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Lit on Fire

Author: Elizabeth Hahn and Peter Whetzel

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“Welcome to Lit on Fire — the podcast where literature meets controversy, where banned books, silenced voices, and dangerous ideas refuse to stay quiet. From classrooms to courtrooms, novels to news cycles, we explore how stories challenge power, expose injustice, and ignite social change.


Our logo — a woman bound atop a burning stack of books — isn’t just an image. It’s a warning and a promise. A warning about what happens when voices are erased… and a promise that stories, once lit, are impossible to put out.


So if you’re ready to question, to argue, to feel uncomfortable, and to think deeper — you’re in the right place. This is - Lit on Fire.

22 Episodes
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Send us Fan Mail Nobody here is destined. Nobody is crowned. And that’s exactly why Stumbling Up by Reck Well hits so hard. We’re talking about a LitRPG story that swaps the power fantasy for something messier: three lifelong friends trying to become adventurers while carrying the kind of self-doubt that never shuts up. Cole wakes up hungover with a life-changing mistake already made, Tandy is the high-achiever who’s tired of living by other people’s rules, and Leo is the friend whose insecur...
Send us Fan Mail Can you keep a beloved book on your shelf while refusing to excuse the person behind it? We step into the most uncomfortable corner of modern reading culture: the collision between great stories and flawed authors, where personal identity, harm, and community pressure all show up at once. We don’t chase easy answers, because “art versus artist” isn’t a slogan, it’s a lived ethical problem for readers, teachers, parents, and anyone trying to read responsibly. We dig into the ...
Send us Fan Mail Cozy fantasy sounds gentle until you realize what it’s really risking: your sense of self. We step into S.L. Rowland’s Tales of Aedrea with Halfling Harvest and There Be Dragons Here, two warm-hearted fantasies where the “high stakes” aren’t wars or prophecies, but belonging, purpose, and the fear of living a life that doesn’t feel like home. We start with Marigold, a halfling running a vineyard and inn under the long shadow of her parents’ legendary success. A yearly wine c...
Send us Fan Mail “Stop making everything political” sounds reasonable until you ask what politics actually is. We define it as the everyday negotiation of power, identity, values, and belonging, then we test the claim that stories can ever be “just stories.” If a narrative has conflict, rules, heroes, villains, gender roles, class signals, or consequences, it is already making choices about what matters and who counts. From there, we zoom out to the biggest gatekeeper of all: the canon. Who ...
Send us Fan Mail Peace can look like a warm barstool, a well-made cocktail, and a quiet town by the sea. But if you’ve ever hit burnout, carried guilt for too long, or wondered who you are after the job that defined you ends, you know comfort is never just comfort. We step into S.L. Rowland’s cozy fantasy world of Adria to talk about Cursed Cocktails and Sword and Thistle, two novels that swap constant war for something harder to face: healing. We unpack what “cozy fantasy” really means, why...
Send us Fan Mail A queen buries the warrior she loves, builds a kingdom on the aftershock, and then watches him walk back into her court ten years later. That single impossible return is the spark for our deep dive into Thorns, Feathers, And Bones by Anderson W. Frost, an indie dark epic fantasy where politics run on betrayal, grief hardens into policy, and power keeps finding new disguises. We start spoiler free with the honest reading experience: the opening throws a lot at you, but the ch...
Send us Fan Mail Step inside a house that feeds on longing. We tackle Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House through Eleanor Vance’s eyes, asking whether the terror is truly supernatural or the slow burn of a life starved of choice. From the first “turn back” at the gate to that devastating, decisive final drive, we unpack how Jackson binds architecture to psychology—how skewed angles, slamming doors, and whispering halls mirror a mind trained to obey. We dig into the “cup of stars” as...
Send us Fan Mail A demon is easy to spot. The real horror is the smile you’re taught to trust. We crack open Grady Hendrix’s My Best Friend’s Exorcism to explore how an ’80s possession tale exposes the quieter monsters—purity panic, class snobbery, and adults who would rather protect reputation than protect a child. Peter and Elizabeth trade laughs and gut-punches as we revisit roller rinks, mixtapes, and that white-van “exorcist,” then follow the story into its darkest rooms where belief loo...
Send us Fan Mail A recommendation letter shouldn’t cost half your life—unless your advisor died, went to hell, and your future depends on dragging him back. We dive into R.F. Kuang’s Katabasis with a frank look at ambition, institutional harm, and the uneasy bargains that fuel elite academia. Two scholars descend through a Dante-coded underworld where each level doubles as a metaphor for pressure, plagiarism, coercion, and the cult of genius. The result is a sharp, unsettling exploration of w...
