26 episodes

CBC Radio's Writers and Company offers an opportunity to explore in depth the lives, thoughts and works of remarkable writers from around the world. Hosted by Eleanor Wachtel.

Writers and Company CBC Radio

    • Arts
    • 4.7 • 190 Ratings

CBC Radio's Writers and Company offers an opportunity to explore in depth the lives, thoughts and works of remarkable writers from around the world. Hosted by Eleanor Wachtel.

    US poet laureate Ada Limón celebrates nature, family and human connection in The Hurting Kind

    US poet laureate Ada Limón celebrates nature, family and human connection in The Hurting Kind

    Called "a poet of ecstatic revelation," U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón brings an observant eye and sense of wonder to all her work – from 2015's Bright Dead Things, to her acclaimed 2018 collection, The Carrying, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry. Limón's latest book, The Hurting Kind, is a finalist for the $130,000 Griffin Poetry Prize. The winner will be announced at a live event, complete with readings, on Wednesday June 7 at Koerner Hall in Toronto.

    • 1 hr 3 min
    From Antarctica to Zanzibar – Sara Wheeler on 40 years of adventure in her new book, Glowing Still

    From Antarctica to Zanzibar – Sara Wheeler on 40 years of adventure in her new book, Glowing Still

    One of Britain's foremost travel writers, Sara Wheeler has written bestselling books and biographies about the polar region and its famous expeditions, as well as the United States, Chile, Russia and Greece. Now, in Glowing Still: A Woman's Life on the Road, Wheeler turns the lens on herself, considering a life spent on the road and writing in what has historically been a male-dominated genre. Part memoir, part travelogue, Glowing Still spans seven continents and has been described as "funny, furious writing from the queen of intrepid travel."

    • 1 hr 1 min
    Maestro Daniel Barenboim on his life in music — and its role in bringing cultures together

    Maestro Daniel Barenboim on his life in music — and its role in bringing cultures together

    Daniel Barenboim has been conductor of the Orchestra of Paris and musical director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, as well as the Berlin State Opera, a position he held for three decades. Along with the Palestinian-American intellectual Edward Said, Barenboim created the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, bringing together young musicians from the Middle East, especially Israel and the Arab world. Speaking to Eleanor Wachtel from Milan in 2008, he talked about the orchestra's historic 2005 concert in Ramallah, growing up on Bach and the meaning of music in his life. This episode originally aired on Wachtel on the Arts on IDEAS in 2008.

    • 55 min
    Serbian British writer Vesna Goldsworthy on reimagining Anna Karenina

    Serbian British writer Vesna Goldsworthy on reimagining Anna Karenina

    From Belgrade and London, the remarkable novelist, poet and memoirist, Vesna Goldsworthy. She spoke to Eleanor Wachtel in 2019 about her novel Monsieur Ka, an ingenious re-working of Tolstoy’s masterpiece, Anna Karenina — picking up where his story left off. Set in post-war London and focusing on the life of Anna's abandoned son, it’s an entertaining and affecting story about identity, exile and fiction.

    • 52 min
    Max Porter blurs the line between dream and reality in his compelling, inventive fiction

    Max Porter blurs the line between dream and reality in his compelling, inventive fiction

    Author of the powerful and poetic Grief is the Thing With Feathers, the best-selling British novelist talks with Eleanor Wachtel about his new novel, Shy, and his original imaginings of the natural world

    • 54 min
    Pulitzer Prize winner Carol Shields brought a fresh perspective to the lives of women

    Pulitzer Prize winner Carol Shields brought a fresh perspective to the lives of women

    On May 4, the winner of the inaugural US$150,000 Carol Shields Prize for Fiction, which celebrates the work of Canadian and American women and non-binary writers, will be announced. In honour of the prize, Writers & Company is airing Eleanor Wachtel's last conversation with Shields, recorded at her home in Victoria in 2002. Shields died the following year. She was the author of more than 20 books including the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Stone Diaries, The Republic of Love and Swann: A Mystery. Her last novel, Unless, tells the story of a writer struggling with the loss of her daughter, who's chosen to live on a downtown street corner with a cardboard sign fixed to her that reads "Goodness." *This episode originally aired on July 17, 2003.

    • 53 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
190 Ratings

190 Ratings

trillionshelper ,

BEST PODCAST EVER

Dear Ms. Wachtel,

It was upsetting to hear you are ending your podcast—-selfishly I wish you would continue doing it forever. There is no podcast I look forward to more—-I know it will be the most interesting, intelligent and enlightening hour of the week, without equal. As I am not a writer I do not have the words to adequately and appropriately thank you—-for an hour of bliss each week, for introducing me to authors I would otherwise never have known of—-many many thanks. You will be greatly missed. I can hope you write several volumes of memoirs !

20digits ,

No equal among author interviewers

An incredibly prepared and thoughtful interviewer of authors . Superior to all other book podcasts

lukequinton ,

The best

Eleanor Wachtel is one of the best interviewers in the world.

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