Episodes
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We're on holiday! But don't worry, we will be back before you know it!
The post Summer holidays! first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
We have a lot of authors on our podcast, talking about their books, what inspired them, how they’ve written them etc. Quite often they’ll get drawn into the TV series or films that inspired them [*coughs* Star Trek]. But a medium we don’t often touch upon is comics & graphic novels, even though some of […]
The post Writing horror comics with Corissa Grant first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
Missing episodes?
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When we say the word “novel,” most of us think of a book written in prose, split into chapters and possibly parts. But every now and again, we come across novels that defy our expectations. Pratchett’s early work not only eschewed chapters – instead presenting the reader with continuous prose divided by section breaks – […]
The post The poetry of space – with Oliver K. Langmead first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
A few decades ago, if you said the word “Gothic haunted house novel,” the phrase would very definitely have brought to mind something with a rambling Victorian mansion, tortured heroines, mad women in the attic, sombre men, and wailing ghosts. It probably wouldn’t have brought to mind a little old lady baking scones and conducting […]
The post Secrets and killers with Kaaron Warren first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
A short story isn’t just a novel in miniature form. It isn’t even a shortened novella. It is a creature of its own devising. There’s only time for a snapshot of reality, and in the space of a few thousand words, you have to be able to draw in a reader, make them feel for […]
The post Keeping it short – with Gianni Washington first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
The literature of our past is littered with casual gender biases. You describe someone as a “witch” and the natural assumption is that they are female. But according to Diane Purkiss, while mostly women were accused in the English witch trials, in some of the Scandinavian countries, men were in the slight majority. In fact, […]
The post Secret societies & the occult – with S.T. Gibson first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
“In space, no one can hear you scream.” It’s an iconic tagline that can be applied to so many modern stories about space travel and exploration (except, perhaps, our beloved Star Trek). Obviously, space travel in real life can be incredibly perilous, but the perils of space in fiction have moved beyond the worry about […]
The post The horror of space travel with SA Barnes first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
Religion has been part of our society for centuries. Is it any wonder then that it can make up a large part of our fiction – from CS Lewis’s allegorical Chronicles of Narnia series to Anna Smith Spark’s Empires of Dust trilogy and the Loki books by Joanne Harris. But with so many religions the […]
The post Religion, tradition, and history in fantasy with Andrew Knighton first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
We have a bit of an unusual episode for you today! While it is amazing that we have so many authors who want to come on the show – we feel truly honoured – we thought it was about time we returned to talking among the three of us, like it was when we first […]
The post Yes, we’re also authors – with Lucy and Charlotte first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
Love can last a lifetime, but revenge is forever… Love is a common driving force for novels, and it comes in many forms. It could be the pursuit of true love, or the quest to turn unrequited love into a passionate relationship. Often, it can be the loss of love that spurs a hero or […]
The post Obsessional love and vengeance with S.E. Porter first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
The title of this episode is taken from Will R. Bird’s memoir of World War 1, a title which also inspired that of Katherine Arden’s novel set amidst the horror of the Great War. When it comes to writing about war, past authors have glorified it with moments of pathos. Who can forget the stirring […]
The post Ghosts have warm hands – with Katherine Arden first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
Welcome to our first episode of 2024. Yes, the title’s a quote from our incredible guest. As a podcast dedicated primarily to speculative fiction, we rarely find ourselves taking a deep dive into history. But the growth in popularity of both myths and retellings is bringing with it a new focus on historical periods, and […]
The post Beneath the skin of the earth – with Nicola Griffith first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
Modern fantasy owes much to J.R.R. Tolkien, including his problematic colonialist views and othering of cultures and races different from his medieval European-inspired setting. Many authors since then have used ‘historical accuracy’ as a defence against a lack of diversity in their similarly inspired settings. But even if we gloss over the fact that this […]
The post Othering and exoticism in fantasy with Eliza Chan first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
We love our folk horror. The genre has been growing in popularity these past years, and it’s not hard to see why. Writers take pastoral settings such as windswept hills or rugged sea coasts and imbue them with a sense of deep isolation. Throw in a community that seems at first utterly safe and then […]
The post Community and isolation – with Jennifer Thorne first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
Welcome to our Halloween episode! Romance has always been big business and these days there are plenty of subgenres. Despite its popularity, however, some snobbery still exists, often dismissing romance as “women’s fiction.” But if romance is really so terrible, why does it sell so well? Are the female characters in these books still the […]
The post Romancing the necromancer – with Alice James first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
It’s October, so we’re officially allowed to talk about Christmas. Sure, we’ve got Halloween first, and that’s a celebration we should all be enthusiastic about, but take a look at what books are being pushed by bookstores, Amazon, and even supermarkets, and you’ll find that Christmas stories are starting to creep in. You could say […]
The post The dark half of the year – with Lili Hayward first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
We often take for granted the role language plays in communicating our favourite stories. And here in the west, there exists an unspoken expectation to be able to consume those favourite stories in English. The necessity and importance of translation is a given. Writers producing work in English but for whom English is their second […]
The post The power of language – with Jelena Dunato and Ioanna Papadopoulou first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
We’re honoured to have Isabel Cañas join us on the show as she talks us through not only her fabulous new novel, Vampires of El Norte, but also her experience of breaking into publishing as a Mexican-American writer and the pressure on marginalised creators to produce something “fresh”. Mentioned in this episode: Isabel Cañas is a […]
The post “Something a little monstrous” – with Isabel Cañas first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
In the preface to Les Fleurs du mal, Baudelaire indicated that boredom is the truest suffering, andthis idea later became central to the fin de siècle movement, an era of decadence in which artificemasqueraded as, or was even elevated to the status of, art. The Belladonna Invitation by Rose Bigginis a Gothic exploration of the […]
The post The poison salon – with Rose Biggin first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. -
When it comes to science fiction – and particularly dystopian science fiction – doctors are either the saviours of humanity with their invaluable medical knowledge, or they are the villains, using a lack of rules to exploit the vulnerable for their own questionable ends. But why is that? Is it a case of power corrupts? […]
The post Medical hive minds – with Hiron Ennes first appeared on Breaking the Glass Slipper. - Show more