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Castle Hill Author Talks

Castle Hill Author Talks

Written by: Karen Dukess
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About this listen

Castle Hill Author Talks is a podcast of lively, smart, interviews with today's most exciting writers. Host Karen Dukess, the best-selling author of Welcome to Murder Week and The Last Book Party, chats with authors you may know and authors she thinks you ought to know. A project of Truro Center for the Arts on Cape Cod, the Castle Hill Author Talks are for readers and writers. It's a podcast that will guide you and inspire you, help you choose your next great read, and might even spur you to finish your own novel.Provincetown Recording Studio Art
Episodes
  • Christina Baker Kline on THE FOURSOME
    May 12 2026

    Christina Baker Kline’s THE FOURSOME is a riveting novel based on the true story of the author’s distant relatives, sisters in 19th-century North Carolina who married conjoined twins, Chang and Eng Bunker, with whom they had 21 children. Christina Baker Kline joins us to discuss how she blended imagination and historical research, why she thinks this is ultimately a novel about slavery and complicity, and how she tackled the daunting issue of writing about the sisters’ intimate lives with their conjoined husbands.

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    30 mins
  • Virginia Evans on The Correspondent
    Apr 28 2026

    Virginia Evans’ debut novel, THE CORRESPONDENT, was the breakout novel of 2025, and is now clocking 25 consecutive weeks on The New York Times bestseller list. In honor of the one-year anniversary of its publication, we’re running this live interview from last year, in which Virginia talks about why she wrote a novel in letters, how she survived years of rejection, and what inspired her to create her retiree protagonist, the prickly but very funny Sybil van Antwerp.

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    25 mins
  • John Kenney on I See You've Called in Dead
    Apr 24 2026

    John Kenney may not consider himself a humor writer, but his novel about a divorced obituary writer who accidentally posts his own obituary is very funny. In this interview, Kenney talks about why he loves writing about “middle-aged, slightly broken men,” the role of humor in coping with grief, how he became a contributor to The New Yorker after years of trying, and what contemporary novel he’s read four times and will probably read again.

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    38 mins
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