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    <fireside:genDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 12:24:03 -0500</fireside:genDate>
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    <title>Weird Era - Episodes Tagged with “Sthenri”</title>
    <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/tags/sthenri</link>
    <pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>Hosted by Sruti Islam and Alex Nierenhausen
Theme Songs by Gino Visconti and Michael Jaworski (@mikejaws)
Audio Production by Kyel Loadenthal
</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:subtitle>Dedicated to asking authors the right questions.</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Hosted by Sruti Islam and Alex Nierenhausen
Theme Songs by Gino Visconti and Michael Jaworski (@mikejaws)
Audio Production by Kyel Loadenthal
</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/cover.jpg?v=10"/>
    <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
    <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2024books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Bookish, MTL, PulBooks, PulpBooksandCafe, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Weird Era</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>sruti.islam@gmail.com</itunes:email>
    </itunes:owner>
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<itunes:category text="Arts">
  <itunes:category text="Books"/>
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<itunes:category text="Fiction"/>
<item>
  <title>Episode 44: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Elif Batuman</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/44</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/678e3b69-8a14-476f-b94b-ad79ae49c2c6.mp3" length="29919485" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Elif Batuman to talk about what it means to ~feel~ intelligent, to over-intellectualize a crush, the normalized expectations of heterosexuality, how it feels to forefront Immigrant stories in North American canon, and what she thinks about The Idiot developing into film.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>41:33</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>About Elif Batuman:
Elif Batuman’s first novel, The Idiot, was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction in the UK. She is also the author of The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them, which was a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism. She has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 2010 and holds a PhD in comparative literature from Stanford University.
From the acclaimed and bestselling author of The Idiot, the continuation of beloved protagonist Selin’s quest for self-knowledge, as she travels abroad and tests the limits of her newfound adulthood
About Either/Or
Selin is the luckiest person in her family: the only one who was born in America and got to go to Harvard. Now it’s sophomore year, 1996, and Selin knows she has to make it count. The first order of business: to figure out the meaning of everything that happened over the summer. Why did Selin’s elusive crush, Ivan, find her that job in the Hungarian countryside? What was up with all those other people in the Hungarian countryside? Why is Ivan’s weird ex-girlfriend now trying to get in touch with Selin? On the plus side, it feels like the plot of an exciting novel. On the other hand, why do so many novels have crazy abandoned women in them? How does one live a life as interesting as a novel—a life worthy of becoming a novel—without becoming a crazy abandoned woman oneself?
Guided by her literature syllabus and by her more worldly and confident peers, Selin reaches certain conclusions about the universal importance of parties, alcohol, and sex, and resolves to execute them in practice—no matter what the cost. Next on the list: international travel.
Unfolding with the propulsive logic and intensity of youth, Either/Or is a landmark novel by one of our most brilliant writers. Hilarious, revelatory, and unforgettable, its gripping narrative will confront you with searching questions that persist long after the last page. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2022books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Elif Batuman</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Elif Batuman:<br>
Elif Batuman’s first novel, The Idiot, was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction in the UK. She is also the author of The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them, which was a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism. She has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 2010 and holds a PhD in comparative literature from Stanford University.</p>

<p>From the acclaimed and bestselling author of The Idiot, the continuation of beloved protagonist Selin’s quest for self-knowledge, as she travels abroad and tests the limits of her newfound adulthood</p>

<p>About Either/Or<br>
Selin is the luckiest person in her family: the only one who was born in America and got to go to Harvard. Now it’s sophomore year, 1996, and Selin knows she has to make it count. The first order of business: to figure out the meaning of everything that happened over the summer. Why did Selin’s elusive crush, Ivan, find her that job in the Hungarian countryside? What was up with all those other people in the Hungarian countryside? Why is Ivan’s weird ex-girlfriend now trying to get in touch with Selin? On the plus side, it feels like the plot of an exciting novel. On the other hand, why do so many novels have crazy abandoned women in them? How does one live a life as interesting as a novel—a life worthy of becoming a novel—without becoming a crazy abandoned woman oneself?</p>

<p>Guided by her literature syllabus and by her more worldly and confident peers, Selin reaches certain conclusions about the universal importance of parties, alcohol, and sex, and resolves to execute them in practice—no matter what the cost. Next on the list: international travel.</p>

<p>Unfolding with the propulsive logic and intensity of youth, Either/Or is a landmark novel by one of our most brilliant writers. Hilarious, revelatory, and unforgettable, its gripping narrative will confront you with searching questions that persist long after the last page.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Elif Batuman:<br>
Elif Batuman’s first novel, The Idiot, was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction in the UK. She is also the author of The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them, which was a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism. She has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 2010 and holds a PhD in comparative literature from Stanford University.</p>

<p>From the acclaimed and bestselling author of The Idiot, the continuation of beloved protagonist Selin’s quest for self-knowledge, as she travels abroad and tests the limits of her newfound adulthood</p>

<p>About Either/Or<br>
Selin is the luckiest person in her family: the only one who was born in America and got to go to Harvard. Now it’s sophomore year, 1996, and Selin knows she has to make it count. The first order of business: to figure out the meaning of everything that happened over the summer. Why did Selin’s elusive crush, Ivan, find her that job in the Hungarian countryside? What was up with all those other people in the Hungarian countryside? Why is Ivan’s weird ex-girlfriend now trying to get in touch with Selin? On the plus side, it feels like the plot of an exciting novel. On the other hand, why do so many novels have crazy abandoned women in them? How does one live a life as interesting as a novel—a life worthy of becoming a novel—without becoming a crazy abandoned woman oneself?</p>

<p>Guided by her literature syllabus and by her more worldly and confident peers, Selin reaches certain conclusions about the universal importance of parties, alcohol, and sex, and resolves to execute them in practice—no matter what the cost. Next on the list: international travel.</p>

<p>Unfolding with the propulsive logic and intensity of youth, Either/Or is a landmark novel by one of our most brilliant writers. Hilarious, revelatory, and unforgettable, its gripping narrative will confront you with searching questions that persist long after the last page.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 43: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Jackson Howard</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/43</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 14 Jul 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/a6eb893b-4ab9-4bfb-b71e-c114bb593d41.mp3" length="35443181" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex sits down with Jackson Howard, an editor at the forefront of queer literature, to discuss the current state of the publishing industry, bad reading habits, Brontez Purnell's tattoos, and the Pitchfork rating system.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>48:27</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/a/a6eb893b-4ab9-4bfb-b71e-c114bb593d41/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Jackson Howard is an editor and writer from Los Angeles who lives in Brooklyn. 
He’s an Editor at Farrar, Straus and Giroux and its imprint MCD, where he acquires and edits a broad range of fiction and nonfiction. Writers he publishes include Judith Butler, Brontez Purnell, Sarah Schulman, Catherine Lacey, Fernando A. Flores, Susan Straight, Venita Blackburn, Imogen Binnie, Thomas Grattan,  Missouri Williams, Jonathan Escoffery, Kaitlyn Tiffany, and many others.  
As a writer, his reviews, profiles, and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Pitchfork, The Cut, Rolling Stone, The Ringer, them., W., ELLE, i-D, office, Document, and elsewhere. 
He regularly visits undergrad and MFA programs for workshops and talks, and judges for fellowships; he’s also spoken on panels for the Miami Book Fair, One Story, and the New York Foundation for the Arts, and he’s read at Housing Works and MOMA PS1. He is also part of the team behind the FSG Writer’s Fellowship, and is passionate about efforts to increase transparency and access within publishing at large. 
He graduated from the University of Michigan in 2016 and is very much a Taurus.  
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Jackson Howard</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Jackson Howard is an editor and writer from Los Angeles who lives in Brooklyn. </p>

<p>He’s an Editor at Farrar, Straus and Giroux and its imprint MCD, where he acquires and edits a broad range of fiction and nonfiction. Writers he publishes include Judith Butler, Brontez Purnell, Sarah Schulman, Catherine Lacey, Fernando A. Flores, Susan Straight, Venita Blackburn, Imogen Binnie, Thomas Grattan,  Missouri Williams, Jonathan Escoffery, Kaitlyn Tiffany, and many others.  </p>

<p>As a writer, his reviews, profiles, and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Pitchfork, The Cut, Rolling Stone, The Ringer, them., W., ELLE, i-D, office, Document, and elsewhere. </p>

<p>He regularly visits undergrad and MFA programs for workshops and talks, and judges for fellowships; he’s also spoken on panels for the Miami Book Fair, One Story, and the New York Foundation for the Arts, and he’s read at Housing Works and MOMA PS1. He is also part of the team behind the FSG Writer’s Fellowship, and is passionate about efforts to increase transparency and access within publishing at large. </p>

<p>He graduated from the University of Michigan in 2016 and is very much a Taurus. </p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Jackson Howard is an editor and writer from Los Angeles who lives in Brooklyn. </p>

<p>He’s an Editor at Farrar, Straus and Giroux and its imprint MCD, where he acquires and edits a broad range of fiction and nonfiction. Writers he publishes include Judith Butler, Brontez Purnell, Sarah Schulman, Catherine Lacey, Fernando A. Flores, Susan Straight, Venita Blackburn, Imogen Binnie, Thomas Grattan,  Missouri Williams, Jonathan Escoffery, Kaitlyn Tiffany, and many others.  </p>

<p>As a writer, his reviews, profiles, and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Pitchfork, The Cut, Rolling Stone, The Ringer, them., W., ELLE, i-D, office, Document, and elsewhere. </p>

<p>He regularly visits undergrad and MFA programs for workshops and talks, and judges for fellowships; he’s also spoken on panels for the Miami Book Fair, One Story, and the New York Foundation for the Arts, and he’s read at Housing Works and MOMA PS1. He is also part of the team behind the FSG Writer’s Fellowship, and is passionate about efforts to increase transparency and access within publishing at large. </p>

<p>He graduated from the University of Michigan in 2016 and is very much a Taurus. </p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 42: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Lillian Fishman</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/42</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 07 Jul 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/0d0ee039-7674-4039-9315-e9585b3decf9.mp3" length="33993607" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Lillian Fishman about her favourite book of 2022 (Acts of Service), and how a conversation on Queerness led her to an investigation of Heterosexuality, why desire conflates with our personal politics, and if freedom necessitates radicalism. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>44:55</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/0/0d0ee039-7674-4039-9315-e9585b3decf9/cover.jpg?v=2"/>
  <description>About Lillian Fishman:
Lillian Fishman was born in 1994 and lives in New York. She received her MFA from NYU, where she was a Jill Davis Fellow. Acts of Service is her first novel.
About Acts of Service:
A “bold and unflinchingly sexy” (Vogue) debut novel about a young woman who follows her desires into a world of pleasure, decadence, and privilege, unraveling everything she thought she knew about sex . . . and herself.
“One of the most entertaining books about sex I’ve ever read . . . The perfect read for fans of Raven Leilani and Ottessa Moshfegh, this is a book that will have people talking.”—BuzzFeed
“Anytime I want, I can forsake this dinner party and jump into real life.”—Eve Babitz
Eve has an adoring girlfriend, an impulsive streak, and a secret fear that she’s wasting her brief youth with just one person. So one evening she posts some nudes online. This is how Eve meets Olivia, and through Olivia the charismatic Nathan. Despite her better instincts, the three soon begin a relationship—one that disturbs Eve as much as it enthralls her. 
As each act of their complicated, three-way affair unfolds across a cold and glittering New York, Eve is forced to confront the questions that most consume her: What do we bring to sex? What does it reveal of ourselves, and one another? And how do we reconcile what we want with what we think we should want? 
In the way only great fiction can, Acts of Service takes between its teeth the contradictions written all over our ideas of sex and sexuality. At once juicy and intellectually challenging, sacred and profane, Lillian Fishman’s riveting debut is bold, unabashed, and required reading of the most pleasurable sort. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Lillian Fishman, Acts of Service</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>About Lillian Fishman:</strong><br>
Lillian Fishman was born in 1994 and lives in New York. She received her MFA from NYU, where she was a Jill Davis Fellow. Acts of Service is her first novel.</p>

<p><strong>About Acts of Service:</strong><br>
A “bold and unflinchingly sexy” (Vogue) debut novel about a young woman who follows her desires into a world of pleasure, decadence, and privilege, unraveling everything she thought she knew about sex . . . and herself.</p>

<p>“One of the most entertaining books about sex I’ve ever read . . . The perfect read for fans of Raven Leilani and Ottessa Moshfegh, this is a book that will have people talking.”—BuzzFeed</p>

<p>“Anytime I want, I can forsake this dinner party and jump into real life.”—Eve Babitz</p>

<p>Eve has an adoring girlfriend, an impulsive streak, and a secret fear that she’s wasting her brief youth with just one person. So one evening she posts some nudes online. This is how Eve meets Olivia, and through Olivia the charismatic Nathan. Despite her better instincts, the three soon begin a relationship—one that disturbs Eve as much as it enthralls her. </p>

<p>As each act of their complicated, three-way affair unfolds across a cold and glittering New York, Eve is forced to confront the questions that most consume her: What do we bring to sex? What does it reveal of ourselves, and one another? And how do we reconcile what we want with what we think we should want? </p>

<p>In the way only great fiction can, Acts of Service takes between its teeth the contradictions written all over our ideas of sex and sexuality. At once juicy and intellectually challenging, sacred and profane, Lillian Fishman’s riveting debut is bold, unabashed, and required reading of the most pleasurable sort.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>About Lillian Fishman:</strong><br>
Lillian Fishman was born in 1994 and lives in New York. She received her MFA from NYU, where she was a Jill Davis Fellow. Acts of Service is her first novel.</p>

<p><strong>About Acts of Service:</strong><br>
A “bold and unflinchingly sexy” (Vogue) debut novel about a young woman who follows her desires into a world of pleasure, decadence, and privilege, unraveling everything she thought she knew about sex . . . and herself.</p>

<p>“One of the most entertaining books about sex I’ve ever read . . . The perfect read for fans of Raven Leilani and Ottessa Moshfegh, this is a book that will have people talking.”—BuzzFeed</p>

<p>“Anytime I want, I can forsake this dinner party and jump into real life.”—Eve Babitz</p>

<p>Eve has an adoring girlfriend, an impulsive streak, and a secret fear that she’s wasting her brief youth with just one person. So one evening she posts some nudes online. This is how Eve meets Olivia, and through Olivia the charismatic Nathan. Despite her better instincts, the three soon begin a relationship—one that disturbs Eve as much as it enthralls her. </p>

<p>As each act of their complicated, three-way affair unfolds across a cold and glittering New York, Eve is forced to confront the questions that most consume her: What do we bring to sex? What does it reveal of ourselves, and one another? And how do we reconcile what we want with what we think we should want? </p>

<p>In the way only great fiction can, Acts of Service takes between its teeth the contradictions written all over our ideas of sex and sexuality. At once juicy and intellectually challenging, sacred and profane, Lillian Fishman’s riveting debut is bold, unabashed, and required reading of the most pleasurable sort.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 41: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Naben Ruthnum</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/41</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 30 Jun 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/6c0250ca-0d3f-4ef2-9004-51f5763c423f.mp3" length="35117806" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Naben Ruthnum about heterosexual male desire, South East Asian narratives in fiction, and how a kind of self-deprecation can ironically involve a heightened ego.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>39:22</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/6/6c0250ca-0d3f-4ef2-9004-51f5763c423f/cover.jpg?v=2"/>
  <description>ABOUT NABEN RUTHNUM:
Naben Ruthnum lives in Toronto, and is the author of Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race. As Nathan Ripley, he is the author of two thrillers, Find You In the Dark and Your Life is Mine. He also writes for film and television.
ABOUT A HERO OF OUR TIME
A wry comic novel with an acerbic wit, A Hero of Our Time is a vicious takedown of superficial diversity initiatives and tech culture, with a beating heart of broken sincerity.
Osman Shah is a pitstop on his white colleague Olivia Robinson’s quest for corporate domination at AAP, an edutech startup determined to automate higher education.
Osman, obsessed by Olivia’s ability to successfully disguise ambition and self-interest as collectivist diversity politics, is bent on exposing her. Aided by his colleague turned comrade-in-arms Nena, who loathes and tolerates him in equal measure, Osman delves into Olivia's twisted past. But at every turn, he's stymied by his unfailing gift for cruel observation, which he turns with most ferocity on himself, without ever noticing what it is that stops him from connecting to anyone in his past or present. As Osman loses his grip on his family, Nena, and everything he thought was essential to his identity, he confronts an enemy who may simply be too good at her job to be defeated.
A Hero of Our Time cracks the veneer of well-intentioned race conversations in the West, dismantles cheery narratives of progress through tech and “streamlined” education, and exposes the venomous self-congratulation and devouring lust for wealth, power, and property that lurks beneath.
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Naben Ruthnum, A Hero Of Our Time</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>ABOUT NABEN RUTHNUM:</strong><br>
Naben Ruthnum lives in Toronto, and is the author of Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race. As Nathan Ripley, he is the author of two thrillers, Find You In the Dark and Your Life is Mine. He also writes for film and television.</p>

<p><strong>ABOUT A HERO OF OUR TIME</strong><br>
A wry comic novel with an acerbic wit, A Hero of Our Time is a vicious takedown of superficial diversity initiatives and tech culture, with a beating heart of broken sincerity.</p>

<p>Osman Shah is a pitstop on his white colleague Olivia Robinson’s quest for corporate domination at AAP, an edutech startup determined to automate higher education.<br>
Osman, obsessed by Olivia’s ability to successfully disguise ambition and self-interest as collectivist diversity politics, is bent on exposing her. Aided by his colleague turned comrade-in-arms Nena, who loathes and tolerates him in equal measure, Osman delves into Olivia&#39;s twisted past. But at every turn, he&#39;s stymied by his unfailing gift for cruel observation, which he turns with most ferocity on himself, without ever noticing what it is that stops him from connecting to anyone in his past or present. As Osman loses his grip on his family, Nena, and everything he thought was essential to his identity, he confronts an enemy who may simply be too good at her job to be defeated.</p>

<p>A Hero of Our Time cracks the veneer of well-intentioned race conversations in the West, dismantles cheery narratives of progress through tech and “streamlined” education, and exposes the venomous self-congratulation and devouring lust for wealth, power, and property that lurks beneath.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>ABOUT NABEN RUTHNUM:</strong><br>
Naben Ruthnum lives in Toronto, and is the author of Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race. As Nathan Ripley, he is the author of two thrillers, Find You In the Dark and Your Life is Mine. He also writes for film and television.</p>

<p><strong>ABOUT A HERO OF OUR TIME</strong><br>
A wry comic novel with an acerbic wit, A Hero of Our Time is a vicious takedown of superficial diversity initiatives and tech culture, with a beating heart of broken sincerity.</p>

<p>Osman Shah is a pitstop on his white colleague Olivia Robinson’s quest for corporate domination at AAP, an edutech startup determined to automate higher education.<br>
Osman, obsessed by Olivia’s ability to successfully disguise ambition and self-interest as collectivist diversity politics, is bent on exposing her. Aided by his colleague turned comrade-in-arms Nena, who loathes and tolerates him in equal measure, Osman delves into Olivia&#39;s twisted past. But at every turn, he&#39;s stymied by his unfailing gift for cruel observation, which he turns with most ferocity on himself, without ever noticing what it is that stops him from connecting to anyone in his past or present. As Osman loses his grip on his family, Nena, and everything he thought was essential to his identity, he confronts an enemy who may simply be too good at her job to be defeated.</p>

<p>A Hero of Our Time cracks the veneer of well-intentioned race conversations in the West, dismantles cheery narratives of progress through tech and “streamlined” education, and exposes the venomous self-congratulation and devouring lust for wealth, power, and property that lurks beneath.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 40: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Heather O'Neill</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/40</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">6d7e170a-d721-4962-ad8f-a97cc2424bbf</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/6d7e170a-d721-4962-ad8f-a97cc2424bbf.mp3" length="27043954" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex talks with Montreal legend Heather O'Neill about her newest novel, When We Lost Our Heads. They talk about adult fairy tales, gritty underworlds, literary erotica, and what it means to get revenge.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>37:33</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/6/6d7e170a-d721-4962-ad8f-a97cc2424bbf/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Heather O'Neill
HEATHER O’NEILL is a novelist, short-story writer and essayist. Her most recent bestselling novel, The Lonely Hearts Hotel, won the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction and was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction and CBC’s Canada Reads. Her previous work, which includes Lullabies for Little Criminals, The Girl Who Was Saturday Night and Daydreams of Angels, has been shortlisted for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Scotiabank Giller Prize two years in a row. She has won CBC’s Canada Reads and the Danuta Gleed Award. Born and raised in Montreal, O’Neill lives there with her daughter.
About When We Lost Our Heads
1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER
Belletrist Book Club selection * Readers' Digest Book Club selection * Cityline Book Club selection
From the bestselling author of The Lonely Hearts Hotel, a spellbinding story about two young women whose friendship is so intense it not only threatens to destroy them, it changes the course of history
Marie Antoine is the charismatic, spoiled daughter of a sugar baron. At age twelve, with her pile of blond curls and unparalleled sense of whimsy, she’s the leader of all the children in the Golden Mile, the affluent strip of nineteenth-century Montreal where powerful families live. Until one day in 1873, when Sadie Arnett, dark-haired, sly and brilliant, moves to the neighbourhood.
Marie and Sadie are immediately inseparable. United by their passion and intensity, they attract and repel each other in ways that set them both on fire. Marie, with her bubbly charm, sees all the pleasure of the world, whereas Sadie’s obsession with darkness is all-consuming. Soon, their childlike games take on the thrill of danger and then become deadly.
Forced to separate, the girls spend their teenage years engaging in acts of alternating innocence and depravity, until a singular event unites them once more, with devastating effects. After Marie inherits her father’s sugar empire and Sadie disappears into the city’s gritty underworld, the working class begins to foment a revolution. Each woman will play an unexpected role in the events that upend their city—the only question is whether they will find each other once more.
From the beloved Giller Prize-shortlisted author who writes “like a sort of demented angel with an uncanny knack for metaphor” (Toronto Star), When We Lost Our Heads is a page-turning novel that explores gender and power, sex and desire, class and status, and the terrifying strength of the human heart when it can’t let someone go.  
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, When We Lost Our Heads, Heather O'Neill</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>About Heather O&#39;Neill</strong><br>
HEATHER O’NEILL is a novelist, short-story writer and essayist. Her most recent bestselling novel, The Lonely Hearts Hotel, won the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction and was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction and CBC’s Canada Reads. Her previous work, which includes Lullabies for Little Criminals, The Girl Who Was Saturday Night and Daydreams of Angels, has been shortlisted for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Scotiabank Giller Prize two years in a row. She has won CBC’s Canada Reads and the Danuta Gleed Award. Born and raised in Montreal, O’Neill lives there with her daughter.</p>

<p><strong>About When We Lost Our Heads</strong></p>

<h1>1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER</h1>

<p>Belletrist Book Club selection * Readers&#39; Digest Book Club selection * Cityline Book Club selection</p>

<p>From the bestselling author of The Lonely Hearts Hotel, a spellbinding story about two young women whose friendship is so intense it not only threatens to destroy them, it changes the course of history</p>

<p>Marie Antoine is the charismatic, spoiled daughter of a sugar baron. At age twelve, with her pile of blond curls and unparalleled sense of whimsy, she’s the leader of all the children in the Golden Mile, the affluent strip of nineteenth-century Montreal where powerful families live. Until one day in 1873, when Sadie Arnett, dark-haired, sly and brilliant, moves to the neighbourhood.</p>

<p>Marie and Sadie are immediately inseparable. United by their passion and intensity, they attract and repel each other in ways that set them both on fire. Marie, with her bubbly charm, sees all the pleasure of the world, whereas Sadie’s obsession with darkness is all-consuming. Soon, their childlike games take on the thrill of danger and then become deadly.</p>

<p>Forced to separate, the girls spend their teenage years engaging in acts of alternating innocence and depravity, until a singular event unites them once more, with devastating effects. After Marie inherits her father’s sugar empire and Sadie disappears into the city’s gritty underworld, the working class begins to foment a revolution. Each woman will play an unexpected role in the events that upend their city—the only question is whether they will find each other once more.</p>

<p>From the beloved Giller Prize-shortlisted author who writes “like a sort of demented angel with an uncanny knack for metaphor” (Toronto Star), When We Lost Our Heads is a page-turning novel that explores gender and power, sex and desire, class and status, and the terrifying strength of the human heart when it can’t let someone go. </p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p><strong>About Heather O&#39;Neill</strong><br>
HEATHER O’NEILL is a novelist, short-story writer and essayist. Her most recent bestselling novel, The Lonely Hearts Hotel, won the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction and was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction and CBC’s Canada Reads. Her previous work, which includes Lullabies for Little Criminals, The Girl Who Was Saturday Night and Daydreams of Angels, has been shortlisted for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Scotiabank Giller Prize two years in a row. She has won CBC’s Canada Reads and the Danuta Gleed Award. Born and raised in Montreal, O’Neill lives there with her daughter.</p>

