Support This Podcast

Click on the PayPal button below to make a one-time donation to this podcast. Thanks for your generosity.

Buy the books featured in our podcasts at Amazon.com by clicking on the links below:

Visit www.noircast.net

Click on the banner below for more hardboiled podcasts and news from Clute and Edwards. Click to go to Noircast.net.

Subscribe To This Podcast

Click here to subscribe through iTunes Click to open the iTunes page for Out of the Past.


If you don't use iTunes, consider a Juice (it's free) as your podcast receiver (available for PCs and Macs):
Download Juice, the cross-platform podcast receiver

To add our show to Juice (or any other podcast receiver), type in our subscription address:
http://btbm.libsyn.com/rss

Feed Shark

Tag These Podcasts


Promote This Podcast

Support our podcast through wordofblog.net

Want this badge?

Listen to Past Episodes

All episodes are still available!
2008
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
October
December

2007
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2006
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

August 2007
S M T W T F S
     
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
1920 2122232425
262728293031

Looking for Something?

Search Site by Category

general
podcasts
Jason Starr builds THE FOLLOWER on the seemingly shifty foundations of feeling and perception, but in his hands these are the cornerstones of substantial suspense. With a dazzling alternation of third person points of view and razor-sharp dialogue, Starr contrasts the interior thoughts with the exterior realities of several twenty-somethings struggling to find satisfaction in the impersonal Big Apple. To see how completely feelings cloud perception, and as a result how differently each character perceives events, is disarming and ultimately terrifying. The novel seems to be a meditation on the question of whether there is any truth beyond perception, and perhaps also a parable of how the rampant commercialism of our era confuses person and product, subject and object. It is a novel reminiscent of the works of Alfred Hitchcock, Patricia Highsmith, and George V. Higgins, and yet unlike anything you've read before. This podcast is brought to you by Clute and Edwards of www.noircast.net. To leave a comment on this episode, or make a donation to the podcast, please visit Behind the Black Mask: Mystery Writers Revealed at btbm.libsyn.com.
Direct download: BTBM_2007_08_15_JS.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:25 AM
Comments[0]