49 episodes

Novel Dialogue: where unlikely conversation partners come together to discuss the making of novels and what to make of them. What makes us special? Critics and novelists in conversation. Breaking down the boundaries between critical, creative, and just plain quirky, Novel Dialogue’s approach is wide-ranging and unconventional. Ever wondered what Jennifer Egan thinks of TikTok, how Ruth Ozeki honed her craft working on the movie Mutant Hunt, or if Colm Tóibín will ever write a novel about an openly gay novelist? Join us for lively conversations hosted by scholars who admire and write about the novelists that help shape our literary culture. Learn more about Novel Dialogue here.

Novel Dialogue Aarthi Vadde and John Plotz

    • Arts
    • 4.6 • 19 Ratings

Novel Dialogue: where unlikely conversation partners come together to discuss the making of novels and what to make of them. What makes us special? Critics and novelists in conversation. Breaking down the boundaries between critical, creative, and just plain quirky, Novel Dialogue’s approach is wide-ranging and unconventional. Ever wondered what Jennifer Egan thinks of TikTok, how Ruth Ozeki honed her craft working on the movie Mutant Hunt, or if Colm Tóibín will ever write a novel about an openly gay novelist? Join us for lively conversations hosted by scholars who admire and write about the novelists that help shape our literary culture. Learn more about Novel Dialogue here.

    7.2 You Write Because You Want to Feel Free: Katie Kitamura and Alexander Manshel (SW)

    7.2 You Write Because You Want to Feel Free: Katie Kitamura and Alexander Manshel (SW)

    Although Katie Kitamura feels free when she writes—free from the “soup of everyday life,” from the political realities that weigh upon her, and even at times from the limits of her own thinking—she is keenly aware of the unfreedoms her novels explore. Katie, author of the award-winning Intimacies (2021), talks with critic Alexander Manshel about the darker corners of the human psyche and the inescapable contours of history that shape her fiction. Alexander and Katie explore how she brings these tensions to “the space of interpretation, where the book exists” and places trust in her readers to dwell there thoughtfully. They also discuss the influence of absent men (including Henry James), love triangles, love stories, long books, and titles (hint: someone close to Katie says all her novels could be called Complicity). Stay tuned for Katie’s answer to the signature question, which takes listeners from to the farmlands of Avonlea to the mean streets of Chicago.
    Mentioned in this episode
    By Katie Kitamura:

    Intimacies

    A Separation

    Gone to the Forest

    Japanese for Travelers

    The Longshot

    Also mentioned:

    Flannery O’Connor, “Revelation”

    Henry James, Portrait of a Lady

    Garth Greenwell, What Belongs to You

    Elena Ferrante, The Neapolitan Novels

    Elsa Morante, Lies and Sorcery

    Lucy Maud Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables

    John Steinbeck, East of Eden

    Theodore Dreiser, An American Tragedy


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    • 58 min
    7.1 Etherized: Anne Enright in Conversation with Paige Reynolds (JP)

    7.1 Etherized: Anne Enright in Conversation with Paige Reynolds (JP)

    Anne Enright, writer, critic, Booker winner, kindly makes time for Irish literature maven Paige Reynolds and ND host John Plotz. She reads from The Wren, The Wren (Norton, 2023) and discusses the “etherized” state of our inner lives as they circulate on social media. Anne says we don't yet know if the web has become a space of exposure or of authority, but that the state of diffusion we all exist in is “pixilated”--though perhaps we can take comfort from the fact that “Jeff Bezos...is not as interested in your period as you might think.”
    Anne speaks of “a moment of doom” when a writer simply commits to a character, unlovely as they may or must turn out to be. (Although The Wren The Wren harbors one exception: “Terry is lovely.”) She also gently corrects one reviewer: her characters aren’t working class, they're "just Irish." Asked about teaching, Anne emphasizes giving students permission to write absolutely anything they want--while simultaneously “mortifying them...condemning them to absolute hell” by pointing out the need to engage in contemporary conversation. Students should aim for writing that mixes authority with carelessness. However, “to get to that state of carefree expression is very hard.”
    Although tempted by Lewis Carroll and Kenneth Grahame, Anne has a clear winner when it comes to the signature question: A. A. Milne’s Now We are Six.
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    • 41 min
    6.6 Overtaken by Awe: Sheila Heti speaks with Sunny Yudkoff

