Episode: Ep350: A Desperate Writer Steals 'The Plot'
Ep350: A Desperate Writer Steals 'The Plot'
1 - A Desperate Writer Steals 'The Plot'
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Published at: 5/28/2021
Author: The New York Times
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Jake Bonner, the protagonist of Jean Hanff Korelitzās āThe Plot,ā writes a novel based on someone elseās idea. The book becomes a big hit, but Jake has a hard time enjoying it because heās worried about getting caught. On this weekās podcast, Korelitz says that Jakeās more general anxieties about his career as a writer are relatable, despite her own success (this is her seventh novel).
āJake is all of us,ā Korelitz says. āI used to regard other peopleās literary careers with great curiosity. I used to have this little private parlor game: Would I want that personās career? Would I want that personās career? And those names have changed over the years as careers have faltered, disappeared. Iāve been publishing for a very long time, and my contemporaries in the 1990s were people with massive successes who have not been heard of now for 10, 15 years. So itās very much a tortoise and hare kind of thing, in my own case.ā
Elizabeth Hinton visits the podcast to discuss her new book, āAmerica on Fire,ā a history of racial protest and police violence that reframes the civil rights struggle between the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 and the widespread demonstrations after the murder of George Floyd in 2020. Hinton writes about major uprisings, but also focuses on lesser-known examples of systemic violence against Black communities in places like York, Pa., and Cairo, Ill.
āPart of the reason why the violence in both of those cities was so extreme was the deep entanglement between white vigilante groups and white power groups and the police department and political and economic elites in both cities,ā Hinton says. āSo in many ways, what happened, in Cairo especially, is a warning to all of us about what the consequences are when officials decide to use the police to manage the material consequences of socioeconomic exclusion and poverty.ā
Also on this weekās episode, Elizabeth Harris has news from the publishing world; Tina Jordan looks back at Book Review history as it celebrates its 125th anniversary this year; and Gregory Cowles and John Williams talk about what theyāve been reading. Pamela Paul is the host.
Here are the books discussed in this weekās āWhat Weāre Readingā:
āDispatchesā by Michael Herr
āThe Emigrantsā by W.G. Sebald
āLeninā by Victor Sebestyen
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