return to fiction. Described by Amit Chaudhuri as ‘his best work yet’ an...
Ange Mlinko, Don Paterson and Edmund de Waal on Rilke
11 May 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Central to this modern myth is the ‘savage creative storm’ of 2-23 February 1922, when Rilke wrote the Sonnets to Orpheus and completed the Dui...
Fernanda Melchor and Nicole Flattery: Paradais
04 May 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Fernanda Melchor first came to the attention of the English-speaking world with 'Hurricane Season', a tale of murder in a lawless Mexican village, des...
Tom McCarthy and Susan Philipsz on ‘Ulysses’
27 Apr 2022
Contributed by Lukas
‘How do you write after Ulysses?’ asked the twice Booker-nominated novelist Tom McCarthy, author of C, Satin Island and most recently The Making o...
Revivalism: Christopher Hitchens
20 Apr 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Lisa Appignanesi, Benjamin Burgis, Janan Ganesh and James Wolcott on ‘A Hitch in Time’, chaired by David Runciman Christopher Hitchens was a star...
Sheila Heti & Merve Emre: Pure Colour
13 Apr 2022
Contributed by Lukas
With How Should a Person Be? Sheila Heti merrily and unforgettably extended our notions of what a novel might or ought to contain. In Pure Colour (Har...
Josh Cohen & Deborah Levy: Losers
06 Apr 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In his long essay Losers (Peninsula) psychoanalyst and critic Josh Cohen examines, with characteristic wit and acuity, what our culture loses by under...
Speculative Communities: Aris Komporozos-Athanasiou, Grace Blakely, James Bridle and Will Davies
30 Mar 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Aris Komporozos-Athanasiou, Professor of Sociology at University College London, argues in Speculative Communities (Chicago) that speculation is no ...
Vron Ware and Hazel Carby: Return of a Native
23 Mar 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Vron Ware’s take on what it means to be English has, thankfully, little time for nostalgic visions of a post-Brexit rural paradise. In Return of a N...
Michael Rosen and Rachel Clarke on the Covid-19 pandemic
16 Mar 2022
Contributed by Lukas
It’s clear that the Covid pandemic has changed the way we need to think about public health, social justice, the economy and a good deal else beside...
Abdulrazak Gurnah and Kamila Shamsie
09 Mar 2022
Contributed by Lukas
2021’s Nobel Laureate in Literature Abdulrazak Gurnah is in conversation about his work with author Kamila Shamsie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com...
Diane di Prima: Revolutionary Letters
02 Mar 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Diane Di Prima began writing her revolutionary ‘Letters’ in 1968, conjuring a potent blend of utopian visions, ecological urgency and spiritual in...
Mary Gaitskill & Octavia Bright: Oppositions
23 Feb 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Oppositions collects Mary Gaitskill’s essays of 30 years; taking in subjects as diverse as Nabokov, horse-riding and the Book of Revelation, they’...
Alys Fowler & Bee Wilson: The Woman Who Buried Herself
16 Feb 2022
Contributed by Lukas
In The Woman Who Buried Herself (Hazel Press) Alys Fowler takes us deeper and deeper into, and under the soil, until there is no longer a separati...
Iain Sinclair and Gareth Evans: ‘The Gold Machine’
09 Feb 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Towards the end of the 19th century Iain Sinclair’s great-grandfather Arthur made an accident-prone and largely disastrous colonial expedition to Pe...
D.M. Black, Robert Chandler and Giovanna di Ceglie on Dante
02 Feb 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Dante’s Purgatorio is as much an allegory of spiritual transformation as it is one of psychological rebirth, personal healing, and self-transcendenc...
John Clegg and Jess McKinney: Pinecoast/Weeding
26 Jan 2022
Contributed by Lukas
John Clegg and Jess McKinney launch their new Hazel Press poetry collections with reading and conversation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for...
Tariq Ali & James Meek: The Forty-Year War in Afghanistan
19 Jan 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Tariq Ali has been observing and commenting on Afghanistan for more than four decades. He vehemently opposed the Soviet occupation in 1979, and the ...
