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Episode 228 — Claire Vaye Watkins
Otherppl with Brad Listi
English - November 24, 2013 09:08 - 1 hour - ★★★★★ - 477 ratingsBooks Arts Society & Culture interview entrepreneurship business entrepreneur leadership health finance marketing comedy live Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Claire Vaye Watkins is the guest. Her debut story collection, Battleborn, is now available in paperback from Riverhead.
Antonya Nelson, writing for The New York Times Book Review, says
“Although individual stories stand alone, together they tell the tale of a place, and of the population that thrives and perishes therein… The historical sits comfortably alongside the contemporary and the factual nicely supplements the fictional… Readers will share in the environs of the author and her characters, be taken into the hardship of a pitiless place and emerge on the other side—wiser, warier and weathered like the landscape.”
And The Millions says
“As if Watkins’ prose embodies the desert landscape of Nevada itself, the stories are stony, unkind, and harsh, though never unattractive… Beneath these confessions runs a spiritual undertow—that salvific beauty can arise when brutality is brought to light… All of her stories left me feeling purged and oddly cleansed, easily making Battleborn one of the strongest collections I’ve read in years.”
Monologue topics: titles, titling, Dying Young, nakedly depressing titles.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Claire Vaye Watkins is the guest. Her debut story collection, Battleborn, is now available in paperback from Riverhead.
Antonya Nelson, writing for The New York Times Book Review, says
“Although individual stories stand alone, together they tell the tale of a place, and of the population that thrives and perishes therein… The historical sits comfortably alongside the contemporary and the factual nicely supplements the fictional… Readers will share in the environs of the author and her characters, be taken into the hardship of a pitiless place and emerge on the other side—wiser, warier and weathered like the landscape.”
And The Millions says
“As if Watkins’ prose embodies the desert landscape of Nevada itself, the stories are stony, unkind, and harsh, though never unattractive… Beneath these confessions runs a spiritual undertow—that salvific beauty can arise when brutality is brought to light… All of her stories left me feeling purged and oddly cleansed, easily making Battleborn one of the strongest collections I’ve read in years.”
Monologue topics: titles, titling, Dying Young, nakedly depressing titles.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices