Tuesday, December 1, 2020

A slice of modern day life ... like an “Open Book”

Open Book host Scott Simon
with The Cactus League
author Emily Nemens

Modern day life as we know it slowed down back in mid-March. Sometimes, it's not always easy to remember what day of the week it is – there is a blur to them all after sheltering in place for eight months because of the coronavirus pandemic. Yet, I have found there are many wonderful and simple things in which to be thankful. For me, “Open Book” is something that is both simple and worth appreciating.

Each evening, I look forward to connecting via Twitter with NPR Weekend Edition Saturday host Scott Simon, who has invited us into his Washington, D.C. residence for a half-hour salon he calls “Open Book.” Each “Open Book” show commences at 6:15 p.m. EST (3:15 p.m. San Francisco, 11:15 p.m. London, 12:15 a.m. Paris), and Simon, a Chicago native and unabashed Cubs fan, craves our company and the questions we submit for his guests.

In any given week, Simon's visitors might include: Columbia University historian, author and Financial Times contributor Simon Schama, ESPN Outside the Lines host Jeremy Schaap, Paris Review editor and author of the novel The Cactus League Emily Nemens and Veep co-star/comedian Matt Walsh. Among his many guests have been: Moneyball author Michael Lewis, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra conductor Marin Alsop, American writer Terry Tempest Williams, sports writer and author Howard Bryant, and music writer and pop culture historian Greil Marcus.

On Open Book, Scott Simon
shares his love of reading and literature.
For me, “Open Book” is like an extension listening to Weekend Edition Saturday because there is the calming presence of Simon's voice and the idea that if you tune in, you’ll come away having acquired new knowledge and feel good about our world. On “Open Book,” Simon shares an anecdote or two about daily family life during the pandemic followed by reading a poem or a short story from the likes of Dorothy Parker, Terrance McNally, Shel Silverstein, E.B. White – maybe a haiku penned by his dog Daisy – then, there's a visit by a special guest. Finally, it’s followed by question and answer time that enables viewers to participate in the discussion. Recently, Simon has also been reading from his work-in-progress baseball novel, tentatively titled Wins, Losses and Saves, and asking viewers for their feedback.

Not only is Simon a master interviewer, he’s also a great listener. It all adds up to a scholarly conversation in the new normal. At the end of each show, Simon remembers to pay tribute to our everyday heroes: first responders, healthcare workers, postal carriers, food service workers and others who are doing their part to help keep “the trains” of everyday life running on schedule.

Scott Simon, host of “Open Book.”
Scott Simon, host of Open Book.
Don’t worry if you’re busy at the appointed time to catch “Open Book” live. It immediately is available for replay on demand and previous episodes remain on Simon's Twitter account @nprscottsimon and are archived on his website, scottsimonbooks.com. So, it's actually possible to binge-watch “Open Book” while enjoying a coffee or tea, any time of the day or night.

While it's difficult to predict how long we will be shuttered by the coronavirus outbreak before it's safe to resume our normal daily comings and goings, I do hope Simon will consider continuing “Open Book.” If not nightly, then perhaps he can host “Open Book” at least once or twice a week. Thanks to Periscope and Twitter – and with able assistance from his wife Caroline and his oldest daughter Elise feeding him questions and helping with production – Simon has shown the simplicity of reaching so many of us with relative ease and he does so with much warmth.

Hopefully, if there’s a positive to come from the pandemic, it's that people will appreciate the gentler things of life, like “Open Book.” I know I have.

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