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Join us as we talk with our very own Diane Cook. Listen in as Diane shares how God is using her today!!
“Well, you're not hardcore unless you live hardcore,” sang Jack Black in “School of Rock.” In this episode, taking a cue from our pal Jack, we tackle core-ness: What does it mean to be core? Why do we care if we're perceived as hardcore or not? Does it signify anything? In Book Club, Stephen Casimiro takes us on a trip through Diane Cook's The New Wilderness. It's a semi-post-apocalyptic tale of a group of people chosen to live in the last stretch of wilderness in the country, as urban civilization decays. Post-apocalyptic mindbenders are catnip for Stephen, and maybe this one will be for you too. In a trip to the Gear Shed, Justin Housman talks up Patagonia's new line of neoprene-free wetsuits. Even if you don't surf, it's a fascinating look at how Patagonia is trying to clean up the toxic wetsuit industry, a business that is surprisingly dirty. Plus, it's just a great wetsuit. All that and more general outdoor talk goodness. Chapters: 0:00 School of Rock 3:01 Does Hardcore Matter? 25:58 Book Club: The New Wilderness 42:51 Patagonia's Neoprene-Free Wetsuits 55:28 Closing Thoughts Subscribe to our beautiful printed quarterly, whose stories are only found in print, at http://www.subscribetoaj.com FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/adventurejournal/ Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/adventurejournal Pinterest — https://www.pinterest.com/adventurejournl Tiktok — https://www.tiktok.com/@adventurejournal/ Adventure Journal is supported primarily by readers who subscribe to our printed quarterly. AJ does not have affiliate relationships, nor do we accept sponsored content or paid placements or reviews. We are proudly independent, and opinions expressed are solely our own.
Listen as The Katies kick off the new "Round Table" series of interview style episodes. This series aims to highlight different seasons and stages of life to grow our compassion for one another, and to encourage each other. In this first episode, The Katies sit down with high school seniors, Natalia and Juliana to find out more about their unique and special season of life!Resources mentioned:Eating From the Tree of Life by Mark Hoffman: https://www.amazon.com/Eating-Tree-Life-Daily-Meditations/dp/B0BJ7ZZVVS/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2O0WMFE8H38L0&keywords=eating+from+the+tree+of+life&qid=1675144880&sprefix=eating+from+the+%2Caps%2C458&sr=8-1 The BEMA Podcast: https://www.bemadiscipleship.comWomen of the Word by Jen Wilkin: https://www.amazon.com/Women-Word-Study-Bible-Hearts/dp/1433567148/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ZQZDS51OPXDP&keywords=women+of+the+word+jen+wilkin&qid=1675145084&sprefix=women+of+the+word+%2Caps%2C200&sr=8-1Practicing the Presence of God for 30 Days by Michell and Diane Cook: https://www.amazon.com/Practicing-Presence-God-30-Days/dp/1593528841Contact us:Insta: @thekatiespodcastEmail: thekatiespodcast@gmail.comMusic and production courtesy of @matt_foreman_official
Episode 2 with Sandy Litchfield, a painter, public artist and Associate Professor at the University of Massachusetts Department of Architecture. Sandy has been recognized with numerous grants and commissions for public art. She has exhibited in numerous museums including the Decordova Museum and Sculpture Park, the Fitchburg Art Museum, the Portland Art Museum and the Hunterdon Museum. Her work focuses on landscape as a construct for understanding place and notions of belonging. It's a conversation about what roots us and the places that give us a sense of belonging, and the ways in which that can inform our work and the trajectory of what we create. It's also a conversation about creating fictional future places where we want to be, that feel in our control and expressing what we wish for in the landscapes that we inhabit. We cover lots of ground in this conversation. Please enjoy! Subscribe, rate and review us so others can find these conversations too. Check out Sandy's work here, follow her on Instagram and her project On Distant Keys. Learn more about Bruno Latour's work here and research some maps at the Norman B Leventhal Map Center. Check out The New Wilderness by Diane Cook for a great post-climate novel that we talked about in this conversation. Check out our website for more information and follow us on @artist_and_place Steam Clock Theme music by @GraceImagoEngineering support by Scot CoarPodcast graphic design by @RobKimmelPlease Subscribe to the show, leave a review and share this episode on social media or with friends! Check out our website for more information and follow us on @artist_and_place Steam Clock. Theme music by @GraceImago Podcast graphic design by @RobKimmel
In einer nahen Zukunft ist die Zerstörung der Umwelt weiter vorangeschritten: Eine amerikanische Familie rettet sich deshalb in ein Naturschutzgebiet, muss aber auch dort um ihr Überleben kämpfen. Die neue Wildnis von Diane Cook ist ein feinfühliger wie kraftvoller Roman, der letztlich von der Natur des Menschen erzählt.
Sigrid Nunez erzählt in "Eine Feder auf dem Atem Gottes" vom Aufwachsen in New York. Patrick Modiano geht im Vallée de Chevreuse auf Erinnerungssuche. Außerdem Romane von Emily Segal, Miku Sophie Kühmel und Diane Cook.
Diane Cook: Die neue Wildnis | Übers.: Astrid Finke | Heyne Verlag 2022 | Preis: 16,00 Euro
Všechno, co jsem v březnu přečetla a všechno, co mě zaujalo z právě vydaných knížek. Pokud mi chcete sdělit vaše tipy na čtení nebo cokoliv jiného, najdete mě na instagramu jako @les.slov
Episode QS79: Caoilinn Hughes + Diane Cook (December 23, 2021)(Recorded September 30, 2021)Award-winning authors Caoilinn Hughes and Diane Cook took to the Greenlight virtual stage to discuss their recent novels, The Wild Laughter (winner of the Royal Society of Literature's Encore Award 2021) and The New Wilderness (shortlisted for the 2020 Man Booker Prize). Along with exploring shared themes of legacy, climate change, “generational robbery”, and the ever-changing challenges of parenting, Hughes and Cook bantered spiritedly about the mystery & process of writing and pondered together the impulse to build new worlds in fiction—to look elsewhere—in order to tell the stories we need to tell.
