Poets & Writers Theater
Every day we share a new clip of interest to creative writers—author readings, book trailers, publishing panels, craft talks, and more. So grab some popcorn, filter the theater tags by keyword or genre, and explore our sizable archive of literary videos.
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In this Nobel Foundation interview, Han Kang, winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in literature, talks about her writing process and how she draws inspiration from being present in everyday life. “Reading books, and especially reading literature, enables you to enter the depths of another human,” she says. “It’s a very direct way to enter the other’s heart or soul.”
Tags: Fiction | Han Kang | Nobel Prize | Nobel Foundation | interview | writing process | 2025 -
“It was like a very nice, pleasant chat.” In this 2016 Foyles video, Korean author Han Kang and translator Deborah Smith speak about working together on The Vegetarian (Portobello Books, 2015), which won the 2016 Man Booker International Prize. Kang is the winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature.
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In this 2013 video, Nobel laureate Alice Munro talks about her fascination with reading and writing at an early age in Canada’s countryside, how she can become “desperately consumed” with writing, and the ways in which her writing life changed throughout her long-standing career. Munro died at the age of ninety-two on May 13, 2024.
Tags: Fiction | Alice Munro | Nobel Prize | Nobel laureate | 2013 | in memoriam | writing process | writing practice -
“Memory is my instrument and my element, my material,” says French Nobel Prize–winning author Annie Ernaux in this Louisiana Channel interview with Matthias Dressler-Bredsdorff in Copenhagen. “I’m nobody when I write. I search. When I write, I know I have a woman’s experience.”
Tags: Fiction | Creative Nonfiction | Annie Ernaux | Nobel Prize | French | Louisiana Channel | interview | 2023 -
Watch this 2018 reading and conversation with Nobel Prize–winning author Annie Ernaux celebrating the English publication of her book The Years, along with translator Alison L. Strayer and Seven Stories Press publisher Dan Simon at the Shakespeare and Company bookstore in Paris, France.
Tags: Creative Nonfiction | Translation | Annie Ernaux | The Years | Seven Stories Press | 2018 | French | Alison L. Strayer | Dan Simon | Shakespeare and Company | Nobel Prize -
In this Knopf video, Kazuo Ishiguro, who was awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature, speaks about what he calls “double-cross metaphors” and how “tilting the reality of the world just a little bit” in his stories provides inspiration. For more Ishiguro, read “Never Let Me Go: A Profile of Kazuo Ishiguro” by John Freeman from the May/June 2005 issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Fiction | Kazuo Ishiguro | Nobel Prize | Nobel laureate | Knopf | 2017 | May/June 2005 -
“Writing has always been a pleasure. Even as a boy at school I looked forward to the class set aside for writing a story,” reads Abdulrazak Gurnah, winner of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature, from his lecture titled “Writing,” in which he discusses his earliest memories of reading and writing, as well as how his observations of colonization and immigration influenced his desire to write.
Tags: Fiction | Abdulrazak Gurnah | Nobel Prize | lecture | 2021 | Nobel laureate -
“You will love again the stranger who was your self.” Dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson reads Derek Walcott’s poem “Love After Love” from Collected Poems: 1948–1984 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1986) for a tribute to the poet and playwright. Walcott, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1992, passed away on March 17, 2017.
Tags: Poetry | Derek Walcott | Linton Kwesi Johnson | reading | dub poetry | Love After Love | Nobel Prize | Nobel laureate | 1992 | 1986 | Collected Poems: 1948–1984 | Farrar, Straus and Giroux -
“Many people aren’t even remotely interested in [poetry]. But it’s so clear to me that, of course, it’s what you want to do.” Louise Glück ruminates about her writing process in this short documentary from the Academy of American Poets. Glück has been named the winner of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature.
Tags: Poetry | Academy of American Poets | Louise Glück | Nobel Prize -
“Anything will break given sufficient strain.” Nobel Prize–winning author William Golding speaks about the optimism that may often go unnoticed in his novel Lord of the Flies for this Faber & Faber video celebrating the sixty-fifth anniversary of the book.
