LA Review of Books
En podcast af LA Review of Books - Fredage
503 Episoder
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Errol Morris Explores the Death of Truth in America, Past and Present
Udgivet: 15.12.2017 -
Controversial Jews
Udgivet: 8.12.2017 -
Freeman’s Bright Future for New Writing Across the Globe; plus Kurniawan’s Beauty is a Wound
Udgivet: 30.11.2017 -
Liska Jacobs’ Catalina: A Crash & Burn Tale for Our Times; plus Chris Kraus’ Video Green
Udgivet: 23.11.2017 -
Robin Campillo's BPM Captures the Vitality & Tragedy of ACT UP Paris in the 90s; plus Canine Lit
Udgivet: 17.11.2017 -
Lynn Comella on the Feminst Sexual Revolution that Shook the Nation; + Katherine Heiny
Udgivet: 10.11.2017 -
An Israeli & Palestinian Dinner at the Center of the Earth with Nathan Englander; & Rachel Cusk
Udgivet: 2.11.2017 -
Literary & Artistic Connections: Manchester to Oaxaca to LA; plus, Pankaj Mishra's Histories
Udgivet: 26.10.2017 -
Ai Weiwei on Human Flow: Refugees, Art, History, Spirit & Nature
Udgivet: 19.10.2017 -
Karen Tei Yamashita's Letters to Memory; plus Sylvia by Leonard Michaels
Udgivet: 12.10.2017 -
Orange County: A Literary Field Guide; plus Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow's Age of the Walkman
Udgivet: 5.10.2017 -
Chiara Barzini's Los Angeles Before the Earthquake; plus, Play Dead by Francine Harris
Udgivet: 28.9.2017 -
Natalie J Graham Begin with a Failed Body; plus Russian Emigre Short Stories after October 1917
Udgivet: 21.9.2017 -
Dolores Huerta & Peter Bratt La Lucha Continua at 87; plus, David Plante's Difficult Women
Udgivet: 14.9.2017 -
Trump’s “Empire of Disorientation”: Philosopher Hans Sluga on Donald Trump
Udgivet: 8.9.2017 -
Lucy Ives Impossible Views of the World; plus Roxane Gay's Hunger
Udgivet: 7.9.2017 -
Bryan Fogel’s Icarus Has the Dope on Putin; plus Tom Atwood’s LGBTQ Home Pics
Udgivet: 31.8.2017 -
Imani Tolliver Runaway: A Memoir in Verse; plus Elena Ferrante's The Lost Daughter
Udgivet: 24.8.2017 -
Danzy Senna's New People: Race, Identity, Romance, & Jonestown; plus Toni Cade Bambara
Udgivet: 17.8.2017 -
Frank Gehry in Dialogue with Joseph Giovannini
Udgivet: 10.8.2017
The Los Angeles Review of Books is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting and disseminating rigorous, incisive, and engaging writing on every aspect of literature, culture, and the arts. The Los Angeles Review of Books magazine was created in part as a response to the disappearance of the traditional newspaper book review supplement, and, with it, the art of lively, intelligent long-form writing on recent publications in every genre, ranging from fiction to politics. The Los Angeles Review of Books seeks to revive and reinvent the book review for the internet age, and remains committed to covering and representing today’s diverse literary and cultural landscape.