inkjockey
Behind The Spine
Behind The Spine is a podcast which deconstructs genre and narrative, and finds learning opportunities for writers in the most unlikely of places.
Koniecznie odwiedź stronę podcastu i wesprzyj twórcę: www.behindthespine.co.uk
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inkjockey
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Strona podcastu
Ostatni odcinek
17 gru 2025
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Odcinki
S11E12 Who Wants to Live Forever: Hanna Thomas Uose on love and life without death 17.12.2025 32:36
“This drug feels incredibly likely. There are all sorts of mad men doing trials on themselves. And they have not put any thought into the societal implications of it” ~Hanna Thomas Uose AI is enabling rapid advancements in technology and drug discovery - unlike anything we’ve seen before. And with humankind’s obsession with longevity only deepening, some believe it’s only a matter of time before...
S11E11 Green Ink: Stephen May on the mysterious story of Victor Grayson 10.12.2025 33:29
“He went down for a drink, did not come back. Nobody was found, but no one even started looking for him” ~Stephen May The story of the UK Labour politician Victor Grayson is a mysterious and thrilling one. Full of holes and unknowns that have never been solved. He went missing in the 1920s following a major political scandal - so what happened? In ‘Green Ink’, the author Stephen May imagines what...
S11E10 Behind Women’s Football: Beatrice Rogers on sacrificing for the game 03.12.2025 30:38
“ I’ve received death threats from people just for posting about women’s football, which is wild” ~Beatrice Rogers Public support for women’s football has skyrocketed in recent years - and yet many of the female athletes still struggle to gain the recognition of their male counterparts. So just how much of the success of the pro game has trickled down to the lower tiers and grassroots leagues? Bea...
S11E9 A Tale of Wartime Morality and Courage: Alice Austen’s 33 Place Brugmann 26.11.2025 40:13
“ Fiction writing is trying to unearth the mystery of who we are. And it boils down to a question of who and what you care about most” ~Alice Austen An apartment block in Belgium, full of close neighbours, suddenly torn apart by the news of war. This is the story of 33 Place Brugmann - whose residents’ lives are upended by fear, uncertainty and occupation. Today we’re revisiting the Second World...
S11E8 The Guernsey Deportees: Ollie Guillou on a little-known story of wartime resilience 19.11.2025 39:57
“One day I heard the news that the head of the Deportees Association had died. I knew I needed to tell the story before the stories disappeared for good.” ~Ollie Guillou In 1942, on Hitler’s orders, more than a thousand islanders from Guernsey were deported to Germany, and sent to the internment camp known as Biberach. Theirs is a little-known story of fortitude and resilience - and the subject of...
S11E7 A Death in Berlin: Simon Scarrow on German life under Nazi oppression 12.11.2025 33:53
“The German guy tells this joke in the factory. It's reported by the foreman. This guy's then hauled away and executed. That's kind of the kind of regime you are living under with the Nazis.” ~Simon Scarrow What was it like to live in Berlin in 1940? We very often picture the war years from the perspective of the Allies, but for the Germans living under the oppressive rule of the Nazis, life very...
S11E6 The Three Lives of Cate Kay: Kate Fagan’s multi-layered trip into fiction 10.09.2025 45:02
“ I put that memoir out and my mum in particular was really upset and she came to me and was like, that's not how I remember that happening.” ~Kate Fagan Writing a memoir is a tricky business - you may think writing about your own life is a straightforward process of telling fact after fact. The trouble is, very rarely do the people in your life recall events the same way you do. There are discre...
S11E5 The Bureau: Eoin McNamee’s deep connection to corruption and violence in Northern Ireland 03.09.2025 31:36
“ If you write about real situations, real names and real people, there's always somebody else's blood on the floor at the end of it. Well this is me and my family's blood on the floor in this book.” ~Eoin McNamee Taking place in the shadow of The Troubles, The Bureau is a story of corruption, death, love and violence. Based on the real events of a murder-suicide between two lovers - the book als...
