Between the Covers

A weekly show featuring interviews with locally and nationally known authors of both fiction and non-fiction.

Episode Archive

Between the Covers on 09/30/08

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Between the Covers
Air date: 
Tue, 09/30/2008 - 9:00am - 10:30am

Best Political Books Special

Michelle Schroeder Fletcher and Kathleen Stephenson host a look at really good recent political books. We'll hear excerpts from recent interviews with Barbara Ehrenreich, author of This Land Is Their Land; Andrew Bacevich, author of The Limits of Power; Jane Mayer, author of The Dark Side; Katherine Gun, the subject of the book, The Spy Who Tried to Stop a War; and many more.

Between the Covers on 09/23/08

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Between the Covers
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Tue, 09/23/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Ed Goldberg interviews local writer Sharan Newman about her book, "The Shanghai Tunnel," a mystery set in Portland in the 1860's.

Between the Covers on 09/16/08

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Between the Covers
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Tue, 09/16/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Jim Schumock interviews writer and teacher Richard Bausch about his new novel Peace, the story of a squad on a mission.

Between the Covers on 09/09/08

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Between the Covers
Air date: 
Tue, 09/09/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Ed Goldberg speaks with local author Molly Dwyer about her novel Requiem for the Author of Frankenstein, which is based on the life of Mary Shelley and her circle of literary figures.  Dwyer is doing a benefit reading of the book for Veterans for Peace on September 11th at 23rd Avenue Books.

Between the Covers on 09/02/08

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Between the Covers
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Tue, 09/02/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Crystal Leighty interviews Australian writer Kate Vietch about her first novel, Without a Backward Glance, a heartfelt portrait of a family.

Between the Covers on 08/26/08

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Between the Covers
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Tue, 08/26/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Jim Schumock interviews Andrew Sean Greer about his latest book, The Story of a Marriage, which is set in the 1950s and molded by the social events of the times.

Between the Covers on 08/19/08

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Between the Covers
Air date: 
Tue, 08/19/2008 - 9:00am - 10:00am

Host Jim Schumock interviews radio-host and author Scott Simon about his book, Windy City: A Novel of Politics. The book provides an insider's view of Chicago's urban political fray.

Between the Covers on 08/12/08

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Between the Covers
Air date: 
Tue, 08/12/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Ed Goldberg interviews local author Greg Mandel, whose latest book is High Hat, a hard-boiled satire featuring the Pope as a private eye.

Between the Covers on 08/05/08

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Between the Covers
Air date: 
Tue, 08/05/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Marianne Barisonek interviews essayist and novelist Pico Iyer about his latest book, The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. Iyer has known the Dalai Lama for more than 30 years and brings a unique perspective to this biography.

Between the Covers on 07/29/08

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Between the Covers
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Tue, 07/29/2008 - 9:00am - 9:30am

Host Jim Schumock speaks with Nam Le about his highly praised collection of short stories, The Boat. Le was born in Vietnam and raised in Australia. He attended the Iowa Writer's Workshop.

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Geraldine Brooks talks about "Caleb's Crossing," her novel inspired by Harvard's first Native American graduate

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Between the Covers
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Thu, 05/19/2011

Host Marianne Barisonek interviews Geraldine Brooks, best-selling author and winner of the Pulitzer Prize (for March) about her new book, CALEB’S CROSSING, which was inspired by the life of Caleb Cheeshahteaumauk, the first Native American to graduate from Harvard College. Brooks first learned about him during her time as a Radcliffe fellow at Harvard in 2006. Caleb was from the Wampanoag tribe of Native Americans who lived on Martha’s Vineyard. There is little official information on Caleb’s life and Brooks’s novel is an informed imagining of what he might have gone through. 

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Ann Crittenden on "The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World Is Still the Least Valued"

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Between the Covers
program date: 
Thu, 05/05/2011

Ann Crittenden talks about the 10th anniversary of her bestselling book The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World Is Still the Least Valued. Ann shows how mothers are systematically disadvantaged and made dependent by a society that exploits those who perform its most critical work. Although women have been liberated, mothers have not.

Ann's Portland Event: What is the Price of Motherhood?

A benefit for Family Forward Oregon
Thursday, May 5th, 7-8:30PM
First Unitarian Church, 1011 SW 12th Ave., Portland 

 

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Wayne Pacelle on "The Bond: Our Kinship with Animals, Our Call to Defend them"

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Between the Covers
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Thu, 04/28/2011

The guest is Wayne Pacelle, President of the Humane Society of the United States, and author of the new book, The Bond: Our Kinship with Animals, Our Call to Defend Them. Pacelle will discuss the deep links of the human-animal bond as wll as the conflicting implulses that have led us to betray this bond through widespread and systemic cruelty to animals.

Wayne Pacelle has been with the Humane Society of the U.S. for seventeen years. He has taken a special interest in law reform and has been a leading strategist in getting animal protection laws enacted by the direct action of the electorate.

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Between the Covers 04-21-11 Author/Publisher Tod Davies

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Between the Covers
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Thu, 04/21/2011

Host Lyn Moelich spoke with Tod Davies, author of Snotty Saves the Day:  The History of Arcadia. In this fantasy from Exterminating Angel Press, a manuscript, delivered by Owl, is left under an old fir tree in the snow, and another world's scientists have discovered that the laws of the universe are found in fairy tales.

