ABC Australia

The Book Show

Arts EN ↓ 247 episodes

Your favourite fiction authors share the story behind their latest books.

Author

ABC Australia

Category

Arts

Podcast website

www.abc.net.au

Latest episode

Jul 5, 2026

Where to listen?

Podcasts in the app Replaio Radio Coming soon

Podcasts are coming to the app soon. Install now and be the first to see a whole new take on podcasts

Get it on Google Play Install for free Android 5M+ downloads · 4.8 rating iOS soon

Episodes

Holden Sheppard brings footy out of the closet 05.07.2026

Holden Sheppard grew up gay and closeted in the regional town of Geraldton, WA and now he writes characters like himself into his award winning books — Invisible Boys and Yeah the Boys. Plus for NAIDOC week, Kalkadoon writer John Morrissey tells Claire Nichols about his debut science fiction Bird Deity. Holden Sheppard's bestselling novel Invisible Boys was adapted to the screen and now its sequel...

Bryan Brown comes bob-bob-bobbin' along 28.06.2026

Settle in for some classic storytelling with actor Bryan Brown who's written his third novel, Hidden. Plus Angela O'Keefe tells Claire Nichols about Phantom Days, a book about a book. Bryan Brown has been a fixture of our screens since the 1970s but he recently became a writer too. In 2021 his first book of short stories, Sweet Jimmy came out and he's now penned two novels including his latest, Th...

Why Flashlight's Susan Choi can't stop writing about her dad 21.06.2026

How Susan Choi took her own family — and dialled up the tension — in her Booker shortlisted novel, Flashlight. Flashlight traces the fallout from the disappearance of Serk, a Japanese born Korean on his family, including his American wife and daughter. In the process, the novel powerfully traverses the intersecting 20th century histories of Japan, Korea and the US.  Susan Choi joined Claire Nichol...

How Maggie O'Farrell's inner 'neek' came out with Land 14.06.2026

Fresh from the Oscars for Hamnet, Maggie O'Farrell joins Claire Nichols to discuss her book Land. Plus, Robert Forster of iconic indie band The Go-Betweens shares the musical influences behind his debut novel Songwriters on the Run. Maggie O'Farrell is best known for her novels Hamnet , The Marriage Portrait and her memoir I Am, I Am, I Am. Her new novel Land takes place soon after the 19th centur...

Yann Martel flips the script on a Greek classic 07.06.2026

In Son of Nobody , Yann Martel tells Claire Nichols how he reimagines The Iliad, shifting the epic from heroic legend to life as an ordinary foot soldier. Twenty-five years after Life of Pi changed his life, he also reflects on the enduring power of myth, storytelling, and why animals continue to resonate in fiction. Yann spoke to Claire Nichols at the Sydney Writers Festival .

Why joy matters in Ann Patchett's Whistler 31.05.2026

Bestselling author Ann Patchett joins Claire Nichols to discuss her novel Whistler and its unexpected take on step-parents, while Romy Ash unpacks her intimate, sexy and strange new book, Mantle. American author Ann Patchett is the bestselling author of Commonwealth, Bel Canto and Tom Lake. She tells Claire Nichols how her own experience of growing up in a large, blended family influenced her new...

Booker Prize winner David Szalay on the risk and reward of writing Flesh 24.05.2026

Why Booker Prize winner David Szalay once thought Flesh was a vulgar title and why he's glad he kept it. He joined Claire Nichols at the Margaret River Readers and Writers Festival to discuss his award winning novel and its complicated relationship to masculinity. With the fall of the USSR, the novel charts István's changing fortunes from his humble beginnings in Hungary to a lavish life in the UK...

Siri Hustvedt's love letter to Paul Auster 17.05.2026

Why Siri Hustvedt wants Paul Auster to return as a ghost. American novelist and essayist Siri Hustvedt speaks with Claire Nichols about her partner of 43 years, writer and poet Paul Auster . When Auster died in 2024 from complications of lung cancer, Hustvedt began writing in the depths of grief. Her new memoir, Ghost Stories , reflects on a life both with and without him, offering rare insight in...

