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Estimated from 27 chart positions in 27 markets.
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- 🇦🇺AU · Books#21M to 3M
- 🇬🇧GB · Books#22100K to 300K
- 🇨🇦CA · Books#46100K to 300K
- 🇺🇸US · Books#8530K to 100K
- 🇰🇷KR · Books#6510K to 30K
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417K to 1.3M🎙 Daily cadence·124 episodes·Last published yesterday - Monthly Reach
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1.4M to 4.3M🇦🇺71%🇬🇧7%🇨🇦7%+24 more - Active Followers
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557K to 1.7M
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On the show
From 18 epsHosts
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Recent episodes
TS Eliot 2: The Waste Land
Jun 23, 2026
Unknown duration
TS Eliot 1: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
Jun 16, 2026
Unknown duration
Bleak House by Charles Dickens - SLoB Book Club returns! (feat. Bret Walker SC)
Jun 9, 2026
1h 16m 37s
Sucking the Forbidden Fruit: Christina Rossetti's Goblin Market
Jun 2, 2026
1h 16m 10s
Wings and Things: John Keats' Ode to a Nightingale
May 26, 2026
1h 13m 51s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/23/26 | ![]() TS Eliot 2: The Waste Land | After the triumph of Prufrock and other Observations, TS Eliot almost steered the car into the ditch, poetically and personally. Under the influence of his friend, the fascist poet Ezra Pound - a man who later achieved notoriety for his enthusiastic support of Hitler during the Second World War - Eliot’s second collection of poems reveled in antisemitism, misogyny and willful obscurity. He even wrote poems in French. Pretentious, moi? In this episode, we show how just in the time - with the beret almost on his head - Eliot managed to cast it aside, regain control of the wheel, and steer the vehicle away from the boulevards of Paris into the waste land. As ever, our question is: how? In the hyperbolic spirit of a Discovery channel documentary, we think it’s fair to say that The Waste Land, published in two magazines in1922, then by Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth press in 1923, changed the world FOREVER. For readers at the time, Eliot captured the spiritual malaise of Europe after the first World War. Nobody could definitively explain the poem - although many had their theories - but it captured more than any realist novel the spirit of the age. It influenced many of the greatest books of the 20th Century, including The Great Gatsby, Evelyn Waugh’s A Handful of Dust, Raymond Chandler’s The Long Goodbye and many books of poetry. We ourselves are guilty of having written utter bollocks about this poem during our undergraduate years. In consequence of which, we tremble before our microphones for this week’s episode.Become a subscriber by signing up at Apple: http://apple.co/slobOr join our Patreon community here: https://www.patreon.com/c/secretlifeofbookspodcastHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() TS Eliot 1: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock | T.S. Eliot was a mid-west American living in London in the first decades of the 20th century, who wrote Dickens-inflected poems about fog, wind, damp evenings and the general gloom of English life (if you were a young, neurotic, over-educated, American male, that is). Eliot’s remembered in the same breath as Ezra Pound as a founding father of literary Modernism, but while very few people could quote a line from Pound, almost everyone will recognize some of these evergreen phrases from Eliot’s lugubrious output. “April is the cruellest month,” “I have measured out my life in coffee spoons,” “do I dare eat a peach?”; “I grow old, I grow old, I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled” and “this is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper.” But thing about Eliot is that he had an ear for a crowd-pleasing line, which is why he also ended up being one of the most important editors of the 20th century at the publishing house Faber and Faber, making the careers of many poets including WH Auden and Marianne Moore.Today