Stephanie Sy-Quia and Will Harris: Amnion
12 Jan 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Stephanie Sy-Quia’s Amnion (Granta) is a one-of-a-kind ‘lyric epic’, weaving memoir, essay and poetics into one of 2021’s most eagerly await...
Hazel Press Autumn 2021 Celebration
05 Jan 2022
Contributed by Lukas
Hazel Press’s four 2020 titles were all LRB Bookshop bestsellers; we’re proud to be launching the first tranche of their four 2021 titles, one an ...
Iain Sinclair & Gareth Evans: The Gold Machine
22 Dec 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Towards the end of the 19th century Iain Sinclair’s great-grandfather Arthur made an accident-prone and largely disastrous colonial expedition to Pe...
Karl Ove Knausgaard on 'The Morning Star'
15 Dec 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Karl Ove Knausgaard’s series of autobiographical novels published in English as My Struggle propelled him to international fame, near universal acc...
Chloe Aridjis & Lynne Tillman: Dialogue with a Somnambulist
08 Dec 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Renowned internationally for her lyrically unsettling novels Book of Clouds, Asunder and Sea Monsters, the Mexican writer Chloe Aridjis crosses border...
Massimo Montanari and Rachel Roddy: A Short History of Spaghetti with Tomato Sauce
02 Dec 2021
Contributed by Lukas
What could be simpler than a dish of pasta with tomato sauce? According to food historian Massimo Montanari’s latest book A Short History of Spaghe...
Paul Gilroy and Adam Shatz on William Gardner Smith’s The Stone Face
24 Nov 2021
Contributed by Lukas
William Gardner Smith’s roman à clef about racism, identity, and bohemian living against the backdrop of violence of Algerian War-era France, has b...
Revivalism: Penelope Fitzgerald, with Susannah Clapp and Hermione Lee
17 Nov 2021
Contributed by Lukas
The Penelope Fitzgerald who wrote The Bookshop, Offshore and The Blue Flower is far too celebrated – as the greatest novelist of her time, according...
Leo Boix and Andrew McMillan
10 Nov 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Leo Boix and Andrew McMillan read and talk to celebrate the publication of Boix's long-awaited debut collection in English, Ballad of a Happy Immigran...
Maggie Nelson & Amelia Abraham: On Freedom
04 Nov 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Drawing on a vast range of material, from critical theory to pop culture to the intimacies and plain exchanges of daily life, Maggie Nelson's On Freed...
Lauren Elkin & Deborah Levy: No. 91/92 Notes on a Parisian Commute
28 Oct 2021
Contributed by Lukas
In Flâneuse Lauren Elkin celebrated the woman walker in the city, revealing how aimlessly wandering through New York, Tokyo, Venice – but most of a...
Carole Angier and Caroline Moorehead: Speak, Silence
20 Oct 2021
Contributed by Lukas
W.G. Sebald was one of the most important literary figures of the bridge between the 20th and 21st centuries. Twenty years after his death, we were jo...
Morgan Parker and Rachel Long: Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night
13 Oct 2021
Contributed by Lukas
In Other People’s Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night, Morgan Parker bobs and weaves between humour and pathos, grief and anxiety, Gwendolyn Brooks and Jay...
Claire-Louise Bennett and Sheila Heti: Checkout 19
06 Oct 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Claire-Louise Bennett’s debut, Pond (Fitzcarraldo), has been a firm bookshop favourite since its release, for its unique, irreverent voice and atten...
Owen Hatherley & Juliet Jacques: Clean Living Under Difficult Circumstances
29 Sep 2021
Contributed by Lukas
From the grandiose histories of grand state building projects to the minutiae of street signs and corner pubs, from the rebuilding of capital cities t...
Amia Srinivasan and Alice Spawls: The Right to Sex
22 Sep 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Building on her essay ‘Does anyone have the right to sex?’, first published in the London Review of Books in 2018, Professor of Social and Politic...
