
Elizabeth Strout
Presenter James Crawford speaks to award‑winning American author Elizabeth Strout about her new book The Things We Never Say and its three key literary influences.
Presenter James Crawford speaks to award‑winning American author Elizabeth Strout - winner of the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and a two‑time Booker Prize nominee - about her new book The Things We Never Say and its three key literary influences.
In Elizabeth's latest novel, we are taken to the New England coast, where we follow the life of history teacher Artie Dam, who is struggling to cope with the way the modern world is changing around him.
Elizabeth’s three influences are The Stories of William Trevor by William Trevor (1983), Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf (1925), and Middlemarch by George Eliot (1872).
On radio
Broadcast
- Sun 12 Jul 202616:00BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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Take Four Books
James Crawford discusses an author's new book and its connections to three other works.
