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Explore every episode of the podcast A Good Read

Dive into the complete episode list for A Good Read. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
Matt Haig15 Sep 202400:27:42

Matt Haig discusses his new novel, The Life Impossible and Lord of the Flies at 70.

Graham Norton08 Sep 202400:27:38

Graham Norton speaks to Johny Pitts about his new novel, Frankie.

Garth Risk Hallberg14 Jul 202400:27:35

Johny Pitts speaks to Garth Risk Hallberg about his new novel, The Second Coming.

A Good Read: Philippa Perry and Anil Seth28 Feb 202300:27:54

Psychotherapist writer Philippa Perry and Professor of Neuroscience Anil Seth join Harriett Gilbert to talk about books they love.

Anil Seth, who explores consciousness and the self in his book Being You, recommends Klara and The Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro, where our near-future world is seen through the eyes of an Artificial Friend. Philippa Perry's choice is A Stranger City by Linda Grant, a novel with a mystery at its heart and is about how lives interweave in the city. And Harriett Gilbert loves the non-fiction book Being Mortal by American surgeon Atul Gawande, which asks what medicine is for in the face of death.

Comment on instagram: @agoodreadbbc Produced by Eliza Lomas for BBC Audio in Bristol

Tom Bullough on writing about the climate crisis, and Richard Wright's lost novel26 Feb 202300:27:46

Tom Bullough on writing about the climate crisis, and Richard Wright's lost novel

A Good Read: James Marriott and Jude Rogers21 Feb 202300:27:54

Columnist at The Times James Marriott and arts journalist for The Guardian Jude Rogers discuss favourite books with Harriett Gilbert.

James picks The Past by Tessa Hadley, a contemporary novel about family, place and the modern world encroaching upon the old; Jude recommends Border Country by Raymond Williams, a semi-autobiographical story of a man returning home to his small village on the Welsh borders, and how it's changed over a century; and Harriett loves A Summer Without Men by Siri Hustvedt, about a woman re-examining her life in after her husband's rejection.

Do you agree with their assessments? Join us on Instagram @agoodreadbbc Produced by Eliza Lomas for BBC Audio in Bristol.

Aleksandar Hemon, Roddy Doyle on Soul, and Dorothy Tse on Hong Kong19 Feb 202300:27:22

Chris Power talks to Aleksandar Hemon about his new novel The World and All That It Holds

A Good Read: Kate Bryan and Mark Steel17 Feb 202300:27:59

Art historian Kate Bryan and comedian Mark Steel talk to Harriett Gilbert about their favourite books. Kate loves Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency by Olivia Laing, an inspiring collection of essays which make a case for why art matters. Mark is a big fan of Stalin Ate My Homework by Alexei Sayle, a comedic memoir about growing up in a Jewish atheist communist family in Liverpool. And Harriett puts forward Ghost Wall by Sarah Moss, in which a present-day story converges with ancient rituals to provoke a discussion about how far we have come from the “primitive minds” of our ancestors.

Comment on instagram: @agoodreadbbc Produced by Becky Ripley

Bret Easton Ellis12 Feb 202300:27:49

Bret Easton Ellis

A Good Read07 Feb 202300:27:54

Favourite books chosen by well known guests and presenter Harriett Gilbert

A Good Read31 Jan 202300:27:50

Guest choose favourite books to discuss with Harriett Gilbert

Dark Academia with Katy Hays, RF Kuang and Kate Weinberg. Plus Saba Sams' Book I'd Never Lend29 Jan 202300:27:49

Chris Power discusses one of the most talked about trends in publishing

Really Good, Actually22 Jan 202300:27:40

Monica Heisey talks to Johny Pitts about her debut novel about divorce in your twenties

A Good Read: Gyles Brandreth and Hannah Critchlow08 Jul 202400:27:35

Writer and broadcaster Gyles Brandreth has chosen EF Benson's entertaining tale of competitive snobbery in the 1920s, Mapp and Lucia. In a contrasting choice, neuroscientist Hannah Critchlow advocates for Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi, a story of a Ghanaian family transplanted to Alabama which takes in neuroscience and opiate addiction. Harriett has gone for a real crowd-pleaser in E. Nesbit's The Railway Children and all three enjoy a bit of nostalgia for the times when children could run free having adventures around the railway. Produced for BBC Audio Bristol by Sally Heaven.

Jane Smiley, and writing gay lives from the past with Tom Crewe and Nell Stevens15 Jan 202300:27:48

Jane Smiley, and writing gay lives from the past with Tom Crewe and Nell Stevens

Katherine Mansfield08 Jan 202300:27:53

Chris Power explores the writing of Katherine Mansfield on the centenary of her death.

Agatha Christie at Christmas26 Dec 202200:27:45

Johny Pitts explores the Queen of Crime's connection to the festive season

Katherine Rundell18 Dec 202200:27:21

Chris Power talks to the author of The Golden Mole and Other Living Treasures.

Looking back at 2022 and (re)discovering Bruno Schulz Open Book12 Dec 202200:27:39

Chris Power discusses a year in books with Ellah Wakatama and Kate Mosse.

