Episodes

  • Ann Garvin is a USA Today Bestselling author of six novels. She writes about people who do too much in a world that asks too much from them. A former Registered Nurse, Ann currently teaches creative writing at Drexel University. Her latest book is BUMMER CAMP, in which “two sisters scramble to save their family’s legacy in a funny, huge-hearted novel about grandiose plans and summers to remember.” On today’s show, Ann and Annmarie talk about head lice, tick bites, weirdness, and the worries and wonders of camp. 

    Episode Sponsors:
    Mystery to Me – A general bookstore with a very specific name. Of course we curate a wide selection of mystery as well as general and literary fiction, non-fiction, science fiction, fantasy, rom-com, horror, graphic novels, young adult titles, and a delightful children's section. Visit our Madison, Wisconsin location or shop online at mysterytomebooks.com.
    Bluestockings – A collectively-run NYC activist center, community space and feminist bookstore that offers mutual aid, harm reduction support, non-judgemental resources, and a warming/cooling place that is radically inclusive of all genders, cultures, expansive sexualities and identities. Bluestockings seeks to empower all people to challenge oppression and participate in creating a society which is equitable, cooperative, and free, and we strive to empower our worker-owners through non-hierarchy, cooperation, and consensus-based decision making, providing an example of the society we are working toward. Stop by or shop online at bluestockings.com.

    Titles Mentioned in this Episode:
    Bummer Camp, by Ann Garvin
    Olive Kitteridge, by Elizabeth Strout
    Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel

    Here’s the trailer for Station Eleven.

    Check out Tall Poppy Writers.

    Follow Ann Garvin:
    Instagram: @anngarvin_
    Twitter: @anngarvin_
    Facebook: @ann.w.garvin
    anngarvin.com
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Wade Rouse is the USA TODAY, Publishers Weekly, and internationally bestselling author of more than a dozen books which have been translated into 21 languages. On today’s show, Annmarie and Wade discuss difficult parents, screened-in porches, and how to pursue a writing life against the odds.

    Episode Sponsors:
    Literary Cleveland – Where writers can explore other voices and discover their own. The Inkubator is Literary Cleveland’s free annual festival for writers and readers. Generate new writing, improve your craft, and advance your career. Register for classes, sign up for our free writing conference, and find your writing community at LitCleveland.org.
    Mac’s Backs – A proud Cleveland indie bookstore with three floors for browsing, great online service, and chocolate milkshakes right next door. Find your next great read and shop online at macsbacks.com.

    Titles Mentioned in this Episode:
    Magic Season, by Wade Rouse
    The Recipe Box: A Novel, by Viola Shipman

    Here’s the trailer for Terms of Endearment.

    Follow Wade Rouse:
    Instagram: @authorwaderouse and @viola_shipman
    Twitter: @waderouse and @viola_shipman
    Facebook: @authorwaderouse and @authorviolashipman
    YouTube: @WadeRouse
    waderouse.com and violashipman.com

    Photo Credit: Ivan Hundric Photography
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Episodes manquant?

    Cliquez ici pour raffraichir la page manuellement.

  • Sarah Manguso is the author of nine books, most recently the novel LIARS.
    Her work’s been recognized by an American Academy of Arts and Letters Literature Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Rome Prize, and her writing has been translated into thirteen languages. On today’s show, Sarah and Annmarie discuss marriage and how our best intentions often crumble in the face of gender roles, misogyny, the patriarchy, and myriad forces so much larger than we are.

    Episode Sponsors:
    McNally Jackson – Independent booksellers with locations in Nolita, Williamsburg, Seaport, Rockefeller, and Downtown Brooklyn. To find your next great read, drop by or shop online at www.mcnallyjackson.com
    Annabelle’s Book Club LA – A highly curated collection of books and gifts with a modern point of view. Founded by 17-year-old Annabelle Chang, this YA-focused bookstore aims to spark imagination, inspire connection, and bring joy to people of all ages. Stop or find us online at annabellesbookclubla.com.

