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Ep 14: Paul Constant, Seattle Review of Books
Manage episode 177746124 series 98935
Epigraph
The Drunk Booksellers get stoned on this 4/20 themed episode with Paul Constant of the Seattle Review of Books.
Listen on iTunes, Stitcher, our website, or subscribe using your podcatcher of choice.
This episode is sponsored by Books & Whatnot, the newsletter dedicated to books, bookselling, and bookish folk; check out their newsletter archive here. Follow Books & Whatnot on Twitter at @booksandwhatnot.
If you want to get our show notes delivered directly to your inbox—with all the books mentioned on the podcast and links back to the bookstore we’re interviewing PLUS GIFs—sign up for our email newsletter.
Introduction
In which we make pot jokes and get excited about books
We're switching up our intoxicant of choice this episode and getting stoned rather than drunk (mostly). Paul's rocking Mr. Moxey's Mints (of the peppermint/sativa variety). Emma's smoking CBD (not to be confused with William Steig's children's picture book, CDB!). Kim stops talking while stoned—which would make for a really awkward podcast episode—so she's drinking the hoppiest IPA she could find instead. Everyone's a little too high to explain the varieties of weed particularly well, so you should just read David Schmader's Weed: The User's Guide: A 21st Century Handbook for Enjoying Marijuana.
Paul's Reading:
- Up South by Robert Lashley
- The Nameless City by Faith Erin Hicks
- A collection of books from Mount Analogue Press
- Manners by Ted Powers
- Final Rose by Halie Theoharides
(a comic book tone poem about love and loss made up screenshots from The Bachelor)
- Reading Through It book club pick: What We Do Now: Standing Up for Your Values in Trump's America, edited by Dennis Johnson
Emma's Reading:
- First Position by Melissa Brayden (thanks to a recommendation from our episode with The Ripped Bodice)
- Giant Days 4 by John Allison, Max Sarin, Lissa Treiman, Liz Fleming, and Whitney Cogar
- All the Lives I Want: Essays about My Best Friends Who Happen to Be Famous Strangers by Alana Massey (thanks to a recommendation from our episode with Amy Stephenson)
Kim's Reading:
- We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
- Hope in the Dark by Rebecca Solnit
- On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy Snyder
- The Aisles Have Eyes: How Retailers Track Your Shopping, Strip Your Privacy, and Define Your Power by Joseph Turow
Forthcoming Titles We're Excited For:
- You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me by Sherman Alexie (out June 13)
- Love and Trouble: a Midlife Reckoning by Claire Dederer (out May 9)
- also mentioned Poser: My Life in Twenty-Three Yoga Poses
- Theft by Finding: Diaries (1977-2002) by David Sedaris (out May 30)
- Hunger: a Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay (out June 13)
- Priestdaddy by Patricia Lockwood (out May 2)
- Borne by Jeff VanderMeer (out April 25)
- Book of Joan by Lidia Yuknavitch (out April 18)
- Woman No. 17 by Edan Lepucki (out May 9)
- Isadora by Amelia Gray (out May 23)
- Dreaming the Beatles: the Love Story of One Band and the Whole World by Rob Sheffield (out April 25)
- Witches, Sluts, Feminists: Conjuring the Sex Positive by Kristen J Sollee (out June 13)
- Modern Tarot: Connecting with Your Higher Self Through the Wisdom of the Cards by Michelle Tea (out June 13)
- The Perfect Mix: Everything I Know about Leadership I Learned as a Bartender by Helen Rothberg (out June 20)
Chapter I [18:50]
In which we learn what The Seattle Review of Books is, talk about book reviews as a meta art form, and get advice on promoting diversity and being a safe, welcoming place for people who aren't white bros
The Seattle Review of Books is a book news, review, and interviews site. This isn't consumer reports, with a thumbs up or down on each title; each review aims to have a conversation with the book. It's a site that aims to look like your bookshelf, without genre classification.
Emma & Kim don't quite understand Paul's assertion that people don't organize their bookshelves, but we roll with it.
SRB makes all their money through a single sponsor (which changes each week). If you're interested in their sponsorship program, you can learn more here.
