Reading too widely and talking too seriously.
Joel Cuthbertson and Bill Coberly
Bill and Joel read through Eugene McCarraher's anti-capitalist tome The Enchantments of Mammon, and only end up preaching a little bit!
Joel and Bill go through most of the books they read in 2024!
Bill and Joel take a bunch of LSD and go to the Ren Faire. Or they read the first cycle in Roger Zelazny's The Chronicles of Amber. Same difference, really.
Bill and Joel are joined once again by the great Phil Christman for a guest podcast, this one about Cahokia Jazz, the alternate-history noir written by the incomparable Francis Spufford!
Joel and Bill wade through Laurence Sterne's wild and digressive masterpiece, and do their best not to get distracted throughout.
Joel and Bill discuss the books they read in 2023 and some plans for 2024!
Bill and Joel read a small but dense text: two essays by 17th-century doctor, philosopher, writer, and weirdo Sir Thomas Browne!
Joel and Bill read Vernor Vinge's 1992 Hugo-award winning novel A Fire Upon the Deep. It's the best book about group-mind dog packs either of them have ever read.
Joel and Bill return from their hiatus with a discussion of Kate Atkinson's novel Life After Life, which basically Groundhog Day but over the space of an entire life and in the first half of the 20th century.
Bill and Joel go through some of the books they read in 2022!
Bill and Joel read The Annotated Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant, which covers his early life and his career in the Civil War, with extensive and excellent annotations by Elizabeth D. Samet, Bill only deploys a *few* Sherman memes.
Joel and Bill read Frans G. Bengtsson's "The Long Ships," an excellent romp throughout 10th and 11th-century Scandinavia, Britain, and Spain. Join us as we go a-Viking, friends!
Bill and Joel are joined by one of the best essayists in America, Phil Christman, to talk about Adam Roberts's barnstorming novel The This, which is about hive minds, social media, Coleridge and, most importantly, GWF Hegel.
Bill and Joel read Gene Wolfe's The Wizard Knight, a sublime tale of a young man in an adult's body who has a series of adventures throughout a seven-tiered world of knights, dragons, and wizards.
Is it a novel? Is it an anthropology textbook? Is it, possibly, both? Joel and Bill read Ursula K. Le Guin's 1985 text Always Coming Home, about a possible future people living in what is now the Napa Valley. Also here's the bandcamp: https://ursulakleguintoddbarton.bandcamp.com/album/music-and-poetry-of-the-kesh
Bill and Joel read a lot of books in 2021! Bill, specifically, read 104 of them, a fact he's certainly not going to be repeating ad nauseum throughout this podcast!
Joel and Bill read Sigrid Undset's Kristin Lavransdatter, a three-volume novel about life in 14th century Norway. It's a profound tale of love, lust, stabbings, and, at one point, licking a child's eyes.
Bill and Joel read Studs Terkel's oral history "Working: People Talk About What They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They Do" which is about just that. Also a few tangents about other things.
Joel, Bill, and special guest star Martyn Wendell Jones dig through Adam Roberts's The Thing Itself: a nearly indescribable novel about Immanuel Kant, AI, time travel, James Joyce, literary experimentation, and many more things.
Bill, Joel, and Special Guest Christy go through Connie Willis's masterful and award-winning novel Doomsday Book!
Joel and Bill read Americanah, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie!
Joel and Bill read a bunch of books in 2020! They talk about what it's like to be reading in a pandemic, and how the many events of 2020 shaped their reading this year. Also, how good is Susanna Clarke's Piranesi, you guys? So good.
Bill and Joel read Jonathan Franzen's Freedom, and lay to rest forever the question of whether or not Franzen is a good novelist! What's their answer? Well, you'll just have to listen to find out!
Joel and Bill dig through Charles Taylor's monumental tome "A Secular Age," an exhaustive survey of the differences between our age's relationship with religion in the 2000s and that of societies in the 1500s. It's a dynamite book, but it's about, well, *everything.*
Joel and Bill read Michael Chabon's Pulitzer-prize winning novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay! But first, given that it would have felt disingenuous not to, we talk a little bit about our Current Political Situation and both our hopes and fears about our growing reckoning with our system of policing, so the first 15 minutes or so of the podcast are about Politics, not the Book.
