Reading Writers

Reading Writers

Arts EN ↓ 38 episodes

Writers Charlotte Shane and Jo Livingstone talk about what they’ve been reading and special guests join to enthuse about a significant or provocative book of their choice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Author

Reading Writers

Category

Arts

Podcast website

shows.acast.com

Latest episode

Mar 11, 2026

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Episodes

A Businessless Person: William C. Anderson on Thich Nhat Hanh’s Zen Battles 11.03.2026

In the Season 3 finale, Jo sells Charlotte on Alan Warner’s “amazingly textured” Movern Callar , which leads the hosts to reflect on some of the season’s recurring themes. They’re then joined by the radically reflective William C. Anderson, who explains how the Buddhism transmitted in Thich Nhat Hanh’s Zen Battles , a commentary on the teachings of Master Linji, informed his political development....

Pain and Debasement: Rayne Fisher-Quann on Iris Owens' After Claude 04.03.2026

Charlotte puzzles over who exactly wrote Brighton Rock before Jo shares a newfound fascination with big machines, spurred in part by Don Gillmor’s On Oil . A conversation with the preternaturally wise Rayne Fisher-Quann starts with Iris Owens' After Claude , then opens up into a rousing feminist seminar on Margery Kempe, sexual obsession, and women’s humor of past and present.  Rayne Fisher-Q...

Tree-Based Horror: Nicholas Russell on Algernon Blackwood’s The Wendigo and Other Stories 25.02.2026

Jo and Charlotte turn their attention to Nobel Laureate Kenzaburo Oe’s mindblowing A Personal Matter and Troubled Lands: Stories of Mexico and Cuba , a collection translated by Langston Hughes, before they’re joined by Gothic-literature-loving writer-of-all-modes Nicholas Russell, who puts the spotlight on Algernon Blackwood’s unsettling preoccupation with mysterious forces in the natural world.&n...

Tethered to Life: Maya Binyam on Joy Williams’ “The Excursion” 18.02.2026

Charlotte and Jo go deep on jealousy, self-hatred, and vulnerability in a conversation that touches on A Separate Peace , The Go-Between , Beowulf , and more. Then the canny and intrepid Maya Binyam joins for a discussion about the category of little girlhood, ambiguity in fiction, and female desire. Maya Binyam is the author of Hangman . Her writing has appeared in the New Yorker, the Paris Revie...

Deeply Heterosexual: Jamie Hood on Doris Lessing’s The Golden Notebook 04.02.2026

Jo takes us on a whirlwind tour of their recent reading, including Mary Helen Washington’s Paule Marshall: A Writer’s Life, and Charlotte explains why Susanna Moore’s In the Cut is one of the most thrilling novels she’s ever encountered. Then, the profoundly thoughtful Jamie Hood joins to explore the many boyfriends and political disappointments of Doris Lessing’s The Golden Notebook.  Jamie...

Uncategorizable Interactions: Brittany Newell on Samuel R. Delany’s Times Square Red, Times Square Blue 28.01.2026

Charlotte and Jo revisit Rebecca Novack’s Murder Bimbo before taking a quick tour of the Russian Civil War and comrade crushes through Nikolai Ostrovsky’s How The Steel Was Tempered. They’re then joined by the scintillating Brittany Newell, who meditates on contemporary fiction, cities at night, and Samuel R. Delany's indelible Times Square Red, Times Square Blue. Also discussed in this episode: E...

Bookforum Live: Stephanie Wambugu on Vincenzo Latronico’s Perfection 21.01.2026

At last, the audio from December's Bookforum x Reading Writers live holiday event! The justly celebrated novelist Stephanie Wambugu joins Charlotte and Jo to talk about the controversial and inescapable Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico. Stephanie Wambugu is the author of the novel Lonely Crowds . Her work has appeared in The Drift, The Nation, Granta, Frieze, Bookforum. She lives and works in New...

Moral Discord: Noah Kulwin on Ross Macdonald’s Black Money 14.01.2026

The hosts discuss Stephanie Wambugu’s justly-hyped novel Lonely Crowds before they’re joined by Noah Kulwin, an avowed Macdonaldhead who details the pleasures of private eye fiction through 1966’s Black Money.  Noah Kulwin is a writer based in New York City. He is also the co-host of the podcast Blowback, a history program about American empire. He has written for a wide variety of publicatio...

