The Bibliotherapists

Toni Jones & Tanya Lynch

A podcast from Substackers and bookworms, Tanya Lynch (EASE Retreats) and Toni Jones (The Shelf Help Club), exploring the healing power of words. thebibliotherapists.substack.com

  1. The Bibliotherapists Ep #25: Natasha Poliszczuk bringing all the glamour to your TBR pile

    18 APR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #25: Natasha Poliszczuk bringing all the glamour to your TBR pile

    It’s the penultimate episode of The Bibliotherapists Series #3, and we’re not sorry that your reading list is about to get a lot longer. This week we’re joined by Natasha Poliszczuk, a writer and journalist, Editor-in-Chief of industry bible, BookBrunch, and the voice behind the brilliantly bookish Substack, Book(ish). Natasha has spent her career shaping conversations across the media landscape, with roles at Condé Nast, Time Inc., and Associated Newspapers as former books editor at You Magazine. These days, she sits right at the heart of the publishing world, bringing insight, taste and a sharp editorial eye to what and how we read. Always with a side of excellent style. In this conversation we explore her journey from glossy magazines to the world of books and what it means to build a life and identity around reading. We speak about career pivots, reading rituals, writing habits for real life, and why returning to stories again and again can be one of the most powerful forms of self-support. And, as always, there are plenty of recommendations along the way… “Books make me feel less alone… and remind us that we are more alike than we are unalike.” * Natasha Poliszczuk ✨ IN THIS CONVERSATION ✨ “Books are the soother of my soul” Natasha shares how reading has been her lifelong form of therapy, a daily practice that helps her feel grounded, comforted and connected. ✨ Reading makes us feel less alone Books offer both connection and perspective, even across completely different lives. ✨ A career pivot can be a return, not a reinvention Natasha describes her move into books as a kind of homecomin, proof that sometimes the thing you loved first is the thing you come back to. ✨ Rereading is not a failure, it’s a tool In times of stress or uncertainty, Natasha turns to familiar books for comfort, stability and emotional safety. ✨ You don’t find time to read, you choose it From reading while cooking to carrying multiple books at once, Natasha shows that a rich reading life is built intentionally, not accidentally. 📖 Natasha’s Reading List (and you can see ALL of our guests book picks so far at our Bookshop.org shop) Childhood & formative books * Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery * Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild Comfort reads & favourites * Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen * Persuasion by Jane Austen * A is for Arsenic by Agatha Christie Recent & upcoming reads mentioned * Strangers by Belle Burden * The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett (published 21st May) * The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout (published 7th May) * The Given World by Melissa Harrison (published 14th May) * The Golden Hours (the new Cazalet novel) by Louisa Young (published 3rd Sept) * Sophie Standing There by Meg Mason (published 27th Aug) * My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein by Deborah Levy * Mrs Dickens by Emily Howes (published 11th Jun) * Gloria Don’t Speak by Lucy Apps * An Ocean in a Day by Hannah Richell ABOUT THE BIBLIOTHERAPISTS The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Tanya Lynch therapeutic journalling coach and founder of Ease Retreats and Toni Jones founder of The Shelf Help Club. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). New episodes recorded live on Substack every week. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    48 min
  2. The Bibliotherapists Ep #24: Sarah Knight says stop f*cking scrolling