you’ll be hearing about Eliot’s penchant for amateur theatricals, Paris, and the philosophy of Henri Bergson; and his pivot from being a high-minded Philosophy PhD student at Harvard to a wanker-banker at Lloyds in London. Next week we’ll focus on his turbulent relationship with the unhappy and unstable Vivienne, his first wife, his complicated feelings about Victorian and Elizabethan literature, and his conversion to high Anglican Christianity, which caused his good pal Viriginia Woolf to announce, “Tom is dead to me.”We claim whenever possible that all literary roads lead to the 1980s and Andrew Lloyd Webber. TS Eliot’s greatest poetic achievement is neither Prufrock nor The Waste Land, but Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, which provided the Cats! Songbook.Genius as Mcavity the Mystery Cat and Rum-Tum Tugger are, TS Eliot’s immortality was truly sealed with the ubiquitous and appalling 80s soft rock ballad “Memory,” sung by Grizabella the once-beautiful feline who has fallen on hard times amid a load of oversized garbage bins. Memory is a mash-up of lines from Eliot’s early poems, and today we’ll find out exactly what it was that so attracted this young American to the burnt out ends of smoky days in early 20C London. Become a subscriber by signing up at Apple: http://apple.co/slobOr join our Patreon community here: https://www.patreon.com/c/secretlifeofbookspodcastHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 6/9/26 | ![]() Bleak House by Charles Dickens - SLoB Book Club returns! (feat. Bret Walker SC)✨ | Charles DickensBleak House+4 | Bret Walker SC | Court of ChanceryBleak House+1 | London | Bleak HouseCharles Dickens+6 | — | 1h 16m 37s | |
| 6/2/26 | ![]() Sucking the Forbidden Fruit: Christina Rossetti's Goblin Market✨ | Victorian literatureChristina Rossetti+5 | — | Goblin MarketAlice | — | Christina RossettiGoblin Market+5 | — | 1h 16m 10s | |
| 5/26/26 | ![]() Wings and Things: John Keats' Ode to a Nightingale✨ | John Keatspoetry+5 | — | La Belle Dame Sans MerciOde to a Nightingale+3 | — | John KeatsOde to a Nightingale+5 | — | 1h 13m 51s | |
| 5/19/26 | ![]() Paths of Glory: Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard✨ | Thomas GrayElegy Written in a Country Churchyard+3 | — | Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard | Stoke Poges | Thomas GrayElegy+4 | — | 1h 17m 07s | |
| 5/15/26 | ![]() Literary Pilgrimage in New York: From the Mixes Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler✨ | literary pilgrimagechildren's literature+4 | Gretchen Rubin | Happier with Gretchen RubinMOVE 26 in '26+3 | — | literary pilgrimagechildren's book+5 | — | 33m 18s | |
| 5/12/26 | ![]() Canterbury Tales (General Prologue) by Geoffrey Chaucer✨ | Geoffrey ChaucerCanterbury Tales+4 | — | HarvardThe Canterbury Tales | Canterbury Cathedral | Canterbury TalesGeoffrey Chaucer+5 | — | 1h 22m 12s | |
| 5/5/26 | ![]() The Other Bennet Sister with author Janice Hadlow✨ | adaptationclassic literature+4 | Janice Hadlow | The Other Bennet SisterPride and Prejudice+4 | — | The Other Bennet SisterPride and Prejudice+5 | — | 53m 54s | |
| 4/28/26 | ![]() Back to School 4: Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld✨ | high school novelsEast Coast culture+3 | — | Prep | — | Curtis SittenfeldPrep+5 | — | 1h 12m 09s | |
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| 4/21/26 | ![]() Back to School 3: A Kestrel for a Knave by Barry Hines✨ | literaturefilm adaptation+4 | — | A Kestrel for a Knave | YorkshireBarnsley | Billy CasperBarry Hines+7 | — | 1h 24m 10s | |
| 4/14/26 | ![]() Back to School 2: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie✨ | literatureeducation+5 | — | New YorkerThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie+1 | Edinburgh | Miss Jean Brodieliterary analysis+8 | — | 1h 06m 22s | |
| 4/7/26 | ![]() Back to School 1: Tom Brown's School Days✨ | school fiction19th century education+4 | — | Tom Brown's School DaysThe Governess, or The Little Female Academy+4 | — | Tom Brown's School Daysschool fiction+5 | — | 1h 08m 52s | |