Each Brick in This Wall: Hanif Abdurraqib on Gloria Naylor’s The Women of Brewster Place 07.01.2026

Charlotte and Jo spring into the new year with a conversation about ancient poetry: Beowulf, The Iliad, and Dante’s Inferno as translated by Mark Musa, Mary Jo Bang, and Danny Lavery. They’re then joined by the wise and wonderful Hanif Abdurraqib who—after sharing a scoop about what series of book he reads every year (!)—reflects on the formative impacts of his encounter with Gloria Naylor’s The W...

A Year in Reading 31.12.2025

In this host-only bonus episode, Charlotte and Jo discuss some of their most memorable reads of 2025. Authors discussed include Arthur C. Clarke, Shon Faye, Sarah Schulman, Ai Yazawa, Marjane Satrapi, Ariana Reines, Kyung-Ran Jo, and more. Please consider supporting us on Patreon , where you can access additional materials and send us your guest (and book!) coverage requests. Questions and kind co...

Stinking and Miserable: Clio Chang on Cheryl Strayed's Wild 17.12.2025

In a scandalous rejection of holiday spirit, Jo and Charlotte reflect on the dark, elegant pleasures of Gabrielle Wittkopf’s The Necrophiliac alongside contemporary novel conventions as deployed in Rebecca Novack’s Murder Bimbo. The hosts are then joined by dear friend Clio Chang, who outlines the timeless, charming, annoying allure of Cheryl Strayed’s hit memoir Wild (2012). Also discussed in thi...

A Certain Mistake: Jackie Ess on Tolstoy’s Resurrection 03.12.2025

Charlotte delves into Ecclesiastes through the work of liberation theologist Elsa Támez (When the Horizons Close) before Jo shares some of Pierre Guyotat’s horny, rapturous literary memoir, Idiocy. Icon of many RW conversations past, the thoughtful Jackie Ess then joins to discuss Tolstoy’s crank-inflected final novel, Resurrection. Jackie Ess is the author of a novel called Darryl, and more recen...

French Sicko: Annelise Ogaard on Gabrielle Wittkop’s Murder Most Serene 26.11.2025

Jo and Charlotte discuss secret gardens, indoor kids, and Peter Pan’s baby teeth before they’re joined by culture-shaping Annelise Ogaard, who introduces listeners to the lavish, creepy world of Gabrielle Wittkop’s fiction. Annelise Ogaard is a writer, translator, filmmaker, vibesmith, area woman, and friend of the pod. She has translated a variety of Japanese manga, including Hauntress , (one of...

Metaphysically Blown Away: Torrey Peters on Zoë Schlanger’s The Light Eaters 19.11.2025

Charlotte overcomes her resistance to novels about sexual abuse in order to read Kate Elizabeth Russell’s excellent My Dark Vanessa, after which Jo introduces listeners to the freewheeling criminality of Diane DiMassa’s Hothead Paisan: Homicidal Lesbian. The ferociously intelligent Torrey Peters then joins for a conversation about plant consciousness and our relationship with the organic world.&nb...

Setting the House on Fire: Lauren Michele Jackson on Nettie Jones’ Fish Tales 12.11.2025

This week, Jo discovers the seminal elegance of Sylvia Wynter’s Black Metamorphosis: New Natives in a New World, while Charlotte considers how well she would fare if she traveled back in time to the era of Alexander the Great, as depicted in Mary Renault’s The Persian Boy. Then, the dazzling Lauren Michele Jackson joins to discuss the chaotic, thrilling, sexually vibrant, and deeply unwell narrato...

First Draft of Reality: Rumaan Alam on Tina Brown’s The Vanity Fair Diaries. 05.11.2025

Reading Writers is BACK, and in partnership with Bookforum Magazine! In this first episode of Season 3, hosts Jo and Charlotte delve into the (separate) letter collections of Vincent Van Gogh and D.H. Lawrence before they’re joined by superstar novelist Rumaan Alam to reflect on magazine eras of yore via Tina Brown’s The Vanity Fair Diaries . Also mentioned: Cat Marnell’s How To Murder Your Life ,...