A Good Read: Frank Turner and Ellie Gibson29 Nov 202200:28:05

Books about tidying, music and addiction, and a desire to write are this week's choices.

Mariana EnrĂ­quez27 Nov 202200:27:36

Mariana EnrĂ­quez

A Good Read: Shaparak Khorsandi and Anne Hegerty22 Nov 202200:27:57

A disgraced university tutor, a dysfunctional family, and a love-letter to literature.

Cormac McCarthy, The Writers, Derek Owusu20 Nov 202200:27:30

Cormac McCarthy, The Writers, Derek Owusu

A Good Read: Philippa Forrester and Dwayne Fields15 Nov 202200:27:53

Two very-different memoirs and a tale of two women on an adventure feature this week.

A Good Read: Sebastian Faulks and Tessa Hadley01 Jul 202400:27:58

VOICES IN THE EVENING by Natalia Ginzburg (trans. DM Low), chosen by Tessa Hadley THE ZONE OF INTEREST by Martin Amis (trans. Jessica Moore), chosen by Sebastian Faulks EASTBOUND by Maylis de Kerangal, chosen by Harriett Gilbert

Two authors pick books they love with Harriett Gilbert.

Tessa Hadley (Late In The Day, Free Love, After The Funeral) takes us to post-war Italy with Voices In The Evening by Natalia Ginzburg. The drama, suffering and fascism are in the past, but traumas surface in the day-to-day, with first loves and lost chances.

Sebastian Faulks (Birdsong, Human Traces, The Seventh Son) chooses The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis, after watching the hit film by Jonathan Glazer and wanting to read the book it was inspired by. The haunting novel follows a Nazi officer who has become enamoured with the Auschwitz camp commandant's wife, and goes inside the minds of the commandant, who lives with his family right next to the concentration camp.

Harriett Gilbert brings Eastbound by Maylis de Kerangal, a gripping novella set on the Trans-Siberian Railway, with a chance encounter between a desperate Russian conscript and a French woman.

Produced by Eliza Lomas for BBC Audio Bristol Join the conversation on Instagram @bbcagoodread

Barbara Kingsolver, plus the "Social Novel" with John Lanchester and Ayisha Malik13 Nov 202200:27:46

Barbara Kingsolver, plus the "Social Novel" with John Lanchester and Ayisha Malik

A Good Read: Heidi Regan & Neil Delamere08 Nov 202200:27:48

Comedians Heidi Regan and Neil Delamere discuss their favourite all-time books with Harriett Gilbert. Heidi chooses a non-fiction book on the cult of positive thinking by the late Barbara Ehrenreich, called Smile or Die. Neil suggests a novel by Ronan Hession about two unambitious friends in their thirties; Leonard and Hungry Paul, and Harriett picks the novella Foster by Irish writer Claire Keegan, who has recently been nominated for the 2022 Booker Prize. Producer: Eliza Lomas for BBC Audio, Bristol Join the conversation on Instagram @agoodreadbbc

A Good Read: Ria Lina & Otegha Uwagba01 Nov 202200:27:41

The comedian Ria Lina - who's appeared on the BBC’s Live at the Apollo, Have I Got News for You and Mock the Week - joins Otegha Uwagba - author of Little Black Book, Whites and We Need to Talk About Money - to talk to Harriett Gilbert about the books they love.

Ria chooses Moll Flanders, the 18th-century classic by Daniel Defoe. Otegha picks the popular romance story Like Water for Chocolate by Mexican author Laura Esquivel and Harriett Gilbert brings a book about motherhood; Making Babies by Anne Enright.

Produced by Eliza Lomas Comment on Instagram at @agoodreadbbc

Colm TĂłibĂ­n essays, Revisiting Shirley Hazzard30 Oct 202200:27:47

Chris Power talks to Colm TĂłibĂ­n about his essays on illness, religion and literature

A Good Read: Patience Agbabi and Andy Miller25 Oct 202200:27:27

The poet and the writer choose their favourite books.

Writing Nature23 Oct 202200:27:44

Writing Nature

A Good Read: Damian Barr and Ben Fergusson18 Oct 202200:27:30

The writers choose the books they love to read.

William Boyd16 Oct 202200:27:49

William Boyd discusses his new novel, The Romantics.

A Good Read: John Wilson and Chloe Petts11 Oct 202200:27:44

The broadcaster and the comedian choose books they love

Celeste Ng09 Oct 202200:27:50

Celeste Ng and Grief and modern masculinity with Bobby Palmer and Michael Pedersen

Rita Bullwinkel30 Jun 202400:27:51

Rita Bullwinkel, Mohsin Hamid and TĂŠa Obreht

A Good Read: Duncan Campbell and Mark Hokinson04 Oct 202200:27:43

Two writers who cover crime, football and music share their favourite books with Harriett

Orhan Pamuk29 Sep 202200:27:29

Orhan Pamuk, Patterson Joseph and Torrey Peters.