<p><strong>About When We Lost Our Heads</strong></p>

<h1>1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER</h1>

<p>Belletrist Book Club selection * Readers&#39; Digest Book Club selection * Cityline Book Club selection</p>

<p>From the bestselling author of The Lonely Hearts Hotel, a spellbinding story about two young women whose friendship is so intense it not only threatens to destroy them, it changes the course of history</p>

<p>Marie Antoine is the charismatic, spoiled daughter of a sugar baron. At age twelve, with her pile of blond curls and unparalleled sense of whimsy, she’s the leader of all the children in the Golden Mile, the affluent strip of nineteenth-century Montreal where powerful families live. Until one day in 1873, when Sadie Arnett, dark-haired, sly and brilliant, moves to the neighbourhood.</p>

<p>Marie and Sadie are immediately inseparable. United by their passion and intensity, they attract and repel each other in ways that set them both on fire. Marie, with her bubbly charm, sees all the pleasure of the world, whereas Sadie’s obsession with darkness is all-consuming. Soon, their childlike games take on the thrill of danger and then become deadly.</p>

<p>Forced to separate, the girls spend their teenage years engaging in acts of alternating innocence and depravity, until a singular event unites them once more, with devastating effects. After Marie inherits her father’s sugar empire and Sadie disappears into the city’s gritty underworld, the working class begins to foment a revolution. Each woman will play an unexpected role in the events that upend their city—the only question is whether they will find each other once more.</p>

<p>From the beloved Giller Prize-shortlisted author who writes “like a sort of demented angel with an uncanny knack for metaphor” (Toronto Star), When We Lost Our Heads is a page-turning novel that explores gender and power, sex and desire, class and status, and the terrifying strength of the human heart when it can’t let someone go. </p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 39: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Rollie Pemberton aka Cadence Weapon</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/39</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">b2174065-8fae-4f0e-8181-b9f6245dfd0e</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 16 Jun 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/b2174065-8fae-4f0e-8181-b9f6245dfd0e.mp3" length="28973912" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Rollie Pemberton about his debut memoir Bedroom Rapper, the 2000s Montreal DIY scene, conscious rap vs gangster rap, what it means when an album is just trash tho, and navigating a Canadian Black identity throughout his career.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>40:14</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/b/b2174065-8fae-4f0e-8181-b9f6245dfd0e/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>ABOUT ROLLIE PEMBERTON:
He is a writer, rapper, producer, poet and activist who performs under the name Cadence Weapon. He won the 2021 Polaris Music Prize for his album Parallel World. His writing has been published in Pitchfork, The Guardian, Wired and Hazlitt. Currently based in Toronto, Pemberton was a former Poet Laureate in his hometown of Edmonton.
ABOUT Bedroom Rapper: Cadence Weapon on Hip-Hop, Resistance and Surviving the Music Industry:
Tracing his roots from recording beats in his mom's attic in Edmonton to performing with some of the most recognizable names in rap and electronic music—De La Soul, Public Enemy, Mos Def, Questlove, Diplo, and more—Polaris Prize winner Rollie Pemberton, a.k.a Cadence Weapon, captures the joy in finding yourself, and how a sense of place and purpose entwines inextricably with a music scene in his debut memoir: Bedroom Rapper.
From competitive basement family karaoke to touring Europe, from fights with an exploitative label to finding his creative voice, from protesting against gentrification to using his music to centre political change, Rollie charts his own development alongside a shifting musical landscape. As Rollie finds his feet, the bottom falls out of the industry, and he captures the way so many artists were able to make a nimble name for themselves while labels floundered. 
Bedroom Rapper offers us a wide-ranging and crucial history of hip-hop. With an international perspective that's often missing from rap music journalism, he integrates the gestation of American hip hop with UK grime and niche scenes from the Canadian prairies, bringing his obsessive knowledge of hip-hop to bear on his subject. Rollie takes us into New York in the ’70s, Edmonton in the ’90s, the legendary Montreal DIY loft scene of the 2000s, and traces the ups and downs of trusting your gut and following your passion, obsessively. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Rollie Pemberton, Cadence Weapon</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>ABOUT ROLLIE PEMBERTON:<br>
He is a writer, rapper, producer, poet and activist who performs under the name Cadence Weapon. He won the 2021 Polaris Music Prize for his album Parallel World. His writing has been published in Pitchfork, The Guardian, Wired and Hazlitt. Currently based in Toronto, Pemberton was a former Poet Laureate in his hometown of Edmonton.</p>

<p>ABOUT Bedroom Rapper: Cadence Weapon on Hip-Hop, Resistance and Surviving the Music Industry:<br>
Tracing his roots from recording beats in his mom&#39;s attic in Edmonton to performing with some of the most recognizable names in rap and electronic music—De La Soul, Public Enemy, Mos Def, Questlove, Diplo, and more—Polaris Prize winner Rollie Pemberton, a.k.a Cadence Weapon, captures the joy in finding yourself, and how a sense of place and purpose entwines inextricably with a music scene in his debut memoir: Bedroom Rapper.</p>

<p>From competitive basement family karaoke to touring Europe, from fights with an exploitative label to finding his creative voice, from protesting against gentrification to using his music to centre political change, Rollie charts his own development alongside a shifting musical landscape. As Rollie finds his feet, the bottom falls out of the industry, and he captures the way so many artists were able to make a nimble name for themselves while labels floundered. </p>

<p>Bedroom Rapper offers us a wide-ranging and crucial history of hip-hop. With an international perspective that&#39;s often missing from rap music journalism, he integrates the gestation of American hip hop with UK grime and niche scenes from the Canadian prairies, bringing his obsessive knowledge of hip-hop to bear on his subject. Rollie takes us into New York in the ’70s, Edmonton in the ’90s, the legendary Montreal DIY loft scene of the 2000s, and traces the ups and downs of trusting your gut and following your passion, obsessively.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>ABOUT ROLLIE PEMBERTON:<br>
He is a writer, rapper, producer, poet and activist who performs under the name Cadence Weapon. He won the 2021 Polaris Music Prize for his album Parallel World. His writing has been published in Pitchfork, The Guardian, Wired and Hazlitt. Currently based in Toronto, Pemberton was a former Poet Laureate in his hometown of Edmonton.</p>

<p>ABOUT Bedroom Rapper: Cadence Weapon on Hip-Hop, Resistance and Surviving the Music Industry:<br>
Tracing his roots from recording beats in his mom&#39;s attic in Edmonton to performing with some of the most recognizable names in rap and electronic music—De La Soul, Public Enemy, Mos Def, Questlove, Diplo, and more—Polaris Prize winner Rollie Pemberton, a.k.a Cadence Weapon, captures the joy in finding yourself, and how a sense of place and purpose entwines inextricably with a music scene in his debut memoir: Bedroom Rapper.</p>

<p>From competitive basement family karaoke to touring Europe, from fights with an exploitative label to finding his creative voice, from protesting against gentrification to using his music to centre political change, Rollie charts his own development alongside a shifting musical landscape. As Rollie finds his feet, the bottom falls out of the industry, and he captures the way so many artists were able to make a nimble name for themselves while labels floundered. </p>

<p>Bedroom Rapper offers us a wide-ranging and crucial history of hip-hop. With an international perspective that&#39;s often missing from rap music journalism, he integrates the gestation of American hip hop with UK grime and niche scenes from the Canadian prairies, bringing his obsessive knowledge of hip-hop to bear on his subject. Rollie takes us into New York in the ’70s, Edmonton in the ’90s, the legendary Montreal DIY loft scene of the 2000s, and traces the ups and downs of trusting your gut and following your passion, obsessively.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 38: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Bud Smith</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/38</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">51d70a7d-e2b3-428a-b255-a5bf9465991d</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 09 Jun 2022 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/51d70a7d-e2b3-428a-b255-a5bf9465991d.mp3" length="38115179" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Bud Smith about his debut novel Teenager, contemporary manifestations of patriarchy, the difference between America and Americans, and why it's embarrassing to be alive.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>39:42</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/5/51d70a7d-e2b3-428a-b255-a5bf9465991d/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>ABOUT BUD SMITH:
Bud Smith works heavy construction in New Jersey. His story "Violets" appeared in The Paris Review. He released his debut novel this year, titled: Teenager.
ABOUT TEENAGER:
Kody Rawlee Green is stuck in juvie. Tella “Teal Cartwheels” Carticelli is packing her bags for Rome--on the orders of her parents, who want her as far from Kody as possible. But teenage love is too strong a force for the obstacles of reality. And the highway beckons.
Leaving their abusive pasts behind them in Jersey, Kody and Teal set off on a cross-country road trip equal parts self-destruction and self-discovery, making their way, one stolen car at a time, toward bigger, wider, bluer skies. Along the road, of course, there’s time to stop at Graceland, classic diners, a fairgrounds that smells of “pony shit and kettle corn," and time for run-ins with outsize personalities like the reincarnated Grand Canyon tour guide Dead Bob and the spurious Montana rancher Bill Gold. On their heels, all the while, is Teal’s brother, Neil Carticelli, who’s abandoned his post in the navy to rescue the sister he left behind. But does she really need saving?
These all too American tropes find new expression in Bud Smith’s own freewheeling prose—and in Rae Buleri’s original illustrations—filling Teenager with humor, poetry, and a joy that’s palpable in every unforgettable sentence.
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>ABOUT BUD SMITH:<br>
Bud Smith works heavy construction in New Jersey. His story &quot;Violets&quot; appeared in The Paris Review. He released his debut novel this year, titled: Teenager.</p>

<p>ABOUT TEENAGER:<br>
Kody Rawlee Green is stuck in juvie. Tella “Teal Cartwheels” Carticelli is packing her bags for Rome--on the orders of her parents, who want her as far from Kody as possible. But teenage love is too strong a force for the obstacles of reality. And the highway beckons.</p>

<p>Leaving their abusive pasts behind them in Jersey, Kody and Teal set off on a cross-country road trip equal parts self-destruction and self-discovery, making their way, one stolen car at a time, toward bigger, wider, bluer skies. Along the road, of course, there’s time to stop at Graceland, classic diners, a fairgrounds that smells of “pony shit and kettle corn,&quot; and time for run-ins with outsize personalities like the reincarnated Grand Canyon tour guide Dead Bob and the spurious Montana rancher Bill Gold. On their heels, all the while, is Teal’s brother, Neil Carticelli, who’s abandoned his post in the navy to rescue the sister he left behind. But does she really need saving?</p>

<p>These all too American tropes find new expression in Bud Smith’s own freewheeling prose—and in Rae Buleri’s original illustrations—filling Teenager with humor, poetry, and a joy that’s palpable in every unforgettable sentence.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>ABOUT BUD SMITH:<br>
Bud Smith works heavy construction in New Jersey. His story &quot;Violets&quot; appeared in The Paris Review. He released his debut novel this year, titled: Teenager.</p>

<p>ABOUT TEENAGER:<br>
Kody Rawlee Green is stuck in juvie. Tella “Teal Cartwheels” Carticelli is packing her bags for Rome--on the orders of her parents, who want her as far from Kody as possible. But teenage love is too strong a force for the obstacles of reality. And the highway beckons.</p>

<p>Leaving their abusive pasts behind them in Jersey, Kody and Teal set off on a cross-country road trip equal parts self-destruction and self-discovery, making their way, one stolen car at a time, toward bigger, wider, bluer skies. Along the road, of course, there’s time to stop at Graceland, classic diners, a fairgrounds that smells of “pony shit and kettle corn,&quot; and time for run-ins with outsize personalities like the reincarnated Grand Canyon tour guide Dead Bob and the spurious Montana rancher Bill Gold. On their heels, all the while, is Teal’s brother, Neil Carticelli, who’s abandoned his post in the navy to rescue the sister he left behind. But does she really need saving?</p>

<p>These all too American tropes find new expression in Bud Smith’s own freewheeling prose—and in Rae Buleri’s original illustrations—filling Teenager with humor, poetry, and a joy that’s palpable in every unforgettable sentence.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 37: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Mayukh Sen</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/37</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">c464d100-5730-4aa9-a7f6-dedfe5b7505d</guid>
  <pubDate>Fri, 03 Dec 2021 11:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/c464d100-5730-4aa9-a7f6-dedfe5b7505d.mp3" length="31319534" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Mayukh Sen about  Taste Makers: Seven Immigrant Women Who Revolutionized Food in America, how our own relationship to immigrant mothers inform an interest in this text, "the food establishment/media", and culinary lexicon—curry is a real word! </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>43:29</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/c/c464d100-5730-4aa9-a7f6-dedfe5b7505d/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Mayukh Sen is a James Beard and IACP Award–winning writer based in Brooklyn. His work has been anthologized in two editions of The Best American Food Writing. He teaches food journalism at New York University.
About Taste Makers: Seven Immigrant Women Who Revolutionized Food in America
Who’s really behind America’s appetite for foods from around the globe? This group biography from an electric new voice in food writing honors seven extraordinary women, all immigrants, who left an indelible mark on the way Americans eat today. Taste Makers stretches from World War II to the present, with absorbing and deeply researched portraits of figures including Mexican-born Elena Zelayeta, a blind chef; Marcella Hazan, the deity of Italian cuisine; and Norma Shirley, a champion of Jamaican dishes.
In imaginative, lively prose, Mayukh Sen—a queer, brown child of immigrants—reconstructs the lives of these women in vivid and empathetic detail, daring to ask why some were famous in their own time, but not in ours, and why others shine brightly even today. Weaving together histories of food, immigration, and gender, Taste Makers will challenge the way readers look at what’s on their plate—and the women whose labor, overlooked for so long, makes those meals possible. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Mayukh Sen, Tastemakers</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Mayukh Sen is a James Beard and IACP Award–winning writer based in Brooklyn. His work has been anthologized in two editions of The Best American Food Writing. He teaches food journalism at New York University.</p>

<p><strong>About Taste Makers: Seven Immigrant Women Who Revolutionized Food in America</strong></p>

<p>Who’s really behind America’s appetite for foods from around the globe? This group biography from an electric new voice in food writing honors seven extraordinary women, all immigrants, who left an indelible mark on the way Americans eat today. Taste Makers stretches from World War II to the present, with absorbing and deeply researched portraits of figures including Mexican-born Elena Zelayeta, a blind chef; Marcella Hazan, the deity of Italian cuisine; and Norma Shirley, a champion of Jamaican dishes.</p>

<p>In imaginative, lively prose, Mayukh Sen—a queer, brown child of immigrants—reconstructs the lives of these women in vivid and empathetic detail, daring to ask why some were famous in their own time, but not in ours, and why others shine brightly even today. Weaving together histories of food, immigration, and gender, Taste Makers will challenge the way readers look at what’s on their plate—and the women whose labor, overlooked for so long, makes those meals possible.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Mayukh Sen is a James Beard and IACP Award–winning writer based in Brooklyn. His work has been anthologized in two editions of The Best American Food Writing. He teaches food journalism at New York University.</p>

<p><strong>About Taste Makers: Seven Immigrant Women Who Revolutionized Food in America</strong></p>

<p>Who’s really behind America’s appetite for foods from around the globe? This group biography from an electric new voice in food writing honors seven extraordinary women, all immigrants, who left an indelible mark on the way Americans eat today. Taste Makers stretches from World War II to the present, with absorbing and deeply researched portraits of figures including Mexican-born Elena Zelayeta, a blind chef; Marcella Hazan, the deity of Italian cuisine; and Norma Shirley, a champion of Jamaican dishes.</p>

<p>In imaginative, lively prose, Mayukh Sen—a queer, brown child of immigrants—reconstructs the lives of these women in vivid and empathetic detail, daring to ask why some were famous in their own time, but not in ours, and why others shine brightly even today. Weaving together histories of food, immigration, and gender, Taste Makers will challenge the way readers look at what’s on their plate—and the women whose labor, overlooked for so long, makes those meals possible.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 36: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Jo Hamya</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/36</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 25 Nov 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/55967777-4f9f-4506-8fbf-2ae139b2668b.mp3" length="27840852" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks with Jo Hamya about her debut novel Three Rooms, how to know when a chapter is done, what the American literary domestic is vs the UK’s notion of home, and what Woolf might think about the idea of a 9-5 just to stay alive.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>38:40</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/5/55967777-4f9f-4506-8fbf-2ae139b2668b/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>JO HAMYA was born in London in 1997. After living in Miami for a few years, she completed an English degree at King’s College London and a MSt in contemporary literature and culture at Oxford University. There, she divided her research between updating twentieth-century cultural theory into twenty-first-century digital contexts, and the impact of social media on form and questions of identity in contemporary women’s writing. Since leaving Oxford, she has worked as a copyeditor for Tatler and edited manuscripts subsequently published by Edinburgh University Press and Doubleday UK. She has also written for the Financial Times.Three Rooms is her first novel. She lives in London.
A piercing howl of a novel about one young woman’s endless quest for an apartment of her own and the aspirations and challenges faced by the millennial generation as it finds its footing in the world, from a shockingly talented debut author
“A woman must have money and a room of her own.” So said Virginia Woolf in her classic A Room of One’s Own, but in this scrupulously observed, gorgeously wrought, debut novel, Jo Hamya pushes that adage powerfully into the twenty-first century, to a generation of people living in rented rooms. What a woman needs now is an apartment of her own, the ultimate mark of financial stability, unattainable for many.
Set over the course of one year, Three Rooms follows a young woman as she moves from a rented room at Oxford, where she’s working as a research assistant; to a stranger’s sofa, all she can afford as a copyediting temp at a society magazine; to her childhood home, where she’s been forced to return, jobless, even a room of her own out of reach. As politics shift to nationalism, the streets fill with protestors, and news drip-feeds into her phone, she struggles to live a meaningful life on her own terms, unsure if she’ll ever be able to afford to do so.
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Jo Hamya, Three Rooms</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>JO HAMYA was born in London in 1997. After living in Miami for a few years, she completed an English degree at King’s College London and a MSt in contemporary literature and culture at Oxford University. There, she divided her research between updating twentieth-century cultural theory into twenty-first-century digital contexts, and the impact of social media on form and questions of identity in contemporary women’s writing. Since leaving Oxford, she has worked as a copyeditor for Tatler and edited manuscripts subsequently published by Edinburgh University Press and Doubleday UK. She has also written for the Financial Times.Three Rooms is her first novel. She lives in London.</p>

<p>A piercing howl of a novel about one young woman’s endless quest for an apartment of her own and the aspirations and challenges faced by the millennial generation as it finds its footing in the world, from a shockingly talented debut author</p>

<p>“A woman must have money and a room of her own.” So said Virginia Woolf in her classic A Room of One’s Own, but in this scrupulously observed, gorgeously wrought, debut novel, Jo Hamya pushes that adage powerfully into the twenty-first century, to a generation of people living in rented rooms. What a woman needs now is an apartment of her own, the ultimate mark of financial stability, unattainable for many.</p>

<p>Set over the course of one year, Three Rooms follows a young woman as she moves from a rented room at Oxford, where she’s working as a research assistant; to a stranger’s sofa, all she can afford as a copyediting temp at a society magazine; to her childhood home, where she’s been forced to return, jobless, even a room of her own out of reach. As politics shift to nationalism, the streets fill with protestors, and news drip-feeds into her phone, she struggles to live a meaningful life on her own terms, unsure if she’ll ever be able to afford to do so.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>JO HAMYA was born in London in 1997. After living in Miami for a few years, she completed an English degree at King’s College London and a MSt in contemporary literature and culture at Oxford University. There, she divided her research between updating twentieth-century cultural theory into twenty-first-century digital contexts, and the impact of social media on form and questions of identity in contemporary women’s writing. Since leaving Oxford, she has worked as a copyeditor for Tatler and edited manuscripts subsequently published by Edinburgh University Press and Doubleday UK. She has also written for the Financial Times.Three Rooms is her first novel. She lives in London.</p>

<p>A piercing howl of a novel about one young woman’s endless quest for an apartment of her own and the aspirations and challenges faced by the millennial generation as it finds its footing in the world, from a shockingly talented debut author</p>

<p>“A woman must have money and a room of her own.” So said Virginia Woolf in her classic A Room of One’s Own, but in this scrupulously observed, gorgeously wrought, debut novel, Jo Hamya pushes that adage powerfully into the twenty-first century, to a generation of people living in rented rooms. What a woman needs now is an apartment of her own, the ultimate mark of financial stability, unattainable for many.</p>

<p>Set over the course of one year, Three Rooms follows a young woman as she moves from a rented room at Oxford, where she’s working as a research assistant; to a stranger’s sofa, all she can afford as a copyediting temp at a society magazine; to her childhood home, where she’s been forced to return, jobless, even a room of her own out of reach. As politics shift to nationalism, the streets fill with protestors, and news drip-feeds into her phone, she struggles to live a meaningful life on her own terms, unsure if she’ll ever be able to afford to do so.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 35: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Claire Vaye Watkins</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/35</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 18 Nov 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/5d57b7b9-16c0-4946-adba-7693f6ce1f2c.mp3" length="33215375" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks with Claire Vaye Watkins about why normal might be overrated (given her family's history with the Manson family), the relationship between pleasure and peace—in fact, lots about pleasure seeking, and the independent lives parents occupy before their children come to exist. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>46:07</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/5/5d57b7b9-16c0-4946-adba-7693f6ce1f2c/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Claire Vaye Watkins is the author of the short story collection Battleborn and the novel Gold Fame Citrus. She has received the Story Prize, the Dylan Thomas Prize, the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award, and the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. A National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree, Watkins is a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and lives in Twentynine Palms, California.
About I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness
9780593330xxx
304 pages | 6.27" x 9.29"
Named a Most Anticipated Book of Fall 2021 by The New York Times, USA Today, Vulture, The Week, and more!
“There’s some kind of genius sorcery in this novel. It’s startlingly original, hilarious and harrowing by turns, finally transcendent. Watkins writes like an avenging angel. It's thrilling and terrifying to stand in her wake.” —Jenny Offill, author of Dept. of Speculation and Weather
A darkly funny, soul-rending novel of love in an epoch of collapse—one woman’s furious revisiting of family, marriage, work, sex, and motherhood.
Since my baby was born, I have been able to laugh and see the funny side of things. a) As much as I ever did. b) Not quite as much now. c) Not so much now. d) Not at all. Leaving behind her husband and their baby daughter, a writer gets on a flight for a speaking engagement in Reno, not carrying much besides a breast pump and a spiraling case of postpartum depression. Her temporary escape from domestic duties and an opportunity to reconnect with old friends mutates into an extended romp away from the confines of marriage and motherhood, and a seemingly bottomless descent into the past. Deep in the Mojave Desert where she grew up, she meets her ghosts at every turn: the first love whose self-destruction still haunts her; her father, a member of the most famous cult in American history; her mother, whose native spark gutters with every passing year. She can’t go back in time to make any of it right, but what exactly is her way forward? Alone in the wilderness, at last she begins to make herself at home in the world.
Bold, tender, and often hilarious, I Love You but I’ve Chosen Darkness reaffirms Watkins as one of the signal writers of our time. 
</description>
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  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Claire Vaye Watkins is the author of the short story collection Battleborn and the novel Gold Fame Citrus. She has received the Story Prize, the Dylan Thomas Prize, the New York Public Library&#39;s Young Lions Fiction Award, and the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. A National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree, Watkins is a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and lives in Twentynine Palms, California.</p>

<p><strong>About I Love You But I&#39;ve Chosen Darkness</strong></p>

<p>9780593330xxx<br>
304 pages | 6.27&quot; x 9.29&quot;</p>

<p>Named a Most Anticipated Book of Fall 2021 by The New York Times, USA Today, Vulture, The Week, and more!</p>

<p>“There’s some kind of genius sorcery in this novel. It’s startlingly original, hilarious and harrowing by turns, finally transcendent. Watkins writes like an avenging angel. It&#39;s thrilling and terrifying to stand in her wake.” —Jenny Offill, author of Dept. of Speculation and Weather</p>

<p>A darkly funny, soul-rending novel of love in an epoch of collapse—one woman’s furious revisiting of family, marriage, work, sex, and motherhood.</p>

<p>Since my baby was born, I have been able to laugh and see the funny side of things. a) As much as I ever did. b) Not quite as much now. c) Not so much now. d) Not at all. Leaving behind her husband and their baby daughter, a writer gets on a flight for a speaking engagement in Reno, not carrying much besides a breast pump and a spiraling case of postpartum depression. Her temporary escape from domestic duties and an opportunity to reconnect with old friends mutates into an extended romp away from the confines of marriage and motherhood, and a seemingly bottomless descent into the past. Deep in the Mojave Desert where she grew up, she meets her ghosts at every turn: the first love whose self-destruction still haunts her; her father, a member of the most famous cult in American history; her mother, whose native spark gutters with every passing year. She can’t go back in time to make any of it right, but what exactly is her way forward? Alone in the wilderness, at last she begins to make herself at home in the world.</p>