Competing Fantasies: K. Austin Collins on Dennis Cooper’s The Sluts 01.01.2025

In an incendiary season finale, the insightful and hilarious K. Austin Collins joins to discuss Dennis Cooper's controversial classic, The Sluts. Other topics of debate include the old internet, social media in fiction, and the world's ultimate unreliable narrators: service review writers. Thanks to all our listeners and guests for a wonderful second season! K. Austin Collins is a film critic. His...

Three Types of Loss: CharJo on Lorrie Moore and Scholastique Mukasonga 23.12.2024

Charlotte comes in salty about Lorrie Moore’s annoying 9/11 novel A Gate at the Stairs, while Jo has been awed by Cockroaches, Scholastique Mukasonga’s memoir of losing her family in the Rwandan genocide.  Send questions, requests, recommendations, and your own thoughts about any of the books discussed today to readingwriterspod at gmail dot com.  Charlotte’s most recent book is An Hones...

A Natural Affinity: Shon Faye on Germaine Greer's The Female Eunuch 12.12.2024

Charlotte and Jo enthuse briefly but ardently about friend of the pod’s Tony Tulathimutte’s Rejection and Helen Humphreys’ Followed By The Lark before the powerhouse Shon Faye joins for a rollicking take on Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch. Shon Faye is an advice columnist for Vogue dot com and the author of two books The Transgender Issue published by Verso in 2022 and the forthcoming Love in E...

Inheriting the Inescapable: Lovia Gyarkye on Marie NDiaye’s Ladivine 06.12.2024

Jo discovers one of the most fascinating books of all time with Extraterrestrial Languages by Daniel Oberhaus, while Charlotte issues her verdict on whether Lional Shriver’s We Need to Talk About Kevin lives up to its good reputation. Beloved critic Lovia Gyarkye then joins to assess the complex, beguiling mother-daughter dynamics at work in Marie NDiaye’s Ladivine. Lovia Gyarkye is a critic at Th...

Illegible Logic: CharJo on Paula Hawkins and Jacqueline Harpman 27.11.2024

In another host-only bonus episode, Jo reviews Paula Hawkins’ art mystery novel, The Blue Hour, and Charlotte rhapsodizes about Jacqueline Harpman’s bizarre science fiction masterpiece I Who Have Never Known Men. Other titles discussed: Karen Slaughter’s Will Trent series, Paula Hawkins’ The Girl on the Train, The Woman in Black by Susan Hill, and The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins. Send questio...

Bring A Pen: Emma Robinson on Dianne Brill’s Boobs, Boys, and High Heels 13.11.2024

Jo is refreshed by Trouble in the Cotswalds by Rebecca Tope but Charlotte quickly ruins their peace by connecting the sex in Heather Lewis’s violent novel Notice with Miranda July’s NBA-shortlisted All Fours. The effervescent Emma Robinson joins to share her love for Dianne Brill’s Boobs, Boys, and High Heels, which inspires further reflection on 90s era beauty books and instruction manuals. Other...

Just Open the Door and Go: Marlowe Granados on Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone 06.11.2024

Jo opens their mind to further basketball books after reading Hanif Abdurraqib’s There’s Always This Year, while Charlotte (11:30) revisits a YA novel from her youth, Bette Green’s Summer of My German Soldier. Glamorous Marlowe Granados then joins (24:30) to expound on great novels of mid-century women, namely Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone.  Other books discussed in this episode: Mary McCa...

A Stranger Comes to Town: Matt Korvette on Joan Samson’s The Auctioneer 30.10.2024

Charlotte is haunted by the lack of violence in Swedish dystopias (Kallocain by Karin Boye and Amatka by Karin Tidbeck) while Jo (17:00) delves into the controlled and uncontrolled horror of medical history in Human Medical Experimentation, ed. Francis R. Frankenberg. Pissed Jeans’ thoughtful frontman Matt Korvette joins (27:00) to share his trenchant take on menace and neighborly predation in Joa...

Disposing of the Bodies: CharJo on J.M. Coetzee 23.10.2024

In this special bonus episode, Jo and Charlotte talk about J.M. Coetzee, starting with Disgrace and moving to white South African literature, the legacy of colonialism in fiction, animal rights and Coetzee’s The Lives of Animals, as well as Athol Fugard’s plays, James Percy FitzPatrick’s Jock of the Bushveld, Sunaura Taylor’s Beasts of Burden, Marjorie Spiegel’s The Dreaded Comparison: Human and A...

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