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Home > Episode 24: Marlon James, Ilya Kaminsky, Valeria Luiselli & More

Episode 24: Marlon James, Ilya Kaminsky, Valeria Luiselli & More

Ampersand Episode 24: Marlon James, Ilya Kaminsky, Valeria Luiselli by Poets & Writers

Related Media: 
Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli [1]
Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky [2]
Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James [3]
Related Reading: 

Shape-Shifter: A Profile of Marlon James [4]

by
Kima Jones
Feature [5]
March/April 2019 [6]
2.13.19

The Man Booker Prize-winning novelist whose new book, Black Leopard, Red Wolf, is the first title of an epic fantasy trilogy, sits down with Kima Jones for a conversation about the freedom of genre-defying fiction.

 

Twenty-Two of the Most Inspiring Writers Retreats in the Country [7]

by
Various
Special Section [8]
March/April 2019 [6]
2.13.19

Twenty-two writers, including Alexander Chee and Rebecca Makkai, offer their personal take on the best retreats for productivity, motivation, networking, and more.

Tags: 
conferences [9] | festivals [10] | residencies [11] | retreats [12]

Reviewers & Critics: Maureen Corrigan of NPR’s Fresh Air [13]

by
Michael Taeckens
The Practical Writer [14]
March/April 2019 [6]
2.13.19

In this continuing series, a book critic discusses the unique challenges of reviewing for radio and how she picks the books that make it on the air.

Tags: 
Reviewers & Critics [15] | literary criticism [16] | book reviewing [17]

March/April 2019 [6]

march_april_noupc.png [18]

[18]
Summary: 

Our annual Writers Retreats Issue features twenty-two of the most inspiring retreats in the country; a profile of Marlon James on the release of his new epic fantasy novel, Black Leopard, Red Wolf; an interview with Valeria Luiselli about her new novel, Lost Children Archive; a conversation with poet Ilya Kaminsky about his new collection, Deaf Republic; the second installment of How to Get Paid; Reviewers & Critics; the art of translation; writing prompts; and more.

SUBSCRIBE NOW [19]
Buy This Issue [20]

In the twenty-fourth episode of Ampersand, editor in chief Kevin Larimer and senior editor Melissa Faliveno discuss new books by the three authors featured in the new issue: Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James; Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli, and Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky. 

pro_jones.jpg [21]

The opening spread of this issue’s cover profile of Marlon James by Kima Jones [4]. Photo by Sara Rubinstein.
 

02:40 Marlon James, the author of three previous books of fiction, including the Man Booker Prize winning novel A Brief History of Seven Killings, is back this month with Black Leopard, Red Wolf, the first installment of his Dark Star Trilogy, an epic fantasy that’s being called “The African Games of Thrones.” And this book is truly epic: It follows two shape-shifting mercenaries, Leopard and Tracker, on an odyssey through a Dark Ages version of the African continent, across ancient cities and dense forests, in search of a missing boy. Along the way they encounter all sorts of mythical creatures, including vampires, witches, wizards, trickster monkeys, and one very wise buffalo. Adventure and swashbuckling ensue, but so do deeper explorations: of truth, power, queerness, and the desire to understand one another.

04:25 Marlon James reads an excerpt from Black Leopard, Red Wolf.

pro_greenwell.jpg [22]

The opening spread of this issue’s conversation between Ilya Kaminsky by Garth Greenwell. Photo by Bob Mahoney.
 

12:03 Ilya Kaminsky’s new book, Deaf Republic, is a kind of parable-in-poems set in an unnamed occupied territory during a time of political unrest. The poetic narrative starts with a gunshot: While breaking up a protest, a soldier shoots and kills a young deaf boy—and this horrific act renders the entire town deaf. The citizens coordinate their silent insurgency with sign language as the book follows the private lives of townspeople encircled by public violence. It’s a love story, a collection of poems about terror and carnage and witness and political dissent—and the power of puppeteering. Ilya was born in Odessa, in what was then the Soviet Union, in 1977. Substantially deaf from the age of four, he spoke no English when he immigrated to the United States with his family at sixteen. And yet he studied at the University of Rochester and Georgetown University and has a JD from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law. His honors include a Whiting Award, the American Academy of Arts and Letters Metcalf Award, a Lannan Fellowship, Poetry magazine’s Levinson Prize, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He is the editor in chief of the literary journal Poetry International and, after several years teaching in the graduate creative writing program at San Diego State University, Ilya now holds the Bourne Poetry Chair at Georgia Tech.