In our final episode we dive into the role art and culture play in cultivating long-termism at scale. Far from being window dressing, art and culture forms the operating systems of our world; it has the power to shift our collective identity. Culture doesn't just reflect societal norms, it has the power to change, iterate and manifest new ones. We'll meet the artists, creators and curators who are using time as both their medium and their message, and explore the role of creativity in shifting us to a long-term society.Special thanks to the contributors to this episode, Brian Eno, Bridgit Antoinette Evans, Katie Paterson, Jeremy Lent, Anab Jain and Sherri Mitchell.Discover more about Brian Eno here.Find out more about the work of Bridgit Antoinette Evans and the Pop Culture Collaborative here.Discover Katie Paterson's work here and delve into the Future Library.Find out about Jeremy Lent's work including The Patterning Instinct here.Experience the work of Anab Jain and Superflux here.Find out about Sherri Mitchell's projects and writing here.If you want to delve deeper into Long Time ideas, here is a suggested reading list!NON-FICTION Deep Time Reckoning - Vincent IalentiFutureGen - Jane DavidsonTimefulness - Marcia BjornerudThe Precipice - Toby OrdPip Pip - Jay GriffithsThe Clock of the Long Now - Steward BrandThe Good Ancestor - Roman KrznaricDoughnut Economics - Kate RaworthSandtalk - Tyson YunkaportaThe Patterning Instinct - Jeremy LentThe War for Kindness - Jamil ZakiBraiding Sweetgrass - Robin Wall-KimmererUnderland - Robert MacfarlaneThe Oldest Living Things in the World - Rachel Sussman Sacred Instructions - Sherri MitchellFICTIONKindred- Octavia ButlerThe Parable Series - Octavia ButlerThe Ministry for the Future - Kim Stanley RobinsonThe OverStory - Richard PowersMan V. Nature - Diane CookLove & Other Thought Experiments - Sophie WardBarkskins - Annie ProulxLight Perpetual - Francis SpuffordCREDITSThe Long Time Academy comes to you from Headspace Studios and The Long Time Project, and is produced by Scenery Studios. The series was created and produced by Lina Prestwood and Ella SaltmarsheProduced by Ivor Manley and Madeleine Finlay. This episode was also produced by Eli Block. Executive producers at Headspace Studios are Ash Jones, Leah Sutherland & Morgan SelzerOriginal artwork by Mavi MoraisDesign by Loz Ives & Lewis Kay-ThatcherOriginal music, sound design and mixing by Tristan Cassel-Delavois, Scott Sorenson & Chris Murguia with additional music this episode from Eli Block and Jamie Patterson. It's a Sin clips courtesy of Channel 4/ HBO Max/ Red Production CompanyGlee clip courtesy of Fox/ 20th Century Fox Television/ Brad Falchuk Teley-Vision/ Ryan Murphy ProductionsClips from Mitigation of Shock courtesy of SuperfluxFuture Library archive courtesy of Katie Paterson StudiosAdditional archive clips from xinaesthete, Astounded/Christopher J Astbury, Switzerland
The Story of Adam's Family Tree | Genesis 4:25-6:7 In this week's episode, Donna and Dayna speak with Bellevue Women small group leader Diane Cook about her story and discuss the different ways in which God can use tragedy for His glory. For more information about this study and other resources, visit bellevue.org/women.
Nightclubs are shut, dancing at weddings is not allowed and gigs and festivals are still uncertain. If you want to dance you have to do it at home. Woman's Hour shares your DIY dancing stories and gets tips from Guilty Pleasures DJ, Sean Rowley and Strictly dancer, Amy Dowden. Laurel Hubbard is going to be the first transgender athlete to compete at the Olympics which starts next month. It's controversial, and she'll make history. She'll be part of the New Zealand women's weightlifting team at Tokyo. Laurel came out as transgender in 2013 - and qualifies for the Olympics on the basis that her testosterone levels have been kept below a certain level for at least a year. But how does a reduction in testosterone affect other aspects of the body - such as haemoglobin levels, muscle mass and strength - that could influence competitive performance? And what research is needed to help inform the balance between inclusivity and meaningful competition in sport? Joanna Harper, a PhD researcher at Loughborough University talks about her latest study. Imagine having your home destroyed, losing your livelihood, and then being intimidated by those now on the land. That's what hundreds of women in Western Uganda say has happened to them; they were violently evicted from their homes to make way for a sugar plantation. In an investigation for Woman's Hour, they've told us they are now left with no option but to live in extremely poor conditions in a makeshift camp, where they face physical and sexual abuse from the plantation workers. To make things worse, many of their husbands have abandoned them while they find employment elsewhere. The UK provides overseas aid for these woman as they fight for compensation for their lost land. But, that UK funding is due to end soon, even though after five years a legal dispute over the land is still unresolved. Two novels - one published tomorrow and one just out in paperback explore the human impact of environmental disaster through the lives of girls and women. They both ask - what is really important to us? What lasts when everything we think we need is stripped away? Kate Sawyer, author of 'The Stranding', her first novel, and Diane Cook, whose book 'The New Wilderness' was shortlisted for The Booker Prize last year, discuss their work. Presenter: Emma Barnett Producer: Kirsty Starkey Interviewed Guest: Joanna Harper Interviewed Guest: Sean Rowley Interviewed Guest: Amy Dowden Interviewed Guest: Sostine Namanya Interviewed Guest: Kate Sawyer Interviewed Guest: Diane Cook
