Where novelists and critics come together to talk about how novels are made -- And what to make of them📚Find us on Spotify, Apple Podcast, and Stitcher🎧
“I am haunted by history: the history of dictatorship, the history of empire, history as a whole,” declares the Iraqi novelist Sinan Antoon in conversation with critic Michael Allan in the latest Novel Dialogue episode. Tune in now to hear more! https://t.co/Ye8oyhMiVS
How to write about place is a question that cuts across the career of the South African Ivan Vladislavić. Join him in conversation with critic Jeanne-Marie Jackson in this latest episode of Novel Dialogue! https://t.co/HANvY0a0Fm
Chicago is the main character, the setting, the obsession, and the historical grist for the mill of Peter Orner’s latest novel, The Gossip Columnist’s Daughter. With host Sarah Wasserman, Peter brings us into a lost pocket of time here on Novel Dialogue! https://t.co/yqSd9qGY6S
Can a novel with a singular voice also be a chorus? Can it reject the conventions of the novel and still be a novel? Join Billy-Ray Belcourt and Matt Hooley as they explore these questions in this episode of Novel Dialogue! https://t.co/QRN2m8fnXs
Kick off Season 10 of Novel Dialogue by listening to Aaron Gwyn's conversation with Sean McCann, where Gwyn's own durably realistic work is contrasted with Cormac McCarthy's monstrous and incredible characters, and much more! https://t.co/3dDG8XMZIk
Álvaro Enrigue and critic Maia Gil’Adí begin their conversation considering translation as a living process, one that is internal to the novel form, in this final episode of Season 9: TECH! https://t.co/eiKLs00c78
Vauhini Vara tells Aarthi Vadde and host Sarah Wasserman that at the heart of all her work is a desire to communicate—that “language,” as she says, “is the main tool we have to bridge the divide” in this riveting new episode of Novel Dialogue! https://t.co/A71wLPIPYv
In dialogue with Heather Cleary, Fernanda Trías unfolds the many different ideas explored in Pink Slime, including the ethical complexities of writing about disability, the difficult intimacies of mothers and daughters, and much more in this new episode! https://t.co/5gWJqmER3i
In Season 9, Novel Dialogue set out to find the Venn diagram intersection of tech and fiction—only to realize that Kim Stanley Robinson had staked his claim on the territory decades ago. Tune in to his conversation with Elizabeth Carolyn Miller now! https://t.co/PmRRDhrRla
What work can genre do today? Can the genre system become more than a method of reductive containment and market segmentation—can it be a generative source of imaginative chaos? Ponder this question and more with Lauren Beukes and Andrew Pepper! https://t.co/zeAF01o28u
Ken Liu tells critic Rose Casey and host Sarah Wasserman that if “your idea of heaven doesn’t include play, then I’m not sure it’s a heaven people want to go to" in this riveting episode from Novel Dialogue! https://t.co/qOV0Hhb0Sk
We kick off Season 9: TECH by talking with our very own Aarthi Vadde about the role of the novel in relation to the mass writing platforms that dominate our digital lives. Join us now! https://t.co/OBeAcu6W7b
The wait is almost over! Season 9: TECH of Novel Dialogue is coming to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Stitcher starting March 21. You won't want to miss our first riveting conversation, Writing Against the System, with Aarthi Vadde - we hope to catch you listening!
Novelist Jordy Rosenberg and critic Annie McClanahan's conversation limns the 18th and 21st centuries, taking up 18th century historical concerns and the messy early history of the novel, along with much more in this last episode of Season 8! https://t.co/nv8ghyz0Nl
During a desert thunderstorm outside Tucson, Lydia Millet joined the Novel Dialogue conversation with hosts John Plotz and Emily Hyde, with Emily playing the role of critic. Tune in now! https://t.co/9z46UppgGH
In today's episode between novelist Jamil Jan Kochai and critic Kalyan Nadiminti, they discuss Kochai's experience growing up between Sacramento, California and Logar, Afghanistan and much more. Join us for this great discussion! https://t.co/FhEOTtnDhg
What happens when a novelist wants “nonsense and joy” but his characters are destined for a Central European sanatorium? Join us to ponder this question and more in this conversation with Adam Ehrlich Sachs and Sunny Yudkoff! https://t.co/3nEf9IygOW
An unforgettable horse gallops through the pages of Kaveh Akbar’s best-selling novel Martyr! (2024), but it is a figurative hastening toward failure and the limitations of language that Akbar discusses with critic Pardis Dabashi. Episode 8.2 available now!
https://t.co/L2iGqQbH6K
Today's episode between Lydia Kiesling and Megan Ward takes up questions of form and political consciousness in the novel, globality and rootedness, capitalism and the yearning for things, optimization and wellness culture, and so much more. Tune in now! https://t.co/fUXDFYLEXH