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    magic realism

    Explore " magic realism" with insightful episodes like "Winner of The Booker Prize 2022 Shehan Karunatilaka", "🔒 Magic realism, screenwriting, and The Man Who Came and Went. With writer Joe Stillman", "Three painters and a poet: Checking in with the Missouri Arts Council's October artists", "Rea and the Blood of the Nectar: Young Adventure with Payal Doshi" and "3.4 Rituparna Chatterjee - How She Transformed Her Life Story Into A Magical Memoir" from podcasts like ""The Literary City", "The Brainwave Podcast with Gail Hulnick", "Speaking of the Arts", "Dropping In" and "Books and Beyond with Bound"" and more!

    Episodes (10)

    Winner of The Booker Prize 2022 Shehan Karunatilaka

    Winner of The Booker Prize 2022 Shehan Karunatilaka

    There is an old saying, “Dead men tell no tales”.

    But how wonderful and useful it would be if we could follow a conversation into the afterlife? And what more wonderful than if you wrote about it and then won the Booker Prize for your efforts? Is this the stuff from which dreams are made?

    Clearly true if you consider my guest today, Shehan Karunatilaka, winner of the The Booker Prize 2022.

    In Shehan’s novel, The Seven Moons Of Maali Almeida, the main protagonist is dead but the character is alive. The novel—set in a terrible patch of Sri Lankan history between 1983 and 1990—is the story of a photojournalist who dies. In the afterlife, he finds himself in the "In-between"—a state between "Down There" which is life on earth and "The Light"—and where that is, is revealed at the end of the book.

    The protagonist is confronted by—of all things—a bureaucracy in the afterlife and he is told he has a week, or seven moons, to find out how he died if he wanted to make it to The Light.

    The novel touches the reader in many ways. Not the least to wonder what happens if we were indeed to find bureaucracy in the afterlife. Even the disappointment that visits us upon such a proposition is not rational. Yet…

    Shehan uses the second person as a literary device. Literary fiction written in the second-person is rare. This style is unusual because the narrator tells the story to the reader using the personal pronoun "you." The perspective suggests that the reader is the protagonist.

    Shehan Karunatilaka’s prose is compelling…gripping, even. The turns of phrase and word come together like play dough in what seems to be an absently crafted sculpture.

    Intelligent prose is never without its humour and Shehan’s prose has a river of funny as its undercurrent.

    He defines a queue in Sri Lanka as “…an amorphous curve with multiple entry points.” (Clearly, a south Asian malaise.)

    "The afterlife is a tax office and everyone wants a rebate."

    "You drift among the broken people with blood on their breath."

    All this and you are still on Page 10.

    But humour is peppered through the entire narrative and some of it is recognisable to typical snarky South Indian humour. This on page 135: ”...frilly shirt tailored by a blind man”.

    In the context though, the humour is a noir humour that characterises places in the world that are in strife—such as Ireland, parts of the Middle East and Shehan’s home country, Sri Lanka.

    I really cannot wait to ask him about all this.

    At the time of this recording, Shehan has just won the Booker Prize, a little over a week ago. I know that the entire world’s media waits to talk to him and so, I am particularly happy that he chose to spend this time with me.

    ABOUT SHEHAN KARUNATILAKA
    Shehan Karunatilaka is a Sri Lankan writer whose first book, Chinaman, won the Commonwealth Book Prize, the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature and the Gratiaen Prize, and was shortlisted for the Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize. Seven Moons of Maali Almeida is his second book, it won the Booker Prize 2022.


    Buy The Seven Moons Of Maali Almeida: https://amzn.to/3gUhnDw

    WHAT'S THAT WORD?!
    Co-host Pranati "Pea" Madhav joins Ramjee Chandran in "What's That Word?!",  where they discuss the interesting origins of the phrase, "DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES"

    WANT TO BE ON THE SHOW?
    Reach us by mail: theliterarycity@explocity.com or simply, tlc@explocity.com.
    Or here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/theliterarycity
    Or here:  https://www.instagram.com/explocityblr/

    🔒 Magic realism, screenwriting, and The Man Who Came and Went. With writer Joe Stillman

    🔒 Magic realism, screenwriting, and The Man Who Came and Went. With writer Joe Stillman

