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Do you find yourself rushing, doing, swept up in the busyness of life? In today's episode Mary shares her personal experience in slowing down, building intention and creating spaciousness as she experienced the loss of her partner, Max. This episode is highly recommended for anyone experiencing grief, as Mary generously shares how she navigated being confronted with limited time to create time abundance. Time impacts all areas of our lives, it's our most precious resource. We would love to support you to create more abundance and spaciousness around your time. Click here to become a Time Hacker: https://www.timehackers.xyz/time-hackers or if you'd prefer 1:1 coaching support, join the Time Hacker 1:1 coaching program here: https://hackyourtime.as.me/schedule.php Connect with Mary here: Website: https://marytalbot.com/ Instagram: @marytalbotcoaching https://www.instagram.com/marytalbotcoaching?igsh=bnVodHozdWgweGEx&utm_source=qr
Bob Martin now has a doctorate degree in Paranormal Science. After following and learning from his mentor Dr. Paul Masters, Ph.D., he is now going out on his own paranormal investigations. A friend has invited him to investigate one of the classic Catskill resorts and make a TV special while he is at it. Samuel Levitz has arranged this opportunity to investigate a place he went as a young man with his family. This classic now abandoned Catskill resort is called Schechter Hotel.Come along with Bob, Samuel, and their partner Mary Talbot to this haunted resort and investigate multiple ghost sightings. This book is a continuation of Dr. Master's Ghost Stories leading them all to a new phase under Bob's direction.
A conversation with Alice-Mary Talbot (Dumbarton Oaks) on the experience of communal monastic life in Byzantium, ranging from its organization and rules to its religious goals, engagement with society, and differences between monasteries for men and women. It is based on Alice-Mary's recent book Varieties of Monastic Experience in Byzantium, 800-1453 (University of Notre Dame Press 2019), which discusses solitary ascetics too.
Dramatising the Real: In a pair of interviews looking at comic creators who dramatise real life events, Alex Fitch talks to Bryan and Mary Talbot about their graphic novels Sally Heathcote: Suffragette and The Red Virgin and the Vision of Utopia on French revolutionary Louise Michel in a Q and A recorded at Graphic Brighton, […]
Hello comics fans. On this episode we have the lovely Kate Charlesworth on the show to talk all about her new book Sensible Footwear, A Girls Guide. The book looks at the history of the LGBT community and the hardships (and joys) she dealt with through her own life. Kate has previously written comic strips for the gay press as well as drawing Sally Heathcote Suffragette for Bryon and Mary Talbot. Check out Kates book at Myriad. Tom reviews The Whore Chronicles, written by Tony Esmond and features art by Vicent Hunt, Rachael Bell, Sarah Harris, Tom Curry, Charles Raymond, Stuart Mulrain and Rik Jackson. Ian and Nikki review The Glass Hood by Matt Garvey, Grayham Puttock and Stefano Pavan and Cloud Hotel by Julian Hanshaw. Mike and Pete join forces again for a two hour extravaganza all about the events at this years festival. In particular they look at gothic comics, zombie movies, banned/censored comics, hell themed comics and Belgian comics. They continue this next episode as they continue there in depth look at this years event. Thank you for listening.http://www.comicartpodcast.ukTwitter: @comicartfestpodFacebook: Comic Art PodcastInstagram: ComicArtPodcastAlso on YouTubeFind all about the festival at http://www.comicartfestival.comLogo designed by Pete Taylor at http://www.thismanthispete.comContributions by Mike Williams (@CthulhuPunk) Pete Taylor (@thismanthispete) and Tom Stewart (@uramyx).Title Music used with permission: Don’t Fool Yourself by Pop Noir
Hello comics fans. On this episode we have the lovely Kate Charlesworth on the show to talk all about her new book Sensible Footwear, A Girls Guide. The book looks at the history of the LGBT community and the hardships (and joys) she dealt with through her own life. Kate has previously written comic strips for the gay press as well as drawing Sally Heathcote Suffragette for Bryon and Mary Talbot. Check out Kates book at Myriad. Tom reviews The Whore Chronicles, written by Tony Esmond and features art by Vicent Hunt, Rachael Bell, Sarah Harris, Tom Curry, Charles Raymond, Stuart Mulrain and Rik Jackson. Ian and Nikki review The Glass Hood by Matt Garvey, Grayham Puttock and Stefano Pavan and Cloud Hotel by Julian Hanshaw. Mike and Pete join forces again for a two hour extravaganza all about the events at this years festival. In particular they look at gothic comics, zombie movies, banned/censored comics, hell themed comics and Belgian comics. They continue this next episode as they continue there in depth look at this years event. Thank you for listening.http://www.comicartpodcast.ukTwitter: @comicartfestpodFacebook: Comic Art PodcastInstagram: ComicArtPodcastAlso on YouTubeFind all about the festival at http://www.comicartfestival.comLogo designed by Pete Taylor at http://www.thismanthispete.comContributions by Mike Williams (@CthulhuPunk) Pete Taylor (@thismanthispete) and Tom Stewart (@uramyx).Title Music used with permission: Don’t Fool Yourself by Pop Noir
