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  • Alison Bechdel on making money and seeing Fun Home in a new light
    2025/06/04

    Nearly 20 years after her breakout memoir, Fun Home, cartoonist Alison Bechdel is still unearthing new truths about her life in that time. The memoir and its Broadway adaptation changed Alison’s life and brought a degree of success she was unaccustomed to. She explores these themes in her latest work, a comic novel called Spent. It’s about a cartoonist's complicated relationship with money and capitalism, and the struggle to stay true to her values. Alison tells Mattea about creating a fictionalized version of herself ... and shares surprising revelations about her parents, which have given her new insight into her own life story.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Adrian Tomine: Answering his readers' burning questions
    • Rumaan Alam: How would you spend a billion dollars?
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    37 分
  • David A. Robertson puts stories at the heart of reconciliation
    2025/06/01

    Through his books and public speaking, David A. Robertson has dedicated his career to sharing stories about Indigenous people. His latest book, 52 Ways to Reconcile, is a guide for all of us to take action when it comes to reconciliation — and shows how small acts can have a big impact. Like all of David's work, the book tackles hard truths with a gentle touch and a profound sense of hope. David joins Mattea Roach to talk about educating children on Indigenous histories, how his father influenced his life and work and why "reconciliation" is a journey ... not a destination.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Tanya Talaga: Searching for her great-great grandmother — a story of family, truth and survival
    • Imani Perry: Tracing blue through Black American life
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    39 分
  • An opera singer gives voice to the Grenadian revolution
    2025/05/28

    The 1983 revolution in Grenada was a major moment of the Cold War era ... and writer Zilla Jones grew up hearing stories about its connection to her own family. She transports readers back to that time in her debut novel, The World So Wide. It follows a Canadian opera singer named Felicity who is caught up in the military coup and placed under house arrest. What unfolds next is a saga that spans decades and reflects on race, love, belonging and revolution. Zilla joins Mattea Roach to talk about why opera is at the centre of the story, her work as a lawyer and the power of art as protest.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Nnedi Okorafor: Bringing a writer to life in Death of the Author
    • Jack Wang: Reimagining the lost stories of Chinese Canadians during WWII
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    34 分
  • When young men murder, what can we learn?
    2025/05/25

    There’s no easy answer to that question — and Vijay Khurana’s debut novel, The Passenger Seat, takes a closer look at how complicated it really is. Drawing on aspects of a real string of murders that took place in British Columbia in 2019, the story follows two high school boys as they set off on a road trip that turns violent. It examines male friendships and masculinity with nuance and complexity, asking difficult questions about what we can learn from men who commit violence … and what separates a killer from the rest of us.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Rumaan Alam: How would you spend a billion dollars?
    • What if your dreams could land you in jail?
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    33 分
  • Music, sex and finding the soundtrack to queer joy
    2025/05/21

    Growing up in the midst of the HIV/AIDS epidemic left Pete Crighton with a huge fear of sex … and he threw himself into music as a way to cope with his anxieties. Decades later, he realized that he needed to face his fears and live his queer life to the fullest. Pete writes about this journey in his new memoir, The Vinyl Diaries, where he uses his favourite songs, albums and artists as the backdrop to his story. He tells Mattea Roach about his later-in-life exploration of sex and why music was so formative to his queer experience.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Kate Bush spins a magical story on her album Hounds of Love
    • Zoe Whittall: Why heartbreak is a valid form of grief
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    32 分
  • Weightlifting made Casey Johnston stronger — in muscle and mind
    2025/05/18

    For years, Casey Johnston thought fitness was all about shrinking down. She was terrified of weightlifting and what it would do to her body. Now, she’s a writer and fitness advocate with a massive following of fellow lifters. Her latest book, A Physical Education, tells the story of how stepping into the weight room changed her life — body, mind and heart. Speaking with Mattea Roach, she shares how training for strength helped her take a closer look at her upbringing, body image and the way she approaches every day.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Kate Gies: Reclaiming her body after years of medical trauma
    • Why growing up is so hard — and why Canadians are so funny


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    30 分
  • Fans asked for another happy ending — Carley Fortune delivered
    2025/05/14

    During the pandemic, journalist Carley Fortune turned to romance writing as an outlet … and her debut novel, Every Summer After, was a life-changing success. The nostalgic summer love story was a massive hit, launching her into the world of book lists, devoted fans and screen rights. This spring Carley is back with One Golden Summer, the much-anticipated sequel to her debut novel. Carley joins Mattea to talk about revisiting old characters, her love of the lake and sharing the beauty of rural Ontario with the world.


    If you enjoyed this conversation, check out these episodes:

    • Casey McQuiston: Celebrating queer love and joy and navigating the future of romance
    • Emma Knight: 'Bad' mothers make good stories — and are more true-to-life
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    32 分
  • Bookends Introduces | Understood: Who Broke the Internet
    2025/05/12

    It's not you — the internet really does suck. Novelist, blogger and noted internet commentator Cory Doctorow explains what happened to the internet and why you're tormented by ads, bots, algorithms, AI slop and so many pop-ups. Spoiler alert: it wasn't an accident.


    In Understood: Who Broke the Internet, Doctorow gets into the decisions made by powerful people that got us here, and most importantly, how we fix it. More episodes of Who Broke the Internet are available at: https://link.mgln.ai/4HbHJ8

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    38 分