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The NewlyReads

Author: Daniel Fladager and Kylie Regan

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The history of literature through book recommendations. Two newly-married English teachers discuss a book that one loves and the other is reading for the first time. Will it take its place on the shelf of honor, or be thrown carelessly onto the shelf of shame? Join us for this podcast about the people we love and the books that come with them!
36 Episodes
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Kylie takes on another NewlyReads Game. New stakes are introduced and street pennies are argued over. 
Kylie makes Dan read Hurston's beautiful short novel about a woman chasing her horizon. They discuss Hurston's reputation with her contemporaries, the novel's engagement with Transcendentalist ideas, and why it's so frequently taught in American literature courses. 
Kylie makes Dan read D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love (1920). Together, they discuss the novel's place in the Modernist canon, explore its depiction of a restrictive and generally doomed  Britain in the wake of WWI and industrialization, and acknowledge that sometimes you really do have to karate chop a demonic rabbit. Follow us on Instagram @thenewlyreads or drop us a line at thenewlyreads@gmail.com ! 
In the bonus episode on Nabokov's Pale Fire, Kylie and Dan discuss what characterizes Nabokov's sentence-level style. Then, they debut The NewlyReads game, a passage identification quiz designed to test the knowledge of the host who chose the novel under discussion. Can Dan identify which one of three passages comes from Pale Fire, and earn bonus points for ID-ing the authors of the other two passages? Can you, dear listener? Check out our Instagram page @thenewlyreads to see the quiz passages. Drop us a line at thenewlyreads@gmail.com to tell us how you did!We'll be back in two weeks, after a short spring break, to discuss D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love. 
In their second interstitial episode, The NewlyReads examine Jeff Vandermeer's first weird landscape by discussing "The Hoegbotton Guide to the Early History of Ambergris" from the collection City of Saints and Madmen. They talk footnote fiction, provide their rankings of Vandermeer's fictional worlds, and Dan explains why having Magneto-esque control over fungus would be the ultimate superpower. 
Jeff Vandermeer's Borne

Jeff Vandermeer's Borne

2021-02-1301:15:30

It's a podcast with a face! This week, Kylie has Dan read an author known with putting human faces on any old thing and calling it scary. Which, strangely, works every time. 
New music! New segment! Weekly episodes! What more could you want? Today Kylie and Daniel dig in to a sentence from Willa Cather's Death Comes for the Archbishop. We talk about scansion, the passive voice, and the ways that textual artists use their medium to convey meaning, and how sleuthing literature folks tease that meaning out.
Dan makes Kylie read Willa Cather's Death Comes for the Archbishop. Is it a cowboy tale? A work of high modernism? The source text for Slow West? (Probably not that last one...) Rustle up your cattle and join The NewlyReads as they meander through the long history of landscape description, why Catholics get a good rep in literature, and how Kylie got Goldfinched by this one. Also, a big announcement: We're going weekly! Starting next week, after every traditional episode, we'll release a shorter companion episode that delves into each author's sentence-level style. So tune in next week for our Sentence Breakdown of a line that encapsulates the themes and style of Death Comes for the Archbishop. Follow us on Instagram @thenewlyreads or drop us a line at thenewlyreads@gmail.com
Kylie has Dan read Colson Whitehead's 2019 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Nickel Boys. After Kylie shares the story of the inscription on her copy of John Henry Days, the NewlyReads discuss why Whitehead frequently baffles critics and where his career might be going next.For more on the historical research that informs the novel, go to www.theofficialwhitehouseboys.org
Jonathan Franzen's Freedom