Maggie O'Farrell, Graphic Novels with Lizzy Stewart and Posy Simmonds, plus Anuradha Roy18 Sep 202200:27:49

Maggie O'Farrell, Graphic Novels with Lizzy Stewart and Posy Simmonds, plus Anuradha Roy

Ian McEwan11 Sep 202200:27:36

Chris Power talks to Ian McEwan about his new book, Lessons.

Alex Clark on novels - past, present and future - about summer and change28 Aug 202200:27:28

Alex Clark on novels - past, present and future - about summer and change

Mary Renault's Greek Myths21 Aug 202200:27:49

Mary Renault's Greek Myths

Ross Raisin14 Aug 202200:27:31

Octavia Bright talks to Ross Raisin about his new book, A Hunger.

The Ethics of Writing Crime31 Jul 202200:27:29

The Ethics of Writing Crime

A Good Read: Salena Godden & Rob Biddulph26 Jul 202200:27:47

Writer Salena Godden chooses Good Morning, Midnight by Jean Rhys, a book she's re-read many times and returns to now – older, wiser and with even greater empathy for its protagonist.

Author-illustrator Rob Biddulph recommends When the Sky Falls by Phil Earle, named Children’s Fiction Book of the Year at the 2022 British Book Awards, which brought him to tears and conjures London in the Blitz so vividly.

Presenter Harriett Gilbert picks Mend the Living by Maylis de Kerangal, translated by Jessica Moore, the story of a heart transplanted from one life to another.

Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Sarah Goodman.

Tess Gunty on The Rabbit Hutch; Jackie Kay on the writing of Jamaica Kincaid24 Jul 202200:27:29

Tess Gunty on The Rabbit Hutch; Jackie Kay on the writing of Jamaica Kincaid

A Good Read: Doon Mackichan and Bruce Robinson25 Jun 202400:39:26

Recorded at the Hay Festival

SHUGGIE BAIN by Douglas Stewart ON THE BLACK HILL by Bruce Chatwin AGAINST NATURE by Joris-Karl Huysmans

Harriett Gilbert takes to the stage in the BBC Marquee at the Hay Festival for a special edition of the programme recorded in front of an audience. Actor and writer Doon Mackichan known for her outrageous character Cathy in the sitcom Two Doors Down chooses Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stewart as her good read. It's a touching but heartbreaking tale of a young Glaswegian boy's desperate efforts to save his mother Agnes from the alcoholism that ruins and degrades her. It won the Booker Prize in 2020. As we're in Wales Harriett's fitting choice is Bruce Chatwin's On The Black Hill an account of rural Welsh life in the mid 20th century. It's the story of two brothers' lives over 80 years and their connection to land and community. Bruce Robinson actor, director and writer of the hit film Withnail and I which has been adapted for stage chooses a book that features in the final scene of the film. The I character places two books in a suitcase at the end of the film, one of which is A Rebours - Against Nature by Joris-Karl Huysmans. Bruce confesses that he's not the book's biggest fan but the ensuing discussion provides an entertaining insight into books we might read when we're younger and how differently we feel about them in later life. It's the story of an eccentric recluse Jean des Esseintes in 19th century France who loathes people and creates a fantasy world for himself but ultimately suffers from his self-inflicted pretentious ennui. "I wish I hadn't chosen this book" proclaims Bruce Robinson as he introduces it. "I wish you hadn't chosen it" agrees Doon Mackichan. They then elicit a lot of audience laughter from their deconstruction of this seminal French novel that all three find pretentious.

This is a longer version of the broadcast programme.

Producer: Maggie Ayre

A Good Read: Melanie Reid & Andrew Cotter19 Jul 202200:27:45

Columnist Melanie Reid adores This is Not About Me by Janice Galloway, a tragicomic account of her turbulent childhood in mid-century Scotland. Presenter Harriett Gilbert thinks John le Carré’s Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a true masterpiece, and sports broadcaster (and famous dog owner) Andrew Cotter recommends The Wild Places by fellow mountain-lover Robert Macfarlane.

Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Sarah Goodman.

Summer Reading and Benjamin Wood17 Jul 202200:27:47

Summer Reading and Benjamin Wood

A Good Read: Sophie Hannah & Viv Groskop12 Jul 202200:27:55

Sophie Hannah and Viv Groskop join Harriett Gilbert to talk about books they love.

Sophie, an Agatha Christie expert and superfan, recommends The Rose and the Yew Tree, a book – misleadingly billed as a romance, she says – that Christie wrote under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott. She claims it can rival any detective novel for suspense and intrigue. Will Harriett and Viv agree?

Harriett champions Dame Eileen Atkin’s recent memoir Will She Do? which charts the first 30 years of the actor's life, including her time as a child soubrette, performing in working men’s clubs as ‘Baby Eileen’.

Writer, podcaster and stand-up Viv Groskop recalls her time living in Russia in the 1990s and explains why she thinks The Heart of a Dog by Mikhail Bulgakov, a 1920s satire about science gone very wrong, will become increasingly relevant in the months and years ahead.

Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Sarah Goodman.

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