Virginia's Podcast: Virginia Postrel interviews interesting people

Virginia Postrel

Creativity, enterprise, and progress: Interviews about life in a dynamic culture vpostrel.substack.com

Episodes

  1. Steve Teles on cost-disease socialism, why American political parties need factions, and why abundance advocates should create their own faction.

    11/01/2024

    Steve Teles on cost-disease socialism, why American political parties need factions, and why abundance advocates should create their own faction.

    This is the first of two conversations with Steve Teles, a political scientist at Johns Hopkins University and the Niskanen Center. In this conversation, which was recorded on September 13, we talk about why American political parties need more factions, why the abundance movement needs to be one,  and how scarcity emerged when, as Steve says, “we traded majority tyranny for minority tyranny.”  Please subscribe to my YouTube channel, which includes my textile-history videos as well as podcasts and assorted other material. Come see me on Sunday On Sunday, November 3, I will be selling and signing copies of The Fabric of Civilization and The Power of Glamour at the Southern California Handweavers’ Guild’s Weaving & Fiber Festival (WeFF) at the Torrance Cultural Arts Center. Admission and parking are free. Doors open at 10, and it’s a fun day for anyone with an interest in fiber arts. I will be working in the members’ boutique, where you can also buy beautiful handwoven items that make great holiday and hostess gifts and vintage garments, made from the 1940s to the 1970s with handwoven cloth, at incredibly low prices. Virginia's Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Virginia's Newsletter at vpostrel.substack.com/subscribe

    58 min
  2. Joel Miller on how book publishing works, why Paul Revere deserves more attention, and how audiobooks took publishers by surprise.

    10/09/2024

    Joel Miller on how book publishing works, why Paul Revere deserves more attention, and how audiobooks took publishers by surprise.

    With this podcast I’m experimenting with a transcript option. Substack produces a good transcript that includes all the ums and ahs. You can read it by clicking the “Transcript” button. Riverside.fm, the service I use to record the podcast, also produces an excellent transcript, which it ties to its editing capabilities. It doesn’t include all the ums and ahs but does include some. Because it combines two separately recorded tracks, it also sometimes seems to have trouble with the sequence of remarks. And it loves time codes. I’ve given the Riverside transcript a light edit and pasted it below the Show Notes. (This makes the post too long to show up in email, but you can click at the bottom to see the whole thing.) Please give me feedback on podcast formats and transcripts by completing a three-question survey. If I get at least 300 responses, I’ll do a drawing to give away five books. There’s a fourth question that allows you to enter. Virginia's Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Show Notes: Miller’s Book Review The story of Joel’s current book-in-progress Joel's 2024 reading list of Classic Novels and Memoirs Review of Slaughterhouse Five Review of Frederick Douglass’s Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs’s Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Review of Their Eyes Were Watching God Joel’s books on Amazon Pilot erasable FriXion pens Virginia’s post on listening to Middlemarch and Moby Dick Obituary of Moby Dick narrator William Hootkins A Movable Feast by Ernest Hemingway (audiobook) Milton Friedman: The Last Conservative by Jennifer Burns (audiobook) aeon.co reason.com Arts and Letters Daily A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith The Fabric of Civilization backdrop a gift from Pure Country Weavers keywords: book publishing, audiobooks, author advice, reading goals, publishing process, Joel Miller, Virginia Postrel, literature, writing, book recommendations Transcript from Riverside.fm Virginia Postrel (00:03.118) Good morning, Joel. Joel (00:05.078) Yes, thank you for having me. Virginia Postrel (00:07.14) Well, thanks for being one of my early guinea pigs. Your Substack is called MILLER’S BOOK REVIEW 📚. So I want to start with a question about the books that you write about. At the beginning of the year, you set out two challenges for yourself. One was every month to read and review a classic work and one was a memoir. How did you pick the books that you decided to do? Joel (00:46.274) I kind of have a running list of things that I feel I want to read or should read. And I'm almost philosophically committed to the idea that I'm only going to read books that I find interesting in some way or another. So I have to, the whim to read that book has to be there in the first place. So I keep this list and then I'm on Twitter and elsewhere and places where I just see wonderful book recommendations all the time. So I'm always adding to that list. And then at the end of the year, I look at that list and I usually share several suggestions with my readers and just say, here are 12 novels, classic novels that I'm thinking about reading. And in this case, this year I added 12 classic memoirs and I just said, you know, am I missing anything? You know, what would you recommend? And I take all that input together and you know, shake it up real good and out comes my list. Virginia Postrel (01:43.555) Right, we're three quarters through the year. What have you liked best that you've read? Joel (01:52.614) That's, it's so hard because there's so many great things. This might surprise, you know, anybody, I don't know, but everybody has read, I thought, Slaughterhouse Five. I somehow missed it in high school. I never read it, never read it in college. So I finally just said, this is the year I'm going to finally read some Kurt Vonnegut. And I put that down on the list and I was really surprised and delighted by that book. On the memoir side, I read Frederick Douglass's first memoir, his first autobiography, The Narrative, and I really loved that. There's so many great stories, though. I would say every one of the books I read in the list this year for both the novels and the memoirs have been surprising in certain ways. Virginia Postrel (02:27.676) Right, right. What is the value of setting that goal for yourself? Joel (02:53.262) Well, this is a little intangible. However, I'm fairly convinced that, and by fairly, I mean, I'm 100 % convinced that reading works that are considered canonical or adjacent to the canon, however that is fuzzily defined, is beneficial for a handful of reasons. One of them could be something as simple as just general cultural literacy. You know, walking into a group of people and somebody brings up a reference to, instance, Kurt Vonnegut, I'm, I'm, you know, in a worse position for not knowing what that is a reference to. And so it, it's just wise to, to be kind of current with things that are generally understood or respected or, or known. But then on the other side of it, there's also the kind of moral enlargement and self -improvement that can come from those kinds of books. And. Virginia Postrel (03:35.961) Right. Joel (03:52.302) That could be true for anything current too. It's just that the books that generally over time people have said, yes, this book is really valuable along those lines, tend to have been proven by time and other people's, know, vast opinions at this point to validate that. So for instance, Their Eyes Were Watching God is a really delightful and surprising novel in so many ways. And Virginia Postrel (04:00.911) Right? Joel (04:20.108) That could be just as true for a modern novelist to have written something like that and for us to have that take. It's just that we do have that take historically and it's been validated over the decades. Virginia Postrel (04:23.972) Right, right, right. So I see behind you, have a lot of books. And are they well organized or are they just like, well, I kind of know this one is got an orange cover and it's in this general vicinity. Joel (04:47.992) Yeah. Well, they're mostly well organized. They start off better organized on this side, which you can't see, but this is a shelf of a whole wall of mostly history and anything related to it that is time specific is chronologically filed. So I've got a lot of overview stuff up top, but then it moves historically from, you know, the ancient world into the modern world. And I've got you know, authorities that were writing at their times filed chronologically. So I know, you know, the arguments Augustine are having are relevant to the time that he's writing. And so I have those histories all together with, you know, his work, for instance, or Montaigne, you know, during the Renaissance and things like that, early modern era. Behind me, get, you know, more into these are more like business books and things like that, that I have for professional reasons. And then off to the side over here I have classic fiction mostly. Virginia Postrel (05:51.234) So one of the reasons, aside from enjoying your Substack and kind of knowing you more as an online friend—I don't think we've ever met in person—one reason I wanted to have you on the podcast was that I've found that whenever I write about publishing, readers are very interested. Joel (06:13.891) Yeah. Virginia Postrel (06:17.56) because it's kind of a black box to most people. And my readers tend to be people who read a lot and are interested in books. And they're very curious about how books get published. So one, you've spent much of your career in publishing. And first of all, could you explain a little bit about that? And then we'll talk about some specific questions that people have. Joel (06:20.12) Yeah. I've been a writer and an editor now most of my professional life. And I started off in journalism and from there moved into publishing. So in 2001, I went to work for an imprint that later was absorbed into some work at Thomas Nelson. And when that happened, that was in 2003. When that happened, I became a Thomas Nelson employee. that point, I was a senior editor and I edited and acquired books. And then I eventually worked my way up to a publisher of that particular division that I was involved in, along with a few other imprints. And then, over time, my job, you know, continued to change and evolve. eventually became VP of acquisitions. So my primary job at that point was to acquire new authors and then edit some portion of those books that I brought in depending on workload and relationships with the authors. Virginia Postrel (07:46.83) Right. Right. And was Thomas Nelson owned by HarperCollins throughout that period or was it acquired during your tenure? Joel (07:56.619) It was acquired after or near the end of the time I was there. Virginia Postrel (08:01.76) Okay, yeah, yeah, because, yeah, for those who don't know, I associate Thomas Nelson with publishing Bibles, partly because I once upon a time, as people have read my post about my life, I worked in a bookstore when I was a teenager in Greenville, South Carolina, where we sold a lot of Bibles. But they are a religiously oriented imprint. But I think a lot of the things that happen in book publishing the same, more or less the same way, regardless of what the specific niche of the imprint is. So when you're talking about acquiring a book, deciding to publish it, how does that process work? Joel (08:55.192) Well, it can work a handful of ways. are sort of like, there's a standard track that a project might run down. this, yeah, the standard track would be that an author works with an agent, they develop a proposal and that proposal gets shopped to a handful of publishers. You know, some agents work like where they'll blanket a whole bunch of people. Most agents work a little bit more strategically than that. They're going to iden