It's The Stacks Book Club day and we're discussing The New Wilderness by Diane Cook with senior editor at The Atlantic and host of the Floodlines podcast, Vann Newkirk. Our conversation looks at the impact of humans on nature, biblical allegories, and the nuance in relationships between parent and child.There are spoilers on this episode. Be sure to listen until the end of today’s episode to find out our book club pick for March! You can find links to everything we discuss on today's show on The Stacks' Website: https://thestackspodcast.com/2021/02/24/ep-152-the-new-wilderness SUPPORT THE STACKS Join The Stacks Pack on Patreon Care/of - for 50% off your first Care/of order, go to takecareof.com and enter code STACKS50. Purchasing books through Bookshop.org or
Our guest today is Mateo Askaripour, the debut author of Black Buck which is a New York Times Bestseller. We talk about writing satire, Mateo's respect for his readers, and the ways he looked to other authors for inspiration throughout his process. The Stacks Book Club selection for February is The New Wilderness by Diane Cook, we will discuss the book with Vann Newkirk on Wednesday February 24th. You can find links to everything we discuss on today's show on The Stacks' Website: https://thestackspodcast.com/2021/02/17/ep-151-mateo-askaripour SUPPORT THE STACKS Join The Stacks Pack on Patreon Libro.FM - get two audiobooks for the price of one when you use code THE STACKS at checkout. Purchasing books through Bookshop.org or Amazon earns The Stacks a small commission. Connect with Mateo: Instagram
Today our guest is author and historian Dr. Keisha N Blain. Keisha, along with Dr. Ibram X. Kendi, edited the brand new collection Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America 1619-2019. Our conversation delves into the work of historians, our ancestors wildest dreams, and the logistics of bringing this ambitious book to life. The Stacks Book Club selection for February is The New Wilderness by Diane Cook, we will discuss the book with Vann Newkirk on Wednesday February 24th. You can find links to everything we discuss on today's show on The Stacks' Website: https://thestackspodcast.com/2021/02/10/ep-150-keisha-n-blain SUPPORT THE STACKS Join The Stacks Pack on Patreon Hello Fresh - go to hellofresh.com/stacks10 and use the code stacks10 to get 10 free meals and free shipping. Libro.FM - get two audiobooks for the price of one when you use code THESTACKS at checkout. Purchasing books through
Our guest today is journalist and senior editor at The Atlantic, Vann Newkirk. Vann is also the host of the Floodlines podcast that chronicled the events of Hurricane Katrina. We talk today about the idea of journalistic neutrality, environmental racism, and using books as a way to fill in the gaps of the things we learned (or didn’t) in school. The Stacks Book Club selection for February is The New Wilderness by Diane Cook, we will discuss the book with Vann Newkirk on Wednesday February 24th. You can find links to everything we discuss on today's show on The Stacks' Website: https://thestackspodcast.com/2021/02/03/ep-149-a-bias-toward-justice-with-vann-newkirk/ SUPPORT THE STACKS Join The Stacks Pack on Patreon Libro.FM - get two audiobooks for the price of one when you use code THE STACKS at checkout. Purchasing books through Bookshop.org or Amazon earns The Stacks a small commission. Connect with Vann: The AtlanticConnect with The Stacks:
On today’s episode, Mr. Fred L. Borch* and Major Jason C. Coffey discuss Judge Advocates in the Great War, covering the pre-World War I Judge Advocate General’s Corps, its expansion after the United States entered the war, Judge Advocate training, and the duties Judge Advocates performed during the war. Below is a timeline of some of the subject-areas discussed during the episode: 00:00 Episode Introduction 00:59 Pre-World War I Judge Advocate General’s Corps 02:34 The Expansion of the Judge Advocate General’s Corps 04:00 The First 25 and Incremental Expansion 05:58 Judge Advocate Duties in the United States 08:39 Military Justice Agreements in World War I 11:09 Other Legal Issues Judge Advocates Faced 18:29 Social Changes in the Judge Advocate General’s Department 21:15 Judge Advocate Education and Training 24:35 Book Recommendations 28:58 End of Episode Mr. Borch’s Book Recommendations: Fred L. Borch. “Judge Advocates in the Great War”. The Army Lawyer, November/December 2018, pages 10-18. Book version expected Spring 2021. “To Raise and Discipline an Army” by Joshua E. Kastenberg. “The New Wilderness” by Diane Cook. “They Shall Not Grow Old” by Peter Jackson. “1917” by Sam Mendes For more information related to FCD you can follow us on Twitter @jagfcd or by visiting our webpage. If you have recommendations or suggestions about future topics or guests, please send us an email at usarmy.pentagon.hqda-tjaglcs.list.tjaglcs-doctrine@mail.mil, or you can leave us a comment by signing in below. Finally, if you like what you hear, please leave us a review on iTunes and subscribe to “Battlefield Next” on your favorite podcast app. While this is a podcast created by US Army Judge Advocates from Future Concepts Directorate, our goal is to reach other judge advocates and lawyers across the DoD, law students, and members of academia. Your reviews help make this possible. For more information about the US Army JAG Corps, you can go here. If you’re interested in joining the Army JAG Corps, you can get more information by contacting the Judge Advocate Recruiting Office (JARO) or by visiting their webpage. *Mr. Borch is a professor of Legal History and Leadership at The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center and School, and the Regimental Historian and Archivist for the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s Corps. **Music by Joseph McDade. ***The views expressed on the podcast are the views of the participants and do not necessarily represent those of The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center and School, the Army, the Department of Defense, or any other agency of the US Government.
