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Bookends with Mattea Roach
CBC
102 episodes
2 days ago

When the book ends, the conversation begins. Mattea Roach speaks with writers who have something to say about their work, the world and our place in it. You’ll always walk away with big questions to ponder and new books to read.

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All content for Bookends with Mattea Roach is the property of CBC 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.

When the book ends, the conversation begins. Mattea Roach speaks with writers who have something to say about their work, the world and our place in it. You’ll always walk away with big questions to ponder and new books to read.

Show more...
Books
Arts
Episodes (20/102)
Bookends with Mattea Roach
Zadie Smith never thought she’d tell this story

It’s hard to believe that Zadie Smith was just 24 years old when she wrote White Teeth, the book that made her a literary star. 25 years later, Zadie is still finding new stories from her life to reflect on — and she shares many of those in her latest essay collection, Dead and Alive. The book combines art criticism with musings about technology, parenting and the writers who've inspired her. This week, Zadie joins Mattea Roach to talk about the collection, what it’s like to look back on 25 years of writing … and that time she fell out of a window.


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s triumphant return to fiction  
  • Alison Bechdel on making money and seeing Fun Home in a new light
Show more...
2 days ago
48 minutes 1 second

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Can your nail tech throw a mean right hook?

In the new novel Pick a Colour, the answer to that question is a resounding yes. The debut novel from Souvankham Thammavongsa centres on Ning, the owner of a nail salon. Before she was a nail technician, Ning was a boxer … and she hasn’t completely shrugged off those instincts from the ring. Souvankham won the Giller Prize in 2020 for her story collection How to Pronounce Knife, and her new novel is shortlisted for this year’s prize. She joins Mattea Roach to talk about her fondness for nail salons, the weight of names and what being in the boxing ring taught her about herself.


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Ocean Vuong finds beauty in a fast food shift
  • For Indigenous players, ice hockey is a ceremony of its own


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6 days ago
25 minutes 43 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Ian McEwan has hope for humanity — here’s why

A century from now, how will historians look back on your life? In his latest novel, What We Can Know, Ian McEwan imagines the future in 100 years. In a world altered by climate change and nuclear war, human beings are looking back at our current age with a mix of nostalgia, envy and contempt … which is why a scholar becomes fixated on finding a lost poem from 2014. You might know Ian from his breakout hit Atonement, which was made into an Oscar-winning film. This week, he joins Mattea Roach to talk about crafting his own dystopia, his concerns about AI and why we just might be living in a golden age.


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Jeff VanderMeer: How his blockbuster Southern Reach series reflects our own fight against climate change
  • What if your dreams could land you in jail?
Show more...
1 week ago
35 minutes 3 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Why Mona Awad gave the Bunnies a say

The bunnies are back … and they’re bloodier than ever. In We Love You, Bunny, Mona Awad returns to the surreal world of her best selling novel Bunny. A deliciously deranged mix of fairy tale, satire and horror, Bunny was loved by critics and readers alike. But what do the villains of that story — a clique of mean girls called the Bunnies — have to say about it? We Love You, Bunny provides a dark, hilarious answer. Mona joins Mattea Roach to talk about expanding the Bunny universe, getting into the heads of her characters and taking inspiration from drag queens. 


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Why Heather O’Neill believes in magic 
  • Pitbull, Scarface and a whale walk into a book
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1 week ago
31 minutes 34 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Where do North Korean spies go for dinner?

Soju, kimchi, gun fights, car chases … and profound reflections on the Korean diaspora. Whether you’re hungry for food or for action, Jinwoo Park’s debut novel has it all. Oxford Soju Club is about a group of Korean spies carrying out their missions in Oxford. At the centre of it all is The Soju Club, the only Korean restaurant in town. Like any good spy novel, the book delivers on secrets and intrigue … but it’s also a story about what it means to be Korean, no matter how far away from home you are. 


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Reimagining the lost stories of Chinese Canadians during WWII
  • In Booker Prize finalist Creation Lake, an agent provocateur faces deep questions about how to live
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2 weeks ago
30 minutes 6 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Think Stonehenge rocks? So does Ken Follett

Ken Follett is one of the most successful authors alive today. He’s sold almost 200 million books, and readers have devoured his stories about the Black Plague, German spies and nuclear war. His next challenge? The great mystery of Stonehenge. Ken’s latest novel, Circle of Days, imagines the story behind that monument and wonder of ancient life. Ken joins Mattea Roach to talk about what makes Stonehenge so special, writing between history and imagination and why his books resonate around the world.  


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Emma Donoghue boards a train destined for disaster
  • Getting to know Canada’s king of suspense
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3 weeks ago
40 minutes 10 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
What is extreme caretaking?

The winner of the 2025 CBC Nonfiction Prize is The Invisible Woman by Laura MacGregor. It's a deeply personal and heartfelt story Laura wrote about her son Matthew, who lived with profound disabilities and required around-the-clock care. Laura wrote The Invisible Woman as a way of dealing with her grief after Matthew's passing, and to reckon with how extreme caregiving had shaped her life. Laura joins Mattea to talk about the joy and dignity of Matthew’s life and the responsibilities she shouldered in silence for many years.


