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Britt Wray on bringing emotions to bear on climate science (encore)

Kobo in Conversation

Release Date: 08/23/2023

MORE of the best books we read in 2024 show art MORE of the best books we read in 2024

Kobo in Conversation

Following our last episode all about the best books we read in 2024, host and producer Nathan Maharaj connected over Zoom with even more Kobo staffers (including one that'll be very familiar Kobo in Conversation listeners) to talk about the books that have stuck with them over the past 12 months. So welcome back once more, to our year in books.  We'll be back in your feed soon with more amazing author interviews.

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The best books we read in 2024 show art The best books we read in 2024

Kobo in Conversation

Listen in as Kobo staffers share the best books they read in 2024. It's all here, from the buzziest new releases to bucket list classics.  

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Dr. Jonathan Stea on how to mind your mental health show art Dr. Jonathan Stea on how to mind your mental health

Kobo in Conversation

Host Nathan Maharaj spoke with Dr. Jonathan Stea, clinical psychologist and adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Calgary, about avoiding the pitfalls of pseudoscience and what we can all learn from wellness grifters in his book .

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Anne Fleming on love stories and curiosity show art Anne Fleming on love stories and curiosity

Kobo in Conversation

Host Michael Tamblyn spoke with novelist Anne Fleming, author of , which was a finalist for the 2024 Giller Prize. It’s the story of how five fictional 17th century manuscripts uncovered by an amateur historian named Anne paint a picture of a handful of unusual lives.

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Anna Gomez on the things she's picked up to write about... somewhere along the way show art Anna Gomez on the things she's picked up to write about... somewhere along the way

Kobo in Conversation

Host Michael Tamblyn spoke with novelist Anna Gomez, author of . It’s the story of Charlotte, or Charlie to her friends, a woman thrown into turmoil with the death of her father. She is given a collection of letters that her mother had been sending since she left Charlie and her dad so long ago. Those letters set Charlie on a journey, and we all get to come along for the ride.

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Joining Richard Powers on the Playground show art Joining Richard Powers on the Playground

Kobo in Conversation

Host Nathan Maharaj spoke with novelist Richard Powers. Many readers will know him from his 2019 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel , or perhaps , which won the 2006 National Book Award. His newest novel is , a story about four characters joined in different ways—marriage, friendship, a kind of celebrity—but sharing nonetheless an interest in the French Polynesian island of Makatea, where much of the story takes place.

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Booktalking - NaNoWriMo's line in the sand, Robo-narration side hustles, a penguin glow-up(?), and more show art Booktalking - NaNoWriMo's line in the sand, Robo-narration side hustles, a penguin glow-up(?), and more

Kobo in Conversation

In our second installment in this new series, hosts Michael Tamblyn and Nathan Maharaj sat down to go over some of the latest goings-on since summer in the business of books. Topics covered in this episode: Is AI a no-go for NaNoWriMo? Audible announces AI narration—as a side hustle for human narrators B&N needs more shovels (to deal with AI) Bestselling nonfiction author Steven Johnson on employing AI as research assistant on steriods -  Odds on an AI writing a bestselling book Fewer booksellers at Apple Books A leaner, meaner penguin* in the Penguin Random House logo (or, the...

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katherena vermette on crafting a real story out of fakery show art katherena vermette on crafting a real story out of fakery

Kobo in Conversation

Host Nathan Maharaj spoke with writer katherena vermette, author of the award-winning 2016 novel , the graphic novel series , as well as a number of and . Her latest novel is . It’s the story of a pair of sisters, lyn and June, whose mother’s claims to Indigenous identity come under more scrutiny than they can bear.

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Jamaluddin Aram on leaving space for the reader to work show art Jamaluddin Aram on leaving space for the reader to work

Kobo in Conversation

Host Nathan Maharaj spoke with writer and filmmaker Jamaluddin Aram, winner of the 2024  for Literary fiction for his novel . It’s a tapestry of stories about different people—shopkeepers, tradespeople, doctors, children, and their parents—while in the background, often very deep in the background, a war is being fought.

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Amanda Peters on the art of thought-provoking storytelling show art Amanda Peters on the art of thought-provoking storytelling

Kobo in Conversation

Host Nathan Maharaj spoke with Amanda Peters, author of the 2023 novel , a book about a 4-year-old girl who goes missing while her family is visiting Maine for the summer to pick blueberries. It’s a book that won both the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction and the Crime Writers of Canada’s first novel award, among many other accolades. Her new book is a collection of short stories called .

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More Episodes

We're taking a little bit of time off for summer, so this episode is a re-release of one we put out early last year. It's with science writer Britt Wray. Nathan spoke with her last May about her book Generation Dread: Finding Purpose in an Age of Climate Crisis, which deals with the psychological and emotional implications of climate change, a topic that has only grown in relevance since it was first published.

Britt Wray on bringing emotions to bear on climate science