    Stories Mentioned in this Episode:
    Liars, by Sarah Manguso
    Learn more about Amber Heard and Gabby Petito.
    Creep, by Myriam Gurba

    Follow Sarah Manguso:
    sarahmanguso.com

    Photo Credit: Beowulf Sheehan
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Rachelle Bergstein is a lifestyle writer, author and editor. Her latest book is The Genius of Judy: How Judy Blume Rewrote Childhood For All of Us. On today’s show, Annmarie and Rachelle discuss taboo topics from childhood – periods! bras! masturbation! – and how Judy Blume books demystified all of them. 

    Episode Sponsors:
    McNally Jackson – Independent booksellers with locations in Nolita, Williamsburg, Seaport, Rockefeller, and Downtown Brooklyn. To find your next great read, drop by or shop online at www.mcnallyjackson.com
    Women & Children First – A bookstore that understands the transformative power of literature. As intersectional trans-inclusive feminists, we believe books are tools for liberation. Since 1979, we’ve celebrated and amplified under-represented voices. We offer a welcoming space for learning, dialogue, and reflection, and strive toward a feminist, equitable workplace. Come visit our Chicago location or shop online at womenandchildrenfirst.com.

    Judy Blume Titles Mentioned in this Episode:
    Deenie
    Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.
    Forever…
    Then Again, Maybe I Won’t
    Blubber
    Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great
    It's Not the End of the World

    Other Titles Mentioned:
    The Genius of Judy: How Judy Blume Rewrote Childhood For All of Us, by Rachelle Bergstein
    Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma, by Claire Dederer
    Biography of X, by Catherine Lacey
    The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath, by Leslie Jamison

    Here’s some 90s music to leave you with: Under the Bridge, by Red Hot Chili Peppers.

    Follow Rachelle Bergstein:
    Twitter: @RaBergstein
    Instagram: @rachellewb
    rachellebergstein.com
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Emma Copley Eisenberg is a queer writer in Philadelphia, where she co-founded Blue Stoop, a community hub for the literary arts. Her latest book is HOUSEMATES which we talk about today. On today’s show, Emma and Annmarie discuss queer aunties, the magic of road trips, and whether art can actually save our lives.
    Episode Sponsors:
    The Head & The Hand – A nonprofit independent publisher and community bookstore based in the Kensington/Fishtown neighborhood of Philadelphia, where we’re committed to serving as a launchpad for the next generation of local writers. We strive to create innovative relationships between authors and their audiences, and we publish and stock writing with the power to both entertain and spark change. Come visit or find us online at theheadandthehand.com.
    Women & Children First – A bookstore that understands the transformative power of literature. As intersectional trans-inclusive feminists, we believe books are tools for liberation. Since 1979, we’ve celebrated and amplified under-represented voices. We offer a welcoming space for learning, dialogue, and reflection, and strive toward a feminist, equitable workplace. Come visit our Chicago location or shop online at womenandchildrenfirst.com.

    Titles Mentioned in this Episode:
    Housemates, by Emma Copley Eisenberg
    The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia, by Emma Copley Eisenberg
    Nicotine, by Nell Zinks
    The Girls of Slender Means, Murial Spark
    All This Could Be Different, by Sarah Thankham Mathews
    Sophie's Choice, by William Styron
    Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott
    A Grace Paley Reader: Stories, Essays, and Poetry
    Blue Stoop, a home for Philly writers
    Learn more about Emma Goldman’s ice cream parlor here
    Jordan Kisner podcast Thresholds

    Follow Emma Copley Eisenberg:
    Twitter: @frumpenberg
    Instagram: @frumpenberg
    emmacopleyeisenberg.com
    Photo credit: Kenzi Crash
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • R.O. Kwon is the author of the nationally bestselling novel The Incendiaries, which was named a best book of the year by more than forty publications. On today’s show, Annmarie and R.O. discuss her new book, Exhibit, an exhilarating novel that’s been called “the sexiest book of the year.” They also talk about photography, the torture and timelessness of ballet, and what it means for women to put voice to their desires both in and out of the bedroom.