S11E4 Summer in the City: How Alex Aster wrote a 400 page book aged 12 27.08.2025 48:30
“All my publishers, my agents, my film agents, they have all rejected me multiple times in the past - and now I work with them!” ~Alex Aster Summer in the City is the new romance novel from internationally acclaimed author Alex Aster - known for her Lightlark series and massive social media following. Alex began writing at the age of 12, when she penned a 400-page novel and tenaciously approached...
S11E3 The Summer Guests: Tess Gerritsen’s town full of spies 19.08.2025 47:20
“ That's why I write books. I want to see those characters tear their way out of the page and just come to life.” ~Tess Gerritsen The town of ‘Purity’ may be fiction, but its secrets are very much based on real life. It may be hard to believe, but in the American state of Maine, there’s a town where former spies go to retire. It’s this strange reality that sets the stage for Tess Gerritsen’s Marti...
S11E2 The Place of Tides: James Rebanks ventures into pastures new 12.08.2025 42:49
“ In my head, it's not a departure from the writer that I think I am.” ~James Rebanks You probably know him for his wildly successful books exploring his long family history farming in the Lake District - but James Rebanks has decided to turn his hand to something different this time. The Place of Tides is a departure from the work that has made him famous, namely bestsellers The Shepherd’s Life a...
S11E1 The Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103: Jonathan Lee on history, injustice and screenwriting 06.08.2025 43:17
“ Telling a story like this, about a real event that impacted so many people, does come with a special responsibility” ~Jonathan Lee The Lockerbie bombing is the UK’s deadliest terrorist attack, killing 270 people in the air and on the ground. Despite taking place 37 years ago, what happened that day is still mired in speculation and conspiracy theories. Now, author and screenwriter Jonathan Lee i...
S10E12 Acts of Resistance: Amber Massie-Blomfield on art’s contribution to global activism 18.12.2024 50:26
“Under the most oppressive circumstances, where the intent is to not only end their lives, but end almost any evidence of their existence or their humanity on the planet, people make art. They lean into making art.”~Amber Massie-Blomfield Art can change the world. Whether it's the work of painters, writers, dancers or musicians, throughout history art has made a real difference in upending the sta...
S10E11 A Concert For Christmas: Helen Hawkins’ peak Hallmark novel, with a twist 11.12.2024 29:22
“Having the darkness makes the lighter bits… light. And when there is that happy end, you feel like they’ve earnt it. And it’s all the brighter for the trauma that they’ve been through” ~Helen Hawkins A traditional Hallmark book or film has a very clear path - a tried and true narrative loved by audiences. But this is a Christmas love story that hits a depth of emotion rarely covered by the typica...
S10E10 Bard Boy: Louise Kulup brings Hamnet Shakespeare back to life 04.12.2024 42:36
“It's that juxtaposition of very grand figures from history and the very bog standard person. They're also two boys who are overlooked by life, and I think that connected them.” ~Louise Kulup Little is known about Hamnet Shakespeare, the son of the Bard himself, who died aged 11. But it’s thought his death shaped much of Shakespeare’s late works, including the famously melancholy King John. But no...
S10E9 The Unexpected: Ellen Wiles questions conventional ways to raise children 27.11.2024 29:14
“It really caught my attention in 2016, when there was the first ever case in Canada where two platonic female friends were granted the right to be co-mothers on a birth certificate. And I thought, how astonishing is that?” ~Ellen Wiles We’ve all heard the pact two platonic friends make, that if they’re both single by 40 they’ll get married. But what about making that same pact about having childr...
S10E8 Crash The System: The Jerky Boys star Kamal Ahmed on his thrilling new project 20.11.2024 33:40
“We had the tapes and I was just giving them out. And by me giving the tapes out, it spread all across the country - the world!” ~Kamal Ahmed The Jerky Boys were a global phenomenon in the 90s - a comedy duo who rose to fame by prank calling unsuspecting recipients, and selling the recordings on comedy albums. Now, Kamal Ahemd, one side of that duo, is using the very tactics that jumpstarted his c...
