The historian can tell you what happened, but it seems to me the novelist can tell you what it felt like.
Click play to listen. Recorded on November 4, 2007.
Join Ann Marie Lipinski and Julia Keller in this conversation with author E. L. Doctorow upon his acceptance of the 2007 Chicago Tribune Literary Prize. Doctorow muses on the blurry overlap between journalism and the novel and astutely pinpoints himself within the western literary tradition. He opines on his namesake, Edgar Allen Poe, and his childhood discoveries of Jack London and Fyodor Dostoevsky. Throughout, Doctorow comments on niche media and the crisscrossing relationships that connect and distinguish radio and television, novels and film.