Episode 5: Long Litt Woon on mushrooms, mourning & memoir

In Episode 5 we’re talking memoir with anthropologist and writer Long Litt Woon. We discuss the tricky questions involved in making a book about yourself. What to put in, and what to leave out, for example. How long after an experience should you wait before writing about it? And is a memoir only about the self, or is it just as much about other people?  After 32 years of marriage and without warning, Long Litt Woon suddenly became a widow. She was, of course, paralysed by grief. But eventually, almost by accident, she signed up for a beginner’s course in mushroom hunting – and found a way back to life. All this is detailed in her first book, The Way Through the Woods: on Mushrooms and Mourning. We recorded this interview in early March, during Adelaide Writers’ Week. That now seems a blissfully innocent time - we had no idea then of the scale of the catastrophe unfolding across the world, and that even a week later this interview would have been impossible. We hope you enjoy this pandemic-free conversation about writing, grief, translation, anthropology and the healing capacity of the natural world.

Om Podcasten

Novelist and author of the popular book ‘The Writer’s Room’, Charlotte Wood continues her in-depth conversations about the creative process. She talks to writers and other artists about how they work, what keeps them going, and the joys and challenges of making art.