
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.
Most discussed topics
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Total monthly reach
Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇦🇹AT · Books#4310K to 30K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
5K to 15K🎙 Weekly cadence·58 episodes·Last published 3mo ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
10K to 30K🇦🇹100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
3K to 9K
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Platform Distribution
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.
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Recent episodes
Francis Spufford on Blitz London, archangels, and the temptation to change history.
Mar 2, 2026
54m 52s
Madeleine Dunnigan on heated rivalries, women writing desire, and boyhood’s pressure systems
Feb 9, 2026
52m 24s
Jonathan Mahler on the 1980s New York that made Trump — and Michael Chabon’s comic-book Gotham
Jan 26, 2026
51m 27s
Laurie Gwen Shapiro on Amelia Earhart, Harriet the Spy, and the art of rewriting legend
Sep 16, 2025
54m 17s
Ada Calhoun on Ghostwriting, Thornton Wilder, and the audacity of desire
Aug 29, 2025
51m 37s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3/2/26 | ![]() Francis Spufford on Blitz London, archangels, and the temptation to change history.✨ | Blitz Londonhistorical fiction+3 | Francis Spufford | NonesuchGolden Hill+1 | — | Francis SpuffordNonesuch+4 | — | 54m 52s | |
| 2/9/26 | ![]() Madeleine Dunnigan on heated rivalries, women writing desire, and boyhood’s pressure systems✨ | coming-of-ageboarding school+4 | Madeleine Dunnigan | Jean | Compton Manor | Madeleine DunniganJean+5 | — | 52m 24s | |
| 1/26/26 | ![]() Jonathan Mahler on the 1980s New York that made Trump — and Michael Chabon’s comic-book Gotham✨ | 1980s New Yorkjournalism+5 | Jonathan Mahler | The Gods of New YorkLadies and Gentlemen | New York | New York1980s+5 | — | 51m 27s | |
| 9/16/25 | ![]() Laurie Gwen Shapiro on Amelia Earhart, Harriet the Spy, and the art of rewriting legend✨ | biographyAmelia Earhart+3 | Laurie Gwen Shapiro | The Washington PostThe Los Angeles Times+1 | — | Amelia EarhartHarriet the Spy+3 | — | 54m 17s | |
| 8/29/25 | ![]() Ada Calhoun on Ghostwriting, Thornton Wilder, and the audacity of desire✨ | ghostwritingmidlife desire+4 | Ada Calhoun | KirkusCrush+3 | — | Ada Calhounghostwriting+6 | — | 51m 37s | |
| 7/17/25 | ![]() Geoff Dyer on Bad Food, Jazz Renegades, and the "Soviet Resignation" of Post-War Britain✨ | literaturememoir+4 | Geoff Dyer | Out of Sheer RageBut Beautiful+1 | Post-War Britain | Geoff Dyermemoir+5 | — | 52m 03s | |
| 3/4/25 | ![]() Biographer Katherine Bucknell on Christopher Isherwood's Odyssey from Weimar Berlin to California✨ | Weimar Germanyautocracy+3 | Katherine Bucknell | Goodbye to BerlinCabaret | Weimar GermanyCalifornia | Weimar GermanyChristopher Isherwood+5 | — | 52m 07s | |
| 1/21/25 | ![]() Legendary Publisher Edwin Frank in Praise of Rudyard Kipling — and Why the 20th Century Novel Matters✨ | publishingliterature+4 | Edwin Frank | New York Review BooksOne Grand Books | — | Edwin FrankRudyard Kipling+3 | — | 50m 40s | |
| 12/31/24 | ![]() Jeanette Winterson on ghosts, tech bros, and what her success taught her about class in Britain✨ | Jeanette WintersonBritish literature+4 | Jeanette Winterson | Oranges are Not the Only FruitThe Passion+3 | — | Jeanette WintersonOranges are Not the Only Fruit+4 | — | 51m 26s | |
| 11/6/24 | ![]() Jennifer Kabat on America's forgotten populist uprising and the politics of place✨ | populismhistory+4 | Jennifer Kabat | The Eighth Moon | Catskills | Jennifer KabatThe Eighth Moon+5 | — | 51m 32s | |
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| 10/29/24 | ![]() Ricky Ian Gordon's Odyssey of Sex, Drugs and Opera | Send us Fan Mail A teenage prodigy who worshiped Joni Mitchell, Ricky Ian Gordon has made a career turning novels and poems into operas and song. “I was that kid who was invited to the party because I could play anything, no matter how hard, and incite everyone into singing all night,” he writes in his memoir, Seeing Through: A Chronicle of Sex, Drugs and Opera. But that exuberant talent has an undercurrent of pain and sadness that has shaped and colored his life and career. It’s there ... | 52m 10s | ||||||
