Overdue
Episodes
Ep 212 - The History of Love, by Nicole Krauss
28 Nov 2016
Contributed by Lukas
The History of Love is littered with catchphrases. Bazinga! Time to make the donuts! Not the Mama! That is to say, our episode on The History of Love ...
Ep 211 - The Ocean at the End of the Lane, by Neil Gaiman
21 Nov 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Neil Gaiman started 2013's The Ocean at the End of the Lane as a novella for his wife, who "doesn't really like fantasy." This gives the book a differ...
Ep 210 - 2016 Election (Bonus episode)
18 Nov 2016
Contributed by Lukas
No book for this month's bonus episode, gang, and we're also releasing it at the same time for both patrons and everyone else in the interest of being...
Ep 209 - Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson
14 Nov 2016
Contributed by Lukas
What does pizza murder have to do with a linguistic virus that dates all the way back to Ancient Sumeria? Find out as we discuss Neal Stephenson's Sno...
Ep 208 - Magic Bites, by Ilona and Andrew Gordon
07 Nov 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Magic Bites, the first novel in a longrunning series by wife-and-husband writing team Ilona and Andrew Gordon (known collectively as Ilona Andrews) do...
Ep 207 - Beware of the Purple Peanut Butter (Bonus Episode) by R.L. Stine
03 Nov 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Listener beware, we're choosing the scares! In this, our final Spooktober entry of 2016, we bounce around the pages of R.L. Stine's Give Yourself Goos...
Ep 206 - Ring, by Koji Suzuki
31 Oct 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Hold on to your VHS tapes! It's time to talk about Koji Suzuki's Ring, the 1991 novel that inspired that movie everyone's heard of with the tape and t...
Ep 205 - The Werewolf of Paris, by Guy Endore
26 Oct 2016
Contributed by Lukas
It’s time to get *very* professional with the fourth book of Spooktober 2016!Guy Endore’s The Werewolf of Paris is widely regarded as The Werewolf...
Ep 204 - The Haunting of Hill House, by Shirley Jackson
17 Oct 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House has been hailed as "the greatest haunted-house story ever written." The house itself is vile. It's dark a...
Ep 203 - Hook (Bonus Episode)
15 Oct 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Come Peter Panning with us as we discuss the 1991 Steven Spielberg film Hook, inspired by the classic book Peter Pan (Episode 165). It's time to name ...
Ep 202 - The Woman in Black, by Susan Hill
10 Oct 2016
Contributed by Lukas
We get Spooktober rolling in earnest this week with Susan Hill's The Woman in Black, a ghost story written in the 1980s that intentionally invokes Got...
Ep 201 - Howl's Moving Castle, by Diana Wynne Jones
04 Oct 2016
Contributed by Lukas
This week is the start of Overdue’s third-annual Spooktober spookfest, a month full of scary (or at least somewhat spooky) books that will get you i...
Ep 200 - Infinite Jest, by David Foster Wallace
26 Sep 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Here it is: the big two-hundo! This week, Andrew tackles David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest in a show that is nearly 2.5 hours long and yet someho...
Ep 199 - Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt
19 Sep 2016
Contributed by Lukas
It's my life...and it's now or never. I ain't gonna live forever! OR AM I? Natalie Babbitt's beloved children's novel Tuck Everlasting tackles the tou...
Ep 198 - The Magicians, by Lev Grossman
12 Sep 2016
Contributed by Lukas
What if magic were real? What if your favorite fantasy world was a place you could actually go? Would you be happy? Could you be happy? These are the ...
Ep 197 - Open: How Compaq Ended IBM's PC Domination and Helped Invent Modern Computing, by Rod Canion
05 Sep 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Something a little different this week: Andrew read a non-fiction book about the personal computer era, something he was reading about mostly because ...
Ep 196 - Watership Down, by Richard Adams (Live from Philadelphia)
01 Sep 2016
Contributed by Lukas
If you came out to our second-ever live show at the Philadelphia Podcast Festival, you've already heard this one! But for the rest of you, settle in f...