    Episode Sponsors:
    Duende District – We make tiny bookstores for & by people of color— where all are welcome. What you'll find at each Duende District is a lovingly curated selection of new & used adult & children's books by authors of color in English & Spanish. Each boutique partnership offers a uniquely crafted & inviting literary space focused on engaging communities of color, while also inviting all people to participate in the experience. Visit our locations in Albuquerque & Brooklyn, or find us online at duendedistrict.com.
    Loyalty Bookstores – A Black, Asian, and Queer owned bookstore, which aims to be the Mid-Atlantic’s neighborhood spot for books, gifts, and programming. At Loyalty, we highlight the diverse voices and creatives who make our communities great. We work to create an inclusive, welcoming environment because, well, books are home. Visit our DC and Silver Spring locations or find us online at loyaltybookstores.com.
    Yu and Me Books – A bookstore / café / and bar that showcases strong, diverse voices, with a focus on immigrant stories, in a space where we can dream together, strive for change, and push systems closer to justice. Come to our NYC location to sip, read, and share amazing conversations, or find us online at yuandmebooks.com.

    Titles Mentioned in this Episode:
    Exhibit, by R.O. Kwon
    The Incendiaries, by R.O. Kwon
    Kink: Stories, edited by Garth Greenwell and R.O. Kwon
    Small Rain, by Garth Greenwell

    Follow R.O. Kwon:
    Twitter: @rokwon
    Instagram: @ro.kwon
    ro-kwon.com
    Photo credit: Jesse Dittmar
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Nicola Yoon is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Instructions for Dancing, Everything, Everything, and The Sun Is Also a Star, and she was the first Black woman to hit #1 on the New York Times Young Adult bestseller list. On today’s show, Nicola and Annmarie discuss Nicola’s new adult book, One of Our Kind, “a terrifying and thought-provoking look at what it means to be truly free in America.” They also talk about Black joy, pursuing dreams, and also why it’s totally fine when your kids want to dye their hair blue.

    Episode Sponsors:
    Annabelle’s Book Club LA – A highly curated collection of books and gifts with a modern point of view. Founded by 17-year-old Annabelle Chang, this YA-focused bookstore aims to spark imagination, inspire connection, and bring joy to people of all ages. Stop or find us online at annabellesbookclubla.com.
    Rep Club – A bookshop and creative space curated by Blackness in Los Angeles, California. Named one of Issa Rae's "favorite places in Los Angeles," this Black, queer, and woman-owned space hosts bookish events  and can help you find your next 5-star read. Wherever you are, shop online at rep.club. For a limited time, listeners can get 10% off your next read with code WILD at checkout! 

    Books by Nicola Yoon:
    Everything, Everything
    The Sun Is Also a Star
    Instructions for Dancing
    One of Our Kind
    Blackout, by Nicola Yoon, Angie Thomas, Ashley Woodfolk, Dhonielle Clayton, Tiffany D. Jackson, and Nic Stone
    Whiteout, by Dhonielle Clayton, Tiffany D. Jackson, Nic Stone, Angie Thomas, Ashley Woodfolk, and Nicola Yoon 

    If you’re looking for a throwback karaoke song, here’s Making Love Out of Nothing at All, by Air Supply. 

    Follow Nicola Yoon:
    Facebook: NicolaYoonWriter
    Twitter: @NicolaYoon
    Instagram: @nicolayoon
    nicolayoon.com
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Jacquelyn Mitchard is the best-selling author of 23 books, including A Very Inconvenient Scandal, The Good Son, and The Deep End of the Ocean, which was the inaugural selection for Oprah Winfrey’s book club. In today’s episode, Jacquelyn and Annmarie talk about the opportunities and challenges of balancing motherhood and the writing life, finding character names in cemeteries, and how no story is ever truly complete until the reader is holding the author’s hand.

    Episode Sponsors:

    Aesop’s Fable – An independent bookshop in Holliston, Massachusetts with a focus on inspiring creativity and growth in readers of all ages. Stop by or shop online at aesopsfable.com.

    Brewster Book Store – A full-service independent shop filled to the brim with books, toys, games, greeting cards, and gifts. We’ve been matching readers with books for over 40 years, and we’re proud of our collection of Cape Cod books, our extensive children's section, and our wide selection of books for readers of all tastes and ages. We believe books have the power to change lives. Come in or shop online at brewsterbookstore.com.


