Poets & Writers Theater
Every day we share a new clip of interest to creative writers—author readings, book trailers, publishing panels, craft talks, and more. So grab some popcorn, filter the theater tags by keyword or genre, and explore our sizable archive of literary videos.
-
In this BookTrib interview, Maggie Su speaks about how her debut novel, Blob: A Love Story (Harper, 2025), began as a short story and then a play, and her interests in surreal and speculative stories.
-
In this Talking Volumes event with MPR News host Kerri Miller, Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist Louise Erdrich reads from her latest novel, The Mighty Red (Harper, 2024), and discusses how her upbringing in the Red River Valley in Minnesota shaped her writing.
Tags: Fiction | Louise Erdrich | The Mighty Red | Harper | Kerri Miller | MPR News | Talking Volumes | reading | discussion | 2024 -
In this City Lights Live event, Deborah Jackson Taffa reads from and speaks about her debut memoir, Whiskey Tender (Harper, 2024), in a conversation with Dean Rader. Taffa is featured in “5 Over 50: 2024” in the November/December issue in Poets & Writers Magazine.
-
Watch the book trailer for Fourteen Days: A Collaborative Novel (Harper, 2024) edited by Margaret Atwood and Douglas Preston, a project from the Authors Guild in which each character living inside an imaginary New York City apartment building has been written by a different, well-known author. Read more about the book in the March/April issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
-
In this virtual discussion, poet, novelist, and playwright Fred D’Aguiar speaks with Daljit Nagra, chair of the Royal Society of Literature, about their shared experience of breaking ground in the poetry landscape and their favorite poets, as well as D’Aguiar’s book Year of Plagues: A Memoir of 2020 (Harper, 2021).
Tags: Poetry | Fred D’Aguiar | Year of Plagues: A Memoir of 2020 | Harper | 2021 | Daljit Nagra | Royal Society of Literature | 2022 -
“A book is much more than a transactional object. The words are flooding in, and ideas are filling you in emotion. It’s haunting in a good way.” In this PBS NewsHour interview, Pulitzer Prize–winning author Louise Erdrich speaks from her bookstore Birchbark Books & Native Arts in Minneapolis about her love of books and her new novel, The Sentence (Harper, 2021), a ghost story which explores the racial divides of her hometown.
Tags: Fiction | Louise Erdrich | The Sentence | Harper | 2021 | PBS NewsHour | Jeffrey Brown | BirchBark Books & Native Arts | Minneapolis -
“I had always been interested in blending reality or elevating the surrealistic elements of real life.” In this episode of the Woolfer Author Series, host Carmen Tanner Slaughter talks with Morgan Jerkins about transitioning between nonfiction and fiction writing, and her debut novel, Caul Baby (Harper, 2021), which is featured in Page One in the May/June issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Fiction | Morgan Jerkins | Caul Baby | Harper | 2021 | Woolfer Author Series | interview | Carmen Tanner Slaughter | Page One | May/June 2021 -
On Late Night With Seth Meyers, Ann Patchett speaks about commissioning a local artist in Nashville for the cover art of her latest novel, The Dutch House (Harper, 2019), and how her bookstore, Parnassus Books, is doing during the pandemic.
Tags: Fiction | Ann Patchett | The Dutch House | Harper | 2019 | Late Night With Seth Meyers | Parnassus Books -
“I have written somewhere that there is only one story, but there are many stories in the one, and I like that idea.” In this video from PBS’s American Masters series, N. Scott Momaday speaks with Robert Redford about the oral tradition, hearing stories from his father, and the importance of language and story. Momaday’s second memoir, Earth Keeper: Reflections on the American Land (Harper, 2020), is featured in Page One in the November/December issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Creative Nonfiction | N. Scott Momaday | Robert Redford | PBS | American Masters | Earth Keeper | Harper | 2020 | Page One | November/December 2020 -
“This book really is inspired by my grandfather, and a lot of it is actually true.” In this Politics and Prose video, Louise Erdrich talks about her most recent novel, The Night Watchman (Harper, 2020), which is featured in Page One in the March/April issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Fiction | Louise Erdrich | reading | The Night Watchman | Harper | 2020 | March/April 2020 | Page One | Politics and Prose Bookstore -
“I’ve always found that the things I find the most intimidating end up being the most intellectually satisfying.” At the Louisiana Literature Festival in 2019, Roxane Gay speaks about what moved her to write Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body (Harper, 2017), and begins her reading with a piece about loving Mister Rogers.
