Audio

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Melissa Coleman spent the formative years of her chilldhood roaming the lands of her family's farn in rural Maine.  Melissa, her sister Heidi, and their parents, Eliot and Sue Coleman, lived off the grid, and became media darlings when the Wall Street Journal ran an article about her father.  Coleman writes about that time in her memoir "This Life is in Your Hands."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Michael Perry is a writer and volunteer fireman who lives in the small town of New Auburn, Wisconsin. His memoir about his adventures on the rescue squad there is called “Population 485: Meeting Your Neighbors One Siren at a Time.”

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Nuala O’Faolain tells Jim Fleming one of her novels is based on an adulterous affair across class lines in Ireland during the potato famine.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

How will we react, the day we hear the news that scientists have found life on another planet?  Science fiction writer Orson Scott Card has dreamed up many first contact scenarios.  His classic science fiction novel, "Ender's Game" is all about the consequences of a first contact gone badly wrong.  He's just published a long-awaited sequel.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Novelist Marilynne Robinson talks with Anne Strainchamps about the role of the soul in the age of modern science.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Here's our final poem to share for this National Poetry Month, Jim reading Max Garland's "A Lesson in Love."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Rolling Stone India has called Karsh Kale one of "the high priests of electro." He's a pioneer of the Asian Underground and top DJ at clubs around the world, from Ibiza to New York. He tells Charles Monroe-Kane about his lifelong journey to blend his two cultures: Indian and American.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Darren Aronofsky's new film "Noah" is getting a lot of buzz, in part because the flood story is a crucial event in the creationist explanation for the origins of life. To find out why, Steve Paulson spoke to the leading historian of creationism, Ronald Numbers.

Pages

Subscribe to Audio