Bill and Joel read Phil Christman's new book Midwest Futures, which is about the history, self-conception, and future of the American Midwest, all in about 130 pages!
Bill and Joel start of Season Three with a book about nineteenth-century English magicians! Both of them loved this book to death!
Bill and Joel read a bunch of books in 2019, and here they are talking about some of their favorites, ranging wildly from short books on capitalism to meandering sci-fi tomes! Also: the next Big Read is revealed!
Joel and Bill finish their ad hoc "Russian Trilogy" with Leo Tolstoy's vast book War and Peace, sort of the ur-Big Read. Come hang out and listen to us try to make sense of this phenomenal book that is about, you know, all of human existence!
Joel, Bill, and special guest Jarrod read the 1991 uncut edition of Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land! It's a messy book about politics, theology, sex, and language, and we try to talk about at least most of those things!
Bill and Joel read Whittaker Chambers's book Witness, about his life as a Soviet spy, his eventual flight from the Communist Party, and his part in the Alger Hiss trials.
Bill and Joel read Tom Stoppard's The Coast of Utopia, which is a trilogy of plays about mid-19th century Russian thinkers! The Broadway production still holds the record for the most Tony awards won by a play. Spoiler alert: one of us didn't like this one very much! Bill and Joel also read a big chunk of Isaiah Berlin's Russian Thinkers, which is the book that helped inspire the Stoppard.
Bill and Joel read the third and final book in N.K. Jemisin's Hugo-winning Broken Earth trilogy! Also some discussion of endings in general, and how we felt about the meta-discourse surrounding Game of Thrones! There are no Game of Thrones spoilers, but we definitely spoil the heck out of The Stone Sky!
Bill and Joel read the second book in N.K. Jemisin's Hugo-winning Broken Earth trilogy! How do you talk about the second book in a trilogy? Do we like this one as much as we liked The Fifth Season? But first, a brief discussion of some Important Francis Spufford news. As always, we spoil the heck out of this book!
Bill and Joel start their read of N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth Trilogy! First, a discussion of genre fiction vs. literary fiction, the Eternal Conflict. Note: as always, we spoil the heck out of this book here, so don't get mad at us once we reveal all the twists and turns!
Joel and Bill start the new year with a GK Chesterton Double Feature! Tune in for our read of The Man Who Was Thursday and The Napoleon of Notting Hill!
Bill and Joel talk about a bunch of the books they read this year -- stay for some wide-ranging conversations about specific books and about literature as a medium! In no particular order: Francis Spufford! Jeff VanderMeer! Annie Dillard! Muriel Spark! John le Carre! Ted Chiang! PG Wodehouse! Fritz Leiber! Michael Moorcock! Ron Chernow! Douglas Adams! Denis Johnson! Adam Hochschild! Philip Roth! Shirley Jackson! Mr. Rogers! And, of course, more Rebecca West, because Black Lamb and Grey Falcon has taken over our lives!
Bill and Joel read Rebecca West's masterful tome Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia, published in 1941. It's a life-changing bully of a book!
Bill and Joel read Shirley Jackson's knockout 1959 novel The Haunting of Hill House! A little discussion of the Netflix TV show of the same name, which includes spoilers, so if you're worried about having the TV show spoiled for you, you should skip 63:20 through about 74:24!
Bill and Joel read the uncut edition of The Stand, and it's a 1200-page doozy!
Bill and Joel read Kazuo Ishiguro's novel The Unconsoled, and it's a trip! Also: are we living in a computer simulation? Are Hellboy 2 and Pacific Rim good movies? Why do we tolerate misbehavior from people we think are geniuses? Also, the character's name is Sophie, not Sophia, but we're not gonna go back and edit all of that.
Bill and Joel read a small book in between their big books - Peter Moskos' "In Defense of Flogging," which is exactly what it says on the tin! Also features a small discussion about a key scene in Black Panther, because why bother having a podcast if you don't talk about Marvel movies on that podcast? The SMBC Comic that inspired this episode: https://smbc-comics.com/comic/justice The Mother Jones article about private prisons: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/06/cca-private-prisons-corrections-corporation-inmates-investigation-bauer/3/
We somehow didn't say the word scurvy once in this episode and it's driving us crazy.