PodcastsArteBrit Lit Book Club

Brit Lit Book Club

Vanessa
Brit Lit Book Club
Último episodio

20 episodios

  • Brit Lit Book Club

    The Hidden History of Book Clubs

    12/03/2026 | 18 min
    What if the book club wasn't just a cozy tradition, but one of the most powerful tools for change in women's history? In this episode of the Brit Lit Book Club, we trace the story of women's reading communities from the salons of ancient Greece and 18th-century France all the way to Oprah's Book Club and BookTok, and uncover just how much of the world women built from a circle of chairs and a shared book.
    We explore the founding of Sorosis in 1868, born from a woman being turned away from a Charles Dickens dinner. We dive into the Black women's literary clubs of the 19th century, including the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs and their unforgettable motto, Lifting As We Climb. 
    We look at how suffragists like Elizabeth Cady Stanton called the women's club "the school of politics for women." And we spend time in our beloved Britain — with the Brontës on the Yorkshire moors, Jane Austen in Bath, and Agatha Christie in Devon, tracing the radical literary tradition that runs through the very landscapes we explore on the Book Club Tour.
    This is the first episode in our Women's History Month series. More episodes coming all month long.
    In This Episode:
    The ancient roots of communal reading — from Greek symposiums to Roman litterati
    The women who ran the literary salons of 17th and 18th century France
    How working-class reading societies in Britain crowdfunded libraries before crowdfunding existed
    The founding of Sorosis (1868) and the General Federation of Women's Clubs — over a million members strong
    The Black women's literary clubs that fought lynching, built schools, and changed America
    How the suffrage movement grew directly from the women's club movement
    The Brontë sisters, Jane Austen, and Agatha Christie as literary revolutionaries
    Oprah's Book Club, Goodreads, and BookTok — the tradition continues
    How the Book Club Tour carries this tradition forward today
    Mentioned in This Episode:
    Sorosis — founded by Jane Cunningham Croly, 1868
    The General Federation of Women's Clubs
    The National Association of Colored Women's Clubs — founded 1896, Mary Church Terrell
    Ida B. Wells & Anna Julia Cooper
    Benjamin Franklin's Junto (1727)
    Pandita Ramabai
    The Brontë sisters — Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
    Jane Austen — Persuasion, the Pump Room in Bath
    Agatha Christie — Devon & the Jane Austen & Agatha Christie Tour
    Oprah's Book Club — Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon
    Reese Witherspoon's Book Club
    BookTok
    Upcoming Book Club Tours:
    🇬🇧 British Book Club Tour — July 2026 & June 2027
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scottish Book Club Tour — June 2027
    🇫🇷 French Book Club Tour — July 2027
    Visit thebookclubtour.com to learn more or book your spot. Custom trips for your own book club are also available!
    Connect With Us:
    Instagram: @thebookclubtour
    Website: thebookclubtour.com
    If you loved this episode, please leave a review — it helps more British literature lovers find the show!
    Love this podcast? Imagine walking the Yorkshire moors where the Brontës found inspiration, visiting Jane Austen's writing desk at Chawton, and exploring Shakespeare's birthplace with fellow book lovers. We do all this and more on The Book Club Tour!
    Follow along with our adventures, or join us!
    🌐 Explore our tours: thebookclubtour.com
    📸 Instagram: @thebookclubtour
    👥 Facebook: @thebookclubtour
  • Brit Lit Book Club

