EPISODE #106 “Fine Legal Boundaries” broadcasting 04-07-14 on LIFE 25 at 9:30 pm.
Although it is not the focus of tonight’s episode, all the authors sharing the same table, Scott Turow, Jean Hanff Korelitz, and Stephan Talty, have had the same share of success with films.
Many of Scott Turow’s books, such as “Presumed Innocent,” have been turned into films, Jean’s “Admission,” was a hit last year with Tina Fey in the lead role, as for Stephan’s “Captain Phillips,” it is still in the theater.
The books discussed maybe works of fiction but their subjects are solidly anchored in reality. On the eve of the Supreme Court decision to lift off ceiling on corporate contributions, we will talk with Scott Turow and his new book, “Identical,” which deals with the abuse of money used during a mayoral election.
Stephan Talty brings a touch of frigid crispiness from upstate New York with his serial killer, “Hangman,” who continues to spread havoc among the population of Buffalo.
While Jean Hanff Korelitz, in “You Should Have Known” deals with the ironic twist a therapist experiences, when she becomes the victim of circumstances, which force her to swallow the very medicine she prescribed in her bestseller . . .
Episode was shot at City Winery
——————————–
David Epstein, in “The Sports Gene,” addresses this sort of issues in a highly entertaining book. How much of our genes define our chances to succeed in sports?
David M. Howitt, in “Heed you Call,” circles back to the hero’s journey as defined by Joseph Campbell, to show that putting our mind into a specific coveted endeavor may well yield the results sought after. Are a strong will and awareness enough to achieve our goals?
“
One of the most interesting aspects about scents is that they are always intimately tied to a location and more particularly to soils. Our three guests carry a distinctive sense of place.
Lara Vapnyar complicates the issue of identity by straddling two continents and two time frames. Her “Scent of Pine,” moves back and forth between the outskirts of Moscow and the countryside of Maine.


