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Think Again - a Big Think Podcast

181. Marlon James (writer) – don’t get too comfortable

Think Again - a Big Think Podcast

Big Think / Panoply

Arts, Society & Culture

4.6594 Ratings

🗓️ 9 February 2019

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

At this point, it’s very rare to read something and find myself thinking: This is something new. This is unlike anything I’ve ever read before. It doesn’t have to be written in hieroglyphs or be some kind of three-dimensional interactive reading experience with pull-out tabs and half the pages upside down. That kind of formal experimentation, in my experience as a reader, more often ends up being gimmicky and annoying than exhilarating. In fact, paradoxically, the “wow this is something new” experience often comes along with a sense that this new thing has somehow always existed, in your dreams if nowhere else. Marlon James—the Jamaican writer who won the Man Booker Prize for A Brief History of Seven Killings— has done something in his new fantasy novel Black Leopard, Red Wolf that’s unlike anything I’ve ever read before. The first book of a trilogy, it’s been described as an “African Game of Thrones” and likened in scope to Tolkien’s Lord of The Rings. But the stories within stories it tells and the shifts in voice and perspective thrust you into a seething, hallucinatory, morally ambiguous world that’s part Ayahuasca dream and part blacklight nightmare, anchored in a rich African mythology that’s worlds away from all those elves, wizards, dragons, and goblins—all those well-worn tales of light versus darkness. Surprise conversation-starters in this episode: Jeffrey Sachs on whether Jeff Bezos should distribute his Amazon wealth Damian Echols on tattoos as a lifeline  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Huh, have you ever wondered what a sandwich sounds like?

0:03.0

Not much to it, is there?

0:06.0

Unless, of course, it's a Walker's sandwich.

0:09.0

Mmm, that is good.

0:13.0

Now that's what Asani should sound like.

0:15.0

Go all crisp in with walkers.

0:18.0

Delicious.

0:20.0

Hi there, I'm Jason Gatz and you you're listening to Think Again, a Big Think

0:23.7

podcast.

0:29.8

At this point, it's very rare that I read something and find myself thinking, this is something

0:35.5

new.

0:36.1

This is unlike anything I've ever read before.

0:39.3

It doesn't have to be written in hieroglyphs

0:41.3

or be some kind of three-dimensional,

0:43.3

interactive reading experience with pull-out tabs

0:45.3

and half the pages upside down.

0:47.3

That kind of formal experimentation,

0:49.3

in my experience as a reader,

0:51.3

more often ends up being gimmicky and annoying than exhilarating. In fact, paradoxically, the wow, this is something new experience often comes along with a sense

1:00.0

that this new thing has somehow always existed in your dreams, if nowhere else.

1:05.0

Marlon James, the Jamaican writer who won the Man Booker Prize for a brief history of seven killings,

1:10.0

has done something in his

...

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