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The Bookshelf

Latest episodes

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Aug 9, 2024 • 55min

Miles Franklin Literary Award 2024

What does the 2024 Miles Franklin shortlist tell us about our shared imagination? Bernadette Brennan and Geordie Williamson join Kate and Cassie to examine the winner, Alexis Wright's epic novel Praiseworthy, and all the finalists for Australia’s most prestigious literary prize.BOOKSWINNER:Alexis Wright, Praiseworthy (Giramondo)REST OF SHORTLIST:Hossein Asgari, Only Sound Remains (Puncher & Wattmann)Jen Craig, Wall (Puncher & Wattmann)André Dao, Anam (Hamish Hamilton)Gregory Day, The Bell of the World (Transit Lounge)Sanya Rushdi, Hospital, (Giramondo)GUESTSBernadette Brennan, literary scholar, biographer, and former judge of the Miles FranklinGeordie Williamson, literary critic and publisherCREDITSPresenter, Kate Evans + Cassie McCullaghProducer, Kate Evans + Sarah CorbettSound engineer, Tegan Nicholls and Ann Marie DebettencorExecutive producer, Rhiannon Brown
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Aug 2, 2024 • 54min

Weird fiction writer China Miéville's surprising collab with Keanu Reeves

Bruce Isaacs on weird fiction novelist China Mievelle's The Book of Elsewhere, a genre-bending epic written in collaboration with Hollywood star Keanu Reeves. Plus, guest critic Ailsa Piper on The Echoes by Miles Franklin winning author Evie Wyld...set between London and rural Australia it's part love story, part ghost story, and Kate and Cassie discuss Choice by Booker-shortlisted author Neel Mukherjee, a bleak, powerful and viciously funny novel about a publisher at war with his industry and himself. BOOKSNeel Mukherjee, Choice, Atlantic BooksEvie Wyld, The Echoes, VintageKeanu Reeves & China Miéville, The Book of Elsewhere, Del ReyGUESTSAilsa Piper, writer and performer whose latest book is For Life: A Memoir of Living and Dying – and FlyingBruce Isaacs, Associate Prof of Film Studies at the University of Sydney; and co-host of the podcast Film Versus FilmOTHER BOOKS MENTIONEDSarah Winman, Still LifeEdna O'Brien, Girls in Their Married BlissThomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49Alfred Bester, The Stars My DestinationTed Chiang, Stories of Your Life and OthersCREDITSPresenter, Kate Evans and Cassie McCullaghProducer, Kate Evans and Sarah CorbettSound engineer, Tegan Nicholls and Nathan TurnbullExecutive producer, Rhiannon Brown 
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Jul 26, 2024 • 54min

Willy Vlautin's The Horse: drenched in twangy music and heartbreak

Award-winning U.S. author Willy Vlautin's The Horse is his poignant new novel about the life of a lonely country musician in Nevada and his chance encounter with a half blind horse. Plus, bookseller David Gaunt reviews Ammar Kalia's A Person Is a Prayer, one family's story of migration from Kenya and India to the UK; and Wellington based critic and curator Claire Mabey looks at Laurence Fearnley's At The Grand Glacier Hotel, which follows a stormy family holiday set on New Zealand's South Island.BOOKSWilly Vlautin, The Horse, FaberAmmar Kalia, A Person is a Prayer, Oldcastle BooksLaurence Fearnley, At the Grand Glacier Hotel, PenguinGUESTSDavid Gaunt, co-owner, Gleebooks, Sydney – independent bookshop [and one of the founding board members of the Indigenous Literacy Foundation]Claire Mabey, NZ based books editor and critic; founder of Verb Wellington readers and writers festival, co-curator of the writers program at the Aotearoa Festival of the Arts – and she has just written her first novel for children, The Raven’s Eye RunawaysOTHER BOOKS MENTIONEDPatrick O'Brian, Aubrey–Maturin seriesAnita Brookner, Hotel du LacEvie Wyld, The EchoesKatherine Rundell, Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John DonneSinead Gleeson, HagstoneCREDITSPresenter, Kate Evans + Cassie McCullaghProducer, Kate Evans  + Sarah CorbettSound engineer, Russell StapletonExecutive producer, Rhiannon Brown
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Jul 19, 2024 • 54min

