Two friends have had a book club for a very very long time. It was mostly an excuse to drink and gossip. In January of 2016, they found renewed purpose in their sadness over the death of David Bowie. They decided to stop mucking around and actually get some reading done – from the list of books that he loved.
The podcast Bowie Book Club Podcast is created by Greg Miller & Kristianne Huntsberger. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner, which turns out to be about much more than Iggy Pop's satin pants.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky, which suprisingly ISN'T about Iggy Pop!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Buddha of Suburbia by Hanif Kureishi, which might be the most Bowie of the Bowie books we've read so far, in some ways.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol a picaresque novel of a grifter being grifty in Old Russia.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Hollywood Babylon a cruel and carnal compilation of old Hollywood tragedies written by Kenneth Anger, who apparantly shares our disdain for thorough research!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Roadside Picnic by Boris and Arkady Strugatsky, a hard-boiled story of mysterious realms, stiff drinks and super-powered artifacts. Apologies for the jingling sounds in the background - we had a very active feline collaborator on this one.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a book mostly about conferences on the astral plane, Psychic Self-Defense by Dion Fortune.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Sane Occultism by Dion Fortune
Angie Bowie's Backstage Passes
Bowie: A Biography by Mark Spitz
The Demon Slayers by Sam Kestenbaum
The Roadside Picnic video game IS REAL
Greg:
Kristianne
Roadside Picnic by Boris and Arkady Strugatsky
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Orlando by Virginia Woolf, a book that essentially proves that David Bowie and Tilda Swinton are one person.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read (sort of) A Grave for a Dolphin by Ally Teeth (or Alberto Denti, Duke of Pirajno, if you must), a story about a manic pixie dream fish and the marine biologist (at least that's what AI thinks) who loved her.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Zanoni by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, an overheated occult pot-boiler that manages to keep the hot esoteric gobbletygook flying for over 400 pages! Spoiler alert: Greg wrote this description and it may (does) not reflect the views of the other half of this podcast.
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Nowhere to Run by Gerri Hirshey - interviews with foundational artists of soul music asthey deal with aging, and (in the case of Screaming Jay Hawkins) serve drinks out of a skull or something.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Private Eye, a half-serious, half-silly British political magazine that is the ultimate in IYKYK.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
The list of books we'll be choosenating Season Two from are also up on Bookshop! If you have ideas of books we could add, let us know!
Greg:
Kristianne:
2nd place song!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Darkness at Noon by Arthur Koestler, a tale of human pyschology under duress that makes a fitting end to the Russian books that Bowie had on his list.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
The last few of the Bowie list!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Hidden Persuaders by Vance Packard, a quaint little preview of the non-stop psychological prodding we endure now.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Greg:
Kristianne:
Darkness at Noon by Arthur Koestler
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Beyond the Brillo Box by Arthur C. Danto - if you like art, philosophy and the philosophy of art, you might get through this a little easier than we did.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Strange People a rundown of all the freaks, geeks and mentalists you'll ever want to encounter.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Alternate song!
Beyond the Brillo Box by Arthur C. Danto
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Writers at Work: The First Series, a compendium of interviews with writers that proves to be as dazzling as a round of George Plimpton's Video Falconry.
Tell us what you think should be on Bowie's list that isn't!!
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne
Strange People by Frank Edwards
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Beano, a British comic that has been teaching the fundamentals of anarchy to the youth of the UK decades before Johnny Rotten gave his first snarl.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read we read The 42nd Parallel by John Dos Passos, a big sweeping tale of America at the turn of the 20th century, including getting chased by a farmer with a shotgun, which happened all the time back then.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Lady Chatterly's Lover by D.H. Lawrence, which has all the bowels and loins anyone could ask for.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Geoffrey Robertson's article on the banning of Lady Chatterley's Lover.
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Infants of the Spring by Wallace Thurman - if you're a fan of gin n' ginger ale or of extremely stylized dialog, you're going to love this one.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read * Fingersmith by Sarah Waters, a novel of deception, doublecross, and people being absolute fucksters to each other.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read White Noise by Don DeLillo, a very funny, very timely book about death, among other concerns.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a doorstop of a history of the Russian Revolution: Orlando Figes' "A People's Tragedy".
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Mr. Wilson's Cabinet O' Wonders by Lawrence Weschler, a short, sharp treatise on a weird, weird museum.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Favorite Books of 2022!
