This Book Made Me

Kim Middleton

Which book changed your life? More than just a good read, a book can alter the trajectory of your experience, shape your decisions, and reveal a new universe. Each episode features a different personality explaining the book that made them...a better partner, a messy thinker, a nerd extraordinaire. It's a reminder of the ways that books matter.

  1. 29/10/2025

    The Magic Mountain: Read Great Books with Others

    Why do we read hard books anymore? Is it worth the time and effort? My guest is here to make the case for how hard books make us better readers, and help us connect to other books and other people. (In fact, a book can read us. Yep. You heard that right!) Bill McDonald grew up in SoCal, where both his parents and most of his relatives were teachers, and he was not a rebellious child. More-or-less educated at Colgate and The Claremont Graduate School, and then by four years of college teaching in downstate Illinois, Bill and his wife Dolores came back to California to help found Johnston College at the University of Redlands in 1969, where his interdisciplinary training in religion, philosophy, and literature proved to be of maximum utility. He's now twenty years retired from U of R's English department and the Hunsaker Chair in Distinguished Teaching, and sort of retired from Johnston. He says: "Retirement's a military trope: I've stepped away from the front lines but continue soldiering on with alumni and development work and teaching one-two courses a year." He's written a couple of books, including one on Thomas Mann, and co-authored, edited/co-edited several others with Johnston alums and colleagues, but at heart he's a co-learner who has taken delight in sixty years in "unsolitary reading" with generations of college students. Don't forget this month's mixtape, courtesy of DJ Diego Dela Rosa, titled: This Mixtape Made Me Ponder. As always, you can find more about the podcast and host at our Instagram, or contact us directly at ThisBookMadeMe@gmail.com

    1h 8m
  2. 26/06/2025

    Inciting Joy: More Capacity, More Access, More Poetry

    What is joy, and how do we access it in a moment that feels so overwhelming? For two years, my guest and I have been studying the practices of a complex-but-easeful joy, using Ross Gay's book of essays "Inciting Joy" as an inspiration and a template. In this episode, we talk about what continues to shape our practice of experiencing joy in this moment.  We invite you to join us, and practice joy in community! We have two opportunities:  ✨ A joy-centered book club where we'll read Ross Gay's Inciting Joy together - building community, sharing reflections, and nourishing what uplifts us. Register and learn more about the book club here: https://shorturl.at/ENKPk ✨ A 5-week community of practice that will cultivate and steward joy, especially in uncertain times. Register and learn more about the community of practice here: https://shorturl.at/Ip5oD  And you can always download our free resource, the Joy Design Practices and Principles, as a starting place for your own work. Here's more about my guest, colleague, and co-facilitator: Lee Wilmoth (they/them) is a human-centered learning designer, strategist, and facilitator with over 10 years of experience. They hold an MA Ed. in Adult Learning and Development from Portland State University and are a LUMA Institute certified Human-Centered Design Practitioner and Instructor. Through their consultancy, Learn & Work, Lee partners with organizations experiencing change to create useful, usable, and desirable solutions. Whether it's a discovery and strategy project or a leadership development program, Lee always embeds equity and inclusion approaches and leverages their expertise in human-centered design, adult learning and development, and facilitation. Lee also has over 30 years of body-based training, dance technique, and performance experience, and has dedicated themself to ongoing studies related to joy, nervous system awareness, and the art and science of scent. They currently live in Portland, Oregon.  DJ Diego Dela Rosa is on vacation this week, but Lee and I did our best to make a playlist for joy, based in Ross Gay's work. You can find it on Spotify, as This Mixtape Made Me: Incite Joy.

    1h 5m

About

Which book changed your life? More than just a good read, a book can alter the trajectory of your experience, shape your decisions, and reveal a new universe. Each episode features a different personality explaining the book that made them...a better partner, a messy thinker, a nerd extraordinaire. It's a reminder of the ways that books matter.