In Episode 2 of the EWBR podcast, Anisha and Dhruv talk about Richard Linklater's "Before" trilogy, and Ethan Hawke's writing, discuss the hedonistic excesses of City/Finance life as depicted in television and movies and disagree on the use of goodreads. Then there's Richard Osman, Hanya Yanagihara and Diane Cook. Also, jazzing up those Brussels Sprouts with a dash of Rose Harissa. Listen in now! WATCH Before Sunrise https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Sunrise Before Sunset https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Sunset Before Midnight - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Midnight_(2013_film) Reality Bites - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reality_Bites Boyhood - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boyhood_%28film%29 Industry https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episodes/m000pb89/industry Suits https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suits_(American_TV_series) The Practice https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Practice Boston Legal https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Legal Ally McBeal https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ally_McBeal Boston Public https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Public BINGE READ Ash Wednesday by Ethan Hawke https://uk.bookshop.org/a/4569/9780747561552 A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara https://uk.bookshop.org/a/4569/9781447294832 The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman https://uk.bookshop.org/a/4569/9780241988268 The New Wilderness by Diane Cook https://uk.bookshop.org/a/4569/9780861540013 Uncommon Type by Tom Hanks https://uk.bookshop.org/a/4569/9781786091338 Haruki Murakami - start with Kafka on the Shore https://uk.bookshop.org/a/4569/9780099458326 Jhumpa Lahiri - reference to Episode 1 of the EWBR podcast. EAT Silo - zero-waste restaurant in London https://silolondon.com Dishoom - https://www.dishoom.com. Follow the Eat Watch Binge Read Podcast at https://www.instagram.com/eatwatchbingeread/ You can listen to all our episodes on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Anchor and wherever you get your podcasts. Just type EAT WATCH BINGE READ in the search bar. You can read Anisha's blog at http://www.fashionandfrappes.com and can follow on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/fashionandfrappes/ and Dhruv on https://www.instagram.com/eatwatchbingeread/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/eatwatchbingeread/message
Live from the Roundhouse, London, Front Row brings you the 2020 Booker Prize ceremony. Who will be the winner of the £50,000 prize for fiction in this extraordinary year? Taking part in the socially distanced proceedings will be Sir Kazuo Ishiguro, last year's winners Margaret Atwood and Bernardine Evaristo, chair of judges Margaret Busby, HRH The Duchess of Cornwall, former President of the United States Barack Obama - and of course, the winner. The evening will be hosted by Front Row's John Wilson and broadcast simultaneously on BBC iPlayer. The shortlisted authors and titles are: Diane Cook, The New Wilderness Tsitsi Dangarembga, This Mournable Body Avni Doshi, Burnt Sugar Maaza Mengiste, The Shadow King Douglas Stuart, Shuggie Bain Brandon Taylor, Real Life Presenter: John Wilson Producer: Sarah Johnson
I’m Jim McKeown, welcome to Likely Stories, a weekly review of fiction, Non-Fiction, and Poetry. Diane Cook lives in Brooklyn, New York. She has had a number of short stories to her credit. Her second novel, The New Wilderness, is a gripping tale . This story is about a group of people who were moved off of the “City” and forced into a large uninhabited area of wilderness.
Anna and Annie discuss the Booker Prize 2020 shortlist and give our predictions on the winner. The shortlisted books are: The New Wilderness by Diane Cook, This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangaremba, Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi, The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste, Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart, and Real Life by Brandon Taylor. The winner will be announced on 19 November (delayed by two days to follow the publication of Barack Obama's book). Follow us! Facebook: Books On The Go Email: booksonthegopodcast@gmail.com Instagram: @abailliekaras and @mr_annie Twitter: @abailliekaras and @mister_annie Litsy: @abailliekaras and @mr_annie Credits Artwork: Sascha Wilkosz
Diane Cook is the author of the novel, THE NEW WILDERNESS, which was shortlisted for the 2020 Booker Prize, and the story collection, MAN V. NATURE, which was a finalist for the Guardian First Book Award, the Believer Book Award, The Pen/Hemingway Award, and the Los Angeles Times Award for First Fiction. Recommended Reading: Fire Season by Philip Connors The World Without Us by Alan Weisman A Children’s Bible by Lydia Millet How Much of These Hills Is Gold by C. Pam Zhang Temporary by Hilary Leichter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Neil Gaiman on blogging and wearing black, Booker shortlisted author Diane Cook and Malcolm Knox on changing Australian beach culture.
Neil Gaiman on blogging and wearing black, Booker shortlisted author Diane Cook and Malcolm Knox on changing Australian beach culture.
It's a bonus happy hour!! This week we're giving you a throwback to one of the test episodes that started it all. We discuss short story Meteorologist Dave Santana by Diane Cook from the collection Man V. Nature while drinking a prohibition-era Damn the Weather! We dig deep into our protagonist, unconventional high-school teacher Janet, who just can't get over her obsession with the local meteorologist she watches on the news...he also happens to be her next door neighbor. And next week we start our new pick - Real Life by Brandon Taylor!Next Week: Real Life by Brandon Taylor (Chapters 1-2)Join us again for Happy Hour next Thursday, and follow us on Insta @AreTheseBooksDrunk for updates on our next episode & cocktail pairing so that you can read along and sip along with us!Episode CreditsSpecial Appearance: Riccardo RoggeriMusic: Jimmy Fontanez, Media Right Productions & Text Me RecordsLogo and Art: Chad HudsonHosts: Mariana Cardenas, Emma Orelove & Brandi Bravo
