Episoder

  • Welcome to Season Two of the Lit Matters Podcast. We kick off this new adventure with a beautifully crafted novel about the mythology of family, of the power of story telling, of overcoming oppression through perseverance—Victor Villasenor’s Rain of Gold. Chris is joined by Dr. Angelica Loera Suarez, the President of Orange Coast College, to discuss this remarkably rich, incredibly lyrical novel and their own journeys of family through the lens of story.

  • Season 2 of Lit Matters begins September 26th! Catch every episode by subscribing via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Podbean, or your favorite podcatcher.

  • Mangler du episoder?

    Klikk her for å oppdatere manuelt.

  • Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: “Explore, and explore, and explore. Be neither chided nor flattered out of your position of perpetual inquiry.” If you’ve spent your life always asking that all important question—“Why”—then, this is the episode for you. Lucky Episode number 13 sees Chris joined by the multi-talented Phil Simpkin to discuss Ralph Ellison’s American classic, Invisible Man. Phil is the lead singer/lead guitarist for the highly successful Reggae band The Simpkin Project, as well as a Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Orange Coast College.

    Books discussed during this episode:

    Ralph Ellison’s Invisible ManThe Republic by Plato’sHerman Melville’s Moby DickCervantes’ Don QuixoteNotes From the Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky

    Check out Phil’s amazing music at The Simpkin Project and his other musical suggestions on Spotify, Amazon Music, or other places where you download tunes:

    The Simpkin ProjectThe AbyssianiansThe GladiatorsBurning Spear
  • One of my favorite lines in Kate DiCamillo’s Newbery Winning children’s story, The Tale of Despereaux, is “Stories are light. Light is precious in a world so dark. Begin at the beginning. Tell a story. Make some light.” Today, Pat Burns, the Executive Director and Co-founder of the Orange County Children’s Book Festival, one the largest in North America, joins the Lit Matters podcast to shine a bright light on the importance of reading, story-telling, and the power of the written word for children. Pat discusses not only her own journey to becoming a reader, but also the impressive guests who have graced the festival’s main stage: Kobe Bryant, Jamie Lee Curtis, Buzz Aldrin, Kristen Bell and so many more.

    Many of the highlights of last year’s Virtual Festival can be viewed at https://www.kidsbookfestival.com/ along with the interview I did with the Library of Congress’ Ambassador for Young Peoples’ Literature, Jason Reynolds, the two time Newbery medalist and best-selling author, Kwame Alexander, and U.S. Congresswoman Katie Porter. The link for this interview is found on the Festival Webpage or at https://youtu.be/CejQEtO2zG8

    A list of some of the books discussed this episode:

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s What Color is My World: The Lost History of African American InventorsBuzz Aldrin’s Reaching for the MoonKwame Alexander’s The Crossover, Swing, and The UndefeatedKristen Bell’s The World Needs More Purple PeopleKobe Bryant’s The Wizenard Series: Season One and Legacy and the QueenJamie Lee Curtis’ Big Words For Little People and Today I Feel SillyJason Reynold’s Long Way Down, Miles Morales Spiderman, and Look Both WaysMaurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are
  • Are you looking for direction in this madcap world?

    Are you trying to figure out “Who are you?”

    To search for answers to some of these questions, we are joined by Derrick Fernando, a High School and College English teacher and the host of the American L_it! Podcast. For Episode 10 of the Lit Matters Podcast, we dive headfirst, whole-heartedly—into the rabbit-hole that is Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. I’m mad. Derrick is mad. We are all a little mad
or we wouldn’t be listening to this podcast. So, join us in Wonderland.

    Derrick’s show, American L_it! can be found at: https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/zhywa-14040b/American-L_it%21-Podcast

    Additionally, The British Library has a wonderful retrospective of Alice, the influences that helped shape the text, and the impact Carroll’s masterpiece has on our world. Visit the collection online:

    https://www.bl.uk/alice-in-wonderland#

  • “To feel/Greatly, and understand greatly, and express greatly, the natural/Beauty, is the sole business of Poetry”—Robinson Jeffers’ “The Beauty of Things”

    For Episode 9 of the Lit Matters Podcast, Chris is joined by California State University of Long Beach Professor, George Hart to discuss one of California’s most important
and forgotten poets, Robinson Jeffers. Stone-mason, naturalists, scandalous recluse, and foreboding prophet of “Inhumanism,” Jeffers composed so many beautiful poems while overlooking the majestic power of the Pacific Ocean and building a three story tower of granite by hand.

    Suggested Works by and About Robinson Jeffers:

    The Wild God of the World: An Anthology of Robinson Jeffers, edited by Albert GelpiJeffers’ 1948 New York Timesarticle, “Poetry, Gongorism, and a Thousand Years” at https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1948/01/18/96585266.html?pageNumber=170Robinson Jeffers’ Cawdor and Medea: A Long Poem after MedeaRobinson Jeffers: Selected PoemsProfessor George Hart’s Inventing the Language to Tell It: Robinson Jeffers and the Biology of Consciousness

    Information on visiting Robinson Jeffers’ Carmel, California home, Tor House can be found at https://www.torhouse.org/

  • In Episode 8 of the Lit Matters Podcast, Chris plans for his next career after talking to professional writer/bookstore operator Amber Reed about Homer’s classic epic poem, The Iliad. Chris and Amber put on their team Troy jerseys and discuss which of the Greek warriors is the absolute WORST and Patroclus’ thighs! This is such a fun conversation about a three thousand year old classic that is perhaps even more relevant today than when it was written.

