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Kate Mosse (no, NOT the model), The Labyrinth

From: Claudia Cragg
Length: 00:35:23

Interview with the best-selling British author Read the full description.

Kmosse_small Kate Mosse is an author and broadcaster. The Co-Founder of the Orange Prize for Fiction (OPF) and the Orange Award for New Writers (OANW). Her novels are Eskimo Kissing (1996); Crucifix Lane (1998), a thriller; and the number one best-selling Labyrinth, an adventure novel set partly in 13th-century Carcassone and partly in present day south west France. Labyrinth has been translated into 37 languages, and has sold over a million copies in English to date. Her next novel, Sepulchre, will be published in 2007. Her short stories and articles have been published in a wide range of newspapers, magazines and anthologies, including: The Observer, the Independent on Saturday, the Independent on Sunday, The Guardian, The Times, The Sunday Times, Harpers Bazaar, the New Statesman and the Financial Times. Her non-fiction books are Becoming a Mother (1993) and The House: inside the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (1995), the book of the award-winning BBC television series. She recently spoke with KGNU's Claudia Cragg as part of The Laughing Goat coffee house series of Arts interviews.

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Piece Description

Kate Mosse is an author and broadcaster. The Co-Founder of the Orange Prize for Fiction (OPF) and the Orange Award for New Writers (OANW). Her novels are Eskimo Kissing (1996); Crucifix Lane (1998), a thriller; and the number one best-selling Labyrinth, an adventure novel set partly in 13th-century Carcassone and partly in present day south west France. Labyrinth has been translated into 37 languages, and has sold over a million copies in English to date. Her next novel, Sepulchre, will be published in 2007. Her short stories and articles have been published in a wide range of newspapers, magazines and anthologies, including: The Observer, the Independent on Saturday, the Independent on Sunday, The Guardian, The Times, The Sunday Times, Harpers Bazaar, the New Statesman and the Financial Times. Her non-fiction books are Becoming a Mother (1993) and The House: inside the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (1995), the book of the award-winning BBC television series. She recently spoke with KGNU's Claudia Cragg as part of The Laughing Goat coffee house series of Arts interviews.

Broadcast History

Aired on KGNU Boulder/Denver Feb 07