This week, Rachel Areosti chooses five of the best podcasts on books, from Cariad Lloyd and Sara Pascoe’s book club for “weirdos” to Pandora Sykes’ exploration of old classics A Good Read Each edition of Radio 4’s long-running series critiques three books: two recommended by the episode’s celebrity panellists, the other by our pleasingly authoritative (and, at this point, frighteningly well-read) host Harriett Gilbert. Part of the appeal comes from the collision of worlds; the guests run the gamut from writers and comedians to chefs and doctors, and their recommendations are similarly diverse: Alan Titchmarsh chooses PG Wodehouse’s Summer Lightning; musician Lauren Mayberry plumps for Yōko Ogawa’s The Memory Police; explorer Ella Al-Shamahi opts for Prison Time in Sana’a by Abdulkader Al-Guneid. Criticism can be merciless, defence passionate and debate combustible: if other book review podcasts leave you adrift in a wash of equivocal opinions and indiscriminate raving, this is the one for you. Weirdos Book Club Book podcast origin stories don’t get better than this: comedians Sara Pascoe and Cariad Lloyd met while studying English at Sussex University in the late 90s – now they are resurrecting their student literary chat in a medium that wasn’t even invented then. Weirdo Book Club – named after Pascoe’s recently released debut novel – sees the pals discuss titles old and new with each other, friends and, occasionally, the people who wrote them: hear Nish Kumar discuss Sheena Patel’s I’m A Fan, Monica Heisey talk about her divorce comedy Really Good, Actually and our hosts get stuck into Iris Murdoch’s Under The Net. The guests are good but Pascoe and Lloyd are the USPs: brilliantly funny, slick yet convincingly casual and in possession of the kind of near-the-knuckle banter only decades of friendship can foster. Book Chat This literary discussion show from journalists Pandora Sykes and Bobby Palmer is built around one key rule: the books featured must be at least two years old. That means no appearances from breathlessly hyped debut novels or that thriller stuck on top of the bestseller charts. Instead the duo look beyond the zeitgeist, giving refreshingly cold takes on the big-hitters of decades past – from Zadie Smith’s White Teeth (2000) to Armistead Maupin’s Tales of The City (1978) – as well as taking a second look at smaller titles from more recent years, including Sarah Winman’s Tin Man and When I Hit You by Meena Kandasamy. It’s an approach that makes Book Chat feel like a calming reprieve from the chaotic hubbub of next-big-thing culture. The LRB Podcast The London Review of Books is home to some of the most compelling and interesting essays and criticism around; resolutely high-brow but never stodgy, serious but usually irreverent too. This series is essentially the magazine in podcast form; hosted by LRB’s staffers Thomas Jones and Malin Hay, it features conversations with the publication’s writers about their latest riffs on recent literature. The focus is typically nonfiction and the subject matter is varied to the point of eclecticism: there’s Amia Srinivasan on octopuses, Rosemary Hill on Mount Vesuvius, Tom Crewe on wrestling, Deborah Friedell on J Edgar Hoover and Jonathan Coe on British humour. Yet the end result – teaching you something you didn’t even realise you needed to know – is the same every time. You’re Booked Reading, by its very nature, is a solitary activity, and the books we consume turn into lifelong companions nobody else can see. This podcast from journalist and novelist Daisy Buchanan goes some way to capturing the intimacy of our relationship with literature: each week Buchanan is joined by an author guest to peruse the bookshelves of their imagination, discovering the tomes that obsessed them as children and teenagers (for Naomi Klein it was Oriana Fallaci’s Interview with History), the novels they never got on with (Andrew Hunter Murray can’t stand The Mitfords) and the books that set them on the path to professional writing (Susie Dent was turned on to dictionaries by Our Mutual Friend). Why not try … Could you survive and thrive if you were sent back in time? Would you invent electricity in ancient Rome, or perhaps teach Napoleon rock’n’roll? Find out in Pastmaster.
Join botanist turned actor Alisha Wainwright in When Science Finds A Way as she meets the trailblazing scientists and researchers changing the world. Soulbare Sessions – Where Momma At? takes a deep dive into one person’s extraordinary life story, offering a platform for them to talk freely about overcoming challenging starts in life. |