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Book It In

What do books tell us about the world we live in? Join Lucy Clark, Paul Daley and Zoya Patel for conversations with top authors about the ideas that shape their work. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify

  • Image for Book It In Podcast featuring host Lucy Clark with Bo Seo author of Good Arguments available via Simon & Schuster.

    Bo Seo on how to have a good argument

    At a time when our society is growing increasingly divided, the world champion debater argues that we shouldn’t be aiming for fewer disagreements
  • Image for Book It In Podcast featuring host Paul Daley with Rachel Franks, author of An Uncommon Hangman out via New South Books

    Rachel Franks on colonial Australia’s noseless hangman

    Paul Daley speaks with the author of Nosey Bob’s biography about his 62 hangings and why Indigenous people and women were disproportionately sentenced to death
  • Image for Book It In Podcast featuring host Jane Lee with Jennifer Down ,and a copy of the book, Bodies Of Life.

    Jennifer Down on why we need to read about trauma

    The winner of the 2022 Miles Franklin Award, Jennifer Down, had only one rule when she set out to write about a fictional survivor of child sexual abuse: do no harm
  • Image for Book It In Podcast featuring host Paul Daley with guests John Carty and Jilda Andrews

    Jilda Andrews and John Carty on Aboriginal art and what it means to belong

    Two anthropologists with different lived experiences discuss the meaning of Country and how it guides them in the preservation of Aboriginal heritage, including the collection and repatriation of Aboriginal human remains
  • Image for episode five of Book It In Podcast featuring host Lucy Clarke and Amy Thunig, author of Tell Me Again out now via UQP

    Amy Thunig on the paradox of family trauma and belonging

    Gomeroi education academic Dr Amy Thunig experienced neglect as a child, but their home was also a refuge of safety and belonging
  • Image for Book It In Podcast featuring host Zoya Patel with Evelyn Araluen author of Dropbear available through UQP

    Evelyn Araluen on the dark side of Blinky Bill

    Are Blinky Bill and Snugglepot and Cuddlepie just cute and cuddly bush characters, or is there something more sinister behind these classic Australian fairytales?
  • Image for Book It In Podcast featuring host Jane Lee with Siang Lu author of The Whitewash available through UQP

    Siang Lu on who gets to be a Hollywood hero

    Movie buff Siang Lu watched hundreds of movies for his debut novel The Whitewash, including many where white actors played characters of colour
  • Image for episode two of Book It In Podcast featuring host Zoya Patel and S.L. Lim, author of Revenge: A Murder In Three Parts out through Transit Lounge

    SL Lim on rage, revenge and unfairness

    The protagonist in SL Lim’s award-winning novel, Revenge, is unmarried, childless and denied a university education. In a story about inequality and disadvantage in one family – which echoes families around the world – the protagonist’s rage results in an unexpected conclusion
  • Image for episode one of Book It In Podcast featuring host Lucy Clarke and Brigid Delaney, author of Reasons Not To Worry out now via Allen and Unwin

    Brigid Delaney on how the Stoics taught her not to worry

    In 2018, Brigid Delaney experimented with the idea of living like a Stoic. Now she says the philosophy is a valuable tool for dealing with life’s modern dilemmas
  • Composite image of author Paul Cleary and the cover photo for his book Title Fight: How the Yindjibarndi Battled and Defeated a Mining Giant

    Paul Cleary on land rights, native title and big mining

    Paul Cleary documents the Yindjibarndi community’s resistance and fight against Fortescue Mining Group
  • Omar Musa holding his book Killernova with two hands, and a close up of the cover of the book.

    Omar Musa on using humour to talk about racism, colonialism and inequality

    The Malaysian Australian author and poet wrestles with race, family and isolation in his new book, Killernova
  • Photo of Hannah Kent and the cover of her new book Devotion

    Hannah Kent on challenging shame through historical fiction

    Hannah Kent’s novel, Devotion, is a queer love story that is set in a pious, nineteenth century religious community
  • Composite image of a headshot of Craig Sherborne and the cover of The Grass Hotel, which includes a drawing of a horse

    Craig Sherborne on love, death and complicated mothers

    Craig Sherborne’s novel The Grass Hotel tells the story of caring for a mother who is declining with dementia. He talks to Paul Daley about his own complex upbringing
  • Portrait of author Yumna Kassab and the cover of her latest novel, Australiana (published by Ultimo Press)

    Yumna Kassab on how we imagine Australia in literature

    Australiana is a novel set in a nameless town in rural Australia, where Yumna Kassab explores universal experiences of inequality
  • Chelsea Watego's Another Day in the Colony, which is out through University of Queensland Press

    Chelsea Watego on sovereignty, survival and self-determination in the colony

    Chelsea Watego talks to Paul Daley about why she says ‘fuck hope’ and why she wants to take her book, Another Day in the Colony, to Aboriginal readers in prisons
  • A composite image of artist, mental health recovery advocate and author, Heidi Everett, along side the cover of her book My Friend Fox

    Heidi Everett on foxes, care and the language of the mental health system

    Heidi Everett uses the lyricism of music and the drawings of a four-legged friend to describe her various mental states
  • Australian author Emily Bitto and book Wild Abandon

    Emily Bitto on gender and the hero’s quest

    In a road trip prompted by an Australian man’s imagination of America, Emily Bitto explores the literary trope of the masculine hero’s quest – through her novel Wild Abandon
  • Marion Frith is the author of the novel Here in the After

    Marion Frith on hope in the aftermath of war

    Paul Daley talks to Marion Frith about how she wrote a novel about life after loss and human resilience in the midst of trauma – by telling the story through an unlikely friendship between two fictional characters
  • Debi Marshall, author of Banquet: The Untold Story of Adelaide's Family Murders.

    Debi Marshall on the popularity of true crime

    Through personal tragedy and time spent telling the stories of victims, investigative crime journalist Debi Marshall says she’s found that closure doesn’t exist.
  • Author Rawah Arja with her new book The F Team for the Guardian Australia books podcast December 2021

    Rawah Arja on how to get inside the mind of a teenage boy

    Despite numerous rejections, Rawah Arja was determined to write a YA novel for – and about – teenage boys in Western Sydney
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