Tag Archives: childbirth
Episode 91 — Sheila Heti
Sheila Heti is today’s guest. She is the Interviews Editor at The Believer magazine, and her new novel, How Should a Person Be?, is now available in the United States from Henry Holt. Miranda July raves: A new kind of … Continue reading →
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Tagged as acting, Antonioni, author interviews, Ben Lerner, book tour, books, Brad Listi, childbirth, embarrassment, fiction, Gideon Lewis-Kraus, Henry Holt, Henry Miller, How Should a Person Be?, interviews, James Wood, Leaving the Atocha Station, Lorin Stein, Los Angeles, Margaret Atwood, Marquis de Sade, McSweeney's, meaning, Miranda July, New York City, novels, patience, Paul Thomas Anderson, photo shoots, podcasts, porn, process, publishing, Reality Hunger, reviews, self-help, sex, Sheila Heti, Stanley Kubrick, style, Tennessee Williams, The Hills, The New Yorker, theater, Ticknor, Toronto, Yaddo
Episode 75 — Jerry Stahl
Jerry Stahl is today’s guest. He’s the author of several books, including the memoir Permanent Midnight, which was adapted into a film starring Ben Stiller. Other titles include novels like I, Fatty and Pain Killers. And most recently, he co-authored … Continue reading →
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Tagged as Akashic, antisemitism, Austin, Bad Sex on Speed, Ben Stiller, Berkeley, butchers, Cannes Film Festival, childbirth, children, Clive Owen, dope, drugs, Ernest Hemingway, fatherhood, Fatty, fear, febrile seizures, France, hamsters, heavy shit, hell, hepatitis-C, heroin, hippies, Hubert Selby Jr., hunting, Hustler, I, Jack Nicholson, James Gandolfini, Jews, Johnny Temple, Larry Charles, Liberty Bell, Los Angeles, luck, MacArthur Park, Martha Gellhorn, meconium, mortal fear, Nepal, Nicole Kidman, nosedives, Pain Killers, parent shame, parenthood, Paris, Permanent Midnight, Philip Kaufman, Pittsburgh, Sicily, St. Bart's, suicide, the abyss, The Evil B.B. Chow and Other Stories, The Hill School, Village Voice
Episode 65 — Matt Bell
Matt Bell is the guest. He’s the author of several chapbooks, a fiction collection called How They Were Found, and his most recent book is a novella called Cataclysm Baby, now available from Mud Luscious Press. Karen Russell, author of … Continue reading →
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Tagged as academia, adolescence, author interview podcasts, author interviews, authors, Bill Murray, books, boredom, Brad Listi, Canada, childbirth, Denis Johnson, Dzanc, genre vs. literary, interviews, isolation, Jesus' Son, Jim Morrison, kids, Louis Ferdinand Celine, Matt Bell, Meatballs, mediated experience, Michigan, Other People with Brad Listi, parenthood, podcasts, publishing, real experience, repetition, self-doubt, Stephen King, teaching, The Collagist, The Nervous Breakdown Literary Experience, The Shining, time, uncertainty, violence, writers, writing