<p>Bold, tender, and often hilarious, I Love You but I’ve Chosen Darkness reaffirms Watkins as one of the signal writers of our time.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Claire Vaye Watkins is the author of the short story collection Battleborn and the novel Gold Fame Citrus. She has received the Story Prize, the Dylan Thomas Prize, the New York Public Library&#39;s Young Lions Fiction Award, and the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. A National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree, Watkins is a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and lives in Twentynine Palms, California.</p>

<p><strong>About I Love You But I&#39;ve Chosen Darkness</strong></p>

<p>9780593330xxx<br>
304 pages | 6.27&quot; x 9.29&quot;</p>

<p>Named a Most Anticipated Book of Fall 2021 by The New York Times, USA Today, Vulture, The Week, and more!</p>

<p>“There’s some kind of genius sorcery in this novel. It’s startlingly original, hilarious and harrowing by turns, finally transcendent. Watkins writes like an avenging angel. It&#39;s thrilling and terrifying to stand in her wake.” —Jenny Offill, author of Dept. of Speculation and Weather</p>

<p>A darkly funny, soul-rending novel of love in an epoch of collapse—one woman’s furious revisiting of family, marriage, work, sex, and motherhood.</p>

<p>Since my baby was born, I have been able to laugh and see the funny side of things. a) As much as I ever did. b) Not quite as much now. c) Not so much now. d) Not at all. Leaving behind her husband and their baby daughter, a writer gets on a flight for a speaking engagement in Reno, not carrying much besides a breast pump and a spiraling case of postpartum depression. Her temporary escape from domestic duties and an opportunity to reconnect with old friends mutates into an extended romp away from the confines of marriage and motherhood, and a seemingly bottomless descent into the past. Deep in the Mojave Desert where she grew up, she meets her ghosts at every turn: the first love whose self-destruction still haunts her; her father, a member of the most famous cult in American history; her mother, whose native spark gutters with every passing year. She can’t go back in time to make any of it right, but what exactly is her way forward? Alone in the wilderness, at last she begins to make herself at home in the world.</p>

<p>Bold, tender, and often hilarious, I Love You but I’ve Chosen Darkness reaffirms Watkins as one of the signal writers of our time.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 34: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Todd Babiak</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/34</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 11 Nov 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/4533cee8-07d7-4573-ad85-88d8c051af97.mp3" length="33749353" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex sits down with Todd to discuss his new novel, The Spirits Up, Charles Dickens, pandemic writing, financial malfeasance, and whether or not babies and animals can ACTUALLY see ghosts.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>46:52</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/4/4533cee8-07d7-4573-ad85-88d8c051af97/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>TODD BABIAK's most recent novels are The Empress of Idaho, Son of France, and Come Barbarians, which was a Globe and Mail Book of the Year and a number one bestseller. His earlier work includes The Garneau Block, which was a national bestseller, a longlisted title for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and the winner of the City of Edmonton Book Prize; The Book of Stanley; and Toby: A Man, which was shortlisted for the Stephen Leacock Medal and won the Alberta Book Award for Best Novel. Todd Babiak is the co-founder of Story Engine and CEO of Brand Tasmania. He currently lives with his family in Hobart. 
About The Spirit's Up
Benedict is an inventor whose life’s work is a clean energy machine. It has just made him an overnight sensation and his family is suddenly wealthy. Benedict’s wife, Karen, and his teenage daughters, Charlotte and Poppy, are proud of him. But there are problems Benedict is too busy to see: Karen is deeply unhappy in the marriage and contemplating an affair, Charlotte, who is dealing with a chronic illness, is growing more and more distant, and Poppy is cracking under the pressures of her social circle. And there’s another problem. Benedict holds a rather terrible secret about his clean energy machine.
Then, on Halloween night, an accident threatens to make everything far worse for the family. The accident kicks off a series of hauntings in their beautiful, historic home in affluent Belgravia, and the ghosts make it clear that they want something from them. Karen has to save her daughters — and herself. Meanwhile, Benedict is consumed by the knowledge that he has to achieve the impossible by Christmas. As time ticks ever closer to the revelation of his secret, he spirals further into despair . . .
The Spirits Up is the story of a family haunted by the charmlessness of middle age and the cruelties of modern teenage life. Part social satire and part contemporary ghost story (with a hint of Dickens’s A Christmas Carol), it is an exploration of a timeless question: what happens when there’s nothing to believe?    
</description>
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  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>TODD BABIAK&#39;s most recent novels are The Empress of Idaho, Son of France, and Come Barbarians, which was a Globe and Mail Book of the Year and a number one bestseller. His earlier work includes The Garneau Block, which was a national bestseller, a longlisted title for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and the winner of the City of Edmonton Book Prize; The Book of Stanley; and Toby: A Man, which was shortlisted for the Stephen Leacock Medal and won the Alberta Book Award for Best Novel. Todd Babiak is the co-founder of Story Engine and CEO of Brand Tasmania. He currently lives with his family in Hobart. </p>

<p><strong>About The Spirit&#39;s Up</strong><br>
Benedict is an inventor whose life’s work is a clean energy machine. It has just made him an overnight sensation and his family is suddenly wealthy. Benedict’s wife, Karen, and his teenage daughters, Charlotte and Poppy, are proud of him. But there are problems Benedict is too busy to see: Karen is deeply unhappy in the marriage and contemplating an affair, Charlotte, who is dealing with a chronic illness, is growing more and more distant, and Poppy is cracking under the pressures of her social circle. And there’s another problem. Benedict holds a rather terrible secret about his clean energy machine.</p>

<p>Then, on Halloween night, an accident threatens to make everything far worse for the family. The accident kicks off a series of hauntings in their beautiful, historic home in affluent Belgravia, and the ghosts make it clear that they want something from them. Karen has to save her daughters — and herself. Meanwhile, Benedict is consumed by the knowledge that he has to achieve the impossible by Christmas. As time ticks ever closer to the revelation of his secret, he spirals further into despair . . .</p>

<p>The Spirits Up is the story of a family haunted by the charmlessness of middle age and the cruelties of modern teenage life. Part social satire and part contemporary ghost story (with a hint of Dickens’s A Christmas Carol), it is an exploration of a timeless question: what happens when there’s nothing to believe?   </p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>TODD BABIAK&#39;s most recent novels are The Empress of Idaho, Son of France, and Come Barbarians, which was a Globe and Mail Book of the Year and a number one bestseller. His earlier work includes The Garneau Block, which was a national bestseller, a longlisted title for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and the winner of the City of Edmonton Book Prize; The Book of Stanley; and Toby: A Man, which was shortlisted for the Stephen Leacock Medal and won the Alberta Book Award for Best Novel. Todd Babiak is the co-founder of Story Engine and CEO of Brand Tasmania. He currently lives with his family in Hobart. </p>

<p><strong>About The Spirit&#39;s Up</strong><br>
Benedict is an inventor whose life’s work is a clean energy machine. It has just made him an overnight sensation and his family is suddenly wealthy. Benedict’s wife, Karen, and his teenage daughters, Charlotte and Poppy, are proud of him. But there are problems Benedict is too busy to see: Karen is deeply unhappy in the marriage and contemplating an affair, Charlotte, who is dealing with a chronic illness, is growing more and more distant, and Poppy is cracking under the pressures of her social circle. And there’s another problem. Benedict holds a rather terrible secret about his clean energy machine.</p>

<p>Then, on Halloween night, an accident threatens to make everything far worse for the family. The accident kicks off a series of hauntings in their beautiful, historic home in affluent Belgravia, and the ghosts make it clear that they want something from them. Karen has to save her daughters — and herself. Meanwhile, Benedict is consumed by the knowledge that he has to achieve the impossible by Christmas. As time ticks ever closer to the revelation of his secret, he spirals further into despair . . .</p>

<p>The Spirits Up is the story of a family haunted by the charmlessness of middle age and the cruelties of modern teenage life. Part social satire and part contemporary ghost story (with a hint of Dickens’s A Christmas Carol), it is an exploration of a timeless question: what happens when there’s nothing to believe?   </p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 33: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Eli Tareq el Bechelany Lynch</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/33</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 04 Nov 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/e173fce0-b314-4c6a-b159-328659569eae.mp3" length="31362891" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex and EIi talk about activism in writing, the garbage crisis in Lebanon, queerness and Arabness, and what makes Montreal such an intimate city.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>42:52</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/e/e173fce0-b314-4c6a-b159-328659569eae/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Eli Tareq El Bechelany-Lynch is a queer Arab poet living in Tio'tia:ke, unceded Kanien'kehá:ka territory (Montreal). Their work has appeared in The Best Canadian Poetry 2018 anthology, GUTS, carte blanche, the Shade Journal, The New Quarterly, Arc Poetry Magazine, Room Magazine, and elsewhere. They participated in the Banff Centre's "Centering Ourselves" BIPOC residency, and they were longlisted for the CBC poetry prize in 2019. You can find their book reviews on instagram @elitareqreads.
About The Good Arabs
Swinging from post-explosion Beirut to a Parc-Extension balcony in summer, the verse and prose poems in The Good Arabs ground the reader in place, language, and the body. Peeling and rinsing radishes. Dancing as a pre-teen to Nancy Ajram. Being drenched in stares on the city bus. The collection is an interlocking and rich offering of the speaker's communities, geographical surroundings both expansive and precise, and family both biological and chosen. The Good Arabs gifts the reader with insight into cycles and repetition in ourselves and our broken nations. This genre-defying collection maps Arab and trans identity through the immensity of experience felt in one body, the sorrow of citizens let down by their countries, and the garbage crisis in Lebanon. Ultimately, it shows how we might love amid dismay, adore the pungent and the ugly, and exist in our multiplicity across spaces. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Eli Tareq El Bechelany-Lynch</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Eli Tareq El Bechelany-Lynch is a queer Arab poet living in Tio&#39;tia:ke, unceded Kanien&#39;kehá:ka territory (Montreal). Their work has appeared in The Best Canadian Poetry 2018 anthology, GUTS, carte blanche, the Shade Journal, The New Quarterly, Arc Poetry Magazine, Room Magazine, and elsewhere. They participated in the Banff Centre&#39;s &quot;Centering Ourselves&quot; BIPOC residency, and they were longlisted for the CBC poetry prize in 2019. You can find their book reviews on instagram @elitareqreads.</p>

<p><strong>About The Good Arabs</strong><br>
Swinging from post-explosion Beirut to a Parc-Extension balcony in summer, the verse and prose poems in The Good Arabs ground the reader in place, language, and the body. Peeling and rinsing radishes. Dancing as a pre-teen to Nancy Ajram. Being drenched in stares on the city bus. The collection is an interlocking and rich offering of the speaker&#39;s communities, geographical surroundings both expansive and precise, and family both biological and chosen. The Good Arabs gifts the reader with insight into cycles and repetition in ourselves and our broken nations. This genre-defying collection maps Arab and trans identity through the immensity of experience felt in one body, the sorrow of citizens let down by their countries, and the garbage crisis in Lebanon. Ultimately, it shows how we might love amid dismay, adore the pungent and the ugly, and exist in our multiplicity across spaces.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Eli Tareq El Bechelany-Lynch is a queer Arab poet living in Tio&#39;tia:ke, unceded Kanien&#39;kehá:ka territory (Montreal). Their work has appeared in The Best Canadian Poetry 2018 anthology, GUTS, carte blanche, the Shade Journal, The New Quarterly, Arc Poetry Magazine, Room Magazine, and elsewhere. They participated in the Banff Centre&#39;s &quot;Centering Ourselves&quot; BIPOC residency, and they were longlisted for the CBC poetry prize in 2019. You can find their book reviews on instagram @elitareqreads.</p>

<p><strong>About The Good Arabs</strong><br>
Swinging from post-explosion Beirut to a Parc-Extension balcony in summer, the verse and prose poems in The Good Arabs ground the reader in place, language, and the body. Peeling and rinsing radishes. Dancing as a pre-teen to Nancy Ajram. Being drenched in stares on the city bus. The collection is an interlocking and rich offering of the speaker&#39;s communities, geographical surroundings both expansive and precise, and family both biological and chosen. The Good Arabs gifts the reader with insight into cycles and repetition in ourselves and our broken nations. This genre-defying collection maps Arab and trans identity through the immensity of experience felt in one body, the sorrow of citizens let down by their countries, and the garbage crisis in Lebanon. Ultimately, it shows how we might love amid dismay, adore the pungent and the ugly, and exist in our multiplicity across spaces.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 32: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Brian Evenson</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/32</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 28 Oct 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/8600b75b-694d-4523-bdd6-db0a581d6d16.mp3" length="24468788" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex and Brian sit down to talk about his latest collection, The Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell, short stories as a format, universe-building, horror writing, and fearing the self.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>33:17</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/8/8600b75b-694d-4523-bdd6-db0a581d6d16/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Brian Evenson is the author of over a dozen works of fiction. He has received three O. Henry Prizes for his fiction. His most recent book, Song for the Unraveling of the World, won a World Fantasy Award and a Shirley Jackson Award and was a finalist for both the Los Angeles Times Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Speculative Fiction and the Balcones Fiction Prize. He lives in Los Angeles and teaches at CalArts.
About The Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell
A sentient, murderous prosthetic leg; shadowy creatures lurking behind a shimmering wall; brutal barrow men—of all the terrors that populateThe Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell, perhaps the most alarming are the beings who decimated the habitable Earth: humans. In this new short story collection, Brian Evenson envisions a chilling future beyond the Anthropocene that forces excruciating decisions about survival and self-sacrifice in the face of toxic air and a natural world torn between revenge and regeneration. Combining psychological and ecological horror, each tale thrums with Evenson’s award-winning literary craftsmanship, dark humor, and thrilling suspense. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Brian Evenson</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Brian Evenson is the author of over a dozen works of fiction. He has received three O. Henry Prizes for his fiction. His most recent book, Song for the Unraveling of the World, won a World Fantasy Award and a Shirley Jackson Award and was a finalist for both the Los Angeles Times Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Speculative Fiction and the Balcones Fiction Prize. He lives in Los Angeles and teaches at CalArts.</p>

<p><strong>About The Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell</strong><br>
A sentient, murderous prosthetic leg; shadowy creatures lurking behind a shimmering wall; brutal barrow men—of all the terrors that populateThe Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell, perhaps the most alarming are the beings who decimated the habitable Earth: humans. In this new short story collection, Brian Evenson envisions a chilling future beyond the Anthropocene that forces excruciating decisions about survival and self-sacrifice in the face of toxic air and a natural world torn between revenge and regeneration. Combining psychological and ecological horror, each tale thrums with Evenson’s award-winning literary craftsmanship, dark humor, and thrilling suspense.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Brian Evenson is the author of over a dozen works of fiction. He has received three O. Henry Prizes for his fiction. His most recent book, Song for the Unraveling of the World, won a World Fantasy Award and a Shirley Jackson Award and was a finalist for both the Los Angeles Times Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Speculative Fiction and the Balcones Fiction Prize. He lives in Los Angeles and teaches at CalArts.</p>

<p><strong>About The Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell</strong><br>
A sentient, murderous prosthetic leg; shadowy creatures lurking behind a shimmering wall; brutal barrow men—of all the terrors that populateThe Glassy, Burning Floor of Hell, perhaps the most alarming are the beings who decimated the habitable Earth: humans. In this new short story collection, Brian Evenson envisions a chilling future beyond the Anthropocene that forces excruciating decisions about survival and self-sacrifice in the face of toxic air and a natural world torn between revenge and regeneration. Combining psychological and ecological horror, each tale thrums with Evenson’s award-winning literary craftsmanship, dark humor, and thrilling suspense.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 31: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Rivka Galchen</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/31</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">d8cbabc2-8603-4486-ad1d-945d99622cc6</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 21 Oct 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/d8cbabc2-8603-4486-ad1d-945d99622cc6.mp3" length="31712349" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex and Rivka sit down to talk about her latest book, Everyone Knows Your Mother Is A Witch, philosophy, life and judicial systems in 17th century Germany, and what moody septuagenarians and millennials have in common.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>44:02</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/d8cbabc2-8603-4486-ad1d-945d99622cc6/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Rivka Galchen received her MD from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, having spent a year in South America working on public health issues. Galchen completed her MFA at Columbia University, where she was a Robert Bingham Fellow. Her essay on the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics was published in The Believer, and she is the recipient of a 2006 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award. Galchen lives in New York City. She is the author of the novel Atmospheric Disturbances.
About Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch:
The startling, witty, highly anticipated second novel from the critically acclaimed author of Atmospheric Disturbances.
The story begins in 1618, in the German duchy of Württemberg. Plague is spreading. The Thirty Years' War has begun, and fear and suspicion are in the air throughout the Holy Roman Empire. In the small town of Leonberg, Katharina Kepler is accused of being a witch.
Katharina is an illiterate widow, known by her neighbors for her herbal remedies and the success of her children, including her eldest, Johannes, who is the Imperial Mathematician and renowned author of the laws of planetary motion. It's enough to make anyone jealous, and Katharina has done herself no favors by being out and about and in everyone's business.
So when the deranged and insipid Ursula Reinbold (or as Katharina calls her, the Werewolf) accuses Katharina of offering her a bitter, witchy drink that has made her ill, Katharina is in trouble. Her scientist son must turn his attention from the music of the spheres to the job of defending his mother. Facing the threat of financial ruin, torture, and even execution, Katharina tells her side of the story to her friend and next-door neighbor Simon, a reclusive widower imperiled by his own secrets.
Drawing on real historical documents but infused with the intensity of imagination, sly humor, and intellectual fire for which Rivka Galchen is known, Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch will both provoke and entertain. The story of how a community becomes implicated in collective aggression and hysterical fear is a tale for our time. Galchen's bold new novel touchingly illuminates a society and a family undone by superstition, the state, and the mortal convulsions of history. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Rivka Galchen, Everyone Knows Your Mother is a Witch</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Rivka Galchen received her MD from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, having spent a year in South America working on public health issues. Galchen completed her MFA at Columbia University, where she was a Robert Bingham Fellow. Her essay on the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics was published in The Believer, and she is the recipient of a 2006 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award. Galchen lives in New York City. She is the author of the novel Atmospheric Disturbances.</p>

<p><strong>About Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch:</strong><br>
<em>The startling, witty, highly anticipated second novel from the critically acclaimed author of Atmospheric Disturbances.</em></p>

<p>The story begins in 1618, in the German duchy of Württemberg. Plague is spreading. The Thirty Years&#39; War has begun, and fear and suspicion are in the air throughout the Holy Roman Empire. In the small town of Leonberg, Katharina Kepler is accused of being a witch.</p>

<p>Katharina is an illiterate widow, known by her neighbors for her herbal remedies and the success of her children, including her eldest, Johannes, who is the Imperial Mathematician and renowned author of the laws of planetary motion. It&#39;s enough to make anyone jealous, and Katharina has done herself no favors by being out and about and in everyone&#39;s business.</p>

<p>So when the deranged and insipid Ursula Reinbold (or as Katharina calls her, the Werewolf) accuses Katharina of offering her a bitter, witchy drink that has made her ill, Katharina is in trouble. Her scientist son must turn his attention from the music of the spheres to the job of defending his mother. Facing the threat of financial ruin, torture, and even execution, Katharina tells her side of the story to her friend and next-door neighbor Simon, a reclusive widower imperiled by his own secrets.</p>

<p>Drawing on real historical documents but infused with the intensity of imagination, sly humor, and intellectual fire for which Rivka Galchen is known, Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch will both provoke and entertain. The story of how a community becomes implicated in collective aggression and hysterical fear is a tale for our time. Galchen&#39;s bold new novel touchingly illuminates a society and a family undone by superstition, the state, and the mortal convulsions of history.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Rivka Galchen received her MD from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, having spent a year in South America working on public health issues. Galchen completed her MFA at Columbia University, where she was a Robert Bingham Fellow. Her essay on the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics was published in The Believer, and she is the recipient of a 2006 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award. Galchen lives in New York City. She is the author of the novel Atmospheric Disturbances.</p>

<p><strong>About Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch:</strong><br>
<em>The startling, witty, highly anticipated second novel from the critically acclaimed author of Atmospheric Disturbances.</em></p>

<p>The story begins in 1618, in the German duchy of Württemberg. Plague is spreading. The Thirty Years&#39; War has begun, and fear and suspicion are in the air throughout the Holy Roman Empire. In the small town of Leonberg, Katharina Kepler is accused of being a witch.</p>

<p>Katharina is an illiterate widow, known by her neighbors for her herbal remedies and the success of her children, including her eldest, Johannes, who is the Imperial Mathematician and renowned author of the laws of planetary motion. It&#39;s enough to make anyone jealous, and Katharina has done herself no favors by being out and about and in everyone&#39;s business.</p>

<p>So when the deranged and insipid Ursula Reinbold (or as Katharina calls her, the Werewolf) accuses Katharina of offering her a bitter, witchy drink that has made her ill, Katharina is in trouble. Her scientist son must turn his attention from the music of the spheres to the job of defending his mother. Facing the threat of financial ruin, torture, and even execution, Katharina tells her side of the story to her friend and next-door neighbor Simon, a reclusive widower imperiled by his own secrets.</p>

<p>Drawing on real historical documents but infused with the intensity of imagination, sly humor, and intellectual fire for which Rivka Galchen is known, Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch will both provoke and entertain. The story of how a community becomes implicated in collective aggression and hysterical fear is a tale for our time. Galchen&#39;s bold new novel touchingly illuminates a society and a family undone by superstition, the state, and the mortal convulsions of history.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 30: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Helen Chau Bradley</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/30</link>
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  <pubDate>Fri, 08 Oct 2021 10:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/bf75ba44-e45f-4028-a173-c16da8e07eab.mp3" length="31022184" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti chats with Helen Chau Bradley about their latest collection of short stories, Queer morality, what makes for a poised short story ending, and the Montreal arts scene.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>43:05</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/b/bf75ba44-e45f-4028-a173-c16da8e07eab/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Helen Chau Bradley is a writer and musician living in Tio'tia:ke / Montreal. They are the author of Automatic Object Lessons (House House Press, 2020). Their stories and essays have appeared in carte blanche, Cosmonauts Avenue, Entropy Magazine, Maisonneuve Magazine, the Montreal Review of Books, and elsewhere.
About Personal Attention Roleplay:
A young gymnast crushes on an older, more talented teammate while contending with her overworked mother. A newly queer twenty-something juggles two intimate relationships--with a slippery anarchist lover and an idiosyncratic meals-on-wheels recipient. A queer metal band's summer tour unravels amid the sticky heat of the Northeastern US. A codependent listicle writer becomes obsessed with a Japanese ASMR channel.
The stories in Personal Attention Roleplay are propelled by queer loneliness, mixed-race confusion, late capitalist despondency, and the pitfalls of intimacy. Taking place in Montreal, Toronto, and elsewhere, they feature young Asian misfits struggling with the desire to see themselves reflected--in their surroundings, in others, online. Chau Bradley's precise language and investigation of our more troubling motivations stand out in this wryly funny debut, through stories that hint at the uncanny while remaining grounded in the everyday. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Helen Chau Bradley, Metonymy Press, Personal Attention Roleplay</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Helen Chau Bradley is a writer and musician living in Tio&#39;tia:ke / Montreal. They are the author of Automatic Object Lessons (House House Press, 2020). Their stories and essays have appeared in carte blanche, Cosmonauts Avenue, Entropy Magazine, Maisonneuve Magazine, the Montreal Review of Books, and elsewhere.</p>

<p>About <strong>Personal Attention Roleplay</strong>:<br>
A young gymnast crushes on an older, more talented teammate while contending with her overworked mother. A newly queer twenty-something juggles two intimate relationships--with a slippery anarchist lover and an idiosyncratic meals-on-wheels recipient. A queer metal band&#39;s summer tour unravels amid the sticky heat of the Northeastern US. A codependent listicle writer becomes obsessed with a Japanese ASMR channel.</p>

<p>The stories in Personal Attention Roleplay are propelled by queer loneliness, mixed-race confusion, late capitalist despondency, and the pitfalls of intimacy. Taking place in Montreal, Toronto, and elsewhere, they feature young Asian misfits struggling with the desire to see themselves reflected--in their surroundings, in others, online. Chau Bradley&#39;s precise language and investigation of our more troubling motivations stand out in this wryly funny debut, through stories that hint at the uncanny while remaining grounded in the everyday.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Helen Chau Bradley is a writer and musician living in Tio&#39;tia:ke / Montreal. They are the author of Automatic Object Lessons (House House Press, 2020). Their stories and essays have appeared in carte blanche, Cosmonauts Avenue, Entropy Magazine, Maisonneuve Magazine, the Montreal Review of Books, and elsewhere.</p>

<p>About <strong>Personal Attention Roleplay</strong>:<br>
A young gymnast crushes on an older, more talented teammate while contending with her overworked mother. A newly queer twenty-something juggles two intimate relationships--with a slippery anarchist lover and an idiosyncratic meals-on-wheels recipient. A queer metal band&#39;s summer tour unravels amid the sticky heat of the Northeastern US. A codependent listicle writer becomes obsessed with a Japanese ASMR channel.</p>