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Kate Gies: Reclaiming her body after years of medical trauma
  • Meet the winner of the 2025 CBC Short Story Prize
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3 weeks ago
25 minutes 11 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
R.F. Kuang raises a little hell

After massive hits like The Poppy War, Babel and Yellowface, R.F. Kuang’s new novel takes readers to hell — quite literally. Katabasis follows two grad students who venture through the underworld to save their professor’s soul, and R.F. Kuang’s own experience as a PhD student, high school debater and talented chef all factor into the book. At a special on-stage event in Toronto, joined by around a thousand of her fans, R.F. told Mattea Roach all about Katabasis … and dove into her own life and inspirations along the way.  


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Nalo Hopkinson: How Caribbean folktales inspired her fantastical novel, Blackheart Man
  • Ocean Vuong finds beauty in a fast food shift
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1 month ago
45 minutes 41 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
What would it take to become the first Cherokee astronaut?

Statistically, your odds of becoming an astronaut are close to zero. You have to make some pretty extreme sacrifices to reach the stars, and that’s the thrust of a new novel about the first Cherokee astronaut. To the Moon and Back is Eliana Ramage’s debut novel and the September pick for Reese Witherspoon’s book club. It’s a book about ambition and astronauts, but it’s also about what it means to be Indigenous … in the past, present, and future. This week, Eliana tells Mattea about loving the story of science, writing frustrating characters and why she’s taking Cherokee identity to Mars. 


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Taylor Jenkins Reid is among the stars — on and off the page
  • For Indigenous players, ice hockey is a ceremony of its own
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1 month ago
32 minutes 42 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
​What happens to fiction in times of war?

A snail scientist takes part in a kidnapping scheme to protest the Ukrainian romance industry. That's the story Maria Reva was writing in her debut novel, Endling. But then Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, leaving Maria to question whether fiction had a place in the devastating new reality. The result is an innovative and darkly humorous book in which Maria blends her novel with her own experiences grappling with the war. Endling is longlisted for the Booker and is a finalist for the Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. Maria joins Mattea Roach to talk about her interest in snails, the evolution of her novel and having loved ones on the frontlines in Ukraine.


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Nnedi Okorafor: Bringing a writer to life in Death of the Author
  • Writing about catastrophe gives Madeleine Thien courage


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1 month ago
27 minutes 57 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Why this comics legend is just getting started

Growing up in rural Ontario, Jeff Lemire bought superhero comics at the local minimart. Years later, he’s one of the biggest comic book creators in Canada … and he’s the one bringing those superheroes to life. Jeff’s new memoir, 10,000 Ink Stains, tells his story. The book looks back on his 25-year career, diving into notable works like Essex County and Sweet Tooth — both of which were recently adapted for television. Jeff tells Mattea about his early days as an indie comics artist, stepping into the worlds of iconic heroes and why his career is only just beginning.


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Chris Ware: Inside the sketchbooks of a comics master
  • Adrian Tomine: Answering his readers' burning questions
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1 month ago
33 minutes 24 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Who was the woman Kafka loved?

Milena Jesenská was a courageous journalist, translator and resister of the Nazi regime. So why do most people only know her as Franz Kafka’s lover? Milena was one of the great loves of Kafka’s life, and his letters to her are immortalized in the book Letters to Milena. But that story remains unfinished … because Milena’s responses have never been found. That’s where writer Christine Estima steps in. In her debut novel, Letters to Kafka, Christine tells Milena’s story and gives voice to a woman often overshadowed in history. 


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Leslie Jamison: Capturing Peggy Guggenheim in fiction and honouring a friend's dream
  • Emma Donoghue boards a train destined for disaster  


Check out Mattea’s interview on Gays Reading:

  • gaysreading.com 
Show more...
1 month ago
33 minutes 51 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Reliving the soundtrack of the 2000s

Feeling nostalgic for the music of the aughts? You’re not the only one. Holly Brickley’s debut novel, Deep Cuts, follows a music-obsessed writer named Percy coming of age in the early 2000s. When Percy befriends a young musician in college, they start to collaborate and their connection deepens. Holly and Mattea talk about their shared love of music, the magic of the pre-smartphone era and why music and human connection often go hand-in-hand. 


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Music, sex and finding the soundtrack to queer joy
  • Emma Knight: 'Bad' mothers make good stories — and are more true-to-life
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1 month ago
30 minutes 7 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Why this Pulitzer Prize winner is done with writing books

Tessa Hulls won a Pulitzer Prize for her first book. So why is it also her last? Tessa’s graphic memoir, Feeding Ghosts, unravels the stories of three women in her family: her Chinese grandmother, her mother and herself. It’s an emotional, complex and beautifully illustrated book that took Tessa almost a decade to produce. This week on Bookends, Tessa tells Mattea about following her family ghosts across the world … and why her next step will look a little different. 


Liked this conversation? Keep listening:

  • Teresa Wong: Illustrating her family's past — in all its ordinary and epic moments
  • Sarah Leavitt: Illustrating grief too wide for words


Listen to Mattea's interview on Gays Reading here: https://www.gaysreading.com/

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1 month ago
34 minutes 41 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Death, sex, money … and podcasting?

Here at Bookends, we never shy away from difficult conversations … and neither does Anna Sale, the host of the popular Slate podcast Death, Sex and Money. The show is all about diving into topics that get deep fast, and Anna expands on that promise in her book, Let’s Talk About Hard Things. In this special summer edition of Bookends, Anna joins Mattea to chat all about the book, podcasting and how her own outlook on tough topics has changed over the years. 

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2 months ago
36 minutes 41 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Bookends Highlights: Why we never shut up about our literary prizes

The CBC Literary Prizes are where Canadian writing stars are made… and this week, we’ll prove it to you. In the first season of Bookends, Mattea Roach spoke with some of the winners, finalists and jurors of the prizes. This week, we’re revisiting Mattea's conversations with Zilla Jones, Dorian McNamara, David Huebert, Zoe Whittall, and Rachel Robb. You can learn more about the prizes at cbcbooks.ca.


Hear the full conversations here:

  • An opera singer gives voice to the Grenadian revolution
  • Meet the winner of the 2025 CBC Short Story Prize
  • David Huebert: Exploring the complexity of our relationship with oil through fiction
  • Zoe Whittall: Why heartbreak is a valid form of grief
  • Rachel Robb: Exploring reconciliation and the natural world
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2 months ago
54 minutes 7 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Bookends Bonus: What do you see in the mirror?

This week, Bookends is revisiting the Mirrors series. It’s a CBC Books special featuring winners of the 2024 Governor General’s Literary Awards.


The English-language books that won last year’s awards demonstrate how stories help us reflect on our lives and see the world in new ways. In this special series, CBC Books asked the winners to further explore the power of reflection in original works. The new works are centred around the theme of mirrors and challenge how we see ourselves, explore alternative identities and blur the lines between reality and fantasy. 


This episode is hosted by Talia Schlanger. It features Canadian authors Li Charmaine Anne, Caleigh Crow, Katia Grubisic, Niigaanwewidam Sinclair, Todd Stewart and Chimwemwe Undi. You can learn more about the winners at cbcbooks.ca.


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2 months ago
49 minutes 20 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Bookends Bonus: Redefining what counts as a Canadian literary classic from Commotion

Commotion is where you go for thoughtful and vibrant conversations about all things pop culture. Host Elamin Abdelmahmoud calls on journalists, critics, creators and friends to talk through the biggest arts & entertainment stories of the day, in 30 minutes or less.


In this episode, Elamin is joined by authors Jael Richardson and David A. Robertson, and bookseller and publisher Martha Sharpe to chat about updating the Can Lit canon. What is considered to be a Canadian literary classic? Has that changed? Has it remained the same? More episodes of Commotion are available here: https://link.mgln.ai/cwea-bookends

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2 months ago
28 minutes 31 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Bernardine Evaristo: In conversation with Eleanor Wachtel

This week on Bookends, we revisit Eleanor Wachtel’s conversation with Bernardine Evaristo. 


Bernardine is the recipient of the Outstanding Contribution award by the Women’s Prize for Fiction. It’s a special, one-time award to celebrate achievement over the course of a career. “Outstanding” is the perfect word to describe Bernardine’s accomplishments — in addition to several acclaimed books, Bernardine has dedicated the past 40 years to uplifting underrepresented writers and promoting inclusivity in literature. Eleanor and Bernardine spoke on Writers & Company in 2020 about Bernardine’s Booker award-winning novel, Girl, Woman, Other, and how her family background shaped her journey as a writer. 


  • Hear the full interview here: https://digital.lib.sfu.ca/writers-company/bernardine-evaristo-black-british-identity-and-her-booker-winning-novel-girl-woman 
  • Check out the rest of the Writers & Company archive: https://digital.lib.sfu.ca/writers-company 
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2 months ago
31 minutes 12 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach
Bookends Highlights: The language of comics with 5 masters of the craft

Whether it’s battling your girlfriend’s “seven evil exes," reinterpreting childhood memories or celebrating the beauty of becoming a parent, comics and graphic novels transport readers to different worlds … and help us better understand the one we live in. In the first season of Bookends, Mattea Roach spoke with some of today’s leading cartoonists about their work and the inspiration they draw from life. In this special summer edition of the show, we’re revisiting Mattea's conversations with Adrian Tomine, Alison Bechdel, Bryan Lee O'Malley, Sarah Leavitt and Chris Ware.


Hear the full conversations here:

  • Adrian Tomine: Answering his readers' burning questions
  • Alison Bechdel on making money and seeing Fun Home in a new light
  • Bryan Lee O’Malley: 20 years of Scott Pilgrim
  • Sarah Leavitt: Illustrating grief too wide for words
  • Chris Ware: Inside the sketchbooks of a comics master
Show more...
3 months ago
53 minutes 52 seconds

Bookends with Mattea Roach

When the book ends, the conversation begins. Mattea Roach speaks with writers who have something to say about their work, the world and our place in it. You’ll always walk away with big questions to ponder and new books to read.