Lee Lai's graphic novel makes Stella Prize history 13.05.2026

Lee Lai has won the 2026 Stella Prize for her graphic novel Cannon , marking the first time a graphic novel has been awarded the $60,000 prize. She tells Claire Nichols why she was surprised to win and why the project of growing up is never finished. Running since 2013, the Stella Prize is an Australian award for women and non-binary writers. The judges praised Lai for her "elegant artistry" that...

Can we escape fate? Veronica Roth and Amitav Ghosh on past lives and destiny 10.05.2026

What do fate and past lives reveal about who we are? Claire Nichols speaks with Veronica Roth and Amitav Ghosh on Seek the Traitor's Son and Ghost Eye. Award-winning, Indian-born American author Amitav Ghosh explores the mysteries of past lives in his latest novel Ghost Eye . Drawing on international case studies of reported reincarnation, Ghosh brings these stories to life through a narrative set...

Elizabeth Strout and Amanda Lohrey on aliens and a man called Artie 03.05.2026

Readers have lovingly followed the fictional lives of Olive Kitteridge and Lucy Barton for more than a decade. Now their creator, Elizabeth Strout introduces a new character to embrace and Claire Nichols finds out why. Plus Amanda Lohrey explains her fascination with the belief in aliens. Artie Dam is an unassuming Massachusetts high school history teacher who seems to have it all, but is facing i...

Kae Tempest and Michael Winkler talk poetry and pooches 26.04.2026

British poet, performer and novelist Kae Tempest explains why writing his second novel, Having Spent Life Seeking, was so necessary and Michael Winkler tells Claire Nichols why life might be better as a dog. Michael Winkler's second novel, Griefdogg follows his lauded genre-bending debut Grimmish about a boxer and a talking goat. It also made Australian literary history in 2022 as the first self-p...

Vale David Malouf 23.04.2026

David Malouf was a giant of Australian writing who was known and loved for his iconic debut novel, Johnno, about a young Brisbane man during World War 2; a book partly inspired by his own life. In a career spanning more than 50 years, David wrote plays, poetry, libretto, and more novels, including The Great World, and his Booker Prize shortlisted, Remembering Babylon. And today, on this special ep...

Steve Toltz rolls the dice in his new dark comedy 20.04.2026

Steve Toltz talks to Claire Nichols about his comic novel A Rising of the Lights, and former diplomat Ian Kemish reflects on his tender debut, Two Islands, exploring the long tail of war. Twins separated by the role of a dice, the rise of AI, and a mystery behind lives trying to hold it together in a lonely fractured world. These are just a few of the themes discussed with Claire Nichols about A R...

Shaun Micallef and Jenny Tinghui Zhang deliver K-Pop thrills and vampire chills 13.04.2026

A fun wild ride here on the Book Show where Claire Nichols embraces the silly with Shaun Micallef and K-Pop with Chinese American writer Jenny Tinghui Zhang. Jenny Tinghui Zhang has tapped into the K-Pop phenomenon with her latest novel Superfan . A knock-off American K-Pop group are set to make history, but at what cost to them and their loyal fans? It's an affectionate but covert satire on obses...

Yael van der Wouden on sex, history and an incredible year 06.04.2026

For this Easter special an opportunity to revisit Yael van der Wouden the 2025 Women's Prize for Fiction winner. Her celebrated debut The Safekeep also made the 2024 Booker Prize shortlist. The Safekeep is set in the Netherlands, 15 years after the end of World War II and is about an uptight woman, an unpredictable house guest, loneliness, repression and desire. The novel confronts the prevailing...

Debra Adelaide on the life and death of Gabrielle Carey 29.03.2026

Debra Adelaide reflects on her pain and helplessness in the wake of writer and friend, Gabrielle Carey's death, and Emma Styles aptly takes Claire Nichols to the beach to discuss her thriller The Shark. Australian author Debra Adelaide's latest book is her most personal to date. As she reveals to Claire Nichols, writing When I am 64 was a way of coming to terms with the death, at age 64, of writer...

