Join Eva and Élaina as they cocoon in the warm disabled academic embrace of Molly McCully Brown's "Places I've Taken My Body" essay collection. A poet and a scholar, McCully Brown prompts us to reflect on disability culture and disabled communities, past and present and we get pretty mushy about it. What! It feels so good to be seen. Listen if you too are craving darkly beautiful reflections on living through the cycle of fighting your bodymind, becoming the supercrip, and then forgetting your pain only to start again.
CW: Eugenics, forced sterilisation, forced institutionalisation
We are back with more Emezi coverage! The magic in "You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty" is all about stringing that grief up like a canopy of wedding rings... If you know, you know. And if you don't know, go read this book immediately! Our fawning knows no spoiler bounds.
CN for discussions of: death, grief, biphobia, aggression
Buy the book
You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
Recommendations
Eva recommends:
Freshwater by Akwaeke Emezi
Second Place by Rachel Cusk
Élaina recommends:
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin
This One Summer by Mariko and Jilliam Tamaki
Follow us
Bookshelf Remix is @bookshelfremix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
Élaina is @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram; check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Eva is @EAsprecher on Twitter and @windup_book_chronicles; find her academic work on ResearchGate
Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Tell a friend about the podcast!
Become a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod.
Are your ready for a psychoanalytic and gushing recap of a queer YA magical realism novel? Well, it doesn't matter because we are gifting you our review of Lakelore by Anna-Marie McLemore. Come for the Latinx non-binary teen representation, stay for the crip mutual aid.
Book recommendations:
Élaina recommends
Eva recommends
Follow us
Bookshelf Remix is @bookshelfremix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
Élaina is @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram; check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Eva is @EAsprecher on Twitter and @windup_book_chronicles; find her academic work on ResearchGate
Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Tell a friend about the podcast!
Become a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod.
In this episode, Élaina and Eva wade into the crocodile-infested waters of “Jawbone”, the horror novel by Mónica Ojeda, translated from Spanish by Sarah Booker. Set in Ecuador, this gothic coming of age tale is as mesmerising as it is disturbing. And, of course, as former teenage girls who now teach the youth, your hosts have THOUGHTS. This was a fun one (and a dark one), y’all.
As always, this podcast is spoiler-FULL.
CW: Body horror, blood, kidnapping, torture
Books mentioned in this episode (these are affiliate links to Bookshop.org and if you buy something using them the podcast will receive a small commission):
Tender is the Flesh by Agostina Bazterrica
Sisters by Daisy Johnson
The Dangers of Smoking in Bed by Mariana Enriquez
Cherish Farrah by Bethany C. Morrow
Follow us
Bookshelf Remix is @bookshelfremix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
Élaina is @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram; check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Eva is @EAsprecher on Twitter and @windup_book_chronicles; find her academic work on ResearchGate
Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Tell a friend about the podcast!
Become a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod.
Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
We invite you to enter the wholesome and delightful world of “A Snake Falls to Earth”, the YA fantasy novel by Darcie Little Badger. Witness Élaina as she revises her analysis live on air and bask in Eva’s joy at the excellent snake and ace representation.
Books mentioned in this episode (these are affiliate links to Bookshop.org and if you buy something using them the podcast will receive a small commission):
A Snake Falls to Earth by Darcie Little Badger
Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Loveless by Alice Oseman
Follow us
Bookshelf Remix is @bookshelfremix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
Élaina is @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram; check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Eva is @EAsprecher on Twitter and @windup_book_chronicles; find her academic work on ResearchGate
Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Tell a friend about the podcast!
In this episode, Élaina and Eva discuss the gothic novel “The Piano Room” by Clio Velentza. We go into detail on this Faust retelling set in 1970s-1990s Hungary and Eva shines with her psychoanalytic insights on umlichkeit, or the Freudian “uncanny”. Listen and learn (in the most fun way, obviously).
As always, this is a spoiler-FULL podcast
Thank you to Fairlight Books for Élaina’s advance paperback copy.
CW: murder, abuse and neglect
Books mentioned in this episode (these are affiliate links to Bookshop.org and if you buy something using them the podcast will receive a small commission):
“The Piano Room” by Clio Velentza
“We Have Always Lived in the Castle” by Shirley Jackson
When Things Get Dark, ed. Ellen Datlow
The Sandman by E.T.A. Hoffman
The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Writings by Edgar Allan Poe
Follow us
Bookshelf Remix is @bookshelfremix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
Élaina is @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram; check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Eva is @EAsprecher on Twitter and @windup_book_chronicles; find her academic work on ResearchGate
Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Tell a friend about the podcast!
*Season 3 of Bookshelf Remix enters the scene to the sound of fanfare and golden trumpets*: We’re back with a brand new season, brand new lineup, and brand new co-host, Eva Sprecher! Join Eva and Élaina to discuss “Gold Diggers” by Sanjena Sathian as they live their best, gold-laden, literary life. We didn’t plan it this way, but it turns out this discussion is the anchor for the whole season, so don’t skip it!
As always, this podcast is spoiler-FULL.
CW: Discussions of suicide, substance abuse, and mental health crisis
Books mentioned in this episode (these are affiliate links to Bookshop.org and if you buy something using them the podcast will receive a small commission):
Gold Diggers by Sanjena Sathian
Brick Lane by Monica Ali
On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong
The Inheritance of Orchidea Divina by Zoraida Cordova
Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger
Follow us
Bookshelf Remix is @bookshelfremix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
Élaina is @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram; check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Eva is @EAsprecher on Twitter and @windup_book_chronicles; find her academic work on ResearchGate
Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Tell a friend about the podcast!
We we are thrilled to announce that season 3 of Bookshelf Remix is coming on the 20th of March!
We have read debut novels, romance, YA fantasy, horror, and magical realism galore and you get to hear about it.
So subscribe to Bookshelf Remix on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts and you won’t miss our season 3 premiere on March 20!
Follow us @bookshelfremix on Instagram to get the full book list so you can read along.
Cause it’s time to give your bookshelf a good remix.
Visiting from the land of @bookedsolidpod and @woqmpod, Sariah has joined Élaina to read "The Perishing", a historical speculative fiction novel by Natashia Déon. As season 2 of Bookshelf Remix wraps up, Élaina is very tired and may or may not have completely misread a significant portion of the book. But, fear not, Sariah (and Google) is there to keep her on track and much fun is had.
You should also listen to the original Booked Remix cross-over ep when we discussed Calvin Kasulke's "Several People Are Typing": https://open.spotify.com/episode/3J9JK5NWMI24KdrXMzPGsE?si=fb5f0c1b6613491e
As always, you can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
Ok, we are going with back-to-back loved reads! In this episode, Élaina discusses The Street by Ann Petry with fellow podcaster Jack Davidson. The Street is a realist drama written and set in 1940s Harlem, NYC. But really, it is a masterful and bejeweled offering of complicated characters and systemic stakes. It’s a must read and belongs on every high school syllabus. Warning: The Street reads like a thriller with a twist ending, so you may want to read it first before listening to the episode. However, it is so rich that being “spoiled” is not necessarily a deal-breaker.
Because Harlem is on Lenape land, we would like to encourage you to donate to the Lenape Center: https://www.nyfa.org/fiscal-sponsorship/project-directory/view-project/?id=L3600
CW: Discussions of systemic racism, misogyny, violence against Black people, attempted sexual assault, and murder.
You can follow Jack on Instagram @goodeveningjack and you can find his The Vampire Diaries fan recap podcast TVD JK @tvdjk_pod.
As always, you can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
In this episode, poet Liv Mammone joins Élaina to discuss the genre-breaking offering that is Carmen Maria Machado’s “In the Dream House”. We talk about what it means to consume someone else’s trauma narrative as “art” and the fact that Machado seems to have created her own planetary system.
CN: This book is about Machado’s experience in an abusive queer relationship and Liv shares some of her own experience in a toxic relationship, so please make sure you take care of yourself if you choose to listen to this episode.
Also, we do go on a tangent about Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Disney queer villains and Dickens, but I swear it is all relevant and all in service of celebrating this excellent memoir.
You can find Liv on Facebook under Liv Mammone or on Instagram @mammoneliv. You can also find Game Over Books on all social media.
As always, you can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
In this episode, Élaina is joined by psychoanalyst, social care scholar, and fellow bookstagrammer Eva A. Sprecher to discuss “The Panopticon”, a YA novel by Scottish author Jenni Fagan.
There were unfortunate technical issues with Élaina’s microphone, which means that the audio quality is not up to the usual Bookshelf Remix standards. But we hope you will stick it out if only to listen to Eva’s insightful analysis.
CN: Self-harm, death by (accidental) suicide, tocix relationships, adult-minor relationships, substance use and abuse, and kidknapping.
You can follow Eva on Twitter @EASprecher, on Instagram @windup_book_chronicles, and on Researchgate.
As always, you can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
In this episode, Élaina discusses The Other Black Girl, a social horror thriller by Zakiya Dalila Harris, with Sarah Winkler and Ben Winkler, the hosts of the What’s New Nancy Drew? and A Swift Review podcast.
SPOILER ALERT: We discuss the whole book including the plot twist pretty early on.
CN: Discussion of gaslighting, non-consensual experimentation on humans, and violence against Black people
This episode marks a new era of Bookshelf Remix. Sophia has a new full-time job (congratulations!) and has decided to step back from the podcast (sad). But this means Élaina will be joined by wonderful guest hosts each episode to discuss a new book.
You can follow Sarah and Ben’s podcasts on Twitter:
And listen to them here:
As always, you can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
In this episode, Sophia spills the tea on why authors translating their own books is problematic, Élaina googles “pushing daisies” in French, and we both discover why Whereabouts bothers us so much as a book!
Please rate and review Bookshelf Remix on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts as this helps other people find the show.
You can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
You can follow Sophia @themetropolitanist on Instagram, @metropolitanist on Twitter, and on her website www.maisonmetropolitanist.com.
Élaina and Sophia read a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel with mixed results. In this episode, they cover Whereabouts by Jhumpa Lahiri, with Élaina reading it in the original Italian under the title Dove mi trovo.
Please rate and review Bookshelf Remix on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts as this helps other people find the show.
You can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call and Women of Questionable Morals.
You can follow Sophia @themetropolitanist on Instagram, @metropolitanist on Twitter, and on her website www.maisonmetropolitanist.com.
In the second installment of our coverage of Anna K. by Jenny Lee we stacked one soapbox on top of the other and our teetering up there. This episode is pretty much sliced in the middle with the first part discussing misogyny and the second part discussing race in this book. We read it so you didn’t have to.
CW: Racism, sexism, misogyny, homophobia, sexual content, explicit language
Please rate and review Bookshelf Remix on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts as this helps other people find the show.
You can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call.
You can follow Sophia @themetropolitanist on Instagram, @metropolitanist on Twitter, and on her website www.maisonmetropolitanist.com.
We’re back, y’all! In this episode, we discuss Anna K. by Jenny Lee, a contemporary YA adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina. Full disclosure, this book made us angry, so feel free to skip it if you loved it because we have a lot to say.
CW: Misogyny, sexual content, racism, homophobia
Please rate and review Bookshelf Remix on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts as this helps other people find the show.
You can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call.
You can follow Sophia @themetropolitanist on Instagram, @metropolitanist on Twitter, and on her website www.maisonmetropolitanist.com.
We're baaaaaaaack! Did you miss us? Make sure you subscribe to Bookshelf Remix so you won't miss our Season 2 premiere on May 2 and follow @bookshelf remix on all social media platforms.
This season has some serious ups and downs, but we are so glad to have you along for the ride.
If you want to follow along book club-style, here is this season's lineup:
Tag us #BookshelfRemix so we can interact with you!
When I'm not reading books, I'm watching Gilmore Girls. So it is my pleasure to announce Women of Questionable Morals:
"Who led? Who followed? None of that really matters because Sariah of @bookedsolidpodcast and Élaina of @bookshelfremix have found each other and decided to launch their (in-depth, passionate) thoughts about Gilmore Girls into the void.
Send us your voice clips and episode requests at woqmpod@gmail.com and follow us on Instagram and Twitter @woqmpod. We’ll see y’all soon!
Sincerely,
Two Women of Questionable Morals
It’s time to share our feelings about season 1! We read so many good books and we truly went on a journey.
Errata: In this episode, we use the wrong pronoun for Akwaeke Emezi in passing. Emezi uses they/them and we apologise for this slip-up.
Please rate and review Bookshelf Remix on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts as this helps other people find the show.
You can follow Bookshelf Remix on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @bookshelfremix and you can support the podcast by becoming a monthly supporter at www.ko-fi.com/brpod. Transcripts also live on our Ko-Fi page for free.
You can follow Élaina @ElainaGMamaril on Twitter, @spinoodler on Instagram and check out her work at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com, and by listening to Philosophy Casting Call.
You can follow Sophia @themetropolitanist on Instagram, @metropolitanist on Twitter, and on her website www.maisonmetropolitanist.com.