Lavinia Greenlaw and Joanna Pocock: Some Answers Without Questions
15 Sep 2021
Contributed by Lukas
As a writer and as a woman Lavinia Greenlaw has spent her life being forced to answer questions that don’t really matter and not being allowed to as...
Jeanette Winterson and Victoria Turk: 12 Bytes
08 Sep 2021
Contributed by Lukas
In twelve witty and insightful essays novelist, memoirist and all-round thinker Jeanette Winterson explores the future of artificial intelligence and ...
Isabel Waidner and Irenosen Okojie
01 Sep 2021
Contributed by Lukas
With their first two novels Isabel Waidner has established themself as one of the most disruptive, vital and boundary-pushing fiction writers at work ...
Grace Blakeley, Owen Jones, Gillian Tett and Yanis Varoufakis: David Graeber’s ‘Debt’
25 Aug 2021
Contributed by Lukas
David Graeber's Debt: The First 5,000 Years turned everything we think we know about money, debt and society on its head, and has, in the ten years si...
Simon Critchley and Brian Eno: Bald
18 Aug 2021
Contributed by Lukas
There’s more to being bald than having no hair. Philosopher Simon Critchley and musician Brian Eno discuss the various dimensions of hairlessness in...
Ed Atkins and Brian Dillon: A Primer for Cadavers
11 Aug 2021
Contributed by Lukas
One of the most widely celebrated artists of his generation, Ed Atkins makes videos, draws, and writes, developing a complex and deeply figured discou...
Jack Underwood and Raymond Antrobus: Not Even This
04 Aug 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Poet and critic Jack Underwood’s latest book Not Even This: Poetry, parenthood and living uncertainly (Little, Brown) combines meditations on litera...
Deborah Levy and Shahidha Bari: ‘Real Estate’
28 Jul 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Deborah Levy completes her ‘Living Autobiography’ trilogy – the first two volumes, Things I Don't Want to Know and The Cost of Living, won the P...
Timothy Brennan and Michael Wood on Edward Said
21 Jul 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Scholar, musician, activist, raconteur and polemicist, Edward Said was one of the most celebrated and controversial intellectuals of the last century....
Utopia Now: John Burnside, Matthew Beaumont and Gareth Evans
14 Jul 2021
Contributed by Lukas
John Burnside’s new novel, Havergey (Little Toller), is set on a remote island in the aftermath of an ecological catastrophe. From our event in 20...
Joshua Cohen and Colm Tóibín: The Netanyahus
08 Jul 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Joshua Cohen’s The Netanyahus blends fact and fiction to give ‘An Account of A Minor and Ultimately Even Negligible Episode in the History of a Ve...
David Runciman and Pankaj Mishra: Histories of Ideas
30 Jun 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Talking Politics: History of Ideas, David Runciman’s podcast introductions to the most important thinkers and theories behind modern politics, has b...
Olivia Laing and Katherine Angel: Everybody
23 Jun 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Everybody has a body, a source of both pleasure and pain. In her latest book Everybody (Picador) Olivia Laing uses the life and work of the radical ps...
Isobel Wohl and Lauren Elkin: Cold New Climate
16 Jun 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Described by Claire Louise Bennett as ‘lithe and ambitious’ and by Toby Litt as ‘a miracle in book form’, Isobel Wohl’s debut Cold New Clima...
Jacqueline Rose and Jude Kelly: On Violence and On Violence Against Women
09 Jun 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Throughout her career and across her many books Jacqueline Rose has been teasing out the political implications of violence, and in particular the way...
Helen Mort and Dan Richards: No Map Could Show Them
03 Jun 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Helen Mort and Dan Richards were at the shop to talk about poetry and mountaineering. Mort read from her latest collection from Chatto and Windus, No...
Carrie Brownstein and Lavinia Greenlaw: Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl
26 May 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Carrie Brownstein was at the shop to discuss her book, Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl, with Lavinia Greenlaw. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy fo...
Katherine Angel & Olivia Laing: Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again
19 May 2021
Contributed by Lukas
In Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again (Verso)—spanning science and popular culture; pornography and literature; debates on #MeToo, consent and femini...