Tags: Creative Nonfiction | Roxane Gay | Hunger | Harper | 2017 | Louisiana Channel | Louisiana Literature Festival | 2019 | Mister Rogers -
“I didn’t know real people could be writers when they grew up. That would have been like saying that I wanted to be a fairy or a movie star.” Barbara Kingsolver, the author most recently of Unsheltered (Harper, 2018), talks to the Free Library of Philadelphia about how a childhood love of books made her a “citizen of the world” despite growing up in a small town in Kentucky. Kingsolver and Richard Powers speak about writing fiction in “A Talk in the Woods” in the November/December issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Fiction | Barbara Kingsolver | Unsheltered | Harper | 2018 | November/December 2018 | Free Library of Philadelphia -
Roxane Gay reads part of “The Illusion of Safety/The Safety of Illusion” from her essay collection, Bad Feminist (Harper Perennial, 2014). Her debut memoir, Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body (Harper, 2017), is featured in Page One in the July/August issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
-
In this video, Book Riot offers six recommendations for books that feature refugees including Girl at War (Random House, 2015) by Sara Nović, Inside Out and Back Again (Harper, 2011) by Thanhha Lai, and Exit West (Riverhead Books, 2017) by Mohsin Hamid.
Tags: Fiction | 2011 | 2015 | 2017 | Book Riot | Books Featuring Refugees | Exit West | Girl at War | Harper | Inside Out and Back Again | Mohsin Hamid | Random House | Riverhead Books | Sara Nović | Thanhha Lai -
“I love the physical book. I love the printed page.” Louise Erdrich, author of LaRose (Harper, 2016), talks about her love of books and her bookstore Birchbark Books & Native Arts located in Minneapolis. For more on Erdrich and her bookstore, read “Best-Selling Booksellers” by Lynn Rosen in the September/October issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
-
"Writing memoir, if it's done right I think, is like knocking yourself out with your own fist." For a reading at the 92nd Street Y moderated by Kathryn Schulz, Mary Karr, author of The Art of Memoir (Harper, 2015), joins Helen Macdonald, author of H Is for Hawk (Grove Press, 2015), to speak about their love of memoir and poetry.
Tags: 2015 | memoir | Grove Press | Mary Karr | The Art of Memoir | Harper | 92NY | Helen Macdonald | H Is For Hawk | Poetry | Creative Nonfiction -
"He always had very intense intellectual pursuits in his personality...today people don't really realize that truly sophisticated artists thought a lot." Novelist and poet Stanley Crouch, a recipient of the 2016 Windham-Campbell Prize for Nonfiction, talks about Charlie Parker, the subject of his most recent book, Kansas City Lightning: The Rise and Times of Charlie Parker (Harper, 2013), the first in a planned two-volume series.
-
"As a writer, I love the irresponsibility of the short story.... There's something beautifully free and single gesture about writing a short story." Tessa Hadley, author of the new novel, The Past (Harper, 2016), and whose work appears in The Penguin Book of the British Short Story (Penguin, 2015), talks about her experience writing both short stories and novels.
Tags: 2015 | Harper | Penguin | short story | 2016 | Tessa Hadley | The Past | The Penguin Book of the British Short Story | Fiction -
"I believe in following your dreams—being incredibly passionate, and being ruthlessly practical about what it takes to get there." Molly Crabapple, whose memoir Drawing Blood (Harper, 2015) features her illustrations, talks about how to succeed as an artist and a creative entrepreneur.
Tags: 2015 | Harper | talk | Molly Crabapple | Drawing Blood | Creative Nonfiction -
In this animated video, Bill Gates recommends five books for summer reading, which include The Heart (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016) by Maylis de Kerangal, Hillbilly Elegy (Harper, 2016) by J. D. Vance, and Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (Harper, 2017) by Yuval Noah Harari.
Tags: Fiction | Creative Nonfiction | Bill Gates | summer reading | animation | The Heart | Maylis de Kerangal | Hillbilly Elegy | J. D. Vance | Homo Deus | Yuval Noah Harari | Farrar, Straus and Giroux | Harper | 2016 | 2017