<p>The stories in Personal Attention Roleplay are propelled by queer loneliness, mixed-race confusion, late capitalist despondency, and the pitfalls of intimacy. Taking place in Montreal, Toronto, and elsewhere, they feature young Asian misfits struggling with the desire to see themselves reflected--in their surroundings, in others, online. Chau Bradley&#39;s precise language and investigation of our more troubling motivations stand out in this wryly funny debut, through stories that hint at the uncanny while remaining grounded in the everyday.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 29: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Sruti Islam</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/29</link>
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  <pubDate>Fri, 01 Oct 2021 13:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/34463e91-dd23-48f8-b17b-31c724b3f024.mp3" length="35170686" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex sits down with Sruti to discuss how the Weird Era Literary Arts journal came to be. Fun!</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>48:50</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/3/34463e91-dd23-48f8-b17b-31c724b3f024/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description/>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 28: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Natasha Brown</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/28</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">b429f11d-bbd4-42d4-8588-57ec4416892b</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 23 Sep 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/b429f11d-bbd4-42d4-8588-57ec4416892b.mp3" length="24314281" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Natasha Brown about her debut: Assembly. They think through generational persistence, how to interrogate a reader's presuppositions, and what the weathering hypothesis means to the Black female experience. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>33:46</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/b/b429f11d-bbd4-42d4-8588-57ec4416892b/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Natasha Brown has spent a decade working in financial services, after studying Maths at Cambridge University. She developed Assembly after receiving a 2019 London Writers Award in the literary fiction category.
About Assembly
One woman. One day. One decision. A blistering, fearless, and unforgettable literary debut from "a stunning new writer." (Bernardine Evaristo)
Come of age in the credit crunch. Be civil in a hostile environment. Go to college, get an education, start a career. Do all the right things. Buy an apartment. Buy art. Buy a sort of happiness. But above all, keep your head down. Keep quiet. And keep going.
The narrator of Assembly is a black British woman. She is preparing to attend a lavish garden party at her boyfriend’s family estate, set deep in the English countryside. At the same time, she is considering the carefully assembled pieces of herself. As the minutes tick down and the future beckons, she can’t escape the question: is it time to take it all apart?
Assembly is a story about the stories we live within – those of race and class, safety and freedom, winners and losers.And it is about one woman daring to take control of her own story, even at the cost of her life. With a steely, unfaltering gaze, Natasha Brown dismantles the mythology of whiteness, lining up the debris in a neat row and walking away.
"A modern Mrs. Dalloway."—The Guardian
"Mind-bending and utterly original."—Brandon Taylor
“Slim in the hand, but its impact is massive.”—Ali Smith 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Natasha Brown, Assembly</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Natasha Brown has spent a decade working in financial services, after studying Maths at Cambridge University. She developed Assembly after receiving a 2019 London Writers Award in the literary fiction category.</p>

<p><strong>About Assembly</strong><br>
One woman. One day. One decision. A blistering, fearless, and unforgettable literary debut from &quot;a stunning new writer.&quot; (Bernardine Evaristo)</p>

<p>Come of age in the credit crunch. Be civil in a hostile environment. Go to college, get an education, start a career. Do all the right things. Buy an apartment. Buy art. Buy a sort of happiness. But above all, keep your head down. Keep quiet. And keep going.</p>

<p>The narrator of Assembly is a black British woman. She is preparing to attend a lavish garden party at her boyfriend’s family estate, set deep in the English countryside. At the same time, she is considering the carefully assembled pieces of herself. As the minutes tick down and the future beckons, she can’t escape the question: is it time to take it all apart?</p>

<p>Assembly is a story about the stories we live within – those of race and class, safety and freedom, winners and losers.And it is about one woman daring to take control of her own story, even at the cost of her life. With a steely, unfaltering gaze, Natasha Brown dismantles the mythology of whiteness, lining up the debris in a neat row and walking away.</p>

<p>&quot;A modern Mrs. Dalloway.&quot;—The Guardian</p>

<p>&quot;Mind-bending and utterly original.&quot;—Brandon Taylor</p>

<p>“Slim in the hand, but its impact is massive.”—Ali Smith</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Natasha Brown has spent a decade working in financial services, after studying Maths at Cambridge University. She developed Assembly after receiving a 2019 London Writers Award in the literary fiction category.</p>

<p><strong>About Assembly</strong><br>
One woman. One day. One decision. A blistering, fearless, and unforgettable literary debut from &quot;a stunning new writer.&quot; (Bernardine Evaristo)</p>

<p>Come of age in the credit crunch. Be civil in a hostile environment. Go to college, get an education, start a career. Do all the right things. Buy an apartment. Buy art. Buy a sort of happiness. But above all, keep your head down. Keep quiet. And keep going.</p>

<p>The narrator of Assembly is a black British woman. She is preparing to attend a lavish garden party at her boyfriend’s family estate, set deep in the English countryside. At the same time, she is considering the carefully assembled pieces of herself. As the minutes tick down and the future beckons, she can’t escape the question: is it time to take it all apart?</p>

<p>Assembly is a story about the stories we live within – those of race and class, safety and freedom, winners and losers.And it is about one woman daring to take control of her own story, even at the cost of her life. With a steely, unfaltering gaze, Natasha Brown dismantles the mythology of whiteness, lining up the debris in a neat row and walking away.</p>

<p>&quot;A modern Mrs. Dalloway.&quot;—The Guardian</p>

<p>&quot;Mind-bending and utterly original.&quot;—Brandon Taylor</p>

<p>“Slim in the hand, but its impact is massive.”—Ali Smith</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 27: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Alexandra Kleeman</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/27</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">2fdbd7ab-ef81-434f-bb32-f612bb5c585b</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 16 Sep 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/2fdbd7ab-ef81-434f-bb32-f612bb5c585b.mp3" length="36118450" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Alexandra Kleeman to discuss her new book Something New Under the Sun, paying homage to classic California Gold Rush Fiction, cinematic prose, the ways in which climate change is exciting (yes), and if perhaps, we are predisposed to kindness.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>50:09</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/2/2fdbd7ab-ef81-434f-bb32-f612bb5c585b/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Alexandra Kleeman is the author of Intimations, a short story collection, and the novel You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine, which was a New York Times Editor’s Choice. Her fiction has been published in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Zoetrope, Conjunctions, and Guernica, among other publications, and her other writing has appeared in Harper’s, The New York Times Magazine, Vogue, Tin House, n+1, and The Guardian. Her work has received fellowships and support from Bread Loaf, the Djerassi Resident Artists Program, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the Headlands Center for the Arts. She is the winner of the Berlin Prize and the Bard Fiction Prize, and was a Rome Prize Literature Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. She lives in Staten Island and teaches at the New School.
About Something New Under the Sun:
NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE • A novelist discovers the dark side of Hollywood and reckons with ambition, corruption, and connectedness in the age of environmental collapse and ecological awakening—a darkly unsettling near-future novel for readers of Don DeLillo and Ottessa Moshfegh
ONE OF SUMMER’S BEST BOOKS: The Wall Street Journal • Time • Vulture • Parade • LitHub • Vanity Fair • Vogue • Refinery29 • Esquire
“A darkly satirical reflection of ecological reality.”—Time
“Genius.”—Los Angeles Times
“Wildly entertaining and beautifully written.”—LitHub
East Coast novelist Patrick Hamlin has come to Hollywood with simple goals in mind: overseeing the production of a film adaptation of one of his books, preventing starlet Cassidy Carter's disruptive behavior from derailing said production, and turning this last-ditch effort at career resuscitation into the sort of success that will dazzle his wife and daughter back home. But California is not as he imagined: Drought, wildfire, and corporate corruption are omnipresent, and the company behind a mysterious new brand of synthetic water seems to be at the root of it all. Patrick partners with Cassidy—after having been her reluctant chauffeur for weeks—and the two of them investigate the sun-scorched city's darker crevices, where they discover that catastrophe resembles order until the last possible second.
In this often-witty and all-too-timely story, Alexandra Kleeman grapples with the corruption of our environment in the age of alternative facts. Something New Under the Sun is a meticulous and deeply felt accounting of our very human anxieties, liabilities, dependencies, and, ultimately, responsibility to truth. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Alexandra Kleeman, Somewhere New Under the Sun</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Alexandra Kleeman is the author of Intimations, a short story collection, and the novel You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine, which was a New York Times Editor’s Choice. Her fiction has been published in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Zoetrope, Conjunctions, and Guernica, among other publications, and her other writing has appeared in Harper’s, The New York Times Magazine, Vogue, Tin House, n+1, and The Guardian. Her work has received fellowships and support from Bread Loaf, the Djerassi Resident Artists Program, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the Headlands Center for the Arts. She is the winner of the Berlin Prize and the Bard Fiction Prize, and was a Rome Prize Literature Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. She lives in Staten Island and teaches at the New School.</p>

<p><strong>About Something New Under the Sun:</strong><br>
NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE • A novelist discovers the dark side of Hollywood and reckons with ambition, corruption, and connectedness in the age of environmental collapse and ecological awakening—a darkly unsettling near-future novel for readers of Don DeLillo and Ottessa Moshfegh</p>

<p>ONE OF SUMMER’S BEST BOOKS: The Wall Street Journal • Time • Vulture • Parade • LitHub • Vanity Fair • Vogue • Refinery29 • Esquire</p>

<p>“A darkly satirical reflection of ecological reality.”—Time<br>
“Genius.”—Los Angeles Times<br>
“Wildly entertaining and beautifully written.”—LitHub</p>

<p>East Coast novelist Patrick Hamlin has come to Hollywood with simple goals in mind: overseeing the production of a film adaptation of one of his books, preventing starlet Cassidy Carter&#39;s disruptive behavior from derailing said production, and turning this last-ditch effort at career resuscitation into the sort of success that will dazzle his wife and daughter back home. But California is not as he imagined: Drought, wildfire, and corporate corruption are omnipresent, and the company behind a mysterious new brand of synthetic water seems to be at the root of it all. Patrick partners with Cassidy—after having been her reluctant chauffeur for weeks—and the two of them investigate the sun-scorched city&#39;s darker crevices, where they discover that catastrophe resembles order until the last possible second.</p>

<p>In this often-witty and all-too-timely story, Alexandra Kleeman grapples with the corruption of our environment in the age of alternative facts. Something New Under the Sun is a meticulous and deeply felt accounting of our very human anxieties, liabilities, dependencies, and, ultimately, responsibility to truth.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Alexandra Kleeman is the author of Intimations, a short story collection, and the novel You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine, which was a New York Times Editor’s Choice. Her fiction has been published in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Zoetrope, Conjunctions, and Guernica, among other publications, and her other writing has appeared in Harper’s, The New York Times Magazine, Vogue, Tin House, n+1, and The Guardian. Her work has received fellowships and support from Bread Loaf, the Djerassi Resident Artists Program, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the Headlands Center for the Arts. She is the winner of the Berlin Prize and the Bard Fiction Prize, and was a Rome Prize Literature Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. She lives in Staten Island and teaches at the New School.</p>

<p><strong>About Something New Under the Sun:</strong><br>
NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE • A novelist discovers the dark side of Hollywood and reckons with ambition, corruption, and connectedness in the age of environmental collapse and ecological awakening—a darkly unsettling near-future novel for readers of Don DeLillo and Ottessa Moshfegh</p>

<p>ONE OF SUMMER’S BEST BOOKS: The Wall Street Journal • Time • Vulture • Parade • LitHub • Vanity Fair • Vogue • Refinery29 • Esquire</p>

<p>“A darkly satirical reflection of ecological reality.”—Time<br>
“Genius.”—Los Angeles Times<br>
“Wildly entertaining and beautifully written.”—LitHub</p>

<p>East Coast novelist Patrick Hamlin has come to Hollywood with simple goals in mind: overseeing the production of a film adaptation of one of his books, preventing starlet Cassidy Carter&#39;s disruptive behavior from derailing said production, and turning this last-ditch effort at career resuscitation into the sort of success that will dazzle his wife and daughter back home. But California is not as he imagined: Drought, wildfire, and corporate corruption are omnipresent, and the company behind a mysterious new brand of synthetic water seems to be at the root of it all. Patrick partners with Cassidy—after having been her reluctant chauffeur for weeks—and the two of them investigate the sun-scorched city&#39;s darker crevices, where they discover that catastrophe resembles order until the last possible second.</p>

<p>In this often-witty and all-too-timely story, Alexandra Kleeman grapples with the corruption of our environment in the age of alternative facts. Something New Under the Sun is a meticulous and deeply felt accounting of our very human anxieties, liabilities, dependencies, and, ultimately, responsibility to truth.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 26: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Michael LaPointe</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/26</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 09 Sep 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/cb5189c6-e17b-444f-8a53-d6856202f50f.mp3" length="33220383" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Michael LaPointe, author of The Creep, to discuss the horror genre, what it means to come to a text from a place of distrust, and the ambition of character construction. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>46:08</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/c/cb5189c6-e17b-444f-8a53-d6856202f50f/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Michael LaPointe's writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, The New York Times, and the Times Literary Supplement. He writes the "Dice Roll" column for The Paris Review. His fiction has appeared in The Walrus and Hazlitt. He has been nominated for the National Magazine Awards, the Journey Prize, and the Digital Publishing Awards, and his fiction has been anthologized in Best Canadian Stories. He lives in Toronto.
About The Creep:
A journalist with a history of bending the facts uncovers a story about a medical breakthrough so astonishing it needs no embellishment--but behind the game-changing science lies a gruesome secret.
A respected byline in the culture pages of the venerable New York magazine The Bystander, journalist Whitney Chase grapples with a mysterious compulsion to enhance her coverage with intriguing untruths and undetectable white lies. She calls it "the creep"--an overpowering need to improve the story in the telling. And she has a particular genius for getting away with it.
In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, Whitney yearns to transition from profiling rock stars and novelists to covering the stories that "really matter." When a chance encounter brings her face-to-face with a potentially massive story about a game-changing medical discovery, Whitney believes she's finally found a story that doesn't need any enhancement. The brilliant and charismatic doctor behind the breakthrough claims she's found "the Holy Grail of medical science": a synthetic blood substitute that, if viable, promises to save millions of lives, and make her corporate backers rich beyond measure. But when Whitney's investigation of this apparent medical miracle puts her on the trail of a string of grisly fatalities across the country, she becomes inexorably tied to a much darker and more nefarious story than even she could imagine.
Set against the ramp-up to the US invasion of Iraq and the decline of print journalism, Michael LaPointe's panoramic, ingeniously plotted debut paints an affecting portrait of an increasingly unequal twenty-first century, exploring how deceitfulness, self-enhancement, and confidently delivered lies can be transfused into fact and constitute a broader violence against the social fabric and public trust. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, The Creep, Michael LaPointe</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Michael LaPointe&#39;s writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, The New York Times, and the Times Literary Supplement. He writes the &quot;Dice Roll&quot; column for The Paris Review. His fiction has appeared in The Walrus and Hazlitt. He has been nominated for the National Magazine Awards, the Journey Prize, and the Digital Publishing Awards, and his fiction has been anthologized in Best Canadian Stories. He lives in Toronto.</p>

<p><strong>About The Creep:</strong><br>
A journalist with a history of bending the facts uncovers a story about a medical breakthrough so astonishing it needs no embellishment--but behind the game-changing science lies a gruesome secret.</p>

<p>A respected byline in the culture pages of the venerable New York magazine The Bystander, journalist Whitney Chase grapples with a mysterious compulsion to enhance her coverage with intriguing untruths and undetectable white lies. She calls it &quot;the creep&quot;--an overpowering need to improve the story in the telling. And she has a particular genius for getting away with it.</p>

<p>In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, Whitney yearns to transition from profiling rock stars and novelists to covering the stories that &quot;really matter.&quot; When a chance encounter brings her face-to-face with a potentially massive story about a game-changing medical discovery, Whitney believes she&#39;s finally found a story that doesn&#39;t need any enhancement. The brilliant and charismatic doctor behind the breakthrough claims she&#39;s found &quot;the Holy Grail of medical science&quot;: a synthetic blood substitute that, if viable, promises to save millions of lives, and make her corporate backers rich beyond measure. But when Whitney&#39;s investigation of this apparent medical miracle puts her on the trail of a string of grisly fatalities across the country, she becomes inexorably tied to a much darker and more nefarious story than even she could imagine.</p>

<p>Set against the ramp-up to the US invasion of Iraq and the decline of print journalism, Michael LaPointe&#39;s panoramic, ingeniously plotted debut paints an affecting portrait of an increasingly unequal twenty-first century, exploring how deceitfulness, self-enhancement, and confidently delivered lies can be transfused into fact and constitute a broader violence against the social fabric and public trust.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Michael LaPointe&#39;s writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, The New York Times, and the Times Literary Supplement. He writes the &quot;Dice Roll&quot; column for The Paris Review. His fiction has appeared in The Walrus and Hazlitt. He has been nominated for the National Magazine Awards, the Journey Prize, and the Digital Publishing Awards, and his fiction has been anthologized in Best Canadian Stories. He lives in Toronto.</p>

<p><strong>About The Creep:</strong><br>
A journalist with a history of bending the facts uncovers a story about a medical breakthrough so astonishing it needs no embellishment--but behind the game-changing science lies a gruesome secret.</p>

<p>A respected byline in the culture pages of the venerable New York magazine The Bystander, journalist Whitney Chase grapples with a mysterious compulsion to enhance her coverage with intriguing untruths and undetectable white lies. She calls it &quot;the creep&quot;--an overpowering need to improve the story in the telling. And she has a particular genius for getting away with it.</p>

<p>In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, Whitney yearns to transition from profiling rock stars and novelists to covering the stories that &quot;really matter.&quot; When a chance encounter brings her face-to-face with a potentially massive story about a game-changing medical discovery, Whitney believes she&#39;s finally found a story that doesn&#39;t need any enhancement. The brilliant and charismatic doctor behind the breakthrough claims she&#39;s found &quot;the Holy Grail of medical science&quot;: a synthetic blood substitute that, if viable, promises to save millions of lives, and make her corporate backers rich beyond measure. But when Whitney&#39;s investigation of this apparent medical miracle puts her on the trail of a string of grisly fatalities across the country, she becomes inexorably tied to a much darker and more nefarious story than even she could imagine.</p>

<p>Set against the ramp-up to the US invasion of Iraq and the decline of print journalism, Michael LaPointe&#39;s panoramic, ingeniously plotted debut paints an affecting portrait of an increasingly unequal twenty-first century, exploring how deceitfulness, self-enhancement, and confidently delivered lies can be transfused into fact and constitute a broader violence against the social fabric and public trust.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 25: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Alex Manley and Daphné B</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/25</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">adee1d0c-aea2-4e38-ae4e-f8b284463ac7</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 02 Sep 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/adee1d0c-aea2-4e38-ae4e-f8b284463ac7.mp3" length="32888603" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Alex Manley and Daphné B, to discuss Manley's english translation of Daphné B's Maquillée: Made-Up. We unfold the dynamics of translation, the various gendered readings of the book, and their individual relationship to the text. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>45:40</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/a/adee1d0c-aea2-4e38-ae4e-f8b284463ac7/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Alex Manley is a Montreal/Tiohtia:ke writer and editor whose work has been published by Maisonneuve magazine, Hazlitt, The Walrus Grain, Vallum, and the Literary Review of Canada, among others. Their debut poetry collection, We Are All Just Animals &amp;amp; Plants, was published by Metatron Press in 2016. @alex_icon
Poet and literary translator, Daphné B lives and works in Montreal. She published Bluetiful in 2015 (Les Editions de l'Ecrou), then Delete (L'Oie de Cravan) in 2017, in addition to writing in numerous magazines ( Nouveau Projet, Liberte, Vice, Spirale, Zinc, Estuaire, etc.). She co-founded the feminist platform Filles Missiles and is a regular contributor to the radio show Plus on est de fous, plus on lit, on Radio-Canada. @daphnebbbbb 
About Made-Up:
A nuanced, feminist, and deeply personal take on beauty culture and YouTube consumerism, in the tradition of Maggie Nelson’s Bluets.
As Daphné B obsessively watches YouTube makeup tutorials and haunts Sephora’s website, she’s increasingly troubled by the ways in which this obsession contradicts her anti-capitalist, intersectional feminist politics. In a looks-obsessed, selfie-covered presentwhere influencers make the world go round, she brings us a breath of fresh air: an anti-capitalist look at a supremely capitalist industry, an intersectional feminist look at a practice many consider misogynist. Blending together the confessional, the poetic, and the essayistic, Made-Up is a lyric meditation on an industry in full bloom.
Made-Up explores the complicated world of makeup, from how it’s made to how we wear it, talking about gender, identity, capitalism, and pop culture in the process. Makeup doesn’t get a lot of serious attention; it’s often derided as shallow. But Daphné B proves that it’s worth looking at a little more in-depth.
The original French-language edition was a cult hit in Quebec. Translated by Alex Manley—like Daphné B, a Montreal poet and essayist—the book’s English-language text crackles with life, retaining the flair and verve of the original, and ensuring that a bookon beauty is no less beautiful than its subject matter. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Alex Manley is a Montreal/Tiohtia:ke writer and editor whose work has been published by Maisonneuve magazine, Hazlitt, The Walrus Grain, Vallum, and the Literary Review of Canada, among others. Their debut poetry collection, We Are All Just Animals &amp; Plants, was published by Metatron Press in 2016. @alex_icon</p>

<p>Poet and literary translator, Daphné B lives and works in Montreal. She published Bluetiful in 2015 (Les Editions de l&#39;Ecrou), then Delete (L&#39;Oie de Cravan) in 2017, in addition to writing in numerous magazines ( Nouveau Projet, Liberte, Vice, Spirale, Zinc, Estuaire, etc.). She co-founded the feminist platform Filles Missiles and is a regular contributor to the radio show Plus on est de fous, plus on lit, on Radio-Canada. @daphnebbbbb </p>

<p><strong>About Made-Up:</strong><br>
A nuanced, feminist, and deeply personal take on beauty culture and YouTube consumerism, in the tradition of Maggie Nelson’s Bluets.</p>

<p>As Daphné B obsessively watches YouTube makeup tutorials and haunts Sephora’s website, she’s increasingly troubled by the ways in which this obsession contradicts her anti-capitalist, intersectional feminist politics. In a looks-obsessed, selfie-covered presentwhere influencers make the world go round, she brings us a breath of fresh air: an anti-capitalist look at a supremely capitalist industry, an intersectional feminist look at a practice many consider misogynist. Blending together the confessional, the poetic, and the essayistic, Made-Up is a lyric meditation on an industry in full bloom.</p>

<p>Made-Up explores the complicated world of makeup, from how it’s made to how we wear it, talking about gender, identity, capitalism, and pop culture in the process. Makeup doesn’t get a lot of serious attention; it’s often derided as shallow. But Daphné B proves that it’s worth looking at a little more in-depth.</p>

<p>The original French-language edition was a cult hit in Quebec. Translated by Alex Manley—like Daphné B, a Montreal poet and essayist—the book’s English-language text crackles with life, retaining the flair and verve of the original, and ensuring that a bookon beauty is no less beautiful than its subject matter.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Alex Manley is a Montreal/Tiohtia:ke writer and editor whose work has been published by Maisonneuve magazine, Hazlitt, The Walrus Grain, Vallum, and the Literary Review of Canada, among others. Their debut poetry collection, We Are All Just Animals &amp; Plants, was published by Metatron Press in 2016. @alex_icon</p>

<p>Poet and literary translator, Daphné B lives and works in Montreal. She published Bluetiful in 2015 (Les Editions de l&#39;Ecrou), then Delete (L&#39;Oie de Cravan) in 2017, in addition to writing in numerous magazines ( Nouveau Projet, Liberte, Vice, Spirale, Zinc, Estuaire, etc.). She co-founded the feminist platform Filles Missiles and is a regular contributor to the radio show Plus on est de fous, plus on lit, on Radio-Canada. @daphnebbbbb </p>

<p><strong>About Made-Up:</strong><br>
A nuanced, feminist, and deeply personal take on beauty culture and YouTube consumerism, in the tradition of Maggie Nelson’s Bluets.</p>

<p>As Daphné B obsessively watches YouTube makeup tutorials and haunts Sephora’s website, she’s increasingly troubled by the ways in which this obsession contradicts her anti-capitalist, intersectional feminist politics. In a looks-obsessed, selfie-covered presentwhere influencers make the world go round, she brings us a breath of fresh air: an anti-capitalist look at a supremely capitalist industry, an intersectional feminist look at a practice many consider misogynist. Blending together the confessional, the poetic, and the essayistic, Made-Up is a lyric meditation on an industry in full bloom.</p>

<p>Made-Up explores the complicated world of makeup, from how it’s made to how we wear it, talking about gender, identity, capitalism, and pop culture in the process. Makeup doesn’t get a lot of serious attention; it’s often derided as shallow. But Daphné B proves that it’s worth looking at a little more in-depth.</p>

<p>The original French-language edition was a cult hit in Quebec. Translated by Alex Manley—like Daphné B, a Montreal poet and essayist—the book’s English-language text crackles with life, retaining the flair and verve of the original, and ensuring that a bookon beauty is no less beautiful than its subject matter.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 23: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Katie Kitamura</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/23</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">d3cc9cc9-3ee2-4561-95b9-bcdc7da3b204</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 19 Aug 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/d3cc9cc9-3ee2-4561-95b9-bcdc7da3b204.mp3" length="29343878" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Katie Kitamura, addressing her fans as addicts of interiority, thinking through what lies behind the responsibility of bearing witness, and if the quality of art is determined by how well it mimics truth.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>40:45</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/d3cc9cc9-3ee2-4561-95b9-bcdc7da3b204/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Katie Kitamura's most recent novel, A Separation, was a finalist for the Premio Gregor von Rezzori and a New York Times Notable Book. It was named a best book of the year by over a dozen publications and translated into sixteen languages, and is being adapted for film. Her two previous novels, Gone to the Forest and The Longshot, were both finalists for the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award. A recipient of fellowships from the Lannan Foundation and Santa Maddalena Foundation, Katie has written for publications including The New York Times, The Guardian, Granta, BOMB Magazine, Triple Canopy, and Frieze. She teaches in the creative writing program at New York University.
About Intimacies:
A novel from the author of A Separation, an electrifying story about a woman caught between many truths.
An interpreter has come to The Hague to escape New York and work at the International Court. A woman of many languages and identities, she is looking for a place to finally call home.
 