    Other works discussed on this show:

    The Iliad, translation by Robert FagelsThe Orestia Trilogy, translated by Robert FagelsVirgil’s The AeneidColleen McCullough’s The First Man in RomeUrsula K. Le Guin’s LaviniaMadeline Miller’s Song of Achilles and Circe

    The Almeida Theatre full reading of The Iliad at https://almeida.co.uk/iliad-digital

  • “Oyez, Oyez, Oyez.” Step right up and listen to Episode 7 of the Lit Matters Podcast, as Chris interviews (live and in-person) Dr. Jeremy Shermak, a Professor of Journalism and Media Studies and Orange Coast College. Chris and Jeremy discuss Thomas Friedman’s Thank You for Being Late: An Optimist’s Guild to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations as well as the state of journalism in 2021, climate change, proper news literacy, and even baseball. If you’ve felt overwhelmed by the tsunami of “alternative facts” and information bombarding you daily
.this is a must listen episode.

    Also, check out some of these fascinating books and writers discussed in this episode:

    Thomas Friedman’s The World Is FlatErnest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell TollsThe Complete Short Stories of Mark TwainThe Legendary Harry Caray: Baseball’s Greatest Salesman by Don ZmindaThe Dodgers: From Coast to Coast by Vin Scully and Tommy LasordaGeorge Will’s A Nice Little Place on the North Side: A History of Triumph, Mostly Defeat, and Incurable Hope at Wrigley FieldTom Brokaw’s A Lucky Life Interrupted: A Memoir of Hope
  • Episode Six of Lit Matters dives into the “undiscovered country” that is Hamlet as Chris chats with Ken Parker, a Professor of English at Orange Coast College, and “a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy.” Chris and Ken continue a conversation about Shakespeare’s masterpiece that has been ongoing for decades, along with a discussion of music, inspiring teachers, and tiny trains. This episode is a “knavish piece of work,” and so much fun.

    If you are looking for other incredible stories influenced by or adapted from Hamlet, check out:

    Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 National Book Award Winning novel, Hamnet

    Tom Stoppard’s hilarious Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

    David Wroblewski’s Edgar Sawtelle

    The Dead Father’s Club by Matt Haig

    John Updike’s Gertrude and Claudius

  • For Episode # 5 of the Lit Matters Podcast, Chris is joined by Dr. Flavia Ruzi, a Professor of English at Orange Coast College, to discuss Octavia E. Butler’s prophetic vision of the near future, The Parable of the Sower. If the goal of Lit Matters is to build up a collective bookshelf of books that can help change the world, then this novel and this discussion is one you need to hear. Remember:

    All that you touch You Change.

    All that you Change Changes you.

    The only lasting truth Is Change.

    For listeners in the Southern California area, here is a fascinating “personal geography” of Pasadena sites connected to Octavia E. Butler: https://lithub.com/finding-octavia-butlers-pasadena/

    You might also want to join the Octavia E. Butler Literary Society at https://oebsociety.wordpress.com/

  • What does a first century Roman Emperor have in common with a USC professor of Education?

    We find out this week on Lit Matters, as Chris is joined by Laurie and Matt Jones, married high school English teachers, parents of teenagers, and hosts of the Teacher Saves World! podcast. Their mission is to “save the world one teenager at a time” while helping us all “try to live our best life.” Laurie and Matt will be discussing Leo Buscaglia’s Love and Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations.

    Please check out Matt’s own book, Helping Teens Succeed in High School and Life, along with Laurie’s recommended reading list for all high school students:

    Hamlet by William ShakespeareThe Bluest Eye by Toni MorrisonThe Catcher in the Rye by J.D. SalingerThe Stranger by Albert CamusFrankenstein by Mary Shelley
  • This week, Lit Matters moves from the seas to the cosmos, discussing Samuel R. Delany’s 1984 Sci-Fi masterpiece, Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand, with Professor Paco Brito Nύnez, a Professor of American Literature and English at Orange Coast College.

    If you want to blast off into other thrilling worlds of Science Fiction, pick up Ursula Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness, Nnedi Okorafor’s Lagoon, Carl Sagan’s Contact, Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Ted Chiang’s Stories of Your Life and Others, Isaac Asimov’s I, Robot, Louise Erdrich’s Future Home of the Living God, Marge Piercy’s Woman on the Edge of Time, or Ray Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles.

    Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand by Samuel R. Delaney is available on Amazon and Audible.

  • This week, Lit Matters sets out on its maiden voyage, discussing Herman Melville’s classic Moby Dick with Dr. Dean Franco, Professor of English and Director of the Humanities Institute at Wake Forest University. He is the author of three books including The Border and the Line: Race, Literature and Los Angeles and Race, Rights, and Recognition: Jewish American Literature Since 1969.

    Herman Melville’s Moby Dick is available in paperback Amazon, as is the hard cover University of California Press Edition mentioned by Dr. Franco.

    If you want to plunge into other nautical or ocean related books, consider Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Rachel Carson’s The Sea Around Us, Nathaniel Philbrick’s In the Heart of the Sea, Sebastian Junger’s The Perfect Storm, or Ruta Sepetys’ Salt to the Sea.

  • Great books have the power to impact us in profound ways. In Lit Matters, English professor Chris Evans explores the stories that matter through the eyes of people from all walks of life: writers, readers, musicians, teachers, librarians, doctors, and friends. Chris and his guests share books that they believe everyone should be reading - books that inspire and move us to be who we are and more importantly, who we want to be.