In this episode Kennedy and Rebecca visit Prythian and Do. Not. Have. Fun. We didn't enjoy this.
We discuss the word-of-mouth phenomenon about an octopus, a senior citizen, and an absolute moron.
In this minisode before our upcoming episode on Remarkably Bright Creatures, we discuss speculative feminist canon masterpieces, how The Odyssey is drags at the end, why Mary Robison should be more widely read, how a novella gave us Brad Pitt, and whether anyone has ever seen a Tabitha King book in real life. Some of the books discussed:I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline HarpmanLegends of the Fall by Jim HarrisonThe Woman Lit By Fireflies by Jim HarrisonWherever You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation in Everyday Life by Jon Kabat-Zinn PhDWhy Did I Ever by Mary RobisonDays by Mary RobisonInvisible Monsters by Chuck Palahniuk
Kennedy and Rebecca cover Swedish banger turned English-language banger, A Man Called Ove.
We had a lot to say about this book so we broke this episode into two parts.
Kennedy and Rebecca get into Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow to see what all the fuss is about.
We read what The NY Times called "the best book of the 21st century." Turns out we agree.
Enjoy our To Be Read minisode as we get our lives together as best we can leading up to our next main episode covering Elena Ferrante's beloved masterpiece, My Brilliant Friend. To Be Read minisodes cover non-podcast books we've recently read, books we're currently reading, and general news and updates.
Kennedy and Rebecca go back to the early 90s with Waiting to Exhale.
Rebecca and Kennedy cover the second half of Demon Copperhead.
Part one of Demon Copperhead. We cover chapters 1 - 34 in this episode.
Kennedy and Rebecca read and discuss one of the best-selling books of all time.
We solve the 9/11 ending of Ottessa Moshfegh's My Year of Rest and Relaxation.
Loved, despised, and maligned, we discuss Fight Club, the book (and movie) that everyone is convinced everyone else misunderstands. Also, Kennedy had a cold while we recorded this and you can hear it. Sorry.
Is the history really secret if you tell Richard Papen about it? Rebecca and Kennedy tackle the Donna Tartt's beloved first novel, The Secret History.
Rebecca and Kennedy get mopey and nihilistic with a book about grim, emotionless reality of being....rich? Saddle up for Bret Easton Ellis's debut classic, Less Than Zero.