Colm Tóibín can't stop naming his characters Paul 22.03.2026

Irish author of Brooklyn, Colm Tóibín shares with Claire Nichols the stories that have shaped his latest collection that travels continents and times, and Patmeena Sabit tests assumptions about the death of a young woman in her inventive novel, Good People. Who do you believe? Colm Tóibín 's collection of short stories, The News from Dublin is a glimpse into people living a life away from their ho...

Daniyal Mueenuddin's changing Pakistan 15.03.2026

  This is Where the Serpent Lives from Pakistani-US writer Daniyal Mueenuddin , is an elegy to a changing Pakistan where contemporary life and technology jostles with feudal social hierarchy, privilege, corruption and ambition. The protagonist in Australian writer Claire Thomas 's latest novel On Not Climbing Mountains travels through grief on Swiss trains through the Alpine Way. It's a journey th...

Howard Jacobson embraces being a Jewish writer 08.03.2026

Howard Jacobson joins Claire Nichols to unpack Howl, and Australian authors Eva Hornung and Omar Musa discuss their latest novels. Booker Prize winner Howard Jacobson has long written about Jewish identity, but only recently has he begun describing himself as a Jewish writer. He says the shift was prompted by the protests in England after the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel. His darkly comic nove...

Francis Spufford's Nonesuch shows World War II as you've never it seen before 01.03.2026

In his new novel, Nonesuch, British author Francis Sufford introduces a fabulously spiky heroine fighting fascism and mysterious moving statues during London's Blitz. Plus, bestselling author Kathy Lette is in Australia touring her latest novel The Sisterhood Rules and urges women to embrace a "sensational second act" with plenty of laughter along the way. British author Francis Spufford, is celeb...

Tayari Jones on her beautiful new novel Kin 22.02.2026

Tayari Jones, author of the Women's Prize-winning An American Marriage, returns with Kin, a work of historical fiction that illuminates the inner lives of two motherless girls growing up in the American South during the Jim Crow era. And former Survivor contestant Steven Fishbach reveals the hidden world of reality television in his debut novel, Escape. In her new novel Kin , award‑winning America...

Patrick Ryan and Sita Walker on seances, secrets and school rooms 15.02.2026

A stolen kiss propels Patrick Ryan's American epic, Buckeye, which traces the loves, loss and lies of two Ohio couples. And Sita Walker on her inventive debut novel, In a Common Hour, which unfolds over a single school lunch break as a troubled but beloved teacher confronts his demons. Patrick Ryan 's bestselling sixth book, Buckeye , traces America's shifting social landscape from the end of Worl...

George Saunders on angels and the afterlife 08.02.2026

American author George Saunders reflects on why death is such fertile ground for fiction and how it shapes his haunting new novel Vigil. Plus, Australian writer Michael Mohammed Ahmad discusses writing through childhood trauma in his courageous and confronting novel Bugger. Booker Prize-winning author George Saunders ( Lincoln in the Bardo ) talks about his haunting new novel Vigil . Beginning wit...

Adam Kay on how medicine and comedy shaped his debut novel 01.02.2026

Doctor‑turned‑memoirist‑turned‑comedian Adam Kay makes his fiction debut with A Particularly Nasty Case, a medical murder mystery set inside a hospital. And Perth based author Jay Martin discusses her debut novel, Boom Town Snap, a story that shifts between the snowfields of Canada and outback Western Australia. Adam Kay's medical memoir, This Is Going to Hurt, was a global bestseller and made Rad...

Listen to the The Book Show podcast in Replaio

Radio and podcasts in one app - free, with no sign-up. Install today and do not miss the launch

Get it on Google Play

Replaio is not a podcast publisher; show names, artwork and audio belong to their authors and are distributed through public RSS feeds.