Ep 195 - The Beggar's Opera, by John Gay
29 Aug 2016
Contributed by Lukas
With The Beggar's Opera, John Gay attempted to skewer 18th-century British government, the rich, and Italian operas. Did his satire succeed? Maybe you...
Ep 194 - Prisoner of the Ant People (Choose Your Own Adventure) by R.A. Montgomery
22 Aug 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Shrink your bodies and expand your minds with this week's Choose Your Own Adventure book: Prisoner of the Ant People by R.A. Montgomery. This week's c...
Ep 193 - Johannes Cabal the Necromancer, by Jonathan L. Howard
15 Aug 2016
Contributed by Lukas
What happens when you take some Ray Bradbury, add some undead, stir in a pinch of Doctor Who, sprinkle with dark humor, and bake in the eternal flames...
Ep 192 - Casino Royale, by Ian Fleming
08 Aug 2016
Contributed by Lukas
"Bond. James Bond." "Shaken, not stirred." "It's no good crying over spilt milk." This week we find out which one of these classic James Bond catchphr...
Ep 191 - The Phantom Tollbooth, by Norton Juster (Bonus episode w/ Appointment Television)
04 Aug 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Andrew's other podcast pals Margaret and Kathryn give Craig a break this month, and we all talk about Norton Juster's classic The Phantom Tollbooth. K...
Ep 190 - Eleanor & Park, by Rainbow Rowell
01 Aug 2016
Contributed by Lukas
This week Andrew reads Rainbow Rowell’s pitch-perfect YA novel Eleanor and Park, and it spurs a discussion of 80s nostalgia, first kisses, censorshi...
Ep 189 - Shadowshaper, by Daniel José Older
25 Jul 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Daniel José Older's novel Shadowshaper is the story of Sierra Santiago, a young woman with the power to infuse art with spirits and save her communit...
Ep 188 - The Likeness, by Tana French
18 Jul 2016
Contributed by Lukas
This week, we use Tana French’s outstanding sequel The Likeness as an opportunity to comment on everything from the semi-serialized nature of crime ...
Ep 187 - A Walk to Remember, by Nicholas Sparks (w/ the Unfriendly Black Hotties)
11 Jul 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Sometimes an author’s prose is so distracting in so many ways that it totally derails their stories—such is the case with Nicholas Sparks’ A Wal...
Ep 186 - Island of the Blue Dolphins, by Scott O'Dell
04 Jul 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Scott O'Dell began writing Island of the Blue Dolphins because of "anger, anger at the hunters who [...] slaughter everything that creeps or walks or ...
Ep 185 - Overdue Q&A (Bonus episode)
30 Jun 2016
Contributed by Lukas
You asked, we answered! For this month's bonus show we didn't read a specific book, but instead went through some listener-submitted questions about t...
Ep 184 - The Gospel of Loki, by Joanne Harris
27 Jun 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Joanne Harris’ The Gospel of Loki is part straightforward myth written for a modern audience and part fanfiction, and we don’t mean that in any so...
Ep 183 - The Door, by Magda Szabo
20 Jun 2016
Contributed by Lukas
"In Soviet Hungary...nanny hires you!" Time to talk about The Door, a lesser known but very powerful book by celebrated Hungarian author Magda Szabo. ...
Ep 182 - Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Brontë
13 Jun 2016
Contributed by Lukas
This week Andrew completes the Brontë trilogy with Charlotte Brontë's seminal novel Jane Eyre. Is it a romance? Is it spooky? Do we like Mr. Rochest...
Ep 181 - Guilt By Association, by Marcia Clark (Bonus Episode)
10 Jun 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Here's a fun fact: Did you know that Marcia Clark, lead prosecutor on the OJ Simpson case, wrote legal thrillers? Neither did we! But Craig's fascinat...
