Alan Cheuse http://kccu.org en How To Put This 'Delicate'-ly ... Not Le Carre's Best Work http://kccu.org/post/how-put-delicate-ly-not-le-carres-best-work Some novelists interest us because they turn the light of a style we enjoy on whatever subject they take up. Some novelists we enjoy because they have found a great subject and work it well and lovingly. John le Carre seems to belong to the latter group, having found his vein of fiction gold in the world of Cold War espionage. Thu, 16 May 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Alan Cheuse 34085 at http://kccu.org How To Put This 'Delicate'-ly ... Not Le Carre's Best Work Book Review: 'A Nearly Perfect Copy' http://kccu.org/post/book-review-nearly-perfect-copy Transcript <p>AUDIE CORNISH, HOST: <p>Allison Amend is out with her third book. It's a novel called "A Nearly Perfect Copy." It features richly detailed characters, including an art dealer gone bad, and it's set in both Paris and New York. Our review Alan Cheuse found it all quite delectable.<p>ALAN CHEUSE, BYLINE: Elmira, known as Elm Howells, works her expertise mainly about European drawings and paintings at a family art auction house in Manhattan. Fri, 10 May 2013 21:23:00 +0000 Alan Cheuse 33752 at http://kccu.org Real Writing, Real Life In Salter's 'All That Is' http://kccu.org/post/real-writing-real-life-salters-all "There comes a time," James Salter writes in the epigraph for his new novel, <em>All That Is</em>, "when you realize that everything is a dream, and only those things preserved in writing have any possibility of being real."<p>There's an echo here of the great 17th-century Spanish playwright Calderon de la Barca's famous lines, "Life is a dream, and dreams even are dreams." In Calderon's play, the king who utters those lines defers only to God as the source of truth in human reality. Salter, like most of us modern writers, looks only to art. Wed, 03 Apr 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Alan Cheuse 31328 at http://kccu.org Real Writing, Real Life In Salter's 'All That Is' Tigers, Scholars And Smugglers, All 'At Home' In Sprawling Novel http://kccu.org/post/tigers-scholars-and-smugglers-all-home-sprawling-novel It's difficult to predict the reception <em>Where Tigers Are at Home</em> will receive in the United States. The winner of France's Prix Medicis in 2008, this big, sprawling novel (in a translation by Mike Mitchell) comes to us from Algerian-born writer, philosopher and world traveler Jean-Marie Blas de Robles, author of more than a dozen works of fiction, poetry and nonfiction. This book — the first of his to appear in the U.S. in English — stands as a challenge to readers who want their fiction to offer a quick pay-off. Wed, 20 Mar 2013 11:03:00 +0000 Alan Cheuse 30467 at http://kccu.org Tigers, Scholars And Smugglers, All 'At Home' In Sprawling Novel Book Review: 'Where Tigers Are At Home' http://kccu.org/post/book-review-where-tigers-are-home Transcript <p>MELISSA BLOCK, HOST: <p>From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Melissa Block.<p>AUDIE CORNISH, HOST: <p>And I'm Audie Cornish. Our book reviewer, Alan Cheuse, has just traveled to Brazil and back in an 800-page novel. The book is called "Where Tigers Are At Home." It's by a French novelist named Jean-Marie Blas de Robles and it's just out in English. Here's Alan's review.<p>ALAN CHEUSE, BYLINE: A Frenchman named Von Wogau, a divorced and retired journalist, lives in a small town in the northeastern region of Brazil. Fri, 15 Mar 2013 21:39:00 +0000 Alan Cheuse 30240 at http://kccu.org