
(with thanks to Annalee)
In case the recent slate of podcasts wasn’t enough for you, there are still a good deal of podcasts to come very soon, including coverage of Alternative Press Expo (which includes an audio intervention with a bunch of people from the CW Television Network), an author who returns for a second appearance (and this interview is crazier than the first), and, of course, Carolyn’s interview with LBC Read This! author Alan DeNiro. Stay tuned!
Condition of Mr. Segundo: Vacating from vacations.
Guests: C. Max Magee and Marshall Klimasewiski
Subjects Discussed: Drawing upon compartmentalized personal experience, writing unpleasant characters, sabbaticals, maintaining an ever-shifting narrative, writing short stories vs. novels, characters stuck in environments, protracted scenes, human connection vs. work, locals vs. vacationers, John Ruskin, Charles Dodgson, co-opted misfits, and invention vs. personal experience.
EXCERPT FROM SHOW:
Klimasewiski: The odd thing for me — and I don’t know why this is — is that I found Cyrus so much easier to write, even though I don’t think I’m a writer with a really terrific memory. And so therefore I don’t have this great sense of exactly what it was like to be nineteen, or to live inside my own nineteen year old mind. And yet he was so much easier for me to write than the cottagers, who demographically are much closer to me and to people I know. Yet I had a terrible time making them seem to come alive or feel credible in some way in my mind.
(A co-production of the LBC, Pinky’s Paperhaus and The Bat Segundo Show.)
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Condition of Mr. Segundo: Avoiding pie-throwing Bolsheviks.
Guests: Jessica Stockton and Mark Binelli
Subjects Discussed: What’s real and what’s not real in Sacco and Vanzetti Must Die, anarchism, 20th century film references, the Coen brothers, Upton Sinclair, extemporaneous speeches, on not writing the novel chronologically, the sensation of research, knife-grinding, Buster Keaton, meat metaphors, Out of Bounds, shopping S&V around to publishers, Dalkey Archive Press, the fragmented trial scenes, and experimental fiction.
EXCERPT FROM SHOW:
Binelli: When I hit on the comedy team idea, I immediately liked that. And then at some point, I can’t say when, but at some point the name “Sacco and Vanzetti” just popped into my head and it was such a perfect comedy team name. Initially, it seemed so ridiculous, which it is obviously. But then the more I thought about it, the more parallels between anarchism and slapstick started to come out. And it just kind of weirdly made more and more sense. So I just decided to embrace it.
(A co-production of the LBC, Pinky’s Paperhaus and The Bat Segundo Show.)
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Condition of Mr. Segundo: Abdicating his duties for an advertising campaign.
Author: Lionel Shriver
Subjects Discussed: Devising a dual narrative, snooker, film references, the relationship between The Bad Seed and Sliding Doors and Shriver’s novels, dialect and transcribed speech, sports in Shriver’s books, contrasting characters, the pros and cons of popcorn, playing the 9/11 card in contemporary fiction, writing from outlines and notes, Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, on books having a short-shelf life, the success of We Need to Talk About Kevin, writing about the States from the UK, persevering as an author, food, fiction with a sense of purpose, being in love with language, Shriver’s evolving fiction tastes, on being a book critic, the benefits of reader exasperation, sex and relationships, and the Bad Sex Award.
EXCERPT FROM SHOW:
Shriver: It was important of me never to play games for the sake of it, that is, I didn’t just want to write a clever book that was a formal experiment. The idea was always to be illustrating something about the characters, something about the nature of two very different kinds of relationships. It’s a book about tradeoffs. Neither of these men is perfect.
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