Dec. 31: Richard Russo, Nikki McClure, Jonathan Lethem & Karen Russell at Wordstock

Published: Dec. 28, 2016, 12:07 a.m.

b'We love talking to authors about their books, but do you know what\\u2019s almost more fun? Talking to them about other people\'s books. This year, at the book festival Wordstock, we rounded up some amazing writers and illustrators on the OPB Pop-Up Stage to ask them: was there a book that changed your life?

Richard Russo - 1:24

The books of Richard Russo are practically synonymous with small town American life. They tell stories of working-class folks in falling-down mill towns in upstate New York, but they could take place practically anywhere in the U.S. Russo\\u2019s 2001 novel, \\u201cEmpire Falls,\\u201d won the Pulitzer prize and was made into a mini-series on HBO. His 1993 novel, \\u201cNobody\\u2019s Fool,\\u201d was made into a movie starring Paul Newman and Philip Seymour Hoffman, and this year, Russo is back with the a sequel, \\u201cEverybody\\u2019s Fool.\\u201d

Russo picked two volumes of short stories by Richard Yates: \\u201cEleven Kinds of Loneliness\\u201d and \\u201cLiars in Love.\\u201d Best known for the novel "Revolutionary Road," Yates wrote about everyday people with small dreams who nonetheless failed to attain them.

"Looking back on it now, these stories amounted to almost permission to write," said Russo. "It was the fact that, in some ways, Yates\'s subject matter was so modest, and yet he had turned it into literature of the highest order, something about that spoke to me as a not terribly confident young writer."

Nikki McClure - 15:31

Nikki McClure\'s trademark paper art is now iconic in the Northwest. She makes images of children and families engaging in work, experiencing the wild, and making the world better in small ways. She has an illustrator\'s eye for animal and plant life, and an exquisite touch for the details of a child\'s face. Her latest book is "Waiting For High Tide." She chats with April Baer about books that deeply resonate with her: "Blueberries for Sal" by Robert McCloskey and the collective works of Tove Jansson.

Karen Russell - 25:56

Karen Russell\\u2019s writing takes your imagination hostage, whisking you into worlds where the children of werewolves get schooled by nuns, vampires pucker their fangs on lemons as a temporary fix, and girls elope with ghosts, only to be left at the alter. Her book \\u201cSwamplandia\\u201d was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, and she\\u2019s a recipient of the MacArthur "Genius" Grant. Her most recent works include the e-book \\u201cSleep Donation: A Novella\\u201d and the short story collection \\u201cVampires in the Lemon Grove.\\u201d

Russell tells Aaron Scott how Carson McCullum\'s 1940 novel, "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter," electrified her when she was a teenager. "To be able to be so articulate about unspeakable experiences is something that books can do that other forms can\\u2019t represent that same way," she says.

Jonathan Lethem - 37:44

Jonathan Lethem\\u2019s novels take us to fabulous places. His writing style interweaves humor, charm, mystery, and stylish prose to create delightful page-turning epics. The recipient of a MacArthur grant and a National Book Critics Circle Award, Lethem also writes great essays and short stories. His latest novel, "A Gambler\\u2019s Anatomy," has garnered praise for its mysterious Bond-like hero and it\'s magical spin on reality.

Lethem discusses how "Alice\'s Adventures in Wonderland" was the first book he read where he felt like he could actually hear the voice of the author \\u2014 a voice full of puns and secret references that inspired his own voices in books like "Motherless Brooklyn."'