Paul wants to promote young, new writers and help them build up their clip file. So you should probably pitch him with your brilliant, bookish ideas. Email submissions@seattlereviewofbooks or fill in the contact form on their about page.
Emma particularly loves the Help Desk by Cienna Madrid. Ask Cienna an awkward book-related question at advice@seattlereviewofbooks.com.
Being a couple of white guys, Paul and his co-founder Martin McClellan are extremely concerned with diverse representation. You can learn more about how SRB encourages diversity in both the books they review and the reviewers they publish on their about page (or by listening to this episode...). But you should know right off the bat, they are not here to promote the new Franzen novel and they will not pander to bros.
Chapter II [33:10]
In which we talk about life in the US post-election, say something negative about a book, and discuss Paul's past (and current) life as a bookseller
Reading Through It is a post-election book club hosted by Seattle Review of Books, the Seattle Weekly, and Third Place Books Seward Park. They meet the first Wednesday of every month.
On our post-election world, Paul Constant says: "This is what books were made for. Books are engines of empathy... the only way to do a deep-dive into an issue. It's our stored knowledge... This is the moment for books."
The next Reading Through It book group pick is The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion by Jonathan Haidt. They'll be meeting Wednesday May 3rd at Third Place Books Seward Park.
Read Paul's article on his time at Borders: Books Without Borders: My Life at the World's Dumbest Bookstore Chain
Though he's not technically a bookseller anymore, Paul is still "on team books." Keep an eye out for our "I'm On Team Books" t-shirts, which may or may not be a thing we sell one day.
Chapter III [43:20]
In which Paul is better at explaining our questions than stoned Emma is at asking them, Emma and Kim give Paul major side-eye due to his bookseller confession, and Emma continues to push Uprooted by Naomi Novik
Desert Island Pick (what would you read that you never had the time to read before): The Years of Lyndon Johnson by Robert Caro (beginning with The Path to Power)
We couldn't find a video of the following clip of Caro on the Colbert Report, so we'll just leave you this series of gifs to explain why you, too, should consider bringing an epic five-volume biography of Lyndon Johnson as your desert beach read:
22 bölüm
Manage episode 177746124 series 98935
Epigraph
The Drunk Booksellers get stoned on this 4/20 themed episode with Paul Constant of the Seattle Review of Books.
Listen on iTunes, Stitcher, our website, or subscribe using your podcatcher of choice.
This episode is sponsored by Books & Whatnot, the newsletter dedicated to books, bookselling, and bookish folk; check out their newsletter archive here. Follow Books & Whatnot on Twitter at @booksandwhatnot.
If you want to get our show notes delivered directly to your inbox—with all the books mentioned on the podcast and links back to the bookstore we’re interviewing PLUS GIFs—sign up for our email newsletter.
Introduction
In which we make pot jokes and get excited about books
We're switching up our intoxicant of choice this episode and getting stoned rather than drunk (mostly). Paul's rocking Mr. Moxey's Mints (of the peppermint/sativa variety). Emma's smoking CBD (not to be confused with William Steig's children's picture book, CDB!). Kim stops talking while stoned—which would make for a really awkward podcast episode—so she's drinking the hoppiest IPA she could find instead. Everyone's a little too high to explain the varieties of weed particularly well, so you should just read David Schmader's Weed: The User's Guide: A 21st Century Handbook for Enjoying Marijuana.
Paul's Reading:
- Up South by Robert Lashley
- The Nameless City by Faith Erin Hicks
- A collection of books from Mount Analogue Press
- Manners by Ted Powers
- Final Rose by Halie Theoharides
(a comic book tone poem about love and loss made up screenshots from The Bachelor)
- Reading Through It book club pick: What We Do Now: Standing Up for Your Values in Trump's America, edited by Dennis Johnson
Emma's Reading:
- First Position by Melissa Brayden (thanks to a recommendation from our episode with The Ripped Bodice)
- Giant Days 4 by John Allison, Max Sarin, Lissa Treiman, Liz Fleming, and Whitney Cogar
- All the Lives I Want: Essays about My Best Friends Who Happen to Be Famous Strangers by Alana Massey (thanks to a recommendation from our episode with Amy Stephenson)
Kim's Reading:
- We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
- Hope in the Dark by Rebecca Solnit
- On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy Snyder
- The Aisles Have Eyes: How Retailers Track Your Shopping, Strip Your Privacy, and Define Your Power by Joseph Turow
Forthcoming Titles We're Excited For:
- You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me by Sherman Alexie (out June 13)
- Love and Trouble: a Midlife Reckoning by Claire Dederer (out May 9)
- also mentioned Poser: My Life in Twenty-Three Yoga Poses
- Theft by Finding: Diaries (1977-2002) by David Sedaris (out May 30)
- Hunger: a Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay (out June 13)
- Priestdaddy by Patricia Lockwood (out May 2)
- Borne by Jeff VanderMeer (out April 25)
- Book of Joan by Lidia Yuknavitch (out April 18)
- Woman No. 17 by Edan Lepucki (out May 9)
- Isadora by Amelia Gray (out May 23)
- Dreaming the Beatles: the Love Story of One Band and the Whole World by Rob Sheffield (out April 25)
- Witches, Sluts, Feminists: Conjuring the Sex Positive by Kristen J Sollee (out June 13)
- Modern Tarot: Connecting with Your Higher Self Through the Wisdom of the Cards by Michelle Tea (out June 13)
- The Perfect Mix: Everything I Know about Leadership I Learned as a Bartender by Helen Rothberg (out June 20)
Chapter I [18:50]
In which we learn what The Seattle Review of Books is, talk about book reviews as a meta art form, and get advice on promoting diversity and being a safe, welcoming place for people who aren't white bros
The Seattle Review of Books is a book news, review, and interviews site. This isn't consumer reports, with a thumbs up or down on each title; each review aims to have a conversation with the book. It's a site that aims to look like your bookshelf, without genre classification.
Emma & Kim don't quite understand Paul's assertion that people don't organize their bookshelves, but we roll with it.
SRB makes all their money through a single sponsor (which changes each week). If you're interested in their sponsorship program, you can learn more here.
Paul wants to promote young, new writers and help them build up their clip file. So you should probably pitch him with your brilliant, bookish ideas. Email submissions@seattlereviewofbooks or fill in the contact form on their about page.
Emma particularly loves the Help Desk by Cienna Madrid. Ask Cienna an awkward book-related question at advice@seattlereviewofbooks.com.
Being a couple of white guys, Paul and his co-founder Martin McClellan are extremely concerned with diverse representation. You can learn more about how SRB encourages diversity in both the books they review and the reviewers they publish on their about page (or by listening to this episode...). But you should know right off the bat, they are not here to promote the new Franzen novel and they will not pander to bros.
Chapter II [33:10]
In which we talk about life in the US post-election, say something negative about a book, and discuss Paul's past (and current) life as a bookseller
Reading Through It is a post-election book club hosted by Seattle Review of Books, the Seattle Weekly, and Third Place Books Seward Park. They meet the first Wednesday of every month.
On our post-election world, Paul Constant says: "This is what books were made for. Books are engines of empathy... the only way to do a deep-dive into an issue. It's our stored knowledge... This is the moment for books."
The next Reading Through It book group pick is The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion by Jonathan Haidt. They'll be meeting Wednesday May 3rd at Third Place Books Seward Park.
Read Paul's article on his time at Borders: Books Without Borders: My Life at the World's Dumbest Bookstore Chain
Though he's not technically a bookseller anymore, Paul is still "on team books." Keep an eye out for our "I'm On Team Books" t-shirts, which may or may not be a thing we sell one day.
Chapter III [43:20]
In which Paul is better at explaining our questions than stoned Emma is at asking them, Emma and Kim give Paul major side-eye due to his bookseller confession, and Emma continues to push Uprooted by Naomi Novik
Desert Island Pick (what would you read that you never had the time to read before): The Years of Lyndon Johnson by Robert Caro (beginning with The Path to Power)
We couldn't find a video of the following clip of Caro on the Colbert Report, so we'll just leave you this series of gifs to explain why you, too, should consider bringing an epic five-volume biography of Lyndon Johnson as your desert beach read:
22 bölüm
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