London Review Bookshop Podcast
Arts:Books
Drawing on a vast range of material, from critical theory to pop culture to the intimacies and plain exchanges of daily life, Maggie Nelson's On Freedom (Jonathan Cape) explores how we might think, experience, or talk about freedom in ways responsive to the conditions of our day. Her abiding interest lies in ongoing "practices of freedom" by which we negotiate our interrelation with-indeed, our inseparability from-others, with all the care and constraint that relation entails, while accepting difference and conflict as integral to our communion.
Nelson is in conversation here with Amelia Abraham, author of Queer Intentions (Picador)
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Jason Okundaye & Mendez: Revolutionary Acts
Aniefiok Ekpoudom & Gary Younge: Where We Come From
Laleh Khalili & James Butler: The Corporeal Life of Seafaring
Fleur Adcock: Collected Poems
Holly Pester & Nathalie Olah: The Lodgers
Rachael Allen & Lucy Mercer: God Complex
Lara Pawson & Jennifer Hodgson: Spent Light
Paul Muldoon: Howdie-Skelp
Adam Phillips & Hermione Lee: On Giving Up
Lavinia Greenlaw & Jennifer Higgie: The Vast Extent
Seán Hewitt & Sarah Perry: Rapture’s Road
Emily Wilson, Edith Hall, Juliet Stevenson & Tobias Menzies: The Iliad
Mary Jean Chan & Andrew McMillan: Bright Fear
Ella Risbridger & Kate Young: The Dinner Table
Ed Atkins & Steven Zultanski: Sorcerer
Lynne Segal & Amelia Horgan: Lean on Me
Tom Stevenson & Tariq Ali: Someone Else's Empire
Mathias Enard & Chris Power: The Annual Banquet of the Gravediggers' Guild
McKenzie Wark & Lauren John Joseph: Love and Money, Sex and Death
Isabel Waidner and Diarmuid Hester: Corey Fah Does Social Mobility
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