She's drawn into simmering personal dramas: her lover, Adriaan, is separated from his wife but still entangled in his marriage. Her friend Jana witnesses a seemingly random act of violence, a crime the interpreter becomes increasingly obsessed with as she befriends the victim's sister. And she's pulled into an explosive political controversy when she’s asked to interpret for a former president accused of war crimes.
 
A woman of quiet passion, she confronts power, love, and violence, both in her personal intimacies and in her work at the Court. She is soon pushed to the precipice, where betrayal and heartbreak threaten to overwhelm her, forcing her to decide what she wants from her life.  
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Katie Kitamura&#39;s most recent novel, A Separation, was a finalist for the Premio Gregor von Rezzori and a New York Times Notable Book. It was named a best book of the year by over a dozen publications and translated into sixteen languages, and is being adapted for film. Her two previous novels, Gone to the Forest and The Longshot, were both finalists for the New York Public Library&#39;s Young Lions Fiction Award. A recipient of fellowships from the Lannan Foundation and Santa Maddalena Foundation, Katie has written for publications including The New York Times, The Guardian, Granta, BOMB Magazine, Triple Canopy, and Frieze. She teaches in the creative writing program at New York University.</p>

<p>About <em>Intimacies</em>:<br>
A novel from the author of A Separation, an electrifying story about a woman caught between many truths.</p>

<p>An interpreter has come to The Hague to escape New York and work at the International Court. A woman of many languages and identities, she is looking for a place to finally call home.<br>
 <br>
She&#39;s drawn into simmering personal dramas: her lover, Adriaan, is separated from his wife but still entangled in his marriage. Her friend Jana witnesses a seemingly random act of violence, a crime the interpreter becomes increasingly obsessed with as she befriends the victim&#39;s sister. And she&#39;s pulled into an explosive political controversy when she’s asked to interpret for a former president accused of war crimes.<br>
 <br>
A woman of quiet passion, she confronts power, love, and violence, both in her personal intimacies and in her work at the Court. She is soon pushed to the precipice, where betrayal and heartbreak threaten to overwhelm her, forcing her to decide what she wants from her life. </p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Katie Kitamura&#39;s most recent novel, A Separation, was a finalist for the Premio Gregor von Rezzori and a New York Times Notable Book. It was named a best book of the year by over a dozen publications and translated into sixteen languages, and is being adapted for film. Her two previous novels, Gone to the Forest and The Longshot, were both finalists for the New York Public Library&#39;s Young Lions Fiction Award. A recipient of fellowships from the Lannan Foundation and Santa Maddalena Foundation, Katie has written for publications including The New York Times, The Guardian, Granta, BOMB Magazine, Triple Canopy, and Frieze. She teaches in the creative writing program at New York University.</p>

<p>About <em>Intimacies</em>:<br>
A novel from the author of A Separation, an electrifying story about a woman caught between many truths.</p>

<p>An interpreter has come to The Hague to escape New York and work at the International Court. A woman of many languages and identities, she is looking for a place to finally call home.<br>
 <br>
She&#39;s drawn into simmering personal dramas: her lover, Adriaan, is separated from his wife but still entangled in his marriage. Her friend Jana witnesses a seemingly random act of violence, a crime the interpreter becomes increasingly obsessed with as she befriends the victim&#39;s sister. And she&#39;s pulled into an explosive political controversy when she’s asked to interpret for a former president accused of war crimes.<br>
 <br>
A woman of quiet passion, she confronts power, love, and violence, both in her personal intimacies and in her work at the Court. She is soon pushed to the precipice, where betrayal and heartbreak threaten to overwhelm her, forcing her to decide what she wants from her life. </p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 22: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Sophie McCreesh</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/22</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">8c0cfefc-547e-4e20-a88b-07bc0da49968</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 12 Aug 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/8c0cfefc-547e-4e20-a88b-07bc0da49968.mp3" length="20597093" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti talks to Sophie McCreesh about her debut novel, Once More With Feeling, writing about depression, and how to find hope in the idea of promise.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>28:36</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/8/8c0cfefc-547e-4e20-a88b-07bc0da49968/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Sophie McCreesh is a fiction writer living in Toronto. Her writing has appeared in Cosmonauts Avenue, Hobart, Bad Nudes and elsewhere. 
Once More, With Feeling follows Jane, an artist navigating her closest relationships while fixating on her own perceived failures and self-imposed isolation. When Jane receives a student grant to attend a workshop in London, England, she sees the opportunity to leave her tedious life behind and start anew, bringing along her new friend Kitty, who Jane will not admit she has little in common with other than a shared appreciation for boxed wine and various other drugs.
In London, Jane struggles to improve both her craft and her mindset while Kitty thrives, and a once exciting trip abroad transforms the already uneven dynamic of their friendship, leaving Jane feeling more withdrawn than ever. As her increasingly destructive behaviour gets in the way of her artistic ambitions, her most important relationships--those with Kitty, her absent lover Richard and a discredited therapist named Anna--begin to deteriorate as Jane starts to examine her growing dependence on substances.
Darkly funny, piercing and tender, Once More, With Feeling is a portrait of a detached young woman trapped in the perils of self-loathing and addiction, who is searching for originality in an age of profound social disconnection and anxiety. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Sophie McCreesh is a fiction writer living in Toronto. Her writing has appeared in Cosmonauts Avenue, Hobart, Bad Nudes and elsewhere. </p>

<p>Once More, With Feeling follows Jane, an artist navigating her closest relationships while fixating on her own perceived failures and self-imposed isolation. When Jane receives a student grant to attend a workshop in London, England, she sees the opportunity to leave her tedious life behind and start anew, bringing along her new friend Kitty, who Jane will not admit she has little in common with other than a shared appreciation for boxed wine and various other drugs.</p>

<p>In London, Jane struggles to improve both her craft and her mindset while Kitty thrives, and a once exciting trip abroad transforms the already uneven dynamic of their friendship, leaving Jane feeling more withdrawn than ever. As her increasingly destructive behaviour gets in the way of her artistic ambitions, her most important relationships--those with Kitty, her absent lover Richard and a discredited therapist named Anna--begin to deteriorate as Jane starts to examine her growing dependence on substances.</p>

<p>Darkly funny, piercing and tender, Once More, With Feeling is a portrait of a detached young woman trapped in the perils of self-loathing and addiction, who is searching for originality in an age of profound social disconnection and anxiety.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Sophie McCreesh is a fiction writer living in Toronto. Her writing has appeared in Cosmonauts Avenue, Hobart, Bad Nudes and elsewhere. </p>

<p>Once More, With Feeling follows Jane, an artist navigating her closest relationships while fixating on her own perceived failures and self-imposed isolation. When Jane receives a student grant to attend a workshop in London, England, she sees the opportunity to leave her tedious life behind and start anew, bringing along her new friend Kitty, who Jane will not admit she has little in common with other than a shared appreciation for boxed wine and various other drugs.</p>

<p>In London, Jane struggles to improve both her craft and her mindset while Kitty thrives, and a once exciting trip abroad transforms the already uneven dynamic of their friendship, leaving Jane feeling more withdrawn than ever. As her increasingly destructive behaviour gets in the way of her artistic ambitions, her most important relationships--those with Kitty, her absent lover Richard and a discredited therapist named Anna--begin to deteriorate as Jane starts to examine her growing dependence on substances.</p>

<p>Darkly funny, piercing and tender, Once More, With Feeling is a portrait of a detached young woman trapped in the perils of self-loathing and addiction, who is searching for originality in an age of profound social disconnection and anxiety.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 21: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Beth Morgan</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/21</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">ef2e1e9c-3d25-4aa4-b371-e7be0dc272e3</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 05 Aug 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/ef2e1e9c-3d25-4aa4-b371-e7be0dc272e3.mp3" length="27141610" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Beth Morgan, author of A Touch of Jen,  to discuss magical realism, the pleasure in reading “unlikeable” characters, the concept of judgement, social media, and manifesting.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>37:41</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/e/ef2e1e9c-3d25-4aa4-b371-e7be0dc272e3/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Beth Morgan grew up outside Sherman, Texas and studied writing as an undergraduate at Sarah Lawrence College. She is currently completing an MFA at Brooklyn College. Her work has been published in The Iowa Review and The Kenyon Review Online.
About A Touch of Jen
Remy and Alicia, a couple of insecure  service workers, are not particularly happy together. But they are bound by a shared obsession with Jen, a beautiful former co-worker of Remy’s who now seems to be following her bliss as a globe-trotting jewelry designer. In and outside the bedroom, Remy and Alicia's entire relationship revolves around fantasies of Jen, whose every Instagram caption, outfit, and new age mantra they know by heart.
Imagine their confused excitement when they run into Jen, in the flesh, and she invites them on a surfing trip to the Hamptons with her wealthy boyfriend and their group. Once there, Remy and Alicia try (a little too hard) to fit into Jen’s exalted social circle, but violent desire and class resentment bubble beneath the surface of this beachside paradise, threatening to erupt. As small disturbances escalate into outright horror, we find ourselves tumbling with Remy and Alicia into an uncanny alternate reality, one shaped by their most unspeakable, deviant, and intoxicating fantasies.  Is this what “self-actualization” looks like?
Part millennial social comedy, part psychedelic horror, and all wildly entertaining, A Touch of Jen is a sly, unflinching examination of the hidden drives that lurk just outside the frame of our carefully curated selves. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Beth Morgan grew up outside Sherman, Texas and studied writing as an undergraduate at Sarah Lawrence College. She is currently completing an MFA at Brooklyn College. Her work has been published in The Iowa Review and The Kenyon Review Online.</p>

<p><strong>About A Touch of Jen</strong><br>
Remy and Alicia, a couple of insecure  service workers, are not particularly happy together. But they are bound by a shared obsession with Jen, a beautiful former co-worker of Remy’s who now seems to be following her bliss as a globe-trotting jewelry designer. In and outside the bedroom, Remy and Alicia&#39;s entire relationship revolves around fantasies of Jen, whose every Instagram caption, outfit, and new age mantra they know by heart.</p>

<p>Imagine their confused excitement when they run into Jen, in the flesh, and she invites them on a surfing trip to the Hamptons with her wealthy boyfriend and their group. Once there, Remy and Alicia try (a little too hard) to fit into Jen’s exalted social circle, but violent desire and class resentment bubble beneath the surface of this beachside paradise, threatening to erupt. As small disturbances escalate into outright horror, we find ourselves tumbling with Remy and Alicia into an uncanny alternate reality, one shaped by their most unspeakable, deviant, and intoxicating fantasies.  Is this what “self-actualization” looks like?</p>

<p>Part millennial social comedy, part psychedelic horror, and all wildly entertaining, A Touch of Jen is a sly, unflinching examination of the hidden drives that lurk just outside the frame of our carefully curated selves.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Beth Morgan grew up outside Sherman, Texas and studied writing as an undergraduate at Sarah Lawrence College. She is currently completing an MFA at Brooklyn College. Her work has been published in The Iowa Review and The Kenyon Review Online.</p>

<p><strong>About A Touch of Jen</strong><br>
Remy and Alicia, a couple of insecure  service workers, are not particularly happy together. But they are bound by a shared obsession with Jen, a beautiful former co-worker of Remy’s who now seems to be following her bliss as a globe-trotting jewelry designer. In and outside the bedroom, Remy and Alicia&#39;s entire relationship revolves around fantasies of Jen, whose every Instagram caption, outfit, and new age mantra they know by heart.</p>

<p>Imagine their confused excitement when they run into Jen, in the flesh, and she invites them on a surfing trip to the Hamptons with her wealthy boyfriend and their group. Once there, Remy and Alicia try (a little too hard) to fit into Jen’s exalted social circle, but violent desire and class resentment bubble beneath the surface of this beachside paradise, threatening to erupt. As small disturbances escalate into outright horror, we find ourselves tumbling with Remy and Alicia into an uncanny alternate reality, one shaped by their most unspeakable, deviant, and intoxicating fantasies.  Is this what “self-actualization” looks like?</p>

<p>Part millennial social comedy, part psychedelic horror, and all wildly entertaining, A Touch of Jen is a sly, unflinching examination of the hidden drives that lurk just outside the frame of our carefully curated selves.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 20: LSHB's Weird Era Season 1</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/20</link>
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  <pubDate>Sat, 10 Jul 2021 10:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/85d39e29-d3e1-4e08-ad3e-a8b004be9b2b.mp3" length="6195774" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>A look back at our first season.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>7:56</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/8/85d39e29-d3e1-4e08-ad3e-a8b004be9b2b/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>New to LSHB's Weird Era? Have a listen to this recap of Season 1. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>New to LSHB&#39;s Weird Era? Have a listen to this recap of Season 1.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>New to LSHB&#39;s Weird Era? Have a listen to this recap of Season 1.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 19: LSHB's Weird Era avec. Daphné B.</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/19</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">c2dca849-e006-479f-8621-8f40df4090e5</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 24 Jun 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/c2dca849-e006-479f-8621-8f40df4090e5.mp3" length="23902373" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Rencontre entre Daphnée (notre libraire) et Daphné B. pour jaser sur l’écriture de soi, les paradoxes de la féminité et #papaUQAM.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>33:11</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/c/c2dca849-e006-479f-8621-8f40df4090e5/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Poète et traductrice littéraire, Daphné B. vit et travaille à Montréal. Elle passe beaucoup de temps à lire, à écrire et à regarder des vidéos sur YouTube. Elle a publié Bluetiful en 2015 (Les Éditions de l’Écrou), puis Delete (L’Oie de Cravan) en 2017, en plus d’écrire dans de nombreuses revues (Nouveau Projet, Liberté, Vice, Spirale, Zinc, Estuaire, etc.). Elle a co-fondé la plateforme féministe Filles Missiles et collabore régulièrement à l’émission de radio Plus on est de fous, plus on lit, sur les ondes de RadioCanada.
Maquillée est le fruit étonnant d’un nombre incalculable d’heures perdues, passées à enchaîner les tutoriels maquillage sur YouTube, ou encore à naviguer sur le site web de Sephora. Cet essai poétique tire profit d’une obsession personnelle, le maquillage, pour développer une réflexion singulière sur notre époque. Se situant au carrefour des discours sur le genre, l’identité, le capitalisme et la culture pop, le maquillage est un objet d’étude riche et complexe, plus que jamais pertinent. S’il est habituellement dédaigné des sphères intellectuelles, Daphné B. nous prouve hors de tout doute qu’il mérite notre attention. Dans un monde oculaire troué de selfies et bouleversé par une industrie de l’influence, Daphné B. propose une réflexion nuancée, féministe et personnelle sur l’univers de la beauté. Objet littéraire hybride, à cheval entre le récit de soi, le poème et l’essai, Maquillée est une méditation lyrique sur un secteur économique en pleine croissance. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Poète et traductrice littéraire, Daphné B. vit et travaille à Montréal. Elle passe beaucoup de temps à lire, à écrire et à regarder des vidéos sur YouTube. Elle a publié Bluetiful en 2015 (Les Éditions de l’Écrou), puis Delete (L’Oie de Cravan) en 2017, en plus d’écrire dans de nombreuses revues (Nouveau Projet, Liberté, Vice, Spirale, Zinc, Estuaire, etc.). Elle a co-fondé la plateforme féministe Filles Missiles et collabore régulièrement à l’émission de radio Plus on est de fous, plus on lit, sur les ondes de RadioCanada.</p>

<p>Maquillée est le fruit étonnant d’un nombre incalculable d’heures perdues, passées à enchaîner les tutoriels maquillage sur YouTube, ou encore à naviguer sur le site web de Sephora. Cet essai poétique tire profit d’une obsession personnelle, le maquillage, pour développer une réflexion singulière sur notre époque. Se situant au carrefour des discours sur le genre, l’identité, le capitalisme et la culture pop, le maquillage est un objet d’étude riche et complexe, plus que jamais pertinent. S’il est habituellement dédaigné des sphères intellectuelles, Daphné B. nous prouve hors de tout doute qu’il mérite notre attention. Dans un monde oculaire troué de selfies et bouleversé par une industrie de l’influence, Daphné B. propose une réflexion nuancée, féministe et personnelle sur l’univers de la beauté. Objet littéraire hybride, à cheval entre le récit de soi, le poème et l’essai, Maquillée est une méditation lyrique sur un secteur économique en pleine croissance.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Poète et traductrice littéraire, Daphné B. vit et travaille à Montréal. Elle passe beaucoup de temps à lire, à écrire et à regarder des vidéos sur YouTube. Elle a publié Bluetiful en 2015 (Les Éditions de l’Écrou), puis Delete (L’Oie de Cravan) en 2017, en plus d’écrire dans de nombreuses revues (Nouveau Projet, Liberté, Vice, Spirale, Zinc, Estuaire, etc.). Elle a co-fondé la plateforme féministe Filles Missiles et collabore régulièrement à l’émission de radio Plus on est de fous, plus on lit, sur les ondes de RadioCanada.</p>

<p>Maquillée est le fruit étonnant d’un nombre incalculable d’heures perdues, passées à enchaîner les tutoriels maquillage sur YouTube, ou encore à naviguer sur le site web de Sephora. Cet essai poétique tire profit d’une obsession personnelle, le maquillage, pour développer une réflexion singulière sur notre époque. Se situant au carrefour des discours sur le genre, l’identité, le capitalisme et la culture pop, le maquillage est un objet d’étude riche et complexe, plus que jamais pertinent. S’il est habituellement dédaigné des sphères intellectuelles, Daphné B. nous prouve hors de tout doute qu’il mérite notre attention. Dans un monde oculaire troué de selfies et bouleversé par une industrie de l’influence, Daphné B. propose une réflexion nuancée, féministe et personnelle sur l’univers de la beauté. Objet littéraire hybride, à cheval entre le récit de soi, le poème et l’essai, Maquillée est une méditation lyrique sur un secteur économique en pleine croissance.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 18: LSHB's Weird Era feat. PJ Vernon</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/18</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">0e6975a5-fd14-4c8b-9284-d42c3b69711a</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 17 Jun 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/0e6975a5-fd14-4c8b-9284-d42c3b69711a.mp3" length="28410512" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>PJ Vernon joins Alex to discuss his novel, Bath Haus, gay representation in mainstream literature, writing morally complex characters, trust issues, and how Grindr can be used for good.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>39:27</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/0/0e6975a5-fd14-4c8b-9284-d42c3b69711a/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>P. J. VERNON was born in South Carolina. His first book, When You Find Me, was published in 2018. He lives in Calgary with his partner and two wily dogs.
“Stylish, smart, and scary as hell.” Chris Bohjalian, #1 New York Times bestselling author 
"A nightmarish white-knuckler." O, The Oprah Magazine
Oliver Park, a recovering addict from Indiana, finally has everything he ever wanted: sobriety and a loving, wealthy partner in Nathan, a prominent DC trauma surgeon. Despite their difference in age and disparate backgrounds, they've made a perfect life together. With everything to lose, Oliver shouldn't be visiting Haus, a gay bathhouse. But through the entrance he goes, and it's a line crossed. Inside, he follows a man into a private room, and it's the final line. Whatever happens next, Nathan can never know. But then, everything goes wrong, terribly wrong, and Oliver barely escapes with his life.
He races home in full-blown terror as the hand-shaped bruise grows dark on his neck. The truth will destroy Nathan and everything they have together, so Oliver does the thing he used to do so well: he lies.
What follows is a classic runaway-train narrative, full of the exquisite escalations, edge-of-your-seat thrills, and oh-my-god twists. P. J. Vernon's Bath Haus is a scintillating thriller with an emotional punch, perfect for readers curious for their next must-read novel. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>P. J. VERNON was born in South Carolina. His first book, When You Find Me, was published in 2018. He lives in Calgary with his partner and two wily dogs.</p>

<p>“Stylish, smart, and scary as hell.” Chris Bohjalian, #1 New York Times bestselling author </p>

<p>&quot;A nightmarish white-knuckler.&quot; O, The Oprah Magazine</p>

<p>Oliver Park, a recovering addict from Indiana, finally has everything he ever wanted: sobriety and a loving, wealthy partner in Nathan, a prominent DC trauma surgeon. Despite their difference in age and disparate backgrounds, they&#39;ve made a perfect life together. With everything to lose, Oliver shouldn&#39;t be visiting Haus, a gay bathhouse. But through the entrance he goes, and it&#39;s a line crossed. Inside, he follows a man into a private room, and it&#39;s the final line. Whatever happens next, Nathan can never know. But then, everything goes wrong, terribly wrong, and Oliver barely escapes with his life.</p>

<p>He races home in full-blown terror as the hand-shaped bruise grows dark on his neck. The truth will destroy Nathan and everything they have together, so Oliver does the thing he used to do so well: he lies.</p>

<p>What follows is a classic runaway-train narrative, full of the exquisite escalations, edge-of-your-seat thrills, and oh-my-god twists. P. J. Vernon&#39;s Bath Haus is a scintillating thriller with an emotional punch, perfect for readers curious for their next must-read novel.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>P. J. VERNON was born in South Carolina. His first book, When You Find Me, was published in 2018. He lives in Calgary with his partner and two wily dogs.</p>

<p>“Stylish, smart, and scary as hell.” Chris Bohjalian, #1 New York Times bestselling author </p>

<p>&quot;A nightmarish white-knuckler.&quot; O, The Oprah Magazine</p>

<p>Oliver Park, a recovering addict from Indiana, finally has everything he ever wanted: sobriety and a loving, wealthy partner in Nathan, a prominent DC trauma surgeon. Despite their difference in age and disparate backgrounds, they&#39;ve made a perfect life together. With everything to lose, Oliver shouldn&#39;t be visiting Haus, a gay bathhouse. But through the entrance he goes, and it&#39;s a line crossed. Inside, he follows a man into a private room, and it&#39;s the final line. Whatever happens next, Nathan can never know. But then, everything goes wrong, terribly wrong, and Oliver barely escapes with his life.</p>

<p>He races home in full-blown terror as the hand-shaped bruise grows dark on his neck. The truth will destroy Nathan and everything they have together, so Oliver does the thing he used to do so well: he lies.</p>

<p>What follows is a classic runaway-train narrative, full of the exquisite escalations, edge-of-your-seat thrills, and oh-my-god twists. P. J. Vernon&#39;s Bath Haus is a scintillating thriller with an emotional punch, perfect for readers curious for their next must-read novel.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 17: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Paul Mendez</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/17</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">b16eea9f-aca7-496e-b89e-1f4446ea4e8a</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 10 Jun 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/b16eea9f-aca7-496e-b89e-1f4446ea4e8a.mp3" length="35590732" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex and Paul sit down to discuss his acclaimed novel, Rainbow Milk, writing as a sensory experience, UK music charts in the early 2000s, and happy endings in queer literature</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>49:25</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/b/b16eea9f-aca7-496e-b89e-1f4446ea4e8a/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>PAUL MENDEZ was born and raised in the Black Country. He now lives in London and is studying for an M.A. in Black British Writing at Goldsmiths, University of London. He has been a performing member of two theatre companies, and worked as a voice actor, appearing on audiobooks by Andrea Levy, Paul Theroux and Ben Okri, most recently recording Ian Wright's A Life in Football for Hachette Audio. As a writer, he has contributed to the Times Literary Supplement and the Brixton Review of Books. Rainbow Milk is his debut novel.
About Rainbow Milk
An essential and revelatory coming-of-age narrative from a thrilling new voice, Rainbow Milk follows nineteen-year-old Jesse McCarthy as he grapples with his racial and sexual identities against the backdrop of his Jehovah's Witness upbringing.
In the 1950s, ex-boxer Norman Alonso is a determined and humble Jamaican who has immigrated to Britain with his wife and children to secure a brighter future. Blighted with unexpected illness and racism, Norman and his family are resilient, but are all too aware that their family will need more than just hope to survive in their new country.
At the turn of the millennium, Jesse seeks a fresh start in London, escaping a broken immediate family, a repressive religious community and his depressed hometown in the industrial Black Country. But once he arrives he finds himself at a loss for a new center of gravity, and turns to sex work, music and art to create his own notions of love, masculinity and spirituality.
A wholly original novel as tender as it is visceral, Rainbow Milk is a bold reckoning with race, class, sexuality, freedom and religion across generations, time and cultures. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>PAUL MENDEZ was born and raised in the Black Country. He now lives in London and is studying for an M.A. in Black British Writing at Goldsmiths, University of London. He has been a performing member of two theatre companies, and worked as a voice actor, appearing on audiobooks by Andrea Levy, Paul Theroux and Ben Okri, most recently recording Ian Wright&#39;s A Life in Football for Hachette Audio. As a writer, he has contributed to the Times Literary Supplement and the Brixton Review of Books. Rainbow Milk is his debut novel.</p>