    Subscriber-only episode

    In Episode 35, Gail talks with Emmy-award-nominated and Academy-award-nominated writer Joe Stillman. Joe is an American television and movie writer, producer and director whose past work includes Shrek, Shrek 2, and King of the Hill. Joe is now also writing for print, and his  new novel, The Man Who Came and Went, is the story of a mysterious stranger who arrives to work at a diner, ready to read the minds of the customers and the hearts of the owner and her daughter.
    We talk about writing for TV and movies vs. writing a novel; finding the confidence necessary to approach the blank page; and the serendipity that often underpins a career.
    The Man Who Came and Went launches in March 2022 and is available at Amazon and other bookstores.
    You can find out more about Joe and his work at www.joestillman.com

    To subscribe to this and other premium content and bonus episodes, please visit https://www.buzzsprout.com/1777452/subscribe

    The Brainwave Podcast is produced and presented by WindWord Group Publishing and Media. 
    Please visit our website at https://www.windwordgroup.com to sign up for our newsletter and receive regular information about upcoming guests, new releases, and special gifts for regular listeners and readers. 

    The Brainwave Podcast is produced and presented by Gail Hulnick and The WindWord Group Publishing & Media.

    Three painters and a poet: Checking in with the Missouri Arts Council's October artists

    Three painters and a poet: Checking in with the Missouri Arts Council's October artists
    Each month the Missouri Arts Council features four artists on its website from a variety of arts genres, and on this week's show Diana Moxon checks in with the October four: Carthage-based painter, Andy Thomas, who paints works that tell stories from Civil War battles to saloon brawls and political history - including a particular painting that hit the news cycle in 2018 and, for a short while, became the most talked about painting in the country; magic realism painter, Brie Duey from Bucklin, whose works reimagine a symbiotic relationship between people and the natural environment; Kansas City's Poet t l Sanders who is an educator, a motivator, a body builder, a bass player, a film maker and a language artist; and Priscilla Block from St Louis, former Executive Director of St Louis Artworks and now, once again, with an art room of her own. You can see the works of this week's artists on their websites: https://andythomas.com/, https://www.brieduey.net/, https://www.poettlsanders.com/, https://www.beaumontstudios.space/. Thanks, as always, to guitarist Yasmin Williams (http://www.yasminwilliamsmusic.com/) for the show's opening and closing music, 'Restless Heart'.

    Rea and the Blood of the Nectar: Young Adventure with Payal Doshi

    Rea and the Blood of the Nectar: Young Adventure with Payal Doshi
    Rea and the Blood of the Nectar tells the story of Rea Chettri, a 12-year-old girl living a simple, if boring, life on the tea plantations of Darjeeling, India. Without warning, Rea's life gets turned on its head when her twin brother, Rohan, goes missing. Determined to save him, Rea embarks on a secret adventure by portaling into the enchanted world of Astranthia. In this thrilling tale of family and friendship, Rea will have to grapple with dark truths, discover her true self, and save Astranthia from a potentially deadly fate. But the clock is ticking. Can Rea rescue Rohan, save Astranthia? Drop In with us to find out what's important to an adolescent girl ,as she makes her way on the journey of a lifetime!

    3.4 Rituparna Chatterjee - How She Transformed Her Life Story Into A Magical Memoir

    3.4 Rituparna Chatterjee - How She Transformed Her Life Story Into A Magical Memoir

    Tara and Michelle talk to Rituparna Chatterjee about how she uses magic realism to explore the heavy theme of child abuse in her memoir ‘The Water Phoenix’.

    We’ve joined #PodForChange to raise donations for Covid relief. Donate here: www.auwa.in/podforchange

    Rituparna recounts how real-life events inspired her to start writing this book as a fictional story and how her editor convinced her to turn it into a memoir. She shares how readers have reached out to her with their stories of abuse. Tara enjoys the refreshing way in which Rituparna’s stepmother is portrayed in the story. Michelle loves how she has managed to keep the essence of childhood alive throughout the book. We discuss why memoirs are becoming increasingly popular among readers because ‘People love real stories’.

    Why does she call herself a reluctant memoirist? How did she come up with the idea for the book cover? And did her son really edit her book? Tune in to find out! 

