503 Episodes

  1. Kiese Laymon: How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America

    Published: 12/11/2020
  2. Alex Ross in Wagner's Shadows

    Published: 12/4/2020
  3. The Magic World of Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum

    Published: 11/27/2020
  4. Alexander Nanau's Collective Nightmare for Our Time

    Published: 11/20/2020
  5. The Election and a Changing America: LARB Politics Editor Tom Zoellner on The National Road

    Published: 11/13/2020
  6. Bryan Washington's Memorial; and Election Reflections

    Published: 11/6/2020
  7. Women Against the Odds: Talking to Filmmaker Garrett Bradley & Art Legends, the Guerrilla Girls

    Published: 10/30/2020
  8. Friending Thanatos: Richard Seymour's The Twittering Machine

    Published: 10/23/2020
  9. Suzanne Nossle on Local News

    Published: 10/23/2020
  10. Talking to Alain Mabanckou, author of Black Moses

    Published: 10/16/2020
  11. Homeland Elegies: Ayad Akhtar on mourning America

    Published: 10/9/2020
  12. The Only Reader is a Re-Reader: Talking to Vivian Gornick

    Published: 10/2/2020
  13. Arundhati Roy on Freedom, Fascism & Fiction

    Published: 9/25/2020
  14. Friendship and Mortality in a Plague Year: Sigrid Nunez on What Are You Going Through

    Published: 9/18/2020
  15. A Different Addiction Story: Yaa Gyasi talks about Transcendent Kingdom

    Published: 9/11/2020
  16. Kelli Jo Ford, author of Crooked Hallelujah, on Love and the End Times

    Published: 9/4/2020
  17. Yan Lianke, author of Three Brothers, on Chinese Life, Law, and Literature

    Published: 8/28/2020
  18. An Alpaca and a Llama Walk into a Bar: Talking to Joni Murphy, author of Talking Animals

    Published: 8/21/2020
  19. Life In Between: Awkaeke Emezi on their new novel The Death of Vivek Oji

    Published: 8/16/2020
  20. Talking Tomboys with Melissa Faliveno

    Published: 8/8/2020

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The Los Angeles Review of Books is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting and disseminating rigorous, incisive, and engaging writing on every aspect of literature, culture, and the arts. The Los Angeles Review of Books magazine was created in part as a response to the disappearance of the traditional newspaper book review supplement, and, with it, the art of lively, intelligent long-form writing on recent publications in every genre, ranging from fiction to politics. The Los Angeles Review of Books seeks to revive and reinvent the book review for the internet age, and remains committed to covering and representing today’s diverse literary and cultural landscape.