Send us Fan Mail A blade that sings. A chorus of mouths that try to drown it out. We dive into Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark and trace how horror and history intertwine to reveal the real machinery of white supremacy—from Stone Mountain’s ritual power to the propaganda engine of The Birth of a Nation. We unpack why casting the Klan as literal monsters isn’t exaggeration but precision, and how Black Southern spiritual traditions turn music, memory, and community into weapons of defense. We spe...
Send us Fan Mail What if war were a livestream with unlockable skins and an insurance plan for infinite respawns? We dive into Matt Dinniman’s Operation Bounce House and pull back the curtain on a future where corporations sell conflict as content, gamers pilot mechs against “terrorists,” and a quiet farming colony is rebranded as the enemy. It’s satire that hits like shrapnel—funny until it isn’t—and it dares us to ask who profits when chaos becomes policy. We walk through New Sonora’s worl...
Send us Fan Mail Ready to question tidy endings and comfortable myths? We dive into Percival Everett’s James—a bold reimagining that shifts the center of gravity from Huck to Jim as James—and uncover how language, law, and narrative shape who gets to be seen as fully human. From the opening pages, we wrestle with why this isn’t a simple retelling: Everett keeps the river but strips out the wishful thinking, replacing it with a more honest ledger of costs, choices, and the brutal calculus of s...
Send us Fan Mail A charming neighbor moves in, the casseroles come out, and the danger starts where polite society refuses to look. We crack open The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires to examine how a suburban horror story exposes patriarchy, gaslighting, and the quiet machinery that protects predators. From PTA meetings to police briefings, we trace how institutions prize male comfort, dismiss women’s intuition as hysteria, and treat marginalized communities as expendable until ...
Send us Fan Mail A summons arrives without a stamp, the house grows its own defenses, and a family gathers to witness a matriarch who refuses to explain herself. We dive into Zoraida Córdova’s The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina to explore how magical realism becomes a clear language for what families cannot say out loud—trauma, migration, race, and the ache of not knowing. As hosts, we unpack the novel’s bold choice to make miracles feel ordinary and silence feel heavy, showing how that tensi...
Send us Fan Mail A slur on a subway platform, a sister lost, and a ghost that won’t stop knocking—our conversation digs into how Kylie Lee Baker’s Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng turns horror into a blade for truth. We trace Cora Zeng’s journey through pandemic-era New York as she navigates grief, crime scene cleaning, and the sickening rise of anti-Asian hate, asking what happens when other people’s fear tries to decide who you are. We talk about the hungry ghost as a ferocious meta...
Send us Fan Mail A color-coded empire tells its workers to love their chains, and a miner learns how deep the lie runs. We take you inside Red Rising’s brutal hierarchy to examine how propaganda, spectacle, and masculinity prop up a system that rewards obedience while punishing dissent. Starting with Eo’s defiant vision and Darrow’s infiltration of the Golds, we unpack the moral trade-offs of fighting a rigged game from the inside and the lingering question of whether true change requires ref...
Send us Fan Mail Ash falls, trees stand like burnt ribs, and a father tells his son to carry the fire. We dive into Cormac McCarthy’s The Road not just as a survival story, but as a sharp mirror reflecting who gets to be called human when every system fails. We wrestle with the novel’s treatment of women—the mother’s contested agency, the near-total silencing of female voices, and the brutal imagery of bodies reduced to utility—and ask what it means when the narratives that endure in catastro...
Send us Fan Mail A death game with loot drops shouldn’t feel this human, but Dungeon Crawler Carl sneaks past your guard with jokes and then hits you with a mirror. We dive into the LitRPG’s wild premise—Earth flattened by aliens, survivors herded into a televised dungeon—and explore why Carl and Princess Donut work as more than a meme. Their bond isn’t comic relief; it’s the engine of a found family story about dignity, tenderness and the cost of staying human when survival is monetized. We...
Send us Fan Mail What if a family legacy of witchcraft demanded more than survival—what if it demanded a reckoning? We dive into Kirsten Miller’s The Women of Wild Hill, where two estranged sisters collide with a centuries-old haunting, a thorny prophecy, and a world that keeps pretending it isn’t on fire. The scale is bigger than a single villain; it’s the machinery of patriarchy, wealth, and extraction, and the question is brutal: do you fix a rigged system from within, or do you burn it do...
Send us Fan Mail What if the moment you were told to disappear was the moment you became impossible to ignore? We take on Kirsten Miller’s The Change, a sharp, propulsive thriller where three midlife women transform grief, rage, and invisibility into a force that refuses to back down. Think murder mystery meets feminist awakening: Harriet roots into the earth and grows dangerous wisdom, Nessa hears the dead and demands peace, and Jo channels fury into fire and strength. Together, they confron...
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