To celebrate International Women's Day we're revisiting one of our favourite interviews - Mary and Bryan Talbot discuss how they wrote the story of Sally Heathcote and turned it in to a graphic novel.Books mentioned:This Is Just My Face, Try Not to Stare by Gabourey Sidibe http://po.st/3npVj5My Own Story (Vintage Feminism Short Edition) by Emmeline Pankhurst http://po.st/Wk536xMotherhood by Sheila Heti http://po.st/yiA8zEBrit(ish), On Race, Identity and Belonging by Afua Hirsch http://po.st/2TuupLSally Heathcote, Suffragette by Mary Talbot http://po.st/LbuJvnFollow us on twitter: twitter.com/vintagebooksSign up to our bookish newsletter to hear all about our new releases, see exclusive extracts and win prizes: po.st/vintagenewsletterMary Talbot, Kate Charlesworth, Bryan Talbot - Sally Heathcote SuffragetteSally Heathcote: Suffragette is a gripping inside story of the campaign for votes for women. A tale of loyalty, love and courage, set against a vividly realised backdrop of Edwardian Britain, it follows the fortunes of a maid-of-all-work swept up in the feminist militancy of the era. Sally Heathcote: Suffragette is another stunning collaboration from Costa Award winners, Mary and Bryan Talbot. Teamed up with acclaimed illustrator Kate Charlesworth, Sally Heathcote's lavish pages bring history to life.Read more at https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/1095547/sally-heathcote/#YUleeg6y1buGjRhO.99 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
"The Syllabus"-- Paul's reading list ( 0:00 ) Political biographies with Edward Haynes ( 48:31 ) "The Wait List" with Sonny ( 1:43:12 ) First, (at 0:00) Paul tries a new approach to “the Syllabus,” his reading list of comics to read widely with him these next two weeks (see list below). He touches on various titles from his last two weeks’ reading list as an explainer about the idea of “Prolepsis and Futures,” and how it applies in comics. Those titles include “The Incal” by Jodorowsky and Moebius (Humanoids), “Speak” by Laurie Halse Anderson and Emily Carroll (FSG), “Battle Angel Alita” by (Kodansha/Comixology), “Birthright” by Joshua Williamson and Andrei Bresson (Image), “Universe” by Albert Monteys (Panel Syndicate), and Black Panther, the comics and the movie! Then we welcome Multiversity’s Edward Haynes (at 48:31 ), who visits to talk about Political Biographies he has read recently. Ed’s on Twitter at twitter.com/teddyhaynes , his Multiversity work can be found at www.multiversitycomics.com/author/ehaynes/ and he makes mention of the literary magazine he’s co-editing for transgender writers, Across & Through, at www.acrossandthrough.co.uk/ . We chat about “Castro” by Reinhardt Kleist (SelfMadeHero/Arsenal Pulp Press), “March” by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell (IDW/Top Shelf), and “Sally Heathcote, Suffragette” by Mary Talbot, Bryan Talbot, and Kate Charlesworth (Dark Horse). Finally, we play catchup with Paul’s brother Sonny for a March edition of the Wait List (at 1:43:12 ), spotlighting upcoming trades and collections they’re planning to check out. Titles include “Green Lantern: Earth One” by Corinna Bechko and Gabriel Hardman (DC), “Super Sons” v2 by Peter Tomasi and Jorge Jimenez (DC), “Letter 44” by Charles Soule and Alberto Albuquerque (Oni), and “Invincible” by Robert Kirkman and Cory Walker (Image). “The Syllabus” for 2/2/2018. (Read along wherever you’d like, and we welcome you to share your thoughts on any of these comics with #ComicsSyllabus) World/BD (Wednesdays): “Ring of the Seven Worlds” by Gualdoni, Clima, and Piana (Humanoids) Throwback (Thursdays): “Fourth World Omnibus” by Jack Kirby (DC), more “Strangers in Paradise” by Terry Moore (Abstract). Family (Fridays): “Wires and Nerve” by Marissa Meyer and Douglas Holgate (Feiwel and Friends). Superheroes (Saturdays): “Avengers: No Surrender” by Waid, Ewing, Zub, Larraz, Jacinto (Marvel) and “Justice League: The People versus the Justice League” by Priest, Woods, Santucci, Churchill (DC). Sequential/Small Press (Sundays): “Happy Hour in America” by Tim Lane (Fantagraphics), “Hypercapitalism” by Larry Gonnick and Tim Kassar, “Something City” by Ellice Weaver (Avery Hill) Manga (Mondays): “Dr. Stone” by Riichiro Inagaki and Boichi in Weekly Shonen Jump (Viz). Alt TPB (Tuesdays): “The Wicked and the Divine” by Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie (Image) and “Animosity” by Marguerite Bennett and Rafael de Latorre (Aftershock) Subscribe and follow the Comics Syllabus podcast on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or Soundcloud, or copy this RSS feed to your podcatcher: feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…739/sounds.rss or you can find archives for this podcast (previously named “Study Comics with Paul”) here: studycomics.club/ Join the discussion on the Comics Syllabus Facebook page: facebook.com/ComicsSyllabus or Follow Paul on Twitter: twitter.com/TwoPlai or leave your comments here on the showpage. Thanks for listening!