Bookmark This! Ep 17: Reviewing the 2020 Booker Prize 28:02 mins Synopsis: A monthly literary podcast by The Straits Times featuring titles in the headlines and sizzling reads. Who will win the 2020 Booker Prize? Will it be an ambitious historical novel about Ethiopia's unsung women soldiers or a bleak dystopia about the last wilderness? Will a pioneer Zimbabwean author take the prize, or will it go to one of the four up-and-coming debut novelists on the list? In the latest episode of this monthly literary podcast, Straits Times journalists Olivia Ho and Toh Wen Li break down the prize's unusually diverse shortlist ahead of the winner's announcement on Nov 19. Listen at: This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangarembga - 1:39 The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste - 4:59 Real Life by Brandon Taylor - 14:23 Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi - 17:25 Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart - 21:57 The New Wilderness by Diane Cook - 23:48 Produced by: Olivia Ho (oliviaho@sph.com.sg), Toh Wen Li (tohwenli@sph.com.sg) and Penelope Lee Edited by: Muhammad Firmann Subscribe to Bookmark This! Podcast series and rate us on your favourite audio apps: Channel: https://str.sg/JWas Apple Podcasts: https://str.sg/JWae Spotify: https://str.sg/JWan Google Podcasts: https://str.sg/Ju4n Website: http://str.sg/stpodcasts Feedback to: podcast@sph.com.sg Read Olivia's stories: https://str.sg/JbhW Read Toh Wen Li's stories: https://str.sg/Jbhm --- Discover more ST podcast series: Asian Insider Podcast: https://str.sg/JWa7 Green Pulse Podcast: https://str.sg/JWaf Health Check Podcast: https://str.sg/JWaN ST Sports Talk Podcast: https://str.sg/JWRE Life Weekend Picks Podcast: https://str.sg/JWa2 #PopVultures Podcast: https://str.sg/JWad Lunch With Sumiko Podcast: https://str.sg/J6hQ Discover BT Podcasts: http://bt.sg/podcasts Follow our shows then, if you like short, practical podcasts! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bookmark This! Ep 17: Reviewing the 2020 Booker Prize 28:02 mins Synopsis: A monthly literary podcast by The Straits Times featuring titles in the headlines and sizzling reads. Who will win the 2020 Booker Prize? Will it be an ambitious historical novel about Ethiopia's unsung women soldiers or a bleak dystopia about the last wilderness? Will a pioneer Zimbabwean author take the prize, or will it go to one of the four up-and-coming debut novelists on the list? In the latest episode of this monthly literary podcast, Straits Times journalists Olivia Ho and Toh Wen Li break down the prize's unusually diverse shortlist ahead of the winner's announcement on Nov 19. Listen at: This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangarembga - 1:39 The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste - 4:59 Real Life by Brandon Taylor - 14:23 Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi - 17:25 Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart - 21:57 The New Wilderness by Diane Cook - 23:48 Produced by: Olivia Ho (oliviaho@sph.com.sg), Toh Wen Li (tohwenli@sph.com.sg) and Penelope Lee Edited by: Muhammad Firmann Subscribe to Bookmark This! Podcast series and rate us on your favourite audio apps: Channel: https://str.sg/JWas Apple Podcasts: https://str.sg/JWae Spotify: https://str.sg/JWan Google Podcasts: https://str.sg/Ju4n Website: http://str.sg/stpodcasts Feedback to: podcast@sph.com.sg Read Olivia's stories: https://str.sg/JbhW Read Toh Wen Li's stories: https://str.sg/Jbhm --- Discover more ST podcast series: Asian Insider Podcast: https://str.sg/JWa7 Green Pulse Podcast: https://str.sg/JWaf Health Check Podcast: https://str.sg/JWaN ST Sports Talk Podcast: https://str.sg/JWRE Life Weekend Picks Podcast: https://str.sg/JWa2 #PopVultures Podcast: https://str.sg/JWad Lunch With Sumiko Podcast: https://str.sg/J6hQ Discover BT Podcasts: http://bt.sg/podcasts Follow our shows then, if you like short, practical podcasts! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bookmark This! Ep 17: Reviewing the 2020 Booker Prize 28:02 mins Synopsis: A monthly literary podcast by The Straits Times featuring titles in the headlines and sizzling reads. Who will win the 2020 Booker Prize? Will it be an ambitious historical novel about Ethiopia's unsung women soldiers or a bleak dystopia about the last wilderness? Will a pioneer Zimbabwean author take the prize, or will it go to one of the four up-and-coming debut novelists on the list? In the latest episode of this monthly literary podcast, Straits Times journalists Olivia Ho and Toh Wen Li break down the prize's unusually diverse shortlist ahead of the winner's announcement on Nov 19. Listen at: This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangarembga - 1:39 The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste - 4:59 Real Life by Brandon Taylor - 14:23 Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi - 17:25 Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart - 21:57 The New Wilderness by Diane Cook - 23:48 Produced by: Olivia Ho (oliviaho@sph.com.sg), Toh Wen Li (tohwenli@sph.com.sg) and Penelope Lee Edited by: Muhammad Firmann Subscribe to Bookmark This! Podcast series and rate us on your favourite audio apps: Channel: https://str.sg/JWas Apple Podcasts: https://str.sg/JWae Spotify: https://str.sg/JWan Google Podcasts: https://str.sg/Ju4n Website: http://str.sg/stpodcasts Feedback to: podcast@sph.com.sg Read Olivia's stories: https://str.sg/JbhW Read Toh Wen Li's stories: https://str.sg/Jbhm --- Discover more ST podcast series: Asian Insider Podcast: https://str.sg/JWa7 Green Pulse Podcast: https://str.sg/JWaf Health Check Podcast: https://str.sg/JWaN ST Sports Talk Podcast: https://str.sg/JWRE Life Weekend Picks Podcast: https://str.sg/JWa2 #PopVultures Podcast: https://str.sg/JWad Lunch With Sumiko Podcast: https://str.sg/J6hQ Discover BT Podcasts: http://bt.sg/podcasts Follow our shows then, if you like short, practical podcasts! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Authors Diane Cook and Lydia Kiesling join the first-ever Twenty Summers virtual festival to talk about their recent novels, The New Wilderness (Harper, 2020) and The Golden State (Picador, 2019), respectively, both of which examine motherhood, the state of the world, and glimpses at even darker futures in unique, funny, and sometimes devastating ways. Diane Cook is the author of the novel, The New Wilderness, currently nominated for a Booker Prize, and the story collection, Man V. Nature, which was a finalist for the Guardian First Book Award, the Believer Book Award, and the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction. Her writing has appeared in Harper’s, Tin House, Granta, and other publications, and her stories have been included in the anthologies Best American Short Stories and The O. Henry Prize Stories. She is a former producer for the radio program This American Life, and was the recipient of a 2016 fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband, daughter and son.Lydia Kiesling is the author of The Golden State, a 2018 National Book Foundation “5 under 35” honoree, and a finalist for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award. She is a contributing editor at The Millions and her writing has appeared at outlets including The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker online, The Cut, and The Guardian.
