Feminist Book Club: The Podcast
Curious about the National Book Award finalists? Last week and this week, our team dived into the shortlists for the Young People’s Literature and Fiction titles. Today, Mariquita and Mhairie discuss the five shortlisted books in Fiction. The National Book Award winners will be announced tomorrow! Mentioned in this episode: Support this episode’s hosts: Follow Mariquita: // Follow Mhairie: // Get our weekly round-up of blog and podcast content delivered directly to your inbox every Friday . This episode was edited and produced by Renee Powers on...
info_outline FBC Weekly - Nov. 15, 2024Feminist Book Club: The Podcast
Renee, Rah, and Sally reconvene to ask is doxxing justified?, plus Grammy takeaways, and what we're watching and reading. Want to see the video recording and put faces to names? We publish these the same day in the FBC Community! Join us here: Books mentioned:
info_outline National Book Award Finalists for Young People’s LiteratureFeminist Book Club: The Podcast
Curious about the National Book Award finalists? This week and next week, our team is diving into the shortlist for the Young People’s Literature and Fiction titles. Today, join Renee, Jordy, and Nox as they tell each other about the five nominees for Young People’s Literature and which title they think is going to win the award. Mentioned in this episode: Support this episode’s hosts Follow Renee: // Follow Jordy: // Follow Nox: // // Get our weekly round-up of blog and podcast content delivered directly to your inbox every Friday . ...
info_outline FBC Weekly - Nov. 8, 2024Feminist Book Club: The Podcast
Join Renee, Rah, and Sally as they catch up and share how they're coping post-election, what they're baking, and how they're escaping Want to see the video recording and put faces to names? We publish these the same day in the FBC Community! Join us here: Books Mentioned:
info_outline The Memeification of Culture (and this election) with Dr. Lauren CagleFeminist Book Club: The Podcast
Mhairie speaks with Dr. Lauren Cagle, professor of rhetoric at the University of Kentucky, about the history of memes, their impact on culture, and particularly on prevalence of memes in the 2024 US Presidential election. They discuss the field of rhetoric more broadly, define the term “meme,” and investigate the generational differences in social media use and online communication as it relates to the consumption of political information. Join our to be a part of the election night craft circle. Support this episode’s host and guest Follow Mhairie: // ...
info_outline FBC Weekly - Nov. 1, 2024Feminist Book Club: The Podcast
Renee, Steph, Rah, and Sally share their unfiltered thoughts on Halloween candy, Woman of the Hour, Love is Blind, Agatha All Along, and what they're reading. Want to see the video recording and put faces to names? We publish these the same day in the FBC Community! Join us here:
info_outline Cool Authors Doing Cool ShitFeminist Book Club: The Podcast
Is this real life? We are honored to be chatting with three amazing authors that we happen to admire so much! Sally chats with Jamie Raines and his wife Shaaba to discuss our November book of the month, The T in LGBT. Then Renee invites KJ Dell’Antonia back on the show to discuss the adaptation of her 2020 book The Chicken Sisters. The Trans Experience and Allyship (0:22) We’re heading into November, where our book club theme is Trans Voices and our non-fiction book is The T in LGBT. Sally sat down with the author, Jamie Raines, and his wife and collaborator, Shaaba, to talk about...
info_outline Stories to Soothe Your SoulFeminist Book Club: The Podcast
We’re in the final weeks until the election, so we thought we’d share a few books (and one documentary!) that brought a glimmer of hope to our hearts. Tune in for Mariquita’s review of A Bit Much, Sally’s review of The Inner Mountain, and Ashley’s discussion of the documentary Sacred Soil alongside the book Admissions. A Bit Much: Relishing Poetry that Recharges Your Heart (0:22) Mariquita reviews Lyndsay Rush’s debut book of poetry, A Bit Much, and discusses why everyone needs to have a little collection that reminds them just what a badass they are. The Inner...
info_outline Escaping or Showing Up: How Books Can Help BothFeminist Book Club: The Podcast
We all know that books can help us escape the real world and they can also demonstrate how we might show up in the world as our whole selves. This episode celebrates both ends of this spectrum. Sally kicks us off with some of her favorite quick horror novellas, a perfect escape for this time of year. Then Nox tells us about the impact the book Fat Girls Hiking had on her. Finally, Ashley chats with Jayne Allen, author of The Most Wonderful Time, a holiday romcom with depth. Bite-Sized Fright for Spooky Season (0:21) Novellas are perfect for a sick day, a readathon, or when you are...
info_outline Why Reader Reviews Matter: A Discussion of One of Our Kind by Nicola YoonFeminist Book Club: The Podcast
Renee and Mariquita didn’t know what they were getting into when they decided to discuss the book One of Our Kind by Nicola Yoon. Tune into this discussion for an overview of Yoon’s first adult novel, a thriller in the vein of The Stepford Wives, but stick around for Renee and Mariquita’s experience being humbled by Black readers’ reviews. Books/Resources Mentioned Support this episode’s hosts Follow Renee: // Follow Mariquita: Get our weekly round-up of blog and podcast content delivered directly to your inbox every Friday . This...
info_outlineRenee shares some of her favorite mental health memoirs and Mariquita interviews author Anamely Salgado Reyes, all in a search for the answer to an age-old question: Are we mad or is it just trauma?
Renee’s Reading Corner: Mental Health Memoirs (0:21)
Instead of a longer review of one book, Renee shares six mental health memoirs that made a last impression on her. From C-PTSD to depression, from sociopathy to anxiety, this segment covers a lot of ground.
You Will Make Mistakes: Finding Home and Family in My Mother Cursed My Name (12:19)
Mariquita interviews author Anamely Salgado Reyes about her debut novel, My Mother Cursed My Name. They discuss the legacy of trauma passed along by family who did their best, what it means to feel othered, how to define home, and just how, exactly, you can break a curse.
Books and Resources Mentioned:
Brain on Fire by Susannah Cahalan
What My Bones Know by Stephanie Foo
A Flat Place by Noreen Masud
The Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction Short List - podcast episode with Sally and Renee
The Valedictorian of Being Dead by Heather B. Armstrong
Sociopath by Patric Gagne
Solutions and Other Problems by Allie Brosh
My Mother Cursed My Name by Anamely Salgado Reyes
Support this episode’s hosts and guests:
Follow Renee: Instagram // The StoryGraph
Follow Mariquita: Instagram
Follow Anamely: Instagram
Today’s episode is sponsored by Gretchen Sisson, author of Relinquished: The Politics of Adoption and the Privilege of American Motherhood. Your support helps keep feminist media independent!
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This episode was edited and produced by Renee Powers on the ancestral land of the Dakota people.
Original music by @iam.onyxrose
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