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Electric Sheep
Ben Walker
96 episodes
5 days ago
Do you want to get everything you ever wanted & live your best life? Then you're going to have to read hard, wide & free. Together, let's learn how to read & write by analysing the best works ever written, and then some. How do writers do it - keep readers turning the page until they finish the book or throw it across the room? Each episode looks at one book, its first line and a standout section where there's a lesson to be learned about writing. Dissecting writers' language, genre and how their work fits into a greater context can help us understand other people and ourselves. x
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All content for Electric Sheep is the property of Ben Walker and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Do you want to get everything you ever wanted & live your best life? Then you're going to have to read hard, wide & free. Together, let's learn how to read & write by analysing the best works ever written, and then some. How do writers do it - keep readers turning the page until they finish the book or throw it across the room? Each episode looks at one book, its first line and a standout section where there's a lesson to be learned about writing. Dissecting writers' language, genre and how their work fits into a greater context can help us understand other people and ourselves. x
Show more...
Books
Arts
Episodes (20/96)
Electric Sheep
The Secret Life of War by Peter Beaumont
Peter Beaumont is one of those rare writers who's willing to go all the way over the edge in his relentless pursuit of the truth. What happened in Iraq, Afghanistan, Gaza, and other battlefields of the early 21st century? Beaumont uses the pen to reflect on the people he met, the surreal realities of war and the deep wounds left long after the shooting stops. Haunting, troubling, and deeply affecting, if you want to understand why we fight, what happens when we do, and what it takes to gaze unflinchingly at humanity's shadow, Beaumont must be read.
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6 months ago
6 minutes 53 seconds

Electric Sheep
Going Mainstream: Why Extreme Ideas Are Spreading, And What We Can Do About It
Julia Ebner puts her finger on some of the most important questions that writers face, not just in our turbulent times, but across all ages: - Who controls language? - Are you using language or being used by it? - Are some people's truths more truthful than others? - How does language change to meet the context of the day? Arming us with critical skills, it's worth reading if you're into the culture war, gender studies, toxic masculinity, incels, the patriarchy, fourth wave feminism, conspiracy theories, the far right, terrorism, deradicalisation and that sort of stuff.
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7 months ago
9 minutes 59 seconds

Electric Sheep
Men Who Hate Women
Laura Bates threads the needle in her undercover investigation into incel culture, misogyny and the manosphere. Unfiltered and rough on the eyes, Bates is brave enough to tackle a thorny issue head-on and come out still standing, her strong arguments standing up across 300 pages. Weaving together online and RW examples, we're privy to forums, threads, vlogs, interviews, protests and in-person meet-ups as Bates walks the beat of investigative journalist/activist. Is male-on-female violence a form of terrorism? You'll have to read it to find out. Keep one eye out for Bates' adept use a whole bag of persuasive techniques, from stats and figures to anecdotes and eyewitness accounts. Especially powerful are her metaphors - watch out for the Guinea worm burrowing into your leg! Other reading: - Going Mainstream by Julia Ebner - 12 Rules for Life by Jordan Peterson - Lean Out by Dawn Foster
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7 months ago
18 minutes 5 seconds

Electric Sheep
Vietnam: The Definitive Oral History, Told From All Sides

Christian G. Appy's mammoth 600-page non-fiction book collects personal accounts of the Vietnam/American War from all angles.

From the Chief of Staff of the United States Army to a new recruit of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam, we hear myriad voices and are lucky to have writers who do such heavy lifts.

Published half a century after the war ended and made up of hundreds of interviews, cuttings and clips of memory, stories, perspectives and reflections, Appy collates them together in an attempt to really understand what happened during the war.

If you're interested in the Vietnam War, insane stories of personal struggle, the highest and lowest experiences human beings can have, and that sort of thing, then read this book.

If you're a writer and want to learn how to approach a seemingly insurmountable multi-year writing project, then Appy's work stands as an inspiration.


Similar books:

- The Forgotten Voices series about WW1 and WW2

- Nam by Mark Baker


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8 months ago
14 minutes 42 seconds

Electric Sheep
Moby-Dick Or, The Whale

Herman Melville takes us on a 625-page voyage that could have been 90. Maybe the greatest example of overwriting in history, Captain Ahab's monomaniacal quest is a sick example of pushing your story, themes and characters to breaking point and how it sometimes pays off. It's easy to criticise Melville's inaccuracies, scientific blunders and cultural insensitivity but if you can step forth critically, armed with context and good humour, there be gold in them hills. Or should I say spermaceti in them organs.


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8 months ago
20 minutes 52 seconds

Electric Sheep
Freedom
Sebastian Junger takes us on a 130-page trek across a range of subjects, themes, and stories from history, science, geography, philosophy, autobiography and pretty much every genre under the sun. Is it creative non-fiction, long-form jpurnalism, a sociological and anthropological meta analysis? Who cares when the writing is as cool as this.
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9 months ago
15 minutes 17 seconds

Electric Sheep
We Were Soldiers Once... And Young
Lt. Gen. Harold G. Moore (Ret.) and Joseph L. Galloway convey the brutality and strength of men trying to kill each other. It's crazy how a battle report from the Vietnam War can hold so many transcendent truths about human nature, heroism, and loss that still resonate today. Read it if you wanna know what happened in the Ia Drang Valley in November 1965 or if you wanna know what Hell on Earth really looks, sounds, smells, and tastes like.
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10 months ago
24 minutes 55 seconds

Electric Sheep
Crime and Punishment
Fyodor Dostoevsky nails his characters and reader to the page with nine inch nails, cranking the tension up to the max and ruthlessly forcing you to face Great Truths no one else has had the balls to go after. Took me three attempts over 10 years so be prepared to work but the payoffs will change your life and writing forever.
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11 months ago
18 minutes 55 seconds

Electric Sheep
Die Trying
Lee Child takes us to a preppers paradise buried in the Montana mountains full of anti-globalist nutjobs in this 1998 thriller. Not only interesting for how on-point it was (think Alex Jones, QAnon, etc) but also in highlighting the difference between good and great art, high and base emotions, and the addictive nature of popular/pulp fiction. I wanted Tolstoy but all I got was Jack bloody Reacher.
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11 months ago
30 minutes 34 seconds

Electric Sheep
Keep the Aspidistra Flying
George Orwells depressing deep dive into the mind of an Incel poet can teach us plenty about clear writing, creativity, and the difference between art, advertising and propaganda. It also helped me realise that even Orwell is human, someone who worked on ideas and got better over time. Read it only if you've already read 1984, Wigan Pier, Paris and London, Homage to Catalonia, Animal Farm and his essays but before Burmese Days..
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1 year ago
23 minutes 39 seconds

Electric Sheep
Shake Hands with the Devil
Roméo Dallaire takes us on a journey into hell. Torn a thousand different ways, he shows the brutal reality of war, genocide, and the danger of seeing some humans as more human than others. Like Pandoras Box, though, there are glimmers in the darkness and they're worth facing.
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1 year ago
18 minutes 42 seconds

Electric Sheep
Reacher: Bad Luck and Trouble
Lee Childs' hero is an all-American cheeseburger whose escapades are full of lessons on writing like drawing out suspense, fast ways to ID characters, and smoothly integrating your research. Plus they offer amazing insights into The Industry... enjoy x
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1 year ago
17 minutes 48 seconds

Electric Sheep
In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz
Michela Wrong takes us on a journey through the collapse of Mobutu's Zaire with lessons on investigative journalism done right, the brutal lives of the common people, and trickle-down corruption in one of the worlds most effed up places.
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1 year ago
19 minutes

Electric Sheep
Season of Blood
Fergal Keane
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1 year ago
20 minutes 37 seconds

Electric Sheep
I Am Legend
Richard Matheson
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1 year ago
18 minutes 29 seconds

Electric Sheep
Make Me
Lee Child
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1 year ago
25 minutes 22 seconds

Electric Sheep
Daniel Deronda
George Eliot
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1 year ago
22 minutes 17 seconds

Electric Sheep
Digital Fortress
Dan Brown
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1 year ago
20 minutes 25 seconds

Electric Sheep
The Bounty
Caroline Alexander
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1 year ago
21 minutes 41 seconds

Electric Sheep
A Time for Machetes
Jean Hatzfeld
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1 year ago
15 minutes 36 seconds

Electric Sheep
Do you want to get everything you ever wanted & live your best life? Then you're going to have to read hard, wide & free. Together, let's learn how to read & write by analysing the best works ever written, and then some. How do writers do it - keep readers turning the page until they finish the book or throw it across the room? Each episode looks at one book, its first line and a standout section where there's a lesson to be learned about writing. Dissecting writers' language, genre and how their work fits into a greater context can help us understand other people and ourselves. x