| 3/31/26 | ![]() The Secret Life of (Literary) Honeymoons✨ | literary analysishoneymoons in literature+4 | — | Mansfield ParkWuthering Heights+4 | — | literary honeymoonsdisastrous weddings+6 | — | 1h 08m 13s | |
| 3/24/26 | ![]() Beowulf: Inside the Anglo-Saxon mind✨ | Anglo-Saxon literatureBeowulf+3 | — | Beowulf | Anglo-Saxon Englandmodern-day Sweden+2 | BeowulfAnglo-Saxon+6 | — | 1h 21m 01s | |
| 3/21/26 | ![]() "On Morrison": a conversation with Namwali Serpell✨ | Toni Morrisonliterature+3 | Namwali Serpell | HarvardOn Morrison | — | Toni MorrisonNamwali Serpell+5 | — | 39m 55s | |
| 3/17/26 | ![]() Toni Morrison 3: Beloved✨ | Toni MorrisonBeloved+5 | — | Beloved | Cincinnati, Ohio | Toni MorrisonBeloved+5 | — | 1h 13m 08s | |
| 3/10/26 | ![]() SLoB Goes to the Oscars: Frankenstein vs Hamnet✨ | Oscarsliterary adaptations+4 | — | FrankensteinHamnet+1 | Los Angeles | OscarsFrankenstein+5 | — | 49m 00s | |
| 3/6/26 | ![]() Saved from Fire: the Toni Morrison Archives✨ | Toni Morrisonarchives+4 | Professor Autumn Womack | Princeton UniversityRootedness: The Ancestor as Foundation | — | Toni Morrisonarchives+5 | — | 37m 03s | |
| 3/3/26 | ![]() Toni Morrison 2: Song of Solomon✨ | Toni MorrisonAfrican American history+4 | — | Song of Solomon | Michigan | Toni MorrisonSong of Solomon+5 | — | 1h 02m 21s | |
| 2/24/26 | ![]() The Other Bronte Girl: Anne Bronte's Tenant of Wildfell Hall | With all the fuss and fanfare around Wuthering Heights, we’re worried Emily Bronte is getting more than her fair share of attention. So today we shift the SLOB-light to her younger sister Anne, author of the remarkable The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, published in 1848. Anne wrote it in a whirlwind after the successes of Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre, determined to prove herself a Bronte in talent and spirit.And though Anne is now the least celebrated of the Bronte trio, Tenant at the time of its publication it was considered the most shocking in the Bronte collective oevre. Anne had fearlessly pulled back the veil on marital infidelity, domestic violence, alcoholism, and the systemic torments of Victorian masculinity and marriage laws.Listeners will spot fascinating overlaps with many of the key scenes and motifs in Emily’s and Charlotte’s writing — like the fact Lord Huntingdon, the violent villain of Tenant, shares his initial with Heathcliff; that he sometimes bears an odd resemblance to Mr. Rochester, and that Wildfell Hall itself has the same initials as Wuthering Heights. But Tenant of Wildfell Hall is also uniquely its own creation, and today Sophie and Jonty get to work unpacking what makes it so extraordinary.To wrap this Bronte mini-series up we ask, should Tenant of Wildfell Hall be classed as peak Bronte, the equal of Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre? And should Emerald Fennell be making Tenant the next stop on her raunchy, irreverent period adaptation-spree?Become a subscriber by signing up at Apple: http://apple.co/slobOr join our Patreon community here: https://www.patreon.com/c/secretlifeofbookspodcastHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 2/21/26 | ![]() Jane Austen's Birthday: why everyone wants to party with Jane | A special bonus episode about the blockbuster phenom of Jane Austen’s 250th Birthday celebrations. Sophie’s guest is Professor Devoney Looser, one of the world’s leading Austen scholars, and the author of the brilliant Wild for Austen: A Rebellious, Subversive, and Untamed Jane, about the unscripted, occasionally unhinged world that Jane Austen really knew, and which influenced her writing.We talk about why the Austen obsession has only gone from strength to strength, and Devoney looks ahead to Austenmania in 2026, with new screen adaptations coming to delight the fans.Get the Book:Devoney Looser, Wild for Austen: A Rebellious, Subversive, and Untamed Jane, St Martin’s Press, 2025.More fun coverage:From Alexandra Schwartz, a SLOB guest, in the New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/newsletter/the-daily/jane-austens-uncommon-compassionhttps://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/12/16/books/jane-austen-250th-birthday.htmlListen to our