    Book Recommendations:

    • Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
    • Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse
    • Ocean Sea by Alessandro Baricco

    Rituparna Chatterjee is a writer, journalist, columnist and a former foreign correspondent for The Economic Times. For the same newspaper she writes California Dreaming, a column about her life as an immigrant mother in America. Her short stories for children have been published in various anthologies. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her son, husband and Quoisey, their samurai fish, and the dogs they puppysit. Find her book here: https://www.amazon.in/Water-Phoenix-childhood-healing-forgiveness/dp/9389000556

    'Books and Beyond with Bound' is the podcast where Tara Khandelwal and Michelle D'costa of Bound talk to some of the best writers in India and find out what makes them tick. Read more: https://boundindia.com/books-and-beyond-podcast/ 

    Follow us @boundindia on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. 

    Check out our Meditative Writing class! https://boundindia.com/events/meditative-writing-workshop/

    Looking for a writing mentor to make your characters memorable? DM us or send us an email at connect@boundindia.com. 


    ‘Books and Beyond with Bound’ is the podcast where Tara Khandelwal and Michelle D’costa uncover how their books reflect the realities of our lives and society today. Find out what drives India’s finest authors: from personal experiences to jugaad research methods, insecurities to publishing journeys. Created by Bound, a storytelling company that helps you grow through stories. Follow us @boundindia on all social media platforms.




    The Keymaker: 2/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    The Keymaker: 2/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    Xi'an, China. 1967. A Kazakhstani writer has travelled through time to the heart of Communist China's barbaric Cultural Revolution. Now, he awaits trial, charged with crimes for which the penalty is death. The protagonist of his latest story, a girl called Junlei, finds herself trapped in a mysterious library. Solving the riddle of this library might just be the only means of escape, for both she and her author. But whilst both characters are held against their will, how could either of them ever escape this historic hell? 

    This is the dramatic conclusion to two-part historical thriller, The Keymaker.

    CW: public humiliation and torture, violence

    Stories from the Hearth is an experimental storytelling experience ft. truly original fiction and thoughtfully produced soundscapes. The aim of this podcast is to rekindle its listeners' love for the ancient art of storytelling (and story-listening), and to bring some small escapism to the frantic energies of the modern world. Stories from the Hearth is the brainchild of queer punk poet, environmentalist, and anarchist Cal Bannerman. Vive l'art!

    Episode #6 out Sunday 11th April 2021 (11.04.21)

    Support the podcast and get early access, bonus content, exclusive extra episodes, an in-episode shout-out, and the chance to become part of a wider community, by visiting our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/storiesfromthehearthpodcast

    Instagram: @storiesfromthehearth
    Twitter: @Hearth_Podcast
    YouTube: Stories from the Hearth
    Email: storiesfromthehearthpodcast@gmail.com

    Original Artwork by Anna Ferrara
    Anna's Instagram: @giallosardina
    Anna's Portfolio: https://annaferrara.carbonmade.com/

    Thank you for listening. Please consider following, subscribing to, and sharing this episode, and please do tell your friends all about Stories from the Hearth.

    The Keymaker: 1/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    The Keymaker: 1/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    Xi'an, China. 2045. A Kazakhstani writer sits down at his desk and begins to type. Beneath his fingers, the story of a young girl unfolds: she holds a mysterious key, inherited from her grandfather. As the key turns, and the world changes, the lives of the writer and his character must intersect, or fade from memory forever. This is part one of a two-part story.

    Stories from the Hearth is an experimental storytelling experience ft. truly original fiction and thoughtfully produced soundscapes. The aim of this podcast is to rekindle its listeners' love for the ancient art of storytelling (and story-listening), and to bring some small escapism to the frantic energies of the modern world. Stories from the Hearth is the brainchild of queer punk poet, environmentalist, and anarchist Cal Bannerman. Vive l'art!

    Episode #5 (The Keymaker: Part Two) out Sunday 21st March 2021 (21.03.21)

    Support the podcast and get early access, bonus content, exclusive extra episodes, an in-episode  shout-out, and the chance to become part of a wider community, by visiting our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/storiesfromthehearthpodcast

    Instagram: @storiesfromthehearth
    Twitter: @Hearth_Podcast
    YouTube: Stories from the Hearth
    Email: storiesfromthehearthpodcast@gmail.com

    Original Artwork by Anna Ferrara
    Anna's Instagram: @giallosardina
    Anna's Portfolio: https://annaferrara.carbonmade.com/

    Thank you for listening. Please consider following, subscribing to, and sharing this episode, and please do tell your friends all about Stories from the Hearth.