Film-maker Sofia Coppola talks about reuniting with Bill Murray for her new film On The Rocks, a comedy about a martini-drinking playboy father who reconnects with his daughter (Rashida Jones) on an adventure through New York. Front Row is convening a series of Booker Prize book groups in which readers can put questions to the six shortlisted authors, ahead of the announcement of the winner on the programme in November. We start with American author Diane Cook who's nominated for her debut novel, The New Wilderness. Set in the near future in an unnamed country, it's about a mother who takes her daughter away from the life-threatening pollution of The City to live in the wilderness with an experimental community. Cook is joined by Front Row listeners to talk about the book. And with many venues still closed, the pandemic has hit the theatre sector particularly hard this year. But the industry was finally able to pay tribute to some of the best performances of the past year at last night's re-scheduled Olivier Awards. Presenter: John Wilson Producer: Dymphna Flynn
12 - Pull up a barstool - it's time for book club and cocktails! This week we FINISH talking about Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, while sipping on a Bartender Riccardo original: the Burn It Down. And dang, our characters DO! We cheers to an unbelievably well-executed ending, pat ourselves on the back for theories that panned out and drown our sorrows over the ones that didn't, and we dig into our own personal real life ghost stories. Oooooooooo....Pages Discussed: All of 'em!Next Week: *Bonus Episode* on short story Meteorologist Dave Santana by Diane Cook from the collection Man V. NatureJoin us again for Happy Hour next Thursday, and follow us on Insta @AreTheseBooksDrunk for updates on our next episode & cocktail pairing so that you can read along and sip along with us!Episode CreditsSpecial Appearance: Riccardo RoggeriMusic: Jimmy Fontanez, Media Right Productions & Text Me RecordsLogo and Art: Chad HudsonHosts: Mariana Cardenas, Emma Orelove & Brandi Bravo
Gill Paul re-imagines the love triangle between the world’s richest man, the President’s widow, and one of the greatest soprano of all time in her historical novel ‘The Second Marriage’. Diane Cook walks us through her debut novel The New Wilderness, which has been shortlisted for this years Booker Prize. And we return to Gill Paul to hear the books of her life.
2020 Booker Prize shortlisted author Diane Cook talks to Red Szell about her novel The New Wilderness
BuzzFeed calls Diane Cook's debut novel, The New Wilderness "... a gripping and profound examination of love and sacrifice." It's a dystopian tale of a community of wanderers struggling to coexist in a wilderness filled with danger and bracketed by the bureaucracy that has become a fact of life in the canyons of stone and steel they left behind. Diane discusses how she made the switch from the fact based world of NPR's This American Life to award winning fictional short stories. She details the process of creating her protagonist, and it's indirect connection to the loss of her own mother. We learn about her influences and how the world she created isn't much different from the world in which we all exist. It's a fascinating visit with a rising star who's attitude is, "Feel the fear and do it anyway."
Host Joe Haddow is joined by two of this year's judges Lee Child and Emily Wilson as take us through each book on the recently announced 2020 Booker Prize shortlist. We also hear from each of the shortlisted authors themselves: Diane Cook, author of The New Wilderness; Tsitsi Dangarembga shortlisted for This Mournable Body; author of Burnt Sugar, Avni Doshi; Maaza Mengiste shortlisted for The Shadow King; Douglas Stuart, author of Shuggie Bain; and Brandon Taylor, shortlisted for Real Life, as they react to the news of making it onto the 2020 Booker Prize shortlist.
Diane Cook’s The New Wilderness (Harper, 2020) is a poignant portrait of a mother and daughter fleeing the polluted cities of a near-future dystopia for a hand-to-mouth existence in the country’s last undeveloped tract. It’s also one of the unusual works of speculative fiction that’s been embraced by the world of high literature by (just this week) reaching the final round of the prestigious Booker Prize. Although Cook has lived mostly in cities, she loves spending time in nature and wrote some of The New Wilderness while trekking across the high desert of Oregon. “There is something about the expansiveness of lands that are empty that make my imagination feel a lot freer than it usually does in a city,” she says. For Cook’s protagonist Bea, the Wilderness State offers the only hope for saving the life of her 5-year-old daughter, Agnes. But as Agnes’ lungs heal from the city’s smog, her relationship with her mother grows strained, suffering rifts that might be typical for a mother and daughter but are magnified by the strain of having to invent a nomadic way of life in a remorseless expanse. “The Wilderness State is this very extreme place and this very extreme situation so it pushes everyone to a very extreme version of how they would normally be,” Cook says. Rob Wolf is the host of New Books in Science Fiction and the author of The Alternate Universe and The Escape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Diane Cook’s The New Wilderness (Harper, 2020) is a poignant portrait of a mother and daughter fleeing the polluted cities of a near-future dystopia for a hand-to-mouth existence in the country’s last undeveloped tract. It’s also one of the unusual works of speculative fiction that’s been embraced by the world of high literature by (just this week) reaching the final round of the prestigious Booker Prize. Although Cook has lived mostly in cities, she loves spending time in nature and wrote some of The New Wilderness while trekking across the high desert of Oregon. “There is something about the expansiveness of lands that are empty that make my imagination feel a lot freer than it usually does in a city,” she says. For Cook’s protagonist Bea, the Wilderness State offers the only hope for saving the life of her 5-year-old daughter, Agnes. But as Agnes’ lungs heal from the city’s smog, her relationship with her mother grows strained, suffering rifts that might be typical for a mother and daughter but are magnified by the strain of having to invent a nomadic way of life in a remorseless expanse. “The Wilderness State is this very extreme place and this very extreme situation so it pushes everyone to a very extreme version of how they would normally be,” Cook says. Rob Wolf is the host of New Books in Science Fiction and the author of The Alternate Universe and The