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  • Q & A with Tomi Ungerer

    Tomi Ungerer's name is instantly recognizable to those who grew up reading his books in the 1960s and '70s. But Ungerer's catalog was allowed to go out of print when his outspoken political views and ribald erotic drawings alarmed U.S. publishers.

  • Methtown, U.S.A.: PW Talks with Frank Bill

    Frank Bill works in a paint factory and writes the grittiest, grizzliest rural noir this side of Knockemstiff. His debut collection, Crimes in Southern Indiana, is a bruising odyssey into the dark heart of the heartland.

  • Home Again, Home Again: PW Talks with Elizabeth Thomson

    Originally published in the mid 1980s, Robert Shelton’s No Direction Home, a portrait of the Bob Dylan’s career through the late ‘70s, was met with wide acclaim (and, to be fair, some derision). Shelton’s immersive portrait was an exemplary take on what an artist’s biography could be.

  • To Live and Die in Mexico: PW Talks with John Gibler

    Gibler, a San Francisco-based journalist, reports from the front lines of the drug war in To Die in Mexico. He risked his own life to bring readers the stories of communities struggling to survive in a land terrorized by violence and where the authorities are complicit in—and profiting from—the chaos.

  • Abbott and Cloak-and-Dagger: PW Talks with Jeff Abbott

    Jeff Abbott's thriller Adrenaline, the first in a series, introduces Sam Capra: former CIA agent, husband, and soon-to-be father.

  • Shakespeare's More Prosaic Elder Brother: PW Talks with Rory Clements

    John Shakespeare once again serves Sir Francis Walsingham, Elizabeth I's spymaster, in Rory Clements's second historical thriller, Revenger: A Novel of Tudor Intrigue.

  • For Shame: PW Talks with Wayne Koestenbaum

    The poet and critic investigates shame—in the body and body politic—in Humiliation.

  • Q & A with Anthea Bell

    Anthea Bell is a translator who has won many top awards, and whose work has appeared on many bestseller list, yet many outside of the publishing industry don’t know her name.

  • A Formidable Female Detective: PW Talks with Lynda La Plante

    An imprisoned serial killer helps London Det. Insp. Anna Travis track a serial killer on the loose in Lynda La Plante's Blind Fury.

  • The Thrill of the Hack: PW Talks with Kevin Mitnick

    In Ghost in the Wires, legendary computer hacker Kevin Mitnick recalls life on the lam for the crime of purloining source code.

  • Q & A with Elise Broach

    Elise Broach follows her E.B. White Read Aloud winner, Masterpiece, with another kid-pleasing mystery, Missing on Superstition Mountain, the first in a trilogy set in the American southwest.

  • She prays for strangers: PW Talks with River Jordan

    River Jordan didn't mean to write her latest book. She only meant to keep one simple New Year's resolution.

  • Finding God In Cyberspace: PW Talks with Adam Thomas

    In his first book, Adam Thomas asks, can God be found in computer games? On Facebook? Is God with us when we tweet? Is God, Thomas wants to know, online?

  • Speaking for herself: PW Talks to Maria Ebrahimji

    As a producer at CNN, Maria Ebrahimji is familiar with the spotlight—she's just not used to being in it. Although her childhood ambition was to be a news anchor, she realized early on that she was naturally drawn deeper into the story. "I believe that the power and value of journalism is really in producing," Maria says. "I'm very much one of those people that likes to work behind the scenes."

  • The Poetry of Maps: PW Talks with Ken Jennings

    In Maphead, Jeopardy! champ Ken Jennings surveys the world of the geography obsessed.

  • Why I Write: By David Ignatius

    I began writing fiction because it was the only way to tell all the intricacies of a real-life spy story. I had written a front-page piece for the Wall Street Journal in 1983 about how the CIA had recruited Yasser Arafat's intelligence chief during the '70s.

  • Deadlier than the Male: PW Talks with Stella Rimington

    Stella Rimington talks about her career in Britain's MI5, of which she was appointed director general in 1992, and the heroine of her thriller series, MI5 agent Liz Carlyle.

  • The Dark Side of Cape Cod: PW Talks with Peter Manso

    In Reasonable Doubt, Peter Manso explores a Cape Cod murder with unintended consequences for himself.

  • Strange and Memorable: PW Talks with Kevin Wilson

    Kevin Wilson and his wife, poet Leigh Anne Couch, became parents at the same time he began to write The Family Fang. In the novel, Caleb and Camille Fang—fearing their children will kill their performance art careers—incorporate the kids into the work itself.

  • Q & A with Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler

    Author-illustrator team Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler have been topping the U.K. bestseller charts over the last decade and a half, with such titles as A Squash and a Squeeze, Room on the Broom, Tabby McTat, and, most famously, The Gruffalo, which recently added to its many honors when the animated movie based on the book was recently nominated for an Oscar.

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