

New Books Network
New Books
Interviews with Authors about their New BooksSupport our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 1, 2026 • 41min
Margo LaPierre, "Ajar" (Guernica Editions, 2025)
Margo LaPierre, a poet and freelance literary editor with an MFA from UBC, reads from Ajar (Guernica, 2025). She talks about writing openly about bipolar psychosis, the book's visceral sensory imagery, and the craft choices behind centos and revision. Conversations also touch on fertility, bisexuality and suicide risk, and how motherhood and recovery reshape the poems.

Feb 1, 2026 • 59min
The Caste Question with Suraj Yengde and Anupama Rao
Anupama Rao, historian at Columbia who studies colonialism, gender, and caste politics. Suraj Yengde, scholar, public intellectual, and anti-caste activist. They explore how caste is defined as a power-based social order. They compare caste and race globally. They trace historical turns, discuss Ambedkar’s Buddhist rupture, lived Dalit imaginaries, and why Wilkerson’s book struck a chord.

Feb 1, 2026 • 45min
Michael Hurley, "Waterways of Bangkok: Memory, Landscape and Twilight" (NUS Press, 2025)
Michael Hurley, an independent scholar of Southeast Asian urban waterways, reflects on Bangkok’s Chaophraya River and its role in history and culture. He explores the city’s waterborne traditions, shifting livelihoods as roads replaced canals, and the impacts of flooding, pollution, and memory on urban life. The conversation also traces ethnic communities and hints at a new project on rain and monsoon rituals.

Feb 1, 2026 • 29min
Jeremy Black, "The Revolutionary War" (St. Augustine's Press, 2026)
Jeremy Black, prolific military historian and Professor Emeritus at Exeter, revisits the Revolutionary War with fresh research. He contrasts Continental insurgency with conventional British strategy. Topics include intelligence gaps across the empire, why key campaigns like Canada and Yorktown unfolded as they did, the global impact of French and Spanish intervention, and the war’s civil dimensions and aftermath.

Feb 1, 2026 • 53min
Andreas Killen, "Nervous Systems: Brain Science in the Early Cold War" (Harper, 2023)
Andreas Killen, historian and professor at CUNY who studies the history of science and psychiatry. He traces 1950s breakthroughs that made the living brain visible. Short tales of patients and methods like EEG, awake neurosurgery, sensory deprivation, and psychopharmacology appear. Cold War fears of conditioning, the rise of brainwashing myths, and links to MKUltra and later interrogations are explored.

Feb 1, 2026 • 54min
Vanessa R. Sasson, "The Gathering: A Story of the First Buddhist Women" (Equinox, 2023)
Vanessa R. Sasson, a professor of religious studies who retells early Buddhist lives, brings the first women seekers to vivid life. She explains her blend of scholarship and storytelling. Listeners hear why Vimala and others were chosen, how communal renunciation shaped their path, and the political risks and leadership involved in their request for ordination.

Feb 1, 2026 • 1h 2min
Gina Schouten, "The Anatomy of Justice" (Oxford UP, 2024)
Gina Schouten, philosophy professor and author of The Anatomy of Justice, reorients liberal egalitarianism toward an “anatomy of justice.” She explains evaluative discernment over prescriptive principles. Short takes cover mutual respect as a thick political ideal, how relational and distributive equality fit together, and how the anatomy guides judgments about institutions, culture, and individual responsibility.

Feb 1, 2026 • 58min
Stevan Harrell, "An Ecological History of Modern China" (U Washington Press, 2023)
Stevan Harrell, professor emeritus of anthropology and environmental and forest sciences with decades studying China’s environment. He discusses ecological history and a systems-focused view of China’s transformation. He frames the Great Leap Forward as an ecological catastrophe. He explores mechanized agriculture, rigidity traps from infrastructure, and hopes like reforestation alongside persistent worries about water, soil, floods, and emissions.

Feb 1, 2026 • 1h 20min
Michael Casiano, "Let Us Alone: The Origins of Baltimore's Police State" (U Illinois Press, 2025)
Michael Casiano, assistant professor and author of Let Us Alone, traces how Baltimore built a modern, racialized system of policing and carceral control. He discusses striking archival images, vagrancy laws, school and social‑work surveillance, courtroom injustices, and how reformers shaped professionalized police power. The conversation maps sites of state control and the city's role in broader national trends.

Feb 1, 2026 • 1h 2min
Danielle N. Boaz, "Voodoo: The History of a Racial Slur" (Oxford UP, 2023)
Danielle N. Boaz, a lawyer-historian who studies persecution of Africana religions, examines how the anglicized term "voodoo" became a racial slur. She traces its 1860s U.S. origins, links to empire and migration policy, and how media used it to denigrate Black religion and politics. She urges care with the word and centers devotees' own identities.


