February 2013
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Episode 37: Steve Davenport!
Episode 37 of The Drunken Odyssey, your favorite podcast about creative writing, literature, and drinking, is available on iTunes, or right click here to download. On this week’s show, I talk to the poet Steve Davenport, Joe Conley plums Cormac McCarthy’s Child of God, Plus I answer some mail… Texts Discussed: Notes: Orlando Shakespeare Theatre presents Othello, now through March… Continue reading
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Episode 36: Readings of Erotic Poetry (A Valentine’s Day Special)
Episode 36 of The Drunken Odyssey, your favorite podcast about creative writing, literature, and drinking, is available on iTunes, or right click here to download. On this week’s show, The Drunken Odyssey All-Stars & I get erotic, poetically speaking… The Drunken Odyssey All-Stars ______________________________ Vanessa Blakeslee Tod Caviness Genevieve Tyrrell Anna King Ryan Rivas Kirsten Holt Susan Lilley… Continue reading
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Winter with the Writers @ Rollins College
I can’t wait to attend this Thursday’s reading. Orlandoers, check this out! Continue reading
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Episode 35: Philip F. Deaver!
Episode 35 of The Drunken Odyssey, your favorite podcast about creative writing, literature, and drinking, is available on iTunes, or right click here to download. On this week’s show, I talk with my friend Philip F. Deaver, who happens to have won a Flannery O’Conner Award, plus Helena-Anne Htittel discusses Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner. Texts Discussed: Notes… Continue reading
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Episode 34: Stephen Burdman!
Episode 34 of The Drunken Odyssey, your favorite podcast about creative writing, literature, and drinking, is available on iTunes, or right click here to download. On this week’s show, I talk Shakespeare with Stephen Burdman, the artistic director of New York Classical Theatre, Plus Bronte Bettencourt talks about Lestat. Texts Discussed: Notes Laurence Olivier’s screenplay adaptation of… Continue reading
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The Drunken Odyssey is a forum to discuss all aspects of the writing process, in a variety of genres, in order to foster a greater community among writers.
