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On the show
From 13 epsHost
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Recent episodes
James O'Loghlin on mesothelioma and friendship in 'The Accidental Activist'
Jun 14, 2026
Unknown duration
Justine Hausheer on the fight against extinction in 'The Vanishing Wild'
May 25, 2026
32m 40s
Jess Kitching on love, loss and new beginnings in, 'The Secrets of Strangers'
May 20, 2026
20m 23s
Kerry Jewell on her compelling, candid and darkly funny novel, 'A Little Unwell'
May 2, 2026
22m 19s
Martin McKenzie-Murray on the shadow world of first responders in 'Sirens'
Apr 27, 2026
29m 32s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/14/26 | ![]() James O'Loghlin on mesothelioma and friendship in 'The Accidental Activist' | Usually when a friend is dying, there’s not much you can do. But what if there was? James O’Loghlin’s best friend at university was Jum Wallner, but once careers and kids came along, they drifted apart. That was, until the day Jum felt a pain in his side and remembered he had grown up in a house filled with ‘Mr Fluffy’ asbestos insulation. Nearly everyone who contracts an asbestos disease gets it from their work and is entitled to compensation or financial support. Jum discovered that if you got one from your home, tough luck. You were on your own. Before he died, Jum wanted to change that. James leapt at the chance to help him. But with zero lobbying experience, how were they going to persuade the ACT Labor Government and the Federal Liberal Government to work together to help the victims of the 1000 ‘Mr Fluffy’ houses? In the middle of Covid, how would they attract national media attention? Most importantly, as Jum’s illness worsened, could they get it done in time? This is a story about amateurs figuring out how to influence government, how friendship can drift and then be found again, and how tragedy can make it clear what really matters. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to James O'Loghlin about the changing contours of friendship as we move through life, how he came to be an activist for the victims of Canberra's 'Mr Fluffy' houses, and how to to prepare for final conversations with dying friends. | — | ||||||
| 5/25/26 | ![]() Justine Hausheer on the fight against extinction in 'The Vanishing Wild'✨ | biodiversityextinction crisis+4 | Justine E. Hausheer | The Vanishing Wild | AustraliaSnowy Mountains+2 | extinctionbiodiversity+6 | — | 32m 40s | |
| 5/20/26 | ![]() Jess Kitching on love, loss and new beginnings in, 'The Secrets of Strangers'✨ | griefmystery+5 | Jess Kitching | The Secrets of Strangers | ManchesterBamblethorpe+1 | thrillerwriter's block+5 | — | 20m 23s | |
| 5/2/26 | ![]() Kerry Jewell on her compelling, candid and darkly funny novel, 'A Little Unwell'✨ | medical trainingdoctor's life+4 | Kerry Jewell | Good Reading MagazineA Little Unwell | Amy | doctorhospital+4 | — | 22m 19s | |
| 4/27/26 | ![]() Martin McKenzie-Murray on the shadow world of first responders in 'Sirens'✨ | first responderstrauma+3 | Martin McKenzie-Murray | Sirens | — | first responderstrauma+5 | — | 29m 32s | |
| 4/3/26 | ![]() Luke Taylor on Peter Marralwanga, Painter of the Djang of Western Arnhem Land✨ | Aboriginal artbark painting+4 | Luke Taylor | Maningrida Arts and Culture | Western Arnhem Land | Peter Marralwangabark painting+5 | — | 24m 39s | |
| 3/30/26 | ![]() Jane Messer on her compelling memoir, 'Raven Mother: War, family and inheritance'✨ | memoirJewish history+5 | Jane Messer | Raven Mother | BerlinIsrael+4 | memoirJewish family+8 | — | 26m 59s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() Theresa Miller on stepping up to the microphone and making an impact in 'Speak Up'✨ | public speakingcommunication skills+3 | Theresa Miller | Good Reading Magazine | — | public speakingmedia training+3 | — | 28m 27s | |
| 2/11/26 | ![]() Vikki Petraitis on a forty-year-old true crime mystery, 'The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron'✨ | true crimecold case+4 | Vikki Petraitis | Good Reading MagazineThe Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron | Phillip Island | true crimeVivienne Cameron+5 | — | 28m 01s | |
| 1/14/26 | ![]() Debra Dank on family, culture, connection and the power of memory in 'Ankami'✨ | family historyAboriginal culture+4 | Debra Dank | Ankami | — | familyAboriginal+5 | — | 36m 31s | |
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| 11/23/25 | ![]() Vicki Bennett on her story of love, war, and inter-generational healing, 'The Letters'✨ | inter-generational healinglove+5 | Vicki Bennett | The Letters | AustraliaFrance | Vicki BennettThe Letters+5 | — | 17m 57s | |