Escape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Diane Cook’s The New Wilderness (Harper, 2020) is a poignant portrait of a mother and daughter fleeing the polluted cities of a near-future dystopia for a hand-to-mouth existence in the country’s last undeveloped tract. It’s also one of the unusual works of speculative fiction that’s been embraced by the world of high literature by (just this week) reaching the final round of the prestigious Booker Prize. Although Cook has lived mostly in cities, she loves spending time in nature and wrote some of The New Wilderness while trekking across the high desert of Oregon. “There is something about the expansiveness of lands that are empty that make my imagination feel a lot freer than it usually does in a city,” she says. For Cook’s protagonist Bea, the Wilderness State offers the only hope for saving the life of her 5-year-old daughter, Agnes. But as Agnes’ lungs heal from the city’s smog, her relationship with her mother grows strained, suffering rifts that might be typical for a mother and daughter but are magnified by the strain of having to invent a nomadic way of life in a remorseless expanse. “The Wilderness State is this very extreme place and this very extreme situation so it pushes everyone to a very extreme version of how they would normally be,” Cook says. Rob Wolf is the host of New Books in Science Fiction and the author of The Alternate Universe and The Escape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The 2020 Booker Prize Shortlist has been announced in London, and with that, the book world comes together to discuss the six books up for the prize. Olivia and Jo sit down to discuss the six books of the shortlist, the surprise omissions, and more. Blog: https://bit.ly/2FCUkL0 Books mentioned in this podcast: The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste: https://bit.ly/2H5JKgd Real Life by Brandon Taylor: https://bit.ly/35FmHmt Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi: https://bit.ly/3kmswto This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangarembga: https://bit.ly/33qXFEU The New Wilderness by Diane Cook: https://bit.ly/2Eal0lW Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart: https://bit.ly/2FL1jBl Hosts: Olivia Fricot & Jo Lewin Producers: Nick Wasiliev
Bookwaves/Artwaves is produced and hosted by Richard Wolinsky. Links to Announced Events Bookwaves Robert Macfarlane, whose latest book is “Underland: A Deep Time Journey”, which comes out in trade paperback on August 18, 2020, is interviewed by host Richard Wolinsky. The author of several books, including “Mountains of the Mind” and “The Old Ways,” Robert Macfarlane discusses his latest work, a travelogue through caves, glacial crevices, mines, and catacombs, as he examines the world below our feet. Extended 43-minute Radio Wolinsky podcast. Photos: Richard Wolinsky. Artwaves Robert K. Massie, a journalist and historian whose focus was on the Russian House of Romanov, and who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1981 for his biography of Peter the Great, died on December 2, 2019 at the age of ninety. Along with a well-received biography of Catherine the Great, he was also known for his books about Czar Nicholas, the Tsarina Alexandra, and the final days of the Romanov dynasty in Ekaterinaberg in Siberia. On November 4, 1995, Richard A. Lupoff and Richard Wolinsky had a chance to interview Robert K. Massie while he was on tour for his book, The Romanovs: The final Chapter, which dealt with events long after the Russian Revolution, from those claiming to be Romanov descendants to the disinterment of the Royal family's bones after the Soviet Union fell. Digitized, remastered and re-edited in August, 2020 by Richard Wolinsky. Extended 38-minute Radio Wolinsky podcast. Announcement Links Book Passage. Conversations with authors features John Shea in conversation with Phi Cousinou on Saturday, August 15 at 4 pm Pacific, and Christine Montross in conversation with Susanna Calahan on Sunday August 16 also at 4 pm Pacific. And on Wednesday August 19, Darin Strauss in conversation with Kelly Corrigan. The Booksmith features Diane Cook and her novel The New Wilderness Thursday August 13 at 6 pm,and Monday August 15 at 11 am, Aya Gruber on the relationship between the feminist movement and mass incarceration. Theatre Rhino Live Thursday performance conceived and performed by John Fisher on Facebook Live and Zoom at 8 pm Thursday August 13 is A Death in the Family. Rhino also presents a zoom performance of Sarah Ruhl's play Dear Elizabeth, an epistolatory journey through the lives of poet Robert Lowell and lesbian author Elizabeth Bishop, Tuesday August 18, 7 pm. San Francisco Playhouse presents a live stream fireside chat with playwright Rajiv Joseph Thursday August 13 at 7 pm, and Monday August 17, 7 pm, Zoomlet play is The Mommy Assumption by Gaetha Reddy. 42nd Street Moon. Full Moon Friday on-line concert August 14 at 8 pm Pacific is Super Songs from Not So Super Shows, Part Two. Shotgun Players. A live stream performance of Quack by Eliza Clark, through August 15. Registration required. California Shakepeare Theatre (Cal Shakes) presents a panel discussion on addressing anti-blackness in non-black communities of color, Friday August 14, 5-7 pm. Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts new on-line programming series featuring classes, concerts, poetry sessions and more. LGBTQ Theatre, Different Stars Live, having its world premiere on You Tube Live, Saturday August 15 at 4 pm Pacific. Aurora Theatre's Aurora Connects series of interviews, every Friday at 4 pm. August 14: Artistic Director Josh Costello and Associate Artistic Director Dawn Monique Williams. Other interviews in the series are available streaming. Bay Area Playwrights Festival works streamed through Aurora's website. Marin Theatre Company Lauren Gunderson's play Natural Shocks streams through Soundcloud on the Marin Theatre website. Bay Area Book Festival. Various Unbound conversations available streaming. Kepler's Books presents Refresh the Page, on line interviews and talks. Registration required. Central Works The Script Club, where you read the script of a new play and send comments to the playwright. The August script is Bamboozled by Patricia Milton. A podcast will be posted to the Central Works website on August 25. Theatreworks Silicon Valley. Interviews and educational videos. Lincoln Center Live Through September 8, 2020: Carousel, with Kelli O'Hara & Nathan Gunn. Public Theatre: The Line streams through the website. A radio recording of Richard II is also available through the website. . The post Bookwaves/Artwaves – August 13, 2020: Robert Macfarlane – Robert K. Massie appeared first on KPFA.