    10 APR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #24: Sarah Knight says stop f*cking scrolling

    This week we’re talking to Sarah Knight, 47, a bestselling self-help author, editor, and professional truth-teller who’s made a career out of saying the things most of us are thinking but are far too polite to admit out loud (especially us Brits). Sarah is the author of the No F*cks Given Guides series, known for helping millions of readers care less about what doesn’t matter and focus on what does. But behind the bold titles and boundary-setting philosophy is something much calmer and nerdier, a lifelong relationship with books and words. Sarah joined us from her home in the tropical Dominican Republic to tell us about her marital book club, her social media diet, her love of a murderous twist as therapy, and her love of sam baker full stop (anyone else want in on our fan club?!), as well as the realities of writing - and reading - for a living. One of my very favourite things is for it to be time to go to bed so I can start reading my book. * Sarah Knight In this conversation, we explore how reading has shaped Sarah’s life from childhood through to her career as an editor and author, and how she had to consciously reclaim reading for pleasure after years of doing it as a job. We also went deep into her writing process… from building books around outrageous titles, to writing at speed, to the messy, humbling reality of trying something new when also grappling with a new chapter of life (hello, fiction. hello, perimenopause. 👀). If you’ve ever struggled to focus on reading, lost the joy in it, or wondered how writers actually write when life is life’ing… this one’s for you. (and you can read all about Sarah’s latest life adventures, black eyes and moving dramas in her recent newsletter HERE). 🎧 Listen Now (also available wherever you get your podcasts). ✨ IN THIS CONVERSATION ✨ Reading as therapy, not productivity: Sarah reads every single night, not to learn or self-help herself, but to quiet her mind and switch off from the noise of the world. ✨ Why she protects her reading time fiercely: From setting app limits on her phone to quitting platforms that drain her, Sarah practices her own boundary-setting advice to make space for books. ✨ The downside of reading for a living: After years of editing hundreds of manuscripts, she lost the ability to read for pleasure… and had to consciously find her way back. ✨ How her bestselling book idea came to her: Inspired by The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying, Sarah realised she’d been “decluttering her mind” and turned that insight into a global bestseller. ✨ The reality of writing books (it’s not romantic): From writing entire books in weeks to wrestling with a 385-page novel that isn’t working, Sarah shares the full spectrum of the writing experience. 📖 Sarah’s Reading List (and you can see ALL of our guests book picks so far at our Bookshop.org shop) Written by Sarah Knight: * The Life-Changing Magic of Not Giving a F**k * Calm the F**k Down Journal * Grow the F*ck Up Books that shaped her: * The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying by Marie Kondo (the spark behind her first bestseller) * A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving Currently reading: * The Hunter by Tana French * Save the Cat Writes a Novel by Jessica Brody Recent reads & recommendations: * Good People by Patmeena Sabit * Adult Braces by Lindy West * It’s Not Her by Mary Kubika * Whidbey by T Kira Madden * Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson * Dear Debbie by Freida McFadden * A Sociopath’s Guide to a Successful Marriage by M K Oliver * Best Offer Wins by Marisa Kashino More from Sarah 🖥️ Join Sarah’s brilliant newsletter here on Substack: The No F*cks Given® Newsletter. 📺 Sarah Knight Instagram About The Bibliotherapists The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Tanya Lynch therapeutic journalling coach and founder of Ease Retreats and Toni Jones founder of The Shelf Help Club. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). New episodes will be recorded live on Substack every week. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    46 min
  3. The Bibliotherapists Ep #23: Book witch Caroline Donahue talks tarot and victorian psychos

    3 APR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #23: Book witch Caroline Donahue talks tarot and victorian psychos

    Welcome to a new episode of The Bibliotherapists. This week we’re in conversation with Caroline Donahue, a writer, coach, and book witch joining us from her home in Berlin. Caroline has spent years helping writers move through fear and into their creative work, and in this conversation she offers something grounding AND magical; a way of thinking about books not just as stories, but as spells cast across time. “Writing a book is like casting a spell for what you want to see in the world.” * Caroline Donahue For Caroline, Bibliotherapy is the idea that books allow us to connect across time, culture, and experience. That somewhere, someone has felt what we’re feeling, and has found a way to put it into words. And that connection, she suggests, is where the healing begins. From there, the conversation moves into writing. Not as a tortured, solitary act, but as something that can be meaningful, even - dare we say it - joyful! Caroline speaks about the work she does helping writers unlearn the idea that suffering produces better art, and instead learn to trust their instincts and create with a sense of possibility. Fear, of course, is part of the process. Whether that’s a fear of being seen, of not being read, or of being read too much. And in this conversation we explore how when we can name our fears, we can begin to move through them. There is also so much here about reading as a wellbeing practice. The idea of “slow reading” as a way to let a book take up delicious space in your life. The quiet ritual of building a monthly reading stack. The freedom of following instinct rather than obligation. And the deep pleasure of matching the right book to the right moment. “Favourite books are the ones you meet in the exact moment you most needed them.” * Caroline Donahue Running through this conversation is the idea that books are not passive objects. They are active forces, and that writing a book is a way of sending a message forward, while reading one is a way of receiving it. Pure magic. 📖 Caroline’s Reading List (and you can see ALL of our guests book picks so far at our Bookshop.org shop) Written by Caroline Donahue: * The Author’s Journey * Writing Through Fear Mentioned in conversation: * Inciting Joy by Ross Gay * The Book of Delights by Ross Gay * Possession by A.S. Byatt * Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë * War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy * A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske * Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson * The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim * The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern * The Cazalet Chronicles by Elizabeth Jane Howard * City of Thieves by David Benioff * Orwell’s Roses by Rebecca Solnit * Books v. Cigarettes by George Orwell * Serious Concerns by Wendy Cope * No Time to Spare by Ursula K. Le Guin Currently reading: * Essays by Zadie Smith * Real Estate by Deborah Levy * Victorian Psycho by Virginia Feito * The Art of Repair by Molly Martin More from Caroline Join Caroline’s latest course Your Writing Year Intensive which starts on Monday 6th April 2026 🖥️ Caroline Donahue Website 📺 Caro Donahue Instagram About The Bibliotherapists The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Tanya Lynch therapeutic journalling coach and founder of Ease Retreats and Toni Jones founder of The Shelf Help Club. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). New episodes recorded live on Substack every week so you can join the conversation as it happens. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    53 min
  4. The Bibliotherapists Ep #22: Katie Clapham on the Substack that turned into a book deal

