
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇦🇺AU · Books#1585K to 30K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
2.5K to 15K🎙 ~2x weekly·390 episodes·Last published 1w ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
5K to 30K🇦🇺100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
2K to 12K
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Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
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
Luke Taylor on Peter Marralwanga, Painter of the Djang of Western Arnhem Land
Apr 4, 2026
24m 39s
Jane Messer on her compelling memoir, 'Raven Mother: War, family and inheritance'
Mar 30, 2026
26m 59s
Theresa Miller on stepping up to the microphone and making an impact in 'Speak Up'
Mar 16, 2026
28m 28s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/2/26 | ![]() Kerry Jewell on her compelling, candid and darkly funny novel, 'A Little Unwell' | For Amy, being a doctor was supposed to mean winning at life. Helping people. Saving lives. Having a secure job. Earning good money. Tick, tick, tick, tick. But now, in her second year in a city hospital the reality is a world away from Amy's med school dreams. She is finding out that people don't always want to be 'helped', the pay barely covers rent, her hours are ridiculous, her favourite patients are getting sicker, and her surgical trainee boyfriend has recently gone shy on proposing. W... | 22m 19s | ||||||
| 4/27/26 | ![]() Martin McKenzie-Murray on the shadow world of first responders in 'Sirens' | Three first responders – a paramedic, a police officer and a firefighter – are motivated by a desire to serve the community. But they are drawn to their work by more complicated impulses as well: a need for control, an acute awareness of danger, and childhood experiences they are still running from. Peter, a paramedic, served at high-profile disasters including the Port Arthur massacre and the Beaconsfield mine collapse. Despite helping countless people, he is haunted by the lives he couldn't... | 29m 32s | ||||||
| 4/4/26 | ![]() Luke Taylor on Peter Marralwanga, Painter of the Djang of Western Arnhem Land | Peter Marralwanga (1916–1987) was a leading figure in one of the great art practices of the world. He grew up in western Arnhem Land surrounded by artists painting in rock shelters and he learned to paint this way himself. The subjects of his paintings were the Djang who made his country and placed the spirits of people within it. Marralwanga’s story highlights the way bark painting became important as a way of evading assimilation policies rife within Northern Territory towns. Marralwanga es... | 24m 39s | ||||||
| 3/30/26 | ![]() Jane Messer on her compelling memoir, 'Raven Mother: War, family and inheritance' | In Raven Mother, Jane Messer weaves together her Jewish family’s tragic story – stretching back and forth between Berlin, Israel, Palestine, Melbourne and Sydney. Messer retraces the steps of her Jewish grandmother Bella, as she tries to understand her life in pre-war Berlin and Mandate Palestine, to post-war Melbourne where she didn’t survive the surviving, and why her father was abandoned in England before the war. In this powerful, beautifully written and insightful book, Messer spends tim... | 26m 59s | ||||||
| 3/16/26 | ![]() Theresa Miller on stepping up to the microphone and making an impact in 'Speak Up' | Theresa Miller has spent decades working as a journalist and now media trainer, coaching people across all industries – from CEOs and academics to climate campaigners, entrepreneurs and artists – to communicate confidently, clearly and concisely. In Speak Up, she shows you how to successfully share your expertise and experience with an audience – whether it’s creating an inspiring work presentation or media release, blitzing a job interview or nailing your message on a podcast, panel, TV or r... | 28m 28s | ||||||
| 2/10/26 | ![]() Vikki Petraitis on a forty-year-old true crime mystery in, 'The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron' | In 1986 on Phillip Island, a young woman called Beth Barnard was savagely murdered and her boyfriend’s wife, Vivienne Cameron, went missing. The police immediately jumped to what they thought was the obvious conclusion: in a jealous rage, Vivienne had killed Beth and then herself. Vivienne’s body was never found. But Vikki Petraitis wasn’t convinced. The official line didn’t explain all the evidence, and it certainly didn’t seem like the behaviour of a mother with two small boys. Fascinated ... | 28m 01s | ||||||
| 1/14/26 | ![]() Debra Dank on family, culture, connection and the power of memory in 'Ankami' | Debra Dank had long been desperate to paint a fuller picture of her family, to add flesh to the name-bones and the few precious stories she possessed. Debra had been aware of her father's five siblings, some of whom had died before she could come to know them, but there were always whispers and gaps and silences. Her parents had experiences that affected how Debra grew up, but hers seemed to be one of the very few Aboriginal families who had escaped having children stolen, who had viewed this... | 36m 31s | ||||||
| 11/24/25 | ![]() Aaron Tait on his journey from war to peace in 'Far Horizons' | As a seventeen-year-old officer Aaron Tait was deployed to a war in the Middle East. Far Horizons is the story of what happened next. From war zones to slums, Aaron Tait has travelled to and worked in more than 70 countries across the globe as a military officer, humanitarian and social entrepreneur, and now writes to help people live deliberate lives filled with purpose. Far Horizons is a globe-spanning coming-of-age memoir of a fighter turned peace-seeker on a vibrant journey of transformat... | 27m 04s | ||||||
