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| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Brad Meltzer and Adithi Ramakrishnan | 11 Feb 2026 | ||
In this episode of Steve Bertrand on Books, Steve talks with author Brad Meltzer. Brad has succeeded in every type of writing he’s explored, including television, non-fiction and even children’s books, but he’s best known for his thrillers. Brad is currently on the New York Times best seller list with The Viper. In the interview, […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand’s 2015 visit with Nobel Prize-winner Kazuo Ishiguro | 05 Oct 2017 | ||
British writer Kazuo Ishiguro has been named the winner of the 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature. In 2015, he spoke with WGN Radio’s Steve Bertrand about his novel The Buried Giant: Kazuo Ishiguro, who has won the Man Booker Prize and been awarded the O.B.E., has been called one of Britain’s most important living novelists. […] | |||
| Bertrand On Books | Alan Furst, A Hero of France | 10 Jun 2016 | ||
The New York Times has called Alan Furst “America’s preeminent spy novelist.” His new book, A Hero of France, about the French Resistance, is the first in a long time set during the war years, rather than the eve of World War II. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about the novel and about […] | |||
| Bertrand On Books | Stephen Coss ‘The Fever of 1721’ | 29 Apr 2016 | ||
Let’s go back to Boston in 1721. Historian Stephen Coss says it was one of the most influential years in U.S. history. And why not: We meet a young Ben Franklin, a chastised Cotton Mather and the beginning American arguments over faith and science. You’ll be surprised by who is on which side. Coss talks […] | |||
| Bertrand on Books | Anna Quindlen ‘Miller’s Valley’ | 18 Apr 2016 | ||
Anna Quindlen has been telling us what we’re thinking, or maybe how we’re thinking, for decades. First as a columnist for Newsweek and the New York Times and now as a novelist. She talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about her latest novel, “Miller’s Valley,” with stops along the way about what it means to […] | |||
| Bertrand On Books | Adam Grant ‘Originals: How Non-conformists Move the World’ | 11 Apr 2016 | ||
How many bad ideas have you had today? Wharton School of Business professor Adam Grant says the more the merrier, or original anyway. In his book Originals: How Non-conformists Move the World, Grant looks at what makes a truly original thinker. Bad ideas can be a good sign. Much more in this interview with Steve […] | |||
| Bertrand On Books | Chris Pavone ‘The Travelers’ | 25 Mar 2016 | ||
Chris Pavone is not your run of the mill espionage writer. Think of it this this way: Pavone writes and about real and compelling people who happen to be spies. His latest novel, “The Travelers,” proves that point wonderfully. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about the novel, about writing, and about being a […] | |||
| Bertrand On Books | Todd Rose ‘The End of Average’ | 05 Mar 2016 | ||
Did you know the idea of an average person was unheard of until the 19th century? Today, we measure ourselves against the average: the average ACT score, the average income, it goes on and on. Harvard professor Todd Rose, who’s written “The End of Average,” says that’s a big mistake that costs us all. He […] | |||
| Novelist Melanie Benjamin | 17 Feb 2016 | ||
Let’s do lunch with the 1960s socialites of New York City. Truman Capote will be there, so will Baby Paley. Novelist Melanie Benjamin writes about the rise and fall of Capote as seen through his relationships with the very rich in “Swans of Fifth Avenue: A Novel.” Melanie is the guest on this edition of Steve Bertrand […] | |||
| Eric Weiner | The Geography of Genius | 29 Jan 2016 | ||
Author Eric Weiner is chasing genius, trying to figure out what made Athens or Renaissance Florence tick. For that matter, what does today’s Silicon Valley have in common with Vienna during Mozart’s time or Edinburgh during the Enlightenment? He talks about his book The Geography of Genius in this edition of Steve Bertrand on Books. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Charles Finch and Sophie Vershbow | 18 Feb 2026 | ||
Why is it we’re so drawn to Victorian novels? Charles Finch has some ideas. He’s the author behind the Charles Lenox detective series. His novel The Hidden City was a hit last year. Charles is also a respected book critic. That’s a job that comes with some heavy responsibility. He talks about that and about […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Mark Oppenheimer and Chris Kelly | 18 Mar 2026 | ||
One of the spring’s most anticipated books is a biography of American literary icon Judy Blume. Author Mark Oppenheimer joins Steve to talk about the writer who helped us grow up and how she’s developed as she’s grown up. Blume cooperated with the writing of the book but has kept her distance from the final […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Johnny Compton and Jordy Rosenberg | 11 Mar 2026 | ||
In this episode, Steve talks with two authors. Johnny Compton writes horror/fantasy stories and his latest is Dead First. Johnny has and interesting theory on horror stories. He says most of our most famous stories all have some aspect of horror in them. You might agree after you hear what he has to say. Also […] | |||
| Vanessa Diffenbaugh – ‘We Didn’t Ask for Wings’ | 29 Aug 2015 | ||