Kristianne
Greg
and Dave rocking the pirate shirt on The Tonight Show:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read In Bluebeard's Castle by George Steiner - an eccentric polymath, kind of like a certain David Jones we all know. Plus, T.S. Eliot impersonations!
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Room at the Top by John Braine, about an angry young man in a dirty old town.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read On the Road by everyone's high school boyfriend, Jack Kerouac. We also talk about the new Bowie documentary Moonage Daydream which we just saw IN A MOVIE THEATRE shudder!
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Leopard by Giuseppe di Lampedusa, a slow, stately book about a very hot island.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Here's the trailer for Moonage Daydream
Greg:
Kristianne:
In Italian!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Coast of Utopia by Tom Stoppard - a play where a lot happens just off stage and there's a lot of talking about thinking.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read In Between the Sheets, a kind-of-sort-of creepy book of short stories by Ian McEwan.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a book of literary criticism/history about Gustave Flaubert that (suprise!) turns out to be a novel that's not really about a bird at all (or is it?) - Flaubert's Parrot by Julian Barnes
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Money by Martin Amis - the literary equivalent of watching someone fall down thousands of flights of stairs and wondering why you're laughing so hard.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Kingsley Amis' Lucky Jim
NYT review of Money that coins the phrase "The New Unpleasantness"
Germaine Greer interview with Amis
Our episodes on connected books: Vile Bodies, Day of the Locust and (maybe?) Bicameral Mind
Martin Amis' review of Bowie in 1973
Greg:
Kristianne: *Books of Jacob by Olga Tokarczuk (progress... it'll be awhile...)
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Awopbopaloobopalopbamboom (or something like that) a intensely jaded look at the first couple decades of rock music from legendary writer Nik Cohn.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Arfur by Nik Cohn (an inspiration for Tommy, and super expensive)
I Am The Still the Greatest, Says Johnny Angelo by Nik Cohn (an inspiration for Ziggy Stardust?)
Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night (the inspiration for Saturday Night Fever - and somewhat made up)
Rock Dreams by Nik Cohn and Guy Peellaert
Nik Cohn is nice to Bowie - and mean to the Rolling Stones
Greg:
Kristianne
Money - Martin Amis
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Homer Tarantino's gory classic of bromanticism - The Iliad
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
We read different translations of this here gruesome volume - Kristianne had the Robert Fagles and Greg read the Carolyn Alexander
Want to understand the Iliad? This is the only infographic you need
The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker
The War that Killed Achilles by Carolyn Alexander
Homer's Daughter by Robert Graves
A Thousand Ships by Natalie Haynes
The Odyssey translated by Emily Wilson
Christa Wolf's book on Cassandra that we should've read!
Greg:
Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom: The Golden Age of Rock - Nik Cohn
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a series of connected stories circling the post-beat, pre-hippie world of Lower Mahattan in Tales Of Beatnik Glory by Ed Saunders. Join us for a hour or two at the Total Assault Cantina!
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016.
We survived another year, and that means we get to dust off the ole Choosenator and see what new books it brings us. This time we had a little canine assistance - our trusty guide led us through the wilds of Seattle (ok, through quiet residential neighborhoods) and pointed us at the correct numbers for the books for 2022!
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Kristianne:
Greg:
Kristanne listened to House in the Cerulean Sea and Under the Whispering Door while walking her dog.
Greg couldn't remember that Sir Derek Jacobi read the audio version of Hawksmoor - here's our episode about that book
Buy records and books from Hex Enduction Records and Books in Lake City, Seattle. Even if you're not in Seattle, they have a giant Discogs page - they're good folks with good stuff!
We'll start things off next month with a relatively new, very modern tome - The Iliad. See y'all then!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read George Orwell's classic work of numerology, 1984.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read * The Quest For Christa T by Christa Wolf, a melancholy elegy that really got on the wrong side of the East German censors, for some reason.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Christa Wolf's first book Divided Heaven
Kristianne:
Greg:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read * The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov, one of our favorites on the list - a fairy tale that careens through the Moscow of the 1920's, and is otherwise impossible to describe accurately. In the spirit of inaccuracy, Greg got several names and facts wrong in this episodes, which he blames on g-g-g-g-ghosts.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Kristianne:
Greg:
Greg won the coin toss, so here's the SKELETON DANCE!
