Poets & Writers Theater
Every day we share a new clip of interest to creative writers—author readings, book trailers, publishing panels, craft talks, and more. So grab some popcorn, filter the theater tags by keyword or genre, and explore our sizable archive of literary videos.
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In this installment of the PBS American Masters documentary series Renegades, which highlights the cultural contributions of little-known historical figures with disabilities, the series spotlights the life and career of editor Judy-Lynn del Rey who revolutionized the world of science fiction by editing and publishing books from writers such as Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac Asimov, Philip K. Dick, and George Lucas.
Tags: Fiction | Judy-Lynn del Rey | science fiction | editing | publishing | Ballantine Books | Del Rey | PBS | Renegades | disabled community | editors | 2024 -
“The things I discovered about writing were so important to me; it was the notion that you could write and find out what you really believed in.” Amy Tan speaks about her creative process in this video from PBS and American Masters previewing her documentary Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir directed by James Redford.
Tags: Fiction | Creative Nonfiction | Amy Tan | Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir | PBS | American Masters | documentary -
“When you can articulate the shape of the monster before you, it all of a sudden becomes a lot less intimidating.” In this video from PBS’s Articulate, author Tochi Onyebuchi talks about how writing helps him process rage and hopelessness, and “organize the universe.”
Tags: Fiction | Tochi Onyebuchi | PBS | Articulate | interview | 2021 -
In this 1988 episode of Voices & Visions, a series produced by the New York Center for Visual History for PBS, the life and work of American poet Hart Crane is explored through interviews, archival footage, and readings.
Tags: Poetry | Hart Crane | Voices & Visions | PBS | 1988 | modernist literature -
“I have written somewhere that there is only one story, but there are many stories in the one, and I like that idea.” In this video from PBS’s American Masters series, N. Scott Momaday speaks with Robert Redford about the oral tradition, hearing stories from his father, and the importance of language and story. Momaday’s second memoir, Earth Keeper: Reflections on the American Land (Harper, 2020), is featured in Page One in the November/December issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Creative Nonfiction | N. Scott Momaday | Robert Redford | PBS | American Masters | Earth Keeper | Harper | 2020 | Page One | November/December 2020 -
“This is how the past interrupts our lives, all of it entering the same doorway…” In this clip from PBS’s Articulate, former poet laureate and Pulitzer Prize winner Natasha Trethewey reads her poem “Letter to Inmate #271847.” An interview by Joshunda Sanders with Trethewey about her new book, Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir (Ecco, 2020), is featured in the July/August issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
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“We’re hoping to start a conversation and get people to fall in love with novels again.” In this eight-part PBS series hosted by Meredith Vieira, a list of one hundred of America’s best-loved novels are tabulated based on a nationwide vote and revealed through interviews with celebrities, authors, and book lovers.
Tags: Fiction | PBS | The Great American Read | novel -
“I didn’t begin with the dog—I wrote that book the way I’ve written all my books which is I start at the beginning and I move on and create the story as I go along.” Sigrid Nunez talks with Rich Fahle of PBS Books about her latest novel, The Friend (Riverhead Books, 2018), at the 2018 AWP Annual Conference & Book Fair in Tampa.
Tags: Fiction | Sigrid Nunez | PBS | PBS Books | interview | The Friend | Riverhead Books | 2018 | AWP -
"Dinky planet on a skateboard of dynamite / Oh, what to do..." Juan Felipe Herrera, who has been appointed a second term as poet laureate of the United States, speaks about meeting young poets and reads from his most recent collection, Notes on the Assemblage (City Lights Publishers, 2015), at the 2016 AWP conference and book fair in Los Angeles.
Tags: Poetry | AWP | interview | Juan Felipe Herrera | United States Poet Laureate | PBS | 2016 | City Lights Books | Book View Now | Notes on the Assemblage -
“When you think about all her heroines who struggled to curb their temperament and discipline themselves, you get a sense of the writer herself.” Directed by Nancy Porter, this film biography from PBS's American Masters series, offers an intimate portrait of Louisa May Alcott and the influence her novel Little Women continues to have across cultures and generations.
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“In this book of mine, Brave New World, I postulated a substance called ‘soma’...I think it’s quite on the cards that we may have drugs which will profoundly change our mental states without doing us any harm.” In this Blank on Blank animated video of a 1958 interview with journalist Mike Wallace, Aldous Huxley speaks about his 1932 novel and his predictions for the future of political leadership, propaganda, and technology.
Tags: interview | animation | PBS | Blank on Blank | Brave New World | Aldous Huxley | 1932 | Fiction -
"It's from 'A Prayer for My Daughter' and the lines are 'It's certain that fine women eat / A crazy salad with their meat,' and I thought it was a nice title for a book about women." In this 1975 interview with Studs Terkel, the late Nora Ephron recounts lines by Yeats, the poetic inspiration for the title of her book of essays Crazy Salad: Some Things About Women (Random House, 1975), and talks about her experiences as a journalist and feminist. Animated by Pat Smith, this video is part of PBS Digital Studio's Blank on Blank series.
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"To me, poetry is one of the highest, most abstract, most fulfilling forms of communication. We've always needed poets." In this recording from 1976, Patti Smith talks to journalist Mick Gold about censorship, her creative habits and inspirations, and recounts her first exposure to the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud. Animated by Patrick Smith, the video is part of PBS Digital Studios' Blank on Blank series.
Tags: Patti Smith | animation | PBS | Blank on Blank | Arthur Rimbuad | Illuminations | 1976 | Poetry -
"Strong women leave legacies. The legacy is simply, if she could do it, I could do it." Independent Lens, a weekly showcase of independent documentary film on PBS, celebrates Women’s History Month with a collage of documentary films about women featuring writers Trina Robbins and Gloria Steinem.
Tags: Not Genre-Specific | PBS | Women's History Month -
From William Shakespeare to Dr. Seuss, this episode of Otherwords, a PBS Storied web series hosted by sociolinguist Dr. Erica Brozovsky, digs deep into verbal innovations and the history of words created by writers.
Tags: Poetry | Fiction | Creative Nonfiction | Spoken Word | PBS | Storied | Otherwords | William Shakespeare | Dr. Seuss | nonce words | linguistics -
"A writer is lucky because he cures himself everyday." In this recorded talk from November 1970, Kurt Vonnegut shared his thoughts on writing as a guest speaker for a class at New York University. This animated video by Patrick Smith is part of PBS Digital Studios' Blank on Blank series.
Tags: talk | animation | Kurt Vonnegut | NYU | PBS | Blank on Blank | Fiction -
This PBS video explores the very complex and compelling phenomenon of creativity—a component of writing that all poets and writers must learn to understand for themselves. “Whatever we can do to expand our capacity for uncertainty, that is wonderful preparation for creativity.”
Tags: Not Genre-Specific | documentary | creativity | PBS -
A Man Within, the documentary about Naked Lunch author William S. Burroughs that premieres on the PBS series Independent Lens tonight, explores the late writer's fascination with, among many other things, guns. "Burroughs didn't feel at home unless he had a loaded gun by his side."
Tags: documentary | William Burroughs | PBS | A Man Within | Fiction