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Jacke Wilson

Jacke Wilson

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  • March 10, 2017

    History of Literature #83 – Overrated! Top 10 Books You Don’t Need to Read

    Life is short, and books are many. How many great books have you read? How many more have you NOT read? How to choose? Mike Palindrome, President of the Literature Supporters Club, joins Jacke for a discussion of overrated classics and the pleasures of shortening one’s list of must-reads. Podcast: Play in new window | Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    chad harbach, don quixote, great books, henry james, joyce carol oates, kingsley amis and martin amis, Shakespeare
  • March 3, 2017

    History of Literature #82 – Robinson Crusoe

    In 1719, a prolific author and political agitator named Daniel Defoe published a long-form narrative about a shipwrecked sailor stranded on a desert island, who lives in solitude for 27 years before famously seeing a human footprint on the sand. Often viewed as the first novel written in English, Robinson Crusoe was a smash hit in its day and has been Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    alexander selkirk, daniel defoe, desert island, moll flanders, robinson crusoe, shipwreck, survivor
  • February 24, 2017

    History of Literature #81 – Faust (aka The Devil Went Down to Germany)

    Have you ever wanted something so badly you’d sell your soul to get it? Youth? Wealth? Sex? Power? Knowledge? We call it making a deal with the devil, or in more literary terms, a Faustian bargain. But who was Faust? How did his tale first get told? How was his legend advanced, and what great Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast
    literary myth
  • February 17, 2017

    History of Literature #80 – Power Play! Shakespeare’s Henry V

    Who rules us and why? What does Shakespeare’s Henry V (c. 1599) tell us about the character of a leader? What does it tell us about the character of the people governed by such a man? Host Jacke Wilson jumps from kings to presidents, from the battlefields of France in the early fifteenth century, to Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast
    agincourt, falstaff, henry v, kenneth branagh, laurence olivier, lincoln memorial, power, richard nixon, William Shakespeare
  • February 10, 2017

    History of Literature #79 – Music That Melts the Stars – Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

    In 1851, a 30-year-old Frenchman named Gustave Flaubert set out to write a novel about a discontented housewife in a style that would melt the stars. After five years of agonizing labor, his book Madame Bovary (1856) changed the world of literature forever. How did Madame Bovary influence authors as different as Ernest Hemingway and Vladimir Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Writing
    Ernest Hemingway, Ezra Pound, Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary, Paris, tibet, vladimir nabokov
  • February 3, 2017

    History of Literature #78 – Jane Eyre, The Good Soldier, Giovanni’s Room (with Margot Livesey)

    Writing about the Scottish-born novelist Margot Livesey, the author Alice Sebold remarked, “Every novel of Margot Livesey’s is, for her readers, a joyous discovery. Her work radiates with compassion and intelligence and always, deliciously, mystery.” How has Margot Livesey managed to create this suspense in novel after novel, including in contemporary classics such as The Flight Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    Charlotte Bronte, flight of gemma hardy, Ford Madox Ford, house on fortune street, James Baldwin, Jane Eyre, margot livesey, Scotland, the good soldier
  • January 27, 2017

    History of Literature #77 – Top 10 Greatest Literary Cities

    What makes a city a great literary city? Having a tradition of famous authors? A culture of bookstores and cafes and publishing houses and universities? Inspiring great books? Host Jacke Wilson is joined by Mike Palindrome, President of the Literature Supporters Club, for a discussion of the cities where literature finds itself most at home – including Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    berlin, buenos aires, Dublin, edinburgh, London, melbourne, New York, Paris, rome, san francisco, tokyo
  • January 18, 2017

    History of Literature #76 – Darkness and the Power of Literature: News from North Korea (with Terry Hong)

    For 70 years, the people of North Korea have lived through a totalitarian nightmare – and those of us in the outside world have had little access to their experience. How have generations of oppression and terror affected the psychology of everyday people? How do they feel about their situation? What are their hopes? What are Continue reading

    Arts, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    bandi, cold war, dissident literature, kim jong-il, north korea, the accusation, totalitarian
  • January 11, 2017

    History of Literature #75 – The Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki

    With a strong claim to be the first novel in history, the Japanese classic The Tale of Genji (ca. 1001-1012), by Murasaki Shikibu, or Lady Murasaki, is one of the world’s greatest literary masterpieces. But who was Lady Murasaki, and what compelled her to write this story of an idealized prince and his many lovers? How Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    cervantes, cheever, japanese literature, lady murasaki, Nabokov, Proust, tale of genji
  • January 1, 2017

    History of Literature #74 – Great First Chapters (with Vu Tran)

    It’s a new year! A time for fresh beginnings! And on the History of Literature Podcast, it’s a time to celebrate beginnings. Vu Tran, author of the novel Dragonfish and a professor of creative writing at the University of Chicago, joins us to discuss ten great first chapters – how they work, how they affect the Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    donna tartt, Fitzgerald, Gabriel García Márquez, j.m. coetzee, jeffrey eugenides, junot diaz, murakami, ralph ellison, toni morrison, vu tran, wharton
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Help support the show at patreon.com/literature or historyofliterature.com/shop. The History of Literature Podcast is a member of Lit Hub Radio and the Podglomerate Network. Learn more at www.thepodglomerate.com/historyofliterature.

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  • The History of Literature #524 — Growing Old with The Graduate – Mike Nichols, Roger Ebert, Charles Webb, and Me
  • The History of Literature #523 — Geoffrey Chaucer (with Marion Turner) | A New Podcast About the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike (with AFSCME President Lee Saunders)
  • The History of Literature #522 — Class, Whiteness, and Southern Literature (with Jolene Hubbs) | My Last Book with Mark Cirino
  • The History of Literature #521 — The Empress Messalina (with Honor Cargill-Martin) | My Last Book with Robert Chandler
  • The History of Literature #520 — “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” by Ambrose Bierce

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Recent Posts

  • The History of Literature #524 — Growing Old with The Graduate – Mike Nichols, Roger Ebert, Charles Webb, and Me
  • The History of Literature #523 — Geoffrey Chaucer (with Marion Turner) | A New Podcast About the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike (with AFSCME President Lee Saunders)
  • The History of Literature #522 — Class, Whiteness, and Southern Literature (with Jolene Hubbs) | My Last Book with Mark Cirino

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