Novelist Vanessa Diffenbaugh adopted her son when he was 25-years-old. That’s not surprising at all if you know her. Diffenbaugh writes books but she rescues hearts. She created the Camellia Network after her first novel “The Language of Flowers.” The non-profit helps children who “age-out” of foster care at 18-years-old and are then left on […] | |||
| Author: Jami Attenberg | 25 Aug 2015 | ||
Jami Attenberg, author of The Middlesteins, talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about her latest novel: Saint Mazie. | |||
| Author: Sara Paretsky | 15 Aug 2015 | ||
Pet coke, crooked politicians and corruption at Wrigley Field: today’s news or a new Sara Paretsky novel? Sara talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about V.I. Warshawky’s latest adventures in Brush Back. She and Steve also discuss her challenges as the president of the Mystery Writers of America. | |||
| Ryan Stradal – Kitchens of the Great Midwest | 08 Aug 2015 | ||
Ryan Stradal’s debut novel Kitchens of the Great Midwest is getting rave reviews and it’s no wonder. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about growing up in Minnesota and writing the book his mom would have loved. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Mark Greaney and Adam al-Sirgany | 04 Mar 2026 | ||
Mark Greaney joins Steve to talk about The Hard Line, the 15th installment of his Gray Man thriller series. In the book, the intelligence community is under attack by selective assassins. It’s up to Court Gentry and his team to stop them. Greaney is well known to those who like to read on the edge of […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Dr. Ashely Alker and Aaron Brown | 25 Feb 2026 | ||
How about we get a few chuckles from the emergency room? Dr. Ashely Alker takes a light-“hearted” look at how we die in “99 Ways to Die: And How to Avoid Them”. It’s actually a fun read with a very personal origin story. Ashely’s mom was diagnosed with a serious illness and the family couldn’t […] | |||
| Author Rebecca Makkai | 16 Sep 2015 | ||
Author Rebecca Makkai talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about her short story collection Music for Wartime. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Nick Petrie | 25 Mar 2026 | ||
Alright, it’s time to move to the edge of your seat. Nick Petrie joins Steve to talk about his new thriller, The Dark Time. It’s the ninth book in his acclaimed Peter Ash series. The book takes on the threat of rapidly expanding Artificial Intelligence in a way only Peter Ash can. | |||
| Michel Faber – ‘The Book of Strange New Things’ | 18 Jul 2015 | ||
Michel Faber talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about The Book of Strange New Things, a fantastical novel set in another world, but a story grounded very much on earth. | |||
| Living next door to Harper Lee – Marja Mills shares with Steve Bertrand | 11 Jul 2015 | ||
With the release of Harper Lee’s novel Go Set a Watchman, Steve Bertrand on Books gets the lowdown on Harper and Alice Lee with Marja Mills. Her book The Mockingbird Next Door details her time living next door to the Lee sisters in Monroeville, Alabama. | |||
| Brad Meltzer: The President’s Shadow | 27 Jun 2015 | ||
Brad Meltzer talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about the pull of parents, the secrets of Devil’s Island, and Ronald Reagan’s gun. It’s all in Meltzer’s latest political thriller, The President’s Shadow. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Colm Tóibín | 01 Apr 2026 | ||
Irish writer Colm Tóibín is a master, whether it’s his novels like Brooklyn or Nora Webster or The Testament of Mary, he has a settled style of writing that brings you not just to a place but to a specific moment. It’s the same for his short stories. His latest collection of stories is The […] | |||
| Michael Alan Peck | 20 Jun 2015 | ||
Michael Alan Peck is the winner of the 2015 Soon to Be Famous Authors Project. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about his award winning novel and the wonder of librarians. | |||
| The Governor’s Wife by Michael Harvey | 13 Jun 2015 | ||
Michael Harvey knows Chicago. The former CBS news producer proves that time and again with his hard-boiled Michael Kelly detective novels. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about his latest, The Governor’s Wife. Spoiler alert: The governor is a crook. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Tana French | 08 Apr 2026 | ||
Irish writer Tana French joins Steve to talk about her Cal Hooper Series. Hooper is a retired Chicago police detective who settles into life in small town Ireland. It’s not as easy as it is sounds. And, don’t tell Steve, but the latest book The Keeper is the last in what turns out to be […] | |||
| Mary Morris: The Jazz Palace | 09 Jun 2015 | ||
Mary Morris talks Jazz, Al Capone, and Chicago in the days of Prohibition with Steve Bertrand on Books. It’s all in her novel The Jazz Palace. | |||
| Maz Jobrani: I’m Not a Terrorist, But I’ve Played One on TV | 30 May 2015 | ||
Maz Jobrani is an Iranian-born, American comedian who is looks at his life with both comedy and introspection in his memoir I’m Not a Terrorist, But I’ve Played One on TV. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about why he refuses to play a terrorist and why the King of Jordan has his cell […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Hannah Thurman | 20 May 2026 | ||