    A Small Selection of Books by Jacquelyn Mitchard:

    A Very Inconvenient Scandal
    The Deep End of the Ocean
    The Good Son
    A Theory of Relativity

    Films Mentioned in this Episode:

    Wuthering Heights – Here’s a clip from the 1992 version starring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche.

    Here’s a trailer for North by Northwest.

    Here’s a clip from the film Glory.

    Here’s the trailer for American Fiction.

    Finally, if you’re a writer and want to journey with Jacquelyn Mitchard along the Mediterranean Sea this fall, learn more HERE. 

    Follow Jacquelyn Mitchard:
    Facebook: jacquelyn.mitchard
    Twitter: @JackieMitchard
    Instagram: @jacquelynmitchard
    Goodreads: jacquelyn_mitchard
    jacquelynmitchard.com
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Alua Arthur is the most visible and active death doula working in America today. She’s a recovering attorney and the founder of Going with Grace, a death doula training and end-of-life planning organization. Her TED Talk titled, “Why Thinking About Death Helps You Live a Better Life,” has over 1.5 million views. In today’s episode, Annmarie and Alua discuss Briefly Perfectly Human, Alua’s life-changing, soul-gathering memoir. They also discuss how talking about death can help all of us live better lives. 

    Episode Sponsors:

    Octavia’s Bookshelf – An independent bookstore in Pasadena, California where readers of all walks of life can enjoy our store full of books written by BIPOC writers. Octavia’s Bookshelf is a place to find your new BFF inside a book, a space to find community, enjoy a cup of coffee, read, relax, find unique and specially curated products from artisans from around the world and in our neighborhood. Stop by or shop online at octaviasbookshelf.com.

    Rep Club – A bookshop and creative space curated by Blackness in Los Angeles, California. Named one of Issa Rae's "favorite places in Los Angeles," this Black, queer, and woman-owned space hosts bookish events    and can help you find your next 5-star read. Wherever you are, shop online at rep.club. For a limited time, listeners can get 10% off your next read with code WILD at checkout! 

    Titles Discussed in this Episode:

    Briefly Perfectly Human, by Alua Arthur
    Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides
    Conscious Grieving, by Claire Bidwell Smith
    Love on the Scottish Spring Isle, by Beatrice Bradshaw
    Fathers and Sons, by Howard Cunnell


    Follow Alua Arthur:
    Instagram: @going_with_grace
    Twitter: @goinggracefully
    Facebook: @goingwgrace
    goingwithgrace.com











    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Today, we have something new. This past spring, Annmarie gathered with eight local writers to try a podcasting project. Over the course of six weeks together, they wrote side-by-side, saying YES to whatever stories arose. About friendship and loss, dreams and possibility, parents and belief. These sessions were sometimes tearful and painful, but they were always beautiful. And powerful. Because something important happens when we create in community. In this episode, we share eight short essays. Some folks have been writing for decades. Others are just getting started. All of them have stories to tell.


    Episode Sponsors:

    Literary Cleveland – Developing writers, amplifying voices, and transforming our community through storytelling. You can explore other voices and discover your own. Search for classes and find your creative community at litcleveland.org.

    Mac’s Backs – A proud Cleveland indie bookstore with three floors for browsing, great online service, and chocolate milkshakes right next door. Find your next great read and shop online at macsbacks.com.


    Writers Showcased in this Episode:

    Alvis Pettker
    Tamar Cloyd
    Jackie Sliva
    T. Lee Peters
    Deborah Taddeo
    Emily Jaster
    L.P.
    Amy Alspach


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Crystal Wilkinson is the award-winning author of several books including Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks. She was Poet Laureate of Kentucky from 2021 to 2023, and currently teaches creative writing at the University of Kentucky where she is a Bush-Holbrook Endowed Professor. In today’s episode, Crystal and Annmarie discuss kitchen ghosts, family recipes – including how biscuits need to “kiss,” and the blessings and self-awareness we find in the stories of our ancestors.


