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🗓️ 2 February 2021
⏱️ 15 minutes
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Ben Okri reads his story from the February 8, 2021, issue of the magazine. Okri is the author of eleven novels, including “The Famished Road,” which won the Booker Prize in 1991, and “The Freedom Artist,” which came out in 2019. His story collection, “Prayer for the Living,” was published in the U.S. this month.
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0:00.0 | This is The Writers Voice, new fiction from the New Yorker. |
0:09.0 | I'm Deborah Treisman, fiction editor at The New Yorker. |
0:12.0 | On this episode of The Writers Voice, we'll hear Ben... A Rincolintian, Fiction Editor at the New Yorker. |
0:12.7 | On this episode of the writer's voice, we'll hear Ben Ocree read his story A Wrinkle in the |
0:17.0 | Realm from the February 8th 2021 issue of the magazine. |
0:22.0 | Ocree is the author of 11 novels, including The Famished Road, which won the Booker Prize in |
0:26.5 | 1991, and the Freedom Artist, which came out in 2019. |
0:31.6 | His story collection, Prayer for the Living, was published in the U.S. this month. |
0:36.0 | Now here's Ben Ocrie. A wrinkle in the realm. |
0:45.0 | The first time he realized that there was something not quite right about him |
0:51.0 | was when a woman crossed the street as she saw him coming. He thought it was a coincidence. Then it happened again. He began to watch those around him. One day on the underground, a woman three empty seats |
1:09.3 | away moved a handbag to her other side when she saw him. |
1:14.0 | He wasn't sure why. |
1:17.0 | After the fourth or fifth time something like that happened, |
1:20.0 | he looked at himself in the mirror. |
1:22.0 | He thought it was normal like everyone else. |
1:27.4 | When he looked at himself through the eyes of those who clutched their handbags when they saw him, |
1:32.4 | he understood that his face was not as normal as he thought. |
1:37.1 | He couldn't see what was wrong with it, but the longer he looked, the more certain he became. Something was wrong with him that he couldn't see. |
1:47.1 | The mirror revealed aspects of his face that he hadn't noticed before. |
1:52.4 | Which aspect made people cross the street to avoid him? This |
1:57.2 | troubled him so much that he was unable to sleep most nights. He wanted to talk to someone about it, but he couldn't think of anyone. |
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