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read On Having No Head by Douglas Harding, a slender guidebook to quick and painless enlightenment.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we sat in a cafe, drinking free refill after free refill, perfected our looks of total ennui and read The Stranger by Albert Camus.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg
Kristianne
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh, a careening comic novel of doomed romance, never ending parties, and rotating gossip columnists.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Greg:
Kristianne:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read English Journey by J.B. Priestley, a gripping tale of a grump making his way around England in the dour `30s.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
This is the Folio Society edition of the book that we both read.
Down and Out In Paris and London and The Road to Wigan Pier by Priestly's arch-nemesis (maybe?) George Orwell.
A BBC4 presentation on Priestly's "Postscripts" - his radio addresses during WWII.
An English Journey, Reimagined, part 1 with Alan Moore and Ian Sinclair.
And we totally spaced on this, but the super nice @travelswbrindle interviewed us for an article about the Bowie list for Early Bird Books. Thanks Chelsea!
Greg: Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James and The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins - still! And some of Ulysses and Ulysses Annotated for Bloomsday!
Kristianne: Red Island House by Andrea Lee and Gideon the Ninth by Tasmyn Muir
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a book (though probably not the right book) about the incredibly prolific Japanese artist and graphic designer Tadanori Yokoo by Tadanori Yokoo.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we took a little wander through Halls Dictionary Of Subjects And Symbols In Art by James A. Hall and read about a lot of saints with swords (sometimes stuck in their heads)
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we attemped to cobble together a plan to read Halls Dictionary Of Subjects And Symbols In Art by James A. Hall
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Ok, here's the plan for reading through this crazy dictionary:
If you need other stimuli, then we also mentioned:
Join us here around about the 18th of April as we discuss our highly academic and rigorously researched findings!
Can you guess the subject and/or title of these paintings?
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Interviews with Francis Bacon, a beautifully constructed cut and paste job from the noted art critic David Sylvester.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a jazzy tale of the very American art of self-invention.
Visit our lists on bookshop.org and help support the podcast (and independent bookstores too!)
BBC article - "The World's Most Misunderstood Book"
Ole Mel Bragg's "In Our Time" podcast episode on Gatsby
Our episode on Susan Jacoby's The Age of American Unreason
interview about the origins of 'Nick' - here's the novel at bookshop.org
an excerpt in the Paris Review from Wesley Morris' new introduction to Gatsby.
Our episode on The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Mystery Train, Griel Marcus' expansive summation of rock music as American culture.
Apologies for the weird clicking noise that sounds like its coming from Greg's mandibles (he forgot to wax them) - we'll have the audio hiccups fixed for next time!
A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab
Bleak House by Chuckie Dickens
The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
Girls Against God by Jenny Hval
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we chose our books for 2021, in the great outdoors, and in our typical shambolic fashion!
We'll be talking about Mystery Train by Greil Marcus later this month
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Journey Into the Whirlwind by Eugenia Ginzburg, a memoir of one incredibly strong woman's survival in Stalin's Reign of Terror.
The much harder to find second installment of Ginzburg's memoir.
The recent NY Times article about this area of Siberia and how climate change is affecting it
so many articles about Bowie's trans-Siberian trip
here's the fancy way to travel by train across Siberian these days.
Our episode on the very real and not fake Communist comic book Octobriana
We both agreed that that The Street was our favorite Bowie Book of the year - check out our episode on it.
We also agreed that Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead was in our top list. Other than that (in no order):
Mystery Train by Greil Marcus
and maybe, just for the holiday season:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Street by Ann Petry, a harsh but gripping tale, which **almost** led to the worst song choice in the history of this podcast.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn, who's not really down with the SYSTEM, MAAAAAAN.
(And apologies for the audio issues at the end - it's the Man trying to keep us down!)
Kirkus Review of A People's History
The amazing These Truths by Jill Lepore
An Indigenous People's History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
A Black Women's History of the United States by Daina Ramey Berry and Kali Nicole Gross
Studs Terkel's oral histories: Working and The Good War
McNally Jackson Books - buy books from your local bookstore!!
TruthOut - alternate news source
Kristianne read Girl, Woman, Other by Bernadine Evaristo this month
Greg read (and loved) The Good Lord Bird by James McBride this month, who also wrote Deacon King Kong, which Greg read (and loved) earlier this year.