    6.6 Overtaken by Awe: Sheila Heti speaks with Sunny Yudkoff

    Sheila Heti sits down with Sunny Yudkoff and ND host John Plotz to discuss her incredibly varied oeuvre. She does it all: stories, novels, alphabetized diary entries as well as a series of dialogues in the New Yorker with an AI named Alice.
    Drawing on her background in Jewish Studies, Sunny prompts Sheila to unpack the implicit and explicit theology of her recent Pure Color (Sheila admits she “spent a lot of time thinking about …what God’s pronouns are going to be" )--as well as the protagonist's temporary transformation into a leaf. The three also explore how life and lifelikeness shape How Should a Person Be. Sheila explains why "auto-fiction" strikes her as a "bad category" and "a lazy way of thinking about what the author is doing formally" since "the history of literature is authors melding their imagination with their lived experience."
    Sheila’s response to the signature question was both textual and hilarious. A true writer's weirdness!
    Mentioned in this Episode:
    By Sheila Heti:

    Pure Colour

    How Should a Person Be?

    Alphabetical Diaries

    Ticknor


    We Need a Horse (children's book)


    The Chairs are Where the People Go (with Misha Glouberman)


    Also mentioned:

    Oulipo Group


    Autofiction: e.g. Ben Lerner, Rachel Cusk, Karl Ove Knausgard


    Craig Seligman, Sontag and Kael


    George Eliot, Middlemarch



    Clarice Lispector (e.g. The Hour of the Star)

    Kenneth Goldsmith Soliloquy


    Willa Cather , The Professor's House


    William Steig, Sylvester and The Magic Pebble.



    Find out more about Novel Dialogue and its hosts and organizers here. Contact us, get that exact quote from a transcript, and explore many more conversations between novelists and critics.
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    • 44 min
    6.5 Attention is Love: A Discussion with Lauren Groff and Laura McGrath (SW)

    6.5 Attention is Love: A Discussion with Lauren Groff and Laura McGrath (SW)

    Just days before the release of her latest novel, The Vaster Wilds (Riverhead Books, 2023), three-time National Book Award Finalist and The New York Times-bestselling author Lauren Groff sat down to talk to critic Laura McGrath and host Sarah Wasserman. Although Groff admits that she wants “each subsequent book to destroy the one” that came before, writing is always for her an endeavor of focus, ritual, and most of all, love. Whether they retell foundational myths about the nation, as in The Vaster Wilds, or rethink the relationship between faith, nature, and desire, as does Matrix, Groff puts love for her characters, for the planet, and for the process of writing at the center of all her fiction. She discusses an anticipated triptych of novels beginning with Matrix and continuing with The Vaster Wilds that covers 1,000 years of women, religion, and planetary crisis and care. The Vaster Wilds tells a kind of anti-captivity narrative as it follows a servant girl who has escaped from a colonial settlement in 1609. The novel asks what it means to love the wilderness even when it is hostile to human survival. Groff and McGrath explore how the novel offers a cautionary tale about the intertwined ills of colonialism and climate change without shame or condescension. Constantly rearranging “the detritus of the actual world” into stories of faith and love and care, Groff relies on the rituals of daily life to discover the formal architectures of fiction.
    Mentioned in this episode
    By Lauren Groff:


    The Vaster Wilds (2023)


    Matrix (2021)


    Florida (2018)


    Fates and Furies (2015)


    Arcadia (2011)


    The Monsters of Templeton (2008)


    Also mentioned:

    William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair


    Joseph Stromberg, Smithsonian Magazine article on the Jamestown

    Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson

    Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe


    John Williams, Stoner


    Kate Marshall, Novels by Aliens


    
    Find out more about Novel Dialogue and its hosts and organizers here. Contact us, get that exact quote from a transcript, and explore many more conversations between novelists and critics.
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    • 48 min
    6.4 “We All Relate to Each Other’s Dystopias”

    6.4 “We All Relate to Each Other’s Dystopias”

