Marlon and Jake Read Dead People

Penguin Random House

Marlon and Jake Read Dead People is a podcast hosted by the Man Booker Prize-winning and internationally bestselling author Marlon James and his editor, Jake Morrissey, Executive Editor at Riverhead Books. In each episode, Marlon and Jake talk about authors—specifically dead authors. Authors they like. Authors they hate. Great books, terrible books, and books they love that you’d never expect them to. As a writer and an editor, Marlon and Jake have read thousands of books between them, and they’re not shy in expressing their opinions about them. Sometimes they’ll agree, sometimes they won’t, but in every episode, they’ll tell you what they think— uncensored and with no holds barred. (That’s why the authors have to be dead.) So, listen along to hear about the spectacularly good, the hilariously bad, and the brutally honest.

  1. 04/11/2023

    Characters Behaving Badly

    In this episode, Marlon and Jake talk about the bad characters we’re not meant to like but do and the good characters we’re meant to like but annoy us. From Dracula to Daisy Buchanan to Oliver Twist and Bambi, the good-to-evil spectrum is vast and no character is safe from commentary. Tune in to find out which classic villain the duo unanimously hate, and which villain gives Marlon the chills and scares Jake to this day.  Subscribe to our River-herd newsletter for sneak peeks of our upcoming books, free giveaways, and exclusive content. https://sites.prh.com/riverhead-reader-newsletter The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia HighsmithA Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee WilliamsThe Flashman series by George MacDonald FraserTom Brown’s School Days by Thomas HughesKing Solomon’s Mines by Sir H. Rider HaggardRaiders of the Lost Arc by Campbell BlackDracula by Bram StokerFrankenstein by Mary ShellyOne Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken KeseyEast of Eden by John SteinbeckThe Awakening by Kate ChopinMadame Bovary by Gustave FlaubertHouse of Mirth by Edith WhartonCrime and Punishment by Fyodor DostoevskyThe Idiot by Fyodor DostoevskyThe Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor DostoevskyThe Great Gatsby by F. Scott FitzgeraldGood Morning Midnight by Jean RhysBambi by Felix SaltenWatership Down by Richard AdamsOliver Twist by Charles DickensMiddlemarch by George EliotThe Catcher in the Rye by J.D. SalingerThe Lord of the Flies by William GoldingRailway Children by E. NesbitPeter Pan by J.M. BarrieThe Jungle Book by Rudyard KiplingTreasure Island by Robert Louis StevensonVanity Fair by William Makepeace ThackerayEmma by Jane AustenMansfield Park by Jane Austen

    55 min
  2. 03/28/2023

    Books Assigned in School

    Books assigned in school evoke strong feelings. You either love em’ or you hate em.’ In this episode, Marlon and Jake discuss the books they wished they were assigned in school and the ones they suffered through. Accompanying the books taught in school, there are, of course, the teachers who taught them. A teacher can make or break a book read in school. As a literature teacher (as well as Booker prize winning author), Marlon acknowledges there are some novels assigned in school that you have to work to understand that are really good, but sometimes those novels are not good and if it weren’t for being assigned in school, we wouldn’t still be reading it. Subscribe to our River-herd newsletter for sneak peeks of our upcoming books, free giveaways, and exclusive content. https://sites.prh.com/riverhead-reader-newsletter Pride and Prejudice by Jane AustenThe Republic by PlatoJude the Obscure by Thomas HardyTess of the D’Urbervilles by Thomas HardyThe Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey ChaucerInfinite Jest by David Foster WallaceTom Jones by Henry FieldingMiddlemarch by George EliotCall of the Wild by Jack LondonBleak House by Charles DickensGreat Expectations by Charles DickensThe Pickwick Papers by Charles DickensDavid Copperfield by Charles DickensThe Warden by Anthony TrollopeWashington Square by Henry JamesThe Turn of the Screw by Henry JamesThe Aspern Papers byHenry JamesThe Ambassadors by Henry JamesDaisy Miller by Henry JamesEthan Frome by Edith WhartonThe Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark TwainThe Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark TwainThe Bondsman’s Narrative by Hannah CraftsGuerillas by VS NaipaulMiguel Street by VS NaipaulA Bend in the River by VS NaipaulA House for Mr. Biswas by VS NaipaulDog Soldiers by Robert StoneThe Godfather by Mario PuzoShogun by James ClavellTia-pan by James ClavellKing Rat by James ClavellWhirlwind by James ClavellJulius Caesar by William ShakespeareKing Lear by William ShakespeareThe Tempest by William ShakespeareKing Solomon’s Mines by H. Rider HaggardThe Radiance of the King by Camara LayeHeart of Darkness by Joseph ConradTarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Lady, or the Tiger? by Frank R. StocktonThe Discourager of Hesitancy by Frank R. Stockton