The Street by Ann Petry
and here's notes on Bowie's record "Reality" from our bible - Pushing Ahead of the Dame
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club* where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Teenage by Jon Savage and you JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND HOW WE'RE FEELING ABOUT IT OK? /slams bedroom door/
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark, which is really not like Dead Poets Society at all.
Never Apologize, Never Explain - Guardian article about the book by James Woods.
England's Dreaming by Jon Savage - not Lipstick Traces which is by Greil Marcus
Red Emma's bookstore in Baltimore
Chris O'Leary (of Pushing Ahead of the Damefame) has great writing up on his Patreon
Greg read Washington Black by Esi Edugyan
Kristianne read (or listened to) The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers
Kristianne also read Confessions of the Fox by Jordy Rosenberg
Teenage by Jon Savage
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Black Boy, Richard Wright's searing story of growing up in the Jim Crow south and his further self-education as a young man in Chicago and his further self-education as a young man in Chicago.
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Life and Times of Little Richard - the Authorized Biography by Charles "Dr. Rock" White, which contains lots of scatalogical pranks, sermons and stories of debauchery from one of the wildest voices ever. Rock and roll.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Sexual Personae by Camillia Paglia, which left us feeling a bit...cthonic.
Wuthering Heights by Kate Bush
Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk
The Odyssey translated by Emily Wilson
Bacchus by Eddie Campbell
Monstress comics series
Confessions of the Fox by Jordy Rosenberg
The Life and Times of Little Richard by Charles White
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot, and tried to talk about anything else beside the poem (and you know...that other thing that's going on).
Apologies again for the recording weirdness! We're such a bunch of fireworms (that'll make more sense after you listen to this one). We'll get it together at some point.
We didn't mention this (Greg spaced), but the British library has a cool webpage about the influences on The Waste Land.
The source of the whole green face powder thing - an article about "Low" and T.S. Eliots influences.
TS Eliot was a bad boyfriend
Twelve Moons by Mary Oliver
Post-Colonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz
Loitering by Charles D'Ambrosio
Degrees of Grey in Phillipsburg by Richard Hugo
The Hugo House in Seattle
The Last Good Kiss by James Crumley
Did Bowie Pinch a Cactus from T.S. Eliot? - well, did he?
OMG, Alec Guiness is the best
Sexual Personae by Camille Paglia
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read McTeague by Frank Norris, which is surprisingly not about a rogue cop who's always getting kicked off the force and reinstated because he's just too damn good out on those streets.
Apologies for the sound quality - we're still figuring out how to do this whole remote thing!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a wide-ranging screed on the intellectual wasteland of current American culture - Susan Jacoby's The Age of American Unreason. And Greg reveals his ignorance of fairly recent presidential elections. Fun! #tuesdaygoths
Buy This Months Book at Bookshop
Anti-Intellectualism in American Life by Richard Hofstader
We didn't mention it, but the James Michener Art Museum is pretty rad
Our Herzog episode
Lori Goldston - the greatest, seriously.
McTeague!! - you're off the force!!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Day of the Locust by Nathaniel West, a grim fable of the darker side of Hollywood in the 30's - and reveal our books for 2020!
Advice to the Lovelorn - the "adaption" of Miss Lonelyhearts
Bowie's Berlin Books - we reviewed Berlin Alexanderplatz and Mr Norris Changes Trains last year.
And don't forget - let's bring back "phooey!" in 2020!
Chosen at the great Cafe Racer in Seattle
The Age of American Unreason by Susan Jacoby
McTeague by Frank Norris
Cats by T.S. Eliot (just kidding - it's The Waste Land)
Sexual Personae by Camille Paglia
Black Boy by Richard Wright
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
Teenage by Jon Savage
The Street by Ann Petry
A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn
Journey Into the Whirlwind by Eugenia Ginzburg
The Life and Times of Little Richard by Charles White
Mystery Train by Greil Marcus
The Age of American Unreason by Susan Jacoby
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Bird Artist by Howard Norman, a tale from the frosty realm of Newfoundland, where women are women and men are mopey.
The Bird Artist by Howard Norman Amazon | IndieBound
The Ghost Clause - Howard Norman's latest book.
