This collection encompasses 50-plus years of interviews, readings, speeches, and reports on the vibrant literary scene in Minnesota. Not only home to giants F. Scott Fitzgerald and Sinclair Lewis, our state has an array of incredible contemporary poets, novelists, and playwrights. Their words make up majority of this collection.
Repeatedly being named the “Most Literate City in the United States,” the Twin Cities has played host to numerous visiting national writers via book tours, festivals, and lectures. Many recordings of these are also included.
This project was funded by the National Historical Publications & Records Commission.
March 3, 1997 - Hour 2 of Midmorning features a Voices of Minnesota segment with Doug Wood. Arne Fogel samples a new four-volume compact disc set of Louis Armstrong music entitled, "Louis Armstrong: the Complete RCA/Victor Label Recordings." Also included is Odd Jobs - lie detector.
March 5, 1997 - Langston Hughes was a pillar of the Harlem Renaissence who wrote poetry about the struggles of the ordinary african american. His first novel, "Not Without Laughter" has been described as one of the best coming of age stories ever written about the black american experience. Now the Children's Theater in Minneapolis is attempting the first ever stage production of the novel.
March 5, 1997 - The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is changing its walleye fishing regulations on Mille Lacs Lake this season. The DNR will require anglers to release all walleye between 16 and 20 inches in length. However, Minnesota Public Radio's Perry Finelli reports many people with business interests on Lake Mille Lacs aren't happy with the decision.
March 5, 1997 - The 20th century has been hard on Minnesota's night sky. Cities expanded into suburbs; small towns grew into big ones; and even towns that stayed small, lit themselves up. Streetlights, parking lot lights, security floodlights -- it's a lot harder to look up and see the Milky Way now than it was a hundred years ago, even in places with loons and black bears.
March 5, 1997 -
March 10, 1997 - Morvern Callar is 18 years old, loves listening to loud music on her Walkman, and going to raves in the small Scottish port where she lives. She doesn't seem to care about much else in the novel bearing her name, even when her long-time boyfriend rather messily commits suicide in their kitchen. The book, written by first time novelist Alan Warner, is attracting a great deal of attention as a portrait of late nineties youth. It's also the latest in a stream of books from a group of Scottish Novelists, including Irvine Welsh of "Trainspotting" and James Kelman of "How Late it Was, How Late" who have taken the literary world by storm. Alan Warner reads from his work tonight at the Hungry Mind Bookstore
March 14, 1997 - Tami Hoag, Minnesota resident and author of many bestselling suspense novels. Her newest is "A Thin Dark Line."
March 14, 1997 - Tami Hoag reads from her book A Thin Dark Line.
March 17, 1997 -
March 20, 1997 - On this first day of spring, Mainstreet Radio’s Mark Steil presents some stories from the winter of '97…and shares words from winter's past in the works of Laura Ingalls Wilder and O.E. Rolvaag.