| 10/8/24 | ![]() YA author Rex Ogle on Life as a Poor Kid in a Land of Plenty | Send us Fan Mail Rex Ogle’s series of YA memoirs, beginning with Free Lunch, about life as a poor kid in a wealthy school district, and culminating this year in Road Home, which chronicles his experience as a homeless teen have won acclaim for their frank ability to illuminate the shame and isolation that comes with poverty. In the words of Ogle’s mother, "being poor in America is like staring at an all-you-can-eat buffet. You can see all of this food piled high but you can’t have any of it.”... | 51m 16s | ||||||
| 9/3/24 | ![]() Helen Phillips on a mother's primal love, and the perfidy (and promise) of AI in her novel, Hum | Send us Fan Mail Is there a more primal terror than a mother’s fear of losing a child. Helen Phillips, one of our greatest speculative writers, explored that terrain in her acclaimed 2020 novel, The Need, in which a mother fears her children are being abducted by her own doppelganger. She returns to that theme ih Hum, a novel set in a near-future when artificial intelligence and surveillance pose urgent questions of what it means to be human, and how a family is capable of finding intimacy in... | 51m 20s | ||||||
| 8/24/24 | ![]() Musician Orenda Fink on Glass Castles, Witchy Mothers, and Family Dysfunction | Send us Fan Mail The musician Orenda Fink, best known for her early 2000s band, Azure Ray, purveyors of a dreamy, confessional pop, has now penned a frank, unsparing memoir, The Witch's Daughter, in which she grapples with her complicated family story in which her mother's profound emotional needs operated as a kind of centrifugal force. “Life with my mother was like being in a trap,” she writes. “Once you entered there was no escaping.” There is no escape, either, for the children in t... | 51m 13s | ||||||
| 4/29/24 | ![]() Jennifer Belle on complicated teenage girls, and writing with Madonna | Send us Fan Mail What does Charles Portis’s 1968 novel, True Grit, twice made into a Hollywood western, have in common with Kay Thompson’s whimsical children's book, Eloise? Here to tell us is Jennifer Belle, the author of five novels, including most recently, Swanna in Love, an indelible, and often very funny portrait of a 14-year-old girl trapped in an artist’s commune in Vermont with her bohemian mother and her mother’s alcoholic lover. Belle is no novice at crafting novels that push... | 51m 23s | ||||||
| 4/20/24 | ![]() Curtis Sittenfeld on writing comedy, and Jane Austen's headstrong heroines | Send us Fan Mail The author of seven novels and one collection of stories, Curtis Sittenfeld specializes in sharp-witted female protagonists in stories that reflect a Jane Austen-like cunning in using comedy as a vehicle for social observation. For those who are familiar with her work, it may come as little surprise that Austen’s Pride & Prejudice is among her favorite books. We also get an all access pass behind the scenes of Saturday Night Live thanks to Tina Fey's bestselli... | 51m 42s | ||||||
| 2/27/24 | ![]() Ada Zhang on the Lives of Others and stanning Eudora Welty | Send us Fan Mail Loss, longing and melancholy dominate the strange and sometimes mordantly funny short stories of Eudora Welty, the writer whose debut 1941 collection, A Curtain of Green is among two books that Ada Zhang has chosen for Shelf Life. The other is William Maxwell's short, taut So Long, See You Tomorrow. Zhang's debut story collection, The Sorrows of Others is a tapestry of first and second generation Chinese immigrants dealing with cultural and geographical dislocation, women on ... | 52m 08s | ||||||
| 2/12/24 | ![]() The Dead Presidents Society with Actor Dylan Baker | Send us Fan Mail When did you first encounter Dylan Baker? Perhaps it was as the brazen wife killer Colin Sweeney in the long-running CBS show, The Good Wife. Or maybe it was the FBI bully-in-chief, J. Edgar Hoover in Ava DuVernay’s civil rights-era movie, Selma. Or was it much longer ago as the monster with the human face, Bill Maplewood in Todd Solendz’s 1998 movie Happiness. He says, “I went into the business because I really enjoyed exploring dark places in human beings, it was alwa... | 51m 31s | ||||||