Now We Shall Be Entirely Free by Andrew Miller
Davidson Galleries in Seattle
Loganberry Books in Cleveland
Book lists are really hard to put together - this from books that we read over the last decade (not necessarily books that came out in the last 10 years).
Day of the Locust by Nathanael West Amazon | IndieBound
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Insult by Rupert Thomson, a book about pyschosis and the seedy underbelly of society that turns out to be two books in one, much to Greg's chagrin.
The Insult by Rupert Thomson Amazon | IndieBound
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon
Alnilam by James Dickey
Overstory by Richard Powers
Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles
The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead
Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake
@bowiesongs on "I'm Deranged". Also check out Chris' new Patreon!
Hex Enduction Books and Records in Seattle
The Bird Artist by Howard Norman Amazon | IndieBound
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Dante's Inferno, which has been inspring haunted hayrides for centuries. Happy Halloween!
Inferno by Dante Amazon | IndieBound
The Insult by Rupert Thomson Amazon | IndieBound
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The Trial of Henry Kissinger by Christopher Hitchens, a book-length legal argument that helpfully reminded us of our ignorance of history.
The Trial of Henry Kissinger by Christopher Hitchens Amazon | IndieBound
Kissinger Peace Prize?? It's true!
Hitchens' book on Bill Clinton - No One Left to Lie To
Hitchens' takedown of Mother Theresa - The Missionary Position
Hitch-22 (Hitchen's autobiography)
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
Politico article about the lessons National Security Advisers can learn from Kissinger
Inferno by Dante Amazon | IndieBound
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a book that WE REALLY REALLY LIKED - Angela Carter's Nights at the Circus.
Angela Carter is best known for her collection of stories The Bloody Chamber
Angela Carter's BBC Radio plays
Trial of Henry Kissinger by Christopher Hitchens Amazon | IndieBound
This time we read Kafka Was the Rage - Anatole Broyard's unfinished memoir of life in Greenwich Village just after WWII, where everyone was an intellectual and sex had just been discovered.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Metropolitan Life by Fran (not Annie) Lebowitz, a snarky little collection of vignettes about life in the big city way back when.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a really weird D & D manual called Transcendental Magic: Its Doctrine and Ritual by Éliphas Lévi, half-poet, half-socialist, and all beard.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Sound of the City by musicologist and BBC DJ Charlie Gillett, a veritable bible for pop music nerds. Spoiler alert: Greg does not sing in this one (or any one, ever).
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This episode, we chat about what we've been reading besides the book we're supposed to be reading.
The Archies with their hit song Sugar Sugar
Chip Zdarsky and Erica Henderson's new-ish Jughead series
Room to Dream - a sort of autobiography of David Lynch
Sound of the City by Charlie Gillett Amazon | IndieBound
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Silence by John Cage, an intensely charming (though sometimes confusing!) book about music theory (sort of) and mushroom hunting (definitely)
Our guest is Mark Schlipper - experimental/improv musician (and Moon Knight aficionado) whose current projects include drone rockers The Luna Moth, improv stoner-doom-noise-mininmalism Perish The Island, and various other other solo projects.
Support your local library! Like seriously.
Video of John Cage performing Water Walk
Simple Men - movie by Hal Hartley
Super Troopers - maybe the greatest movie of all time, depending on your definition of comedy.
As Slow as Possible - this Cage piece is currently being performed in Halberstadt, Germany and is scheduled to complete in 2640.
The Good Shepherd Center Chapel Performance Space - the home for experimental music in Seattle.
Uncut Article about the Low Sessions
Sound of the City by Charlie Gillett Amazon | IndieBound
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This is another gossipy episode with a little bit about the tome we're about to read - Silence by John Cage
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Sweet Soul Music by Peter Guaralnick a compendium of all things related to the musical genre, and most emphatically NOT about Motown.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we just gossiped about this and that - though it all seems to come back to Bowie, as usual.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016.
This time we do a super quick roundup of our 2019 books and shout out some folks who are WAY ahead of us on the book list live from the floor of Podcon2, where we saw a bunch of great pdocasts and learned how to make this a little bit less of a mess.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read The American Way of Death by Jessica Mitford - a cheery little tome that's been called the "Consumer Reports of the Funeral Industry".
Our guest this episode is the hardest working man in show business, or at least the hardest working person who's been on this show - Levi Fuller, who's known for his bands Levi Fuller and the Library and the Luna Moth, and his quarterly Ball of Wax compilation, which gathers great music from all sorts of directions.