    Episode Sponsor:

    Charis Books and More – An independent feminist bookstore. Charis fosters sustainable feminist communities, works for social justice, and encourages the expression of diverse and marginalized voices. When you spend your money or your time at Charis Books and More, you are investing in the radical belief that multi-racial organizing and movement- building centered in a Southern, queer, feminist, anti-racist practice can
    shift culture and change lives and we appreciate your support. Stop by our
    Decatur, Georgia store or find us online at charisbooksandmore.com.

    BEM | books and more – BEM is a bookstore specializing in food literature of the African Diaspora, inspired by a line of dynamic and brilliant Black women who season with love and spin tales with the best of them. Honoring that legacy and those of Black folks and families across time and place is at the heart of what they do. Food opens a door to life, to sustenance, to love, to politics, and BEM | books and more is thrilled to welcome you into their community to explore it all together. Discover more online at bembrooklyn.com or on their Instagram @bembrooklyn.

    Wild Precious Life listeners receive 10% off their orders at BEM | books and more. Just type in the code WILDPRECIOUSLIFE (all one word) when you check out.


    Titles Discussed in this Episode:

    Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks, by Crystal Wilkinson

    Perfect Black, by Crystal Wilkinson

    The Birds of Opulence, by Crystal Wilkinson

    Other conversations with Crystal Wilkinson:

    PRAISESONG FOR THE KITCHEN GHOSTS: STORIES AND RECIPES FROM FIVE GENERATIONS OF BLACK COUNTRY COOKS

    PERFECT BLACK: CRYSTAL WILKINSON IN CONVERSATION WITH KIESE LAYMON

    BREATH BETTER SPENT: LIVING BLACK GIRLHOOD--DAMARIS B. HILL IN CONVERSATION WITH CRYSTAL WILKINSON



    Follow Crystal Wilkinson:
    Instagram: @crystalwilki
    Twitter: @crystalwilki
    Facebook: @wilkinsoncrystal
    crystalewilkinson.net









    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Christina Cooke was born in Jamaica and is now a Canadian citizen who lives and writes in New York City. BROUGHTUPSY is her debut novel. In today’s episode, Annmarie and Christina discuss cultural upbringings, the cruelty of children, the joys of weightlifting, and how all humans are complex and contradictory and deserving of love. 


    Episode Sponsor:

    Zora’s Den – Dedicated to empowering the lives of Black women writers. At Zora’s Den, we host a monthly reading series, conduct workshops, and invite writers to share their work-in-progress for feedback and constructive criticism. Our hope is to build a sisterhood of writers at every level of accomplishment and to strengthen the voices of the unheard and unacknowledged. If you’re a Black woman writer, you’re welcome to join us. Learn more at zorasden.com.

    Brain Lair Books – A black-owned, woman-owned children's bookstore located in South Bend, Indiana. At Brain Lair, we partner with local schools and universities to help build an inclusive, welcoming community. We specialize in juvenile and young adult literature written by and for Black, Indigenous, People of Color, LGBTQIA+, and Disabled communities, as well as adult nonfiction about ending white supremacy, promoting anti-racism, and becoming a social activist. We can help you find the books you need. Drop by or browse online at brainlairbooks.com.


    Titles Discussed in this Episode:

    BROUGHTUPSY, by Christina Cooke

    IMAGINARY HOMELANDS, by Salman Rushdie

    WHITE TEETH, by Zadie Smith

    It’s All Coming Back to Me Now, by Celine Dion.

    Learn more about Louise Bennett, a Jamaican folklorist and poet. 



    Follow Christina Cooke:
    Instagram: @christina.j.cooke
    Twitter: @christinajcooke
    www.christinajcooke.com
    Photo credit: Eli Jules Photography 


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Sarah Kain Gutowski is the author of Fabulous Beast and along with interdisciplinary artist Meredith Starr, she’s co-creator of Every Second Feels Like Theft, a conversation in cyanotypes and poems, and It's All Too Much, a limited edition podcast and art project. She’s out now with a new book of narrative poetry, The Familiar. In today’s episode, Sarah and Annmarie discuss the ache of literary ambition, how parenthood divides us from ourselves, and how Moonstruck is one of the best movies of all time.