    27 MAR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #22: Katie Clapham on the Substack that turned into a book deal

    Welcome to a new episode of The Bibliotherapists. This week Toni and I were joined by Katie Clapham, bookseller, writer, and the voice behind the popular Substack, Receipt from the Bookshop. Receipt from the Bookshop is a brilliantly wry weekly column observing life at Storytellers Inc., the small bookshop that Katie runs with her mum, Carolyn, in St. Annes on Sea, Lancashire, And in this interview we find out how what began as a last-minute Substack post last summer turned into a book (out in June) charting this bookseller’s year, and all the comings, goings and eavesdroppings that make up the particular world of indie bookshops. “Reading is like brushing my teeth or eating food. It’s just a non-negotiable.” * Katie Clapham In this conversation we spoke about: * Why reading isn’t “therapy” for everyone * The surprise bookshop and how it became both a dream and a distraction * How running a bookshop shaped her identity as a writer (and also paused it for five years) * The reality of building a Substack from zero with consistency * How Receipt from the Bookshop began as a last-minute post and became a book deal * A refreshing take on book clubs: choosing books you haven’t read and letting readers disagree * Why the best books don’t reflect your life but transport you somewhere completely different “I like to read a book about someone that I am not and will never be, but can be for the duration of that book.” * Katie Clapham 🎧 Listen Now (also available wherever you get your podcasts). 📖 Katie’s Reading List * Receipts from the Bookshop by Katie Clapham (out 4 June 2026) * Kick the Latch by Kathryn Scanlan * On the Calculation of Volume (Vol. 1) by Solvej Balle * The Lion’s Run by Sara Pennypacker * The Wreck by Lizzie Stewart (out 9 April 2026) * Dad Had a Bad Day by Ashton Politanov (out 2nd July 2026) More from Katie 🖥️ Receipt From The Bookshop 📺 @katieclaphamwriting About The Bibliotherapists The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Toni Jones, founder of The Shelf Help Club, and Tanya Lynch, therapeutic journalling coach and founder of Ease Retreats. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). New episodes will be recorded live here on Substack every week. Next up Caroline Donahue is joining us live on Wednesday April 1st at 11am. Thank you Renee V-L, Tam, Adele Robertson, and many others for tuning into our live video. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    45 min
  5. The Bibliotherapists Ep #21: Selina Barker shares books for burnout and break-ups