    Shehan Karunatilaka’s The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida (Norton, 2022), which won the Booker Prize in 2022, is a thriller that begins in the afterlife, an uproarious murder mystery set amid the tragedies of Sri Lanka’s long civil war. Its protagonist, a war photographer, has become a ghost with just seven moons to find his killer and give his life’s work meaning. This is a historical novel that bends and twists genre and narrative into wondrous and disorienting knots and makes space for the cacophony of ghostly voices of those killed and disappeared in Sri Lanka. Shehan notes that if anything survives the death of your body, it’s probably the voice in your head, and the voice in his head speaks in the second person. 
    Moving from philosophy to the politics of fiction, Professor Sangeeta Ray, author of En-Gendering India: Woman and Nation in Colonial and Postcolonial Narratives (Duke), prompts Shehan to think about Sri Lankan literature’s rise on the global stage, and Shehan makes the case for fiction standing in for the missing records and histories of the dead, lost, and disappeared in a prolonged time of war. The conversation takes us to the surprise Sri Lankan win in the Cricket World Cup of 1996, the role of queer desire in a novel about war tragedies, and whether any story about the Sri Lankan civil war can be optimistic. We end with a signature question that links Shehan and a previous guest, the Argentinian novelist Mariana Enríquez, in their shared (and spooky) writing inspiration. 
    Mentions:

    Salman Rushdie, Midnight’s Children 


    Mohammed Hanif, A Case of Exploding Mangoes 


    Shehan Karunatilaka, The Legend of Pradeep Matthew 



    Kevin Liu 


    Ted Chiang 


    1996 Cricket World Cup 

    Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient  



    Romesh Gunesekera 


    Yasmine Gooneratne 


    Shyam Selvadurai 


    A. Sivanandan 


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    • 46 min
    6.3 Narrative, Database, Archive: Tom Comitta and Deidre Lynch (AV)

    6.3 Narrative, Database, Archive: Tom Comitta and Deidre Lynch (AV)

    2 tables; 300 novels, 1500 pages of nature description: This is how Tom Comitta created The Nature Book, a one-of-a-kind novel cut from 300 years of English literary tradition. It has no human characters, no original writing, and it is astoundingly good! Tom sits down with distinguished Harvard prof, Deidre Lynch and host Aarthi Vadde to talk about how they wrote a book out of found language. 
    The conversation reveals why The Nature Book is so compelling: it scrambles the usual distinctions between narrative and database. It is fast-paced, propulsive, full of cliffhangers and yet also a “mood collage” composed of macro, micro, and nanopatterns that Tom identified in their corpus. Writing through a complex set of Oulipo-like constraints, they checked their own authorial freedom to create a book in which the human hand becomes distant and ghostly – its traces felt in the change of seasons and at the bottoms of oceans yet nowhere seen.
    Deidre connects Tom’s “literary supercut” (their own term for their practice) to the centuries-old tradition of commonplacing in which ordinary readers would cut and paste favored passages into books that then became archives of personal experience and collective memory. The Nature Book thus finds its place in a countercultural tradition of authorship where recycling takes precedence over invention. Copying, curation, and rearrangement become a novelistic style of “degrowth” in which writers discover that, in lieu of developing new language, they can plumb the depths of our already existing language. The episode ends with a series of surprising answers to the signature question: narratives and databases cross paths with hookups and keepsakes!Mentions: 

    Kota Ezawa

    Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights

    Fiction for Dummies

    Amitav Ghosh, The Great Derangement

    Herman Melville, Moby Dick

    It Narratives – narratives in which protagonists are often manufactured objects (e.g. Adventures of a Corkscrew (1775))

    Elvia Wilk, Death by Landscape


    Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith et al. (edited)


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    • 41 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
19 Ratings

19 Ratings

on behalf of the team ,

Informative and unpredictable conversations about writing

I learned a lot from this podcast. With the help of insightful questions from the hosts and guest critics, the authors who sat down for these interviews were candid about their writing processes and objectives and what draws them to the form of the novel. Careful listeners will also be rewarded with gossip about how the publishing industry works (or doesn’t). Strongly recommend!

K2021G ,

A novel discussion in more ways than one

As someone who listens to a lot of podcasts (too many, honestly), I've been on the lookout for one about books that isn't either simply interviews with authors about their own novels (which are great in their own way, but end up sometimes feeling like the authors are just running the press circuit), lightly historicist readings of canonical texts, or that end up boiling down to "here's what I've been reading lately and it was good/bad" in some form: listening to Aarthi Vadde, Kelly Rich, and Teju Cole talk about the novel rather than just a novel was really wonderful, and not something I've been able to find in any of the other podcasts I've tried. Looking forward to future episodes!

HilariousCat ,

Engaging, compelling, smart, and fun

Imagine getting to take part in a dynamic and intelligent but also relaxed conversation with an incredible novelist and incredible literary critic. That’s what the first episode was like for me - and I’m excited for later episodes. It’s perfect for students and scholars of the novel, but it would also be great for anyone who reads and likes to think about novels.

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