Jonathan Franzen's Freedom

2020-12-2601:57:41

Dan makes Kylie read Jonathan Franzen's Freedom, the book that was under a lot of Christmas trees in 2010. (That's, uh, about the best we could do to tie this deeply misanthropic book to any kind of holiday theme...) Join us as we discuss Franzen's amazing ability to antagonize everyone on the internet and decide whether Freedom lives up to its classification as one of the 21st century's Great American Novels. 
Kylie makes Dan read a B-side novel from an A-lister of American fiction! In the 1897 The Spoils of Poynton, an old woman with Britain's most beautifully decorated house is faced with the horrifying prospect of a daughter-in-law with hideous taste. Somehow, this ridiculous premise leads to high drama: furniture is moved in the night, and tea biscuits are incriminatingly displaced! Listen as The NewlyReads discuss why James isn't a household name, the novel's strange mix of headstrong and totally indecisive characters, and why titles with dual meanings really are the best. 
The NewlyReads do poetry! This episode we discuss why feminism is rockstar-level awesome, the caves under New York City (populated by monsters? I don't know, but probably), the newest biography of Adrienne Rich, and why poetry can make us sweat.  A note about the end of the episode: We had a problem at the very end of the recording, so we learned that our announcement of the next episode was cut off! Tragedy. It's The Spoils of Poynton by Henry James, though!  
In this special episode, Dan and Kylie wade into murky philosophical waters to investigate why we're able to laugh, cry, and rage over the fates of fictional characters. If you want to know what's in Dan's copious notes referenced on this episode, here's some of the reading we did to prep for this recording: --Bernard Paris, Imagined Human Beings: A Psychological Approach to Character and Conflict in Literature, NYU Press (1997) --Amie L. Thomasson, Fiction and Metaphysics, Cambridge UP (1999)--Baruch Hochman, Character in Literature , Cornell University Press (1985)--Howard Sklar, "Believable Fictions: On the Nature of Emotional Responses to Fictional Characters," Helsinki English Studies, Vol 5 (2009) --Paisley Livingstone, Andrea Sauchelli, and Paisley Livingston, "Philosophical Perspectives on --Fictional Characters," New Literary History, Vol. 42.2 (2011)--Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's "Fictional Entities" (2018)
Today's episode is a Kylie pick! Is it a street filled with mangoes? A street on a mango? A street for mangoes? The only possible way to know is to listen!
Dan makes Kylie read Paul Theroux's 1981 novel about a man who drags his family down with him as he pursues his dream of total self-sufficiency. Hopefully Dan doesn't have similar plans for Kylie and their cat children... Come on a journey upriver as The NewlyReads debate whether Allie Fox is an interestingly flawed character or just a tiresome egomaniac, examine how Theroux's travel writing clarifies the novel's ideas, and decide whether ice is really civilization. Thanks to a generous grant from Indiana University, we were able to make a major equipment upgrade. Starting with this episode, you can hear us even more clearly as we argue about critical theory and character arcs! Follow us on Instagram @thenewlyreads or send us an email at thenewlyreads@gmail.com
Don Delillo's White Noise

Don Delillo's White Noise

2020-10-0201:10:57

Do you hear that sound? That constant sound in the background? It's the long silence since we went on vacation. Well, we're back! This is our last episode with our old recording equipment, and we used it to discuss a classic: Don DeLillo's White Noise. Next episode: new fancy tech that we will spend the intervening weeks learning how to use.
Dan makes Kylie read Barbara Kingsolver's debut novel, The Bean Trees (1988). They discuss the tradition of scientist-turned-writers, wonder why B-side books sometimes stick with them more than an author's "major work," and debate the virtues of wide-open Midwestern plains!Follow us on Instagram @thenewlyreads or send us an email at thenewlyreads@gmail.com
Kylie makes Dan read James Baldwin's second novel, Giovanni's Room (1956). They discuss Baldwin's unique prose style, why his essays get more attention than his fiction, and the history of black American writer-activists and analyze why Baldwin's novel about doomed love, repressed sexuality, and the difficulty of defining Americanness feels so timeless. 
A visit from the longest episode yet. A NEW SEGMENT appears: the Sentence Breakdown. 
Here at The NewlyReads we have a core tenet: Thou shalt not dunk on thy books. This week, Daniel gets dangerously close to sinning against that core belief, our cats make not one but TWO appearances, and we try to solve the mystery: Wait, wasn't this all about Waldegrave?
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