    20 MAR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #21: Selina Barker shares books for burnout and break-ups

    Welcome to a new episode of The Bibliotherapists. This week Tanya and I were joined by coach, author and life design expert, Selina Barker, whose work has had a huge impact on how we both think about energy, burnout and what it really means to thrive. Selina is the author of Burnt Out, Time to Thrive, and the much-loved Goodbye Hello journals, a nourishing self-development New Year ritual for so many in our communities. And everything she does is designed to help people move from exhaustion to alignment, and JOY. In this conversation, we explored the books that have shaped her, how she rebuilt her energy from the ground up, and why so many of us feel unexpectedly depleted at the start of Spring (this was a real 💡💡💡 moment for us!). Selina reminded us that we are not machines, and that how we live, work and even read needs to reflect that. She shared how discovering the concept of managing our energy, not our time became a turning point, not just for her own life, but for her work and writing too. We also spoke about the reality of burnout, including the permission to stop consuming altogether when your nervous system is overwhelmed, and how books can act as both medicine and mirror at different stages of life. “If you’re really burnt out… close the book and come back when you feel like yourself.” - In this conversation we spoke about: * Why burnout isn’t a failure, but often a natural response to modern life * The difference between gentle recovery vs forced productivity (even with things like exercise) * The five energy zones: physical, emotional, mental, motivational and spiritual * Designing your week (and year) around energy, not output * How reading habits change depending on your capacity, focus and emotional state * The books that shaped Selina at different life stages, from childhood to career pivots and how certain books created a somatic shift, not just intellectual understanding * Why we need to hear the same self-help messages again and again to integrate them * The power of journaling as a tool for self-inquiry and life design - 📖 Selina’s Reading List Written by Selina * Burnt Out * Time to Thrive Self-help / Personal Development * The Book of Forgiving by Desmond Tutu & Mpho Tutu * The Power of Full Engagement – Jim Loehr & Tony Schwartz * Falling Upward by Richard Rohr * The Success Myth by Emma Gannon * Women Who Work Too Much by Tamu Thomas * Purpose by Jessica Huie * Steering by Starlight by Martha Beck * Be a Free Range Human by Marianne Cantwell * Zen and the Art of Falling in Love by Brenda Shoshanna * Goddesses in Every Woman by Jean Shinoda Bolen Memoir / Narrative Non-fiction * All the Way to the River by Elizabeth Gilbert Fiction / Classics * The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho * Circe by Madeline Miller * Brave New World by Aldous Huxley * Meditations by Marcus Aurelius Other * Normal Women by Philippa Gregory * The Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton More from Selina 🌐 https://selinabarker.com/ 🖥️ Another Way on Substack ⚡ The free 5-Day Energy Reset starts on Monday 23rd March 📺 @selinabarker About The Bibliotherapists The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Toni Jones, founder of The Shelf Help Club, and Tanya Lynch, therapeutic journalling coach and founder of Ease Retreats. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). New episodes recorded live on Substack every week. Join us at The Bibliotherapists. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    50 min
  6. The Bibliotherapists Ep #20: Penny Wincer on fiction as therapy

    13 MAR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #20: Penny Wincer on fiction as therapy

    Welcome back to The Bibliotherapists. Where this week we had a full circle kind of conversation. Tanya has been following Penny Wincer’s work for years, since stumbling across her podcast Not Too Busy To Write back in 2021. That discovery was the catalyst for huge change in the direction of Tan’s business, Ease Retreats, leading to collaborations with memoirists like Cathy Rentzenbrink and Clover Stroud, and introducing her to Penny’s agent, Julia Silk. So sitting down together (online) for this bookish chat felt like something long overdue. Penny is an author, writing coach, and podcast host based in the UK, originally from Australia. Her debut book Tender explored the landscape of unpaid care. Her latest, Home Matters, is a hybrid of memoir, narrative nonfiction, and photography that grew from her years as an interiors photographer and her deep curiosity about what our homes say about us, and the stories they hold. “Stories let us explore emotions safely. They take us through experiences and give us the kind of resolution that real life often doesn’t.” * Penny Wincer In this conversation we spoke about: * Her advice (and an exercise) for anyone wanting to write a book * Penny’s rich relationship with reading: from discovering books as therapy during a difficult year in Thailand aged 18, to losing the ability to read in the aftermath of 9/11 in New York * Home Matters as a ‘hybrid’ book (and what that actually means when it comes to publishing) * Why audiobooks have been life-changing for Penny, and how she fits reading into a life shaped around caring for her disabled son * The ethics of audiobook platforms, and her recommendation for an alternative to the big subscription services (she uses xigxag.co.uk). 🎧 Listen Now (also available wherever you get your podcasts). 📖 Penny’s Reading List (referenced in this podcast) https://uk.bookshop.org/lists/the-bibliotherapists-reading-list-series-3 Books written by Penny: • Home Matters by Penny Wincer • Tender by Penny Wincer Books referenced in this podcast interview: • Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri • Anywhere But Here by Mona Simpson • The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron • Devotion by Hannah Kent • Always Home, Always Homesick by Hannah Kent • The Grapevine by Kate Kemp • Gloria Don’t Speak by Lucy Apps • Minback by Ella Lee • Jaded by Ella Lee (first book) About The Bibliotherapists The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Toni Jones, founder of The Shelf Help Club, and Tanya Lynch, therapeutic journalling coach and founder of Ease Retreats. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). New episodes recorded live on Substack every week. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    54 min
  7. The Bibliotherapists Ep #19: Poorna Bell on Midlife Rage, Romance Novels and Radical Boundaries

