
Episode 292 with Joan Silber, Author of Mercy and Award-Winning and Consistent Creator of Dynamic Characters, Realistic Dialogue, and Memorable Settings
Notes and Links to Joan Silber’s Work
Joan Silber was raised in New Jersey and received her B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College, where she studied writing with Grace Paley. She moved to New York after college and has made it her home ever since. She holds an M.A. from New York University.
She’s written ten books of fiction--most recently, Mercy, out in fall 2025. Secrets of Happiness was a Washington Post Best Book of the year and a Kirkus Reviews Best Fiction of the Year. Improvement won The National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction and the PEN/Faulkner Award. She also received the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story. Her other works of fiction include Fools, longlisted for the National Book Award and finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award, The Size of the World, finalist for the Los Angeles Times Prize in Fiction, and Ideas of Heaven, finalist for the National Book Award and the Story Prize. She’s also written Lucky Us, In My Other Life, and In the City (to be reissued by Hagfish in 2026), and her first book, Household Words, won the PEN/Hemingway Award.
She’s the author of The Art of Time in Fiction, which looks at how fiction is shaped and determined by time, with examples from world writers. Her short fiction has been chosen for the O. Henry Prize, Best American Short Stories, and the Pushcart Prize. Stories have appeared in The New Yorker, Tin House, The Southern Review, Ploughshares, Zyzzyva, and other magazines. She’s been the recipient of an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the New York Foundation for the Arts.
For many years Joan taught fiction writing at Sarah Lawrence College and in the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers. Joan lives on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, with Jolie, her rescued street dog from Taiwan, and she travels as often as she can, with a particular interest in Asia.
At about 2:55, Joan talks about responses about her new novel and how uncertainty is always
At about 3:45, Joan talks about places to buy her new novel and upcoming book events
At about 5:05, Joan traces her early relationship with reading and writing and talks about early inspirations like Louisa May Alcott
At about 6:55, Joan responds to Pete’s question about the catalysts for her writing career, and she references the wonderful Grace Paley and her generative teaching methods
At about 8:35, Joan talks about contemporary writers and influences like Charles Baxter, Andrea Barrett, and Margo Livesy
At about 9:50, Pete bumbles through a vague comparison in complimenting Joan on her depiction of New York in the 1970s and gives some exposition of the book, especially regarding the book’s main protagonist, Ivan
At about 11:25, Joan reflects on Ivan and Eddie as “intellectuallizing” their drug adventures
At about 12:35, Joan responds to Pete asking about Eddie and his mindset and personality
At about 14:45, the two trace the book’s inciting incident, involving Eddie and Ivan indulging in drugs to an extreme
At about 17:30, Joan expands on her initial thoughts for the book, and on the secret that Ivan keeps to himself, as well as how she views Ivan in a “complicated” way
At about 18:45, Joan responds to Pete’s question about whether or not she “sit[s] in judgment of [her] characters”
At about 20:20, Pete highlights Ivan and asks Joan’s about Eddie “hav[ing] his own kingdom” in Ivan’s life, especially with regard to his atonement for Alcoholics Anonymous
At about 21:50, Pete traces Astrid/Ginger’s career arc, as Ivan sees her rise and connects to Eddie, and Joan expands on why her film being done in Malaysia is connected to real-life regulations in China
At about 23:30, Pete asks Joan about how she gets into the mindset to write about “What if?”
At about 24:50, Chapter Two is discussed, with a new narrator in Astrid, and her tragedies and triumphs
At about 26:10, Joan talks about the movie that takes place in the book, with Astrid as a star; Joan expands upon the “circle” of heroin/opioids in the novel
At about 28:30, Joan discusses the “echo in the title” about heroin as the “drug of mercy”
At about 29:00, Joan gives background on her choice in including Cara as a character who is a “bystander” to Eddie’s abandonment
At about 30:15, Joan and Pete discuss the whys of Cara leaving and getting on the road
At about 31:40, Joan talks about Chapter Three as a previously-published chapter/standalone, and how she likes “getting her characters in trouble”
At about 32:00, Joan explains how she “follows” Nini into the next chapter, based on a previous quote, and how Joan’s own travels influenced her writing about the Iu Mien of Thailand and Laos
At about 35:00, Joan describes how Nini’s injury in Southeast Asia serves as a vessel for a description of opium’s uses/the way it’s viewed in a variety of ways around the world
At about 36:15, Pete and Joan discuss the roles of anthropologists and their roles
At about 38:30, Cara’s chapter is highlighted, with Cara’s relationship with her previously-absent father discussed
At about 41:00, Pete asks Joan to discuss the book’s title-its genesis and connections to the book’s events and characters
At about 42:30, Joan differentiates between mercy and forgiveness
At about 43:00, Pete compliments Joan’s work in tracing a long but coherent storyline and her depiction of New York
At about 44:10, Joan discusses an exciting upcoming project
At about 45:20, Pete and Joan discuss youth and innocence and aging as key parts
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Please tune in for Episode 293 with Melissa Lozada-Oliva, a Guatemalan-Colombian-American writer. Her chapbook peluda explores the intersections of Latina identity and hair removal. In her novel-in-verse Dreaming of You (2021, Astra House), a poet brings Selena back to life through a seance and deals with disastrous consequences. Candelaria was named one of the best books of 2023 by VOGUE and USA Today. Her collection of short stories is BEYOND ALL REASONABLE DOUBT, JESUS IS ALIVE! The episode airs on September 2, today, Pub Day.
This episode airs today, September 2, Pub Day.
Please go to ceasefiretoday.org, and/or https://act.uscpr.org/a/letaidin to call your congresspeople and demand an end to the forced famine and destruction of Gaza and the Gazan people.
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