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Bob Kustra
Welcome to Reader's Corner, a weekly radio show hosted by Boise State University president emeritus Bob Kustra that features lively conversations with some of the nation's leading authors about issues and ideas that matter today.
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Part 2 With Scott Eyman About The Biography "Hank & Jim"

Part 2 With Scott Eyman About The Biography "Hank & Jim"

Today we’re continuing our conversation with Scott Eyman about his book Hank & Jim. The book chronicles the long friendship between two Hollywood icons, Henry Fonda and Jimmy Stewart. Unlike many friendships, theirs wasn’t based on shared beliefs about things like religion or politics. In fact, Stewart was a church-going Republican married to the same woman for 45 years. Fonda was a liberal Democrat and a non-believer who was married five times. Despite these and other differences, Fonda and Stewart found solace in each other’s company. They understood each other on a cellular level and around each other, they could have fun and relax.
30:0003/08/2018
Scott Eyman Talks Fonda, Stewart And The 50-Year Friendship Of "Hank & Jim"

Scott Eyman Talks Fonda, Stewart And The 50-Year Friendship Of "Hank & Jim"

Henry Fonda and Jimmy Stewart are beloved icons of Hollywood’s Golden Age, with careers that spanned decades and movies that still hold up today. They also were best friends who enjoyed spending time together, away from the glitter of their very public lives. With each other, they were simply Hank and Jim, two guys who flew kites, built model airplanes, played elaborate practical jokes on occasion, and didn’t find it necessary to talk about making movies, women, or the world war they both served in.
29:3127/07/2018
William Drozdiak Examines Brexit, Europe's Crises And The Fate Of The West

William Drozdiak Examines Brexit, Europe's Crises And The Fate Of The West

This encore interview was first broadcast in February, 2018
30:0020/07/2018
Go "Into the Silence" With Award-Winning Author Wade Davis

Go "Into the Silence" With Award-Winning Author Wade Davis

Today’s mountaineers tackle the world’s tallest peaks with the latest in technical gear – from down suits to nylon ropes and even cell phones. It is a far cry from the 1920s, when the first mountaineers to attempt Mount Everest climbed in hobnail boots, hauled canvas tents and were literally facing the unknown.
29:5206/07/2018
Eliza Griswold's "The Tenth Parallel" Surveys Collisions Between Christianity And Islam

Eliza Griswold's "The Tenth Parallel" Surveys Collisions Between Christianity And Islam

A daily battle is raging along the 10th Parallel – the line of latitude 700 miles north of the equator in Africa and Southeast Asia where Islam and Christianity intersect. In this critical geographical band, religious ideologies clash, often erupting into deadly violence as more than half the world’s Muslims and 60 percent of the world’s Christians compete for the souls of the region’s burgeoning population.
29:3322/06/2018
Blaire Briody's "The New Wild West" Investigates Rural North Dakota Amid The Oil Boom

Blaire Briody's "The New Wild West" Investigates Rural North Dakota Amid The Oil Boom

The descriptive phrase, “The Wild West,” brings to mind images of gunslingers, dusty miners and pioneering families eager to forge a fresh start in an inhospitable place. But in a new book, journalist Blaire Briody takes us on a tour of America’s contemporary Wild West: the badlands of North Dakota, under which reside an estimated 4.3 billion gallons of recoverable oil, making it the largest oil reserve in the lower 48 states.
30:1015/06/2018
Amy Goldstein Reveals A Community Reeling From A Manufacturing Plant Closure In "Janesville"

Amy Goldstein Reveals A Community Reeling From A Manufacturing Plant Closure In "Janesville"

This encore program originally was broadcast in March, 2018.
29:5709/06/2018
Gregory Berns Researches Neuroscience And "What It's Like To Be A Dog"

Gregory Berns Researches Neuroscience And "What It's Like To Be A Dog"

This interview was originally broadcast in January, 2018.
30:0525/05/2018
Exploring The Novel "A Gentleman in Moscow" With Author Amor Towles

