Tag Archives: Gideon Lewis-Kraus
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 →
Filed under Podcasts
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







