This week, Thea Lenarduzzi and Lucy Dallas are joined by Patricia J. Williams to discuss ‘Giving a Damn: Racism, romance and Gone with the Wind’, Williams’s deeply researched, and deeply felt, essay on the roots and legacy of racial injustice in the United States; Douglas Field considers a novel about a 'human mole' by Richard Wright, the African American writer best known for 'Native Son', which now sees the light of day, eighty years after it was written; plus Sylvia Plath’s domestic embellishments and the greatest novels of the twenty-first century to date (cont.)
Giving a Damn: Racism, romance and 'Gone with the Wind' by Patricia J. Williams, published next week by TLS Books
The Man Who Lived Underground by Richard Wright
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Byron's oddness
Huge stars in a minor key
Bonus episode: Five women, one radical address
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Apples and oranges in space
The decade that was
Haunted by Miss Austen
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Books of the Year, 2019
Hallie Rubenhold – an interview
Two phat ladies
Elizabeth Strout – an interview
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Cold War machinations
Morals and mysteries
Magazine love
Bernardine Evaristo – winner of the 2019 Booker Prize for Fiction
David Greig – revisiting 'Solaris'
Prize controversies
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