Michael Silverblatt, the longtime host of LA’s KCRW radio show “Bookworm” — known for interviews of authors so in depth that they sometimes left his subjects astounded at his breadth of knowledge of their work — has died. He was 73.
Although Silverblatt’s 30-minute show, which ran from 1989 to 2022 and was nationally syndicated, included interviews with celebrated authors including Gore Vidal, Kazuo Ishiguro, David Foster Wallace, Susan Orlean, Joan Didion and Zadie Smith, the real star of the show was the host himself, the nasal-voiced radio personality who more than once in life was told he did not have a voice for his medium.
His show represents one of the most significant archives of conversations with major literary powerhouses from the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Here are ten “rules” Silverblatt offered in a 1997 LA Times profile:
- Sit. If you’re lying down you’ll fall asleep.
- Read at least 100 pages in your first session with a new book. You must get well in.
- If you’re reading for pleasure, finish a book before starting a new one. Don’t keep three or four going.
- If your eyes get tired, try cotton compresses with witch hazel—they’re soothing and refreshing.
- Read a book about a country you’ve never visited.
- Ask close friends to name their favorite book, one that changed their life or one that accompanied a change in life. You will learn not just about the book, but about the person who recommended it.
- Don’t be embarrassed to keep a vocabulary list. Reading without understanding is not a virtue.
- Don’t torture yourself or read out of duty. A great book has an obligation to enrich and alter your life.
- There are certain books you’ll find you’re not ready for. Please suspend your judgment of them. It took me seven years and six tries to read Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying.
- If you can’t discard preconceptions that come from bad classroom experiences—for example, A Tale of Two Cities and Silas Marner are not Dickens’ or Eliot’s best works—if you’ve X’d them out of your list, you’re missing something of pleasure. You’re ready now. Try them.


