Chris Power and Alex Clark: A Lonely Man
12 May 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Chris Power’s first novel A Lonely Man (Faber) is a powerful, menacing exploration of the nature of truth, fabrication and identity. ‘If you're a ...
Rebecca Solnit and Mary Beard: ‘Recollections of My Nonexistence’
05 May 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Beginning in San Francisco in 1981, the era of punk and nascent gay pride, Rebecca Solnit’s latest book Recollections of My Non-Existence (Granta)...
Rachel Kushner and Hal Foster: The Hard Crowd
28 Apr 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Already well-known for her novels – Telex from Cuba, The Flamethrowers, The Mars Room – Rachel Kushner has over the past two decades been writ...
Joshua Cohen and Jon Day: Moving Kings
21 Apr 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Joshua Cohen, one of Granta magazines ‘Best Young American Writers’ for 2017, was at the shop to read from and talk about his latest novel Moving ...
John Boughton and Owen Hatherley: Municipal Dreams
14 Apr 2021
Contributed by Lukas
From this 2018 event: In Municipal Dreams (Verso), John Boughton charts the often surprising story of council housing in Britain, from the slum clea...
Comic Timing: Holly Pester, Vahni Capildeo and Rachael Allen
07 Apr 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Holly Pester's debut collection, Comic Timing (Granta), is disorienting, radical and extremely funny; Pester has a background in sound art and perfo...
Paul Spooner and Rosemary Hill: Cabaret Mechanical Theatre
01 Apr 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Having an engineer as a father and an art school education, Paul Spooner became, predictably, a school-teacher, then a lorry driver. A chance meeting ...
Patricia Lockwood and John Lanchester: No One Is Talking About This
24 Mar 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Patricia Lockwood was in conversation about her new book, No One Is Talking About This (and a lot else besides) with fellow LRB contributing editor, J...
On Brigid Brophy: Bidisha, Terry Castle and Eley Williams
17 Mar 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Brigid Brophy (1929-95) was a fearlessly original novelist, essayist, critic and political campaigner, championing gay marriage, pacifism, vegetariani...
Lauren Oyler and Olivia Sudjic: Fake Accounts
10 Mar 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Lauren Oyler was talking abou her first novel, Fake Accounts, with the writer Olivia Sudjic, who has described it as 'Savage and shrewd, destined to g...
André Aciman and Brian Dillon: Homo Irrealis
02 Mar 2021
Contributed by Lukas
André Aciman talked to Brian Dillon about his latest book, Homo Irrealis (Faber and Faber), a collection of essays on subjects as diverse as Freud, W...
‘The Lark Ascending’: Richard King and Luke Turner
24 Feb 2021
Contributed by Lukas
In The Lark Ascending (Faber) Richard King, author of Original Rockers and How Soon is Now?, explores how Britain's history and identity have been...
Simon Winder and Adam Phillips: ‘Lotharingia’
17 Feb 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Following on from his bestselling and hugely entertaining Germania and Danubia, Simon Winder continues his idiosyncratic journey through Europe’...
Hal Foster and Mark Godfrey: On Richard Serra
10 Feb 2021
Contributed by Lukas
In his book Conversations About Sculpture (Yale) art historian Hal Foster recapitulates the discussions he has had, over a period of two decades, wit...
Brecht’s War Primer: Oliver Chanarin, Tom Kuhn & Esther Leslie
03 Feb 2021
Contributed by Lukas
From this 2017 event: Bertolt Brecht, poet, playwright, theatre director and refugee, was a passionate critic of fascism and war. During World War Two...
Dana Spiotta and Alex Clark: Innocents and Others
27 Jan 2021
Contributed by Lukas
Dana Spiotta was reading from her novel Innocents and Others, and talking about her work with with journalist and critic Alex Clark. Hosted on Acast. ...
Anne Michaels and Bidisha: The Necessary Word
20 Jan 2021
Contributed by Lukas
From this 2017 event, Canadian poet and novelist Anne MIchaels, author of the multi-award winning fiction Fugitive Pieces, 'the most important book I...