Irish Writers in America: Dennis Lehane, John Banville

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  • Опубликовано: 7 янв 2015
  • This episode of “Irish Writers in America,” a new 13 part series from CUNY TV (City University of New York television station), features interviews with Dennis Lehane, best selling author of Mystic River, Gone Baby Gone, and The Given Day, soon to be released as a major motion picture starring Ben Affleck, and John Banville, one of the most esteemed literary voices in Europe and winner of the Man Booker Prize for his novel, The Sea, which has become a 2013 film starring Charlotte Rampling and Ciarán Hinds.
    Dennis Lehane talks about what it means to be an urban novelist, what it means to be Irish, and his interest in deconstructing the tenets of American crime fiction. He tells the real-life story that inspired Mystic River and explains how his type of childhood led to his brand of fiction. From the roof of his Boston home, Lehane tracks his development as a writer who, despite instruction to the contrary from writing teachers, insisted on the importance of plot. He speaks freely about his complicated feelings on the use of real-life horrors as material for fiction writing.
    John Banville discusses his decision to begin writing modern day Dublin-set crime fiction under the pseudonym Benjamin Black after having already established himself as one of the most lauded literary authors of modern time. He explains the difference between the work done under each guise, and that while one may be more superficial than the other, he believes superficiality is ultimately all we have in either. He explains his proclamation that his work is better than every one else’s and why the sentence is the single greatest human invention.
    This episode presents two of the best-known voices in fiction writing from each side of the Atlantic.
    Taped: 11-26-13
    A galaxy of 23 great contemporary writers share intimate thoughts about writing, creativity, and the influences of being Irish or Irish-American in a new 13-part television series, Irish Writers in America.
    Watch more Irish Writers www.tv.cuny.edu/show/irishwrit...

Комментарии • 10

  • @christianoverfield6956
    @christianoverfield6956 8 лет назад +4

    Fantastic. The best Banville interview I've yet heard. What a mind, what a thinker. Thanks to whomever posted this.

    • @ShanOakley
      @ShanOakley 8 лет назад +1

      +christian overfield I think the same.

  • @Zosima45
    @Zosima45 9 лет назад +2

    Brilliant views, thanks for uploading this

  • @Klimseven
    @Klimseven 6 лет назад +2

    Dennis Lehane is American, not Irish. There are plenty of actual Irish writers living in the US.

    • @Nuggiesoftruth
      @Nuggiesoftruth 5 лет назад

      Klimseven haha 😂

    • @DomhnallOSuileabhainPrin-tm1fw
      @DomhnallOSuileabhainPrin-tm1fw 4 года назад +1

      Correct. He is Irish American.

    • @DK-cy5mt
      @DK-cy5mt 2 года назад +1

      American citizen but in fairness to him, both his parents are Irish immigrants

    • @irish66
      @irish66 15 дней назад

      @@DK-cy5mt But that doesn't make him irish. The program is called Irish Writers in America, not Irish and Irish American writers in America.

  • @irish66
    @irish66 15 дней назад

    Dennis Lehane is not an irish writer.