![]() This is one of the episodes I’m happiest that I’ve gotten to do and I’m so, so happy that I get to share it with you.ĭelany: I don’t know whether it is just left over chiliastic panic, which is to say around the turn of the century there’s always a. Delany, who goes by the name Chip to his friends, about his writing process, about the way that his own particular desires have shaped his work, and even about the role that dyslexia plays in his writing, reading, and revising process. I couldn’t be more excited about this episode in which we sat down to chat with Samuel R. ![]() ![]() Delany’s books, Dhalgren, Nova, Trouble on Triton, The Jewels of Aptor, and so many others are among the most remarkable explorations of desire and its limits in any genre. And one of the people I wrote about in my dissertation was this remarkable queer science-fiction novelist named Samuel R. in English literature before I became a journalist and started hosting the show, among other things. ![]() As regular listeners of the show probably know, I did a Ph.D. Jacob Brogan: This season on Working, we’re talking to individuals whose jobs touch on aspects of LGBTQ life. ![]()
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