Exploring The Novel "A Gentleman in Moscow" With Author Amor Towles

Russia is certainly in the headlines these days – but for the next 30 minutes, we’re setting aside talk of election meddling and diplomats to discuss a work of fiction. The novel, and it’s a bestseller, is A Gentleman in Moscow, and it’s written by today’s guest, Amor Towles.
30:0013/05/2018
Kurt Andersen Says Americans Are Living In A 'Fantasyland'

Kurt Andersen Says Americans Are Living In A 'Fantasyland'

This interview was originally broadcast in January, 2018.
30:0105/05/2018
Scott Anderson On How History Has Fractured The Arab World

Scott Anderson On How History Has Fractured The Arab World

This encore Reader's Corner interview was originally broadcast in September, 2017.
30:1020/04/2018
Insight To The Monarchy And Prince Charles From Sally Bedell Smith

Insight To The Monarchy And Prince Charles From Sally Bedell Smith

Our country was founded on the very idea that a free people should not be ruled by kings and queens. That said, there is an undeniable and lasting allure associated with monarchies. And that’s particularly true when it comes to Great Britain.
30:0213/04/2018
Author Tom Nichols On Cognitive Dissonance And "The Death of Expertise"

Author Tom Nichols On Cognitive Dissonance And "The Death of Expertise"

This is an encore program, originally broadcast in July, 2017.
29:5706/04/2018
"The History, Myth, And Future Of The Mustang" With Author David Philipps

"The History, Myth, And Future Of The Mustang" With Author David Philipps

From the moment we first laid eyes on them, Americans have been captivated by mustangs — with their strength, their determination and their wild nature. They have been featured in countless Western paperbacks, movies and songs through the years, and we’ve named war planes and muscle cars after them.
30:0130/03/2018
Longmire Mystery Series Author Craig Johnson And 'The Western Star'

Longmire Mystery Series Author Craig Johnson And 'The Western Star'

Sheriff Walt Longmire, his sidekick Henry Standing Bear and the wide open spaces of Absaroka County are the fictional creations of author Craig Johnson – but they also have found their way into popular culture. In addition to the bestselling series of novels, there is a real-life Longmire Days festival that each summer draws thousands of fans to Buffalo, Wyoming; a website where you can purchase Longmire-for-Sheriff bumper stickers and other memorabilia; and a hit Netflix original series starring Robert Taylor as the beloved sheriff.
30:1523/03/2018
In "The Perfect Horse" Elizabeth Letts Tells A Surprising WWII Story

In "The Perfect Horse" Elizabeth Letts Tells A Surprising WWII Story

During the final days of World War II, a group of American soldiers encountered a German spy carrying nothing but photos of beautiful white horses. The story behind those photos was even more surprising. Nearby, on a farm behind enemy lines, the Nazis had stockpiled some of the world’s most valuable horses as part of an ambitious breeding program to develop the perfect war horse. But with the Russian army fast approaching from the east and the Third Reich on the verge of defeat, these precious animals were now in great danger. The German spy had an audacious request: Would the Americans step forward to save them?
29:5309/03/2018
Diplomat-Novelist Matthew Palmer Discusses His International Thriller "Enemy Of The Good"

Diplomat-Novelist Matthew Palmer Discusses His International Thriller "Enemy Of The Good"

This encore program was originally aired in December of 2017.
29:5223/02/2018
Robert Merry Contends President McKinley Shaped 20th Century America

Robert Merry Contends President McKinley Shaped 20th Century America

The turn of the 20th century was a momentous time in U.S. history. After defeating imperial Spain in a brief but consequential war, America had expanded its global reach, with a footprint that stretched from Cuba and Guam to the Philippines. The country was developing and harnessing new technology like no other nation, its economic and diplomatic power was soaring, and it had nudged Europe and Japan toward a collective policy with China that favored U.S. interests.
30:0117/02/2018
Debut Novel "Spoils" From Brian Van Reet Explores Facets Of Modern War