Ball of Wax Audio Quarterly #25 - songs about books.
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty and her guide on How to Make Your Death Plan
New Yorker article about Jessica Mitford
Mitford singing 'Right, Said Fred' with Maya Angelou
the etymology of the word 'wake'
Dismal Fest in Seattle
Garden District Bookshop in New Orleans
We start a streak of music books with Sweet Soul Music by Peter Guralnick.
And here's our list of books for 2019!
Levi presented us with his take on the book in "The Funerals Profession"
With these cut-up lyrics
At family contribute the funerals profession Through the special and navigated benefit no plenty able sadness and always with notice and more
without family tribute family back already With many services friends we direct him here and with music consistently dignity always
The Here about a body icon’s family memorial fans broke cremation gems funeral so the vast lots that public place be traditional We’ll next headline England
People want crematorium and legal occasion ignorance conscious call news a simply life ashes remember church unselfconscious throughout vast families
The Here about a body icon’s family memorial fans broke cremation gems funeral so the vast lots that public place be traditional We’ll next headline England
And his choice from Bowie:
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read In Cold Blood, a non-fiction novel about a gruesome killing in Kansas by Truman Capote who may have shared our fancy for wild speculation.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time, we read The Divided Self by R.D. Laing, a treatise about schizophrenia and injecting humanism into the science of psychology. And Greg says "So yeah" about 50 times.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Viz, the scatological UK comic that rose from hand-stapled obscurity to become a titan of juvenilia in the '80s and '90s. Plus, we reveal our ill-conceived conspiracy theories about the Bowie List, or lack thereof.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Berlin Alexanderplatz, a classic of German modernism by Alfred Doblin, and another trip to Berlin in the 'twenties for us.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Mr. Norris Changes Trains by Christopher Isherwood, a (semi-)fictional look at one of Bowie's obsessions - Berlin between the wars.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read three issues from the second volume of the underground/art/indie/lowbrow/highbrow comic book compliation Raw, edited and published by Art Speigelman and Francoise Mouly. Also, Greg proves that an insufferable child becomes an insufferable adult.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read the Gnostic Gospels by Elaine Pagels, a surprisingly accessible book about the discovery of documents from the very foundation of Christianity with a surprisingly unorthodox viewpoint. And, of course, we shirk the opportunity to learn something in favor of making terrible gnu puns.
Art Spiegelman and Francois Mouly's hugely influential comics anthology Raw), which ran from 1980 to 1991. Greg was lucky enough to buy a couple issues of and DUMB ENOUGH to not keep them.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we're catching up on what we're reading and what magical things ONLY KRISTIANNE gets to see, and then we kvetch a bit about ebooks and audio books.
We're reading the Gnostic Gospels by Elaine Pagels, a surprisingly accessible book about the discovery of documents from the very foundation of Christianity with a surprisingly unorthodox viewpoint.
This time we read Keith Waterhouse's Billy Liar - the story of a dreamer in Northern England who just can't keep his stories straight.
We catch up with @manmademoon's choice for this month - Down and Out in Paris and London - George Orwell's (not H. Lewis Allways') masterful piece of reporting on poverty AND talk to our Virgilian guide through the songs of David Bowie - Chris O'Leary, whose Rebel Rebel is an essential reference for any Bowie fan.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Madame Bovary a groundbreaking (and salacious, we guess?) novel of one woman's struggle against bourgie norms. And Greg really apologizes about his Vitamin Flintheart.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Puckoon by Spike Milligan - a comic (well, you be the judge) tale of the troubles brought to a fictional Irish village by the Partition.
Edward G Robinson - why? Not really sure.
The Complete David Bowie by Nicholas Pegg
Rebel Rebel - Chris O'Leary's excellent companion to Bowie's work from '64 - 76 - also check out Pushing Ahead of the Dame for song-by-song-goodness
Oh, and there's a Puckoon movie that we totally forgot to mention!
@bowiebookpod On a recent pod you suggested that @ManMadeMoon might’ve picked Puckoon for March because of St Patrick’s day. Given it focuses on the impact of a hard border in Ireland the choice may also be topical for other reasons https://t.co/ffsQZf4VNH
— Niall Mullen (@mullen_niall) April 3, 2018
Three Stooges meets Comedy of Errors meets Father Ted, alternating between total slapstick, sharp satire, and wit so dry you start to wonder if it’s coming to a joke at all until you realize that you yourself might be the butt of it. And of course it’s broadly offensive to all.
