American Writers (One Hundred Pages at a Time) - podcast cover

American Writers (One Hundred Pages at a Time)

In each episode I discuss around 100 pages from the works of American writers. Contact me at [email protected]

Episodes

Episode 625: Richard Wright: Uncle Tom's Children (Part 1)

Richard Wright's first published book was a series of short stories called UNCLE TOM'S CHILDREN. They are wonderful stories looking at the brutality of race relations in Great Depression-era America and good preparation for NATIVE SON.

Feb 15, 202423 minEp. 948

Episode 624: Richard Wright: Lawd Today (Part 2)

The conclusion to my review of Richard Wright's first novel, LAWD TODAY. It is a great way to start digging into Richard Wright, and I think a good contrast with NATIVE SON, which we will look at in a few weeks.

Jan 27, 202429 minEp. 946

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 70: Starman Jones (Part 1)

In 1953, Heinlein wrote his 7th juvenile in STARMAN JONES. He always seems to have something new to say in each of these novels, even if the main characters are always a little bit cookie cutter. He does try to give this young man a bit more differentiation. Nevertheless, this is another good example of world building. I enjoy how each of these novels feels lived in.

Jan 24, 202430 minEp. 945

Episode 623: Richard Wright: Lawd Today!

Today I start a new series looking at the major works of Richard Wright. We begin with LAWD TODAY!, which was published in the 1960s, but was actually the first book written. It is an amazing modernist text looking at the working class black life in Chicago during the Great Depression. It is also one of the bleakest books we have looked at in a while.

Jan 24, 202429 minEp. 944

Episode 620: W. E. B. Du Bois: Black Reconstruction in America (Part 5)

We are in the meat of the book BLACK RECONSTRUCTION IN AMERICA by W. E. B. Du Bois. In these chapters, he looks into the revolution and counter revolution of property in Mississippi and Louisiana and then Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. We see how different demographic structures led to different reactions by the ruling planter class.

Jan 04, 202432 minEp. 939

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 67: The Rolling Stones (Part 1)

In this episode we get introduced to the Stone family and watch them becoming THE ROLLING STONES. This 1952 novel has some of the most well drawn of Heinlein's characters, but it is not the major young man protagonist who are pretty much interchangeable in this one. Some meta commentary on his juvenile novel heroes, I reckon.

Jan 04, 202430 minEp. 938

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 65: The Puppet Masters (Part 1)

It is kind of nice to have old Heinlein back. After writing those juveniles and mainstream science fiction stories, THE PUPPET MASTERS allows Heinlein to bring back hot women, nudity, and individualist philosophy. I am not sure this novel is a success yet, but it is lots of fun.

Dec 27, 202327 minEp. 935

Episode 616: W. E. B. Du Bois: Black Reconstruction in America (Part 1)

In this episode I look at the first four chapters of the amazing book BLACK RECONSTRUCTION IN AMERICA by W. E. B. Du Bois. It is a brilliant celebration of the potential of interracial democracy, written at a time when those potentials were forgotten by historians.

Dec 18, 202352 minEp. 930

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 62: Cliff and the Calories

A bit of an aside in this series, "Cliff and the Calories" by Heinlein is a short story about a young woman struggling with a perhaps unnecessary diet. It slightly aligns with some of what he was doing with his juveniles, but I think we need to wait until we read Podkayne to know for sure.

Dec 14, 202313 minEp. 929

Episode 615: Harriet Beecher Stowe: Oldtown Folks (Part 5)

The finale of my review of OLDTOWN FOLKS by Harriet Beecher Stowe, and the conclusion to this series on Stowe's novels. Next up, we will return to W. E. B. Du Bois with a deep dive into Reconstruction-era America.

Dec 14, 202338 minEp. 928

Episode 613: Harriet Beecher Stowe: Oldtown Folks (Part 3)

The middle sections of Harriet Beecher Stowe's OLDTOWN FOLKS (1869) explored education with intense focus and through multiple conversations. While repetitive, this section of the novel allowed Stowe to engage with the debates of her own time about education, making a case as persuasive as the one she made in UNCLE TOM'S CABIN about slavery.

Dec 06, 202337 minEp. 925

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 60: Farmer in the Sky (Part 2)

In this episode, I finish up my review of the excellent novel FARMER IN THE SKY by Robert A. Heinlein. This novel has some excellent reflections on population, empires, war, ecology, and the frontier. Are the juveniles (and the Future History series at large) metaphors for the Atlantic world? Sometimes I think so.

Dec 06, 202322 minEp. 924

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 59: Farmer in the Sky (Part 1)

Heinlein's fourth juvenile novel, FARMER IN THE SKY (1950) is one of the best books he wrote to that point and the most "mature" of his "boy's novels". We seen Heinlein's approach and concerns grow up with his characters. The first part of this book is an excellent window into the ecological, scientific, and political vision Heinlein develops.

Dec 04, 202334 minEp. 923

Episode 612: Harriet Beecher Stowe: Oldtown Folks (Part 2)

Harriet Beecher Stowe's OLDTOWN FOLKS (1869) is doing a lot, and that is made clear in the second section of this book, which explores the fate of two orphans in this small New England Town, and their ultimate liberation.

Dec 04, 202337 minEp. 922

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 58: Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon

"Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon" is another delightful Future History story by Robert A. Heinlein, but this one includes Boy Scouts. Can an Earth Scout ever find a place with the Moon Scouts with the Moon's inhospitable environment? Maybe if he saves the day? This story has some very harrowing life and death moments as two boys get lost a "morning glory" (a sinkhole).

Nov 27, 202318 minEp. 921

Episode 611: Harriet Beecher Stowe: Oldtown Folks (Part 1)

In this episode I begin to explore OLDTOWN FOLKS by Harriet Beecher Stowe. This is a fascinating, almost modernist, novel about one man's memory of the days of his youth in early 19th century New England. Through deep dives into characters and the community, Stowe digs into surface level and hidden aspects of New England society.

Nov 27, 202325 minEp. 920

Robert A. Heinlein Book Club: Episode 57: Gulf

What is this early 1940s Heinlein story doing in the 1950? In this episode I explore Heinlein's brief return to ASTOUNDING with "Gulf". Thanks, I hate it.

Nov 23, 202332 minEp. 919