episode about Mrs. Dalloway with Alex Schwartz Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 2/17/26 | ![]() Emerald Fennell's "Wuthering Heights": is the hype worth it? | Best Valentine’s Day ever! SLOB’s “Wuthering Heights” watch-party. Sophie and Jonty take it character by character – inanimate characters included — to decide who are the winners and who are the losers in the Fennell-Robbie-Elordi mash-up adaptation of Emily Bronte’s novel. And in the episode’s gripping second half they move onto the really meaty questions: race, class, sex, domestic violence, and pets.As the movie poster says, Come Undone - with SLOB - this Valentine's season.Become a subscriber by signing up at Apple: http://apple.co/slobOr join our Patreon community here: https://www.patreon.com/c/secretlifeofbookspodcastHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 2/10/26 | ![]() Wuthering Heights: Is this really the greatest love story of all time? | The storm clouds are gathering in anticipation of the Valentine’s Day release of Emerald Fennell’s raunchy film adaptation of Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights. The film has been described by one critic as “very horny, very sumptuous, and very demented.” Margot Robbie looks set to change the way we read this beloved classic, well, if not forever, for a few weeks during awards season.It’s fair to say that anyone remotely connected to the world of classic literature is standing by, getting ready to jeer.And it’s also fair to say that the film has propelled Wuthering Heights to become the most read classic of 2026. The New York subway, the London Tube and many other transport systems worldwide are dotted with earnest young people, proudly nose-deep in their Penguin Wuthering Heights.If SLOB has a motto, it’s be prepared. To ready our devoted listeners for the big V. Day release, we’ve recorded a brand-new episode on Wuthering Heights. Emily Bronte’s novel, which may just be the most unhinged, genre-busting, unputdownable classic in English, is back, bigger, better, and balmier than when SLOB recorded our first episode back at the very beginning of this podcast.We drink deep, but always with our trademark cheeky humor, in Emily Bronte’s biography, the secrets behind the book’s writing, and why the Heathcliff-Catherine love-story it is most definitely not GOATED, as the kids say.Become a subscriber by signing up at Apple: http://apple.co/slobOr join our Patreon community here: https://www.patreon.com/c/secretlifeofbookspodcastHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 2/6/26 | ![]() Frankenstein in Oxford: A Conversation with Richard Ovenden, OBE | Sophie talks to Richard Ovenden, OBE, the 25th Bodley’s Librarian at Oxford, about the manuscript of Frankenstein, one of the most extraordinary, and fascinating, literary treasures of all time. Richard is head of Oxford’s Bodleian, as well as the University's libraries, museums, and even botanical gardens. Though Richard isn’t personally dusting off the attic vases or planting the bulbs, he does still spend huge amounts of time with rare books and manuscripts.In this thrilling bonus episode he talks about how the Bodleian came to own the manuscript of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, along with the large, fascinating, and often very weird collection gathered from the Shelley family and their friends over several generations.This is an amazing behind-the-scenes look at what goes on in the world’s great libraries, why old books really matter, and why SLOB was right all along that Percy Bysshe Shelley is bad news.To see the manuscript, go to the Digital Bodleian: https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/objects/53fd0f29-d482-46e1-aa9d-37829b49987d/Become a subscriber by signing up at Apple: http://apple.co/slobOr join our Patreon community here: https://www.patreon.com/c/secretlifeofbookspodcastHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
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41 placements across 27 markets.
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41 placements across 27 markets.

