Ep 180 - Preacher (Gone to Texas and Until the End of the World) by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon
06 Jun 2016
Contributed by Lukas
What if God walked away from it all? And left behind a Gomorrah-like stew of sex and bloodshed out of which emerged a superpowered preacher, seeking r...
Ep 179 - 1Q84, by Haruki Murakami
30 May 2016
Contributed by Lukas
It's alternate universes, murderous plots, and ghostwritten novels all the way down this week—1Q84 is Andrew's first Haruki Murakami novel, and ther...
Ep 178 - The Call of the Wild, by Jack London
23 May 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Get in touch with your inner wolf-dog and answer The Call of the Wild by Jack London! We apologize that our Murakami episode will take another week, b...
Ep 177 - Jurassic Park, by Michael Crichton
16 May 2016
Contributed by Lukas
There are dinosaurs! Lots of dinosaurs! And they rule Jurassic Park!Michael Crichton's techno-thriller classic Jurassic Park kicked off a generation's...
Ep 176 - Black Beauty, by Anna Sewell
09 May 2016
Contributed by Lukas
It's wall-to-wall horse talk this week, starting with a blow-by-blow analysis of the Kentucky Derby and moving on to Anna Sewell's classic Black Beaut...
Ep 175 - The Dark Is Rising, by Susan Cooper
02 May 2016
Contributed by Lukas
News at 11! The Dark is Rising! We repeat: the Dark IS Rising! The second (and titular) entry in Susan Cooper's award-winning The Dark Is Rising seque...
Ep 174 - The Hunchback of Notre Dame, by Victor Hugo
25 Apr 2016
Contributed by Lukas
We're dipping back in the Victor Hugo well this week with his other best-known book The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Did you know that the book and the Di...
Ep 173 - Eat Pray Love, by Elizabeth Gilbert (Bonus episode)
21 Apr 2016
Contributed by Lukas
For this month's bonus episode, Suzannah and Laura (wives of Andrew and Craig, respectively) go on an extended overseas vacation to find themselves. A...
Ep 172 - Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo
18 Apr 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Do you hear the podcast sing?/Singing the song of Hugo's book?/It is a book about some people who are sad and live in France! It took us a while to fi...
Ep 171 - Mr. Peanut, by Adam Ross
11 Apr 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Adam Ross’ Mr. Peanut is a novel about marriage and murder with a warped sense of time and reality, but it’s also a book where the whole is a bit ...
Ep 170 - Star Wars: Aftermath, by Chuck Wendig (Bonus Episode)
07 Apr 2016
Contributed by Lukas
For March's bonus show, friend of the show Eric Van Tassell swings by to chat about Chuck Wendig's novel Star Wars: Aftermath. Eric's staggering knowl...
Ep 169 - Flowers in the Attic, by V.C. Andrews (hosted by Two Bossy Dames)
04 Apr 2016
Contributed by Lukas
This week's episode is something a little different: Andrew and Craig were off writing the Two Bossy Dames newsletter last week, so Margaret H. Willis...
Ep 168 - The Rover, by Aphra Behn
28 Mar 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Aphra Behn's The Rover debuted in 1677 to great acclaim. King Charles II loved it, and audience demand led to Behn writing the sequel: The Rover II. T...
Ep 167 - Statue of Liberty Adventure (Choose Your Own Adventure) by Ellen Kushner
21 Mar 2016
Contributed by Lukas
It's time to choose our adventure and celebrate the arrival of Spring with a trip to the Big Apple in Ellen Kushner's Statue of Liberty Adventure. Thi...
Ep 166 - When Women Were Birds, by Terry Tempest Williams
14 Mar 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Terry Tempest Williams' When Women Were Birds is about the power of words, the power of nature, the power of women, and the power of silence. It's not...
Ep 165 - Peter Pan, by J.M. Barrie
07 Mar 2016
Contributed by Lukas
You've seen the movie(s). You've seen the play/musical. But have you read the novel of J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan? It's chockablock with mommy wives, nan...