Hannah Thurman’s smash debut novel is set in Raleigh, North Carolina, mostly at an under-pressure mental institution. At the center of Mercy Hill is a family of four daughters, their dad, and the mom who is the force fighting to save the hospital. The family grows up in the shadow of the institution, much in […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Charlie Schutt | 13 May 2026 | ||
Charles Schutt is a former Chicago priest who left the Church after 17 years and then successfully moved to the world of corporate recruiting. And he wants you to know why. He’s got a new book out called “A True Story of a Catholic Priest: Why I Got In, Why I Got Out, and What […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Rachel Khong | 06 May 2026 | ||
Maybe it’s in our 30s that the rubber finally meets the road and it’s time to confront life, maybe accept the fact that you can’t be anything you want to be after all. In a way, that’s a way to read Rachel Khong’s short story collection. It’s called “My Dear You.” Rachel says each short […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: James H. McCommons | 29 Apr 2026 | ||
Sometimes a small story can help to paint a much bigger picture. That’s the case with The Feather Wars by James H. McCommons. Actually, his is not a small story at all, it’s a remarkable accounting of America’s assault on birds around the Gilded Age. McCommons writes about flocks of birds more than a hundred […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Clay Cane | 22 Apr 2026 | ||
Clay Cane has written a pretty remarkable book in a personal, novel way. Burn Down Master’s House is a fictional account of a variety moments of resistance by several separate slaves in the days before the civil war. He fictionalizes the stories into one strand that stands as its own narrative. As a descendant of slaves, […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Michael Glover Smith | 15 Apr 2026 | ||
When you think of Bob Dylan, what comes to mind? A cultural revolutionary, right? Lyrics, musicianship, even painting. But did you know Bob Dylan was a filmmaker? Fellow filmmaker Michael Glover Smith did….and his book Bob Dylan as Filmmaker: No Time to Think is out. | |||
| Kazuo Ishiguro – ‘The Buried Giant’ | 23 May 2015 | ||
Kazuo Ishiguro, who has won the Man Booker Prize and been awarded the O.B.E., has been called one of Britain’s most important living novelists. His latest, The Buried Giant, examines the frailty of collective memory with the story of an elderly post-King Arthur era couple on their way to visit their long lost son. Their […] | |||
| David Brooks – ‘The Road to Character’ | 16 May 2015 | ||
New York Times columnist David Brooks says we’ve lost focus on the virtues that matter most: we worry too much about shallow accomplishments and not enough about the more meaningful behavior that truly makes a difference in the world. He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about his book The Road to Character. | |||
| Erik Larson – ‘Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania’ | 02 May 2015 | ||
Erik Larson talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania. It was 100 years ago this week that a German U-boat sank the ocean liner with a single torpedo. | |||
| Jessica Hagy – ‘The Art of War Visualized’ | 25 Apr 2015 | ||
Cartoonist Jessica Hagy explains Sun Tzu’s Art of War with Venn diagrams. She talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about taking an ancient text and pulling out current meaning in her book, The Art of War Visualized. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Melanie Benjamin | 03 Jun 2026 | ||
Chicago writer Melanie Benjamin has made a career out of writing historical fiction with stories that largely center around women. Put another way, Melanie has given us fictional accounts of our non-fiction world. In her latest, The Windsor Affair, she looks into the abdication of King Edward Vlll. It’s a story that’s been told many […] | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Djamel White | 27 May 2026 | ||
Djamel White is being called a powerful new voice in Irish literature. His debut novel, All Them Dogs, takes a look inside the crime underworld of west Dublin, focusing on a lost young man looking to be found. Unfortunately for him, his search for male guidance only brings more struggle. Djamel talks with Steve about […] | |||
| Barney Frank – ‘Frank’ | 04 Apr 2015 | ||
Former Congressman Barney Frank lives up to his name in his new memoir, “Frank.” He talks with Steve Bertrand on Books about his life in Washington, the Religious Freedom law in Indiana, Aaron Schock, and more. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Lisa See | 17 Jun 2026 | ||
New York Times bestselling author Lisa See’s latest book is Daughters of the Sun and Moon. Publisher’s Weekly calls it one of the best books of the summer. She talks with Steve about the little-known story of the 1870 massacre of Chinese immigrants in what was then a small, dusty and very dangerous Los Angeles. | |||
| Steve Bertrand on Books: Phil Melanson | 10 Jun 2026 | ||
In this week’s podcast, Steve catches up with author Phil Melanson as he teaches in London. Phil is the author of Florenzer…it’s a great account of life in Medici Florence told through the lives of Lorenzo de Medici, Francesco Salviati and Leonardo de Vinci. The book is now in paperback. | |||
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