| 11/23/25 | ![]() Chris Blake on his crime thriller set on New Zealand's wild west coast, 'Softly Calls the Devil'✨ | crime thrillerNew Zealand+4 | Chris Blake | Softly Calls the Devil | HaastNew Zealand+1 | crime thrillerNew Zealand+5 | — | 18m 38s | |
| 11/21/25 | ![]() Henry Reynolds on Australian colonisation from the top down in 'Looking From the North'✨ | Australian historycolonisation+4 | Henry Reynolds | UN General AssemblyAustralian Federal government+1 | — | Henry Reynoldscolonisation+5 | — | 34m 14s | |
| 11/2/25 | ![]() Amra Pajalic on her thrilling Balkan war murder mystery, 'Time Kneels Between Mountains'✨ | Balkan warhistorical fiction+4 | Amra Pajalic | Time Kneels Between Mountains | SrebrenicaBosnia | Balkan warmurder mystery+5 | — | 21m 47s | |
| 10/30/25 | ![]() Joanna Nell on her heart-warming story celebrating life and love in, 'The Funeral Crashers' | Retired academic Martin Pottinger's romantic aspirations for the delectable head of his former university's archaeology department, Professor Mary Blake, seem about to be realised. If only he could devise a plan to manage the demands of his eccentric elderly mother, Edwina. Recently bereaved Grace Cavendish spends her days helping out at All Souls Church, making it her mission to drown out the Reverend Rod's tone-deaf hymn-singing and give each funeral recipient a hearty send-off. Yet the peace she craves remains elusive despite the comforts offered by psychic medium Rhondda and her eight-year-old son, Hudson. When Martin and Grace meet and bond at an All Souls service, they unwittingly set off a chain of events with far-reaching consequences. They become funeral crashers. But who could have predicted that crashing funerals might have such life-changing and life-affirming outcomes? In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Joanna Nell about how funerals are not just a stage in the grieving process, her role as a GP in aged care and advocacy for ageing positively, and creating stories and characters that reflect the realities of later life. | — | ||||||
| 10/16/25 | ![]() Suzanne Leal on her HNSA award-winning book for young adults, 'The Year We Escaped' | Europe, 1940. With war on their doorstep, German classmates Klara and Rachel, and French brothers Lucien and Paul, are forced to leave their homes. They are taken to Gurs, a French detention camp in the south-west of France. It's a crowded place, with little comfort and even less food. When Klara and Rachel are promised safe refuge in a remote French village, Lucien and Paul are anxious to join them — and will risk their own lives to get there. Filled with adventure, danger and intrigue, this is the story of four unlikely friends desperate to escape from a war that keeps coming closer. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Suzanne Leal the source of her fascination with World War II history, why finding the right setting for young people's introduction to historical fiction is critical, and why combining themes of loss, resilience and empathy with a great story are essential to engaging with the subject. | — | ||||||
| 10/16/25 | ![]() Tasma Walton and Robbie Arnott on their ARA HNSA 2025 prize-winning novels | 'I am Nannertgarrook' is based on the true story of Tasma Walton’s ancestor, a powerful, heart-wrenching novel about maternal love that endures against pitiless odds. Kidnapped by sealers and enslaved far from her homeland, Nannertgarrook has a spirit that refuses to bow/ From her idyllic life in sea country in Nerrm (Port Phillip Bay, Victoria), Nannertgarrook is abducted and taken to a slave market, leaving behind a husband, daughter and son. Pregnant when seized, she soon gives birth to another son, whom she raises with the children of her fellow captives. In the distant highlands, a puma named Dusk is killing shepherds. Down in the lowlands, twins Iris and Floyd are out of work, money and friends. When they hear that a bounty has been placed on Dusk, they reluctantly decide to join the hunt. As they journey up into this wild, haunted country, they discover there's far more to the land and people of the highlands than they imagined. And as they close in on their prey, they're forced to reckon with conflicts both ancient and deeply personal. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Tasma Walton and Robbie Arnott about their ARA Historical Novel Society of Australasia's prize winning novels for 2025. Tasma and Robbie share their thoughts about the role of mythology within the genre of historical fiction, the destruction of landscape and culture that has come with colonisation, and how very different approaches to research have informed their novels. | — | ||||||
| 10/13/25 | ![]() Katie Edmiston from Queensland State Library on 'How do you Library?' | "How do you library?" is a statewide campaign that aims to expand visitation and encourage deeper engagement and participation at libraries across Queensland by highlighting the diversity of services, programs, resources and surprising things people can do at their local library. Libraries offer much more than you think; they are places for everyone to connect to knowledge, ideas, technology, community, history, and even other people, the list goes on. Using the word library as a verb invites the reader to consider how they currently engage with their library and how they can curate their own experience to connect to the people and things that matter to them. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Katie Edmiston about how your local library is no longer just about books, magazines and newspapers but are now critical community hubs for learning, engagement and services, how going digital has opened up new worlds for accessing information and broadening collections of all kinds, and while libraries will remain the go-to destination for quality information and research guidance, libraries around the state have a bright future that will continue to serve the changing needs of both urban and rural communities. | — | ||||||
| 10/6/25 | ![]() Garry Disher on the fifth in the Hirsch crime thriller series, 'Mischance Creek' | Hirsch is checking firearms. The regular police audit: all weapons secured, ammo stored separately, no unauthorised person with keys to the gun safe. He’s checking people, too. The drought is hitting hard in the mid-north, and Hirsch is responsible for the welfare of his scattered flock of battlers, bluebloods, loners and miscreants. He isn’t usually called on for emergency roadside assistance. But with all the other services fully stretched, it’s Hirsch who has to grind his way out beyond the Mischance Creek ruins to where some clueless tourist has run into a ditch. As it turns out, though, Annika Nordrum isn’t exactly a tourist. She’s searching for the body of her mother, who went missing seven years ago. And the only sense in which she’s clueless is the lack of information unearthed by the cops who phoned in the original investigation. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Garry Disher about the character of Paul Hirschhausen he originally envisaged, how his own research into far right and sovereign citizen groups turned out to be very timely, and why small town Australia is defined by the people who live there. | — | ||||||
| 9/27/25 | ![]() Inga Simpson and Tannya Harricks on their picture book for children, 'The Peach King' | When Little Peach Tree was just a sapling, all they could see was row upon row of other peach trees. And, on top of the hill, watching over the orchard - the Peach King. As seasons pass, bringing cycles of change, Little Peach Tree grows and grows. But darker changes are stirring. Soon rain is scarce, the forests turn brown, animals flee and the sky turns red.To protect the orchard, the Peach King faces grave danger and Little Peach Tree must find their voice. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Inga Simpson and Tannya Harricks about their shared passion for the natural world, why stories of resilience in nature have meaning for us all, and why the peach is the king of fruit. | — | ||||||
| 9/19/25 | ![]() Blake Johnston on surfing success, change and resilience in 'Swellbeing' | For Blake 'Blakey' Johnston growing up around the beaches of Cronulla, life was good and surfing was everything. At sixteen, he turned pro and took off around the world, chasing his dream to become the world's best. The thing about dreams, though, is that they change - sometimes by choice and sometimes by circumstance. For some people, that change can be too much. 'SwellBeing: Everyone Deserves to Feel Awesome' is a powerful memoir and mental health toolkit from the world record holder for longest surf. Blake Johnston's first book is an honest and inspiring story about carrying a family history of suicide and struggling with mental illness, what he did to rise back up and the lessons he wants to share to help others. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Blake Johnston about his idyllic childhood growing up in the beachside suburb of Cronulla, his early success on the pro surfing circuit, and the toolkit everyone one needs to make it through the tough times and live their best lives. | — | ||||||
