May 13, 2013 In this edition of Chapter 16’s podcast series, Stephen Usery talks with Kevin Powers about The Yellow Birds. Powers’s novel—which went on to win the Pen-Hemingway award, the Guardian First Fiction award, and was a finalist for the National Book Award in Fiction—follows a young soldier through combat in Iraq and his rocky adjustment to life at home and away from the battlefield.
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The Farthest Reaches of the Most Isolated Place in the World
April 19, 2013 This week novelist Adam Johnson won the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction—a prize no novelist took home in 2012—for The Orphan Master’s Son, which was released to wide critical acclaim in January of last year. Johnson is also the author of a story collection, Emporium (2002), and another novel, Parasites Like Us (2003). Today he speaks with Chapter 16‘s Stephen Usery about The Orphan Master’s Son, the story of a North Korean boy living in a Soviet-built and now largely lawless city far from the nation’s center of power in Pyongyang.
Read moreImmortality and Lemonade
April 15, 2013 Karen Russell, author of Swamplandia!, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2012 (a year in which no prize was awarded), talks with Chapter 16 about her new collection of short stories, Vampires in the Lemon Grove. In her fiction, Russell toys with the line between fantasy and reality, and she is wary of fantasy’s association with young-adult novels.
Read moreContemporary Cinderella
April 10, 2013 Today, author Jill McCorkle talks about the title story from her 2009 collection, Going Away Shoes, which precedes the publication of her new novel, Life After Life—her first in seventeen years.
Read moreLiterary Co-Conspirators
April 3, 2013 Acclaimed author Jay McInerney is most noted for his many novels, including Bright Lights, Big City and The Last of the Savages, but he is also the wine columnist for The Wall Street Journal and has published three collections of essays from the column, including The Juice: Vinous Veritas, which will be released next week in paperback.
Read moreMystery and magic meet in David Wesley Williams’s debut novel
March 15, 2013 This installment of Chapter 16’s podcast series features Memphis writer David Wesley Williams, author of the new novel, Long Gone Daddies. The story follows three generations of musicians fueled by passion, ambition, and family tradition. Hoping to find fame in legendary Memphis, the men embark on a long and unusual journey through Texas, Arkansas, and the Southern delta.
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