Cross Word Books

Michele McAloon

mysteryhints@gmail.comListen. Learn. Engage. Welcome to Cross Word Books,  the podcast where we delve into compelling conversations with authors who illuminate history, politics, culture, faith, and art. Each episode uncovers intriguing insights and untold stories that shape our understanding of today’s world and the rich tapestry of ideas that define it. Whether you’re passionate about the cultural impact of art or curious about how history informs our political landscape, Crossword invites you to explore the diverse forces that influence human experience. Join our community of curious minds and subscribe now to embark on a journey of discovery, thoughtful reflection, and deeper connection with the world around us.

  1. APR 21

    Lewis And Clark Reconsidered

    Send us Fan Mail Find out more at bookclues.com Two men got the highway signs—but the real Lewis and Clark Expedition story was a crowded canoe. We sit down with Craig Fehrman to discuss This Vast Enterprise: A New History of Lewis and Clark and why the expedition only comes into focus when we follow the people history usually pushes to the margins—and when we take Native nations seriously as powers, not scenery. If you care about American history, primary sources, archival research, and how interpretation changes when new evidence appears, this episode is for you. We explore Thomas Jefferson as the “mainspring” behind the mission, the mistaken dream of an easy water route to the Pacific, and the hard reality of distance, terrain, and the Rocky Mountains. We also dive into diplomacy and danger along the Missouri River, where the Lakota Nation and other Native powers were making strategic decisions of their own. Fehrman’s rotating point-of-view method makes familiar moments feel new by asking what the same event looked like from the other side. We discuss leadership and military culture in 1804—why Lewis and Clark’s style of discipline, trust, and shared responsibility differed sharply from Army norms—and how figures like John Ordway helped make the expedition function day to day. We also confront the hardest truths, including York under enslavement and Sacagawea as a teenage survivor whose role became indispensable. Subscribe, share with a history-loving friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What famous American story should be retold from another point of view next? Reach Craig Fehrman atcraigfehrman.com Check out Avid avidreaderpress. Reader Press Send me a picture of you reading the Book @. bookclues.com

    40 min
  2. APR 14

    What Happens When A Nation Falls For A Strongman

    Send us Fan Mail Find Michele McAloon @ bookclues.com Andrew Jackson is one of those American names people think they understand until they look closer. We sit down with historian David S. Brown, author of Andrew Jackson: The First Populist, to walk through the life that turned “Old Hickory” into a national symbol, a political weapon, and a permanent argument. From a hazy birthplace and a brutal frontier childhood to a self-made legal career in Tennessee, Jackson’s story is built on loss, ambition, and a fierce need to command respect. We talk about the traits that powered his rise and damaged his reputation: the duels that served as public proof of status, the moments of questionable judgment such as the Aaron Burr affair, and the social explosion of the Peggy Eaton controversy that effectively broke a cabinet. Brown also explains why Jackson’s actions in Spanish Florida created an international crisis, and how the Battle of New Orleans locked in a celebrity aura that followed him into national politics. This is early American history as a lesson in how fame and force can merge into leadership. From there, we dig into the big structures Jackson helped reshape: Jacksonian democracy, the expansion of presidential power, the veto as a governing tool, the nullification crisis, and the Bank War against the Second Bank of the United States. We also face the hardest parts of his legacy head-on, including Indian removal and the fact that there was opposition to it even in Jackson’s own time. We end by testing modern comparisons and what “populism” really means when you put policy, personality, and power in the same frame. If you care about US presidents, American populism, or how the bully pulpit was born, listen now, then subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

    32 min
  3. MAR 30

    The Seven Last Words

    Send us Fan Mail Find out more about this podcast at https://www.bookclues.com/ Wisdom from the CrossHow Jesus' Seven Last Words Teach Us How to Live (and Die) Well Holy Week can feel familiar until you slow down and listen to what Jesus actually says while he’s dying. Those final phrases from the cross, known as the Seven Last Words of Christ, are not random last breaths. They’re a compressed guide to forgiveness, trust, love, and what a good life looks like when everything is stripped away. We sit down with writer and editor Casey Chalk, author of a short but densely packed book from Sophia Institute Press, to translate two thousand years of Christian reflection into modern language without flattening the mystery. We talk about why the Seven Last Words appear across all four Gospels, how thinkers like Aquinas, Bonaventure, and Augustine read them, and why these sayings can be a surprising entry point for Catholics, Protestants, and curious listeners who aren’t sure what they believe. Along the way, we wrestle with the line that troubles nearly everyone: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Casey connects it to Psalm 22 and to the lived experience of the silence of God.  If this conversation helps you see Good Friday, Easter, and your own hard seasons with clearer eyes, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review so more people can find it. Buy the book  https://sophiainstitute.com/ any questions for Casey Chalk.  https://www.caseychalk.com/