S10E7 Heart, Be At Peace: Donal Ryan on dealing with rejection, polyphonic writing and time 13.11.2024 38:36
“Every single thing I ever wrote was rejected by myself. I burnt nearly everything I wrote throughout my twenties because I was so ashamed of how bad it was.” ~Donal Ryan Donal Ryan is an author who’s not only dealt with rejection, but has flourished despite it - winning awards, writing bestsellers and becoming one of Ireland’s best loved authors. But what did it take for him to succeed against th...
S10E6 The Problem of Fragmentation: Peter Garrett on A New Kind of Dialogue 06.11.2024 34:25
“If we’re not on the same page as the underlying storyline, then we have fragmentation. And that fragmentation is really, very dangerous. It’s what’s breaking apart the world.” ~Peter Garrett Humanity’s story has become fragmented and our understanding of one another disconnected. And when we no longer share a common story, cracks start to show in every area of life. Peter Garrett, author of A Ne...
S10E5 Sun Lounger Fiction: Wine expert Helen McGinn on the secrets of a prolific writer 30.10.2024 33:54
“I saw someone with my book on holiday. I think we both ended up having a tear because it was just so lovely. That’s the goal, to see somebody out there reading your words!” ~Helen McGinn Once an author releases her fourth book in as many years, she learns a thing or two about writing a good novel - reflections become lessons, confidence builds and goals become clearer. Helen McGinn is an award-wi...
S10E4 Entitlement: Rumaan Alam on how money defines and controls us 23.10.2024 39:17
“It felt so powerful a moment of realisation to me, that the sum of who I am may be, in some significant way, measured in dollars.” ~Rumaan Alam Money controls us all, whether we have a lot of it, or not enough. And exposure to money can force people to do questionable things - and even stray from their morals and beliefs. Rumaan Alam is the New York Times bestselling author of Leave the World Beh...
S10E3 The Future of Football: Graham Sibley on the game post-covid 15.10.2024 52:01
“It looked like the club was going to just disappear completely. And then luckily, it was rescued by a tech millionaire, basically. It sounds like something that would happen far, far higher up the food chain.” ~Graham Sibley Worldwide cancellations and small clubs on the brink of extinction—COVID-19 turned the football world upside down. Though life is back to normal, there’s plenty about footbal...
S10E2 History’s Famous Figures At 18: Alice Loxton on the teenage lives of history’s greatest people 08.10.2024 45:35
“I love finding out people’s back stories. It’s the grittier, it’s the weirder, it’s the bits where people’s lives go wrong that shines a light on their glories later on.” ~Alice Loxton History’s most famous figures are remembered only for their great deeds and achievements, but rarely for their lives before. What were the likes of Empress Matilda, Richard Burton or Chaucer like when they were tee...
S10E1 The Silence in Between: Josie Ferguson on separation from loved ones and wartime tragedy 01.10.2024 40:54
“I had a friend who read an early version of the book, and she just said, well, I mean, it's a bit far fetched though, isn't it? And I was like, no, no, no, this did happen.” ~Josie Ferguson Being separated from a loved one, never sure when you might be reunited again - a familiar feeling for many of us, having lived through the COVID lockdowns. But for Berlin residents alive in 1961, when the Ber...
The Art That Will Change How You See Mental Illness Forever with Matt Ottley 14.08.2024 45:22
💬 “When I’ve been really unwell, I lose the ability to understand spoken language. But what happens is I hear music with crystal clarity in my mind.” Did you know that bipolar disorder can fuel intense creativity? We often fear complex mental health issues - words like psychotic and mental are regularly used to describe villains across TV and film. But this stigma and prejudice is not just inaccu...
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