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.
More from Claudia Cragg
Andrew Lam, 'Perfume Dreams', 'East Eats West'
(00:26:26)
From: Claudia Cragg
The Vietnamese-American author on his work and on Human Trafficking
Author Jean Kwok on Sweatshops, Legal Immigrants, 'The American Dream' and 'Girl In Translation' ...
(00:21:28)
From: Claudia Cragg
Kwok's debut novel 'Girl in Translation' became a New York Times bestseller. It has been published in 15 countries and chosen as the winner of an American Library Association ...
Rye Barcott, TED fellow, former Marine, 'It Happened on the Way to War'
(00:27:48)
From: Claudia Cragg
Rye Barcott, ' Chasing the Mad Lion' (Kibera, the US Armed Forces and the "Catalytic Power of Participatory Development"
Dr Helen Caldicott: NO safe levels of radiation, NO safe levels of food radionuclides
(00:13:09)
From: Claudia Cragg
THIS IS AN UPDATE dated 1 April 2011 from Dr. Helen Caldicott, physician, paediatrician, and author of 'Nuclear Is Not The Answer' on the current situation in Japan.
Asma Jahangir - Pakistan, the Rule of Law and the NRO (National Reconciliation Ordinance)
(00:25:07)
From: Claudia Cragg
Asma Jahangir is the Chair of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and a special 'rapporteur' for the UN on Freedom of Religion and Beliefs. She has denounced a Supreme ...
Bhopal 25 years on - Dr. Suroopa Mukherjee
(00:23:51)
From: Claudia Cragg
Indian state authorities have announced that, 25 years after the Union Carbide Bhopal tragedy that killed thousands, the (till now) sealed pesticide plant is to be opened for ...
T. R. Reid on "The Healing of America"
(00:29:33)
From: Claudia Cragg
A global quest for better, cheaper and fairer health care
'Holy Roller', Diane Wilson, From Fundamentalist to Activist
(00:28:01)
From: Claudia Cragg
If only all of us were so 'Unreasonable' - her first memoir...
Write a true life story for Field Report and win $250K ?
(00:06:16)
From: Claudia Cragg
Online venture seeks revolution in publishing industry
Burma 08 08 1988 -- 20 Years On
(00:23:07)
From: Claudia Cragg
The life of Burmese refugees in Northern Thailand
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