Episodes

  • Episode 721: On Ballard, biography and books
    Apr 19 2026

    This week, Jonathan and Gary sit down and talk some new and forthcoming books, including our mutual choices for favorite book of the year so far.

    Gary starts by describing a book which he just finished and found particularly moving: The Illuminated Man: Life, Death and the Worlds of J. G. Ballard, Christopher Priest and Nina Allan, which he says reads more like a novel than a biography, with Priest’s final illness becoming a significant theme in portions written by Allan. They also discuss The Recollections: Fragments from a Life in Writing, a collection of Priest's writings from Briardene Books.

    Gary then goes on to recommend Frances Spufford's Nonesuch as his book of the year so far, Jonathan recommends S.L. Huang’s new novella The Language of Liars and then talks about what it’s like to reread The Fellowship of the Ring after a long tome.

    Of course, there are the usual digressions into things like the New Wave, the popularity of romantasy, the immense length of some literary classics, and other matters.

    As always, we hope you enjoy the episode!

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    59 mins
  • Episode 720: Alexandra Pierce, Ian Mond, and The Totally Temporary Book Club
    Mar 22 2026

    With Gary away at the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts in Florida, and celebrating his 80th birthday (!!!!!), Jonathan sat down to chat with Alexandra Pierce and Ian Mond about why we read books, why we talk about and review them, and three great new books from 2026 that we loved.

    Along the way, we talked about Johanna Bell's The Department of the Vanishing, S.L. Huang's The Language of Liars, and Francis Spufford's Nonesuch, which led to the spontaneous inaugural meeting of The Totally Temporary Book Club, because by sheer chance all three had read and loved it.

    The books in this episode are:

    • Johanna Bell's The Department of the Vanishing;
    • S.L. Huang's The Language of Liars; and
    • Francis Spufford's Nonesuch.
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    57 mins
  • Episode 719: Ishiguro, Dinniman, and genre expectations in story
    Mar 8 2026

    As usual, Jonathan and Gary raise a number of thorny questions about reading SF and fantasy, and resolve none of them.

    Beginning with Jonathan’s account of his recent reading of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, we speculate on what sort of expectations we bring as readers to novels in which the interiority of the characters is privileged over the SF elements, whether a novel can do both, and whether the reading protocols are different for different genres.

    This leads toward a customarily rambling discussion that touches upon everything from Jo Walton and Ada Palmer’s new nonfiction book Trace Elements to novels by Le Guin, Wolfe, Bujold and others, and eventually leads us to a consideration of Matt Dinniman’s Dungeon Crawler Carl novels, along with books we’re either reading right now or looking forward to in the next few weeks.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Episode 718: Michael Swanwick and The Universe Box
    Feb 22 2026

    Today Jonathan and Gary are joined by Nebula, World Fantasy, and five-time Hugo Award winner Michael Swanwick to discuss the origins of some of his stories, the life and craft of the professional writer, and his extraordinary new short story collection, The Universe Box.

    As always, our thanks to Michael for making time to talk to us. We hope you enjoy the conversation!

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    59 mins
  • Episode 717: Activism, reviewing, books to look forward to, and a little about the weather
    Feb 8 2026
    As always, the Coode Street Motel Six bestrides continents, so after briefly comparing notes on the weather in Perth and Chicago, Gary and Jonathan get down to it and chat about the subjects of the moment. How do you talk about books and what was the weather like? The importance of settings in fiction, especially regarding climate and weather, and the broader question of whether readers can ever fully appreciate a setting dissimilar to their own and how book reviewers might take this into account. This includes a brief discussion of translated fiction—a welcome new category in this year’s Locus Awards. Anthologies and activism The significance of advocacy anthologies that may reflect anything from feminist SF (as in Vonda McIntyre and Susan Janice Anderson’s Aurora: Beyond Equality (1976) to antiwar works to promoting the New Wave. Books we’re looking forward to In a new segment, we list a few books that we are looking forward to that will be published in the coming weeks. Jonathan talks about A.G. Slatter's A Forest, Darkly, Adrian Tchaikovsky's Pretenders to the Throne of God, Paul McAuley's Loss Protocol, and A.D Sui's debut The Iron Garden Sutra. Gary’s list includes Rebecca Roanhorse’s River of Bones and Other Stories and The Best of Adrian Tchaikovsky, a novella by Ian McDonald, Boy, with Accidental Dinosaur, and nonfiction study of SFF by Ada Palmer and Jo Walton, Trace Elements: Conversations on the Project of Science Fiction and Fantasy.
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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Episode 716: Dystopias, cozy fiction and other dilemmas
    Jan 26 2026

