The New Yorker Radio Hour   /     The New Yorker Celebrates a Hundred Years as a Poetry and Fiction Tastemaker

Summary

The New Yorker editors Deborah Treisman and Kevin Young discuss literary anthologies published for the magazine’s centennial.

Subtitle
The New Yorker editors Deborah Treisman and Kevin Young discuss literary anthologies published for the magazine’s centennial.
Duration
00:18:19
Publishing date
2025-02-04 11:00
Link
https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/tnyradiohour
Contributors
  WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
author  
Enclosures
https://mgln.ai/e/14/tracking.swap.fm/track/uJwtcKQUPuqBQPfusm59/pdrl.fm/7a3b46/pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/waaa.wnyc.org/82098f2c-a672-49b6-8a05-b8245aec3dbc/episodes/338707f3-5d7b-4d69-b1da-37b188bf60b4/audio/128/default.mp3?aid=rss_fee
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

David Remnick talks with The New Yorker’s literary guiding lights: the fiction editor Deborah Treisman and the poetry editor Kevin Young. Treisman edited “A Century of Fiction in The New Yorker,” and Young edited “A Century of Poetry in The New Yorker,” both of which were published this month.  “When you asked me to do this,” Young remarks to David Remnick, “I think my first response was, I’ve only wanted to do this since I was fifteen. . . . It was kind of a dream come true.” Treisman talks about the way that stories age, and the difficulty of selecting stories. “The thing to remember is that even geniuses don’t always write their best work right right off the bat. People make a lot of noise about rejection letters from The New Yorker that went to famous writers, or later-famous writers. And they were probably justified, those rejections.”