    32 min
  4. MAR 12

    Toxic Feminism

    Send us Fan Mail https://www.bookclues.com Feminism is supposed to make women safer, freer, and happier. So why does it so often leave behind loneliness, rivalry, collapsed families, and a constant need to prove we’re “enough”? I sit down with Dr. Carrie Gress, PhD, scholar at the Institute for Human Ecology at The Catholic University of America and author of “Something Wicked: Why Feminism Can’t Be Fused With Christianity,” to name the parts of the story we’re usually told to ignore. We go past slogans and into the worldview, because ideas don’t just change laws, they change what we think a woman is for.  We trace feminism’s intellectual history from Mary Wollstonecraft through Simone de Beauvoir and into the second wave, asking whether the movement was “broken from the beginning” and whether women’s legitimate social gains could have happened without feminism at all. Along the way, Carrie shares a vivid metaphor from the book’s cover art, a Robert Duncanson painting that looks serene until you realize it may be encoded with a hidden map, a reminder that experts can misread what’s right in front of them. That’s exactly how toxic feminism can operate: compassionate language on top, corrosive assumptions underneath.  We also talk about the real-world fallout: sexual autonomy as a supposed cure for vulnerability, abortion as the mechanism that keeps autonomy possible, and what happens to a civilization when monogamy and motherhood are treated as optional. Then we pivot to hope and rebuilding: John Paul II’s clarity about women and men, the difference between vulnerability and victimhood, why “local love” matters, and practical first steps for women who want something healthier than the girlboss script.  If you’re wrestling with Christianity and feminism, Catholic teaching on womanhood, the sexual revolution, or what a pro-family future could look like, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who will argue back, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Check out Dr Carrie Gress.  https://theologyofhome.com/

    34 min
  5. MAR 4

    What Really Happened To Amelia Earhart?

    Send us Fan Mail Find Michele at https://www.bookclues.com A voice from the golden age of flight opens the door to one of history’s most enduring mysteries. We sit down with National Geographic writer Rachel Hartigan, author of Lost: Amelia Earhart’s Three Mysterious Deaths and One Extraordinary Life, to trace Earhart’s path from a refined but unstable Midwestern childhood to global fame—and the fateful push toward Howland Island that still puzzles pilots and historians. Across this episode, we unpack the pressures and logistics behind the round-the-world attempt, from Purdue University’s backing to the costly reset after a ground loop in Hawaii. Rachel explains how Earhart’s training and tech intersected with 1930s realities: a new direction finder she barely used, a likely damaged antenna out of Lae, strict radio schedules that clashed with Itasca’s expectations, and the navigational knife-edge of finding a 20-foot-high island in open ocean. We examine the competing theories with fresh detail. The Nikumaroro hypothesis offers intriguing clues—burn features, period artifacts, detection dogs—but no confirmed plane. The Saipan capture narrative thrives on secrecy and conflicting memories from wartime, yet lacks verifiable proof. The ditching scenario remains the most parsimonious: fuel exhaustion, a missed visual, and a descent into the Pacific near Howland. What makes Earhart timeless is more than her records; it’s the mindset. She moved through barriers with a matter-of-fact confidence, managed fame as strategy, and insisted on her own terms in marriage and work. Rachel’s field experience—from coral atolls and coconut crabs to deep-sea search tech—grounds the story in evidence while honoring the human drive behind it. If you care about aviation history, navigation, search and rescue, or the psychology of unsolved cases, this is a clear, compelling guide to what we know, what we don’t, and why we still look. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to keep thoughtful conversations like this in the air. Which theory convinces you most? Find Rachel at https://rachelhartiganauthor.com/ National geographic Books https://www.nationalgeographic.com/books

    43 min
4.6
out of 5
27 Ratings

About

mysteryhints@gmail.comListen. Learn. Engage. Welcome to Cross Word Books,  the podcast where we delve into compelling conversations with authors who illuminate history, politics, culture, faith, and art. Each episode uncovers intriguing insights and untold stories that shape our understanding of today’s world and the rich tapestry of ideas that define it. Whether you’re passionate about the cultural impact of art or curious about how history informs our political landscape, Crossword invites you to explore the diverse forces that influence human experience. Join our community of curious minds and subscribe now to embark on a journey of discovery, thoughtful reflection, and deeper connection with the world around us.

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