    Episode Sponsor:

    Zora’s Den – Dedicated to empowering the lives of Black women writers. At Zora’s Den, we host a monthly reading series, conduct workshops, and invite writers to share their work-in-progress for feedback and constructive criticism. Our hope is to build a sisterhood of writers at every level of accomplishment and to strengthen the voices of the unheard and unacknowledged. If you’re a Black woman writer, you’re welcome to join us. Learn more at zorasden.com.

    Split Rock Books – A locally-owned, independently-minded neighborhood bookstore located in the heart of the Hudson Valley. Split Rock carries a curated selection of new books with a focus on literary fiction and non-fiction, small presses, local interest, and children's books. We host a variety of family programming, book clubs, readings, signings and discussions. And we’re located steps from the Cold Spring train station, which is just over an hour from New York City. Learn more or shop online at splitrockbks.com.


    Titles Discussed in this Episode:

    The Familiar, by Sarah Kain Gutowski

    Fabulous Beast, by Sarah Kain Gutowski 
    Kate Bush's album 50 Words for Snow

    One of Annmarie and Sarah’s favorite scenes from the movie Moonstruck.

    Hills Like White Elephants, a short story by Ernest Hemingway.


    Follow Sarah Kain Gutowski:
    Instagram: @sarahkaingutowski
    Twitter: @skgutowski
    Facebook: /sarahkaingutowskiauthor
    TikTok: @sarahkaingutowski
    Email: sarah.kain.gutowski [at] gmail.com
    Website: https://www.sarahkaingutowski.com

    Photo credit: Priyanca Rao



    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Originally from Argentina, Cecilia Gentili came to the U.S. pursuing a safer life as a transgender woman. She lived undocumented for 10 years. After surviving arrests and an immigration detention, she accessed recovery services and won asylum. Cecilia founded Transgender Equity Consulting, which works to ensure all people living on the margins receive dignity and respect. In today’s episode, Annmarie and Cecilia talk about growing up on the margins, emigrating to the United States, and how to love and forgive people who struggle to offer dignity or understanding in return.  

    Cecilia Gentili passed away on Feb. 6, 2024. She was 52 years old.

    Episode Sponsor:

    The Word Is Change – A neighborhood bookstore in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, selling used and new books, hosting readings and meetings, buying books for resale, and supporting visual artists. Come into the store and find the perfect book you were looking for, or the perfect book you didn’t even know you were looking for. And shop online at thewordischange.com.


    Titles Discussed in this Episode:

    FALTAS, by Cecilia Gentili

    Here are links to some of Cecilia’s favorite songs:

    Isabel Pantoja singing “Abrásame Muy Fuerte,” (or Hug Me Really Hard.

    Gilda singing “No me Arrepiento de este Amor,” (or I Don't Regret This Love). 

    Laura Branigan singing “Gloria.” 

    Here’s a clip from Cecilia Gentili appearing as Ms. Orlando in POSE.





    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Leslie Jamison has written two essay collections, The Empathy Exams and Make It Scream, Make It Burn. She also gained prominence for her critical memoir, The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath. She’s out now with a new book, Splinters, about raising a child during the end of a relationship and the beginning of the pandemic. In today’s episode, Annmarie and Leslie talk about motherhood and how it’s both a mad transformative mystery and a boring daily slog. It’s both the Cheerios ground into the carpet and the love etched into your heart. 

    Episode Sponsors:

    Greenlight Bookstore – Through knowledgeable staff, curated book selection, community partnerships, and a robust e-commerce website, Greenlight combines the best traditions of the neighborhood bookstore with a forward-looking sensibility, and welcomes readers of every kind to the heart of Brooklyn. Learn more and shop online at greenlightbookstore.com.

    Flourish After Forty – A women’s retreat cultivating growth and contentment in midlife. Join facilitators Dr. Shannon Sherfey and Holly Stencil for a weekend of nourishing your body, mind, and spirit. We’ll examine struggles, let go of narratives that do not serve us, and shift our mindset toward blooming in midlife. If you’re looking to step away from stagnation and move into joy and gratitude, check out the Flourish After 40 Women’s Retreat today. Go to tinyurl.com/FlourishAfterForty to learn more.