| 9/18/25 | ![]() Mark Greenwood and Frané Lessac on their children's picture book, 'The Legend of Jessie Hickman' | Jessie Hickman was a woman who lived outside the norms of her time. A brave and formidable woman, Jessie lived a life full of adventure, action and danger. At the age of eight she joined a travelling bush circus, learning to perform as a whip cracker, sharpshooter and rough rider. She would perform dangerous feats, like tightrope walking or handstands on bare-backed ponies. When the circus closed, Jessie became an outlaw and cattle rustler, famous for her daring escapes. This picture book brings to life the fascinating but little-known story of Jessie Hickman (1890–1936), Australia’s so-called ‘Lady Bushranger’. This lavishly illustrated picture book immerses the reader in the wilderness of what is now the Wollemi National Park as Jessie’s life unfolds with every turn of the page. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Mark Greenwood and Frané Lessac their shared passion for Australian history, about life in a travelling bush circus at the turn of the twentieth century, and how a young girl from humble beginnings became an Australian bush legend. | — | ||||||
| 8/31/25 | ![]() Jessica Mansour-Nahra on her first novel, an eerie gothic psychological thriller, 'The Farm' | When 37-year-old Leila suffers a health tragedy, she doesn't recover as quickly as she expected. Her partner, James, suggests a year away from the city - they'll stay on his family farm, where the wide, open spaces and clean country air will help her come to terms with her grief. But the property is remote and the house oppressive. Leila is disturbed by strange noises, fleeting visions and intrusive dreams. James worries that her medication is causing hallucinations.As Leila's isolation grows amid the haunted landscape, so does her suspicion that she isn't the first woman James has relocated to the farm. Is what she's experiencing real? Or is it all in her head? In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Jessica Mansour-Nahra about the power of imagery to create a ghostly atmosphere, how isolation can lead to heightened sensory experiences, and how a barren, open landscape can contribute to an intense feeling of claustrophobia. | — | ||||||
| 8/27/25 | ![]() Belinda Castles on discovering literary Sydney on foot in 'Walking Sydney' | Walking Sydney invites you to walk with a city’s writers as they share their places of home and imagination. From the streets of the suburbs to the shores of the harbour, as we walk amid diasporas, countercultures, activists, artists, dreamers and thieves, the city comes alive with story. Written by Belinda Castles from walks taken with fifteen writers, Walking Sydney is an opportunity to see the city afresh. Eveleigh and Carriageworks with Jazz Money – Surry Hills with Fiona Kelly McGregor – The Rocks, Walsh Bay and Circular Quay with Gail Jones – Parramatta with Eda Gunaydin – King Street, Newtown with Vanessa Berry – Freshwater with Malcolm Knox – Yagoona and Bankstown with Sheila Ngọc Phạm – Rushcutters Bay Park and Elizabeth Bay with Delia Falconer – North Willoughby and Middle Cove with Jakelin Troy – Casula and Liverpool with Max Easton – Kings Cross, Elizabeth Bay, Darlinghurst and Surry Hills with Neal Drinnan – Bronte and Clovelly with Beth Yahp – Bankstown and Punchbowl Boys’ High School with Michael Mohammed Ahmad – Cooks River with Michelle de Kretser – City and Redfern with Larissa Behrendt. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Belinda Castles about her fascination for the people, places and history of the city of Sydney, why walking is both a physical and creative experience, and the hopes she has for the future of this city and for its people. | — | ||||||
| 8/24/25 | ![]() Toni Jordan on greyhounds, gambling and growing up, in her new novel, 'Tenderfoot' | Brisbane, 1975: Andie Tanner's world is small but whole. Her mum is complicated, but she adores her dad and the kennel of racing greyhounds that live under their house. Andie is a serious girl with plans: finish school with her friends, then apprentice to her father until she can become a greyhound trainer, with dogs of her very own. But real life rarely goes to plan, and the world is bigger and more complicated than Andie could imagine. When she loses everything she cares about - her family, her friends, the dogs - it's up to Andie to reclaim her future. She will need all her wits to survive this new reality of secrets and half-truths, addictions and crime. In this episode Gregory Dobbs chats to Toni Jordan about how her varied work history found its way in this story, how the triangulation of mother, father and daughter shapes relationships and character, and how we are all truly children in adult form. | — | ||||||
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