43 episodes

Shelf Life is a show about books and the people who love them. In each episode, we invite a celebrated bibliophile (think Alan Cumming, John Waters, and Joyce Maynard) to select two of their favorite books, and then we chat about them, drawing connections between their lit choices and their lives and careers.

Shelf Life Grand Journal

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 33 Ratings

Shelf Life is a show about books and the people who love them. In each episode, we invite a celebrated bibliophile (think Alan Cumming, John Waters, and Joyce Maynard) to select two of their favorite books, and then we chat about them, drawing connections between their lit choices and their lives and careers.

    Curtis Sittenfeld on writing comedy, and Jane Austen's headstrong heroines

    Curtis Sittenfeld on writing comedy, and Jane Austen's headstrong heroines

    The author of seven novels and one collection of stories, Curtis Sittenfeld specializes in sharp-witted female protagonists in stories that reflect a Jane Austen-like cunning in using comedy as a vehicle for social observation.  For those who are familiar with her work, it may come as little surprise that Austen’s Pride & Prejudice is among her favorite books.  We also get an all access pass behind the scenes of Saturday Night Live thanks to Tina Fey's bestselling 2011 memoir, Bossypants. It so  happens that SNL and Tina Fey were instrumental in Sittenfeld's most recent novel, Romantic Comedy. Says Sittenfeld, “People say, ‘Write the book you want to read’, but I think I was actually writing the world I wanted to exist in.” 

    • 51 min
    Ada Zhang on the Lives of Others and stanning Eudora Welty

    Ada Zhang on the Lives of Others and stanning Eudora Welty

    Loss, longing and melancholy dominate the strange and sometimes mordantly funny short stories of Eudora Welty, the writer whose debut 1941 collection, A Curtain of Green is among two books that Ada Zhang has chosen for Shelf Life. The other is William Maxwell's short, taut So Long, See You Tomorrow. Zhang's debut story collection, The Sorrows of Others is a tapestry of first and second generation Chinese immigrants dealing with cultural and geographical dislocation, women on the threshold of adulthood, and intergenerational misunderstanding. Her characters reveal as much about themselves in what they say as in what they don’t.  “Lies say a lot about people," Zhang has said.  "What we choose to lie about can be incredibly telling. Getting your characters to lie or hide the truth is a sure way to get to know them.”  (Audiobook clip from The Sorrows of Others courtesy of Audible).

    • 52 min
    The Dead Presidents Society with Actor Dylan Baker

    The Dead Presidents Society with Actor Dylan Baker

    When did you first encounter Dylan Baker? Perhaps it was as the brazen wife killer Colin Sweeney in the long-running CBS show, The Good Wife. Or maybe it was the FBI bully-in-chief, J. Edgar Hoover in Ava DuVernay’s civil rights-era movie, Selma. Or was it much longer ago as the monster with the human face, Bill Maplewood in Todd Solendz’s 1998 movie Happiness.  He says, “I went into the business because I really enjoyed exploring dark places in human beings, it was always how I searched out roles.” But if his screen portrayals often show men abusing their power; his book choices for this episode of Shelf Life - Gore Vidal's Lincoln, and Robert Caro's The Path to Power -  show men who manipulated power for positive change, some bumps notwithstanding. 

    • 51 min
    Ramit Sethi on money, pleasure, and finding moments of awe

    Ramit Sethi on money, pleasure, and finding moments of awe

    The bestselling  finance guru-turned-TV star, Ramit Sethi is on a mission to help all of us live what he calls our rich lives, but he's not just another finance bro. The son of Indian immigrants who were too poor to afford restaurants or overseas vacations, he has developed an extraordinary skill in helping people figure out how to spend money on the things that make our lives more enjoyable. One thing that separates Sethi from the crowd? He reads!  His choices for this episode of Shelf Life are Christopher Alexander’s  The Timeless Way of Building, a clarion call to think about buildings and urban environments in the context of community, and  Elliott Aronson’s The Social Animal, a touchstone of 20th century psychology that aims for nothing less than to understand "how we think, how we behave, what makes us aggressive, and what makes us loving." 

    • 52 min
    Season Three is Coming: turn the page on a new chapter.

    Season Three is Coming: turn the page on a new chapter.

    In the quiet hush of winter, there's a particular inclination to fold into the pages of unexplored narratives. Since Shelf Life paused its pulse last summer, I've wandered through a constellation of worlds chosen by  a new group of celebrated bibliophiles, including the actor Dylan Baker, the finance guru Ramit Sethi,  and new voices in fiction like Ada Zhang and Ben Purkett. Stay tuned to find out what books they think you should read. 

    • 40 sec
    Between Dystopias: Marlon James and Hafizah Augustus Geter Live at Deep Water Lit Fest 23

    Between Dystopias: Marlon James and Hafizah Augustus Geter Live at Deep Water Lit Fest 23

    Each year  Deep Water Literary Festival in Narrowsburg, NY, identifies a unifying theme, often a particular literary work or an author, and builds a program to engage and interrogate the ways in which the theme resonates for contemporary audiences. In 2023 the festival explored the work of British novelist and journalist George Orwell. In this conversation the award-winning novelist, Marlon James, author of Black Leopard, Red Wolf and A Brief History of Seven Killings, and the poet and memoirist Hafizah Augustus Geter, author of The Black Period, parse the meaning and dynamics of dystopia, both literary and real-world. At a time when our lived reality feels like it's teetering on the edge of catastrophe, how does dystopian, apocalyptic, and speculative fiction speak to the world we live in, or help us to imagine alternatives. Find more information about the festival here. For Marlon James ten favorite books, head to One Grand Books here.

    • 46 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
33 Ratings

33 Ratings

michael in jeff ,

Pleasant surprise

I love this program as it constantly inspires me. Hearing the discussions weekly allows me the chance to digress from my usual noise and focus a bit on new ideas and new ways of looking at things. Aarons voice is particularly soothing and charming at the same time.

Trish South ,

Wonderful

Thoughtful & entertaining! Brilliant concept, authors talking not only about their new projects but books they love, books that have moved and inspired them. Aaron is incredibly engaging asking poignant questions, you feel like you are listening in to a private conversation, one that make you want to pick up a book and read read read!

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