Yesterday I interviewed the gentle, wise author, reader—and it turns out—singer, Colm Herron of Derry, Ireland. As I say in my intro of him when you listen to the interview—don't miss the close when he sings "The Rose of Tralee".
Now for those 21 radio interviews that have been an unparalleled delight:
One caveat: When you click on a link below, a short pause and an ad (about 10-20 seconds) may first appear, not of my making, so do forgive, but then you'll hear the show as it ran live. Each show is thirty minutes. Listen at your leisure to all or part of any of the shows.
Here's the list of the twenty-one radio interviews. Click on the name and you'll be taken to the radio show:
Colm Herron, of Derry, Ireland, author of The Wake (and what Jeremiah did next)
Dana Gioia, poet, former head of the National Endowment for the Arts and author most recently of Pity the Beautiful, poems
Molly Peacock, poet, memoir writer and author of The Paper Garden: An Artist {Begins Her Life's Work} at 72
Margaret Brown, publisher of the digital magazine Shelf Unbound: What to read next in independent publishing
Richard Kramer, producer, writer of thirtysomething, My So-Called Life and a new HBO series
Sarah C. Harwell, poet, author of Sit Down Traveler
Carolyn Mary Kleefeld, painter, poet and Big Sur presence
Jaki Scarcello, author of Fifty and Fabulous: The best years of a woman's life
Douglas Rogers, author of The Last Resort: a memoir of mischief and mayhem on a family farm in Africa
Ravi Shankar, poet, author of Deepening Groove
Peter Cox, British literary agent
Robert G. Pielke, author of Rock Music in American Culture
Jacquie Kubin, former managing and senior editor of The Communities at The Washington Times
Maureen Stanton, author of Killer Stuff and Tons of Money
Derek Haines, self-published author of more than 14 books, novels and essays
The Third Man and Déjà Vu: A Love Story: Conversation with journalist Harvey Black about the Graham Greene screenplay and movie starring Orson Welles and the Henry Jaglom film (See the interview link above.)
Eduardo Santiago, Cuban author of Tomorrow They Will Kiss
Michael Johnson, journalist who lives in Bordeaux France and writes for The International Herald Tribune, Open Letters, Facts and Arts, The Columnists--and more.
Michael Johnson, journalist who lives in Bordeaux France and writes for The International Herald Tribune, Open Letters, Facts and Arts, The Columnists--and more.
Enjoy and do let me know what you think. Comments always welcome.
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