Book-ish

From The Daily Princetonian, Book-ish is more than a book review podcast: every other Saturday, listen for a candid discussion of a great book –– ranging to thoughts inside and outside the text at large. Book-ish is written and hosted by Gabriel Robare and produced by Francesca Block under the 145th Managing Board of The Daily Princetonian. The theme was composed and performed by Robare, and the cover art is by Sydney Peng. Have a book you want us to review, or want to talk about a previous episode? Send us an email at podcast@dailyprincetonian.com.

Episodes

  1. The Footnote - Anthony Grafton

    04/03/2021

    The Footnote - Anthony Grafton

    Before I record each episode of “Book-ish,” the script is fact-checked by The Daily Princetonian’s intrepid copy editors. While editing the last episode on Sarah Bakewell’s “How to Live,” they marked two of the passages from the book I quoted to be checked. I was confused because, well, I quoted them! Why would they need to check those? Lo and behold, they were wrong. Only slightly wrong — but wrong indeed. You heard the correct quotes on the podcast two weeks ago. This whole fiasco could have been avoided if I had taken the time to properly cite the book. Citations both prove that you’ve done your work and make it easy to check. Anthony Grafton’s book, “The Footnote,” digs into the history of citation. I sat down with him to talk about his book, how history is made, how we understand the past, and the nature of truth. The humble little footnote is behind it all. Listen in. This podcast was written and recorded by Gabe Robare, and was produced under the 145th Managing Board of The Daily Princetonian. It was edited by Cammie Lee and produced by Frannie Block with production help from Isabel Rodrigues. Special thanks to Professor Grafton for speaking with me for today’s episode. Have a book you want us to review, or want to talk about a previous episode? Send us an email at podcast@dailyprincetonian.com. For The Daily Princetonian, this has been Book-ish. Have a great day and keep reading. Rock Over London by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4301-rock-over-londonLicense: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license

    17 min
  2. How to Live - Sarah Bakewell

    03/20/2021

    How to Live - Sarah Bakewell

    Few inventions can truly be attributed to one person. We say Edison made the lightbulb, and we say Bell made the telephone, but in reality both of them were just at the end of a long line of cumulative innovations.  Michel de Montaigne, the Renaissance French writer, is one of the few true innovators in human history. Before Montaigne first published his Essays in 1580, the personal essay did not exist. After Montaigne, it was one of the most popular art forms in Europe. Montaigne was to literature what Michael Jackson, Elvis Presley, and Grandmaster Flash were to popular music, combined. Innumerable writers since the 1580s have been influenced by Montaigne and saw themselves in his Essays, as Sarah Bakewell writes in her biography of him, How to Live. Ever since the book came out, Montaigne has been an extremely relatable figure in contemporary society. After having read Montaigne, Stefan Zweig said “Here is a ‘you’ in which my ‘I’ is reflected; here is where all distance is abolished.” More simply –– Bernard Levin said “How did he know all that about me?” Listen to the latest Book-ish podcast to find out. This podcast was written and recorded by Gabe Robare, and was produced under the 145th Managing Board of The Daily Princetonian. It was edited by Cammie Lee and produced by Frannie Block with production help from Isabel Rodrigues. Have a book you want us to review, or want to talk about a previous episode? Send us an email at podcast@dailyprincetonian.com.

    20 min

About

From The Daily Princetonian, Book-ish is more than a book review podcast: every other Saturday, listen for a candid discussion of a great book –– ranging to thoughts inside and outside the text at large. Book-ish is written and hosted by Gabriel Robare and produced by Francesca Block under the 145th Managing Board of The Daily Princetonian. The theme was composed and performed by Robare, and the cover art is by Sydney Peng. Have a book you want us to review, or want to talk about a previous episode? Send us an email at podcast@dailyprincetonian.com.

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