
Fresh Air
Weekdays at 7:00pm
Opening the window on contemporary arts and issues with guests from worlds as diverse as literature and economics.

Can't sleep? Journalist Jennifer Senior says you're not alone in your insomnia
by Terry Gross
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Jennifer Senior has had insomnia for 25 years. Her new piece in The Atlantic is about her often futile attempts to fall asleep, and about the latest research into insomnia.
Tom Perrotta Shares 'Post-Parental' Reflections From An Empty Nest
by Terry Gross
Perrotta's novel, Mrs. Fletcher, is now an HBO series. In 2017, he told Terry Gross that the book was inspired by the upheaval he experienced when his kids grew up and moved out of the house.
Booker T. Jones Reflects On His Life in Music
by Terry Gross
Jones' band, Booker T. & the MG's, composed the instrumental classic, "Green Onions," and played background to Otis Redding. His new memoir is Time is Tight. Originally broadcast March 26, 2007.
Indian Percussion Infuses 'Good Hope' With Complex, Crossfire Beats
by Kevin Whitehead
Indian percussionist Zakir Hussain joins with saxophonist Dave Holland and bassist Chris Potter on a new album that that's clear and confident, with plenty of fire.
'The Lighthouse': A Brashly Funny Thriller, Soaked In Rain, Rum And Testosterone
by Justin Chang
Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson play 19th-century seamen stationed at a remote lighthouse in Maine. Shot in black and white, it's an exquisitely old-fashioned study of souls in isolation.
The Battle For Mosul — And Why The Threat Of ISIS Won't Go Away
by Dave Davies
Journalist James Verini offers a first-hand account of the 2017 battle to drive ISIS from Mosul, the second-largest city in Iraq. His new book is They Will Have to Die Now.
U.S. Withdrawal From Syria Leaves A 'Tangled Mess,' Journalist Says
by Terry Gross
Washington Post Beirut Bureau Chief Liz Sly has covered the Syrian civil war since it began in '11. "There is an inevitability that Russia is going to emerge as the dominant power in Syria," she says.
Essayist Ventures 'From The Greeks To Game Of Thrones' — And Back Again
by Maureen Corrigan
Despite Helen Mirren's Star Turn, 'Catherine The Great' Is Just OK
by David Bianculli
HBO's new series has plenty of court intrigue, scandals and betrayals, but the script amounts to little more than a historical greatest hits, bouncing from well-known event to event.