Lannan Readings & Conversations

Isabel Allende

with Michael Silverblatt
Wednesday September 24 2008


Click the Play button (triangle) to listen to the Michael Silverblatt Introduction and Reading.

Click the Play button (triangle) to listen to the Isabel Allende Conversation with Michael Silverblatt.

Isabel Allende in conversation with Michael Silverblatt at the Lensic Theater in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Wednesday, September 24, 2008. Photo: Don Usner

Photo by Don Usner Isabel Allende was born in Peru and raised in Chile. Her acclaimed first novel, The House of Spirits, was called "Nothing short of astonishing," by the San Francisco Chronicle. She is the author of eight novels, most recently Inés of My Soul, mapping the early years of the conquest of the Americas through the experiences of Inés Suárez, a seamstress condemned to a life of toil, who flees Spain to seek adventure in the New World. Allende has also written a collection of stories, four memoirs, and a trilogy of children's novels. Her most recent memoir, The Sum of Our Days, recalls the last 13 years of family life in the wake of her daughter's tragic death. Allende uses feminist terms to describe her history of the California Gold Rush. Her writing has always been a stand against patriarchy, her characters the people marginalized by American history: women, Hispanics, Native Americans and Asians.

Isabel Allende Bio and Cross Links


Photo by Don Usner Michael Silverblatt is the host of the literary talk show Bookworm, which he created in 1989 for KCRW 89.9 FM in Santa Monica. He has participated in numerous Readings & Conversations programs, interviewing Gore Vidal, Susan Sontag, Salman Rushdie, and A.S. Byatt, among others. Bookworm airs locally on KSFR 101.1FM every Sunday at 1:30pm.

Michael Silverblatt Bio and Cross Links