<p><strong>About Rainbow Milk</strong><br>
An essential and revelatory coming-of-age narrative from a thrilling new voice, Rainbow Milk follows nineteen-year-old Jesse McCarthy as he grapples with his racial and sexual identities against the backdrop of his Jehovah&#39;s Witness upbringing.</p>

<p>In the 1950s, ex-boxer Norman Alonso is a determined and humble Jamaican who has immigrated to Britain with his wife and children to secure a brighter future. Blighted with unexpected illness and racism, Norman and his family are resilient, but are all too aware that their family will need more than just hope to survive in their new country.<br>
At the turn of the millennium, Jesse seeks a fresh start in London, escaping a broken immediate family, a repressive religious community and his depressed hometown in the industrial Black Country. But once he arrives he finds himself at a loss for a new center of gravity, and turns to sex work, music and art to create his own notions of love, masculinity and spirituality.</p>

<p>A wholly original novel as tender as it is visceral, Rainbow Milk is a bold reckoning with race, class, sexuality, freedom and religion across generations, time and cultures.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>PAUL MENDEZ was born and raised in the Black Country. He now lives in London and is studying for an M.A. in Black British Writing at Goldsmiths, University of London. He has been a performing member of two theatre companies, and worked as a voice actor, appearing on audiobooks by Andrea Levy, Paul Theroux and Ben Okri, most recently recording Ian Wright&#39;s A Life in Football for Hachette Audio. As a writer, he has contributed to the Times Literary Supplement and the Brixton Review of Books. Rainbow Milk is his debut novel.</p>

<p><strong>About Rainbow Milk</strong><br>
An essential and revelatory coming-of-age narrative from a thrilling new voice, Rainbow Milk follows nineteen-year-old Jesse McCarthy as he grapples with his racial and sexual identities against the backdrop of his Jehovah&#39;s Witness upbringing.</p>

<p>In the 1950s, ex-boxer Norman Alonso is a determined and humble Jamaican who has immigrated to Britain with his wife and children to secure a brighter future. Blighted with unexpected illness and racism, Norman and his family are resilient, but are all too aware that their family will need more than just hope to survive in their new country.<br>
At the turn of the millennium, Jesse seeks a fresh start in London, escaping a broken immediate family, a repressive religious community and his depressed hometown in the industrial Black Country. But once he arrives he finds himself at a loss for a new center of gravity, and turns to sex work, music and art to create his own notions of love, masculinity and spirituality.</p>

<p>A wholly original novel as tender as it is visceral, Rainbow Milk is a bold reckoning with race, class, sexuality, freedom and religion across generations, time and cultures.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 16: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Brontez Purnell</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/16</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">11a3a624-c930-4460-97b9-da2851760594</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 03 Jun 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/11a3a624-c930-4460-97b9-da2851760594.mp3" length="29403974" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti chats with Brontez Purnell about gay and racial stereotypes, writing elegant prose out of bluntness, and the relationship between black gay men and sin.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>40:50</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/1/11a3a624-c930-4460-97b9-da2851760594/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Brontez Purnell is a writer, musician, dancer, filmmaker, and performance artist. He is the author of a graphic novel, a novella, a children's book, and the novel Since I Laid My Burden Down. The recipient of a 2018 Whiting Writers' Award for Fiction, he was named one of the thirty-two Black Male Writers of Our Time by T: The New York Times Style Magazine in 2018. Purnell is also the frontman for the band the Younger Lovers, a cofounder of the experimental dance group the Brontez Purnell Dance Company, the creator of the renowned cult zine Fag School, and the director of several short films, music videos, and the documentary Unstoppable Feat: The Dances of Ed Mock. Born in Triana, Alabama, he's lived in Oakland, California, for more than a decade.
About 100 Boyfriends:
An irrerverent, sensitive, and inimitable look at gay dysfunction through the eyes of a cult hero
Transgressive, foulmouthed, and brutally funny, Brontez Purnell’s 100 Boyfriends is a revelatory spiral into the imperfect lives of queer men desperately fighting the urge to self-sabotage. As they tiptoe through minefields of romantic, substance-fueled misadventure—from dirty warehouses and gentrified bars in Oakland to desolate farm towns in Alabama—Purnell’s characters strive for belonging in a world that dismisses them for being Black, broke, and queer. In spite of it—or perhaps because of it—they shine.
Armed with a deadpan wit, Purnell finds humor in even the darkest of nadirs with the peerless zeal, insight, and horniness of a gay punk messiah. Together, the slice-of-life tales that writhe within 100 Boyfriends are an inimitable tour of an unexposed queer underbelly. Holding them together is the vision of an iconoclastic storyteller, as fearless as he is human. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Brontez Purnell is a writer, musician, dancer, filmmaker, and performance artist. He is the author of a graphic novel, a novella, a children&#39;s book, and the novel Since I Laid My Burden Down. The recipient of a 2018 Whiting Writers&#39; Award for Fiction, he was named one of the thirty-two Black Male Writers of Our Time by T: The New York Times Style Magazine in 2018. Purnell is also the frontman for the band the Younger Lovers, a cofounder of the experimental dance group the Brontez Purnell Dance Company, the creator of the renowned cult zine Fag School, and the director of several short films, music videos, and the documentary Unstoppable Feat: The Dances of Ed Mock. Born in Triana, Alabama, he&#39;s lived in Oakland, California, for more than a decade.</p>

<p>About 100 Boyfriends:<br>
An irrerverent, sensitive, and inimitable look at gay dysfunction through the eyes of a cult hero</p>

<p>Transgressive, foulmouthed, and brutally funny, Brontez Purnell’s 100 Boyfriends is a revelatory spiral into the imperfect lives of queer men desperately fighting the urge to self-sabotage. As they tiptoe through minefields of romantic, substance-fueled misadventure—from dirty warehouses and gentrified bars in Oakland to desolate farm towns in Alabama—Purnell’s characters strive for belonging in a world that dismisses them for being Black, broke, and queer. In spite of it—or perhaps because of it—they shine.</p>

<p>Armed with a deadpan wit, Purnell finds humor in even the darkest of nadirs with the peerless zeal, insight, and horniness of a gay punk messiah. Together, the slice-of-life tales that writhe within 100 Boyfriends are an inimitable tour of an unexposed queer underbelly. Holding them together is the vision of an iconoclastic storyteller, as fearless as he is human.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Brontez Purnell is a writer, musician, dancer, filmmaker, and performance artist. He is the author of a graphic novel, a novella, a children&#39;s book, and the novel Since I Laid My Burden Down. The recipient of a 2018 Whiting Writers&#39; Award for Fiction, he was named one of the thirty-two Black Male Writers of Our Time by T: The New York Times Style Magazine in 2018. Purnell is also the frontman for the band the Younger Lovers, a cofounder of the experimental dance group the Brontez Purnell Dance Company, the creator of the renowned cult zine Fag School, and the director of several short films, music videos, and the documentary Unstoppable Feat: The Dances of Ed Mock. Born in Triana, Alabama, he&#39;s lived in Oakland, California, for more than a decade.</p>

<p>About 100 Boyfriends:<br>
An irrerverent, sensitive, and inimitable look at gay dysfunction through the eyes of a cult hero</p>

<p>Transgressive, foulmouthed, and brutally funny, Brontez Purnell’s 100 Boyfriends is a revelatory spiral into the imperfect lives of queer men desperately fighting the urge to self-sabotage. As they tiptoe through minefields of romantic, substance-fueled misadventure—from dirty warehouses and gentrified bars in Oakland to desolate farm towns in Alabama—Purnell’s characters strive for belonging in a world that dismisses them for being Black, broke, and queer. In spite of it—or perhaps because of it—they shine.</p>

<p>Armed with a deadpan wit, Purnell finds humor in even the darkest of nadirs with the peerless zeal, insight, and horniness of a gay punk messiah. Together, the slice-of-life tales that writhe within 100 Boyfriends are an inimitable tour of an unexposed queer underbelly. Holding them together is the vision of an iconoclastic storyteller, as fearless as he is human.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 15: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Anakana Schofield</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/15</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/9ad8ebb0-2f2f-4fe9-81df-d1a4a87147e6.mp3" length="35275808" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Anakana Schofield, author of Bina: A Novel in Warnings to discuss distrust in the establishment, female pain, and the question of self-euthanization in fiction. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>48:59</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/9/9ad8ebb0-2f2f-4fe9-81df-d1a4a87147e6/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Anakana Schofield is an award-winning Irish-Canadian writer of fiction, essays, and literary criticism. Her previous novels are Malarky (2012) and Martin John (2015). The UK edition of Bina was shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize 2020. Schofield lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.
A provocative, feminist novel about a woman who persists in spite of the violence, injustice, and oppression that fills her world.
Bina is a woman who’s had enough and isn’t afraid to say so. “I’m here to warn you, not reassure you,” she announces at the book’s outset. In a series of taut, urgent missives she attempts to set the record of her life straight, and in doing so, to be useful to others. Yet being useful is what landed her in jail. Empathy is her Achilles’ heel. Her troubles seem to stem from an injured stranger named Eddie, and they multiply when her charity extends from delivering meals to the elderly to working with the dying. No good deed of hers goes unpunished and the costs of her capacity for care are legion, as one by one she is denied her livelihood, her health, and her freedom, but her voice continues resolutely, an act of friendship in itself. Bina is an unsettling, thought-provoking novel of formal inventiveness and moral and emotional complexity by a bold and talented writer. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Anakana Schofield is an award-winning Irish-Canadian writer of fiction, essays, and literary criticism. Her previous novels are Malarky (2012) and Martin John (2015). The UK edition of Bina was shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize 2020. Schofield lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.</p>

<p>A provocative, feminist novel about a woman who persists in spite of the violence, injustice, and oppression that fills her world.</p>

<p>Bina is a woman who’s had enough and isn’t afraid to say so. “I’m here to warn you, not reassure you,” she announces at the book’s outset. In a series of taut, urgent missives she attempts to set the record of her life straight, and in doing so, to be useful to others. Yet being useful is what landed her in jail. Empathy is her Achilles’ heel. Her troubles seem to stem from an injured stranger named Eddie, and they multiply when her charity extends from delivering meals to the elderly to working with the dying. No good deed of hers goes unpunished and the costs of her capacity for care are legion, as one by one she is denied her livelihood, her health, and her freedom, but her voice continues resolutely, an act of friendship in itself. Bina is an unsettling, thought-provoking novel of formal inventiveness and moral and emotional complexity by a bold and talented writer.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Anakana Schofield is an award-winning Irish-Canadian writer of fiction, essays, and literary criticism. Her previous novels are Malarky (2012) and Martin John (2015). The UK edition of Bina was shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize 2020. Schofield lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.</p>

<p>A provocative, feminist novel about a woman who persists in spite of the violence, injustice, and oppression that fills her world.</p>

<p>Bina is a woman who’s had enough and isn’t afraid to say so. “I’m here to warn you, not reassure you,” she announces at the book’s outset. In a series of taut, urgent missives she attempts to set the record of her life straight, and in doing so, to be useful to others. Yet being useful is what landed her in jail. Empathy is her Achilles’ heel. Her troubles seem to stem from an injured stranger named Eddie, and they multiply when her charity extends from delivering meals to the elderly to working with the dying. No good deed of hers goes unpunished and the costs of her capacity for care are legion, as one by one she is denied her livelihood, her health, and her freedom, but her voice continues resolutely, an act of friendship in itself. Bina is an unsettling, thought-provoking novel of formal inventiveness and moral and emotional complexity by a bold and talented writer.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 14: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Alice Sparkly Kat</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/14</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">476ace3f-1a07-4bfb-befd-aa318d6f6cbf</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/476ace3f-1a07-4bfb-befd-aa318d6f6cbf.mp3" length="19921326" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Sruti sits down with Alice Sparkly Kat to explore colonialism in the study of myth, the role of interpretation in Astrology, and the ways in which astrology functions as a language.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>27:40</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/4/476ace3f-1a07-4bfb-befd-aa318d6f6cbf/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Alice Sparkly Kat is a queer, PoC astrologer. They use astrology to re-chart a history of the subconscious, redefine the body in world, and reimagine history as collective memory. Their astrological work has inhabited MoMA, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum, and Hauser and Wirth Gallery. They're friendly, located in Brooklyn, and available for readings in person or by phone at www.alicesparklykat.com. Follow them on Instagram or Twitter at @alicesparklykat for astrology content and weird memes.
Tapping into the political power of magic and astrology for social, community, and personal transformation.
In a cross-cultural approach to understanding astrology as a magical language, Alice Sparkly Kat unmasks the political power of astrology, showing how it can be channeled as a force for collective healing and liberation.
Too often, magic and astrology are divorced from their potency and cultural contexts: co-opted by neoliberalism, used as a force of oppression, or distilled beyond recognition into applications that belie their individual and collective power. By looking at the symbolic and etymological histories of the sun, moon, Saturn, Venus, Mercury, Mars, and Jupiter, we can trace and understand the politics of magic--and challenge our own practices, interrogate our truths, and reshape our institutions to build better frameworks for communities of care.
Fearless, radical, and fresh, Sparkly Kat's Postcolonial Astrology ushers in a new wave of astrology revival, refusing to apologize for its magickism and connecting its power to the spirituality and politics we need now. Intersectional, inclusive, and geared towards queer and POC communities, it uses our historical and collective constructs of the planets, sun, and moon to re-chart our subconscious history, redefine the body in the world, and assert our politics of the personal, in astrology and all things. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Alice Sparkly Kat is a queer, PoC astrologer. They use astrology to re-chart a history of the subconscious, redefine the body in world, and reimagine history as collective memory. Their astrological work has inhabited MoMA, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum, and Hauser and Wirth Gallery. They&#39;re friendly, located in Brooklyn, and available for readings in person or by phone at <a href="http://www.alicesparklykat.com" rel="nofollow">www.alicesparklykat.com</a>. Follow them on Instagram or Twitter at @alicesparklykat for astrology content and weird memes.</p>

<p>Tapping into the political power of magic and astrology for social, community, and personal transformation.</p>

<p>In a cross-cultural approach to understanding astrology as a magical language, Alice Sparkly Kat unmasks the political power of astrology, showing how it can be channeled as a force for collective healing and liberation.</p>

<p>Too often, magic and astrology are divorced from their potency and cultural contexts: co-opted by neoliberalism, used as a force of oppression, or distilled beyond recognition into applications that belie their individual and collective power. By looking at the symbolic and etymological histories of the sun, moon, Saturn, Venus, Mercury, Mars, and Jupiter, we can trace and understand the politics of magic--and challenge our own practices, interrogate our truths, and reshape our institutions to build better frameworks for communities of care.</p>

<p>Fearless, radical, and fresh, Sparkly Kat&#39;s Postcolonial Astrology ushers in a new wave of astrology revival, refusing to apologize for its magickism and connecting its power to the spirituality and politics we need now. Intersectional, inclusive, and geared towards queer and POC communities, it uses our historical and collective constructs of the planets, sun, and moon to re-chart our subconscious history, redefine the body in the world, and assert our politics of the personal, in astrology and all things.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Alice Sparkly Kat is a queer, PoC astrologer. They use astrology to re-chart a history of the subconscious, redefine the body in world, and reimagine history as collective memory. Their astrological work has inhabited MoMA, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum, and Hauser and Wirth Gallery. They&#39;re friendly, located in Brooklyn, and available for readings in person or by phone at <a href="http://www.alicesparklykat.com" rel="nofollow">www.alicesparklykat.com</a>. Follow them on Instagram or Twitter at @alicesparklykat for astrology content and weird memes.</p>

<p>Tapping into the political power of magic and astrology for social, community, and personal transformation.</p>

<p>In a cross-cultural approach to understanding astrology as a magical language, Alice Sparkly Kat unmasks the political power of astrology, showing how it can be channeled as a force for collective healing and liberation.</p>

<p>Too often, magic and astrology are divorced from their potency and cultural contexts: co-opted by neoliberalism, used as a force of oppression, or distilled beyond recognition into applications that belie their individual and collective power. By looking at the symbolic and etymological histories of the sun, moon, Saturn, Venus, Mercury, Mars, and Jupiter, we can trace and understand the politics of magic--and challenge our own practices, interrogate our truths, and reshape our institutions to build better frameworks for communities of care.</p>

<p>Fearless, radical, and fresh, Sparkly Kat&#39;s Postcolonial Astrology ushers in a new wave of astrology revival, refusing to apologize for its magickism and connecting its power to the spirituality and politics we need now. Intersectional, inclusive, and geared towards queer and POC communities, it uses our historical and collective constructs of the planets, sun, and moon to re-chart our subconscious history, redefine the body in the world, and assert our politics of the personal, in astrology and all things.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 13: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Isle McElroy</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/13</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">8a8c7b6b-418d-47d5-8970-f28895a089b3</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/8a8c7b6b-418d-47d5-8970-f28895a089b3.mp3" length="36785942" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Isle McElroy talks about their debut novel The Atmospherians, the role of empathy in fiction, moral purity, and accountability vs cancel culture. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>48:12</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/8/8a8c7b6b-418d-47d5-8970-f28895a089b3/cover.jpg?v=2"/>
  <description>Isle McElroy is a nonbinary writer based in Brooklyn. Their debut novel, THE ATMOSPHERIANS, was named a NY Times Editors' Choice. Their second novel, PEOPLE COLLIDE, is forthcoming from HarperVia. Other writing appears in The NY Times, NYT Magazine, The Guardian, The Cut, Vulture, GQ, Vogue, The Atlantic, Tin House, and elsewhere.  
About The Atmospherians:
Sasha Marcus was once the epitome of contemporary success: an internet sensation, social media darling, and a creator of a high profile wellness brand for women. But a confrontation with an abusive troll has taken a horrifying turn, and now she’s at rock bottom: canceled and doxxed online, fired from her waitress job and fortressed in her apartment while men’s rights protestors rage outside. All that once glittered now condemns.
Sasha confides in her oldest childhood friend, Dyson—a failed actor with a history of body issues—who hatches a plan for Sasha to restore her reputation by becoming the face of his new business venture, The Atmosphere: a rehabilitation community for men. Based in an abandoned summer camp and billed as a workshop for job training, it is actually a rigorous program designed to rid men of their toxic masculinity and heal them physically, emotionally, and socially. Sasha has little choice but to accept. But what horrors await her as the resident female leader of a crew of washed up, desperate men? And what exactly does Dyson want?
Explosive and wickedly funny, this “Fight Club for the millennial generation” (Mat Johnson, author of Pym) peers straight into the dark heart of wellness and woke-ness, self-mythology and self-awareness, by asking what happens when we become addicted to the performance of ourselves. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Isle McElroy is a nonbinary writer based in Brooklyn. Their debut novel, THE ATMOSPHERIANS, was named a NY Times Editors&#39; Choice. Their second novel, PEOPLE COLLIDE, is forthcoming from HarperVia. Other writing appears in The NY Times, NYT Magazine, The Guardian, The Cut, Vulture, GQ, Vogue, The Atlantic, Tin House, and elsewhere.  </p>

<p><strong>About The Atmospherians:</strong><br>
Sasha Marcus was once the epitome of contemporary success: an internet sensation, social media darling, and a creator of a high profile wellness brand for women. But a confrontation with an abusive troll has taken a horrifying turn, and now she’s at rock bottom: canceled and doxxed online, fired from her waitress job and fortressed in her apartment while men’s rights protestors rage outside. All that once glittered now condemns.</p>

<p>Sasha confides in her oldest childhood friend, Dyson—a failed actor with a history of body issues—who hatches a plan for Sasha to restore her reputation by becoming the face of his new business venture, The Atmosphere: a rehabilitation community for men. Based in an abandoned summer camp and billed as a workshop for job training, it is actually a rigorous program designed to rid men of their toxic masculinity and heal them physically, emotionally, and socially. Sasha has little choice but to accept. But what horrors await her as the resident female leader of a crew of washed up, desperate men? And what exactly does Dyson want?</p>

<p>Explosive and wickedly funny, this “Fight Club for the millennial generation” (Mat Johnson, author of Pym) peers straight into the dark heart of wellness and woke-ness, self-mythology and self-awareness, by asking what happens when we become addicted to the performance of ourselves.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Isle McElroy is a nonbinary writer based in Brooklyn. Their debut novel, THE ATMOSPHERIANS, was named a NY Times Editors&#39; Choice. Their second novel, PEOPLE COLLIDE, is forthcoming from HarperVia. Other writing appears in The NY Times, NYT Magazine, The Guardian, The Cut, Vulture, GQ, Vogue, The Atlantic, Tin House, and elsewhere.  </p>

<p><strong>About The Atmospherians:</strong><br>
Sasha Marcus was once the epitome of contemporary success: an internet sensation, social media darling, and a creator of a high profile wellness brand for women. But a confrontation with an abusive troll has taken a horrifying turn, and now she’s at rock bottom: canceled and doxxed online, fired from her waitress job and fortressed in her apartment while men’s rights protestors rage outside. All that once glittered now condemns.</p>

<p>Sasha confides in her oldest childhood friend, Dyson—a failed actor with a history of body issues—who hatches a plan for Sasha to restore her reputation by becoming the face of his new business venture, The Atmosphere: a rehabilitation community for men. Based in an abandoned summer camp and billed as a workshop for job training, it is actually a rigorous program designed to rid men of their toxic masculinity and heal them physically, emotionally, and socially. Sasha has little choice but to accept. But what horrors await her as the resident female leader of a crew of washed up, desperate men? And what exactly does Dyson want?</p>

<p>Explosive and wickedly funny, this “Fight Club for the millennial generation” (Mat Johnson, author of Pym) peers straight into the dark heart of wellness and woke-ness, self-mythology and self-awareness, by asking what happens when we become addicted to the performance of ourselves.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 12: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Larissa Pham</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/12</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">dbb02191-aa1e-4d71-bf3f-04a1328d48e3</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/dbb02191-aa1e-4d71-bf3f-04a1328d48e3.mp3" length="34534983" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex sits down with Larissa Pham to talk about her new essay collection Pop Song, the joys of Tumblr in 2012, intimacy, and art writing vs art critique.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>47:57</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/dbb02191-aa1e-4d71-bf3f-04a1328d48e3/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Larissa Pham is an artist and writer in Brooklyn. Born in Portland, Oregon, she studied painting and art history at Yale University. She has written essays and criticism for the Paris Review Daily, The Nation, Art in America, Guernica, and elsewhere. She was an inaugural Yi Dae Up fellowship recipient from the Jack Jones Literary Arts Retreat. She is also the author of Fantasian, a novella.
--
Like a song that feels written just for you, Larissa Pham's debut work of nonfiction captures the imagination and refuses to let go.
Pop Song is a book about love and about falling in love--with a place, or a painting, or a person--and the joy and terror inherent in the experience of that love. Plumbing the well of culture for clues and patterns about love and loss--from Agnes Martin's abstract paintings to James Turrell's transcendent light works, and Anne Carson's Eros the Bittersweet to Frank Ocean's Blonde--Pham writes of her youthful attempts to find meaning in travel, sex, drugs, and art, before sensing that she might need to turn her gaze upon herself.   
Pop Song is also a book about distances, near and far. As she travels from Taos, New Mexico, to Shanghai, China and beyond, Pham meditates on the miles we are willing to cover to get away from ourselves, or those who hurt us, and the impossible gaps that can exist between two people sharing a bed.
Pop Song is a book about all the routes by which we might escape our own needs before finally finding a way home. There is heartache in these pages, but Pham's electric ways of seeing create a perfectly fractured portrait of modern intimacy that is triumphant in both its vulnerability and restlessness. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Larissa Pham is an artist and writer in Brooklyn. Born in Portland, Oregon, she studied painting and art history at Yale University. She has written essays and criticism for the Paris Review Daily, The Nation, Art in America, Guernica, and elsewhere. She was an inaugural Yi Dae Up fellowship recipient from the Jack Jones Literary Arts Retreat. She is also the author of Fantasian, a novella.</p>

