My 2009 appearance on Wisconsin Public Radio's Here on Earth program will be rebroadcast today at 4 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. Dig that nifty opening theme, and find out what kind of voices the show's host, Jean Feraca, likes! In honor of WPR's rebroadcast, I'm bringing back a blog post I made after the show first aired.
Here's a summary of what we talked about and what I would have liked to talk about had we had more time. (If you're just tuning in now, the Here on Earth link should still allow you listen to the archived program.)
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I'm back from talking international crime fiction on the
Here on Earth radio program, and how about a huzzah for
Wisconsin Public Radio for hosting a show on that entertaining, enlightening topic? The broadcast is available for listening or downloading
here or
here.
I learned that radio is an astonishingly compressed medium. I was worried we'd run out of things to discuss, but we got to barely a tenth of the authors and subjects I'd prepared. So in the coming days, I'll post a series of outtakes, things I'd have discussed had there been time.
I did get to tout Ireland as a hotbed of crime fiction, to offer my definition of noir and to talk about
Yasmina Khadra,
Seicho Matsumoto,
Henning Mankell,
Patricia Highsmith,
David Goodis,
Ian Rankin,
Matt Rees,
Ken Bruen's Jack Taylor and
Jo Nesbø's Harry Hole. My fellow guest and I both like
Jean-Claude Izzo, so we talked about him awhile. (That fellow guest was Hirsh Sawhney, editor of Akashic Books'
Delhi Noir, about which he made some interesting remarks.)
But, oh, the things I didn't get to: Corporate villains. Humorous Swedes. Canadian borders. Northern Ireland. Irish odysseys. Hard-boiled crime as America's gift to the world. Translation. Miscellaneous exotica. The world of publishing.
More to come. Oh, and the show's host, Jean Feraca, with whom I had never spoken before, said on air that I had a "nice voice." Bless you, Ms. Feraca.
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P.S.: Feraca gave me credit for a statement that I was only quoting. It was the Edgar Allan Poe scholar
Shelley Costa Bloomfield who suggested that the French were ready and waiting for what Poe had to offer before Americans were: "Maybe it takes an older civilization to feel comfortable with the dark side and be able to enjoy it." I wish I'd said that, but Costa Bloomfield said it first.
P.P.S: Before anyone can point this out to me, I realize that I said, "If you will" once on the air. I shall suffer the consequences in the next life.
P.P.P.S. Finally, I think I got Seicho Matsumoto's death date wrong. That fine Japanese crime writer died in 1992. I think I killed him off twelve years prematurely.
© Peter Rozovsky 2009, 2011Labels: David Goodis, Henning Mankell, Here on Earth, Hirsh Sawhney, Ian Rankin, Jean-Claude Izzo, Jo Nesbø, Ken Bruen, Matt Rees, miscellaneous, Patricia Highsmith, radio, Yasmina Khadra