Audio

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Kathleen Morris talks about her experience with the mental habit monastics used to describe a kind of frantic escapism and aversion to other people. It's similar, but not identical, to the modern disease of depression.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Paul Lussier is the author of “Last Refuge of Scoundrels,” a fictionalized re-telling of the American Revolution.  He tells Steve Paulson some of the dirt he dug up on the Founding Fathers.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Michael Wood's latest documentary film for PBS is called "Shangri-La." Wood tells Jim Fleming about his journey through the Himalayas.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Jem Rolls runs poetry cabarets and poetry slams in Edinburgh, Scotland.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Historian Jim Cullen talks with Jim Fleming about the various versions of the American Dream: freedom, equality, upward mobility, home ownership and the good life.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Joshua Wolf Shenk talks about his book, "Powers of Two: Finding the Essence of Innovation in Creative Pairs."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Danish film director Lone Scherfig tells Steve Paulson about her new film “Wilbur Wants to Kill Himself.”

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

NPR Cultural Critic Neda Ulaby helps Jim Fleming unravel the complications of the 2006 film "Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story."

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