<p>--</p>

<p>Like a song that feels written just for you, Larissa Pham&#39;s debut work of nonfiction captures the imagination and refuses to let go.</p>

<p>Pop Song is a book about love and about falling in love--with a place, or a painting, or a person--and the joy and terror inherent in the experience of that love. Plumbing the well of culture for clues and patterns about love and loss--from Agnes Martin&#39;s abstract paintings to James Turrell&#39;s transcendent light works, and Anne Carson&#39;s Eros the Bittersweet to Frank Ocean&#39;s Blonde--Pham writes of her youthful attempts to find meaning in travel, sex, drugs, and art, before sensing that she might need to turn her gaze upon herself.   </p>

<p>Pop Song is also a book about distances, near and far. As she travels from Taos, New Mexico, to Shanghai, China and beyond, Pham meditates on the miles we are willing to cover to get away from ourselves, or those who hurt us, and the impossible gaps that can exist between two people sharing a bed.</p>

<p>Pop Song is a book about all the routes by which we might escape our own needs before finally finding a way home. There is heartache in these pages, but Pham&#39;s electric ways of seeing create a perfectly fractured portrait of modern intimacy that is triumphant in both its vulnerability and restlessness.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Larissa Pham is an artist and writer in Brooklyn. Born in Portland, Oregon, she studied painting and art history at Yale University. She has written essays and criticism for the Paris Review Daily, The Nation, Art in America, Guernica, and elsewhere. She was an inaugural Yi Dae Up fellowship recipient from the Jack Jones Literary Arts Retreat. She is also the author of Fantasian, a novella.</p>

<p>--</p>

<p>Like a song that feels written just for you, Larissa Pham&#39;s debut work of nonfiction captures the imagination and refuses to let go.</p>

<p>Pop Song is a book about love and about falling in love--with a place, or a painting, or a person--and the joy and terror inherent in the experience of that love. Plumbing the well of culture for clues and patterns about love and loss--from Agnes Martin&#39;s abstract paintings to James Turrell&#39;s transcendent light works, and Anne Carson&#39;s Eros the Bittersweet to Frank Ocean&#39;s Blonde--Pham writes of her youthful attempts to find meaning in travel, sex, drugs, and art, before sensing that she might need to turn her gaze upon herself.   </p>

<p>Pop Song is also a book about distances, near and far. As she travels from Taos, New Mexico, to Shanghai, China and beyond, Pham meditates on the miles we are willing to cover to get away from ourselves, or those who hurt us, and the impossible gaps that can exist between two people sharing a bed.</p>

<p>Pop Song is a book about all the routes by which we might escape our own needs before finally finding a way home. There is heartache in these pages, but Pham&#39;s electric ways of seeing create a perfectly fractured portrait of modern intimacy that is triumphant in both its vulnerability and restlessness.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 11: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Alex and Sruti</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/11</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">d206df60-2aab-4b06-b3ad-3e78e5793fdc</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 22 Apr 2021 09:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/d206df60-2aab-4b06-b3ad-3e78e5793fdc.mp3" length="33380326" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Librairie Saint-Henri Store Manager, and Weird Era Co-host and Weird Era Founder and Co-Host, Sruti, sit down and talk about the start of this project, the store's affinity for curation, and what we look for in literature.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>46:21</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/d206df60-2aab-4b06-b3ad-3e78e5793fdc/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Librairie Saint-Henri Store Manager, and Weird Era Co-host and Weird Era Founder and Co-Host, Sruti, sit down and talk about the start of this project, the store's affinity for curation, and what we look for in literature. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Librairie Saint-Henri Store Manager, and Weird Era Co-host and Weird Era Founder and Co-Host, Sruti, sit down and talk about the start of this project, the store&#39;s affinity for curation, and what we look for in literature.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Librairie Saint-Henri Store Manager, and Weird Era Co-host and Weird Era Founder and Co-Host, Sruti, sit down and talk about the start of this project, the store&#39;s affinity for curation, and what we look for in literature.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 10: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Syan Rose</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/10</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">d4949d9e-6ebd-4b37-8d39-79818110b8be</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/d4949d9e-6ebd-4b37-8d39-79818110b8be.mp3" length="31414686" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Syan Rose talks about different types of work, acupuncture, how to be a better ally, and the importance of amplifying marginalized voices.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>43:37</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/d4949d9e-6ebd-4b37-8d39-79818110b8be/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Syan Rose:
Syan Rose is an illustrator and comic artist whose work plays with both surrealist and representational imagery to approach topics of personal history, politics, accountability, and healing. Sheâ€™s been published in Bitch, Slate, Gay Magazine, Truthout, and Autostraddle, and has self-produced many comics and zines. Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer disabled femme writer and performer of Burgher/Tamil Sri Lankan and Irish/Roma ascent. Her most recent titles are the nonfiction book Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice (2018) and the poetry book Tonguebreaker (2019). Her memoir Dirty River was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award and a Publishing Triangle Award (Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction). She is also author of the poetry books Bodymap and Love Cake (Lambda Literary Award winner) and Consensual Genocide, and co-editor of The Revolution Starts At Home: Confronting Intimate Violence in Activist Communities. She is the co-founder of Mangos With Chili, North America's touring queer and trans people of colour cabaret, and is a lead artist with the disability justice incubator Sins Invalid.
About Our Work Is Everywhere: An Illustrated Oral History of Queer and Trans Resistance:
A visually stunning graphic non-fiction book on queer and trans resistance.
Over the past ten years, we have witnessed the rise of queer and trans communities that have defied and challenged those who have historically opposed them. Through bold, symbolic imagery and surrealist, overlapping landscapes, queer illustrator and curator Syan Rose shines a light on the faces and voices of these diverse, amorphous, messy, real, and imagined queer and trans communities.
In their own words, queer and trans organizers, artists, healers, comrades, and leaders speak honestly and authentically about their own experiences with power, love, pain, and magic to create a textured and nuanced portrait of queer and trans realities in America. The many themes include Black femme mental health, Pacific Islander authorship, fat queer performance art, disability and health care practice, sex worker activism, and much more. Accompanying the narratives are Rose's startling and sinuous images that brings these leaders' words to visual life.
Our Work Is Everywhere is a graphic non-fiction book that underscores the brilliance and passion of queer and trans resistance.
Includes a foreword by Lambda Literary Award-winning author and activist Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, author of Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice.
Full-colour throughout. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Syan Rose, Transgender, Trans, Graphic Novel, Gender</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Syan Rose:<br>
Syan Rose is an illustrator and comic artist whose work plays with both surrealist and representational imagery to approach topics of personal history, politics, accountability, and healing. Sheâ€™s been published in Bitch, Slate, Gay Magazine, Truthout, and Autostraddle, and has self-produced many comics and zines. Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer disabled femme writer and performer of Burgher/Tamil Sri Lankan and Irish/Roma ascent. Her most recent titles are the nonfiction book Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice (2018) and the poetry book Tonguebreaker (2019). Her memoir Dirty River was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award and a Publishing Triangle Award (Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction). She is also author of the poetry books Bodymap and Love Cake (Lambda Literary Award winner) and Consensual Genocide, and co-editor of The Revolution Starts At Home: Confronting Intimate Violence in Activist Communities. She is the co-founder of Mangos With Chili, North America&#39;s touring queer and trans people of colour cabaret, and is a lead artist with the disability justice incubator Sins Invalid.</p>

<p>About Our Work Is Everywhere: An Illustrated Oral History of Queer and Trans Resistance:<br>
A visually stunning graphic non-fiction book on queer and trans resistance.</p>

<p>Over the past ten years, we have witnessed the rise of queer and trans communities that have defied and challenged those who have historically opposed them. Through bold, symbolic imagery and surrealist, overlapping landscapes, queer illustrator and curator Syan Rose shines a light on the faces and voices of these diverse, amorphous, messy, real, and imagined queer and trans communities.</p>

<p>In their own words, queer and trans organizers, artists, healers, comrades, and leaders speak honestly and authentically about their own experiences with power, love, pain, and magic to create a textured and nuanced portrait of queer and trans realities in America. The many themes include Black femme mental health, Pacific Islander authorship, fat queer performance art, disability and health care practice, sex worker activism, and much more. Accompanying the narratives are Rose&#39;s startling and sinuous images that brings these leaders&#39; words to visual life.</p>

<p>Our Work Is Everywhere is a graphic non-fiction book that underscores the brilliance and passion of queer and trans resistance.</p>

<p>Includes a foreword by Lambda Literary Award-winning author and activist Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, author of Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice.</p>

<p>Full-colour throughout.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Syan Rose:<br>
Syan Rose is an illustrator and comic artist whose work plays with both surrealist and representational imagery to approach topics of personal history, politics, accountability, and healing. Sheâ€™s been published in Bitch, Slate, Gay Magazine, Truthout, and Autostraddle, and has self-produced many comics and zines. Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer disabled femme writer and performer of Burgher/Tamil Sri Lankan and Irish/Roma ascent. Her most recent titles are the nonfiction book Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice (2018) and the poetry book Tonguebreaker (2019). Her memoir Dirty River was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award and a Publishing Triangle Award (Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction). She is also author of the poetry books Bodymap and Love Cake (Lambda Literary Award winner) and Consensual Genocide, and co-editor of The Revolution Starts At Home: Confronting Intimate Violence in Activist Communities. She is the co-founder of Mangos With Chili, North America&#39;s touring queer and trans people of colour cabaret, and is a lead artist with the disability justice incubator Sins Invalid.</p>

<p>About Our Work Is Everywhere: An Illustrated Oral History of Queer and Trans Resistance:<br>
A visually stunning graphic non-fiction book on queer and trans resistance.</p>

<p>Over the past ten years, we have witnessed the rise of queer and trans communities that have defied and challenged those who have historically opposed them. Through bold, symbolic imagery and surrealist, overlapping landscapes, queer illustrator and curator Syan Rose shines a light on the faces and voices of these diverse, amorphous, messy, real, and imagined queer and trans communities.</p>

<p>In their own words, queer and trans organizers, artists, healers, comrades, and leaders speak honestly and authentically about their own experiences with power, love, pain, and magic to create a textured and nuanced portrait of queer and trans realities in America. The many themes include Black femme mental health, Pacific Islander authorship, fat queer performance art, disability and health care practice, sex worker activism, and much more. Accompanying the narratives are Rose&#39;s startling and sinuous images that brings these leaders&#39; words to visual life.</p>

<p>Our Work Is Everywhere is a graphic non-fiction book that underscores the brilliance and passion of queer and trans resistance.</p>

<p>Includes a foreword by Lambda Literary Award-winning author and activist Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, author of Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice.</p>

<p>Full-colour throughout.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 9: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Marlowe Granados</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/9</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">ba5f0eed-27cb-4dc9-bc91-d87e6384fd88</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 08 Apr 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/ba5f0eed-27cb-4dc9-bc91-d87e6384fd88.mp3" length="53757252" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Marlowe Granados talks about her debut novel Happy Hour, that time she beckoned Greta Gerwig, female friendships, what style means in text and in clothes, and much more.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>1:14:39</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/b/ba5f0eed-27cb-4dc9-bc91-d87e6384fd88/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Marlowe Granados:
Marlowe Granados is a writer and filmmaker. She co-hosts The Mean Reds, a podcast dedicated to women-led films, and her advice column, "Designs for Living," appears in The Baffler. Granados currently resides in Toronto. Happy Hour is her debut novel.
About Happy Hour:
Refreshing and wry in equal measure, Happy Hour is an intoxicatingnovel of youth well spent. Isa Epley is all of twenty-one years old, and already wise enough to understand that the purpose of life is the pursuit of pleasure. She arrives in New York City for a summer of adventure with her best friend, one newly blond Gala Novak. They have little money, but that’s hardly going to stop them from having a good time.
In her diary, Isa describes a sweltering summer in the glittering city. By day, the girls sell clothes in a market stall, pinching pennies for their Bed-Stuy sublet and bodega lunches. By night, they weave from Brooklyn to the Upper East Side to the Hamptons among a rotating cast of celebrities, artists, Internet entrepreneurs, stuffy intellectuals, and bad-mannered grifters. Resources run ever tighter and the strain tests their friendship as they try to convert their social capital into something more lasting than precarious gigs as au pairs, nightclub hostesses, paid audience members, and aspiring foot fetish models. Through it all, Isa’s bold, beguiling voice captures the precise thrill of cultivating a life of glamour and intrigue as she juggles paying her dues with skipping out on the bill.
Happy Hour is a novel about getting by and looking great in a system that wants you to do neither. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Marlowe Granados, Happy Hour, Flying Books, Verso Books</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Marlowe Granados:<br>
Marlowe Granados is a writer and filmmaker. She co-hosts The Mean Reds, a podcast dedicated to women-led films, and her advice column, &quot;Designs for Living,&quot; appears in The Baffler. Granados currently resides in Toronto. Happy Hour is her debut novel.</p>

<p>About Happy Hour:<br>
Refreshing and wry in equal measure, Happy Hour is an intoxicatingnovel of youth well spent. Isa Epley is all of twenty-one years old, and already wise enough to understand that the purpose of life is the pursuit of pleasure. She arrives in New York City for a summer of adventure with her best friend, one newly blond Gala Novak. They have little money, but that’s hardly going to stop them from having a good time.</p>

<p>In her diary, Isa describes a sweltering summer in the glittering city. By day, the girls sell clothes in a market stall, pinching pennies for their Bed-Stuy sublet and bodega lunches. By night, they weave from Brooklyn to the Upper East Side to the Hamptons among a rotating cast of celebrities, artists, Internet entrepreneurs, stuffy intellectuals, and bad-mannered grifters. Resources run ever tighter and the strain tests their friendship as they try to convert their social capital into something more lasting than precarious gigs as au pairs, nightclub hostesses, paid audience members, and aspiring foot fetish models. Through it all, Isa’s bold, beguiling voice captures the precise thrill of cultivating a life of glamour and intrigue as she juggles paying her dues with skipping out on the bill.</p>

<p>Happy Hour is a novel about getting by and looking great in a system that wants you to do neither.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Marlowe Granados:<br>
Marlowe Granados is a writer and filmmaker. She co-hosts The Mean Reds, a podcast dedicated to women-led films, and her advice column, &quot;Designs for Living,&quot; appears in The Baffler. Granados currently resides in Toronto. Happy Hour is her debut novel.</p>

<p>About Happy Hour:<br>
Refreshing and wry in equal measure, Happy Hour is an intoxicatingnovel of youth well spent. Isa Epley is all of twenty-one years old, and already wise enough to understand that the purpose of life is the pursuit of pleasure. She arrives in New York City for a summer of adventure with her best friend, one newly blond Gala Novak. They have little money, but that’s hardly going to stop them from having a good time.</p>

<p>In her diary, Isa describes a sweltering summer in the glittering city. By day, the girls sell clothes in a market stall, pinching pennies for their Bed-Stuy sublet and bodega lunches. By night, they weave from Brooklyn to the Upper East Side to the Hamptons among a rotating cast of celebrities, artists, Internet entrepreneurs, stuffy intellectuals, and bad-mannered grifters. Resources run ever tighter and the strain tests their friendship as they try to convert their social capital into something more lasting than precarious gigs as au pairs, nightclub hostesses, paid audience members, and aspiring foot fetish models. Through it all, Isa’s bold, beguiling voice captures the precise thrill of cultivating a life of glamour and intrigue as she juggles paying her dues with skipping out on the bill.</p>

<p>Happy Hour is a novel about getting by and looking great in a system that wants you to do neither.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 8: LSHB's Weird Era feat. andrea bennet</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/8</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/de70f848-3945-4392-9e20-59fc82c85670.mp3" length="42225393" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>58:38</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/de70f848-3945-4392-9e20-59fc82c85670/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About andrea bennet:
andrea bennett is a National Magazine Award-winning writer and editor and the author of one book of poetry (Canoodlers, Nightwood Editions) and two travel guides (Montreal and Quebec City, Moon Guides). Like a Boy but Not a Boy is andrea's first book of essays.
About Like A Boy but Not a Boy:
Inquisitive and expansive, Like a Boy but Not a Boy explores author andrea bennett's experiences with gender expectations, being a non-binary parent, and the sometimes funny and sometimes difficult task of living in a body. The book's fourteen essays also delve incisively into the interconnected themes of mental illness, mortality, creative work, class, and bike mechanics (apparently you can learn a lot about yourself through trueing a wheel).
In "Tomboy," andrea articulates what it means to live in a gender in-between space, and why one might be necessary; "37 Jobs 21 Houses" interrogates the notion that the key to a better life is working hard and moving house. And interspersed throughout the book is "Everyone Is Sober and No One Can Drive," sixteen stories about queer millennials who grew up and came of age in small Canadian communities.
With the same poignant spirit as Ivan Coyote's Tomboy Survival Guide, Like a Boy addresses the struggle to find acceptance, and to accept oneself; and how one can find one's place while learning to make space for others. The book also wonders what it means to be an atheist and search for faith that everything will be okay; what it means to learn how to love life even as you obsess over its brevity; and how to give birth, to bring new life, at what feels like the end of the world.
With thoughtfulness and acute observation, andrea bennett reveals intimate truths about the human experience, whether one is outside the gender binary or not. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About andrea bennet:<br>
andrea bennett is a National Magazine Award-winning writer and editor and the author of one book of poetry (Canoodlers, Nightwood Editions) and two travel guides (Montreal and Quebec City, Moon Guides). Like a Boy but Not a Boy is andrea&#39;s first book of essays.</p>

<p>About Like A Boy but Not a Boy:<br>
Inquisitive and expansive, Like a Boy but Not a Boy explores author andrea bennett&#39;s experiences with gender expectations, being a non-binary parent, and the sometimes funny and sometimes difficult task of living in a body. The book&#39;s fourteen essays also delve incisively into the interconnected themes of mental illness, mortality, creative work, class, and bike mechanics (apparently you can learn a lot about yourself through trueing a wheel).</p>

<p>In &quot;Tomboy,&quot; andrea articulates what it means to live in a gender in-between space, and why one might be necessary; &quot;37 Jobs 21 Houses&quot; interrogates the notion that the key to a better life is working hard and moving house. And interspersed throughout the book is &quot;Everyone Is Sober and No One Can Drive,&quot; sixteen stories about queer millennials who grew up and came of age in small Canadian communities.</p>

<p>With the same poignant spirit as Ivan Coyote&#39;s Tomboy Survival Guide, Like a Boy addresses the struggle to find acceptance, and to accept oneself; and how one can find one&#39;s place while learning to make space for others. The book also wonders what it means to be an atheist and search for faith that everything will be okay; what it means to learn how to love life even as you obsess over its brevity; and how to give birth, to bring new life, at what feels like the end of the world.</p>

<p>With thoughtfulness and acute observation, andrea bennett reveals intimate truths about the human experience, whether one is outside the gender binary or not.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About andrea bennet:<br>
andrea bennett is a National Magazine Award-winning writer and editor and the author of one book of poetry (Canoodlers, Nightwood Editions) and two travel guides (Montreal and Quebec City, Moon Guides). Like a Boy but Not a Boy is andrea&#39;s first book of essays.</p>

<p>About Like A Boy but Not a Boy:<br>
Inquisitive and expansive, Like a Boy but Not a Boy explores author andrea bennett&#39;s experiences with gender expectations, being a non-binary parent, and the sometimes funny and sometimes difficult task of living in a body. The book&#39;s fourteen essays also delve incisively into the interconnected themes of mental illness, mortality, creative work, class, and bike mechanics (apparently you can learn a lot about yourself through trueing a wheel).</p>

<p>In &quot;Tomboy,&quot; andrea articulates what it means to live in a gender in-between space, and why one might be necessary; &quot;37 Jobs 21 Houses&quot; interrogates the notion that the key to a better life is working hard and moving house. And interspersed throughout the book is &quot;Everyone Is Sober and No One Can Drive,&quot; sixteen stories about queer millennials who grew up and came of age in small Canadian communities.</p>

<p>With the same poignant spirit as Ivan Coyote&#39;s Tomboy Survival Guide, Like a Boy addresses the struggle to find acceptance, and to accept oneself; and how one can find one&#39;s place while learning to make space for others. The book also wonders what it means to be an atheist and search for faith that everything will be okay; what it means to learn how to love life even as you obsess over its brevity; and how to give birth, to bring new life, at what feels like the end of the world.</p>

<p>With thoughtfulness and acute observation, andrea bennett reveals intimate truths about the human experience, whether one is outside the gender binary or not.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 7: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Hilary Leichter</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/7</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/40524eb9-7d25-465b-aad3-cb04901f12c4.mp3" length="33128054" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Hilary Leichter discusses adventure novels, in childhood and adulthood, waiting for our lives to start, and how writers can be their own ideal readers.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>45:20</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/4/40524eb9-7d25-465b-aad3-cb04901f12c4/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Hilary Leichter:
Hilary Leichter's writing has appeared in n+1, the New Yorker, the Cut, the Southern Review, and elsewhere. She has taught fiction at Columbia University and has been awarded fellowships from the Folger Shakespeare Library and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.
About Temporary:
In Temporary, a young woman’s workplace is the size of the world. She fills increasingly bizarre placements in search of steadiness, connection, and something, at last, to call her own. Whether it’s shining an endless closet of shoes, swabbing the deck of a pirate ship, assisting an assassin, or filling in for the Chairman of the Board, for the mythical Temporary, “there is nothing more personal than doing your job.” 
This riveting quest, at once hilarious and profound, will resonate with anyone who has ever done their best at work, even when the work is only temporary. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Hilary Leichter, Temporary</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Hilary Leichter:<br>
Hilary Leichter&#39;s writing has appeared in n+1, the New Yorker, the Cut, the Southern Review, and elsewhere. She has taught fiction at Columbia University and has been awarded fellowships from the Folger Shakespeare Library and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.</p>

<p>About Temporary:<br>
In Temporary, a young woman’s workplace is the size of the world. She fills increasingly bizarre placements in search of steadiness, connection, and something, at last, to call her own. Whether it’s shining an endless closet of shoes, swabbing the deck of a pirate ship, assisting an assassin, or filling in for the Chairman of the Board, for the mythical Temporary, “there is nothing more personal than doing your job.” </p>

<p>This riveting quest, at once hilarious and profound, will resonate with anyone who has ever done their best at work, even when the work is only temporary.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Hilary Leichter:<br>
Hilary Leichter&#39;s writing has appeared in n+1, the New Yorker, the Cut, the Southern Review, and elsewhere. She has taught fiction at Columbia University and has been awarded fellowships from the Folger Shakespeare Library and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.</p>

<p>About Temporary:<br>
In Temporary, a young woman’s workplace is the size of the world. She fills increasingly bizarre placements in search of steadiness, connection, and something, at last, to call her own. Whether it’s shining an endless closet of shoes, swabbing the deck of a pirate ship, assisting an assassin, or filling in for the Chairman of the Board, for the mythical Temporary, “there is nothing more personal than doing your job.” </p>

<p>This riveting quest, at once hilarious and profound, will resonate with anyone who has ever done their best at work, even when the work is only temporary.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 6: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Katherine Angel</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/6</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 18 Mar 2021 21:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/d4b3f508-6b16-40d2-8a2e-a722527d5a1a.mp3" length="38166096" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Katherine Angel discusses her latest book, Sex Will Be Good Again Tomorrow, consent, desire, and how to shift the #metoo movement to better benefit all members of society.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>53:00</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/d4b3f508-6b16-40d2-8a2e-a722527d5a1a/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Katherine Angel:
Katherine Angel is the author of Unmastered, Most Difficult to Tell and Daddy Issues. She directs the MA in Creative and Critical Writing at Birkbeck, University of London, and has a PhD from the University of Cambridge.
About Sex Will be Good Again Tomorrow:
Women are in a bind. In the name of consent and empowerment, they must proclaim their desires clearly and confidently. Yet sex researchers suggest that women’s desire is often slow to emerge. And men are keen to insist that they know what women—and their bodies—want. Meanwhile, sexual violence abounds. How can women, in this environment, possibly know what they want? And why do we expect them to?
In this elegant, searching book—spanning science and popular culture; pornography and literature; debates on Me-Too, consent and feminism—Katherine Angel challenges our assumptions about women’s desire. Why, she asks, should they be expected to know their desires? And how do we take sexual violence seriously, when not knowing what we want is key to both eroticism and personhood?
In today’s crucial moment of renewed attention to violence and power, Angel urges that we remake our thinking about sex, pleasure, and autonomy without any illusions about perfect self-knowledge. Only then will we fulfil Michel Foucault’s teasing promise, in 1976, that “tomorrow sex will be good again.” 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Katherine Angel, Foucault, Consent, Metoo, #Metoo, Desire, Sex Positivity</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Katherine Angel:<br>
Katherine Angel is the author of Unmastered, Most Difficult to Tell and Daddy Issues. She directs the MA in Creative and Critical Writing at Birkbeck, University of London, and has a PhD from the University of Cambridge.</p>