    6 MAR

    The Bibliotherapists Ep #19: Poorna Bell on Midlife Rage, Romance Novels and Radical Boundaries

    Hello everybody, We’re back! Series Three of The Bibliotherapists podcast opened STRONG with a brilliant bookish conversation with Poorna Bell, journalist, author, and creator of Substack publication As I Was Saying. Poorna joined us live on Substack to talk about her new book, She Wanted More, a bold exploration of what happens when women stop waiting for permission and start asking for more from life, work and themselves. “I want you to have a stronger voice within your own life and not feel guilty about advocating for your own choices.” We spoke about: * Why fiction is her true form of bibliotherapy * The catharsis of writing about grief after losing her husband * Why she refuses to finish books she doesn’t love * The “reward” women are promised for good behaviour — and why it never arrives * How she protects her time, energy and calendar in midlife We also explored how her relationship with ambition, validation and boundaries has shifted in her 40s (and the curse of plan-cancelling friends). 📖 Poorna’s Reading List (referenced in this podcast). * She Wanted More by Poorna Bell * Chase the Rainbow by Poorna Bell * Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto * The Neverending Story by Michael Ende * Haruki Murakami * The Elements by Kat Lister * Likeable by Fearne Cotton * Murder at Mount Fuji by Shizuko Natsuki * Eat Bitter by Lydia Pang About The Bibliotherapists The Bibliotherapists is hosted by Toni Jones, founder of The Shelf Help Club, and Tanya Lynch, therapeutic journaling coach and founder of Ease Retreats. Each week, we speak to a writer or creative about: * The books that shaped them * How reading supports their wellbeing * Their writing practice and reading habits * How they use Substack as part of their creative ecosystem We believe words heal. And we love asking other word nerds questions that get beneath the surface (as well as taking a tour through their book shelves). ** New episodes recorded live on Substack every week across March and April. Subscribe for all areas access at The Bibliotherapists. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    54 min
  8. The Bibliotherapists S2 Ep #8: Matt Trinetti on the power of writing in community

    29/08/2025

    The Bibliotherapists S2 Ep #8: Matt Trinetti on the power of writing in community

    Welcome to the second series of The Bibliotherapists, and our FINAL episode, featuring MATT TRINETTI, a community builder, publisher, TED talker and the cofounder of London Writers’ Salon & Writers' Hour - aka the friendliest corner on the internet for writers. A must-listen for aspiring writers and people considering a new adventure. - 🎧 5 takeaways from our conversation with Matt 1. Writing as a Tool for Self-Discovery Matt shares how journaling and writing helped him process grief, burnout, and career confusion, ultimately leading to personal breakthroughs. “We all have something to say. The act of saying it is what changes us.” 2. Permission to Call Yourself a Writer He encourages everyone to drop the imposter syndrome and claim their creative identity simply by showing up. 3. Community is Everything The success of the London Writers’ Salon proves that while writing is often a solitary act, writing in community transforms the experience. 4. The Myth of Motivation You don’t need to feel inspired to write; consistency, ritual and accountability matter more than fleeting passion. “When you show up consistently to your writing, you show up more honestly in your life.” 5. Everyone Has a Story Worth Telling Matt urges listeners to honour their unique perspectives, reminding us that “your story could be the light someone else needs.” - The Bibliotherapists is a podcast celebrating the healing power of words, hosted on - and featuring writers and creatives from - the Substack platform. Find Matt on Substack > https://substack.com/@matttrinetti Read the Writer's Hour Magazine > https://writershour.substack.com/ Toni (The Shelf Help Clubhouse) on Substack > https://shelfhelpclub.substack.com/ Tanya (withEase) on Substack > https://tanyalynch.substack.com/ WATCH THE VIDEO Video recordings of The Bibliotherapists interviews are available exclusively to our Substack subscribers. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit shelfhelpclub.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thebibliotherapists.substack.com

    48 min
4.5
out of 5
20 Ratings

About

A podcast from Substackers and bookworms, Tanya Lynch (EASE Retreats) and Toni Jones (The Shelf Help Club), exploring the healing power of words. thebibliotherapists.substack.com

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