Ep 164 - Speedboat, by Renata Adler (Bonus Episode w/ Sophie Brookover)
04 Mar 2016
Contributed by Lukas
For February's bonus show, friend of the show and co-Two Bossy Dame Sophie Brookover (@sophiebiblio) joins us to talk about Speedboat, Renata Adler's ...
Ep 163 - Disgruntled, by Asali Solomon
29 Feb 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Disgruntled, Asali Solomon’s debut novel, is simultaneously ambitious and accessible. It’s a coming-of-age novel that grapples with questions of r...
Ep 162 - A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving
22 Feb 2016
Contributed by Lukas
We are doomed to remember a podcast about a book about a boy with a wrecked voice. John Irving's seminal bildungsroman A Prayer for Owen Meany weaves ...
Ep 161 - It, by Stephen King
15 Feb 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Stephen King's It deserves most of the praise it gets - it's an incredibly long, incredibly detailed book that tells two long intertwined stories and ...
Ep 160 - Robinson Crusoe, by Daniel Defoe (w/ Jake Hurwitz)
08 Feb 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Special guest Jake Hurwitz (of Jake and Amir, If I Were You, and Headgum fame) joins us this week to talk about Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, one of...
Ep 159 - The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas and The Forbidden Words of Margaret A (Bonus Episode)
05 Feb 2016
Contributed by Lukas
For January's bonus episode, we put together a sci-fi double feature: The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas by Ursula K. Le Guin and The Forbidden Words ...
Ep 158 - Beloved, by Toni Morrison
01 Feb 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Widely regarded as one of the best, and most important books, of the last half-century, Toni Morrison's Beloved is an unflinching examination of how t...
Ep 157 - The Bees, by Laline Paull
25 Jan 2016
Contributed by Lukas
This week's book manages to combine eerily accurate biology with a Margaret Atwood-esque dystopia, a potent mixture that you need to read to believe. ...
Ep 156 - A Canticle for Leibowitz, by Walter M. Miller, Jr.
18 Jan 2016
Contributed by Lukas
In A Canticle for Leibowitz, the 1959 post-apocalyptic classic by Walter M. Miller, Jr., a secluded order of monks have dedicated themselves to preser...
Ep 155 - Good Omens, by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett
11 Jan 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Good Omens was written by a sort of science fiction supergroup, Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. It's one of those books where it's as fun to chew on ...
Ep 154 - The Scarlet Pimpernel, by Emma Orczy
04 Jan 2016
Contributed by Lukas
Odd's fish! It's time to reveal the identity of the Scarlet Pimpernel, the hero of Baroness Emma Orczy's 1908 novel. (No seriously, we're going to tel...
Ep 153 - The Age of Innocence, by Edith Wharton (Bonus Episode)
31 Dec 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This month, first-ever patron guest host Asma walks us through Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence, a story about upper-class people of marriageable ...
Ep 152 - The Cuckoo's Calling, by Robert Galbraith (w/ Margaret H. Willison)
28 Dec 2015
Contributed by Lukas
What exactly IS a Cormoran Strike? Did J.K. Rowling's publisher leak her pen name to make big big bucks? To answer these questions and more, we invite...
Ep 151 - Home Alone, by Todd Strasser
21 Dec 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Welcome to the wild world of movie novelizations! This week, we read Todd Strasser's (mostly) faithful novelization of the hit 1990 family comedy Home...
Ep 150 - Fifty Shades Freed, by E.L. James
14 Dec 2015
Contributed by Lukas
We're back to finish the fight - this week we take on the third and final book in EL James' Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy. It's not that a book about a...
Ep 149 - Around the World in Eighty Days, by Jules Verne
07 Dec 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This week we're going around the world -- in 80 days, no less! Well, actually, Andrew read Jules Verne's classic globetrotting adventure Around the Wo...
Ep 148 - Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe (Bonus Episode)
04 Dec 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Our belated bonus episode for November tackles Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, a seminal work of Nigerian literature and a look at the bad things...