Tags: Fiction | William Golding | Lord of the Flies | Faber & Faber | 1954 | Nobel Prize -
The Wife (Scribner, 2003), Meg Wolitzer’s novel about a devoted wife looking back on life choices and sacrifices as her husband is awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, has been adapted into a feature film. Directed by Björn Runge, the film stars Glenn Close, Max Irons, Elizabeth McGovern, Jonathan Pryce, and Christian Slater.
Tags: Fiction | The Wife | Scribner | 2003 | Meg Wolitzer | film adaptation | movie trailer | 2018 | Nobel Prize -
In this video, V. S. Naipaul accepts the 2001 Nobel Prize in Literature and reads his speech at the Nobel Banquet in Stockholm. Described by the Swedish Academy as “a literary circumnavigator,” the prolific author published more than a dozen novels and several nonfiction books. Naipaul died at the age of eighty-five on August 11, 2018.
Tags: Fiction | Creative Nonfiction | V. S. Naipaul | Nobel Prize | 2001 | speech | in memoriam -
“Like literature, my own field, the Nobel Prize is an idea that, in times like these, helps us to think beyond our dividing walls...” In this video, Kazuo Ishiguro delivers a heartfelt speech to accept the 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature at the Nobel Banquet in Stockholm.
Tags: Fiction | Kazuo Ishiguro | Nobel Prize | Nobel laureate | speech | Stockholm | 2017 -
“I think that literature is really needed, and art in general. It’s saying something that cannot be said in any other way, and that’s why you do it.” In this interview, Norwegian author Jon Fosse, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2023, talks about how music inspired him to write at a young age, and how pauses and silences are used to generate rhythm in his work.
Tags: Poetry | Fiction | Creative Nonfiction | Translation | Jon Fosse | Nobel Prize | Nobel laureate | interview | Norwegian | 2023 -
“There are a number of people my own age, who are doing extraordinary, remarkable work, but I feed more on the young—the sounds they are making are different, new.” In this 2012 interview for the Academy of Achievement, Nobel Prize–winning poet Louise Glück speaks on a variety of subjects, including falling in love with poetry, starting out as a writer, teaching, and her prolific career.
Tags: Poetry | Louise Glück | Academy of Achievement | interview | Nobel Prize -
"This is what we must do—not to sleep well when people suffer anywhere in the world." Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel speaks about the power of law to change people's lives while accepting the 2012 William O. Douglas Award.
Tags: Nobel Prize | Elie Wiesel | Creative Nonfiction -
“I was fascinated by the tales of my grandmother...it was enough for me. I didn’t need any books.” Nobel Prize-winning novelist Kenzaburō Ōe discusses his life and work in an interview with UC Berkeley's Harry Kreisler in 1999. His latest novel, Death by Water (Grove Press, 2015), is longlisted for the 2016 Man Booker International Prize.
Tags: interview | Man Booker International Prize | Nobel Prize | Kenzaburō Ōe | Death by Water | UC Berkeley | Fiction -
"You invent whole sections of something and then later some biographer wants to know which is true and what isn't, and you have to sit and think." In this short video produced in 2013, the late Nobel Prize-winning author Doris Lessing shares anecdotes from her life as a writer. Currently, a search is on to appoint a new biographer for Lessing.
Tags: talk | Doris Lessing | Nobel Prize | Fiction -
French novelist Patrick Modiano was awarded the 2014 Nobel Prize in Literature yesterday. Known for his detective mysteries and brief novels, Modiano focuses on the themes of memory and loss.
Tags: 2014 | Nobel Prize | Patrick Modiano | Wall Street Journal | Fiction -
Nobel Prize–winner Gabriel García Márquez, the Colombian novelist whose One Hundred Years of Solitude established him as a colossus of twentieth-century literature, died on April 17, 2014 in Mexico City at the age of eighty-seven.