LA Review of Books
A podcast by LA Review of Books - Fridays
503 Episodes
-
Melissa Febos Abandon Me; plus The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl
Published: 3/30/2017 -
Naima Keith & The California African American Museum
Published: 3/24/2017 -
Real Word Episode 06 - Everything I Never Told You
Published: 3/23/2017 -
Akhil Reed Amar on Trump and the Constitution
Published: 3/16/2017 -
Valeria Luiselli's Tale of Children Refugees Tell Me How It Ends; Sarah Manguso on 8
Published: 3/10/2017 -
Real Word Episode 5 - The Tattooed Soldier
Published: 3/8/2017 -
Sarah Manguso 300 Arguments; plus One Hundred Demons Recommended
Published: 3/2/2017 -
Film Now Panel: Justin Chang, J D Connor, Gil Robertson, Cathy Schulman, Anna Shechtman
Published: 2/23/2017 -
Real Word Episode 4
Published: 2/20/2017 -
Vanessa Davis Spaniel Rage; Sarah Schulman People in Trouble; plus Emily Dickinson Readings
Published: 2/17/2017 -
Literature vs Trump: Iranian Poet Moshen Emadi & San Pedro's Martabel Wasserman
Published: 2/10/2017 -
The Real Word Episode 3
Published: 2/8/2017 -
Karina Longworth's You Must Remember This; Monica Coleman's Bipolar Faith
Published: 2/2/2017 -
Best Foreign Films of 2016; Awards Season; Tom Lutz on TC Boyle & DH Lawrence
Published: 1/27/2017 -
The Real Word - Episode Two - Me Before You
Published: 1/25/2017 -
LARB in SF with Ha Jin and Dr. Loco (Jose Cuellar); plus Lena Dunham and Thomas Lux
Published: 1/20/2017 -
The Real Word - Episode One
Published: 1/13/2017 -
LARB in SF w Rabih Alameddine & Jade Chang; Dian Hanson Hails Ren Hang & CP Cavafy Waits for Trump
Published: 1/12/2017 -
Taschen's Dian Hanson on Bob Mizer; plus The Seventh Fire Documents Gangland on the Reservation
Published: 1/6/2017 -
Celebrate the Holidays Soviet Style from Moscow to Los Angeles
Published: 12/29/2016
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.