Ep 147 - Catch-22, by Joseph Heller
30 Nov 2015
Contributed by Lukas
War...war never changes. But it does get more and more absurd the deeper you dive into Joseph Heller's Catch-22. Join us for a discussion of potato ti...
Ep 146 - A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other Stories, by Flannery O'Connor
23 Nov 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Flannery O'Connor was a master of the Southern Gothic short story. Her characters are vivid, her turns of phrase equal parts memorable and chilling. T...
Ep 145 - A Confederacy of Dunces, by John Kennedy Toole
16 Nov 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Every once in awhile you read a character study about a character who is uniquely unpleasant to study—such is the case with John Kennedy Toole's A C...
Ep 144 - The Last of the Wine, by Mary Renault
09 Nov 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Mary Renault's The Last of the Wine depicts Ancient Greece as truthfully as possible. It is historical fiction filled with war, political intrigue, pe...
Ep 143 - Ghost Stories and Urban Legends (Bonus episode)
05 Nov 2015
Contributed by Lukas
To close out Spooktober, we thought it only appropriate that we gather around the digital campfire and swap some spooooooky stories. Tales told includ...
Ep 142 - Wuthering Heights, by Emily Brontë
02 Nov 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This week we go back to the Brontë well to read Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights, the only novel she published before her untimely death at the age ...
Ep 141 - Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier
26 Oct 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Though not conventionally spooky, Daphne du Maurier's classic novel Rebecca is a perfect fit for Spooktober. It takes place at a big creepy (but beaut...
Ep 140 - The Amityville Horror, by Jay Anson
19 Oct 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Spooktober rolls on this week with Jay Anson’s The Amityville Horror, a “true story” from the mid 1970s about a family that buys a haunted house...
Ep 139 - Ghost Train (Choose Your Own Adventure) by Louise Munro Foley
12 Oct 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Spooktober rolls along with another Choose Your Own Adventure: Louise Munro Foley's Ghost Train. We make some dubious choices in this week's episode: ...
Ep 138 - Bunnicula, by James and Deborah Howe (w/ Kathryn VanArendonk)
05 Oct 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This week is the start of Overdue’s second-annual Spooktober spookfest, a month full of scary books that will get you in the mood for Halloween! Our...
Ep 137 - The Martian, by Andy Weir (Bonus episode)
01 Oct 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Andy Weir's The Martian is about a man who gets trapped on Mars. It's about all of the actually plausible-sounding science he uses to get himself out ...
Ep 136 - LOTR: The Return of the King, by J.R.R. Tolkien
28 Sep 2015
Contributed by Lukas
It is time to ascend Mount Doom and end our time in Middle-Earth with Tolkien's The Return of the King. Many goodbyes are said; scores are settled; an...
Ep 135 - LOTR: The Two Towers, by J.R.R. Tolkien
21 Sep 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This week we continue the Lord of the Rings saga with The Two Towers, a book that moves beyond Fellowship’s table-setting and dives right into the a...
Ep 134 - LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien
14 Sep 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Join us for the second installment in our four-part journey down to Mordor with J.R.R. Tolkien and his Lord of the Rings series. Craig's sister Jillia...
Ep 133 - Go Set a Watchman (Live from Philadelphia)
07 Sep 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird is a classic of American literature, and for good reason. The follow-up-slash-first-draft, Go Set a Watchman, doesn...
Ep 132 - 1984, by George Orwell (Bonus Episode)
01 Sep 2015
Contributed by Lukas
There's a reason why words like "Orwellian" and "thoughtcrime" have stuck in the public consciousness for more than 65 years, and that reason is Georg...
Ep 131 - The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien
31 Aug 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This is the first entry in our four-part journey down the J.R.R. Tolkien rabbit hole that so many of you wanted us to journey down. Andrew and Craig h...
Ep 130 - All The King's Men, by Robert Penn Warren
24 Aug 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Robert Penn Warren's 1947 Pulitzer Prize winning novel All the King's Men has been called "uneven as a corduroy road," "sloppy," and "one of American ...
