
Sci Fi Writer Paolo Bacigalupi, SHIPBREAKER & Literary Critic Harold Bloom on Last Poems
Series: Writer's Voice
From: Francesca Rheannon
Length: 00:59:00
Paolo Bacigalupi
Earth Day is coming up. What shall we tell the children? Whether you’ve got young ones at home or, like me, grandkids who are already asking pointed questions about the state of nature, it’s a dilemma. Do we tell the truth? Try to explain that the natural world we are passing onto them is in deep trouble? End on a note of hope — one we are reaching for ourselves? Or do we just change the subject?
Science fiction writer Paolo Bacigalupi says we have to tell them the truth — it’s the least us grownups owe them. Of course, he’s writing for an older youth audience, the plus twelve crowd called “young adults.” Bacigalupi hopes not just to warn them but also to inspire them with stories of kids who succeed against the odds.
His latest book, SHIPBREAKER, tells the story of one such kid living in a post-apocalyptic world on the Gulf Coast. Fossil fuels are a thing of the past and most people struggle to survive while the tiny elite live in comfort with their high tech, clean tech marvels.
His protagonist, Nailer, is small — the better to worm into the deepest bowels of wrecked oil tankers to pull out the valuable scrap. He meets an upper class girl after a superstorm wrecks the wind-and-solar powered ship she is traveling in. Together, they set out to save the world from a nefarious cabal. The plot is familiar, but the finely drawn world of the novel, set sometime within the next 100 years, makes the book a fascinating read.
SHIPBREAKER was a finalist for the National Book Award. Paolo Bachigalupi is also the author of THE WINDUP GIRL, which won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards, and PUMP SIX AND OTHER STORIES.
David Bollier
David Bollier writes about the commons: in BRAND NAME BULLIES, he writes about the intellectual commons; in VIRAL SPIRAL, the digital commons. Bollier is now looking into the idea of the ecological commons: what kinds of laws could be developed to protect it. We air an excerpt from an interview Francesca did for another radio show, Sea Change Radio.
David Bollier’s website: news and perspective on the commons
More on the commons from onthecommons.org
Harold Bloom
April is poetry month. Francesca visited literary critic and octogenarian Harold Bloom in his New Haven home a few months ago to record an interview about his latest book,
TILL I END MY SONG. It’s a marvelous collection of poems and Bloom’s commentary, drawing on the work of poets he holds dear, from Shakespeare and Michael Drayton to Hart Crane and Agha Shahid Ali. All are what Bloom calls “last poems”, written in the face of our inevitable mortality.
More Poetry
We air two poems to young people. One describes the fears young people have and the second describing our hopes for them. They appear in the anthology & CD set POETRY SPEAKS WHO I AM (Paschen Books, 2010), read by the poets themselves.
Toi Derricotte: “Fears of the 8th Grade”
Richard Wilbur: “The Writer”
Also in the Writer's Voice series
Amy Seidl, FINDING HIGHER GROUND & Matthew Stein, WHEN DISASTER STRIKES
(00:59:03)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Ecologist Amy Seidl talks about FINDING HIGHER GROUND: Adaptation in a Warming World and survival expert Matthew Stein talks about WHEN DISASTER STRIKES: A Comprehensive ...
Top Ten Writers Voice Shows of 2011
(00:59:00)
From: Francesca Rheannon
We hear clips from five of the top ten show episodes of 2011, including novelists Tahmima Anam and Teju Cole, journalist James Kaplan, memoirist Susan Rosenberg and marine ...
Agendas for A New Economy & A New Society
(00:59:00)
From: Francesca Rheannon
David Korten talks about AGENDA FOR A NEW ECONOMY: From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth and David Wann discusses his book, THE NEW NORMAL: An Agenda for Responsible Living.
Green Home: Eric Corey Freed and Barry Katz
(00:59:00)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Eric Corey Freed talks about the book he co-authored with Kevin Daum, GreenSense For The Home. And Barry Katz tells us about Practical Green Remodeling. Finally, green ...
The Audacity of Hope or The Mendacity of Hope? Two Views of Obama.
(00:59:01)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Unemployment’s still high, we’re still at war, and the banks are still playing fast and loose with other people’s money. Has Obama failed — or has he just not yet hit his ...
REWILDING THE WORLD, Caroline Fraser
(00:58:59)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Author and conservationist Caroline Fraser talks about bringing the predators of the Pleistocene back to America and other efforts to restore habitat. Her book is REWILDING ...
Carl Safina, A SEA IN FLAMES: The Deepwater Horizon Blowout
(00:59:00)
From: Francesca Rheannon
On the first anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon Disaster, author Carl Safina talks about the blowout, why it happened and its impact on the people and wildlife of the Gulf. ...
Generation Hot: Mark Hertsgaard and Thomas Yezerski
(00:59:00)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Journalist Mark Hertsgaard on HOT: Living Through the Next 50 Years on Earth and children’s book author and illustrator Thomas Yezerski on his picture book for children, ...
A New American Revolution? Ted Rall's Anti-American Manifesto
(00:58:57)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Cartoonist and author Ted Rall talks about his book, THE ANTI-AMERICAN MANIFESTO. And poet Martin Espada reads a poem about the nonviolent people’s rebellion in Mexico, ...
H.G. Adler: Witness and Storyteller
(00:59:00)
From: Francesca Rheannon
Translator Peter Filkins talks about H.G. Adler’s PANORAMA. Set in the vanished world of pre-war Bohemia, it follows the young Joseph from childhood in Prague to adulthood in ...
Piece Description
Paolo Bacigalupi
Earth Day is coming up. What shall we tell the children? Whether you’ve got young ones at home or, like me, grandkids who are already asking pointed questions about the state of nature, it’s a dilemma. Do we tell the truth? Try to explain that the natural world we are passing onto them is in deep trouble? End on a note of hope — one we are reaching for ourselves? Or do we just change the subject?
Science fiction writer Paolo Bacigalupi says we have to tell them the truth — it’s the least us grownups owe them. Of course, he’s writing for an older youth audience, the plus twelve crowd called “young adults.” Bacigalupi hopes not just to warn them but also to inspire them with stories of kids who succeed against the odds.
His latest book, SHIPBREAKER, tells the story of one such kid living in a post-apocalyptic world on the Gulf Coast. Fossil fuels are a thing of the past and most people struggle to survive while the tiny elite live in comfort with their high tech, clean tech marvels.
His protagonist, Nailer, is small — the better to worm into the deepest bowels of wrecked oil tankers to pull out the valuable scrap. He meets an upper class girl after a superstorm wrecks the wind-and-solar powered ship she is traveling in. Together, they set out to save the world from a nefarious cabal. The plot is familiar, but the finely drawn world of the novel, set sometime within the next 100 years, makes the book a fascinating read.
SHIPBREAKER was a finalist for the National Book Award. Paolo Bachigalupi is also the author of THE WINDUP GIRL, which won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards, and PUMP SIX AND OTHER STORIES.
David Bollier
David Bollier writes about the commons: in BRAND NAME BULLIES, he writes about the intellectual commons; in VIRAL SPIRAL, the digital commons. Bollier is now looking into the idea of the ecological commons: what kinds of laws could be developed to protect it. We air an excerpt from an interview Francesca did for another radio show, Sea Change Radio.
David Bollier’s website: news and perspective on the commons
More on the commons from onthecommons.org
Harold Bloom
April is poetry month. Francesca visited literary critic and octogenarian Harold Bloom in his New Haven home a few months ago to record an interview about his latest book,
TILL I END MY SONG. It’s a marvelous collection of poems and Bloom’s commentary, drawing on the work of poets he holds dear, from Shakespeare and Michael Drayton to Hart Crane and Agha Shahid Ali. All are what Bloom calls “last poems”, written in the face of our inevitable mortality.
More Poetry
We air two poems to young people. One describes the fears young people have and the second describing our hopes for them. They appear in the anthology & CD set POETRY SPEAKS WHO I AM (Paschen Books, 2010), read by the poets themselves.
Toi Derricotte: “Fears of the 8th Grade”
Richard Wilbur: “The Writer”
Timing and Cues
60 second music break between 36:15 and 37:15
Musical Works
| Title | Artist | Album | Label | Year | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sleeping with Maya | Sufi Baul | Madness and Happiness. | unknown | 2009 | 01:00 |