Tod Davies will read from "Snotty Saves the Day" on Sunday May 1st, 4pm at Powell's Books on Hawthorne

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Peter Mountford discusses recent novel: "A Young Man's Guide to Late Capitalism"

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Between the Covers
program date: 
Wed, 04/13/2011

Host Marianne Barisonek speaks with fiction writer Peter Mountford about his new novel A Young Man's Guide to Late Capitalism, which tells the story of Gabriel de Boya, a recent college graduate who works for an unscrupulous hedge fund while pretending to be a freelance journalist. Mountford drew on his own experience for the book. Just out of college, he was hired to write about the economy of Ecuador for a nonprofit think tank. He later discovered that the think tank was running a hedge fund out of its back office.

Jess Walters, author of "The Financial Lives of the Poets" describes "A Young Man's GUide to Late Capitalism" as a "parable of the voracious global economy." 

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Mystery writer Rhys Bowen discusses "Royal Flush"

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Between the Covers
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Wed, 04/06/2011

Ed Goldberg interviews Rhys Bowen author of Royal Flush, a mystery set in a Scottish castle with Lady Georgiana Rannoch in her third madcap adventure.  Humor and history combine in this novel that also includes a group of demanding Americans, ghosts, haggis, a monster in the Loch, and a sinister someone with a gun.   

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Mystery writer Lisa Gardner on her new novel "Love You More"

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Between the Covers
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Thu, 03/31/2011

Host Ed Goldberg interviews mystery suspense author Lisa Gardner about her new novel Love You More. In Love You More the crime appears open-and-shut: Pushed to the brink by an abusive husband, state police trooper Tessa Leoni finally snapped and shot him in self-defense. But Tessa isn’t talking–not about her dead husband, her battered face, or her missing six-year old daughter. Now, Detective D.D. Warren will have to race against the clock to unearth family secrets, solve a murder and save a child.

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Patty Somlo on her book "From Here to There and Other Stories"

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Between the Covers
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Thu, 03/24/2011

Host Marianne Barisonek speaks with Portlander and former journalist Patty Somlo about her newest book, From Here to There And Other Stories. Patty Somlo is a short story writer who makes occasional forays into non-fiction. Her work has been published in numerous print and online publications, including the San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner, Baltimore Sun, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Oregonian, Santa Clara Review, Fringe Magazine, Guernica, Common Boundary: Stories of Immigration (Editions Bibliotekos), and the Los Angeles Review. Patty has served as an associate editor for Pacific News Service in San Francisco and as a member of the editorial collective for VoiceCatcher, an annual anthology featuring the writings of women from Portland, Oregon. She holds an M.A. in English with a concentration in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University.

  • Length: 26:40 minutes (24.41 MB)
  • Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
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Gemma Whelan talks about her novel "Fiona: Stolen Child"

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Between the Covers
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Thu, 03/17/2011

  In the novel Fiona Clarke, an Irish writer living in New York, has been running away from her past since she left rural Cregora, Ireland, for boarding school. That past finds her, many years later, when her thinly veiled autobiographical novel is optioned for a movie. Working as the film’s consultant, Fiona unearths deep secrets, relives childhood trauma, and connects with an estranged family thrust back into her life. As her history opens upon her, Fiona must stop running and confront her secret shame: her long-held sense of responsibility over the death of her little sister.

Host Marianne Barisonek interviews author Gemma Whelan, an Irish-born theatre director and educator. After moving to the San Francisco Bay Area, Whelan directed more than sixty stage productions and was founding artistic director of GemArt and Wilde Irish Productions. Gemma is also an award-winning screenwriter and film director. She graduated from Trinity College, Dublin in English and French, and has graduate degrees from University of California, Berkeley in Theatre and San Francisco State University in Cinema. Gemma lives in Portland.

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Cynthia Grant Tucker author of "No Silent Witness" on women who influenced liberal culture in PDX, U.S.

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Between the Covers
program date: 
Thu, 03/10/2011

Guest Cynthia Grant Tucker, author of No Silent Witness: the Eliot Parsonage Women and their Unitarian World,  discusses the stories of the women who influenced the liberal culture of America, particularly here in Portland.

"No Silent Witness" is a group biography which follows three generations of ministers' daughters and wives in a famed American Unitarian family. Spanning 150 years from the early 19th century forward, the narrative divides into six chapters. Each chapter takes up a different woman's defining experience, from the deaths of numerous children and the anguish of infertility to the suffocation of small parish life with its chronic loneliness, doubt, and resentment. All of the stories are linked by the women's continuing battles to make themselves heard over clerical wisdom that contradicts their reality.

Cynthia Grant Tucker also spoke in Portland on "The Remarkable Eliot Women" on Friday, March 11th from 7-8:30PM at the First Unitarian Church at 1101 SW 12th Avenue in Portland. 

 

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Comments

Timber Beasts

I've read the book twice and rather hoped to hear the program that the author spoke on the book. But that page was not available on your site. Anyway, I loved the book. I thought it was an exciting dose of history. Stoner brought the Portland of  1900 to life. There was intrigue that kept my interest throughout the book.

Today's Interview

I was washing eggs at the farm when this came on. I loved it and looked for it to share with my peeps!

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