4.6 • 3.6K Ratings
🗓️ 12 December 2008
⏱️ 31 minutes
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Roddy Doyle reads Maeve Brennan's short story "Christmas Eve," and discusses Brennan's relationship with Ireland and Doyle's own family, with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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0:00.0 | This is the New Yorker Fiction Podcast from the New Yorker magazine. |
0:05.0 | I'm Deborah Treesman, Fiction Editor at the New Yorker. |
0:08.0 | Each month, we invite a writer to choose a story from the magazine's archives to read and discuss. |
0:13.0 | This month, we're going to hear Christmas Eve by Maeve Brennan, |
0:16.0 | which appeared in December of 1972. |
0:18.0 | She was getting what she called nervous, |
0:21.0 | and she couldn't understand her because she'd been looking forward to Christmas. |
0:25.0 | She didn't know what was the matter with her. |
0:27.0 | Christmas Eve was chosen by Roddy Doyle, who has published nine stories in the magazine. |
0:32.0 | Doyle is the author of many novels, including the commitments, |
0:35.0 | for which he also wrote the screenplay. |
0:37.0 | He joins me from Mutiny Studios in Dublin, Ireland. |
0:40.0 | Hi, Roddy. |
0:41.0 | Hello. |
0:42.0 | So, Roddy Maeve Brennan moved to New York from Ireland when she was a teenager in the 1930s, |
0:47.0 | and for years, she was much better known here than she was in Ireland, |
0:50.0 | though a lot of her fiction is set there. |
0:52.0 | None of her books, I think, were actually published in Ireland at the time. |
0:56.0 | Where you come from? |
0:57.0 | Is she considered an Irish writer or an American one? |
1:00.0 | Irish, very much so now. |
1:01.0 | It was as if she was discovered a new writer, even though she was dead, |
... |
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