    Mary Shelley & the Birth of Frankenstein

    04/03/2026 | 21 min
    What does it take to write one of the most enduring novels in human history at eighteen years old, in the middle of a volcanic winter, surrounded by grief? In this episode of the Brit Lit Book Club, we dive deep into Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, tracing the extraordinary life behind one of Gothic literature's greatest masterworks.
    We explore Mary's radical inheritance: daughter of pioneering feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and philosopher William Godwin — and the personal tragedies that shaped her obsession with creation, loss, and the desperate wish to undo death. We journey to the shores of Lake Geneva, where the stormy summer of 1816 gave birth to the famous ghost story competition and, ultimately, to the spark of Frankenstein itself.
    Along the way, we discuss why the creature is not the villain of this novel, how Mary Shelley invented science fiction while drawing on the very real and very fashionable science of Galvanism, and why the 1931 Boris Karloff film, brilliant as it is, robbed the creature of his most essential quality: his eloquence.
    We also look at Frankenstein's extraordinary legacy, from the National Theatre's 2011 Benedict Cumberbatch production to its DNA running through every conversation we're currently having about artificial intelligence and the ethics of creation. That question has never felt more urgent.
    In this episode:
    Mary Wollstonecraft's radical legacy and its influence on Frankenstein
    The Year Without a Summer and the Villa Diodati ghost story competition
    Why the 1818 first edition differs — and why it matters
    The feminist and humanist reading of the creature
    Gothic literature's origins and how Mary Shelley transformed the tradition
    Literary pilgrimage sites related to Mary Shelley
    Perfect for: fans of Gothic literature, British literary history, feminist literary criticism, science fiction origins, the Romantic era, and literary travel.
    📚 Reading List
    Start Here: Frankenstein: The 1818 Text (Penguin Classics) — Mary Shelley The original, unrevised edition — rawer, more radical, and more interesting than the commonly reprinted 1831 version. This Penguin edition includes an introduction by Charlotte Gordon and notes that place Mary in a feminist literary legacy.
    Biography: Mary Shelley — Miranda Seymour The gold-standard life of Shelley. Thoroughly researched and beautifully written — the kind of biography that reads like a novel and leaves you feeling you've lost a friend when it's over.
    Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley — Charlotte Gordon A National Book Critics Circle Award winner that tells the story of both mother and daughter in alternating chapters — two women who never knew each other but shared a literary and feminist legacy. This one will absolutely wreck you in the best way possible.
    The Gothic Tradition: The Mysteries of Udolpho (Penguin Classics) — Ann Radcliffe The Gothic novel that defined the genre before Mary Shelley came along and revolutionized it. Atmospheric, suspenseful, and surprisingly modern
    Love this podcast? Imagine walking the Yorkshire moors where the Brontës found inspiration, visiting Jane Austen's writing desk at Chawton, and exploring Shakespeare's birthplace with fellow book lovers. We do all this and more on The Book Club Tour!
    Follow along with our adventures, or join us!
    🌐 Explore our tours: thebookclubtour.com
    📸 Instagram: @thebookclubtour
    👥 Facebook: @thebookclubtour
  • Brit Lit Book Club

    How to Start a Classics Book Club

    27/02/2026 | 52 min
    Starting a Classics Book Club: Tips, Traditions & Literary Travel with Keri & Liz 
    Have you ever dreamed of starting a classics book club but didn't know where to begin? In this episode, I sit down with two friends who started my personal book club, Keri & Liz, to talk all things classic literature and the magic that happens when readers gather around great books.
    Keri and Liz share how their classics book club got started, how they recruit and retain members, and what a typical meeting actually looks like — from how they choose their reads to what happens when someone hasn't finished the book (we've all been there!). We dig into why classic literature still matters in today's world, which books sparked the most passionate debates in her group, and how timeless stories connect to our modern lives in ways we never expected.
    We also tackle the harder conversations — navigating uncomfortable themes in classic texts, managing group dynamics, and keeping a book club thriving year after year.
    And then we get to the really exciting part: Keri and Liz have actually traveled to England with The Book Club Tour, and they share how experiencing the real landscapes, homes, and villages behind beloved books completely transformed the way they read. If you've ever wondered whether a literary travel experience is worth it, this episode will answer that question.
    Whether you're a seasoned book club host or dreaming of starting one from scratch, this episode is packed with practical advice, genuine inspiration, and a healthy dose of literary wanderlust.
    Interested in combining your love of classic literature with travel? Visit thebookclubtour.com to learn more about our immersive literary tours to England.
    In this episode we cover:
    How to start and grow a classics book club
    Why classic literature is more relevant than ever
    Book club meeting formats, discussion tips & member dynamics
    Navigating difficult themes in classic texts
    How literary travel deepens your connection to the books you love
    The Book Club Tour experience in England
    Love this podcast? Imagine walking the Yorkshire moors where the Brontës found inspiration, visiting Jane Austen's writing desk at Chawton, and exploring Shakespeare's birthplace with fellow book lovers. We do all this and more on The Book Club Tour!
    Follow along with our adventures, or join us!
    🌐 Explore our tours: thebookclubtour.com
    📸 Instagram: @thebookclubtour
    👥 Facebook: @thebookclubtour
  • Brit Lit Book Club

    My Review of the New Wuthering Heights Movie

    23/02/2026 | 20 min
    Emerald Fennell's Wuthering Heights (2026) has arrived and the internet has opinions. So do I.
    In this episode of The Brit Lit Book Club, we're stepping away from the page and into the cinema to review the most talked-about British literary adaptation of the year. Starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, Fennell's film was never meant to be a faithful retelling, by her own admission, it's her response to Emily Brontë's novel, built from memory and feeling rather than faithful reconstruction. 
    But does artistic freedom have limits? And what happens when the details an adaptation chooses to leave out aren't details at all, but the story's entire moral foundation?
    We cover it all: what the film gets genuinely right, what it loses by erasing and the novel's second generation, why Isabella's arc matters more than audiences may realize, and why the whitewashing of Heathcliff (however common in other adaptations) is not something we can brush past in 2026.
    We also sit with the bigger question the novel has always been asking: why do we romanticize love that hurts? And what does it mean that Wuthering Heights was exploring toxic love long before we had language for it?
    Whether you've seen the film, read the book, or just found your way to Emily Brontë through the movie buzz, this one's for you.
    Love this podcast? Imagine walking the Yorkshire moors where the Brontës found inspiration, visiting Jane Austen's writing desk at Chawton, and exploring Shakespeare's birthplace with fellow book lovers. We do all this and more on The Book Club Tour!
    Follow along with our adventures, or join us!
    🌐 Explore our tours: thebookclubtour.com
    📸 Instagram: @thebookclubtour
    👥 Facebook: @thebookclubtour
  • Brit Lit Book Club