    Titles by Leslie Jamison:

    SPLINTERS: ANOTHER KIND OF LOVE STORY
    THE EMPATHY EXAMS
    MAKE IT SCREAM, MAKE IT BURN
    THE RECOVERING: INTOXICATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
    THE GIN CLOSET: A NOVEL

    Other Titles and Authors Discussed in this Episode:

    Easy Beauty, by Chloé Cooper Jones
    Flight, by Lynn Steger Strong

    Here’s a trailer for the latest season of Love Island.


    Follow Leslie Jamison:

    Twitter: @lsjamison
    www.lesliejamison.com
    Photo credit: Beowulf Sheehan


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Angeline Boulley, an enrolled member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians, is a storyteller who writes about her Ojibwe community in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. She is a former Director of the Office of Indian Education at the U.S. Department of Education and is the author of two bestselling novels, Firekeeper’s Daughter and Warrior Girl Unearthed. In today’s episode, Angeline and Annmarie talk about the need to protect and celebrate indigenous artifacts, cultures, and stories.

    Episode Sponsors:

    Brain Lair Books – A black-owned, woman-owned children's bookstore located in South Bend, Indiana. At Brain Lair, we partner with local schools and universities to help build an inclusive, welcoming community. We specialize in juvenile and young adult literature written by and for Black, Indigenous, People of Color, LGBTQIA+, and Disabled communities, as well as adult nonfiction about ending white supremacy, promoting anti-racism, and becoming a social activist. We can help you find the books you need. Drop by or browse online at brainlairbooks.com.

    International Writers' Collective – The Collective offers fiction and poetry workshops online and in the Netherlands and a vibrant international community to support you in your writing goals. Many students view their program as a cheaper and more flexible alternative to an MFA. Learn more and find a class at internationalwriterscollective.com.



    Titles and Authors Discussed in This Episode:

    The Firekeeper’s Daughter, by Angeline Boulley

    Warrior Girl Unearthed, by Angeline Boulley

    House Party, edited by justin a. reynolds

    Yellowface, by R.F. Kwon

    The Shadow Sister, by Lily Mead 

    Promise Boys, by Nick Brooks

    The Only Good Indians, Stephen Graham Jones.

    Elatsoe, by Darcie Little Badger

    English-Cayuga/Cayuga-English Dictionary, by Frances Froman, Alfred J. Keye, Lottie Keye, and Carrie J. Dyck

    Here’s a sneak peak of the movie Interstellar.



    Follow Angeline Boulley:

    Instagram: @angelineboulley
    Twitter: @FineAngeline
    Facebook: @angelineboulleyauthor
    Angelineboulley.com
    Photo credit: Marcella Hadden


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Born and raised in Northeast Ohio, Athena Dixon is a poet, essayist, and editor. She is the author of The Loneliness Files, The Incredible Shrinking Woman, and No God In This Room, winner of the Intersectional Midwest Chapbook Contest. In this episode, Annmarie and Athena talk about mental health, women who die alone, and how having loneliness in common might just be the connection we need to take better care of one another.

    Episode Sponsors:

    A Novel Idea – A community-minded bookstore and event space in East Passyunk, Philadelphia. At A Novel Idea, we hope to create and foster a space of diversity and inclusivity, and we want to help our customers fall in love with books, either for the first time or the millionth. More than anything, our goal is to cultivate community. Stop in or shop online at anovelideaphilly.com.

    Zora’s Den – Dedicated to empowering the lives of Black women writers. At Zora’s Den, we host a monthly reading   series, conduct workshops, and invite writers to share their work-in-progress for feedback and constructive criticism. Our hope is to build a sisterhood of writers at every level of accomplishment and to strengthen the voices of the unheard and unacknowledged. If you’re a Black woman writer, you’re welcome to join us. Learn more at zorasden.com.


    Titles Discussed in This Episode:

    The Loneliness Files, by Athena Dixon

    The Incredible Shrinking Woman, by Athena Dixon

    No God in This Room, by Athena Dixon

    The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows, by John Koenig

    Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston

    Here’s a sneak peak of the movie Goodfellas.

