
Doris Lessing at the 2006 Cologne Literature Festival in Germany. Photo: Elke Wetzig
Literary icon Doris Lessing won a Nobel Prize at 87 — and now, at 88, she says she’s written her last book.
It’s called “Alfred & Emily.” It’s about her parents. About their lives as they were — deeply scarred by World War I and played out as British colonials in outback Rhodesia. And about what their lives might have been without the trenches and blood and death of that war.
Deep in her years, Doris Lessing has a reputation these days as a brilliant, prickly, tough customer. But in this book, she is all powerful empathy and imagination. This hour, we reach out to London for a conversation with Doris Lessing.
You can join the conversation. What’s your question for Doris Lessing? Do you have a lifelong relationship with her work? What does she stand for, to you? Did you cheer when she won the Nobel Prize? Have you ever tried to imagine how your parents’ lives might have been different? We look forward to your thoughts.
-Tom Ashbrook
Guest:
Doris Lessing joins us from London. Winner of the 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature, she is author of “The Golden Notebook,” published in 1962, and more than 50 other books, including novels, story collections, poetry, science fiction, and nonfiction. Her new book is “Alfred & Emily,” which she has announced will be her last.
More links:
Read an excerpt from “Alfred & Emily” at HarperCollins.com.
Dorris Lessing: A Retrospective offers a good biography and information on her works.
You can read her Nobel Lecture, “On not winning the Nobel Prize,” at NobelPrize.org. You can also watch it on video.
Tags: books, Doris Lessing, literature





















Please please ask Ms. Lessing to discuss The Four Gated City. This book shaped my perception of the world forever!!!!
Thanks!
Posted by terry ward, on August 20th, 2008 at 11:33 am EDTTerry
Is there a way to find one of your short stories, “My Father”? This may not be the correct title, but I’ve had no luck.
Thanks,
Posted by kitty barber, on August 20th, 2008 at 11:37 am EDTKitty
Can you ask Ms Lessing, whom I’ve just begun reading and respect very much, as an almost 30-year old, unmarried, childless woman, who owns a business and works for a grant office and has gone to school and strives for happiness and self-sufficiency, what are the new responsibilities of women my age to my society, in her perspective? My parents have brought me up to accept responsibility but to do only what makes me happy.
Posted by Alicia Nabozny, on August 20th, 2008 at 11:54 am EDTThank you so much for this interview with Doris Lessing!
I have read many of her books, but I loved “African Stories” the best. The book actually fell apart from overuse!
Thanks!
Posted by Carol Wade, on August 20th, 2008 at 12:32 pm EDTReading Doris Lessing’s Nobel Lecture was a very moving experience. Thank you for sharing it.
I was fortunate to grow up someplace with a good public library, and it changed my life profoundly. Is there any particular organization that Ms. Lessing recommends that sends books to people in less wealthy parts of the world and that takes into consideration what sorts of books the locals would actually like to read?
Thank you.
Posted by Susanne, on August 20th, 2008 at 1:27 pm EDT… And let us not forget Martha Quest, A Proper Marriage, A Ripple From the Storm, Landlocked, and yes finally The Four Gated City…..the five of which comprise Doris Lessing’s “Children of Violence” series which is of great social importance, now as much as then…..of timeless importance…..
Posted by blue betsey, on August 20th, 2008 at 3:10 pm EDTWhy can’t I hear all the On Point shows on podcast? The one last week on Indian weddings was online, but not as a podcast. This one with Doris Lessing, is again, not on podcast.
Posted by Sujatha Byravan, on August 20th, 2008 at 8:06 pm EDTSujatha
I would like to congratulate Ms Lessing for her wonderful contribution to English Literature.I particularly enjoyed the Canopus series which I devoured one after the other last year. I would love to know a little about her inspiration for this series, which it seems to me, could well have some basis in fact
I am English but only began to read her books quite recently. I noticed that the series was not in print in USA and my copies were imported from UK.
Wishing her the best of of everything.
Posted by Susan Taylor, on August 20th, 2008 at 8:56 pm EDTWhat a thoroughly nutty and charming lady! She goes on a public forum and calls her own mother a neurotic and then chastises sixties’ feminists as being too mean-spirited.
I can’t say that I think there’s anything wrong with this but that said, she does definitely epitomize the weird combination of politeness and bluntness that typifies Brits especially of a certain age.
Posted by Sam, on August 20th, 2008 at 9:51 pm EDTThank you Tom Ashbrook for introducing me to Doris Lessing. What an inspiring mind!
Imagine-a world without the experience of ‘The Great War.’
What unnecessary calamity may we avoid if only ……
Niall Ferguson’s “The War of the Worlds” helped open my eyes to the horrors of war. It’s probably that I am more willing to face our past.
Growing up, I used to be entirely turned off by history and different world views and cultures. Now that I am in my mid-thirties, it seems like the most interesting things are our differences and stories of people’s lives.
Posted by Frederic C., on August 21st, 2008 at 2:13 pm EDTWe welcome comments from all of our listeners.
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