    Wuthering Heights: Everything You Need to Know Before the New Movie Comes Out This Week

    11/02/2026 | 32 min
    Wuthering Heights: Everything You Need to Know Before the New Movie Comes Out This Week
    The new Wuthering Heights movie starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi is coming soon, and whether you've read Emily Brontë's classic or not, this episode will prepare you for what you're about to see on screen.
    In this episode:
    Complete plot summary for first-time readers (or if you're not going to read the book)
    Emily Brontë's fascinating, tragic life—from her isolation at Haworth Parsonage to her death at 30
    Major themes: class, revenge, toxic relationships, nature vs. civilization
    Why Wuthering Heights is NOT a romance (and why Heathcliff is not a romantic hero)
    The shocking Victorian reception to this "coarse" and "brutal" novel
    Why the book is so difficult to adapt to film
    Past adaptations worth knowing 
    What we know about Emerald Fennell's version and what to expect
    How to prepare for the movie and what to take away
    Why this 1847 novel still matters today
    Visiting the Yorkshire moors and Haworth Parsonage where Emily wrote
    This is Gothic psychological drama, not a love story—come prepared for intensity, obsession, and the wild beauty of the moors.
    Book Recommendations:
    Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
    Emily Brontë: A Life by Claire Harman
    The Madwoman in the Attic by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar
    The Complete Poems by Emily Brontë
    The Brontës: Wild Genius on the Moors by Juliet Barker
    Want to walk the moors where Emily wrote? Visit thebookclubtour.com for literary tours of Haworth, the Yorkshire moors, and other British literary locations.
    Love this podcast? Imagine walking the Yorkshire moors where the Brontës found inspiration, visiting Jane Austen's writing desk at Chawton, and exploring Shakespeare's birthplace with fellow book lovers. We do all this and more on The Book Club Tour!
    Follow along with our adventures, or join us!
    🌐 Explore our tours: thebookclubtour.com
    📸 Instagram: @thebookclubtour
    👥 Facebook: @thebookclubtour

Más podcasts de Arte

Acerca de Brit Lit Book Club

Welcome to The Brit Lit Book Club, where we explore the stories behind the stories. Host Vanessa, founder of The Book Club Tour, takes you on literary adventures through Britain's greatest works—from Shakespeare and Austen to Dickens and the Brontës.What to Expect:Each episode dives deep into a classic British author or work, going far beyond the plot summaries you learned in school. We'll uncover how these authors challenged their societies, examine the historical forces that shaped their writing, and discover why these centuries-old books still speak to our modern world—from family expectations and social pressure to gender roles and class conflict.Explore the real Shakespeare beyond the myths. Understand why Romeo and Juliet is more about social control than romance. Discover how Jane Austen revolutionized the novel while navigating life as a single woman. Learn what Dickens revealed about Victorian poverty and why the Brontës' heroines were so scandalous.You'll Discover:Historical context that brings classic literature to lifeSurprising connections between Regency ballrooms and modern dating cultureWhy Victorian social issues mirror today's challengesThe real lives of authors who defied conventionHow to read between the lines of England's most beloved booksBook recommendations for deeper explorationTravel tips for experiencing literary England firsthandWho this podcast is for:Perfect for book club members, literature enthusiasts, Anglophiles, students, travelers planning literary pilgrimages, and anyone who suspects there's more to these classics than they were taught in school.Whether you're revisiting old favorites or discovering British literature for the first time, each episode offers fresh perspectives, thoughtful analysis, and plenty of tea. New episodes weekly.Grab your tea and join the conversation!
Sitio web del podcast

Escucha Brit Lit Book Club, Literal y muchos más podcasts de todo el mundo con la aplicación de radio.net

Descarga la app gratuita: radio.net

  • Añadir radios y podcasts a favoritos
  • Transmisión por Wi-Fi y Bluetooth
  • Carplay & Android Auto compatible
  • Muchas otras funciones de la app

Brit Lit Book Club: Podcasts del grupo

Aplicaciones
Redes sociales
v8.7.2 | © 2007-2026 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 3/13/2026 - 8:14:21 AM