The Fitzcarraldo Editions Archive podcast
A series of newly recorded, in-depth conversations with authors published by Fitzcarraldo Editions about their work, touching on process, style, form, themes and influences.
Jeremy Cooper in conversation with Gareth Evans
1hrs 52 min.
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Jeremy Cooper in conversation with Gareth Evans
Jeremy Cooper, author of Discord, Brian, Bolt from the Blue and Ash Before Oak, speaks to Gareth Evans, writer, editor and film/event producer, about his writing to date. The conversation touches on his trajectory from the art world into writing, how our relationships with others underpin creativity, and the correspondence between art and feeling.
Joanna Pocock in conversation with Samantha Walton
1hrs 28 min.
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Joanna Pocock in conversation with Samantha Walton
Joanna Pocock, author of Surrender and Greyhound, speaks to Samantha Walton, academic and author of Everybody Needs Beauty: In Search of the Nature Cure, about her writing to date. The conversation touches on resistance to nostalgia in nature writing, mapping internal journeys onto landscape and the invention of ‘wilderness’ in American literature.
Thea Lenarduzzi in conversation with Elinor Cleghorn
1hrs 20 min.
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Thea Lenarduzzi in conversation with Elinor Cleghorn
Thea Lenarduzzi, author of Dandelions and The Tower, speaks to Elinor Cleghorn, author of Unwell Women and A Woman’s Work (forthcoming in 2026). The conversation touches on the imaginative resonances of fairy tales, storytelling in the pub, and the generative possibilities of not-knowing.
Guadalupe Nettel in conversation with Sarvat Hasin
1hrs 22 min.
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Guadalupe Nettel in conversation with Sarvat Hasin
Guadalupe Nettel, author of Still Born and The Accidentals, both tr. Rosalind Harvey, speaks to Sarvat Hasin, author of You Can’t Go Home Again and The Giant Dark, about her work to date. The discussion touches on transforming someone’s story into fiction, writing in the space between reality and fantasy, and the potent symbolism of dreams.
Ed Atkins in conversation with Dan Fox
1hrs 31 min.
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Ed Atkins in conversation with Dan Fox
Ed Atkins, artist and author of Flower, Old Food and A Primer for Cadavers, speaks to Dan Fox, filmmaker, musician and author of Pretentiousness: Why it Matters and Limbo, about his work to date. The conversation touches on catachresis and its relation to the animism of childhood, the feeling of words in the mouth, the thin border between pathos and slapstick, and the pleasure of making lists.
Diane Seuss in conversation with Sandeep Parmar
1hrs 42 min.
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Diane Seuss in conversation with Sandeep Parmar
Diane Seuss, author of frank: sonnets and Modern Poetry, speaks with poet and critic Sandeep Parmar, author of Faust, Eidolon and Reading Mina Loy’s Autobiographies, about her work to date. The discussion touches on the confluence of memoir and poetry, the need for connection with the past and the possibility of existing in the absolute present, and the vagaries of being positioned outside ‘the house’ of poetry.
Edward Said and The Question of Palestine at the Southbank Centre
2hrs 27 min.
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Edward Said and The Question of Palestine at the Southbank Centre
Edward Said & The Question of Palestine: To mark the re-publication of Edward Said’s The Question of Palestine, this landmark event held at the Royal Festival Hall on 20 November gathers eight key authors to reflect on the enduring legacy of Said’s work and its role in the ongoing Palestinian struggle for self-determination.
Esther Kinsky in conversation with Gareth Evans
1hrs 51 min.
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Esther Kinsky in conversation with Gareth Evans
Esther Kinsky in conversation with Gareth Evans: Esther Kinsky, author of River (tr. Iain Galbraith), Grove, Rombo and most recently Seeing Further (all tr. Caroline Schmidt), speaks with Gareth Evans, writer, editor and film/event producer. The discussion touches on the physicality of the writing process, telling a story without plot as the structuring principle, making the sensory presence of the world felt in language, and the personal and collective histories that words bear.
Daisy Hildyard in conversation with Filipa Ramos
1hrs 41 min.
