Sharing our love of literature, writ large.
“A good book is an event in [one’s] life.” —Stendhal
In his “Writer’s Credo,” Edward Abbey wrote “that words count, that writing matters, that poems, essays, and novels—in the long run—make a difference.” Abbey’s politics aside, the written word, whether fiction or nonfiction, educational or entertainment, holds a special place in our cultural histories, our communities, and our personal lives. Through interviews with authors, both local and remote, analysis with experts, and reviews of books, Listening to Literature explores literature of the present and the past.
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Leigh E. Rich, Ph.D., is a professor of Health Administration at Georgia Southern University, with a background in bioethics, cultural and medical anthropology, and health-related law. She is a longtime editor and a former journalist and book and theater critic. She also hosts The Common Good on Fridays at 2 p.m. and co-hosts Beyond the Liner Notes on Fridays at 11 a.m.
P. T. Bridgeport is a photographer, calligrapher, and uncompensated curmudgeon. He is a member of the Savannah Art Association Board of Directors and shows work at the Association Art Gallery on Chippewa Square. He also co-hosts Beyond the Liner Notes on Fridays at 11 a.m. and has his own show, When the Moon Sings, on Saturday evenings. He was a trombonist early in life, but went through a program and now lives spit-valve free.
Carol Andrews, Ph.D., earned her doctorate in American and Southern literature from Vanderbilt University and taught English composition and literature courses for several decades at Georgia Southern University (Armstrong campus), Sewanee, and Tift College. She wrote her dissertation on Faulkner and has been a member of a long-running faculty reading group that has explored the works of Marcel Proust, Naguib Mahfouz, James Baldwin, Patrick Leigh Fermor, and others.
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