| 11/23/25 | ![]() Vicki Bennett on her story of love, war, and intergenerational healing, 'The Letters' | When rebellious Ruby is bequeathed her late grandfather’s personal letters, she is pulled from peacetime 1973 Australia, to 1917 World War 1 France. Without identification or any way home, she sets out to right a wrong that has broken her family for generations. She meets her young grandfather, an Australian soldier, who has a secret family – a French wife and daughter. Ruby is the only person who knows the true danger they are in, and sets out to rewrite her family’s past. A local resistance... | 17m 57s | ||||||
| 11/23/25 | ![]() Chris Blake on his gripping crime thriller set on New Zealand's wild west coast, 'Softly Calls the Devil' | Things are going well for Matt Buchanan. After some hard times, life is peaceful as sole-charge constable for the small, isolated settlement of Haast on New Zealand's wild West Coast. He's made friends among the locals, won their trust. He keeps their little world safe. And he's working in spectacular surroundings - the fierce Tasman Sea, the dense beech forest, the dark, cold swamps, the snowy Southern Alps. But then his much-loved predecessor, Gus, is discovered beside a river with a bullet... | 18m 38s | ||||||
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| 11/21/25 | ![]() Henry Reynolds’ ground-breaking re-examination of Australian colonisation from the top down, in 'Looking From the North' | When acclaimed historian Henry Reynolds moved from Hobart to Townsville to teach Australian history in the 1960s, he discovered the books of the period covered very little about northern Australia and First Nations peoples. He set out to help remedy the situation and ended up transforming Australian history in ways he could never have imagined. In 'Looking from the North', Reynolds again turns Australian history on its axis with an exploration of colonisation north of the Tropic of Capricorn.... | 34m 13s | ||||||
| 11/2/25 | ![]() Amra Pajalic on her thrilling Balkan war murder mystery, 'Time Kneels Between Mountains' | Overnight, Seka Torlak’s life as a regular teenager is upended as Srebrenica, her once peaceful town, falls under siege and she faces starvation, shelling, and sniper attacks. When desperately needed antibiotics and food disappear and are sold on the black market, Seka vows to investigate the corruption and bring the culprits to justice. As the war ravages Srebrenica, Seka's resilience is tested as she navigates the harsh realities of war. Yet, amidst the devastation, she finds a glimm... | 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 peac... | 18m 58s | ||||||
| 10/16/25 | ![]() Suzanne Leal on her Historical Novel Society Australasia 2025 award-winning novel for young readers, '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... | 17m 34s | ||||||
| 10/16/25 | ![]() Tasma Walton and Robbie Arnott on their Historical Novel Society Australasia 2025 award-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 an... | 28m 45s | ||||||
| 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 ... | 22m 07s | ||||||
| 10/6/25 | ![]() Garry Disher on the fifth in the Hirsch crime thriller series, 'Mischance Creek' | Constable Paul Hirschhausen 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... | 21m 10s | ||||||
| 9/27/25 | ![]() Inga Simpson and Tannya Harricks their new 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 c... | 15m 25s | ||||||
| 9/19/25 | ![]() Blake Johnston on surfing success, change and resilience in 'Swellbeing: Everyone Deserves to Feel Awesome' | 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 l... | 21m 12s | ||||||
| 9/18/25 | ![]() Mark Greenwood and Frané Lessac on their new picture book for children, '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 br... | 17m 17s | ||||||
| 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 ... | 24m 55s | ||||||
| 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 –... | 33m 02s | ||||||
| 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... | 23m 03s | ||||||
| 7/26/25 | ![]() Tanya Scott on her high-octane debut crime thriller, 'Stillwater' | After years away from his home town of Melbourne, Luke Harris is back on track. All he wants is a normal job, his own house and a dog. But Luke is a man with a past, when life was anything but peaceful and his skills ran to the dark side. A past not easily forgotten – or forgiven. When he crosses paths with Gus Alberici – the brutal criminal he worked for as a teenager – he's dragged reluctantly back to his old life. Luke's father has vanished, along with a chunk of Gus's cash. And something ... | 23m 13s | ||||||
| 7/24/25 | ![]() Adam Courtenay on the dynamic, complex and driven man in his memoir 'My Father Bryce' | Bryce Courtenay was one of Australia's highest-selling and most-loved authors. From his first book, The Power of One, he captivated readers. Many of his fans would have thought they knew him, and they did - they knew the version of him that he wanted to present to the world. To his son Adam, Bryce Courtenay was larger than life, mercurial, and impossible to know completely. In this moving, unforgettable memoir, Adam searches for the real Bryce. His father was a natural born storyteller and oc... | 29m 58s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.

























