New Books Network

New Books
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 5min

Robert Guffey, "Hollywood Haunts the World: An Investigation into the Cinema of Occulted Taboos" (Headpress, 2026)

Robert Guffey, author and cultural critic who tracks a century of taboo themes in film. He traces how cinema encodes Darwinian ideas, mind-control and UFO stigma, JFK conspiracies, and the shift from coded genre metaphors to overt treatments. Short, vivid dives into horror, westerns, sci‑fi and conspiracy films reveal how marginal art seeds cultural change.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 43min

Neelum Saran Gour, "Requiem in Raga Janki" (Penguin Viking, 2018)

Neelum Saran Gour, prolific novelist and award-winning scholar from Allahabad, reimagines the life of Hindustani singer Janki Bai Ilahabadi. The conversation traces Janki Bai’s rise from hardship to musical fame. It explores music lore, the social world of early 20th-century north India, language choices, and the novel’s vivid sense of place.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 54min

Dafeng Xu, "Chinatown: San Francisco's 1906 Earthquake and the Paradox of American Immigration Policy" (JHU Press, 2026)

Dafeng Xu, an urban planning scholar who studies immigrant neighborhoods and migration history, traces Chinatown's near-erasure after the 1906 quake and its contested rebuilding. Short segments explore family separation from immigration bans, how burned records enabled paper sons, language and schooling barriers, residential segregation as protection and constraint, and the use of architecture to assert identity.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 35min

Hollay Ghadery, "The Unravelling of Ou" (Palimpsest Press, 2026)

Hollay Ghadery, an Iranian-Canadian multi-genre writer and debut novelist, discusses a whimsical yet haunting tale about a sock puppet named Ecology Paul. Short scenes explore the puppet’s origin, mother-daughter shame, exile from Iran, inventive prose shaped by poetry, and the novel’s shifting timelines and emotional stakes.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 1min

Dianna N. Watkins-Dickerson, "A Black Woman for President: Shirley Chisholm, Carol Moseley Braun, and Kamala Harris" (UP of Mississippi)

Dianna N. Watkins-Dickerson, author and scholar of womanist rhetorical criticism, explores the presidential announcement speeches of Shirley Chisholm, Carol Moseley Braun, and Kamala Harris. She explains womanist rhetorical theory and its roots in Black church and HBCU spaces. Short, focused analyses trace rhetorical strategies, historical precedents, and the challenges of studying recent campaigns.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 9min

Tom Griffiths, "The Laws of Thought: The Quest for a Mathematical Theory of the Mind" (Henry Holt and Co., 2026)

Tom Griffiths, cognitive scientist and head of Princeton’s AI Lab, explores the centuries-long quest to mathematize thought. He traces logic from Boole to modern probabilistic and neural approaches. Listens cover rule-based systems, neural networks and backpropagation, and how large language models blend frameworks while still differing from human minds.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 56min

Andrew Billing, "Animal Rhetoric and Natural Science in Eighteenth-century Liberal Political Writing" (Routledge, 2023)

Andrew Billing, Professor of French and Francophone Studies and author of Animal Rhetoric and Natural Science in Eighteenth-century Liberal Political Writing, maps how Rousseau, Diderot, La Mettrie, Quesnay, and Rétif use animal imagery and emerging zoology. Short takes cover Buffon’s influence, political zoology, anthropomorphism, organic and molecular metaphors, and animal-based models of economy, morality, and empire.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 50min

P. C. Saidalavi, "Seeking Allah's Hierarchy: Caste, Labor, and Islam in India" (U Pennsylvania Press, 2025)

P. C. Saidalavi, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Shiv Nadar University, explores Muslim barbers in Kerala and how Islamic values shape intra-communal hierarchy. He discusses fieldwork origins, ethical listening, competing lineage claims, patronage and labor relations, jurisprudential labels that justify humiliation, and how unionization and migration reshaped dignity and status.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 39min

Rob Kutner, "The Jews: 5,000 Years and Counting" (Wicked Son, 2025)

Rob Kutner, comedy writer and teacher known for The Daily Show and more, offers a playful mini-history in The Jews: 5,000 Years and Counting. He reads medieval comic excerpts and explains how he makes dark history funny. He discusses timing and framing after October 7, ethical limits of satire, editorial choices on scope, and writing for Jewish audiences.
undefined
Feb 4, 2026 • 56min

Ning Leng, "Politicizing Business: How Firms Are Made to Serve the Party-State in China" (Cambridge, 2025)

Ning Leng, Assistant Professor at Georgetown specializing in Chinese political economy, examines how officials turn private firms into political tools. She discusses visible projects like bridges, buses, and incinerators. Topics include officials’ incentives for grand projects, firms’ roles in social control, NIMBY dynamics, and challenges of fieldwork in China.

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app