Dylin Hardcastle's A Language of Limbs: emotionally true, structurally complex

Kate Evans and Jonathan Green with guests Pip Williams and Sarah Bailey read Dylin Hardcastle's A Language of Limbs, Lev Grossman's The Bright Sword, Valeria Usala's A Woman in Sardinia and Jean-Baptiste del Amo's The Son of Man. Australian fiction, novels in translation, secrets and violence, cities and regions, queer love and emotional truths, and a hint of fantasy.BOOKSDylin Hardcastle, A Language of Limbs, PicadorLev Grossman, The Bright Sword, Del RayValeria Usala, A Woman in Sardinia (trans from the Italian by Katherine Gregor), TextJean-Baptiste del Amo, The Son of Man (trans from the French by Frank Wynne), TextGUESTSPip Williams, writer whose novels include The Dictionary of Lost Words and The Bookbinder of Jericho [Adelaide studios]Sarah Bailey, crime writer whose books include The Dark Lake, The Housemate and – her latest, released in February this year – Body of Lies [Melb studios]OTHER BOOKS MENTIONED:Shubnam Khan, The Djinn Waits 100 YearsItalo Calvino, If On a Winter's Night a TravellerJ P Pomare, Seventeen Years LaterFrederick Backman's BeartownArthuriads (an incomplete list)Thomas Mallory, Le Morte D'ArthurMary Stewart's Merlin Trilogy (The Crystal Cave etc)T H White's Once and Future King + seriesMarion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of AvalonMark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's CourtGuy Gavriel Kay, Fionavar Tapestry/ The Darkest Road trilogyM K Hume's Merlin Emrys trilogyVictoria Gosling, Bliss and BlunderSophie Keetch, Morgan is my NameCREDITS• Presenter, Kate Evans + Jonathan Green• Producer, Kate Evans + James Pattison• Sound engineer, Roi Huberman + Simon Branthwaite• Executive producer, Rhiannon Brown
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Jul 12, 2024 • 54min

Awfully Rich: Taffy Brodesser-Akner's Long Island Compromise and more

Money, kidnapping, reality TV, politics, corruption, families, love, and betrayal in all three books on this edition of The Bookshelf. Kate Evans and Jonathan Green, with guests Farz Edraki and Johan Gabrielsson, read Taffy Brodesser-Akner's Long Island Compromise, Porochistaa Khakpour's Tehrangeles and Patrick Holland's Oblivion. Awfully rich, richly awful.BOOKSTaffy Brodesser-Akner, Long Island Compromise, WildfirePorochistaa Khakpour, Tehrangeles: A Novel, Ultimo PressPatrick Holland, Oblivion, Transit LoungeGUESTSFarz Edraki, Iranian-Australian writer and producer. Presenter of the ABC audio series, 'Days Like These'Johan Gabrielsson, Swedish-born, Sydney-based filmmaker – and Bookshelf regularOTHER BOOKS MENTIONEDJonathan Franzen, The CorrectionsMarcel Proust, In Search of Lost TimeHossein Asgari, Only Sound RemainsLouisa May Alcott, Little WomenTaffy Brodesser-Akner, Fleishman is in TroubleKaveh Akbar, Martyr!James Joyce, UlyssesGraham Greene, The Quiet AmericanGraham Greene, A Burnt-Out CaseClaire Keegan, Walk the Blue FieldsClaire Keegan, AntarcticaJames Salter, worksJonathan Franzen, worksPhilip Roth, worksMiranda July, All FoursClive James, Poetry NotebookNiklas Turner Olovzon, Iceberg
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Jul 5, 2024 • 54min

Fairytales are at play in Julia Phillips' Bear

The band is back together! Join Cassie and Kate as they head to an island off North America in Julia Phillips’ Bear, plus two Australian novels – Jessie Tu’s The Honeyeater and Finegan Kruckemeyer’s The End and Everything Before It.BOOKSJulia Phillips, Bear, ScribeJessie Tu, The Honeyeater, Allen & UnwinFinegan Kruckemeyer, The End and Everything Before It, TextGUESTSTom Wright, theatre writer and literary adaptor; Artistic Associate at Belvoir TheatreNicole Abadee, books writer for the Good Weekend, interviewer at festivals, and Board Member, Indigenous Literacy Foundation OTHER BOOKS MENTIONEDJulia Phillips, Disappearing EarthJessie Tu, A Lonely Girl is a Dangerous ThingBen Okri, The Freedom ArtistRobbie Arnott, Limberlost; The Rain HeronWillem Frederik Hermans, Beyond Sleep Catherine Newman, Sandwich; We All Want Impossible ThingsClare Lombardo, Same as it Ever Was​CREDITSPresenter, Kate Evans + Cassie McCullaghProducer, Kate Evans + Sarah CorbettSound engineer, Russell Stapleton + Beth StewartExecutive producer, Rhiannon Brown
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Jun 28, 2024 • 54min

Catherine McKinnon's To Sing of War takes us to PNG during WW ll

Mark Mordue, a poet and rock journalist known for his works like 'Boy on Fire,' and Patrick Carey, a writer and digital producer, explore Catherine McKinnon's novel 'To Sing of War,' set in WWII Papua New Guinea. They discuss the book's immersive journey and emotional depth, highlighting the character complexities of nurses and soldiers. The duo also dives into two debut novels, 'Big Time' and 'Evenings and Weekends,' connecting dystopian themes with rock music, societal challenges, and personal struggles, offering a rich tapestry of human experience.
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Jun 21, 2024 • 54min