Mary Talbot, author of The Red Virgin and the Vision of Utopia, joins us to talk about the book's subject, Louise Michel. We talk about Louise's extraordinary life, including her involvement in the Paris Commune and her deportation to New Caledonia. Utopian Horizons is a podcast about utopias, real and imaginary. Each episode covers a different utopia, dystopia, utopian, or utopian movement, asking what they can tell us about ourselves, our society, and our future. Music: The Fiction of Utopian Studies/The Road To Oceania by The Fucked Up Beat.
Journalist Paul Mason and graphic novelists Mary and Bryan Talbot discuss Louise Michel, the revolutionary feminist anarchist dubbed 'The Red Virgin of Montmartre', who fought on the barricades defending the Paris Commune in 1871. UC Berkeley psychologist Dr Dacher Keltner explores what he calls the power paradox.The Red Virgin and the Vision of Utopia by Bryan and Mary Talbot is out now. The Power Paradox by Dacher Keltner is out now. Producer: Jacqueline Smith
In Episode 11 we chat via Skype with Kate Charlesworth. Kate has been published far and wide, in some of the UK’s most read newspapers and magazines. We chat about her recent collaboration with Bryan & Mary Talbot on Sally Heathcote: Suffragette and look back on some of her earlier work. Kate has enjoyed a long […] The post Kate Charlesworth appeared first on Drawn Out Podcast.
In Episode 11 we chat via Skype with Kate Charlesworth. Kate has been published far and wide, in some of the UK's most read newspapers and magazines. We chat about her recent collaboration with Bryan & Mary Talbot on Sally Heathcote: Suffragette and look back on some of her earlier work. Kate has enjoyed a long […] The post Kate Charlesworth appeared first on Drawn Out Podcast.
On this episode of Comic Books Are Burning In Hell, Chris, Joe and Tucker discuss the following topics: Taking vacations from comics: the pros and cons! The Hospital Suite, by John Porcellino and published by Drawn & Quarterly Bumperhead, by Gilbert Hernandez and published by Drawn & Quarterly Sally Heathcote: Suffrage by Kate Charlesworth, Bryan Talbot and Mary Talbot and published by Dark Horse
9 November 2012 Author Bryan Talbot dropped into Foyles to talk about Grandville Bête Noire, the third instalment of the phenomenal Grandville series of anthropomorphic steampunk romance thrillers starring Inspector Le Brock. In this interview with Kim Newman, Bryan was joined by his wife Mary Talbot, writer and co-creator of Dotter of Her Father's Eyes, part autobiographical family history, part biography of James Joyce's daughter Lucia. This was a Comica / Foyles event.
Jessica Chastain talks about her role in Zero Dark Thirty and Denzel Washington on his new film, Flight. 2012 Costa nominees Hilary Mantel and Bryan & Mary Talbot on being shortlisted; Alexei Sayle discusses his return to standup and Ruthie Henshall on a career on stage.
With Mark Lawson. Denzel Washington has won an Oscar nomination for his role in the film Flight. He plays an airline pilot who miraculously lands a stricken plane. At first he's hailed as a hero, but then questions start to arise about what actually happened. Denzel Washington reflects on the role, and his long Hollywood career. Manet: Portraying Life is the first major British exhibition of Edouard Manet's portraits - including 50 paintings as well as pastels and photographs from private and public collections from around the world. Novelist A S Byatt reviews. Bryan and Mary Talbot have won the biography category of this year's Costa Book Awards for their graphic memoir Dotter of her Father's Eyes. They discuss working as a husband and wife team and whether talking about work is banned at the dinner table. Producer Claire Bartleet.
Listen to a recording of Nicola Streeten interviewing Bryan and Mary Talbot about their forthcoming graphic novel, Dotter of Her Father’s Eyes, which contrasts two coming of age narratives: Lucia, daughter of James Joyce, and author Mary Talbot, daughter of … Continue reading →