Diane Cook, author of The New Wilderness (Harper), which has been long listed for the Booker Prize. As I mentioned early in today’s show, when I interviewed Diane Cook, her infant son could be heard in the early part of the hour. Then he went to be with his dad and his voice was no longer heard on the recording. But it got me thinking: children fill our world, but are sometimes absent from our settings. Why is that? Do they make too much noise? Would the chaos keep your scene from working smoothly? (Kind of like life?) The world is full of children, yet it sometimes seems like I see way more dogs than children in the books I read. So this week’s Write the Book Prompt is to put a baby, toddler, or child in a scene. This doesn’t necessarily mean introducing a new character. But maybe your narrator is at a coffee shop. Is there a cherubic baby in a car seat by his mom’s side at another table? Is a young child acting up? Is a teenager sitting with a friend, in ardent conversation? Keep children in mind as you build your poetic and fictional worlds. Good luck with your work in the coming week, and tune in next week for another prompt or suggestion. Music Credit: Aaron Shapiro
The 2020 Booker Prize Longlist has been announced! Booktopia's Olivia, Jo and Ben sat down and (over Skype) discussed their thoughts on the longlist and give their perspectives on who might be the favourites to the prize home. Books mentioned in this podcast: Apeirogon by Colum McCann: https://bit.ly/2XcKVzI The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste: https://bit.ly/3jRYxKj This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangarembga: https://bit.ly/2XaJ3Ya The Mirror & the Light by Hilary Mantel: https://bit.ly/2X6XPPq Who They Was by Gabriel Krauze: https://bit.ly/3jSMdtj Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi: https://bit.ly/2P8ZakA The New Wilderness by Diane Cook: https://bit.ly/3hGVhj4 Love and Other Thought Experiments by Sophie Ward: https://bit.ly/308T5ei How Much of These Hills is Gold by C Pam Zhang: https://bit.ly/2X7QT4T Redhead by the Side of the Road by Anne Tyler: https://bit.ly/2XbAex4 Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart: https://bit.ly/2P4qQac Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid: https://bit.ly/2P73yjV Real Life by Brandon Taylor: https://bit.ly/3jVx2iQ Host: Olivia Fricot Guests: Ben Hunter & Jo Lewin Producers: Nick Wasiliev & Mark Harding
Diane Cook and Len Jenshel are two outstanding photographers who have worked together as a duo since 1991. In this episode, we discuss their personal histories in the field, the differences between their fine art and editorial work, the process of shooting a story for National Geographic and what it’s like to create photographs as a team.
Trees shape the mythology of cultures all over the world. Trees show us where the fairies live. Just as the forest is the place where untried heroes are transformed, we, too, can be both lost and found among the trees. That's because trees have messages for us, if we'll just listen. I offered 14 of those messages to those who attended this year's Winter Solstice ritual. Which one of these trees calls to you: Alder, Apple, Ash, Birch, White Birch, Cherry, Elder, Hawthorn, Hazel, Hickory, Locust, Red Oak, White Oak? Each message comes with an instruction. Are you ready to follow the wisdom of the trees? Mentioned in the episode: This Winter's Night, a CD by MotherTongue / Available at http://EarthSpirit.org Wise Trees, a book by Diane Cook and Len Jenshel / Available wherever books are sold.
in DUTCH Hanan Faour is een geboren en getogen Limburger. Ze zit in haar 2e jaar Creative Writing aan ArtEz Hogeschool voor kunsten en houdt zich in haar werk bezig met transmedia en onderwerpen als cultuur en afkomst. Ze won in 2017 de El Hizjra proza prijs met haar verhaal “kippen vliegen niet”. The Not-needed Forest van Diane Cook, vertaald door Kees Mollema En verder komen ter sprake - Shirley Jackson - the lottery - https://sites.middlebury.edu/individualandthesociety/files/2010/09/jackson_lottery.pdf - Lieke Marsman – Het tegenovergestelde van een mens - Dystopische verhalen - Ursula le Guin - Diane Cook - Man versus Nature
UCSF's Stanton Glantz on the new tobacco warning ads. Landscape photographers Diane Cook and Len Jenshel share the new National Geographic book "Night Vision." Jay Melosh of Purdue on a lunar colony. Sam Payne of The Apple Seed tells stories. Utah Valley Univ's Gregory Jackson on the path Meghan Markle is paving. Buffalo Bill made a big splash in Europe, with Frank Christianson, BYU.
Oct 31st - Dr. Cass Ingram, Diane Cook, Len Jenshel, Drew Curtis
Oct 31st - Dr. Cass Ingram, Diane Cook, Len Jenshel, Drew Curtis
Three men are stranded in a lifeboat. Adapted from a short story by Diane Cook, our adaptation is by Diana McCorry. Performed by David Pasquesi, Ed Herbstman, and Mark Gessner. Produced by Jonathan Mitchell. "Man V. Nature" is from the collection of the same name, copyright 2014 by Diane Cook, used by permission of HarperCollins Publishers.
Three men are stranded in a lifeboat. Adapted from a short story by Diane Cook, our adaptation is by Diana McCorry. Performed by David Pasquesi, Ed Herbstman, and Mark Gessner. Produced by Jonathan Mitchell. "Man V. Nature" is from the collection of the same name, copyright 2014 by Diane Cook, used by permission of HarperCollins Publishers.
Three men are stranded in a lifeboat. Adapted from a short story by Diane Cook, our adaptation is by Diana McCorry. Performed by David Pasquesi, Ed Herbstman, and Mark Gessner. Produced by Jonathan Mitchell. "Man V. Nature" is from the collection of the same name, copyright 2014 by Diane Cook, used by permission of HarperCollins Publishers.
Diane Cook is the guest. Her debut story collection, Man V. Nature, is available now from Harper Books. Tea Obreht says "Man V. Nature is as close to experiencing a Picasso as literature can get: the worlds in Diane Cook’s impressive debut are bizarre, vertiginous, funny, pushed to the extreme-but just familiar enough in their nuances of the human condition to evoke an irresistible, around-the-corner reality.” And the Boston Globe says “Here’s a good rule: If Diane Cook wrote it, read it…Safety is tenuous, if not an illusion, in her thoughtful, unsettling, and darkly funny collection.” Monologue topics: Kathleen Hale, Blythe Harris, don't feed trolls, Goodreads, stalking. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Writer Diane Cook was a producer at This American Life for years until she quit to pursue her own fiction writing. She’s since had work published or forthcoming in places like Harper's, Granta, and Zoetrope, and in 2012 she won the Calvino Prize for fabulist fiction. Cook speaks about what she learned from her time at This American Life, how she ultimately had to leave the job to develop her own identity as a writer, and her need to focus exclusively on her writing for the last couple of years. Check out Diane Cook's story, "Moving On", in the latest issue of . Preorder her debut collection, Man V. Nature, .
The 381st episode of the Reading & Writing podcast features an interview with Diane Cook ( https://dianemariecook.com/ ) , author of the book THE NEW WILDERNESS ( https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780062333131 ). Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/reading-and-writing-podcast/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy