This podcast looks at a different book each episode through the lens of just three questions: Why is this book good? Why is this book bad? Why should I care about this book?
Today is the second part of our series on Les Misérables. I discuss the symbolism of Cosette and Hugo's suspending of the reader's disbelief, among other things.www.reddit.com/r/BriefBookReview
Today's book is The Nonexistent Knight by Italo Calvino. It's a great novella that plays with some interesting ideas, and I noticed some parallels between it and the schools of Marxism and Existentialism. reddit: www.reddit.com/r/BriefBookReview
Today's book is the longest yet on the Brief Book Review - Les Misérables. As such, I've chosen to divide this episode into five parts. This episode follows Part I: Fantine. www.reddit.com/r/BriefBookReview
Today's book is Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre. It's Sartre's first existentialist work and pioneers the basic tenets of the philosophy, but is one of the most polarizing works in literature.Reddit: r/BriefBookReview
This week's book is MAUS by Art Spiegelman. It's a bit of a break from tradition to include a comic in a book review podcast, but this book is one of the most moving I've read in any medium. Recommended reading in tandem with it is Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud.Reach out on:reddit: r/BriefBookReviewtwitter: @BriefBookPod
Today's book is Dream Story by Arthur Schnitzler. It's a great book and criminally unknown. The book is my pick as representative of the fin de siècle movement in Vienna, a precursor to modernism that is as fascinating as it is insular.Reach out to me ontwitter: @briefbookpodreddit: r/BriefBookReview
This week's book is Civilwarland in Bad Decline by George Saunders. It is one of the most darkly funny books you'll ever read, and puts into words a sort of vague alienation that we all feel but don't want to examine. Feel free to share your opinion on this book and many others at:@briefbookpod on twitterwww.reddit.com/r/BriefBookReview
This week, I reviewed Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein, a book whose role in science fiction I respect but about whose ideas I have mixed feelings. Feel free to disagree and make fun of me at:@briefbookpod (Twitter)www.reddit.com/r/BriefBookReview (reddit)
Today's book on Brief Book Review is The Unconsoled by Kazuo Ishiguro, Nobel laureate and one of my personal favorite authors. This book is very polarizing, though, and its mimicry of dream logic makes it a complicated and often unrewarding book./r/BriefBookReview@briefbookpod
For today's episode of the Brief Book Review, I share my thoughts on Midnight's Children, one of Salman Rushdie's best works. Please, let me know your thoughts on the book and on the podcast in general. Reach out on reddit or twitter.@BriefBookPod/r/BriefBookReview
For the inaugural episode of the Brief Book Review, I wanted to share my thoughts on The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde. Please, let me know what books you would like to see discussed and any ways I can improve the show on reddit or twitter./r/BriefBookReview@briefbookpod