It makes me so happy to hear Eleanor Wachtel’s voice as the interviewer here. She’s one of the finest interviewers of writers around (has interviewed Toibin on a few occasions), and sorely missed after her retirement from the CBC. Eleanor, I’m glad to hear you’re still at it :-)
@Thomas...19116 күн бұрын
How extraordinarily self-aware and candid he is about his relationship with his work
@janicedowson7793Ай бұрын
What an excellent surprise to hear Eleanor Wachtel's iconic voice, she's the best. Writers and Company is so missed, love to hear her here with the most excellent Colm Toibin!
@samfrank629023 күн бұрын
His cadence is like an Irish Tarantino
@derektrotter4998 күн бұрын
You're not wrong there, my son.
@annemcleod850524 күн бұрын
This is very interesting, especially to hear the subtlety and honesty of his insights about it being actually 'disgusting' to write publicly about such delicate, private things from his own family experience. I remember reading 'The Heather Blazing' while on a walking holiday in Kerry and found myself squirming and repelled for exactly this reason. My impulse was to take the book with me up a Kerry mountain and leave it in the fresh air under a rock. So it's very encouraging to discover that he has had these same moral reservations. Maybe I'll try reading some more of his work!
I know, sincerity, humility and intelligence wrapped up in kindly face.
@trizachai17 күн бұрын
i like the man's style, i might remember him later, good talk.
@laurajackson2310 күн бұрын
The morality point is something I've thought about a lot. My mothers death was included in my cousins novel.
@PapaLazarou1928 күн бұрын
Is it me or does this guy look like a really good AI video?
@fergal242419 күн бұрын
I think it’s the blurred background in particular that adds to that effect. He’s an amazing Irish writer all the same.
@MorePlausible16 күн бұрын
So delighted to hear the Queen of Canadian Radio, Eleanor Wachtel, interviewing again!
@CHANDANSINGH-qd8vcАй бұрын
thank you from India .Can somebody suggest me any novel to start my reading career .i am aged 31 right now .
@yonathanasefaw9001Ай бұрын
The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann?
@DK-yq5nx29 күн бұрын
Colm Toibin’s The Master is a masterful novel. I re-read it every couple of years.
@FoursWithin29 күн бұрын
What kind of stories or writing do you like ? That would give us a better idea of what books to direct you towards. So if you want to get back to us with some notes ... In the meantime, or in case you don't have an opinion yet I'm going to toss out various titles. Overstory by Richard Powers All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr Dune by Frank Herbert The Life of Pi by Yann Martel 1984 by George Orwell 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell Many of these are so popular they're translated into movies. Although the books are IMO better than any of the movies, which are themselves all very well made. Hope you find something here to enjoy on your reading adventures.
@awanderingprince11 күн бұрын
wow, i’m so happy i stopped to watch this.
@ahmetepik20 күн бұрын
Sorry. I don't take any writer seriously if he hasn't said a single word on Israel's genocide in Gaza which has already left 50.000 dead, 125.000 wounded and 12.000 still beneath the rubble...
@MorePlausible16 күн бұрын
You are extraordinarily tyrannical to demand all writers answer to your political preferences. Who are you to demand such a thing?
@ahmetepik15 күн бұрын
@@MorePlausible As a reader I don't think I have any tyrannical demands. My demand is only moral. The real tyrannical demand is to ask people to remain silent on the face of Israel's brutal actions against Palestinian civilians. To my mind any decent person, whether he/she is a writer or not should automatically be against Israel's genocide in Gaza and Lebanon. No literary accomplishement is more important than the life of an innocent child in Gaza...