Debut Novel "Spoils" From Brian Van Reet Explores Facets Of Modern War

This program was first broadcast in November, 2017
30:0110/02/2018
"Dark Money" By Jane Mayer Investigates The Rise Of The Radical Right

"Dark Money" By Jane Mayer Investigates The Rise Of The Radical Right

This episode of Reader's Corner was originally broadcast in June of 2017.
30:0026/01/2018
"High Noon" And The Hollywood Blacklist With Author Glenn Frankel

"High Noon" And The Hollywood Blacklist With Author Glenn Frankel

This encore program was originally broadcast in September, 2017.
29:4912/01/2018
Lyanda Lynn Haupt, author of "Mozart's Starling"

Lyanda Lynn Haupt, author of "Mozart's Starling"

This is an encore of the program which was originally broadcast in August of 2017.
30:0329/12/2017
Edward Alden On The Global Economy Leaving America Behind

Edward Alden On The Global Economy Leaving America Behind

This interview was originally broadcast in June, 2017.
30:0008/12/2017
Greg Mitchell On "The Tunnels" Under The Berlin Wall

Greg Mitchell On "The Tunnels" Under The Berlin Wall

In 1961, the world watched as tensions flared and the Berlin Wall went up, trapping East Germans inside a Communist regime. What was less well known was what was happening under that wall. Away from the glare of television cameras and public demonstrations, defectors and West Germans engaged in clandestine efforts to build tunnels and help East Germans escape.
30:0023/11/2017
Noah Isenberg Shares His Book About 'Casablanca'

Noah Isenberg Shares His Book About 'Casablanca'

This year marks the 75th anniversary of the release of Casablanca, perhaps the most beloved of all Hollywood films. Somehow, this love story set in war time seems as relevant today as when it first lit up the silver screen back in 1942. People who’ve never even seen the movie still recognize its famous lines, and references to Casablanca abound in novels, plays, musicals, and other productions.
30:0603/11/2017
With "To End All Wars," Adam Hochschild Provides A Chilling Exposé Of WWI

With "To End All Wars," Adam Hochschild Provides A Chilling Exposé Of WWI

The war that became known as World War I began over 100 years ago and ushered in a new type of warfare – one built underground, in trenches, instead of above ground, on horses. In his book, To End All Wars, Adam Hochschild brings the war to life in a stark and dramatic new way.
36:1227/10/2017
Marc Levinson On Why The Mid-20th Century Was "An Extraordinary Time" For America's Economy

Marc Levinson On Why The Mid-20th Century Was "An Extraordinary Time" For America's Economy

This interview was originally broadcast in May, 2017.
29:3120/10/2017
Author Saladin Ambar Malcolm X And Racial Politics In A Global Era

Author Saladin Ambar Malcolm X And Racial Politics In A Global Era

Fifty years after he was assassinated at age 39, Malcolm X remains a controversial and somewhat mysterious figure. During his short but eventful life, he was a minister with the Nation of Islam who went on to found his own mosque, a fiery militant who advocated “any means necessary” to attain racial justice, and a brilliant, charismatic speaker whose legacy is still being determined.
29:3729/09/2017
"Are We Smart Enough To Know How Smart Animals Are?" With Frans de Waal

"Are We Smart Enough To Know How Smart Animals Are?" With Frans de Waal

This episode originally was broadcast in March, 2017.
30:0015/09/2017
An Interview From Our Archives With Cecil Andrus

An Interview From Our Archives With Cecil Andrus

Today we’re featuring a special edition of our show as we remember and honor the remarkable life and legacy of Cecil D. Andrus, who died last week, just one day before his 86th birthday. Governor Andrus was the only Idahoan elected four times as the state’s governor, and he also served as Secretary of the Interior under President Jimmy Carter. He was a lifelong Democrat, but he knew how to work with colleagues of various persuasions to address issues that truly mattered to Idahoans, and to the nation.
29:4902/09/2017
Beth Macy Tells Of Two Brothers, A Kidnapping, And A Mother's Quest In "Truevine"

Beth Macy Tells Of Two Brothers, A Kidnapping, And A Mother's Quest In "Truevine"

At the turn of the 20th century, the most popular entertainment acts in the country were found under the Big Top. The circus offered daring acts of bravery, wild animals, comic antics and the collection of human oddities known as the Freak Show.
29:5219/08/2017
John Dvorak, author of "Mask of the Sun"

John Dvorak, author of "Mask of the Sun"

With the 2017 total solar eclipse less than two weeks away, excitement is reaching a fever pitch in Idaho and other places across the country where this stunning celestial event will be visible.
29:5812/08/2017
Award-winning Writer Shawn Vestal On His Debut Novel "Daredevils"

Award-winning Writer Shawn Vestal On His Debut Novel "Daredevils"

This interview was originally broadcast in March, 2017
29:2221/07/2017
Why General MacArthur And President Truman Clashed In The Early 1950's

Why General MacArthur And President Truman Clashed In The Early 1950's

This program was originally broadcast in March, 2017.
29:5207/07/2017
A Fascinating Look Into "Stalin's Last American Spy" With Author Kati Marton

A Fascinating Look Into "Stalin's Last American Spy" With Author Kati Marton

What does it take for someone with seemingly every advantage in life to turn on their friends, their family and their country, all in the name of a cause? Today’s guest, Kati Marton, explores that question in her new book, True Believer: Stalin’s Last American Spy.
29:5724/06/2017
Navigating "The Road To Character" With NY Times Columnist David Brooks

Navigating "The Road To Character" With NY Times Columnist David Brooks

Every once in a while, you come across individuals who make you feel better just for having encountered them. As today’s guest, David Brooks, puts it, “They seem deeply good. They listen well. They make you feel funny and valued. They are not thinking about what wonderful work they are doing. They are not thinking about themselves at all.”
29:5710/06/2017
Charles Fountain On Why The 1919 World Series Scandal Was The Birth Of Modern Baseball

Charles Fountain On Why The 1919 World Series Scandal Was The Birth Of Modern Baseball

This program was originally broadcast in May of 2016
30:0026/05/2017
Why Americans May Not Want Another Great President, With Aaron David Miller

Why Americans May Not Want Another Great President, With Aaron David Miller

Washington, Lincoln and FDR are revered as leaders who helped shape the course of history. They are often referred to as “great” presidents. But is it possible to have a great president today? And is greatness a quality that Americans even want in their chief executive?
29:5305/05/2017
Author J.D. Vance On "Hillbilly Elegy" And A Culture In Crisis

Author J.D. Vance On "Hillbilly Elegy" And A Culture In Crisis

Following one of the most divisive and contentious elections in history, it is easy to say that we are a nation in cultural crisis. But what does that actually mean? In the Rust Belt, as well as in rural Appalachia, it means factories closing and good jobs shipped overseas in less than a generation. It means an uptick in drug abuse and violence in the home, an erosion of the education system and trust in our government, and the disintegration of children’s dreams for a better future than that of their parents.
29:5221/04/2017
Mary Ellen Hannibal, author of "Citizen Scientist"

Mary Ellen Hannibal, author of "Citizen Scientist"

In our complex and data driven world, scientists are facing a major challenge to understand and document plant and animal species that may be in the process of disappearing. Climate change, habitat fragmentation, pollution and population growth are among the threats that are pushing some species toward extinction. The good news – and we need some good news these days – is that overwhelmed researchers are getting an assist from a growing number of enthusiastic volunteers. Known as citizen scientists, these volunteers are using their eyes, ears, and observations about the natural world to help scientists find answers to critical questions.
29:5714/04/2017
How Winston Churchill Became "Hero Of The Empire"