    44 min
  3. 03/21/2023

    Judging a Book

    In this episode, Marlon and Jake weigh in on a question as old as books themselves—can you judge a book by its cover? Spoiler alert: the answer is yes! They discuss good books with bad covers and bad books with good covers, cover art trends (*cough* the woman facing away), books that were recommended to them, and books they read because of peer pressure. Tune in to hear Marlon and Jake opine the myriad ways we judge books. Subscribe to our River-herd newsletter for sneak peeks of our upcoming books, free giveaways, and exclusive content. https://sites.prh.com/riverhead-reader-newsletter One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia MarquezHotel du Lac by Anita BrooknerThe Latecomers by Anita BrooknerThe Joy of Sex by Alex ComfortEverything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex: But Were Afraid to Ask by Dr. David R. ReubenGeek Love by Katherine DunnAncient Evening by Norman MailerMiami and the Siege of Chicago by Norman MailerThe Naked and the Dead by Norman MailerThe Railway Children by E. NesbitBallad of a Sad Café by Carson McCullersConfederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy TooleThe Bridges of Madison County by Robert James WallerAngela’s Ashes by Frank McCourtThe Hound of the Baskerville by Sir Arthur Conan DoyleAtlas Shrugged by Ayn RandThe Night of January 16th by Ayn RandWinesburg, Ohio by Sherwood AndersonRebecca by Daphne Du MaurierJamacia Inn by Daphne Du MaurierDon’t Look Now by Daphne Du MaurierThe French Lieutenant’s Woman by John FowlesDune by Frank HerbertStoner by John WilliamsOne is Not Enough by Jacqueline SusannValley of the Dolls by Jacqueline SusannHollywood Wives by Jackie CollinsChances by Jackie CollinsPeyton Place by Grace MetaliousEarthly Powers by Anthony BurgessAbsalom, Absalom! By William FaulknerButterfield 8 by John O’HaraA Rage to Live by John O’HaraGrendel by John GardnerMickelsson’s Ghosts by John GardnerOctober Light by John GardnerFreddy’s Book by John GardnerThe Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr SolzhenitsynThe Longest Journey by E.M. ForsterA Passage to India by E.M. ForsterHowards’ End by E.M. ForsterMaurice by E.M. ForsterSoldier’s Pay by William FaulknerEverything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O’ConnorWise Blood by Flannery O’Connor

    45 min
4.8
out of 5
975 Ratings

About

Marlon and Jake Read Dead People is a podcast hosted by the Man Booker Prize-winning and internationally bestselling author Marlon James and his editor, Jake Morrissey, Executive Editor at Riverhead Books. In each episode, Marlon and Jake talk about authors—specifically dead authors. Authors they like. Authors they hate. Great books, terrible books, and books they love that you’d never expect them to. As a writer and an editor, Marlon and Jake have read thousands of books between them, and they’re not shy in expressing their opinions about them. Sometimes they’ll agree, sometimes they won’t, but in every episode, they’ll tell you what they think— uncensored and with no holds barred. (That’s why the authors have to be dead.) So, listen along to hear about the spectacularly good, the hilariously bad, and the brutally honest.

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