    Here’s the video for Hollywood by Victoria Monét.


    Follow Athena Dixon:

    Instagram: @the_muse_paper
    Twitter: @AthenaDDixon
    Facebook: @athenadevondixon
    athenadixon.com




    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Olga Mecking is a writer, journalist, and translator based in the Netherlands, and she’s the reporter who made Niksen (“doing nothing”) go viral. Her New York Times article on the subject was shared over 100,000 times. In this episode, Annmarie and Olga talk about the health and creativity benefits of doing nothing and why it is that pauses, rests, and breaks too often feel out of reach for our overworked selves.


    Episode Sponsors:

    The American Book Center – Booksellers with a personal touch. This family-owned bookstore, opened in 1972, has been quirky, friendly and knowledgeable from the start, and just counting our present staff, we represent more than 700 years of combined bookselling experience. Our Amsterdam location is often listed as one of the Ten Most beautiful Bookshops in the World, and our stores are highly rated for assortment and personal service. Drop by to touch and smell the books, or shop online at abc.nl.

    International Writers' Collective – The Collective offers fiction and poetry workshops online and in the Netherlands and a vibrant international community to support you in your writing goals. Many students view their program as a cheaper and more flexible alternative to an MFA. Learn more and find a class at internationalwriterscollective.com.


    Titles Discussed in This Episode:

    Niksen: The Dutch Art of Doing Nothing, by Olga Mecking

    One Chance in a Thousand: A Holocaust Memoir, by Jan Balicki and Olga Mecking
    Here’s the trailer for FLASHDANCE.

    Here’s the video for YELLOW SUBMARINE by the Beatles.


    Follow Olga Mecking:

    Instagram: @olgamecking
    Twitter: @OlgaMecking
    Facebook: @OlgaMeckingWriter



    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Prince Shakur’s debut memoir, When They Tell You to Be Good, is a political and personal exploration of his coming of age as a writer and activist. In this episode, Laura Maylene Walter talks to Prince Shakur about how race and identity shaped his formative years, how journaling providing him with a creative outlet, his experience with activism and protest, the challenges he faced in the publishing industry, and working with Hanif Abdurraqib as his editor at Tin House Books, and more.

    Follow Page Count
    Follow Laura Maylene Walter
     
    Follow Prince Shakur
    Instagram: @sweetblackprince
    Twitter: @prshakur
    YouTube: @PrinceShakurYouTube
    www.princeshakur.com
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

  • Alejandro Varela is the author of THE TOWN OF BABYLON, a finalist for the National Book Award, and THE PEOPLE WHO REPORT MORE STRESS, which The New York Times called “a master class in analyzing the unspoken” and praised Varela for shedding light on complex societal problems with “seemingly effortless wit and empathy." Varela has a Master’s Degree in Public Health, and believes strongly in reparations, land back, a national health service, and a $36 minimum wage pegged to inflation. In this episode, Annmarie and Alejandro talk about social justice, online dating, and whether writing fiction can help foster the collective liberation of our society.

    Episode Sponsors:

    The Word Is Change – A neighborhood bookstore in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, selling used and new books, hosting readings and meetings, buying books for resale, and supporting visual artists. Come into the store and find the perfect book you were looking for, or the perfect book you didn’t even know you were looking for. And shop online at thewordischange.com.

    Greenlight Bookstore – Through knowledgeable staff, curated book selection, community partnerships, and a robust e-commerce website, Greenlight combines the best traditions of the neighborhood bookstore with a forward-looking sensibility, and welcomes readers of every kind to the heart of Brooklyn. Learn more and shop online at greenlightbookstore.com.


    Titles Discussed in This Episode:

    THE TOWN OF BABYLON, by Alejandro Varela 

    THE PEOPLE WHO REPORT MORE STRESS, by Alejandro Varela

    FALTAS: LETTERS TO EVERYONE IN MY HOMETOWN WHO ISN’T MY RAPIST, by Cecilia Gentili

    Here’s the trailer for PAST LIVES.


    Follow Alejandro Varela:

    Instagram: @drovarela
    Twitter: @drovarela
    alejandrovarela.work

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices