American novelist
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Whether you're a library reader, a used bookstore connoisseur, or just buy books faster than you read ‘em, this episode is for you! We're chatting about the backlist books (AKA books released over 1 year ago) on our TBR. Olivia's List Saint X by Alexis Schaitkin (2020) Seawife by Amity Gaige (2020) Godshot by Chelsea Bieker (2020) The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai (2018) Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler (1993) Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver (1998) Migrations by Charlotte McConaghy (2020) Ghosts by Dolly Alderton (2020) Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid (2019) Becca's List Greenlights by Matthew McConaghey (2020) Early Morning Riser by Katherine Heiney (2021) Sorrow and Bliss by Meg Mason (2020) Bel Canto by Ann Patchett (2001) The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue (2020) Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro (2005) Happy All The Time by Laurie Colwin (1978) Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin (1956) American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld (2008) Summer of ‘69 by Elin Hilderbrand (2019) or Summer People (2003) Cleopatra and Frankenstein by Coco Mellors (2022) Listener Reccomendations The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai (2018) The Country Club Murders (Book 1 The Deep End by Julie Mulhern) The Cave Dwellers by Christina McDowell Wrong Place, Wrong Time by Gillian McCallister The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal Lady Tan's Circle of Women by Lisa See Geek Love by Katherine Dunn The Good Part by Sophie Cousens Oona Out of Order by Margarita Montimore The Nine Lives of Rose Napolitano by Donna Freitas Obsessions Becca - Maybe Happy Ending musical Olivia - Walks + Merlin bird ID app What we read this week Becca - Maggie; Or A Man and a Woman Walk Into A Bar by Katie Yee (7/24) Olivia - She Used To Be Nice by Alexia LaFata (8/12), The Colony by Annika Norlin This Month's Book Club Pick - Audition by Katie Kitamura (have thoughts about this book you want to share? Call in at 843-405-3157 or email us a voice memo at badonpaperpodcast@gmail.com) Sponsors Quince - Go to Quince.com/bop for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns Wayfair - Shop a huge selection of outdoor furniture online at wayfair.com Join our Facebook group for amazing book recs & more! Buy our Merch! Join our Geneva! Order Olivia's Book, Such a Bad Influence! Subscribe to Olivia's Newsletter! Order Becca's Book, The Christmas Orphans Club! Subscribe to Becca's Newsletter! Follow us on Instagram @badonpaperpodcast. Follow Olivia on Instagram @oliviamuenter and Becca @beccamfreeman.
We talk about My weight loss, Michelle coming back to Nigeria for me and me alone
Bestselling fiction writer Curtis Sittenfeld joins co-hosts Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan to talk about her new collection of stories, Show Don't Tell. Sittenfeld discusses the title story, which depicts graduate students in creative writing competing for funding, and its connections to her time at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, when that practice was common. She also considers how President Trump's attacks on DEI reveal some people's true natures, and what it means to write about “the hypocrisy of being a person.” Finally, she explains why she thinks of time as a plot twist, and reflects on returning to the protagonist of her debut novel, Prep, Lee Fiora, who reappears in the new collection's final story, which features her thirtieth high school reunion. Sittenfeld reads from Show Don't Tell. To hear the full episode, subscribe through iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app (include the forward slashes when searching). You can also listen by streaming from the player below. Check out video versions of our interviews on the Fiction/Non/Fiction Instagram account, the Fiction/Non/Fiction YouTube Channel, and our show website: https://www.fnfpodcast.net/. This podcast is produced by Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan. Selected Readings: Curtis Sittenfeld Show Don't Tell (2025) Romantic Comedy (2023) Rodham (2021) The Best American Short Stories 2020 (ed. with Heidi Pitlor) You Think It, I'll Say It (2019) Eligible (2016) Sisterland (2013) American Wife (2008) The Man of My Dreams (2006) Prep (2005) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Curtis Sittenfeld is the author of the story collection Show Don't Tell, available from Random House. Sittenfeld's New York Times bestselling books have been translated into thirty languages and twice selected as Reese's Book Club picks. They include the novels Prep, American Wife, Eligible, Rodham, and Romantic Comedy, and the story collection You Think It, I'll Say It. Sittenfeld's stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, and The Best American Short Stories, of which she was the 2020 guest editor. She lives with her family in Minneapolis. *** Otherppl with Brad Listi is a weekly podcast featuring in-depth interviews with today's leading writers. Available where podcasts are available: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, etc. Subscribe to Brad Listi's email newsletter. Support the show on Patreon Merch Bluesky Instagram TikTok Email the show: letters [at] otherppl [dot] com The podcast is a proud affiliate partner of Bookshop, working to support local, independent bookstores. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Most of us have heard of the “Pony Express", but probably don't know much about it! It's a fascinating story and one which our guest, Jim DeFelice, knows all about. Jim is the co-author of such bestsellers as "American Sniper", "American Wife" and "Code Name: Johnny Walker". He's also the author of "West Like Lightning: The brief, legendary ride of the Pony Express". His website is http://www.jimdefelice.com/ Thinking about starting your own business? Already have one? Shopify is the all-in-one commerce platform that makes it simple for anyone to start, run and grow your own successful business. With Shopify's single dashboard, you can manage orders, shipping and payments from anywhere. Businesses that sell more, sell on Shopify! Sign up for your one-dollar-per-month trial period at shopify.com/nobody
For more of my latest content, subscribe to my YouTube channel, 'Dark Asia with Megan.' Head over to www.youtube.com/@DarkAsiawithMegan and join our awesome community. Your support means everything, and I can't wait to share more Asian cases with you! - Megan On Other Platforms TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@darkasiawithmegan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/darkasiawithmegan/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkasiamegan/
The penultimate episode in our Great Political Fictions re-release is about Curtis Sittenfeld's American Wife (2008), which re-imagines the life of First Lady Laura Bush.One of the great novels about the intimacy of power and the accidents of politics, it sticks to the historical record while radically retelling it. What does the standard version leave out about the Bush presidency? How does an ordinary life become an extraordinary one? And where is the line between fact and fiction?Tomorrow: Lin-Manuel Miranda's HamiltonFind out more about Past Present Future on our new website www.ppfideas.com where you can also join PPF+ to get bonus episodes and ad-free listening. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
During election season, voters hope to glimpse the true selves of presidential candidates. And sometimes, revealing details hide in plain sight. On this week's On the Media, one reporter sifts through political memoirs for truths about politicians and the people they lead. Plus, in vivid detail, a novelist imagines the private lives of former presidents.[01:00] Host Brooke Gladstone speaks with Carlos Lozada, New York Times Opinion columnist and a co-host of the weekly “Matter of Opinion” podcast. Lozada explains how he mines political memoirs for deeper understanding of our political figures by examining what they include and what they omit.[16:43] Brooke speaks with Vinson Cunningham, author of the novel Great Expectations. Cunningham, who is now a theater critic at The New Yorker, worked on the 2008 Obama campaign and later in the White House. Great Expectations is inspired by that time in his life and the difficult-to-read candidate for the presidency.[35:05] Brooke interviews novelist Curtis Sittenfeld about her exploration of the minds of political figures through fiction, first in American Wife (inspired by Laura Bush) and next in Rodham, which considers what Hilary Clinton's life would have looked like if she had never married Bill. They discuss the questions that led Sittenfeld to write those novels and why fiction based on real people makes readers so uncomfortable — especially the sex scenes.This show originally aired on our May 3, 2024 program, How to Read a President, with Carlos Lozada, Vinson Cunningham, and Curtis Sittenfeld.Further reading:The Washington Book by Carlos LozadaGreat Expectations by Vinson CunninghamAmerican Wife and Rodham by Curtis SittenfeldCurtis Sittenfeld: ‘People misunderstood the sex scenes in Rodham' On the Media is supported by listeners like you. Support OTM by donating today (https://pledge.wnyc.org/support/otm). Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @onthemedia, and share your thoughts with us by emailing onthemedia@wnyc.org.
Today, Lilah's back and we're talking about Emily in Paris! The extraordinarily popular Netflix sitcom, which millions of people across the globe love to hate-watch, just dropped half of its fourth season. It's about an American 20-something who moves to Paris to live out our Francophile fantasies. And while it's been ridiculed since it first came out in 2020, we're all still watching! Why? And what do we want out of comfort television? Lilah is joined by Adrienne Klasa, the FT's Paris reporter on luxury and media, and Cordelia Jenkins, FT Weekend Magazine's deputy editor.-------We love hearing from you. Lilah is on Instagram @lilahrap. We're on X @lifeandartpod and on email at lifeandart@ft.com. We are grateful for reviews on Apple and Spotify. And please share this episode with your friends!Register now for the FT Weekend Festival, and claim £24 off your pass using promo code FTPodcast at: ft.com/festival-------Links (all FT links get you past the paywall): – Episodes one to five of Emily in Paris Season 4 are on Netflix now. The next half of the season will air on September 12– We love this article by Jo Ellison – ‘Emily in Paris is as cheesy as brie' – from 2020– Cordelia Jenkins is on X @CordeliaJ. Adrienne Klasa is @AdrienneKlasa– Lilah recommends American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld. For more on the value of reading old books, here's a recent column by Janan Ganesh-------Special FT subscription offers for Life and Art podcast listeners, from 50% off a digital subscription to a $1/£1/€1 trial, are here: http://ft.com/lifeandart-------Original music by Metaphor Music. Mixing and sound design by Jean-Marc Ek and Sam Giovinco. Clip courtesy of NetflixRead a transcript of this episode on FT.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Rising Above: A Conversation with Taya Kyle In this powerful episode, Marcus and Melanie visit with Taya Kyle, an author, political commentator, and military veteran's family activist. Taya is widely known as the widow of US Navy SEAL Chris Kyle, whose story was immortalized in the book and movie "American Sniper." Taya was unexpectedly thrust into the national spotlight when her husband, Chris Kyle, one of America's greatest heroes, was tragically murdered. Chris Kyle's legacy as a Navy SEAL and his extraordinary combat tours were shared with the world through his autobiography and its film adaptation. Despite the immense grief and pain, Taya has continued to honor Chris' life and service by dedicating herself to helping others navigate through their own tragedies. As a New York Times best-selling author, Taya's first book, "American Wife," offers a deeply personal look at her life with Chris. In 2019, she released her second book, "American Spirit," a collection of inspirational short stories about remarkable individuals she has encountered on her journey. Taya's commitment to uplifting others extends through her foundation, Taya and Chris Kyle Family - Service Marriage Strong, where she provides support and hope to those facing difficult times. Join us for an episode filled with hope, strength, and the enduring American spirit. In This Episode You Will Hear: • [McKnenna] I kind of always looked at everything as negative, and tried to find the negative in things. {21:06) • Go find people that who are so broken themselves. To come out of that is God's grace. It is 100% God's grace. (23:57) • Colton said, I've never seen an example of spiritual warfare, as much as I saw it with McKenna. (24:37) • [Melanie] We all make mistakes. We're not born parents (30:51) • The parents are losing their time with the kids, and they're expecting the schools to do it. I advise every single person to homeschool. Be done. (37:18) • [McKenna] If there is an adult role model who is teaching them and showing them how to act, it is very helpful. (45:52) • There are some [teachers] that enjoy teaching or children, but a lot of them just enjoy power and control. (52:40) • Taya and Chris Kyle Foundation. And Service Marriage Strong. In marriage, 80% of murder-suicide is relationship related, not because of the people in it doing things wrong, but they don't have the tools they need for a service marriage. (55:18) • We're coming in to coach them on their strengths and how to use their strengths in marriage. (56:13) • If knowing that you're not alone in your thoughts that you've kept it all to yourself. (57:17) • The happiness of your marriage impacts your children. (57:59) • [Marcus' advice to Taya] You don't have to be planning so much. Just show up. Do what you do, and God's got it covered. (67:53) • Do something that you feel called to do. (69:56) • You have a responsibility to add goodness to the world. (97:21)
The penultimate episode in our fictions series is about Curtis Sittenfeld's American Wife (2008), which re-imagines the life of First Lady Laura Bush. One of the great novels about the intimacy of power and the accidents of politics, it sticks to the historical record while radically retelling it. What does the standard version leave out about the Bush presidency? How does an ordinary life become an extraordinary one? And where is the line between fact and fiction?Sign up now to PPF+ to get all our bonus episodes along with ad-free listening: coming soon for PPF+ subscribers Robert Saunders on his favourite political novel plus a special episode on Evita: www.ppfideas.comNext time: Lin-Manuel Miranda's Hamilton Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Since the Broadway musical Hamilton hit the stage for the first time in 2015, the world has become obsessed and fascinated with the United State's first Treasury Secretary known for his death in a duel with his political enemy, Alexander Hamilton. But, who will tell Eliza's story? This week, Madigan tells you the story of the privileged young girl from the American colonies, her life as an American Wife, and how she managed the political upheavals and rumors in the post-Revolutionary War Period. Come back Monday to check out Part Two, where Madigan will discuss Alexander's alleged affair with Maria Reynolds, how Eliza coped with the death of her husband, and what she did in to 50 some years after his passing. JOIN ME ON PATREON! https://www.patreon.com/angryneighborhoodfeminist Do you have a topic that you want the show to take on? Email: neighborhoodfeminist@gmail.com Social media: Instagram: @angryneighborhoodfeminist **Don't forget to REVIEW and SUBSCRIBE on Apple Podcasts and Spotify!** Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Want to learn how to turn fear into faith, tragedy into triumph, suffering into strength? Taya Kyle was thrust into the national scene when her husband, Chris Kyle, became known as one of America's greatest heroes. His story was told in the book and movie, “American Sniper.” After Chris' death at a shooting range in Texas, Taya is continuing to honor his life as a bestselling author and speaker. Taya joins nine-time Emmy winner David Sams to talk about how she finds hope and healing through the grief, all while raising strong children. You can learn more about Taya and her foundation: “Taya and Chris Kyle Family – Service Marriage Strong” that helps military and first responder families at tackf.org. #tackf_ #TayaKyle #AmericanSniper #ServiceMarriageStrong #DavidSams #ChrisKyle #KeepTheFaith #ContagiousInfluencer #AmericanSpirit
We continue our "marriage plot" season with guest Curtis Sittenfeld (Prep, American Wife, Romantic Comedy) who talks us through one of her favorite Alice Munro stories, why she admires it, and how it's influenced her own work. Plus: Are trains romantic? Is some writing trying too hard to be sexy? And what's the ideal bathroom situation for a marriage? For more about Curtis, and her books, visit her website: https://curtissittenfeld.com/ If you like the podcast, and would like more of it in your life, consider joining our Patreon, where $5/month gets you lots of bonus content, and helps support the show more generally: https://www.patreon.com/BookFight Thanks for listening!
Beyond the Page: The Best of the Sun Valley Writers’ Conference
In bestselling author Curtis Sittenfeld's much-loved new novel, she explores—with her typically keen observations and trademark ability to bring complex women to life on the page—the neurosis-inducing and heart-fluttering wonder of love,while slyly dissecting the social rituals of romance and gender relations in the modern age. Sittenfeld sits down with SVWC Literary Director John Burnham Schwartz—a former professor of hers at the Iowa Writers' Workshop—to discuss what makes Romantic Comedy a romantic comedy, her approach to genre and craft in previous novels such as American Wife, Rodham, and Eligible, and other stories from her literary journey. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When politicians publish their autobiographies, often they reveal more than intended. On this week's On the Media, find out how one reporter sifts through political memoirs for truths about politicians and the people they lead. Plus, in vivid detail, a novelist imagines the private lives of former presidents.[01:00] Host Brooke Gladstone speaks with Carlos Lozada, New York Times Opinion columnist and a co-host of the weekly “Matter of Opinion” podcast. Lozada explains how he mines political memoirs for deeper understanding of our political figures by examining what they include and what they omit.[16:59] Brooke speaks with Vinson Cunningham, author of the new novel Great Expectations. Cunningham, who is now a theater critic at The New Yorker, worked on the 2008 Obama campaign and later in the White House. Great Expectations is inspired by that time in his life, and the difficult-to-read candidate for the presidency.[35:19] Brooke interviews novelist Curtis Sittenfeld about her exploration of the minds of political figures through fiction, first in American Wife (inspired by Laura Bush) and next in Rodham, which considers what Hilary Clinton's life would have looked like if she had never married Bill. They discuss the questions that led Sittenfeld to write those novels and why fiction based on real people makes readers so uncomfortable — especially the sex scenes.Further reading:The Washington Book by Carlos LozadaGreat Expectations by Vinson CunninghamAmerican Wife and Rodham by Curtis Sittenfeld On the Media is supported by listeners like you. Support OTM by donating today (https://pledge.wnyc.org/support/otm). Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @onthemedia, and share your thoughts with us by emailing onthemedia@wnyc.org.
Taya Kyle was unexpectedly thrust into the spotlight when she married Chris Kyle, one of America's greatest heroes. Chris' story was told in the book and movie, American Sniper. Just before the release of the film, Chris was tragically killed at a gun range by another veteran suffering from PTSD. Taya continues to rise above her grief and pain with a family she loves and a platform honoring Chris' life. In this episode, she shares her powerful story and how the Lord continues to use her to provide help and hope to those going through tragic times. Taya became a New York Times best-selling author with her first book American Wife, and in 2019 released her second book – American Spirit – a collection of short stories chronicling the lives of inspirational people she has met through her travels, all of whom show the American spirit is as strong as ever. Here newest book is a children's book, Prayers for Bears, a fun, yet insightful book that takes readers on a delightful journey, teaching them the importance of gratitude in all seasons of life.
"Homefront Stories" is a collection of fictional short stories written by Victoria Kelly inspired by her life as a military spouse. Her 2015 work, “When Men Go Off to War” is a collection of poems written while her husband was deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan and captures the hopes, anxieties and intimacies of the military spouse during times of war. “Prayers of an American Wife” is a collection of poems that highlights the displacement women experience when their husbands deploy and the battles fought by those left at home Victoria graduated Summa Cum Laude from Harvard University and initially planned to attend law school. However, she had always wanted to write and chose that path instead. She met her future husband while attending a conference at the Naval Academy. She says her Ivy League friends expressed some surprise that she became a military spouse, mostly based upon their own misconceptions about the military. During her husband's first deployment, Victoria had been working on a novel but became frustrated. She turned to poetry as a way of dealing with the emotions she experienced during that deployment. Victoria shares her poem “When Men Go off to War” which beautifully captures the lives of military families. Victoria did not have much exposure to the military growing up. We spend some time discussing her learning curve as a military spouse and some of issues that civilians may not understand. These include learning to read rank and why it is not a good idea to wear high heels on an aircraft carrier. Being the spouse of a Navy officer added extra pressures. She emphasizes that the all the pieces in “Homefront Stories” are completely fictional and none were inspired by actual events she experienced. You can find Victoria's works here. TAKEAWAY: “I loved being a military spouse..all except for the uncertainty about where we might be living.”
Happy Monday & Happy 1 Year Anniversary from that time Hallie and Suketu went to India! Remember a whole year ago when Hallie went out of the country for the first time? That's right, well this week get ready to take a walk down memory lane. Except you're going to hear the BEST parts of the 2023 India Trip. What was it like experiencing culture shock for the first time? How did Hallie deal with the language barrier? Best foods and best places to visit while in India? Lessons learned and what NOT to do? All of that and so much more is covered on this week's episode of Half Past Chai. So get cozy, settle in, grab your CHAI, and enjoy this recap of the best trip Hallie and Suketu have ever been on. Be sure to submit your stories at https://www.halfpastchai.com Follow us! https://linktr.ee/halfpastchai --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/halfpastchai/support
This week playwright Steve Fife sat in-studio in the Playwright's Spotlight. It was a reflective conversation of his experience in New York and on Broadway in the seventies, his dislike of eighties, and the joyous return in the nineties. We discuss rewriting and updating past works, getting back to theatre's roots, directing your own work (of course) and The Greats, the current acceptance of dark subject matter, and audience feedback at staged readings. We also touch on theatre in L.A., cast conflicts and obligations, Playwrights vs Directors interpretation, lessons from workshop participation vs running workshops as well as lessons as a literary manager which led into stories of David Ives and fame in the bubble of theatre and being a big fish in a small pond. Our conversation ends in writing natural dialogue. It's a fascinating conversation through a window of where theatre was and where it is now and Steve's connection with personas we've all come to know throughout our time in this wondrous arena. I'm sure you'll find something to connect with. Enjoy!Steve Fife is an author, poet, and playwright and former reporter and literary manager. His plays SAVAGE WORLD, BREAK OF DAY and THIS IS NOT WHAT I ORDERED have been published by Samuel French/Concord Theatricals. Other plays include In The Mood, Sizzle Sizzle, Blue Kiss, The Kitchen Girl, Fun With Freud, Scattered Blossoms, Vincent in the Asylum, Van Gogh's Zombie Movie, The Transformation Center, Bring Your Own and The Blessing. His adaptation of Sholem Asch's God of Vengeance was produced Off-Broadway and The American Wife had its World Premiere at the Park Theatre in London. He was 2019-20 writer-in-residence at the Ark Theatre in North Hollywood. He has also penned book & lyrics for four musicals. He is a graduate the National Theatre Institute, Sarah Lawrence College and received his MFA from Columbia University's School of the Arts. To view the video format of this episode, visit -https://youtu.be/RZmBvAMPM3ELinks mentioned in this episode -Interact Theatre Company -https://www.interactla.org/"Hurricane" Carter -https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubin_CarterMatrix Theatre -http://www.matrixtheatre.comNew Dramatists -https://newdramatists.orgConcord Theatricals -https://www.concordtheatricals.comWebsites and socials for Steve Fife -Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/steve.fife.94X - @twistedhipster8IG - @steve.fife.94Websites and socials for James Elden, PMP, and Playwright's Spotlight -Punk Monkey Productions - www.punkmonkeyproductions.comPLAY Noir -www.playnoir.comPLAY Noir Anthology –www.punkmonkeyproductions.com/contact.htmlJames Elden -Twitter - @jameseldensauerIG - @alakardrakeFB - fb.com/jameseldensauerPunk Monkey Productions and PLAY Noir - Twitter - @punkmonkeyprods - @playnoirla IG - @punkmonkeyprods - @playnoir_la FB - fb.com/playnoir - fb.com/punkmonkeyproductionsPlaywright's Spotlight -Twitter - @wrightlightpod IG - @playwrights_spotlightPlaywriting services through Los Angeles Collegiate Playwrights Festivalwww.losangelescollegiateplaywrightsfestival.com/services.htmlSupport the show
Victoria Kelly is the author of Homefront, Mrs. Houdini, and When the Men Go Off to War. Victoria graduated Summa Cum Laude from Harvard University. She received her M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and her M.Phil. in Creative Writing from Trinity College Dublin, where she was a U.S. Mitchell Scholar. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in Best American Poetry, The Autumn House Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry, Prairie Schooner, Southwest Review and dozens of other journals and anthologies. Her novel Mrs. Houdini was a People Magazine Best New Book, a USA Today New and Noteworthy Book, a Jeopardy Pick and a Publishers Weekly Starred Debut. Her new book HOMEFRONT is inspired by her experiences as the wife of a fighter pilot during three wartime deployments, this collection follows women whose lives have been impacted by war and military service as they struggle with their fragile ideas of home. In “Prayers of an American Wife,” a Navy wife grapples with loneliness when she discovers that her neighbor, also a Navy wife, is having an affair while their husbands are deployed on the same aircraft carrier. Tensions rise in “The Strangers of Dubai” as a soldier on leave tries to buy his wife a souvenir from an Afghan vendor. After attending eight funerals with fellow military wives whose husbands died in the Iraq war, the protagonist in “Finding the Good Light” divorces her Navy husband and tries to start a new life as a movie star. These, along with the eleven other stories in this collection, explore the emotional landscape of the resilient women who remain on the homefront. Kelly's stories offer readers an intimate, eye-opening look into the sacrifices and steadfastness of military family members. https://www.victoria-kelly.com/ Homefront - https://bit.ly/49im7cD Thank you to our sponsors: UPMC for Life: http://upmchealthplan.com/medicare Tobacco Free Adagio Health: https://tobaccofree.adagiohealth.org/ To find out more information about the Veterans Breakfast Club and view our upcoming schedule of online and in-person events, visit our website at: http://www.veteransbreakfastclub.org/ #podcast #zoom #scuttlebutt #thescuttlebutt #humor #storytelling #headlines #news #oralhistory #militaryhistory #roundtable #navy #army #airforce #marinecorps #marines #military #coastguard #veteran #veterans #veteransbreakfastclub #vbc #nonprofit #501c3 #veterans #veteran #vet #militaryhistory #usarmy #army #vietnam #usnavy #navy #pilot #airforce #veteranowned #coastguard #aviators #militaryveterans #Iraq #vietnamveterans #veteransstories #veteranshistory #veteranshistoryproject #veteranstravel #veteranstrips #veteranshistoricaltours #veteransoralhistory #militaryretirees #armyretirees #navyretirees #warstories #airforce #vietnamwar #veteraninterview
Award-winning author Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger talks about her first two books in The Diplomat's Wife series: "The American Wife" and "An American Wife in Paris". The third book, "The American Wife's Secret," has just been released. In this gripping World War 2 fiction, we follow the journey of Kitty Larsson, a U.S. senator's daughter whose life takes an unexpected turn when she marries an Austrian diplomat on the cusp of the Anschluss. As secrets unravel and loyalties are tested, Kitty's unwavering moral compass becomes her guiding light through a landscape of espionage and political intrigue. The Diplomat's Wife series on Amazon and Bookshop.org Find the recommended books, the author's social media links, and the video version of this episode at www.BestofWomensFiction.com Lainey's author website: www.LaineyCameron.com
In today's episode, I speak to the writer Avery Carpenter Forrey, who wrote the fun & enjoyable debut novel “Social Engagement”. It's a young woman's journey to getting married that is full of obstacles & revelations. At first glance, this may seem like standard chick-lit fare but I was pleasantly surprised to find that there was a darker undertone to this work that gave it an interesting shape. Aside from struggling with the aftermath of a past relationship as well as family trauma, the young woman at the heart of this novel deals with an eating disorder, and there's a whole angle of body symbolism that gives it an unusual flavour. It is Edith Wharton in the age of TikTok, with David Cronenberg as a cameo guest star. Its' tribe of privileged Upper East Siders are well-defined and certainly more palatable than the brats of Bret Easton Ellis, and it's no spoiler to reveal that the wedding at the heart of this novel is a total car crash – and who doesn't love a good car crash at a wedding – given that the novel opens at the end. In this episode, Avery & I talk about her work and how it came to be, and we meander down her literary path to uncover her literary influences in her journey to becoming a writer. Books mentioned in the episode: The book that changed her mind: Never Let Me Go, by Kazuo Ishiguro (2005) The genre that she is drawn to: Carmen Maria Machado, author of the short story collection “Her Body & Other Parties” (2017) and her memoir “In The Dream House” (2019) Favourite book I've never heard of: “Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance” by Alison Espach Favourite book of the last 12 months: “The Rachel Incident”, by Caroline O'Donoghue The book that she found over-rated: “Lessons in Chemistry” by Bonnie Garmus The book she's embarrassed not to have read: “Anna Karenina” by Leo Tolstoy The book she would take to a desert island: “You Think It, I'll Say It”, a short story collection by Curtis Sittenfeld . This is the book she was reading as she gave birth so it's got to be entertaining. She also recommends the book “Prep” and “American Wife”, a fictionalized portrait of Laura Bush, and “Rodham” an alternative history where Hilary Clinton never meets Bill Clinton. Instagram: @averycarpenterforrey Buy her book: https://amzn.eu/d/6lBZlkh Follow me @litwithcharles for more book reviews and recommendations!
Most of us have heard of the “Pony Express", but probably don't know much about it! It's a fascinating story and one which our guest, Jim DeFelice, knows all about. Jim is the co-author of such bestsellers as "American Sniper", "American Wife" and "Code Name: Johnny Walker". He's also the author of "West Like Lightning: The brief, legendary ride of the Pony Express". His website is http://www.jimdefelice.com/
On today's show we chat to Hilary Holmes, founder of makeup artist-backed cosmetics brand Holme Beauty. Hilary's love for makeup didn't start out like most. After experiencing a tough childhood, Hilary grew up with very low self-esteem/ low self-confidence and found herself in a space of poor mental health. She first fell in love with makeup in her final year of high school, using it as a tool to give her the confidence that she couldn't find within herself at the time. But despite falling in love with makeup, Hilary actually studied and worked in agricultural science. However, in 2008 the recession hit and she was made redundant from her job. Hilary's life then took a 360 turn when she found herself moving to London to live with her sister and it was then that she finally threw herself into a career in beauty. This marked the beginning of a career that has seen Hilary not only open two makeup artistry salons in Australia and run her now iconic makeup masterclasses, but also launch her very own beauty brand, Holme Beauty. Today Hilary is a mum of two who is not afraid to document the very UNglamorous parts of being both a mum and a business owner. She gets incredibly real on her blog at hilaryholmes.com - from the journeys of trying to get pregnant to complicated birth stories and finally, everything that happens once that baby does arrive. – Hilary recently read Romantic Comedy, The bestselling Reese Witherspoon Book Club Pick by the author of Rodham and American Wife, Curtis Sittenfeld. – Find Hilary on Instagram and Tiktok. Find Holme Beauty and Hilary's blog pieces on her website holmebeauty.com and on Instagram. – Wanting more? Find us on TikTok & Instagram as @cleverwomenco Ps. you can ask us a question or pitch to come on the show by heading to our website: clevermediaco.com – And please don't forget to support us! If you liked what you heard, subscribe to our show & leave us a rating and review - we will love you for it
It is Dakota's birthday week, and we continue the trend of picking a category and choosing our favourites from it. In 2020 there was 114: 30 Films in 30 Years, in 2021 it was 157: Best Films Through the Decades and in 2022 it was 199: Best Films by Genre. This year we are naming our 10 favourite films by language. We cover four specific languages, one country, two regions and three wildcards! We name both our picks and runners-up. See our picks below (Dakota's first, then Rachel's)! French: Incendies and Polytechnique Spanish: Pan's Labyrinth Italian: Bicycle Thieves and La Dolce Vita Cantonese or Mandarin: In the Mood for Love and Septet: The Story of Hong Kong Middle East Region: Capernaum and Subtraction Nordic Region: The Worst Person in the World and Speak No Evil African Wildcard: Timbuktu and Saloum Asian Wildcard: Pather Panchali and Old Boy European Wildcard: Nosferatu the Vampyre and M Check out our Letterboxd list to see our full list including our runner up's. Listen to episodes mentioned on the podcast 69: Make/Remake Terminal Station and Indiscretion of an American Wife, 214: A Trilogy of Nosferatu's. Watch Kogonada's video essay What Is Neorealism? to see his breakdown of the differences between Terminal Station and Indiscretion of and American Wife. Why Iran creates some of the world's best films. Read Rachel's interview with Adele Lim the director of Joy Ride on The Asian Cut. Follow Rachel on Twitter and Instagram, bookmark The Asian Cut and check out her website for more great reviews. Check out more great Contra Zoom content on That Shelf! Listen to Contra Zoom on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play, Overcast, RadioPublic, Breaker, Podcast Addict and more! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/contrazoompod/message
This week, bestselling author Curtis Sittenfeld joins us to talk about romantic comedies. Curtis is a long-time fan of rom-coms – her most recent novel is, in fact, called Romantic Comedy. She loves love. But she also knows that there's a difference between how love is portrayed in TV and movies, and what it's like in real life. Curtis speaks with Lilah about the state of romantic comedies today: how they've changed, and where they could go next.Don't forget! Send us your top summer tip: what's one thing that you'd recommend people do to have the perfect summer? Record a message here: http://sayhi.chat/15xxg You can also email us at ftweekendpodcast@ft.com, tweet us @ftweekendpod, or message Lilah on Instagram or Twitter @lilahrap. --------------Links: – Curtis' latest novel is called Romantic Comedy– The FT's review of Romantic Comedy: https://on.ft.com/3OGt4wC – Curtis' other novels include Rodham (an alternate history of the life of Hillary Clinton) Prep (set in an American boarding school), Eligible (a modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice), and American Wife (a romance based loosely on the life of Barbara Bush)– Follow Curtis on Twitter @csittenfeld Romantic comedies mentioned: – When Harry Met Sally – Say Anything– Notting Hill– Four Weddings and a Funeral– Dirty Dancing– Jerry Maguire– You've Got Mail– Ticket to Paradise (starring Julia Roberts and George Clooney)– Rye Lane– Fire Island– Russian Doll– Something's Gotta Give--------------Special offers for Weekend listeners, from 50% off a digital subscription to a $1/£1/€1 trial are here: http://ft.com/weekendpodcast.--------------Original music by Metaphor Music. Mixing and sound design by Breen Turner and Sam Giovinco. Clips courtesy of Columbia Pictures, Universal Pictures, and Vestron Pictures / Lionsgate Entertainment. Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Curtis Sittenfeld is the bestselling author of six novels: Prep, The Man of My Dreams, American Wife, Sisterland, Eligible, and Rodham. Her first story collection, You Think It, I'll Say It, was published in 2018 and picked for Reese Witherspoon's Book Club. Her books have been selected by The New York Times, Time, Entertainment Weekly, and People for their “Ten Best Books of the Year” lists, optioned for television and film, and translated into thirty languages. Her new novel is Romantic Comedy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Kate and Brodie are literally jocks. Jinxy went to the footy and BL watched it at the pub. They talk about taking Emma Straub to Melbourne Writers Festival opening night, watching lots of SVU, showing your family around Melbourne, avoiding the movie Infinity Pool if you have trypophobia, being a cool aunty the inspiration for the dreamboat love interest in Curtis Sittenfeld's Romantic Comedy, romance novels that are for virgins, sex scenes that would make us prefer to be rehymenised, the new documentary Jude Blume Forever and whether teens can relate to things that aren't texts.See AlsosDon't Think TwiceLive From New York oral history by James Andrew Miller and Tom ShalesWe Killed: The Rise of Women in American ComedyGilda LiveAre You There God it's Me Margaret (the movie!)Rodham, Eligible and American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld@judyblume on twitterJohn Mayer's 2021 album Sob RockJudy Blume on Fresh Air and WWHLALSO ALSOSWATCH ALSO: BARRY (on Binge). See Also: this profile on Bill Hader in the New YorkerWATCH ALSO: Agnes Varda on SBS Movies in Australia! They have 6 titles: Cleo From 5 to 7, Lions Love (...and Lies), Vagabond, La Pointe Courte, Jane B For Agnes V, One Sings, the Other Doesn't! WEAR ALSO: Skims Naked Scoop braREAD ALSO: HIBOOKS in PortlandFOLLOW ALSO: Lucky Dragon Supper ClubADMIN ALSO: Going to the doctor, getting the referralsFollow us on socials @seealsopodcast for links to Also AlsosThanks as always to Samuel Hodge and Harvey Sutherland for making us look and sound great. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
My guest today is the bestselling author of American Wife and Prep, Curtis Sittenfeld. I first came across Curtis when both our debut novels were named “ones to watch” by Time Magazine. They turned out to be right about one of us. It wasn't me!Since that first novel, Prep, hit the big time, Curtis has written six more novels and two short story collections. The most famous of which is the transatlantic bestseller American Wife, a fictionalised look at the life of Laura Bush, wife of George W Bush that ponders the question of whether she would have voted for him!Her latest novel, Romantic Comedy is a total departure and absolutely the tonic we need right now. It asks, pertinently, how come hot accomplished women persistently marry average blokes, but it doesn't seem to work the other way around. And what if… it did?!Curtis joined me from her home in a very snowy Minneapolis to talk about how men constantly punch above their weight, why rom-coms are having a comeback and how she found her funny. We also discussed writing out your emotions, why old is not a synonym for bad and how weird shit has happened to everyone by the time they reach their 40s.* You can buy all the books mentioned in this podcast at The Shift bookshop on Bookshop.org, including Romantic Comedy By Curtis Sittenfeld and the book that inspired this podcast, The Shift: how I lost and found myself after 40 - and you can too, by me.* And if you'd like to support the work that goes into making this podcast and get a weekly newsletter plus loads more content including transcripts of the podcast, please consider joining The Shift community. Find out more at https://steadyhq.com/en/theshift/And if you already subscribe - did you know you can buy a Gift Membership of The Shift for a friend at https://steadyhq.com/en/theshift/gift_plans• The Shift (on life after 40) with Sam Baker is created and hosted by Sam Baker and edited by Emily Sandford. If you enjoyed this podcast, please rate/review/follow as it really does help other people find us. And let me know what you think on twitter @sambaker or instagram @theothersambaker Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Curtis Sittenfeld has made a name for herself as one of America's most exciting writers and her novels Prep, American Wife and Rodham have been hailed as modern classics. Her latest novel, Romantic Comedy, follows a scriptwriter who has given up on romance with Sittenfeld's trademark warmth and intelligence. In this episode, she speaks to Esme Bright about the pitfalls and pleasures of romantic comedies, celebrity obsession in the US, why everyone wants to be the main character on TikTok, and what separates cheese from romance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A treat of an episode! Curtis Sittenfeld is the author who's given us Rodham, Prep, American Wife, and now this new beaut of a book, Romantic Comedy. Come for the book chat but stay for how you go about disguising comedy TV gold Saturday Night Live in a story, and meeting Jay-Z on his private jet. Hope you love this one as much we do! If you do enjoy these chats, we'll keep making them, and if you're in a position to be able to support Bestsellers, we'll never turn down a coffee, metaphorical or otherwise... https://ko-fi.com/bestsellerspodcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We are thrilled to chat with a longtime favorite, Curtis Sittenfeld, the New York Times bestselling author of six novels including Rodham, Eligible, Prep, American Wife, and Sisterland, as well as the collection You Think It, I'll Say It, which was a Reese Book Club pick. Her new novel, Romantic Comedy is her second Reese Book Club pick and it's out now. Listen to our spoiler-free episode while you wait for your copy to arrive!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nationwide strikes and protests erupted in Israel as outrage grew over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plan to overhaul the country's courts. Many saw the move as a threat to Israel's democracy. And on Monday, Netanyahu announced he would put the plan on pause.Read more:For months, Israelis have rallied against the country's right-wing government as it tries to force a drastic overhaul of the Supreme Court. But protests intensified when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fired his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, after Gallant criticized Netanyahu's judiciary reform.The country was at a standstill as Israeli universities, workers' unions, hospitals, malls and Israel's national air carrier, El Al, announced a general strike and the international airport terminated outgoing flights indefinitely.And it seems the protests had an effect. On Monday, after a long day of protests, Netanyahu announced a delay to the judicial reform proposal. The Washington Post's Steve Hendrix in Jerusalem walks us through what happened, what this means for Israel and what might come. Join Post Reports LIVE on April 13th! Martine Powers will host a live conversation in D.C. with best-selling author Curtis Sittenfeld at Sixth and I, in partnership with Politics & Prose. Sittenfeld is the author of books like “Eligible” and “American Wife.” Her latest novel is “Romantic Comedy,” about a late-night comedy writer's search for love. Listeners can purchase tickets here, and if you can't make it to D.C., you can always join via a livestream.
This week Caroline is joined by one of the greatest novelists of her generation to talk about Dirty Dancing, Sylvia Plath, and whether Adam Driver is hot. Curtis is the author of American Wife, Rodham and the forthcoming Romantic Comedy. Caroline is the author of several books and really wants you to pre-order The Rachel Incident. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As the U.S. continues to grow racially and ethnically diverse, that shift is reflected in how our names are changing. Still, culture wars persist. And that can mean Americans are forced to consider what makes us American, and what makes a name American. Read more:Two years ago this week, a 21-year-old gunman in Atlanta massacred eight people in three spas. Six of those victims were women of Asian descent. It prompted a wave of reporting about racist attacks and violence, and for Marian Chia-Ming Liu, it began a deeply introspective journey – one that prompted thousands of Washington Post readers to reach out with stories about their own experiences with their names.Marian talks with Elahe Izadi about what she discovered on her name journey, and what other people from across the country have shared with her along the way. Join Post Reports LIVE on April 13th! Martine Powers will host a live conversation in D.C. with best-selling author Curtis Sittenfeld at Sixth and I, in partnership with Politics & Prose. Sittenfeld is the author of books like “Eligible” and “American Wife.” Her latest novel is “Romantic Comedy,” about a late-night comedy writer's search for love. Listeners can purchase tickets here, and if you can't make it to D.C., you can always join via a livestream.
TOUR DE INDIA 2023. Little life update, Suketu and Hallie are in India this week and they have lots of tea to share with you guys. In this episode, Hallie talks about her first time in India with all the ups and downs, and twists and turns. Suketu discusses how India has last changed since he last came here 9 years ago. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/halfpastchai/support
Curtis Sittenfeld answers listener questions about American Wife, a novel which follows Alice Lindgren's path from school librarian to First Lady, and is based on the life of former First Lady Laura Bush. Our next recording is at Broadcasting House in London on 13th October 2022. Juan Gabriel Vasquez will talking about his novel, The Sound Of Things Falling. To take part and ask a question, email bookclub@bbc.co.uk
First responder and military couples often have bigger asks of them compared to civilian couples. These careers ask more out of couples and families. But sadly, it can be hard to find support and resources for the tens of thousands of service families that need them.In today's episode I am joined by Taya Kyle. Taya Kyle is the widow of Chris Kyle-American Sniper, Executive Director of The Taya and Chris Kyle Foundation | Service Family Strong, New York Times Best Selling Author of American Wife, and a huge advocate for first responder and military families. Our community was so blessed to have the TACK-F as the Grand Prize Sponsor of the 4th Annual Police Wife Conference back in April.READ THE FULL BLOG POST HERE.Learn more about The Taya and Chris Kyle Foundation and their programs here.Taya Kyle on InstagramTaya Kyle on Facebook
Bookclub travels to Edinburgh where Scotland's Makar Kathleen Jamie answers readers questions about her Selected Poems, and her writing life. Many poems here celebrate the natural world; Kathleen Jamie writes about animals and plants with a forensic and empathetic eye, often focussing on unloved and unsung creatures like daisies, spiders and frogs. In this collection there are also poems about the struggles of motherhood, and memories of her Scottish childhood - her friends, her family, her school days. This programme was recorded in front of an audience at Greenside Parish Church in Edinburgh . The next Bookclub recordings are with Curtis Sittenfeld (14/09/22) answering questions about American Wife in a virtual recording, and Juan Gabriel Vasquez (13/10/22) on The Sound of Things Falling , at an in-person event. Contact bookclub@bbc.co.uk to take part in either recording.
We're taking body diversity in books with Jennifer Weiner, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of nineteen books, including That Summer, Big Summer, Mrs. Everything, Good in Bed, and an essay collection, Hungry Heart: Adventures in Life, Love, and Writing. Jennifer talks about her journey to becoming a best-selling author, what motivated her to feature women with different body types in her books, and the process of getting a visibly plus-size woman on book covers. We also ask Jennifer about how she decides what to write about, her newest book The Summer Place, and writing a book set in the time of COVID. Jennifer also shares her favorite Philly bookstores and her favorite recent reads. You can find Jennifer at @jenniferweinerwrites on Instagram, @jenweinerwrites on Tik Tok, Jennifer Weiner on Facebook, jenniferweiner.com, and get a signed copy of her books at Head House Books in Philadelphia Books Jennifer loves right now: When We Were Bright and Beautiful by Jillian Medoff Wish You Were Here by Jodi Picoult You Made A Fool Of Death With Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld Obsessions Becca: Anthropologie bracelet stack: Colorful Chicklet Bracelet, Pearly Heart Bracelet, and Colorful Tennis Bracelet Olivia: The Ghost Ship That Didn't Carry Us by Cheryl Strayed, Dear Sugar Column Some bonus things we talked about this week include Olivia's Mango Cucumber salad by What's Gaby Cooking and a Smashed Pickle Salad recipe from NYT cooking we both want to make ASAP. What we read this week! Becca: Killers of A Certain Age by Deanna Raybourn (out Sept 6!) The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner Olivia: The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner, The Measure by Nikki Erlick This Month's Book Club Pick: You Made A Fool Of Death With Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi Sponsors: Better Help - get 10% off your first month at BetterHelp.com/badonpaper Join our Facebook group for amazing book recs & more! Like and subscribe to RomComPods. Available wherever you listen to podcasts. Follow us on Instagram @badonpaperpodcast. Follow Olivia on Instagram @oliviamuenter and Becca @beccamfreeman.
In the Winter 2022 Book Preview (Ep. 102), Catherine (Gilmore Guide to Books) and I shared our most anticipated books set to release January – March 2022 (with one early April release). Today, we're giving an update on the books we shared in the Winter Preview — now that we've had the chance to read them. This post contains affiliate links, through which I make a small commission when you make a purchase (at no cost to you!). Highlights Sarah's and Catherine's Winter 2022 reading stats and success rates. How their success rates compare to Fall 2021 and Winter 2021. Sarah talks about the key to her tremendous reading success lately. Their Best and Worst picks from the Winter 2022 Book Preview episode. Winter 2022 Books Read Before the Preview [2:54] Sarah's Picks: Beautiful Little Fools by Jillian Cantor (February 1) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [3:24] I Came All This Way to Meet You by Jami Attenberg (January 11) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [5:11] Catherine's Picks: Honor by Thrity Umrigar (January 4) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [4:34] No Land to Light On by Yara Zgheib (January 4) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [7:01] Winter 2022 Circle Back [8:08] January Sarah's Pick: Fiona and Jane by Jean Chen Ho (January 4) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [8:08] Catherine's Picks: To Paradise by Hanya Yanagihara (January 11) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [12:35] The Department of Rare Books and Special Collections by Eva Jurczyk (January 25) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [17:49] Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka (January 25) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [24:34] February Sarah's Picks: What the Fireflies Knew by Kai Harris (February 1) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [15:11] Our American Friend by Anna Pitoniak (February 15) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [20:03] Fake by Erica Katz (February 22) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [27:52] Catherine's Pick: Love and Saffron by Kim Fay (February 8) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [30:32] March Sarah's Pick: Don't Know Tough by Eli Cranor (March 8) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [34:57] Catherine's Picks: One Italian Summer by Rebecca Serle (March 1) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [39:13] Dilettante by Dana Brown (March 22) | Buy from Amazon | Bookshop.org [45:38] April Sarah's Pick: Memphis by Tara M. Stringfellow (April 5) | Amazon | Bookshop.org [41:58] Other Books Mentioned The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald [3:33] The Secrets We Kept by Lara Prescott [24:19] American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld [24:25] Girl in Snow by Danya Kukafka [24:49] The Boys' Club by Erica Katz [28:05] Friday Night Lights by H. G. Bissinger [37:32] The Bright Lands by John Fram [38:30] Never Simple by Liz Scheier [40:45] About Catherine Gilmore Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram Catherine started The Gilmore Guide to Books over 6 years ago after wrapping up a career as a corporate librarian. She loves books and reading (surprise!) and currently lives in Ann Arbor, MI.
Today Pip Adam is talking about books about real people. She's reviewing The Surgeon's Brain by Oscar Upperton, Action & Travels: How Poetry Works by Anna Jackson and American Wife (Penguin, 2012) and Rodham (Penguin, 2020) by Curtis Sittenfeld.