    There are snowstorms blowing where Gary is and Jonathan can see rain falling outside in Perth's midsummer, but the Motel Six has been safely relocated and the Gershwin Room is open once again.

    Conversation starts off, perhaps incoherently, with dystopias and dystopian fiction, segues to Travis Baldree and the somewhat misdescribed notion of cozy fiction, and then wanders here and there before Jonathan has to head off for a family event. Nothing was resolved, but almost no conversational gambits were harmed during recording.

    As always, we hope you enjoy the ramble, and will be back with more before you know it!

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    45 mins
  • Episode 715: The one we recorded in between recording the other ones
    Jan 11 2026

    Jonathan and Gary kick off 2026 with no guests, but with the sort of wide-ranging ramble that some listeners seem to enjoy, and that others probably gave up on years ago. We talk about some books due in the new year, especially story collections by Samantha Mills, Amal El-Mohtar and others, how story collections can contribute to an author’s career, and whether it’s necessary to read the stories in the order in which the author presented them. But we also get discuss re-reading old favorites, whether Australian or UK authors get a fair shake in the US these days, and what our listeners would like to hear about in the new year. Feel free to offer ideas, comments, and suggestions at Coodestreet (@) gmail.com.

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    58 hrs and 42 mins
  • Episode 714: The Year in Books with James Bradley, Ian Mond, and Alex Pierce
    Dec 28 2025

    For our year-end discussion of 2025 books, we’re joined by Locus reviewers Ian Mond and Alex Pierce, and distinguished critic and novelist James Bradley. As usual, we mention a lot of authors and titles, and probably forget to mention many deserving others. But you’ll no doubt find some suggestions you hadn’t thought of, and some of our usual digressions about familiar questions of genre, literary ambition, and books that at least some of us think have been overlooked.

    Alex's list

    • Adrian Tchaikovsky, Shroud
    • Claire North, Slow Gods
    • Darkly Lem, Transmentation | Transgression
    • EJ Swift, When There Are Wolves Again
    • Alastair Reynolds, Halcyon Years
    • Emily Tesh, The Incandescent
    • The Isle in the Silver Sea, Tasha Surii

    Ian's list

    • Mark Danielewski, Tom’s Crossing
    • Alex Pheby, Waterblack
    • Isaac Fellman, Notes from a Regicide
    • Nnedi Okorafor, Death of the Author
    • Nick Mamatas, Kalivas!

    James's list

    • Claire North, Slow Gods
    • EJ Swift, When There Are Wolves Again
    • Laila Lalami, The Dream Hotel
    • Nina Allan, A Granite Silence
    • Sarah Hall, Helm
    • Catherine Chidgey, The Book of Guilt.

    Gary's list

    • Alix Harrow, The Everlasting
    • Laila Lalami, The Dream Hotel
    • Natalia Theodoridou, Sour Cherry
    • R.F. Kuang, Katabasis
    • Silvia Moreno-Garcia, The Bewitching

    Jonathan's list

    • Alix E. Harrow, The Everlasting
    • EJ Swift, When There Are Wolves Again
    • Emily Tesh, The Incandescent
    • Nina Allan, A Granite Silence
    • Silvia Park, Luminous

    After a very busy end of the year, that's the final episode for 2025. See you all in early 2026 with something new! And thank you to Alex, Ian, and James for making time to talk to us. We hope you enjoy the episode.

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    1 hr and 32 mins