<p>About Sex Will be Good Again Tomorrow:<br>
Women are in a bind. In the name of consent and empowerment, they must proclaim their desires clearly and confidently. Yet sex researchers suggest that women’s desire is often slow to emerge. And men are keen to insist that they know what women—and their bodies—want. Meanwhile, sexual violence abounds. How can women, in this environment, possibly know what they want? And why do we expect them to?</p>

<p>In this elegant, searching book—spanning science and popular culture; pornography and literature; debates on Me-Too, consent and feminism—Katherine Angel challenges our assumptions about women’s desire. Why, she asks, should they be expected to know their desires? And how do we take sexual violence seriously, when not knowing what we want is key to both eroticism and personhood?</p>

<p>In today’s crucial moment of renewed attention to violence and power, Angel urges that we remake our thinking about sex, pleasure, and autonomy without any illusions about perfect self-knowledge. Only then will we fulfil Michel Foucault’s teasing promise, in 1976, that “tomorrow sex will be good again.”</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Katherine Angel:<br>
Katherine Angel is the author of Unmastered, Most Difficult to Tell and Daddy Issues. She directs the MA in Creative and Critical Writing at Birkbeck, University of London, and has a PhD from the University of Cambridge.</p>

<p>About Sex Will be Good Again Tomorrow:<br>
Women are in a bind. In the name of consent and empowerment, they must proclaim their desires clearly and confidently. Yet sex researchers suggest that women’s desire is often slow to emerge. And men are keen to insist that they know what women—and their bodies—want. Meanwhile, sexual violence abounds. How can women, in this environment, possibly know what they want? And why do we expect them to?</p>

<p>In this elegant, searching book—spanning science and popular culture; pornography and literature; debates on Me-Too, consent and feminism—Katherine Angel challenges our assumptions about women’s desire. Why, she asks, should they be expected to know their desires? And how do we take sexual violence seriously, when not knowing what we want is key to both eroticism and personhood?</p>

<p>In today’s crucial moment of renewed attention to violence and power, Angel urges that we remake our thinking about sex, pleasure, and autonomy without any illusions about perfect self-knowledge. Only then will we fulfil Michel Foucault’s teasing promise, in 1976, that “tomorrow sex will be good again.”</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 5: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Christine Smallwood</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/5</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">06abdda9-e21d-4265-84dd-d8a185c0a078</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 11 Mar 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/06abdda9-e21d-4265-84dd-d8a185c0a078.mp3" length="32064787" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Author and Critic Christine Smallwood discusses her debut novel, The Life of the Mind: ambient doubleness, waste, and a critic's sense of humour.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>44:32</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/0/06abdda9-e21d-4265-84dd-d8a185c0a078/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Christine Smallwood:
Christine Smallwood’s fiction has appeared in The Paris Review, n+1, and Vice. Her reviews, essays, and cultural reporting have been published in many magazines, including The New Yorker, Bookforum, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and The New York Times Magazine, where she is a contributing writer. She has also written the “New Books” column for Harper’s Magazine, where she is a contributing editor, and been an editor at The Nation. She has a PhD in English from Columbia University, is a founding faculty member of the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research, and is a fellow at the New York Institute for the Humanities.
About The Life of the Mind:
As an adjunct professor of English in New York City with no hope of finding a permanent position, Dorothy feels “like a janitor in the temple who continued to sweep because she had nowhere else to be but who had lost her belief in the essential sanctity of the enterprise.” No one but her boyfriend knows that she’s just had a miscarriage, not even her therapists—Dorothy has two of them. Nor can she bring herself to tell the other women in her life: her friends, her doctor, her mentor, her mother. The freedom not to be a mother is one of the victories of feminism. So why does she feel like a failure?
Piercingly intelligent and darkly funny, The Life of the Mind is a novel about endings: of youth, of professional aspiration, of possibility, of the illusion that our minds can ever free us from the tyranny of our bodies. And yet Dorothy’s mind is all she has to make sense of a world largely out of her control, one where disaster looms and is already here, where things happen but there is no plot. There is meaning, however, if Dorothy figures out where to look, and as the weeks pass and the bleeding subsides, she finds it in the most unlikely places, from a Las Vegas poolside to a living room karaoke session. In literature—as Dorothy well knows—stories end. But life, as they say, goes on. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Christine Smallwood, The Life of the Mind, Miscarriage, Motherhood, Feminism</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Christine Smallwood:<br>
Christine Smallwood’s fiction has appeared in The Paris Review, n+1, and Vice. Her reviews, essays, and cultural reporting have been published in many magazines, including The New Yorker, Bookforum, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and The New York Times Magazine, where she is a contributing writer. She has also written the “New Books” column for Harper’s Magazine, where she is a contributing editor, and been an editor at The Nation. She has a PhD in English from Columbia University, is a founding faculty member of the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research, and is a fellow at the New York Institute for the Humanities.</p>

<p>About The Life of the Mind:<br>
As an adjunct professor of English in New York City with no hope of finding a permanent position, Dorothy feels “like a janitor in the temple who continued to sweep because she had nowhere else to be but who had lost her belief in the essential sanctity of the enterprise.” No one but her boyfriend knows that she’s just had a miscarriage, not even her therapists—Dorothy has two of them. Nor can she bring herself to tell the other women in her life: her friends, her doctor, her mentor, her mother. The freedom not to be a mother is one of the victories of feminism. So why does she feel like a failure?</p>

<p>Piercingly intelligent and darkly funny, The Life of the Mind is a novel about endings: of youth, of professional aspiration, of possibility, of the illusion that our minds can ever free us from the tyranny of our bodies. And yet Dorothy’s mind is all she has to make sense of a world largely out of her control, one where disaster looms and is already here, where things happen but there is no plot. There is meaning, however, if Dorothy figures out where to look, and as the weeks pass and the bleeding subsides, she finds it in the most unlikely places, from a Las Vegas poolside to a living room karaoke session. In literature—as Dorothy well knows—stories end. But life, as they say, goes on.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Christine Smallwood:<br>
Christine Smallwood’s fiction has appeared in The Paris Review, n+1, and Vice. Her reviews, essays, and cultural reporting have been published in many magazines, including The New Yorker, Bookforum, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and The New York Times Magazine, where she is a contributing writer. She has also written the “New Books” column for Harper’s Magazine, where she is a contributing editor, and been an editor at The Nation. She has a PhD in English from Columbia University, is a founding faculty member of the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research, and is a fellow at the New York Institute for the Humanities.</p>

<p>About The Life of the Mind:<br>
As an adjunct professor of English in New York City with no hope of finding a permanent position, Dorothy feels “like a janitor in the temple who continued to sweep because she had nowhere else to be but who had lost her belief in the essential sanctity of the enterprise.” No one but her boyfriend knows that she’s just had a miscarriage, not even her therapists—Dorothy has two of them. Nor can she bring herself to tell the other women in her life: her friends, her doctor, her mentor, her mother. The freedom not to be a mother is one of the victories of feminism. So why does she feel like a failure?</p>

<p>Piercingly intelligent and darkly funny, The Life of the Mind is a novel about endings: of youth, of professional aspiration, of possibility, of the illusion that our minds can ever free us from the tyranny of our bodies. And yet Dorothy’s mind is all she has to make sense of a world largely out of her control, one where disaster looms and is already here, where things happen but there is no plot. There is meaning, however, if Dorothy figures out where to look, and as the weeks pass and the bleeding subsides, she finds it in the most unlikely places, from a Las Vegas poolside to a living room karaoke session. In literature—as Dorothy well knows—stories end. But life, as they say, goes on.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 4: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Francesca Ekwuyasi</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/4</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 04 Mar 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/c0f716fa-7788-4766-9924-2b07c7985b64.mp3" length="31751787" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Alex talks to Francesca Ekwuyasi about her novel Butter Honey Pig Bread, food, and her 2021 Canada Reads nomination.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>44:05</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/c/c0f716fa-7788-4766-9924-2b07c7985b64/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>About Francesca Ekwuyasi:
Francesca Ekwuyasi is a writer, artist, and filmmaker born in Lagos, Nigeria. Her work explores themes of faith, family, queerness, consumption, loneliness, and belonging. Her writing has been published in Winter Tangerine Review, Brittle Paper, Transition Magazine, the Malahat Review, Visual Art News, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, and GUTS magazine. Her story "Orun is Heaven" was longlisted for the 2019 Journey Prize. Butter Honey Pig Bread, longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, is her first novel.
About Butter Honey Pig Bread:
Butter Honey Pig Bread is a story of choices and their consequences, of motherhood, of the malleable line between the spirit and the mind, of finding new homes and mending old ones, of voracious appetites, of queer love, of friendship, faith, and above all, family. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Butter Honey Pig BreadMontreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Canada Reads, Francesca Ekwuyasi, Canadian Black Authors</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Francesca Ekwuyasi:<br>
Francesca Ekwuyasi is a writer, artist, and filmmaker born in Lagos, Nigeria. Her work explores themes of faith, family, queerness, consumption, loneliness, and belonging. Her writing has been published in Winter Tangerine Review, Brittle Paper, Transition Magazine, the Malahat Review, Visual Art News, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, and GUTS magazine. Her story &quot;Orun is Heaven&quot; was longlisted for the 2019 Journey Prize. Butter Honey Pig Bread, longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, is her first novel.</p>

<p>About Butter Honey Pig Bread:<br>
Butter Honey Pig Bread is a story of choices and their consequences, of motherhood, of the malleable line between the spirit and the mind, of finding new homes and mending old ones, of voracious appetites, of queer love, of friendship, faith, and above all, family.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Francesca Ekwuyasi:<br>
Francesca Ekwuyasi is a writer, artist, and filmmaker born in Lagos, Nigeria. Her work explores themes of faith, family, queerness, consumption, loneliness, and belonging. Her writing has been published in Winter Tangerine Review, Brittle Paper, Transition Magazine, the Malahat Review, Visual Art News, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, and GUTS magazine. Her story &quot;Orun is Heaven&quot; was longlisted for the 2019 Journey Prize. Butter Honey Pig Bread, longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, is her first novel.</p>

<p>About Butter Honey Pig Bread:<br>
Butter Honey Pig Bread is a story of choices and their consequences, of motherhood, of the malleable line between the spirit and the mind, of finding new homes and mending old ones, of voracious appetites, of queer love, of friendship, faith, and above all, family.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 3: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Joni Murphy</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/3</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 18 Feb 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/0aa52a55-9046-4d8a-8aa7-2c827de1da2d.mp3" length="79564801" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Joni Murphy, author of Talking Animals, discusses capitalism, academia, and puns.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>32:54</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/0/0aa52a55-9046-4d8a-8aa7-2c827de1da2d/cover.jpg?v=2"/>
  <description>About Joni Murphy:
Joni Murphy is from New Mexico and lives in New York. Her debut novel, Double Teenage, was published in 2016 and was named one of the Globe and Mail's 100 Best Books of the year.
About Talking Animals:
A fable for our times, Joni Murphy's Talking Animals takes place in an all-animal world where creatures rather like us are forced to deal with an all-too-familiar landscape of soul-crushing jobs, polluted oceans, and a creeping sense of doom.It's New York City, nowish. Lemurs brew espresso. Birds tend bar. There are bears on Wall Street, and a billionaire racehorse is mayor. Sea creatures are viewed with fear and disgust and there's chatter about building a wall to keep them out.Alfonzo is a moody alpaca. His friend Mitchell is a sociable llama. They both work at City Hall, but their true passions are noise music and underground politics. Partly to meet girls, partly because the world might be ending, these lowly bureaucrats embark on an unlikely mission to expose the corrupt system that's destroying the city from within. Their project takes them from the city's bowels to its extremities, where they encounter the Sea Equality Revolutionary Front, who are either a group of dangerous radicals or an inspiring liberation movement.In this novel, at last, nature kvetches and grieves, while talking animals offer us a kind of solace in the guise of dumb jokes. This is mass extinction as told by BoJack Horseman. This is The Fantastic Mr. Fox journeying through Kafka's Amerika. This is dogs and cats, living together. Talking Animals is an urgent allegory about friendship, art, and the elemental struggle to change one's life under the low ceiling of capitalism. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Joni Murphy:<br>
Joni Murphy is from New Mexico and lives in New York. Her debut novel, Double Teenage, was published in 2016 and was named one of the Globe and Mail&#39;s 100 Best Books of the year.</p>

<p>About Talking Animals:<br>
A fable for our times, Joni Murphy&#39;s Talking Animals takes place in an all-animal world where creatures rather like us are forced to deal with an all-too-familiar landscape of soul-crushing jobs, polluted oceans, and a creeping sense of doom.It&#39;s New York City, nowish. Lemurs brew espresso. Birds tend bar. There are bears on Wall Street, and a billionaire racehorse is mayor. Sea creatures are viewed with fear and disgust and there&#39;s chatter about building a wall to keep them out.Alfonzo is a moody alpaca. His friend Mitchell is a sociable llama. They both work at City Hall, but their true passions are noise music and underground politics. Partly to meet girls, partly because the world might be ending, these lowly bureaucrats embark on an unlikely mission to expose the corrupt system that&#39;s destroying the city from within. Their project takes them from the city&#39;s bowels to its extremities, where they encounter the Sea Equality Revolutionary Front, who are either a group of dangerous radicals or an inspiring liberation movement.In this novel, at last, nature kvetches and grieves, while talking animals offer us a kind of solace in the guise of dumb jokes. This is mass extinction as told by BoJack Horseman. This is The Fantastic Mr. Fox journeying through Kafka&#39;s Amerika. This is dogs and cats, living together. Talking Animals is an urgent allegory about friendship, art, and the elemental struggle to change one&#39;s life under the low ceiling of capitalism.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Joni Murphy:<br>
Joni Murphy is from New Mexico and lives in New York. Her debut novel, Double Teenage, was published in 2016 and was named one of the Globe and Mail&#39;s 100 Best Books of the year.</p>

<p>About Talking Animals:<br>
A fable for our times, Joni Murphy&#39;s Talking Animals takes place in an all-animal world where creatures rather like us are forced to deal with an all-too-familiar landscape of soul-crushing jobs, polluted oceans, and a creeping sense of doom.It&#39;s New York City, nowish. Lemurs brew espresso. Birds tend bar. There are bears on Wall Street, and a billionaire racehorse is mayor. Sea creatures are viewed with fear and disgust and there&#39;s chatter about building a wall to keep them out.Alfonzo is a moody alpaca. His friend Mitchell is a sociable llama. They both work at City Hall, but their true passions are noise music and underground politics. Partly to meet girls, partly because the world might be ending, these lowly bureaucrats embark on an unlikely mission to expose the corrupt system that&#39;s destroying the city from within. Their project takes them from the city&#39;s bowels to its extremities, where they encounter the Sea Equality Revolutionary Front, who are either a group of dangerous radicals or an inspiring liberation movement.In this novel, at last, nature kvetches and grieves, while talking animals offer us a kind of solace in the guise of dumb jokes. This is mass extinction as told by BoJack Horseman. This is The Fantastic Mr. Fox journeying through Kafka&#39;s Amerika. This is dogs and cats, living together. Talking Animals is an urgent allegory about friendship, art, and the elemental struggle to change one&#39;s life under the low ceiling of capitalism.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 2: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Lauren Oyler</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/2</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 11 Feb 2021 21:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/7c20f2ff-7ed4-4653-b584-52aa2606b1b4.mp3" length="99818442" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Lauren Oyler discusses her debut novel Fake Accounts: book criticism, relationship anarchy, and moral purity.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>41:13</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/7/7c20f2ff-7ed4-4653-b584-52aa2606b1b4/cover.jpg?v=2"/>
  <description>About Lauren Oyler:
Lauren Oyler's essays on books and culture have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, London Review of Books, The Guardian, New York magazine's The Cut, The New Republic, Bookforum, and elsewhere. Born and raised in West Virginia, she now divides her time between New York and Berlin.
About Fake Accounts:
On the eve of Donald Trump's inauguration, a young woman snoops through her boyfriend's phone and makes a startling discovery: he's an anonymous internet conspiracy theorist, and a popular one at that. Already fluent in internet fakery, irony, and outrage, she's not exactly shocked by the revelation. Actually, she's relieved--he was always a little distant--and she plots to end their floundering relationship while on a trip to the Women's March in DC. But this is only the first in a series of bizarre twists that expose a world whose truths are shaped by online lies.
Suddenly left with no reason to stay in New York and increasingly alienated from her friends and colleagues, our unnamed narrator flees to Berlin, embarking on her own cycles of manipulation in the deceptive spaces of her daily life, from dating apps to expat meetups, open-plan offices to bureaucratic waiting rooms. She begins to think she can't trust anyone--shouldn't the feeling be mutual?
Narrated with seductive confidence and subversive wit, Fake Accounts challenges the way current conversations about the self and community, delusions and gaslighting, and fiction and reality play out in the internet age. 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Fake Accounts, Lauren Oyler</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Lauren Oyler:<br>
Lauren Oyler&#39;s essays on books and culture have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, London Review of Books, The Guardian, New York magazine&#39;s The Cut, The New Republic, Bookforum, and elsewhere. Born and raised in West Virginia, she now divides her time between New York and Berlin.</p>

<p>About Fake Accounts:<br>
On the eve of Donald Trump&#39;s inauguration, a young woman snoops through her boyfriend&#39;s phone and makes a startling discovery: he&#39;s an anonymous internet conspiracy theorist, and a popular one at that. Already fluent in internet fakery, irony, and outrage, she&#39;s not exactly shocked by the revelation. Actually, she&#39;s relieved--he was always a little distant--and she plots to end their floundering relationship while on a trip to the Women&#39;s March in DC. But this is only the first in a series of bizarre twists that expose a world whose truths are shaped by online lies.</p>

<p>Suddenly left with no reason to stay in New York and increasingly alienated from her friends and colleagues, our unnamed narrator flees to Berlin, embarking on her own cycles of manipulation in the deceptive spaces of her daily life, from dating apps to expat meetups, open-plan offices to bureaucratic waiting rooms. She begins to think she can&#39;t trust anyone--shouldn&#39;t the feeling be mutual?</p>

<p>Narrated with seductive confidence and subversive wit, Fake Accounts challenges the way current conversations about the self and community, delusions and gaslighting, and fiction and reality play out in the internet age.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Lauren Oyler:<br>
Lauren Oyler&#39;s essays on books and culture have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, London Review of Books, The Guardian, New York magazine&#39;s The Cut, The New Republic, Bookforum, and elsewhere. Born and raised in West Virginia, she now divides her time between New York and Berlin.</p>

<p>About Fake Accounts:<br>
On the eve of Donald Trump&#39;s inauguration, a young woman snoops through her boyfriend&#39;s phone and makes a startling discovery: he&#39;s an anonymous internet conspiracy theorist, and a popular one at that. Already fluent in internet fakery, irony, and outrage, she&#39;s not exactly shocked by the revelation. Actually, she&#39;s relieved--he was always a little distant--and she plots to end their floundering relationship while on a trip to the Women&#39;s March in DC. But this is only the first in a series of bizarre twists that expose a world whose truths are shaped by online lies.</p>

<p>Suddenly left with no reason to stay in New York and increasingly alienated from her friends and colleagues, our unnamed narrator flees to Berlin, embarking on her own cycles of manipulation in the deceptive spaces of her daily life, from dating apps to expat meetups, open-plan offices to bureaucratic waiting rooms. She begins to think she can&#39;t trust anyone--shouldn&#39;t the feeling be mutual?</p>

<p>Narrated with seductive confidence and subversive wit, Fake Accounts challenges the way current conversations about the self and community, delusions and gaslighting, and fiction and reality play out in the internet age.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Episode 1: LSHB's Weird Era feat. Torrey Peters</title>
  <link>https://snowy-dew-6832.fireside.fm/1</link>
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  <pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2021 08:30:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Weird Era</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/d94176fc-8946-42c3-883f-87e457e0d6f3.mp3" length="84035725" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
  <itunes:author>Weird Era</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Bookseller, Sruti Islam, sits down to discuss Detransition, Baby—a debut novel by Torrey Peters.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>34:41</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/aa758402-506c-4cb6-90e5-34ca75cb33d2/episodes/d/d94176fc-8946-42c3-883f-87e457e0d6f3/cover.jpg?v=2"/>
  <description>About Torrey Peters:
Torrey Peters is the author of the novellas Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones and The Masker, which are available for free on her website. She holds an MFA from the University of Iowa and an MA in Comparative Literature from Dartmouth. She grew up in Chicago and now lives in Brooklyn.
About Detransition, Baby:
Reese almost had it all: a loving relationship with Amy, an apartment in New York City, a job she didn’t hate. She had scraped together what previous generations of trans women could only dream of: a life of mundane, bourgeois comforts. The only thing missing was a child. But then her girlfriend, Amy, detransitioned and became Ames, and everything fell apart. Now Reese is caught in a self-destructive pattern: avoiding her loneliness by sleeping with married men.
Ames isn’t happy either. He thought detransitioning to live as a man would make life easier, but that decision cost him his relationship with Reese—and losing her meant losing his only family. Even though their romance is over, he longs to find a way back to her. When Ames’s boss and lover, Katrina, reveals that she’s pregnant with his baby—and that she’s not sure whether she wants to keep it—Ames wonders if this is the chance he’s been waiting for. Could the three of them form some kind of unconventional family—and raise the baby together?
This provocative debut is about what happens at the emotional, messy, vulnerable corners of womanhood that platitudes and good intentions can’t reach. Torrey Peters brilliantly and fearlessly navigates the most dangerous taboos around gender, sex, and relationships, gifting us a thrillingly original, witty, and deeply moving novel.
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Bookstore, Books, Fiction, Literature, Bookclub, Authors, Interviews, 2021books, Montreal, Montrealbookstore, Indiebooks, Indiebookstore, Sthenri, Bookish, MTL, Librairiesthenribooks, LSHB, Weirdera, Weirderapod, Torrey Peters, Detransition Baby, Transgender, Trans, Detransitioning, Sexuality, Gender, Motherhood</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Torrey Peters:<br>
Torrey Peters is the author of the novellas Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones and The Masker, which are available for free on her website. She holds an MFA from the University of Iowa and an MA in Comparative Literature from Dartmouth. She grew up in Chicago and now lives in Brooklyn.</p>

<p>About Detransition, Baby:<br>
Reese almost had it all: a loving relationship with Amy, an apartment in New York City, a job she didn’t hate. She had scraped together what previous generations of trans women could only dream of: a life of mundane, bourgeois comforts. The only thing missing was a child. But then her girlfriend, Amy, detransitioned and became Ames, and everything fell apart. Now Reese is caught in a self-destructive pattern: avoiding her loneliness by sleeping with married men.</p>

<p>Ames isn’t happy either. He thought detransitioning to live as a man would make life easier, but that decision cost him his relationship with Reese—and losing her meant losing his only family. Even though their romance is over, he longs to find a way back to her. When Ames’s boss and lover, Katrina, reveals that she’s pregnant with his baby—and that she’s not sure whether she wants to keep it—Ames wonders if this is the chance he’s been waiting for. Could the three of them form some kind of unconventional family—and raise the baby together?</p>

<p>This provocative debut is about what happens at the emotional, messy, vulnerable corners of womanhood that platitudes and good intentions can’t reach. Torrey Peters brilliantly and fearlessly navigates the most dangerous taboos around gender, sex, and relationships, gifting us a thrillingly original, witty, and deeply moving novel.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>About Torrey Peters:<br>
Torrey Peters is the author of the novellas Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones and The Masker, which are available for free on her website. She holds an MFA from the University of Iowa and an MA in Comparative Literature from Dartmouth. She grew up in Chicago and now lives in Brooklyn.</p>

<p>About Detransition, Baby:<br>
Reese almost had it all: a loving relationship with Amy, an apartment in New York City, a job she didn’t hate. She had scraped together what previous generations of trans women could only dream of: a life of mundane, bourgeois comforts. The only thing missing was a child. But then her girlfriend, Amy, detransitioned and became Ames, and everything fell apart. Now Reese is caught in a self-destructive pattern: avoiding her loneliness by sleeping with married men.</p>

<p>Ames isn’t happy either. He thought detransitioning to live as a man would make life easier, but that decision cost him his relationship with Reese—and losing her meant losing his only family. Even though their romance is over, he longs to find a way back to her. When Ames’s boss and lover, Katrina, reveals that she’s pregnant with his baby—and that she’s not sure whether she wants to keep it—Ames wonders if this is the chance he’s been waiting for. Could the three of them form some kind of unconventional family—and raise the baby together?</p>

<p>This provocative debut is about what happens at the emotional, messy, vulnerable corners of womanhood that platitudes and good intentions can’t reach. Torrey Peters brilliantly and fearlessly navigates the most dangerous taboos around gender, sex, and relationships, gifting us a thrillingly original, witty, and deeply moving novel.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
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