— The Lark's Purr (@thelarkspurr) April 4, 2018
The original steamy potboiler - Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
This time we read Earthly Powers by Anthony Burgess, a giant, sprawling look at the 20th century, featuring one of the most romantic exorcisms every committed to print.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we catch up on the discussion of The Fire Next Time on the socials media, talk about other stuff we've been putting in our eyes, and looking forward to what's next on @manmademoon's list - Puckoon by Spike Milligan, and what's next on ours - Earthly Powers by Anthony Burgess.
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Levar Burton recreates James Baldwin's interview with the Paris Review
Kara Walker's grim masterpiece 'Katastwof Karavan' in New Orleans
John Henry Days - also Colson Whitehead
Our next book is Earthly Powers by Anthony Burgess, a favorite of Bowie's - we covered Clockwork Orange the other Burgess book on the list way back when in our first episode! We'll publish our discussion at the end of the month - including more discussions of romantic exorcisms!
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a history of Berlin in the 1920's that is as diverse and roiling as its subject. And mispronounced many things.
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M - the movie) - watch on YouTube
Friedrich's other books - City of Nets, a history of Hollywood in the 1940s and Going Crazy
Pushing Ahead of the Dame has a great article about Bowie in Berlin and the making of the song Where Are We Now?
We'll be back with an episode to catch up on the #bowiebookclub, who are reading James Baldwin's The Fire Next Time, which we talked about last August - listen to the episode here
Our next book coming up is Earthly Powers by Anthony Burgess, a favorite of Bowie's - we covered Clockwork Orange the other Burgess book on the list way back when in our first episode!
Another thing we couldn't really pronounce...
In this episode, we gab about Hawksmoor and the next books coming up for #bowiebookclub and from our own list. And Greg apologizes a lot too.
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Plenty of good ideas about the end of Hawksmoor - check out #bowiebookclub and our twitter page to catch up on the conversations.
Who would you cast as Hawksmoor? Idris Alba is a wise choice (@JohnF80174692). We went for Anthony Hopkins as Dyer (kind of a gimme, but you know.)
the London Review of Books has a great wrap of the book and the conversations around it on their blog.
Lots of new song ideas:
And of course:
tis a pity she was a hawk pic.twitter.com/7EqMeYjtmm
— Crayon to Crayon (@CrayonToCrayon) January 25, 2018
Peter Ackroyd has a new book coming out in May - Queer City
If you're in the mood for creepy minimalist ambient music, check out the Hawksmoor episode of Greg's other podcast Too Tired to Say Anything
We had a nice chat on Bookhub last week about Bowie and books
To be clear, Ian Sinclair is NOT DEAD. (whew). Greg just finished his Ghost Milk and is excited to start The Last London once his brain recovers.
Derek Jacobi doesn't believe in Shakespeare - he may be right
The next #bowiebookclub book is The Fire Next Time, an incredible, powerful book that we discussed last summer. Really looking forward to revisiting it. Folks outside the US are still looking for a copy if you want to help out.
We're reading some other books for Black History Month:
We forgot to mention it on the podcast, but @joanna__pearson put together some awesome Bowie Book Club badges with all proceeds going to charity!
Our next book is Before the Deluge by Otto Friedrich, a portrait of Berlin in the 1920s, which we'll discuss in great and discursive detail at the end of the month as is our wont.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read
Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd, a wildly entertaining story of occultism, the churches of London, police procedures and how time isn't as straightforward as you might think.
Welcome to another episode of the Bowie Book Club, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read Inside the Whale, a book of literary criticism by George Orwell, who we've decided was a time traveller (Netflix, get in touch).
Welcome to another episode of the **Bowie Book Club**, where wild speculation and grasping for straws about Bowie’s favorite books has reigned supreme since 2016. This time we read a very entertaining tract about consciousness, hallucinations, poetry, religion and a crackpot theory that ties them all together - in short, what you expected to read in college as a liberal arts major. It's Julian Jayne's magnum opus - The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind.
Hot dang! It's The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes. We've all got a bit of reading to do.
With a little bit of debate, we ended up with a song that is not about Ertha Kitt.
En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.