A new fiction title from bestselling author Bruce Pascoe

Kate Evans returns with guest reviewers to discuss Bruce Pascoe’s Imperial Harvest, an epic of brutality and imperialism; along with Jenny Ackland’s Hurdy Gurdy, a circus saga set in a near-future Australia; and Miranda July’s All Fours, which looks at one woman's quest for a very unique kind of freedom.BOOKSBruce Pascoe, Imperial Harvest, Melbourne BooksJenny Ackland, Hurdy Gurdy, Allen & UnwinMiranda July, All Fours, CanongateGUESTSBeejay Silcox, writer, critic and literary judge. Artistic Director, Canberra Writers Festival; chair of the Stella Prize 2024Kate Mildenhall, writer whose latest novel is The Hummingbird EffectOTHER BOOKS MENTIONEDMargaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale; Oryx and CrakeJane McGonigal, Imaginable: How to See the Future Coming and Feel Ready for Anything Emily St John Mandel, Station ElevenClaire G. Coleman, Terra NulliusAlexis Wright, PraiseworthyCharlotte Wood, The Natural Way of ThingsNaomi Alderman, The PowerLisa Taddeo, Three WomenDavid Owen Kelly, Host CityScott Alexander Howard, The Other ValleyCatherine McKinnon, To Sing of WarRichard Flanagan, The Narrow Road to the Deep North Sharlene Allsopp, The Great UndoingCREDITSPresenter, Kate EvansProducer, Kate Evans + Sarah CorbettSound engineer, Russell Stapleton + Beth StewartExecutive producer, Rhiannon Brown
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Jun 17, 2024 • 54min

Jenny Erpenbeck's Kairos, winner of the 2024 International Booker Prize

Cassie and Kate discuss Jenny Erpenbecks' Kairos (winner of the 2024 International Booker Prize) with critic Declan Fry - originally broadcast August 2023 when the book was first published; and interviews with writers A K Blakemore (The Glutton), Daniel Mason (North Woods) and Gretchen Shirm (The Crying Room) by Kate Evans.BOOKSJenny Erpenbeck, Kairos, translated from the German by Michael Hofmann, GrantaA K Blakemore, The Glutton, GrantaDaniel Mason, North Woods, John MurrayGretchen Shirm, The Crying Room, Transit Lounge.GUESTSDeclan Fry, poet, essayist and critic – who regularly reviews for the Age/ SMH, the Guardian and ABC Arts online.A K Blakemore, English poet and writer whose novels are The Manningtree Witches and The GluttonDaniel Mason, American writer, physician and academic, whose novels include The Piano Tuner, The Winter Soldier, A Registry of my Passage Upon the Earth and North WoodsGretchen Shirm, Australian essayist, critic, novelist and shortstory writer whose books are Having Cried Wolf, Where the Light Falls and The Crying RoomCREDITSPresenter/ Producer: Kate EvansSound Engineer: Ann-Marie De BettencorExecutive Producer: Rhiannon Brown
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Jun 7, 2024 • 54min

In Parade Rachel Cusk blurs reality and fiction

Cassie and Tom Wright read The Parade by Rachel Cusk, her first since 2018’s Kudos, the final part of the acclaimed Outline trilogy. Once again, Cusk questions the very nature of truth.James Ley joins to discuss Ceridwen Dovey’s new collection of short stories, Only the Astronauts, which takes us off-planet and into the “lives” of the objects that humans have sent into space.Gretchen Shirm reviews Alphabetical Diaries by Sheila Heti, constructed of sentences culled from 10 years of her journal writing and arranged, yes, alphabetically.GUESTSGretchen Shirm, critic and writer whose books include the short story collection Having Cried Wolf and the novels Where the Light Falls and The Crying RoomJames Ley, critic and literary judge. Deputy Books and Ideas Editor at The Conversation; former editor, Sydney Review of Books; one of the judges of the Miles Franklin Literary AwardBOOKSRachel Cusk, Parade (Allen and Unwin)Ceridwen Dovey, Only the Astronauts (Penguin)Sheila Heti, Alphabetical Diaries (Allen and Unwin)OTHER BOOKS MENTIONEDJohn Milton, Paradise Lost William S. Burroughs, worksVladimir Sorokin, worksSalmon Rushdie, KnifeAdele Dumont, The PullingCREDITSPresenter, Cassie McCullagh + Tom WrightProducer, Cassie McCullagh + Sarah CorbettSound engineer, Simon Branthwaite + Beth SpencerExecutive producer, Rhiannon Brown

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