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News Articles: Author Interviews

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

Barbara Walters forged a path for women in journalism, but not without paying a price

Walters was the first woman to co-anchor a national news show on prime time television. "The path she cut is one that many of us have followed," says biographer Susan Page, author of The Rulebreaker.

April 24, 2024
|
By:
  • Tonya Mosley
Adam Moss allowed NPR into a space only two other people have seen: his painting studio.

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

In a collection of 40+ interviews, author Adam Moss tries to find the key to creation

Author Adam Moss interviewed more than 40 creative minds to find out how they went from a blank page to finished work of art.

April 24, 2024
|
By:
  • Ari Shapiro,
  • Michael Levitt,
  • and 1 more
After decades creating and publishing recipes, cookbook author Joan Nathan has released what she said is likely her final book, a cookbook and memoir called "My Life in Recipes."

Tagged as: 

  • Food

After years of documenting Jewish food traditions, Joan Nathan focuses on her family's

Joan Nathan has spent her life exploring in the kitchen, but for the Passover Seder, she sticks with a menu that follows her own family's traditions.

April 23, 2024
|
By:
  • Ari Shapiro,
  • Mia Venkat,
  • and 2 more
A voter leaves a voting booth in Concord, N.H., the during primary election on Jan. 23, 2024.

Tagged as: 

  • Politics

How the Founding Fathers' concept of 'Minority Rule' is alive and well today

Journalist Ari Berman says the founding fathers created a system that concentrated power in the hands of an elite minority — and that their decisions continue to impact American democracy today.

April 22, 2024
|
By:
  • Terry Gross

Tagged as: 

  • Book News & Features

George Takei 'Lost Freedom' some 80 years ago – now he's written that story for kids

When actor George Takei was 4 years old, he was labeled an "enemy" by the U.S. government and sent to a string of incarceration camps. His new children's book about that time is My Lost Freedom.

April 20, 2024
|
By:
  • Samantha Balaban
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Salman Rushdie (April 8, 2024).

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

What happened when the threat of danger became Salman Rushdie's reality?

Salman Rushdie is probably most closely associated with his 1988 novel The Satanic Verses, a book inspired by the life of the prophet Muhummad. The book was notorious not just for its contents but because of the intense backlash, and the threat it posed to his safety and wellbeing.

While Rushdie saw it as an exploration of Islamic culture, some Muslims saw it as blasphemous. The year after it published, Iran's supreme leader issued a fatwa, ordering Muslims to kill Rushdie.

Rushdie moved to New York in 2000, and was able to resume the public life of a popular author, but that all changed on August 12th, 2022 when a young man charged at Rushdie while he was on stage at an event, stabbing him at least a dozen times.

After two years, he has chronicled his brush with death, and the aftermath in his new memoir 'KNIFE'.

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

April 17, 2024
|
By:
  • GPB Newsroom
In Alua Arthur's 2023 <a href="https://www.ted.com/talks/alua_arthur_why_thinking_about_death_helps_you_live_a_better_life?language=en" data-key="83135">TED Talk</a>, she said her ideal death would happen at sunset.

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

Death doula says life is more meaningful if you 'get real' about the end

Alua Arthur helps people plan for death. A big part of her work is helping them reconcile the lives they lived with the lives they might have wanted. Her memoir is called Briefly Perfectly Human.

April 17, 2024
|
By:
  • Tonya Mosley
Salman Rushdie says writing <em>Knife</em> allowed him to change his relationship to the attack. "Instead of just being the person who got stabbed, I now see myself as the person who wrote a book about getting stabbed," he says.

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

Two nights before the attack, Salman Rushdie dreamed he was stabbed onstage

Rushdie was onstage at a literary event in 2022 when he was attacked by a man in the audience: "Dying in the company of strangers — that was what was going through my mind." His new book is Knife.

April 17, 2024
|
By:
  • Terry Gross

Tagged as: 

  • Arts & Life

Watch: Salman Rushdie on the moment he was attacked on stage, and why he felt lonely

Salman Rushdie is a storyteller. So when you ask him to describe the day, in 2022, when he was attacked and nearly killed by a young man with a knife, Rushdie paints a vivid picture.

April 17, 2024
|
By:
  • Mary Louise Kelly,
  • Megan Lim,
  • and 5 more
An American hauls in a HA-19 Japanese submarine following the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Submarine warfare would prove crucial during WWII.

Tagged as: 

  • History

Seizures, broken spines and vomiting: Scientific testing that helped facilitate D-Day

Biomedical engineer Rachel Lance says British scientists submitted themselves to experiments that would be considered wildly unethical today in an effort to shore up the war effort.

April 10, 2024
|
By:
  • Terry Gross
Amanda Montell hosts the podcast <a href="https://www.soundslikeacult.com/">Sounds Like a Cult</a>. She's also the author of <em>Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism</em>.

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

'Magical Overthinking' author says information overload can stoke irrational thoughts

Author and podcast host Amanda Montell says our brains are overloaded with a constant stream of information that stokes our innate tendency to believe conspiracy theories and mysticism.

April 09, 2024
|
By:
  • Tonya Mosley
Chilean author Isabel Allende poses for a photograph in Madrid on June 5, 2017.

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

Isabel Allende tells a story of impossible love in 'Lovers at the Museum'

We spoke with the prolific, 81-year-old author about her new short story — a powerful allegory of the human condition and the mystery of love — and also AI and what's she's working on now.

April 08, 2024
|
By:
  • Marcela Davison Aviles
Science writer David Baron views the beginning of a solar eclipse with friends in Western Australia in 2023. Baron says getting to see the solar corona during a total eclipse is "the most dazzling sight in the heavens."

Tagged as: 

  • Science

The weird and wonderful sensations of viewing a total solar eclipse

'You will see a sun you've never seen before,' says science writer David Baron. He urges people to head to the 'path of totality' to see the total solar eclipse on April 8 for an experience of a lifetime.

April 04, 2024
|
By:
  • Regina G. Barber
Sarah McCammon

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

Author Sarah McCammon talks her new book 'The Exvangelicals'

Sarah McCammon, a national political correspondent for NPR and co-host of the NPR politics podcast, is also author of a new book, The Exvangelicals: Loving, Living, and Leaving the White Evangelical Church. She spoke with GPB's Pamela Kirkland about the book and the movement of the younger generation of evangelicals away from the church.

April 03, 2024
|
By:
  • Pamela Kirkland

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

'Women Behind the Wheel' explains how cars became a gendered technology

Author Nancy Nichols says that for men, cars signify adventure, power and strength. For women, they are about performing domestic duties; there was even a minivan prototype with a washer/dryer inside.

March 28, 2024
|
By:
  • Terry Gross
  • Load More

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