Richard Ford Reads Harold Brodkey

理查德·福特读哈罗德·布罗德基

The New Yorker: Fiction

小说

2013-05-04

51 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Richard Ford reads "The State of Grace," by Harold Brodkey.

单集文稿 ...

  • This is the New Yorker fiction podcast from the New Yorker magazine.

  • I'm Deborah Treisman, fiction editor at the New Yorker.

  • Each month we invite a writer to choose a story from the magazine's archives to read and discuss.

  • This month we're going to hear the state of grace by Harold Brodke, who was Edward.

  • He wasn't as smart as I'd been at his age or as fierce at his age.

  • I'd already seen the evil in people's eyes.

  • The story was chosen by Richard Ford, whose latest novel, Canada, came out in January.

  • Ford stories have been appearing in the New Yorker since 1987 and back in 2007, he was the first guest on this podcast when he read reunion by John Cheever.

  • So welcome back, Richard.

  • Thank you, Debra.

  • Nice to get to talk to you.

  • Well, you mentioned when you picked this particular story by Harold Brodke that you had first read it when you were in law school in 1967 in St.

  • Louis.

  • That's right.

  • How did you come across it then?

  • I don't even remember, but I assume it was in an anthology that I had had when I was in college.

  • And I just brought those anthologies along with me because I was so afraid when I was in law school that I wasn't going to have anything to read but law texts, that I brought a fiction anthology with me.

  • I think it actually is in Robert Gorham Davis's anthology, who is Lydia Davis's father?

  • I think I had that anthology with me.

  • And in fact, it turned out to be a really both fortunate and fortuitous thing to do because I didn't last through my first year of law school, and I actually quit and started writing stories.