15:12 Ilya Kaminsky reads three poems from Deaf Republic.

pro_leblanc.jpg [23]

The opening spread of this issue’s interview with Valeria Luiselli by Lauren LeBlanc. Photo by Tony Gale.
 

19:44 Valeria Luiselli’s new novel, Lost Children Archive, follows a family of four—whose names and ethnicities we never learn—as they road-trip across the country, from New York to Arizona. The couple are audio archivists, and their destination on this journey is Apacheria, the place the Apaches once called home. “Why Apaches?” asks the ten-year-old son. “Because they were the last of something,” answers the father. The family, which is facing a crisis of its own, is trying to hold onto its own foundations while attempting to understand those of the country across which they travel. It’s a book that is at once a great American road trip novel and an investigation of the complexities of family, immigration, justice, and equality in the United States. Born in Mexico City in 1983, Luiselli has lived in South Korea, India, Spain, and elsewhere; she now lives in New York, where she teaches a creative writing workshop with her niece, at an immigration detention center, to mostly Guatemalan children for whom Spanish is their second language. In the fall she will begin teaching at Bard College, where he was recently appointed writer in residence. She is the author of four previous books, including Tell Me How It Ends: An Essay in Forty Questions, The Story of My Teeth, Faces in the Crowd, and Sidewalks. 

21:58 Valeria Luiselli reads an excerpt from Lost Children Archive.

27:48 The cohosts talk about one of their favorite subjects—made-up words! [24]—after receiving an e-mail from Jim Armstrong, an avid listener of Ampersand who shared a project in which he came up with a new word for each letter of the alphabet, including wrught, vocabullary, and emaul. On his website, armstrongwords.com, he offers the definition and etymology of each word, then provides some useful examples. Thanks for reaching out, Jim!

This episode is brought to you in part by the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. From July 16–28, the University of the South will host the 30th annual Sewanee Writers’ Conference. Thanks to the generosity of the Walter E. Dakin Memorial Fund, supported by the estate of Tennessee Williams, the Conference will gather distinguished faculty to provide instruction and criticism through workshops and craft lectures in poetry, fiction, and playwriting. Fellowships and scholarships are available, and the application deadline is March 20. Apply online and find out more at sewaneewriters.org [25].

Valeria Luiselli audio excerpted courtesy Penguin Random House Audio from Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli, read by the author, Kivlighan de Montebello, William DeMeritt and Maia Enrigue Luiselli.

Ampersand: The Poets & Writers Podcast is a production of Poets & Writers, Inc., and is edited and mixed by Melissa Faliveno. Music for this episode is provided by YACHT, BitBasic, Adam & Alma, and Clinic. Comments or suggestions? E-mail ampersand@pw.org [26].


Source URL:https://www.pw.org/content/episode_24_marlon_james_ilya_kaminsky_valeria_luiselli_more

Links
[1] https://www.pw.org/content/lost_children_archive_by_valeria_luiselli [2] https://www.pw.org/content/deaf_republic_by_ilya_kaminsky [3] https://www.pw.org/content/black_leopard_red_wolf_by_marlon_james [4] https://www.pw.org/content/shapeshifter_a_profile_of_marlon_james [5] https://www.pw.org/articles/feature [6] https://www.pw.org/content/marchapril_2019 [7] https://www.pw.org/content/twentytwo_of_the_most_inspiring_writers_retreats_in_the_country [8] https://www.pw.org/articles/special-section [9] https://www.pw.org/tags/writers_venues_and_communities/conferences [10] https://www.pw.org/tags/writers_venues_and_communities/festivals [11] https://www.pw.org/tags/writers_venues_and_communities/residencies [12] https://www.pw.org/tags/writers_venues_and_communities/retreats [13] https://www.pw.org/content/reviewers_critics_maureen_corrigan_of_nprs_fresh_air [14] https://www.pw.org/articles/the-practical-writer [15] https://www.pw.org/tags/reviewers_critics [16] https://www.pw.org/tags/genre_specifics/literary_criticism [17] https://www.pw.org/tags/writing_lifestyle/book_reviewing [18] https://www.pw.org/files/march_april_noupcpng [19] https://ssl.drgnetwork.com/flex/POE/MEMBERSHIP/ [20] https://www.pw.org/cart?SKU=47.2&qty=1&class=issue&command=add&came_from=/print/901917 [21] https://www.pw.org/files/pro_jonesjpg [22] https://www.pw.org/files/pro_greenwelljpg_1 [23] https://www.pw.org/files/pro_leblancjpg_0 [24] https://www.pw.org/content/episode_19_leslie_jamison_carmen_gimenez_smith_jenny_xie_more [25] http://sewaneewriters.org [26] mailto:editor@pw.org