
The Weekly Reader
Wednesdays at 2:33 p.m.
For lovers of literary fiction and memoir, The Weekly Reader is a four-minute round-up of the best new books on the national scene. University of Baltimore professor, author, and longtime All Things Considered commentator Marion Winik joins WYPR’s producer Lisa Morgan, former co-host of The Signal, in studio to share two picks each week.
They curate the best of the buzzy books you're hearing about elsewhere, and keeping an eye out for those of special interest to Baltimoreans. When Winik, who reviews for People, Kirkus Review, and the Washington Post, brings her trademark humor, thoughtful insights, and refreshing honesty to book criticism, it’s like having a new best friend with very good taste to guide you on your literary adventures.
Latest Episodes
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Cats From Japan: "The Blanket Cats" by Kiyoshi Shigematsu and "Mornings Without Mii" by Mayumi InabaIn Japan they call it iyashakei – a term that can be applied to anything that is comforting and uplifting: a person, a meal, a walk in the park. These books fit the bill!
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Never trust the teller, trust the tale? Not when the "teller" is as compelling as the "tale!"
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The Weekly Reader's Marion Winik will be in conversation with four local writers who have been receiving raves for their new work in fiction and poetry.
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World War II and its aftermath left an indelible mark on the world and inspired countless artists to try to make sense of such a calamity.
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Joan Didion died in 2021, but interest in her life and work has only increased since then.
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Inheritance: "The Magnificent Ruins" by Nayantara Roy and "Like Mother, Like Mother" by Susan RiegerWe can inherit so many things from our ancestors – physical traits, like hair and eye color, a quick temper, musical talent, a bunch of money, maybe even a big old house!
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Joni Mitchell gets the biographical treatment in a pair of books as unconventional as the artist herself.
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We love short stories, and we're going to make you love them, too.
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Who hasn’t dreamed of running away, leaving it all behind, totally reinventing yourself?
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Great art is often created in the wake of terrible tragedy – think Guernica, The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll, The Vietnam Memorial.
The Weekly Reader
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Click on the image for the book list. Book recommendations The People We Hate At the Wedding, Grant Ginder, FlatironThe Red Car, Marcy Dermansky, Liveright
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Click on the image for the book list. Book recommendations Marlena, Julie Buntin, Henry HoltThe Identicals, Elin Hildebrand, Little Brown
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Click on the image for the book list.Book recommendations Here Comes the Sun, Nicole Dennis Benn, LiverightDo Not Become Alarmed, Maile Meloy, Riverhead
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Click on the image for the book list. The Weekly Reader Recommendations The Heirs, Susan Rieger, CrownGossip of the Starlings, Nina de Gramont, Algonquin
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Click on the image for the book list. From Rockaway,by Jill Eisenstadt, Lee Boudreaux BooksSwell, by Jill Eisenstadt, Lee Boudreaux Books
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Click on the image for the list. Theft by Finding: Diaries 1977-2002, David Sedaris, Little BrownEleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, Gail Honeyman,…
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Book information. The Rocks, Peter Nichols, RiverheadThe Lemon Grove, Helen Walsh, DoubledayThe Vacationers, Emma Straub, Riverhead
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Book information. My Name is Lucy Barton, Random HouseAnything is Possible, Random HouseOlive Kitteridge, Random House
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Click here for book information. Featured book Horse Heaven, Jane Smiley, KnopfThe Gambling Collection Hats and Eyeglasses, Martha Frankel, TarcherLay the…