London Review Bookshop Podcast
Arts:Books
Historical fiction is having a moment, and at the forefront are two of 2023’s most hotly anticipated novels: Zadie Smith’s The Fraud and Adam Thirlwell’s The Future Future. Smith and Thirlwell discussed their approaches to fiction and the ways in which prose can ‘sandblast the dust off history’, as Polly Stenham writes about The Future Future.
Buy The Fraud: lrb.me/thefraud
Buy The Future Future: https://lrb.me/thefuturefuture
Find more events at the Bookshop: lrb.me/eventspod
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Perry Anderson and John Lanchester: Powell v. Proust
Ha-Joon Chang & Daniel Chandler: Edible Economics
Juan Gabriel Vásquez & Shahidha Bari: Retrospective
Sheila Fitzpatrick & James Meek: The Shortest History of the Soviet Union
Katherine Rundell and Alice Spawls: The Golden Mole
Derek Owusu & Jason Okundaye: Losing the Plot
Wallace Shawn and Gareth Evans: Sleeping Among Sheep Under a Starry Sky
Sophie Lewis & Lola Olufemi: Abolish the Family
Vigdis Hjorth & Shahidha Bari: Is Mother Dead
Chantal Mouffe & James Schneider: Towards a Green Democratic Revolution
Martin Shaw and Claire Armistead: s t a g c u l t
Lara Feigel and Lauren Elkin: Look! We Have Come Through!
Perdendosi: Edmund de Waal, Norman McBeath & Alexandra Harris
On Claude McKay: Raymond Antrobus, Paul Mendez & Kevin Okoth
Mohsin Hamid & Jo Hamya: The Last White Man
Dawn Foster Forever: K Biswas, James Butler, Lynsey Hanley, Gary Younge
Jeremy Lee & Olivia Laing: Cooking: Simply and Well, for One or Many
Michelle Tea and Isabel Waidner: Knocking Myself Up
Derek Jarman: Through the Billboard Promised Land Without Ever Stopping
Remember the Details: Skye Arundhati Thomas and Preti Taneja
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