Avsnitt
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell. They talk about Lucy's childhood crush and how it may have impacted her enjoyment of the book; Lucy also blows out the levels on her mic when she realizes they have both diagnosed Agnes as a manic pixie dream girl. Spoiler alert: the husband is William Shakespeare. Leave a comment or email us at [email protected]. Next up: Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash.
Also: live video of Crash unjustly winning the Best Picture Oscar over Brokeback Mountain: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAADWfJO2qM
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance by Alison Espach. They discuss this book’s misleading opening paragraph (nevertheless - a banger), internet rabbitholes on true crime psychics, and when Lucy accidentally became a rabbit breeder in Year 9. Spoilers throughout. Leave a comment or email us at [email protected]. Next up, Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss The Bee Sting by Paul Murray. They discuss how the Great Recession in Ireland created a lot of failed businesses but also a fertile literary environment; the (perhaps excessive) foreshadowing in this novel, and why shame is the most destructive emotion. Spoilers throughout. Leave a comment or email us at [email protected]. Next up, Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance by Alison Espach.
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"The edge is a shantytown filled with gold-seekers." Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Now is Not the Time to Panic by Kevin Wilson. Lucy reveals that she was a psychic grifter as a child, they discuss the ethics of self-plagiarism, and how they'd react to Ann Patchett being behind a Satanic panic. This is a banger of a book; run, don't walk to read it. Spoilers throughout. Leave a comment or email us at [email protected]. Next up: The Bee Sting by Paul Murray.
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss The Book of Guilt by Catherine Chidgey. They discuss the book's inevitable comparison to Never Let Me Go, nature vs nurture, and speculate about the author's hypothetical vegetarianism. Spoilers throughout. Next up, Now Is Not the Time to Panic, by Kevin Wilson. Leave us a comment to tell us which book we should review next!
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Playworld by Adam Ross. They discuss whether this qualifies as a Great American Novel (it does), what growing up in New York City does to a child, and their complicated feelings about Woody Allen's films. Spoilers throughout. Next up, The Book of Guilt by Catherine Chidgey (whose novel, Pet, we reviewed in December). Leave us a comment to tell us which books we should review next!
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Anne Tyler's recent release, Three Days in June. They discuss this book's misleading dust jacket, Gail's social skills (or lack thereof?), what makes a good wedding speech, and whether opposites really attract. Spoilers throughout. Leave a comment or email us at [email protected]. Next up: Playworld by Adam Ross.
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss The Rachel Incident by Caroline O’Donoghue -- now with new and improved audio. They talk about this book’s similarities and differences to Sally Rooney’s oeuvre, its endless quotability, and the most incredible confrontation scene in modern literature (perhaps hyperbole… but perhaps not). This episode contains spoilers throughout. Next up, Three Days in June by Anne Tyler. Leave us a comment to tell us what other books should be on our list!
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Vladimir by Julia May Jonas. They talk about this book's sexy cover, the backlash to the #MeToo movement, and how this book depicts female middle age (not good). Ashleigh also discovers that Lucy doesn’t know how to vacuum, and Lucy tells a story about how her librarian-patron privilege was violated. This episode contains spoilers. Next up, The Rachel Incident by Caroline O'Donoghue. Leave us a comment to tell us what other books should be on our list!
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Jo Hamya's The Hypocrite. Listen to their discussion about the ethics of portraying people you know in art, why Ashleigh gifted this book to her mother-in-law for Christmas (awkward given all the parental sex...), and Lorde's Melodrama (please don't sue us, Ella). Spoilers are signposted. Next up is Vladimir by Julia May Jonas -- leave a comment to tell us what other books should be on our list!
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together to discuss Catherine Chidgey’s Pet, one of their best reads of the year. This was actually the Long Distance Book Friends’ first recorded podcast! Listen to their short discursion into the power of books in long-distance friendship, before they dive into why this book is so engaging, growing up in New Zealand, the cruelty and competitiveness of 12-year-olds’ friendships, and whether Justine’s Dad is useless. They also get meta and review some of Pet’s reviews on Goodreads. Spoilers are signposted. Next up is The Hypocrite by Jo Hamya — leave a comment to tell us what other books should be on our list!
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Ashleigh and Lucy get together for their inaugural episode to discuss Colm Tóibín's Long Island, the sequel to the critically acclaimed Brooklyn (2009). Listen to hear why these two friends disagree about whether this book is good or not, if Ireland in the 1970s is in any way relatable, and why the antagonist of this book is not who you think it'll be. Spoilers are signposted. Leave a comment to tell us what book we should review next!