    "ambience marche 3" was originally recorded by schafferdavid and is courtesy of freesound.org, it is licensed under a CC BY 3.0 International License. Click here to read more about the license.

    Wings of Ebony: J. Elle & Her Superpowered NY Times Bestseller

    Wings of Ebony: J. Elle & Her Superpowered NY Times Bestseller
    In this riveting, keenly emotional debut fantasy, a Black teen from Houston has her world upended when she learns about her godly ancestry and must save both the human and god worlds. “Make a way out of no way” is just the way of life for Rue. But when her mother is shot dead on her doorstep, life for her and her younger sister changes forever. Rue's taken from her neighborhood by the father she never knew, forced to leave her little sister behind, and whisked away to Ghizon—a hidden island of magic wielders.Rue is the only half-god, half-human there, where leaders protect their magical powers at all costs and thrive on human suffering. Miserable and desperate to see her sister on the anniversary of their mother’s death, Rue breaks Ghizon’s sacred Do Not Leave Law and returns to Houston. Evidence mounts about the evil plaguing East Row. Rue must embrace her true identity & wield the full magnitude of her ancestors’ power to save her neighborhood before the gogods burn it to the ground.

    Episode 81: Gnostic Lit: On M. John Harrison's 'The Course of the Heart'

    Episode 81: Gnostic Lit: On M. John Harrison's 'The Course of the Heart'
    The British writer M. John Harrison is responsible for some of the most significant incursions of the Weird into the literary imagination of the last several decades. His 1992 novel The Course of the Heart is a masterful exercise in erasing whatever boundary you care to mention, from the one between reality and mind to the one between love and horror. Recounting the lives of three friends as they play out the fateful aftermath of a magical operation that went horribly wrong, Harrison's novel gives Phil and JF the chance to talk contemporary literature, metaphysics, Gnosticism, zones (see episodes 13 & 14), myth, transcendence, history, and arachnology. Together, they weave a fragile web of ideas centered on that imperceptible something that forever trembles at the edge of our perception, beckoning us to step into its world, and out of ours. REFERENCES M. John Harrison, [The Course of the Heart](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17742.TheCourseoftheHeart ) M. John Harrison, "The Great God Pan" Arthur Machen, The Great God Pan (http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/389) Philip K. Dick, Ubik (https://www.amazon.com/Ubik-Philip-K-Dick/dp/0547572298) Philip K. Dick, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (https://www.amazon.com/Three-Stigmata-Palmer-Eldritch/dp/0547572557) Weird Studies, Episode 14 on Stalker (https://www.weirdstudies.com/14) Jonathan Carrol (https://jonathancarroll.com/), American novelist Robert Aickman (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Aickman), British writer Magic Realism (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_realism), literary genre Phil Ford, “An Essay on Fortuna, parts 1 and 2,” Weird Studies Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/weirdstudies) John Crowley, Ægypt (http://johncrowleyauthor.com/magic-and-history/) Jorge Borges," The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Approach_to_Al-Mu'tasim)" Strange Horizons, Interview with M. John Harrison (http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/articles/interview-m-john-harrison/) M. John Harrison on worldbuilding (http://web.archive.org/web/20080410181840/http://uzwi.wordpress.com/2007/01/27/very-afraid/) Thomas Ligotti, (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Ligotti) American horror writer [Weird Studies subreddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/WeirdStudies/comments/i8h0yk/weirdstudiessynchronicityengine/)_ Albert Camus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Camus), French philosopher David Abram, The Spell of the Sensuous (https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/319/the-spell-of-the-sensuous-by-david-abram/) Spiders’ nervous systems (https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-thoughts-of-a-spiderweb-20170523/) Valentinus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valentinus_(Gnostic)), gnostic theologian Simon Magus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Magus), religious figure Wiccan goddess and god (https://wiccaliving.com/wiccan-goddess-god/) Bruno Schulz, The Street of Crocodiles (https://www.amazon.com/Street-Crocodiles-Classic-20th-Century-Penguin/dp/0140186255) Weird Studies, Episode 37 with Stuart Davis (https://www.weirdstudies.com/37)
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