The brilliant New York writer Sigrid Nunez's most recent novel is What Are You Going Through; her previous one, The Friend, (2018) won the National Book Award. She speaks with Tara Menon, of the Harvard English department, and author of a terrific article about Sigrid Nunez in the Sewanee Review. The conversation ranges widely and then plunges into depths. Because life is defined by grief and mourning, so too are my novels, says Nunez. She thinks her upbringing with immigrant parents who felt adrift from their homeland and her own "failure" as a dancer (recounted in her 1995 debut novel, A Feather on the Breath of God ) are the ferment from which her vocation as a writer arose. The question of genre is tossed around: "fictional memoir" perh...
For this thesis, I am writing a novel, titled The Priceless One, which uses the bildungsroman arc to...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Ulka Anjaria and Madhuri Vijay sit down to talk about Madhuri's prize-winning first novel The Far Fi...
Colm Tóibín , the new laureate for Irish fiction, talks to Joseph Rezek of Boston University, and gu...
Caryl Phillips, professor of English at Yale, world-renowned and prize-winning novelist (from The Fi...
Githa Hariharan grew up in Bombay and Manila, and has lived in the USA. She now lives in New Delhi, ...
A 2011 conversation with the author Sigrid Nunez about her life and the inspiration for her work
Season three of Novel Dialogue launches in partnership with Public Books and introduces some fresh n...
This dissertation explores how a solitary writer becomes a social writer, entering into the industri...
Shola von Reinhold is the author of LOTE, a novel about getting lost in the archives and finding wha...
The Dying Art of Conversation is the story of a young expatriate writer living and working in presen...
‘The Possibilities for the Social Novel in a Contemporary Context’ consists of two volumes. The firs...
Acclaimed novelist Kamila Shamsie joins esteemed Oxford scholar Ankhi Mukherjee for a wide-ranging d...
Helen Garner sits down with John and Elizabeth McMahon, a distinguished scholar of Australian litera...
For this thesis, I am writing a novel, titled The Priceless One, which uses the bildungsroman arc to...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Ulka Anjaria and Madhuri Vijay sit down to talk about Madhuri's prize-winning first novel The Far Fi...
Colm Tóibín , the new laureate for Irish fiction, talks to Joseph Rezek of Boston University, and gu...
Caryl Phillips, professor of English at Yale, world-renowned and prize-winning novelist (from The Fi...
Githa Hariharan grew up in Bombay and Manila, and has lived in the USA. She now lives in New Delhi, ...
A 2011 conversation with the author Sigrid Nunez about her life and the inspiration for her work
Season three of Novel Dialogue launches in partnership with Public Books and introduces some fresh n...
This dissertation explores how a solitary writer becomes a social writer, entering into the industri...
Shola von Reinhold is the author of LOTE, a novel about getting lost in the archives and finding wha...
The Dying Art of Conversation is the story of a young expatriate writer living and working in presen...
‘The Possibilities for the Social Novel in a Contemporary Context’ consists of two volumes. The firs...
Acclaimed novelist Kamila Shamsie joins esteemed Oxford scholar Ankhi Mukherjee for a wide-ranging d...
Helen Garner sits down with John and Elizabeth McMahon, a distinguished scholar of Australian litera...
For this thesis, I am writing a novel, titled The Priceless One, which uses the bildungsroman arc to...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...