    1h 8m
  3. Dean Ball on AI regulation, "hard tech," and the philosophy of Michael Oakeshott

    09/25/2024

    Dean Ball on AI regulation, "hard tech," and the philosophy of Michael Oakeshott

    In the inaugural episode of the cleverly named Virginia’s Podcast, which complements the cleverly named Virginia’s Newsletter, I talk with Dean Ball. Dean writes the excellent Hyperdimensional on Substack and is a research fellow in the Artificial Intelligence and Progress Project at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. It’s a wide-ranging conversation and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. Check out the show notes for an outline of the conversation and links to some of the things we mention. There’s also a transcript, thanks to Substack’s AI, which is astoundingly good at making a transcript. In the future, I plan to make transcripts a paid feature but I’m including everyone initially. I welcome your comments and ideas for the podcast.Show Notes:When I created the podcast, Substack showed the show notes in a sidebar, along with the transcript. But I don’t see where they might be so I’m adding them after the fact.Writing by Dean Ball: “California’s Effort to Strangle AI”: “How to Regulate Artificial Intelligence” National Affairs: “Learning to Love the Inscrutable” (review of How Life Works): Other references: SB 1047: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240SB1047 Virginia’s review of Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson: Fei-Fei Li’s Stanford page The Worlds I See: Curiosity, Exploration, and Discovery at the Dawn of AI by Fei-Fei Li: The Constitution of Liberty by Friedrich Hayek The Road to Serfdom by Friedrich Hayek Rationalism in Politics by Michael Oakeshott Triumph of the City by Edward Glaeser Virginia’s article on materials libraries Brian Potter, Construction Physics: Patrick McKenzie, patio11 How Life Works by Philip Ball Get full access to Virginia's Newsletter at vpostrel.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 3m

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Creativity, enterprise, and progress: Interviews about life in a dynamic culture vpostrel.substack.com