Episodes
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This week we're talking about Xochitl Gonzalez's popular 2022 debut novel Olga Dies Dreaming. It has a lot of interesting ideas and some really good writing, but ultimately these little pieces didn't add up for either of us.
Spoilers from 23 mins
Trigger warning: non-graphic mention of SA
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This week we're talking about the latest David Sedaris collection, which has good and bad moments. We discuss how he's grown bitter and boomerish, and our favorite stories from his career.
No spoilers!
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Missing episodes?
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Second-time guest Sonya joins us to talk about Nothing Tastes As Good, in which an experimental weight loss drug drives a man to cannibalism. It's a wild ride, not always in a good way.
Spoilers from 36 mins
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This week, we discuss the smash hit Yesteryear--what makes it so compelling to so many people but also its significant weaknesses.
Spoilers from 31 mins
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This week we discuss the buzzy new mystery, The Ending Writes Itself. We talk about its strong start, weak ending, and why the story of how it was written might be more interesting than the novel itself.
Spoilers from 20 mins
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First-time guest Bryn joins us to discuss O Sinners!, by Nicole Cuffy, a book about a cult that we all agreed has a bunch of interesting threads, but never quite weaves them together.
Spoilers from 45 mins
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This week we discuss the latest Weird Woman novel we've read: A Good Person, by Kirsten King. If you liked Victorian Psycho, Sky Daddy, All Fours, Yellowface, etc, check this one out.
For more on Nico's beef with Dwight Garner, check out our episode on Vigil, by George Saunders.
Warning, this episode does include non-specific mentions of sexual assault.
Spoilers from 26 mins
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This week we're talking about Cebo Campbell's speculative dystopian/utopian novel, Sky Full of Elephants.
A mysterious event suddenly causes all of America's white people to drown themselves. Without them, Black Americans create a utopian society.
The story follows Charlie as he tracks down his half-white daughter and gets to the bottom of what caused the event in the first place.
Spoilers from 23 mins
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This is a truly weird and disgusting book. Don't listen to this ep with kids or if you are sensitive to graphic descriptions of sex and violence.
No spoiler tag this ep--there's not too much to spoil.
It's also a zoom ep, so excuse the sound in places.
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We discuss the popular 2025 cozy romance, First Time Caller, by BK Borison, including the pitfalls of formulaic books.
Spoilers from 34 mins
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This week, we've got special guest Kate back to help us talk about the 2025 Booker Prize winner, Flesh. We'll talk about unemotional male main characters, the Booker Prize and its questionable history, and a sordid scandal about the novel itself.
Spoilers from 24 mins
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We're returning to another favorite read on the occasion of its screen adaptation. This time the hilarious and very charming Margo's Got Money Troubles, by Rufi Thorpe.
This was one of Nico's top reads of 2024. Dacey is less enthusiastic but comes around after listening to the audiobook.
Spoilers from 20 mins in
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Caleb joins Nico to talk about The Strength of the Few, the second book in James Islington's Hierarchy series. Some serious nerd shit.
No Dacey this week :(
Spoilers from 14 mins
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This week we discuss The Sisters Brothers, by Patrick deWitt, a 2011 darkly comic western, and one of the first book we read together when it first came out. It's also one of Nico's favorite books...
Spoilers from 12 mins
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Bailey joins us to discuss My Husband, by Maud Ventura, including why she hated it while she was reading it, but loved it afterwards. This book was the most popular novel in France when it was published in 2021, and has since become a global sensation.
Spoilers from 32 mins
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We revisit this modern classic on the day that the movie version comes out.
Spoilers for the book pretty much from the jump--if you haven't read this, go read it! (Preferably the audio version.) We both loved it.
After spoilers, we talk about what this book does well, what the author does poorly, and we theorize a bit about how they're going to adapt this into a movie.
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This week, on the verge of St. Paddy's Day, we're reading an Irish book--Duffy and Son follows a 69-year-old Monaghan man who decides to help his 39-year-old son find love. It's heartwarming and extremely Irish, especially the audiobook.
Spoilers from 28 mins
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Our friend Alayne joins us this week to talk about Half His Age, the debut novel by Jennette McCurdy, the Nickolodeon child star and author of the popular memoir I'm Glad My Mom Died.
We all loved her memoir, so we had high hopes coming into this one. Can she deliver?
Trigger warning for mentions of sexual assault
Spoilers from 25 mins
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We discuss the latest book by one of the most famous literary authors in America, George Saunders. This latest, Vigil, discusses political and philosophical issues that are extremely relevant right now.... and it comes up with some pretty disappointing conclusions.
Spoilers from 10 mins
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This week, in honor of Black History Month and Valentine's Day, we're talking about cultural critic and influential academic bell hooks, and one of her more famous books, All About Love.
We discuss what we liked in these essays and what we didn't, what we knew about bell hooks going in, and what we think of her now, and much more.
No spoilers this week
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