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Daisy Hildyard in conversation with Filipa Ramos
Daisy Hildyard, author of Hunters in the Snow, The Second Body and Emergency, which was awarded the 2023 RSL Encore Award, speaks to writer and curator Filipa Ramos about her work to date. The conversation touches on accommodating different forms of life – human, animal, plant – in writing, the ways in which stories come to live independently of their teller, relating experiences that happen outside of language, and humility in the face of our limited knowledge.
Sheila Heti in conversation with Juliet Jacques
2hrs 01 min.
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Sheila Heti in conversation with Juliet Jacques
Sheila Heti, author of Alphabetical Diaries, Pure Colour, Motherhood and How Should a Person Be?, among other works, speaks to writer, journalist, filmmaker Juliet Jacques, whose published works include Monaco, Variations and Trans: A Memoir, about her writing to date. The discussion touches on revealing the hidden face of the self in writing, taking contemporary culture seriously as subject matter, the possibility of capturing ‘the spirit of the age’ in a time of fragmentation, and the unconscious processes that shape our lives.
Jessica Au in conversation with Lucy Caldwell
1hrs 42 min.
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Jessica Au in conversation with Lucy Caldwell
Jessica Au, author of Cold Enough for Snow, winner of the 2020 Novel Prize, speaks to Lucy Caldwell, author of Intimacies and Openings, about the themes and ideas at work in her writing, including the dissonances between our external and internal worlds, the grief of growing apart from parental figures, the absences in the histories of migrant families, and the search for truth and commonality.
Jacqueline Rose in conversation with Helen Charman
1hrs 50 min.
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Jacqueline Rose in conversation with Helen Charman
Feminist critic and writer Jacqueline Rose, author most recently of The Plague: Living Death in Our Times, published by Fitzcarraldo Editions in 2023, speaks to critic and academic Helen Charman, author of Mother State: A Political History of Motherhood, published in August 2024. The conversation touches on South Africa’s case against Israel in the International Court of Justice, the necessity of countenancing multiple and sometimes contradictory truths at once, and motherhood as a confrontation with life’s mess and fragility. Listen here.
Polly Barton in conversation with Rachael Allen
1hrs 50 min.
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Polly Barton in conversation with Rachael Allen
Polly Barton, author of Fifty Sounds and Porn: An Oral History, and translator of Mild Vertigo by Mieko Kanai, speaks to Rachael Allen, poet, editor and author of Kingdomland, about her work to date, including the importance of making spaces for ambivalence and not-knowing, difficult feelings as a source of writing, and her overlapping practices as writer and translator.
Antonia Lloyd-Jones in conversation with Daniel Hahn
1hrs 51 min.
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Antonia Lloyd-Jones in conversation with Daniel Hahn
Antonia Lloyd-Jones, translator of Polish literature including Olga Tokarczuk’s Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead and Witold Gombrowicz’s The Possessed, speaks to Daniel Hahn, translator of Portuguese, Spanish and French literature and author of Catching Fire: A Translation Diary, about her work to date, including the reasons why she started learning Polish, the dynamism of the translator’s role and the necessity of producing a text that is ‘alive’ in translation.
Kate Briggs in conversation with Jennifer Hodgson
1hrs 57 min.
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Kate Briggs in conversation with Jennifer Hodgson
Writer and translator Kate Briggs, author of This Little Art and The Long Form, speaks to Jennifer Hodgson, writer, critic and editor of Ann Quin’s The Unmapped Country, about her work, touching on the generative potential of translation, the possibilities and constraints of third-person narration and the novel as a collective production.
Brian Dillon in conversation with Chris Power
2hrs 18 min.
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Brian Dillon in conversation with Chris Power
Critic and essayist Brian Dillon, author of Essayism, In the Dark Room, Suppose a Sentence and Affinities, speaks to Chris Power, author of A Lonely Man, about his writing to date, including the influence and use of the image in his work, his attachment to the fragment and the ‘mere’, and the challenge of writing attentively about a specific thing, whether a sentence or an object. Recorded at Young Space in February 2023. Edited by Frankie Wells. Music composed by Kwes Darko.