How Winston Churchill Became "Hero Of The Empire"

This program was originally broadcast in December, 2016.
29:4707/04/2017
Dr. Leonard Sax On What He Sees As "The Collapse Of Parenting"

Dr. Leonard Sax On What He Sees As "The Collapse Of Parenting"

As anyone with children, or grandchildren, knows, parenting isn’t easy. Children and adolescents are growing up in a complex and connected world where smartphones, video games, organized activities and friends vie for their attention. At the same time, parents aren’t exactly always sure what their job description should be – or how to best nurture their child.
29:5224/03/2017
"The Revised Fundamentals Of Caregiving" Author Jonathan Evison Will Visit 2017 Storyfort

"The Revised Fundamentals Of Caregiving" Author Jonathan Evison Will Visit 2017 Storyfort

This is an encore of this interview which was first aired in March of 2015.
29:5410/03/2017
Author Sy Montgomery On Octopuses And Animal Consciousness

Author Sy Montgomery On Octopuses And Animal Consciousness

What’s it like to be an octopus? Is it anything like being a human? Is it even possible to know?
30:0025/02/2017
How Voters And Historians View Presidential Greatness With Robert W. Merry

How Voters And Historians View Presidential Greatness With Robert W. Merry

Two hundred and twenty-eight years ago this April, George Washington took the oath of office as the first president of the United States. Since then, 44 Americans have taken that solemn vow, most recently Donald Trump. History has yet to judge our most recent presidents. But as we look farther into the past, which presidents have stood the test of time and are revered today? And which ones are now viewed as less successful leaders, or even as failures?
29:5317/02/2017
Author Peter Bergen On Domestic Terrorism In The "United States Of Jihad"

Author Peter Bergen On Domestic Terrorism In The "United States Of Jihad"

Domestic terrorism has taken many forms since the horrific events of September 11th. From these disparate acts, a sinister pattern of domestic terrorism has emerged as American Muslim men and women are radicalized from afar by extremist groups like ISIS.
29:5210/02/2017
How ISIS Came To Be A Worldwide Threat With Author Joby Warrick

How ISIS Came To Be A Worldwide Threat With Author Joby Warrick

These days, the terrorist organization known as ISIS has much of the world on high alert. How this happened is the subject of a book by today’s guest, Washington Post reporter Joby Warrick.
29:5221/01/2017
Matthew Palmer And His Book "The Wolf Of Sarajevo"

Matthew Palmer And His Book "The Wolf Of Sarajevo"

Novelists do their best to take you inside the worlds they create for their narratives and characters. Matthew Palmer, has lived inside his novels as a 25-year veteran of the U.S. Foreign Service.
29:5230/12/2016
Lynn Sherr Tells The Story Of The First American Woman In Space, Sally Ride

Lynn Sherr Tells The Story Of The First American Woman In Space, Sally Ride

When Sally Ride flew into orbit aboard the space shuttle Challenger in 1983, she made history. As the first American woman in space, Ride helped change perceptions about what women could accomplish and inspired a new generation of girls to literally reach for the stars. But Ride was more than an icon for the U.S. space program – she also was a complex, private woman with singular talents and skills, who continued to contribute to science and education until her death from pancreatic cancer in 2012.
29:5223/12/2016
A True Story Of Cold War Espionage With Author David E. Hoffman

A True Story Of Cold War Espionage With Author David E. Hoffman

At the height of the Cold War, a seemingly unassuming Soviet electronics engineer reached out to several Americans he encountered in Moscow and offered his services. While he was initially ignored, the engineer, Adolf Tolkachev was eventually accepted by the CIA’s Moscow station as a volunteer spy for the United States. Over a number of years, and under the nose of the ever-watchful KGB, Tolkachev passed on highly classified information about Soviet military technology to U.S. intelligence operatives. The documents he shared were of immense strategic value at a time when tensions between the two superpowers were at their peak.
29:3716/12/2016