Author Carol Hrdlicka discusses her book Finding David: An American Wife Betrayed By Her Government.www.powhrdlicka.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For the third episode of The Literary Edit Podcast, I was joined by author and journalist, Sophia Money-Coutts. You can read about Sophia Money-Coutts original list of Desert Island Books here, and the ones we discuss in this episode are: A New Earth by Eckhart Tolle Notes from a Big Country by Bill Bryson Standard Deviation by Katherine Heiny Gone with the Windsors by Laurie Graham The Morning Gift by Eva Ibbotson The Consequences of Love by Gavanndra Hodge Wave by Sonali Deraniyagala Simple by Yotam Ottolenghi Other books we spoke about included The Chimp Paradox, The Power of Now. Rodham, Prep, American Wife and Notes on a Small Island. If you'd like to buy any of the books we discussed in the episode, please consider doing so from the list I created on Bookshop.org, an online bookstore with a mission to financially support local, independent bookstores. If you're based in Australia, please consider buying them from Gertrude & Alice. To contact me, email lucy@thelitedit.com Facebook The Literary Edit Instagram: @the_litedit Twitter: @thelitedit
Your BSV Podcast hosts are back and doing what they do best - talking about Billy Zane! Justin and Mark run down some of the Zanester's best performances as they discuss his new sorta-action movie, FINAL KILL, for this week's Blind Buy. Also, they try and catch you up on a month of backlogged new releases from the store shutdown, including the new Scream Factory releases of Y2K-era classics IDLE HANDS and BONES and a massive (and massively heavy) GUNSMOKE collection. This episode is so packed full of stuff it's bursting at the seams! Mark Hanson (Product Manager of Bay Street Video) and Justin Decloux (Co-Host of The Important Cinema Club) take you through this week's new releases on Blu-ray and DVD live from BAY STREET VIDEO. CULT Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (shout) the Curse of The Werewolf (1961) (shout) the Lost Continent (1968) (shout) Munster, Go Home! (shout) Shatter (1974) (shout) Idle Hands (shout) Bones (2001) (shout) Terror Train (scorpion) Angel Trilogy (vinegar Syndrome) Hollywood Horror House (vinegar Syndrome) Xtro 3 (vinegar Syndrome) Public Affairs (vinegar Syndrome) Police Squad: Complete Series (paramount) Eddie Macon's Run (mill Creek) Hard Hunted (mill Creek) Fit to Kill (mill Creek) the Contractor (2007) / the Fan (1996) (mill Creek) Trapped (2002) (mill Creek) the Nines (2007) (mill Creek) CLASSIC Their Finest Hour: 5 British Ww2 Classics (film Movement) Gunsmoke: Complete Series (paramount) Beau Geste (1939) (kino) the Flame of New Orleans (1941) (kino) the General Died at Dawn (1936) (kino) the Lives of A Bengal Lancer (1935) (kino) Murder, He Says (1945) (kino) the Song of Songs (1933) (kino) Bluebeard's 8 Th Wife (1938) (kino) Supernatural (1933) (kino) Indiscretion of An American Wife (kino) the Great Leap (aka Der Grobe Sprung) (1927) (kino) Slings and Arrows: Complete Collection (acorn) All the Pretty Horses (2000) (mill Creek) Heroes (1977) (mill Creek) Unlikely Angel (1996) (mill Creek) Howl's Moving Castle (steelbook) (shout) Ponyo (steelbook) (shout) Homeboy (1988) (shout) Criminal Minds: Complete Series (paramount) NEW Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (disney) + Original Star Wars on Uhd Little Women (2019) (sony) Bad Boys for Life (sony) Birds of Prey (warner) Standing Up, Falling Down (shout) Ip Man 4: The Finale (well Go) the Captain (2019) (well Go) the Gentlemen (2019) (vvs) the Informer (2019) (vvs) the Rhythm Section (paramount) the Night Clerk (2020) (paramount) Just Mercy (2019) (warner) Citizen K (2019) (greenwich) the Cold Blue (2018) (kino) Lancaster Skies (shout) the Woman Who Loves Giraffes (kino) Cats (universal) Dolittle (universal) Ride Like a Girl (2019) (mongrel) the Photograph (2020) (universal) the Assent (2019) (vvs) Gretel and Hansel (warner) the Turning (2020) (universal) Fantasy Island (2020) (sony) Camp Cold Brook (shout) Exorcism at 60,000 Feet (shout) Escape from Pretoria (2020) (universal) Guns Akimbo (mongrel) Mr. Robot: Season 4 (universal) the Righteous Gemstones: Season 1 (hbo/warner) Lazy Susan (2020) (shout) Like a Boss (2020) (paramount) the Traitor (2019) (sony) Mortal Kombat Legends: Scorpion's Revenge (dc/warner) the Jesus Rolls (screen Media) Bloodshot (sony) the Call of The Wild (2020) (disney/fox) Final Kill (2020) (cinedigm) ***blind Buy***
Comedy Central Presents: The Bach Boys Roast of The American Delusion!! *sniff sniff* Do you guys smell that, Bach Boys Nation? Is something burning? Oh yeah, just our nation's fragile ego!! You're not gonna wanna miss this one, gang, The Bach Boys most POLITICAL episode yet. This week, The Boys pull out all the stops and just. go. HAM! ...er, bologna* #GetWrecked www.bachboys.net
Rodin and the art of ancient Greece is a new exhibition at the British Museum which highlights the influence the Greek Parthenon sculptures had on the French artist on his first visit to the museum in 1881. The show's curators, Ian Jenkins and Celeste Farge, discuss the relationship between Auguste Rodin's works, including The Kiss and The Thinker, and Pheidias's Elgin Marbles. One of Britain's leading young composers Mark Simpson, himself a winner of the BBC Young Musician of the Year Award, has written a cello concerto for his friend, Leonard Elschenbroich. Mark and Leonard reveal the collaborative process involved in its composition and Leonard performs an extract live in the studio.Novelist Curtis Sittenfeld, famous for her novels American Wife and Eligible, talks to John Wilson about her first collection of short stories, You Think It, I'll Say It. The book, nominated for the Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award, includes a story told from the point of view of Hillary Clinton as she runs for the Democrat nomination for president. Other stories delve into parenthood, extra-marital affairs and reconciling our teenage selves with how we are in middle age.Momtaza Mehri, the London Youth Laureate, explains the huge popularity among young people of television dramas made in Korea, and the significance of the Korean Wave or Hallyu, as it is known.Presenter: John Wilson Producer: Julian May.
This week we're discussing a recently published story from The New Yorker by Curtis Sittenfeld, author of a number of books, including Prep and An American Wife. In "Show Don't Tell," Sittenfeld turns her attentions to a fictionalized version of the Iowa Writers Workshop, and the anxious first-year students who are awaiting decisions on their funding for the next year. Since both of your Book Fight hosts are Workshop grads, we take a little stroll down memory lane and compare our own experiences with those of the story's characters. Though we also attempt to consider the story on its own merits, and we wonder whether it's one that people outside the writing world would find compelling. Also: another installment of Millennial M0m3nt. What American industry are the young people killing this week?
Taya Kyle is an internationally known author, speaker, media commentator, and family advocate. Paul and Taya discuss her life as the widow of Navy Seal war hero Chris Kyle – known from the famous book and film American Sniper. Taya has given us her own heroic story in the encouraging book American Wife: A Memoir of Love, Service, Faith, and Renewal With Her passionate work as founder of the Chris Kyle Frog Foundation, as a national speaker and as a Fox News contributor, Taya bring to you a motivating message of service, Godly values, courage, healing and renewal. Engagement Question - What helps you hear from God? Visit GodZoneShow.com for show notes and to ask a question or leave a comment and answer the engagement question.