| 1/30/24 | ![]() Ramit Sethi on money, pleasure, and finding moments of awe | Send us Fan Mail The bestselling finance guru-turned-TV star, Ramit Sethi is on a mission to help all of us live what he calls our rich lives, but he's not just another finance bro. The son of Indian immigrants who were too poor to afford restaurants or overseas vacations, he has developed an extraordinary skill in helping people figure out how to spend money on the things that make our lives more enjoyable. One thing that separates Sethi from the crowd? He reads! His choices for ... | 52m 04s | ||||||
| 1/23/24 | ![]() Season Three is Coming: turn the page on a new chapter. | Send us Fan Mail In the quiet hush of winter, there's a particular inclination to fold into the pages of unexplored narratives. Since Shelf Life paused its pulse last summer, I've wandered through a constellation of worlds chosen by a new group of celebrated bibliophiles, including the actor Dylan Baker, the finance guru Ramit Sethi, and new voices in fiction like Ada Zhang and Ben Purkett. Stay tuned to find out what books they think you should read. | 0m 40s | ||||||
| 10/10/23 | ![]() Between Dystopias: Marlon James and Hafizah Augustus Geter Live at Deep Water Lit Fest 23 | Send us Fan Mail Each year Deep Water Literary Festival in Narrowsburg, NY, identifies a unifying theme, often a particular literary work or an author, and builds a program to engage and interrogate the ways in which the theme resonates for contemporary audiences. In 2023 the festival explored the work of British novelist and journalist George Orwell. In this conversation the award-winning novelist, Marlon James, author of Black Leopard, Red Wolf and A Brief History of Seven Killings, a... | 46m 57s | ||||||
| 6/14/23 | ![]() DJ Taylor on George Orwell's literary genesis, and why the author of 1984 still matters | Send us Fan Mail The writer and biographer D.J. Taylor on the rich, complicated and too-short life of one of the 20th century’s greatest writers, George Orwell. Almost 75 years after his death we discuss why the author of 1984 matters as much, if not more, than ever. Includes an excerpt of Orwell's "Some Thoughts on the Common Today," read for Shelf Life by Tilda Swinton. | 52m 15s | ||||||
| 4/26/23 | ![]() Christopher Bollen on Graham Greene, Agatha Christie, and the abiding pleasures of the whodunnit | Send us Fan Mail Novelist Christopher Bollen has been writing twisty thrillers with emotional depth for over a decade. His latest, The Lost Americans, takes readers to Cairo for a deftly-plotted murder mystery set in the high-stakes world of arms traders and Egypt's authoritarian government. As with his writing, so with his book choices: we get intrigue and suspense in London during the Blitz, courtesy of Graham Greene’s 1943 espionage thriller, The Ministry of Fear, and a criminal mastermind... | 51m 37s | ||||||
| 3/31/23 | ![]() Joanna Quinn, author of The Whalebone Theater, on secret gardens, complicated heroines, and procrastination. | Send us Fan Mail Few of us need reminding that childhood can be a difficult and challenging time; but it can also be a magical one. That duality is at the heart of The Whalebone Theater, the best-selling debut novel of Joana Quinn. Childhood is central, also, to Frances Hodgson Burnett’s 1911 classic novel, The Secret Garden, in which a group of three young children discover the transformative magic of nature during the course of three seasons in a remote house in the Yorkshire moors. It is o... | 51m 13s | ||||||
| 3/23/23 | ![]() Ari Shapiro on singing for Bono, cooking for Nina Totenberg, and what novels teach him. | Send us Fan Mail Tender hearted children growing up in oppressive and claustrophobic societies dominate the two novels chosen by the journalist and musician, Ari Shapiro. The first is Douglas Stuart’s acclaimed sophomore novel, Young Mungo; the second is Belinda Huijuan Tang’s A Map for the Missing. As one of the hosts for NPR’s flagship program, All Things Considered, listeners will be familiar with Shapiro's flair for bringing a lively curiosity to the world around us, whether it be r... | 55m 59s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
2 placements across 1 market.
Chart Positions
2 placements across 1 market.
























