
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Whether evoking the tragicomic and surreal for which his short stories first gained acclaim, or awakening the keen love of family in 2015's The Seven Good Years, Etgar Keret mines the human experience for all of its farce and dignity. The Israeli author recently came by the Library's Stephen A. Schwarzman Building to speak with Paul Holdengräber, the director of LIVE from the NYPL. The conversation began on Keret's lost luggage and the two unexpected donations, of a coat and boxer shorts, that followed. From there it turned one strange corner after the next, from Kafka to drug dealers, technophobia, bedtime stories with drunks and prostitutes, and Keret's anxieties about the ethics of writing fiction.
By The New York Public Library4.4
318318 ratings
Whether evoking the tragicomic and surreal for which his short stories first gained acclaim, or awakening the keen love of family in 2015's The Seven Good Years, Etgar Keret mines the human experience for all of its farce and dignity. The Israeli author recently came by the Library's Stephen A. Schwarzman Building to speak with Paul Holdengräber, the director of LIVE from the NYPL. The conversation began on Keret's lost luggage and the two unexpected donations, of a coat and boxer shorts, that followed. From there it turned one strange corner after the next, from Kafka to drug dealers, technophobia, bedtime stories with drunks and prostitutes, and Keret's anxieties about the ethics of writing fiction.

38,484 Listeners

6,795 Listeners

3,355 Listeners

3,984 Listeners

579 Listeners

472 Listeners

576 Listeners

10,135 Listeners

2,133 Listeners

93 Listeners

1,417 Listeners

794 Listeners

395 Listeners

314 Listeners

656 Listeners

1,574 Listeners