London Review Bookshop Podcast – Details, episodes & analysis

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London Review Bookshop Podcast

London Review Bookshop Podcast

London Review Bookshop

Arts

Frequency: 1 episode/13d. Total Eps: 615

Acast

Listen to the latest literary events recorded at the London Review Bookshop, covering fiction, poetry, politics, music and much more.

Find out about our upcoming events here https://lrb.me/bookshopeventspod

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Apple Podcasts
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - books

    28/07/2025
    #20
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - arts

    28/07/2025
    #61
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - books

    28/07/2025
    #75
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - books

    27/07/2025
    #25
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - arts

    27/07/2025
    #81
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - books

    27/07/2025
    #92
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - books

    26/07/2025
    #68
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - books

    26/07/2025
    #27
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - arts

    26/07/2025
    #86
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - books

    25/07/2025
    #26
Spotify

    No recent rankings available



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Score global : 48%


Publication history

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Olivia Laing & Jon Day: The Garden Against Time

mercredi 28 août 2024Duration 56:23

Drawing on her own experience restoring a walled garden in Suffolk, and moving between real and imagined gardens, from Milton’s Paradise Lost to John Clare’s enclosure elegies, from a wartime sanctuary in Italy to a grotesque aristocratic pleasure ground funded by slavery, Olivia Laing’s The Garden Against Time interrogates the sometimes shocking cost of making paradise on earth. She was joined in conversation with writer, critic and frequent LRB contributor Jon Day.


Get The Garden Against Time: https://lrb.me/gardenlaing

Find more events at the Bookshop: https://lrb.me/eventspod


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Sarah Perry & Helen Macdonald: Enlightenment

mercredi 21 août 2024Duration 55:36

At a Bethesda Baptist chapel two worshippers, separated in age by three decades, are drawn together by common interests, driven apart by divergent loves, before being reunited by the mysteries surrounding their small town. Francis Spufford describes Enlightenment (Jonathan Cape) as ‘a book in which everything is kindled into light by Sarah Perry’s rapt, luminous attention: friendship, betrayal, faith, astronomy, the drizzle on the streets of Essex and the heavens above them.’ Sarah Perry, author of Essex Girls, Melmoth and The Essex Serpent, read from the novel and talked about it with nature writer and novelist Helen Macdonald.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Joe Dunthorne, Hanan Issa & Manon Steffan Ros: Wales in Words

mercredi 19 juin 2024Duration 56:55

Three of Wales' best contemporary writers in an early St David's Day celebration of Wales in words. Novelist Joe Dunthorne, National Poet of Wales Hanan Issa and Carnegie prize-winning novelist and playwright Manon Steffan Ros explore the country's literary history, share its less-known treasures, and discuss the meaning of 'Welshness' today, in a one-off conversation with readings. The event was curated by Hay Festival as part of Wales Week in London.

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Juliet Jacques with Owen Jones: Front Lines

mercredi 28 septembre 2022Duration 58:50

In her journalism Juliet Jacques writes about art, literature, culture and politics from a distinctive trans perspective. Front Lines (Cipher Press) collects seminal pieces written between 2007 and 2020. Juliet Jacques writes in her introduction ‘I never believed any journalism was objective, nor that there was any point in even trying to be. Above all, activism is needed to fight this, with journalism to support it: there is no point in pretending to be objective in our work, as the stakes remain just as high as they were back in 2010, perhaps even higher.’ Jacques is in in conversation with journalist Owen Jones.

Find more upcoming events at the Bookshop here: http://lrb.me/upcomingevents

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Victoria Adukwei Bulley & André Naffis-Sahely: Quiet/High Desert

mercredi 21 septembre 2022Duration 01:02:44

Two exciting young poets were at the shop to read from and talk about their work. Victoria Adukwei Bulley’s debut poetry collection Quiet (Faber) circles around ideas of Black interiority, intimacy and selfhood. ‘This book is a seismic event,’ writes Kayo Chingonyi. ‘Its vibrations will be felt for a long time to come.’ 


Editor of Poetry London André Naffis-Sahely’s second collection High Desert (Bloodaxe) is a psychedelic journal of end-times and an ode to the American Southwest, encompassing wildfires, Spanish colonial history, racial tensions and the recent pandemic.

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Geoff Dyer & Mark Ford: The Last Days of Roger Federer

mercredi 14 septembre 2022Duration 01:03:04

As he enters late middle age, Geoff Dyer turns, in The Last Days of Roger Federer, to the question of late – or, indeed, last – style. Lisa Appignanesi writes, ‘Geoff Dyer's wry meditations on mortality and late style have a dazzling way of dispelling gloom. Nietzsche and the Turin horse, vaporised Turner, dolorous Dylan, antics on courts and at Burning Man, Dyer's Last Days had me laughing aloud, a sure signal of deft seriousness. What is there to say except if this is late Dyer, it's great Dyer.’ Geoff is in conversation with the poet and critic Mark Ford.


Find more upcoming events at the Bookshop here: http://lrb.me/upcomingevents

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Orwell Prize Shortlist Readings: Yara Rodrigues Fowler & Isabel Waidner

mercredi 7 septembre 2022Duration 57:11

Since 2019, the Orwell Prize has celebrated the best in contemporary political fiction. Yara Rodrigues Fowler and Isabel Waidner, both on the prize’s 2022 shortlist, are in conversation with Sana Goyal, one of this year’s judges, talking about their novels there are more things and Sterling Karat Gold – books which not only take political issues as subject-matter but enact radical politics through their form. 

Find more upcoming events at the Bookshop here: lrb.me/upcomingevents

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Édouard Louis & Tash Aw: A Woman's Battles and Transformations

mercredi 31 août 2022Duration 01:12:53

‘Everything started with a photo. To see her free, hurtling fulsomely towards the future, made me think back to the life she shared with my father. Seeing the photo reminded me that those twenty years of devastation were not anything natural but were the result of external forces - society, masculinity, my father - and that things could have been otherwise.’

Édouard Louis’s tender memoir of his mother is an exquisite portrait of womanhood, motherhood, the trials of both and the transcendent, fragile joy of eventual liberation. Louis, one of the leading French writers of his generation, discussed A Woman's Battles and Transformations (Harvill Secker) with its English translator the novelist Tash Aw, winner of the Whitbread First Novel Award for The Harmony Silk Factory and author most recently of We, The Survivors.

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Seán Hewitt & Andrew McMillan: All Down Darkness Wide

mercredi 24 août 2022Duration 54:25

Seán Hewitt’s debut collection of poetry, Tongues of Fire (Cape), won the Laurel Prize in 2020; Max Porter praised it for its reverence to the natural world and ‘gorgeous wisdom’, both of which are apparent in his new book, All Down Darkness Wide, a unique memoir of queer longing, trauma and depression.

Hewitt talks to Andrew McMillan, whose debut collection, physical (Cape), was the first poetry collection to win the Guardian First Book Award. His most recent book, pandemonium, was published in 2021.

Find out about upcoming events: lrb.me/eventspod

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Andrew Mellor and James Jolly: ‘The Northern Silence’

mercredi 17 août 2022Duration 49:56

At one time something of a backwater in the musical world, over the past few decades Scandinavia has become a musical powerhouse, encompassing all genres from Esa-Pekka Salonen to Björk. Copenhagen-based music journalist Andrew Mellor has travelled from Reykjavik to Rovaniemi to investigate the glories and the dark side of Nordic music, encountering composers, performers and audiences and to explore our complex fascination with the unique culture of the north.


He was in conversation with James Jolly, radio presenter and former editor of Gramophone.

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