Ep 129 - The Daughter of Time, by Josephine Tey (w/ Lauren Spohrer)
17 Aug 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Not all mystery novels are about stolen jewels, secret passageways, and shifty butlers. Sometimes, they're just about a man in a hospital bed who beco...
Ep 128 - Then We Came To The End, by Joshua Ferris
10 Aug 2015
Contributed by Lukas
If you've ever worked in an office, at least a passage or two in Joshua Ferris' Then We Came To The End is going to resonate with you. Few books so ac...
Ep 127 - Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton
03 Aug 2015
Contributed by Lukas
One of Edith Wharton's few stories set outside the realm of the American upper class, Ethan Frome is a story about a Massachusetts farmer tr...
Ep 126 - My Side of the Mountain, by Jean Craighead George
30 Jul 2015
Contributed by Lukas
We go out in the wilderness for this month's bonus episode, living off the land and making friends with animals and playing homemade flutes with our n...
Ep 125 - Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret, by Judy Blume (w/ Margaret H. Willison)
27 Jul 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Coming-of-age novels are a dime a dozen, but Judy Blume's Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret is one of the best known. It's such a significant work ...
Ep 124 - Wit, by Margaret Edson
20 Jul 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Margaret Edson's rewarding play Wit (sometimes spelled W;t) is not light, boulevard comedy fare. Inspired by Edson's time in a Was...
Ep 123 - Till We Have Faces, by C.S. Lewis
13 Jul 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Most people familiar with C.S. Lewis' work will have come to him via the Chronicles of Narnia, a series of fantasy books that's defined for better or ...
Ep 122 - To the Lighthouse, by Virginia Woolf
06 Jul 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse is a modernist classic. Rich in lyrical prose and unrelenting streams of conciousness, Lighthouse set a standa...
Ep 121 - Space Vampire (Choose Your Own Adventure) by Edward Packard
30 Jun 2015
Contributed by Lukas
YOU: An intrepid spaceboy, graduating at the top of your class at Space Academy. YOUR MISSION: Find and destroy the evil space vampire at any cost! Ou...
Ep 120 - A Boy and His Dog, by Harlan Ellison
30 Jun 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Harlan Ellison is a man whose reputation precedes him. His long and storied career as a sci-fi and speculative fiction writer is peppered with curmudg...
Ep 119 - Across a Hundred Mountains, by Reyna Grande
22 Jun 2015
Contributed by Lukas
What would you do for a better life? Where would you go? Who would you leave behind? And what does "better" mean, anyway? Reyna Grande poses these que...
Ep 118 - Blood Meridian, by Cormac McCarthy
17 Jun 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Cormac McCarthy is a writer in the vein of Hemingway or Faulkner, a person whose prose you can spot from a mile away. That can be a good or a bad thin...
Ep 117 - Outlander, by Diana Gabaldon
08 Jun 2015
Contributed by Lukas
What better way to discuss Diana Gabaldon's genre-straddling, time-traveling historical fiction novel Outlander than by confining ourselves to the sam...
Ep 116 - The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, by Anne Brontë
01 Jun 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Hey, jabronis! This week we finally read our first Brontë book, thanks to one of our Patreon supporters! Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildf...
Ep 115 - Everything and Nothing, by Jorge Luis Borges
26 May 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Craig tackles Jorge Luis Borges this week, and what results is a pile of conversations about fake novels and encyclopedias, WIkipedia hoaxes, the way ...
Ep 114 - Mr. Popper's Penguins and The Borrowers (Bonus Episode)
20 May 2015
Contributed by Lukas
This is our first monthly bonus episode, brought to you by our supporters on Patreon! If you want these shows one week earlier than everyone else, vis...
Ep 113 - Bad Feminist, by Roxane Gay (w/ Katherine Fritz)
18 May 2015
Contributed by Lukas
Why do we let the messy implications of our beliefs keep us from shouting them the rooftops?Why is it difficult for a movement like feminism to be bot...