Why Robert Coover Writes

William Burroughs Shows Off His Weapons

“I Don’t Feel Any Wiser” — Philip Roth on the Myths of Aging

“There Must Be Some Level of Indignation” — William Gaddis

Kurt Vonnegut Talks Cat’s Cradle

Brian Eno Interviewed

Dick Flash (jeez, what a great name) of Pork Magazine (another great name) interviews mad genius Brian Eno:

“It Was Like a Romance” — Norman Mailer on Marijuana

Tao Lin Makes a Salad

Read our review of Tao Lin’s new novel Richard Yates.

“Towers Open Fire” — William Burroughs

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James Franco and Michael Cunningham on YA Fiction (and What You Should Never Ask a Writer)

David Foster Wallace on Education

Tom McCarthy Talks C

David Foster Wallace on Commercial Literature and the Dread of Reading

Sam Lipsyte, Book Thief

Sam Lipsyte read live from his new novel The Ask last night at HTML GIANT’s Ustream channel. The reading was cool but the best part was the q&a session afterward. We asked Lipsyte the one question all true biblioklepts are dying to know (and the one question we ask every person we interview): “Have you ever stolen a book?”

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Here’s Lipsyte’s response, which you can hear/see at 31:25 in the video:

‘Have you ever stolen a book?’ There was one time when I stole a few books when I worked in a library; it was a university library and my job was to stick the metal strips into the spines of the books that would set off the alarm. And so if a particularly good book came through (and this only happened three or four times) I just wouldn’t–I don’t know if I’d call it stealing–but I wouldn’t put the strip in. And then once it was shelved I would take it.

That’s a pretty sophisticated operation. Kudos to Lipsyte for his candor.

Sam Lipsyte Interviewed at ReadRollShow

ReadRollShow‘s Dave Weich interviews Sam Lipsyte. Great little short clips, perfect for internet viewing. They have three up so far, all embedded below–

Yann Martel Talks About His New Novel, Beatrice and Virgil

Yann Martel talks about autobiography, animals, and more in his new novel Beatrice and Virgil.

“The Tell-Tale Heart” — Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart” is one of our all-time favorite scary stories. Poe’s story explores the troubled mind of a murderer suffering from manic bipolar depression. Or maybe it’s all about the suppression of dark secrets. Is the Evil Eye an “evil I”? I think so! Dig this great animation from 1953, featuring the vocal talents of James Mason: