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.
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In this Green Apple Books event, Muriel Leung reads from her debut novel, How to Fall in Love in a Time of Unnameable Disaster (Norton, 2024), and discusses the possibilities of love and care in Chinese American families and communities in a conversation with K-Ming Chang.
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In this video for the Poetry Society of America’s Storefront Poems series, Kimiko Hahn reads her poem “Ode to the Mud in Corona Park,” which appears in her collection The Ghost Forest: New and Selected Poems (Norton, 2024). For more from Hahn, read her installation of our Ten Questions series.
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In this episode of Poured Over: The Barnes & Noble Podcast with guest host Chris Gillespie, award-winning author Richard Powers discusses how the issues of environmental exploitation and artificial intelligence inspired his new novel, Playground (Norton, 2024), which is set on the island of Makatea in French Polynesia.
Tags: Fiction | Richard Powers | Playground | Norton | Poured Over | Chris Gillespie | podcast | interview | 2024 -
In this event hosted by the Royal Society of Literature, Claire Messud, author most recently of This Strange Eventful History (Norton, 2024), and Anne Michaels, author most recently of Held (Knopf, 2024), speak about the shared themes of history and memory in their new novels in a conversation with novelist Elif Shafak.
Tags: Fiction | Claire Messud | This Strange Eventful History | Norton | Anne Michaels | Held | Knopf | Elif Shafak | Royal Society of Literature | novel | writing process | 2024 -
In this video for the African Speculative Fiction Society, ’Pemi Aguda reads an excerpt from her award-winning short story “Masquerade Season,” which appears in her debut collection, Ghostroots (Norton, 2024). Aguda is featured in “First Fiction 2024” in the July/August issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
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In this 2023 Charleston Literary Festival event, Pulitzer Prize–winning author Paul Harding talks to Geoffrey Harpham about his latest novel, This Other Eden (Norton, 2023), which is inspired by the true story of Malaga Island, home to one of the first racially integrated towns in the American Northeast.
Tags: Fiction | Paul Harding | This Other Eden | Norton | Geoffrey Harpham | Edoardo Ballerini | Charleston Literary Festival | 2023 -
For this LIVE From NYPL event, award-winning author Vauhini Vara reads from her short story collection, This Is Salvaged (Norton, 2023), and discusses exploring the intimacy of relationships between children, parents, friends, siblings, neighbors, and lovers in a conversation with novelist and essayist Leslie Jamison.
Tags: Fiction | Vauhini Vara | This Is Salvaged | Norton | Leslie Jamison | LIVE From NYPL | 2023 -
“I was born to tell my story and the story of my people, to make everyone aware that we exist still, that we breathe still.” In this virtual Charis Circle event, Leah Myers reads from her debut memoir, Thinning Blood: A Memoir of Family, Myth, and Identity (Norton, 2023), and discusses how Native folklore informed the structure of her book in a conversation with author Kung Li Sun. Myers is featured in “The New Nonfiction 2023” in the September/October issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Creative Nonfiction | Leah Myers | Thinning Blood | memoir | Norton | Charis Circle | Kung Li Sun | New Nonfiction 2023 | September/October 2023 | 2023 -
“At one time, / I asked for everything.” Sandra Lim reads from her poetry collection The Curious Thing (Norton, 2021) for this virtual reading hosted by UC Berkeley’s Lunch Poems reading series with an introduction by poet Noah Warren. Lim is the recipient of the 2023 Jackson Poetry Prize.
Tags: Poetry | Sandra Lim | Lunch Poems | UC Berkeley | The Curious Thing | Norton | 2021 | Jackson Poetry Prize | 2023 -
“Nowadays, I lie down in the sunlight / To see my mama moting around / As sympathetic ash. / Yes, one morning whether misty or yellow / I’ll be soot with her.” In this installment of PBS NewsHour’s “Brief But Spectacular” series, Kimiko Hahn reads her poem “A Dusting,” which appears in her collection Foreign Bodies (Norton, 2022), and speaks about the power of poetry to connect us with our loved ones.
Tags: Poetry | Kimiko Hahn | PBS NewsHour | Brief But Spectacular | Foreign Bodies | Norton | 2022 -
“Last night the moon lifted itself / on one wing / over the fields.” In this 1992 recording for Howard County Poetry and Literature Society’s The Writing Life, Linda Pastan reads her poem “Elegy,” which appears in her collection Imperfect Paradise (Norton, 1989). Pastan died at the age of ninety on January 30, 2023.
Tags: Poetry | Linda Pastan | Imperfect Paradise | Norton | 1989 | in memoriam | The Writing Life | HoCoPoLitSo | 1992 -
In this video, DeafBlind poet John Lee Clark, author of How to Communicate (Norton, 2022), performs a Protactile poem called “The Rebuttal” with Jelica Nuccio and Heather Holmes, and voiced by Halene Anderson. For more on Clark, read his installment of our Ten Questions series.
Tags: Poetry | John Lee Clark | Protactile poetry | DeafBlind | How to Communicate | Norton | 2022 | Ten Questions -
“It started with me seeing this weird article in the Lancet, which is a medical journal, about a particular femur that had been discovered in a Roman necropolis on the island of Isola Sacra.” In this virtual event hosted by the Strand Book Store, Mark Prins talks about the research process for his debut novel, The Latinist (Norton, 2022), in a conversation with author Brandon Taylor.
Tags: Fiction | Mark Prins | Brandon Taylor | Strand Book Store | The Latinist | Norton | 2022 -
“What the history books neglect / is that the first astronomers / were women gazing up at depths / and wishing for a different planet.” In this video for the United Nations Girls’ Education Initiative, Maya C. Popa reads her poem “The Art of Stars,” which she dedicates to Maria Mitchell, the first U.S. female astronomer. Popa’s collection Wound Is the Origin of Wonder (Norton, 2022) is featured in Page One in the November/December issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
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“This year Amadeo Padilla is Jesus. The hermanos have been preparing in the dirt yard behind the morada,” reads Kirstin Valdez Quade from her award-winning debut novel, The Five Wounds (Norton, 2021), in this 2021 virtual reading for the James Merrill House’s Writer-in-Residence reading series.
Tags: Fiction | Kirstin Valdez Quade | James Merrill House | The Five Wounds | Norton | 2021 | reading -
“My friend Michael and I are walking home arguing about the movie. / He says that he believes a person can love someone / and still be able to murder that person.” Marie Howe reads her poem “After the Movie,” which appears in her collection The Kingdom of Ordinary Time (Norton, 2008), in this 2014 video for the Page Meets Stage series in New York City.
Tags: Poetry | Marie Howe | The Kingdom of Ordinary Time | Norton | Page Meets Stage | 2014 | reading -
“What you can do is tell your best story, at that moment.” Camille T. Dungy, whose first essay collection, Guidebook to Relative Strangers: Journeys Into Race, Motherhood, and History (Norton, 2017), was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, offers writers advice on how to overcome roadblocks in this Austin Community College video.
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“All lions must lean into something other than a roar,” reads Roger Reeves from his poem “Grendel” included in his new collection, Best Barbarian (Norton, 2022), in this short film directed by Osvaldo Cuevas. Reeves’s collection is featured in Page One in the March/April issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Poetry | Roger Reeves | Grendel | Best Barbarian | Norton | 2022 | short film | Page One | March/April 2022 -
“I had a body and it was good / until you gave it meaning,” reads Ari Banias, author of A Symmetry (Norton, 2021), from his poem “Tautology” in this Poetry Project reading with Silvina López Medin, author of Poem That Never Ends (Essay Press, 2021).
Tags: Poetry | Ari Banias | A Symmetry | Norton | Silvina Lopez Medin | Poem That Never Ends | Essay Press | St. Mark's Poetry Project | 2021 -
“The first was that I was very busy. // The second—I was different from you: whatever happened to you could not happen to me, not like that.” In this 2018 video for Bloodaxe Books, Marie Howe reads “Magdalene—The Seven Devils” and other poems from her fourth poetry collection, Magdalene (Norton, 2017).
Tags: Poetry | Marie Howe | Magdalene | Norton | 2017 | Bloodaxe Books | reading | 2018