Overdue

A podcast about the books you've been meaning to read. Updates Mondays.

Overdue is a podcast about the books you've been meaning to read. Join Andrew and Craig each week as they tackle a new title from their backlog. Classic literature, obscure plays, goofy murder mysteries: they'll read it all, one overdue book at a time.

 

Ep 205 - Werewolf of Paris, by Guy Endore

It’s time to get very professional with the fourth book of Spooktober 2016! Guy Endore’s Werewolf in Paris is widely regarded as The Werewolf Novel, but it isn’t all full moons and silver bullets. Set in and around in the Paris Commune of 1871, the novel tackles class, sex, and the human desire to control our own impulses. 

Support the show by buying the book!
Bookshop.org · Kobo · Nook

Ep 203 - Hook (Bonus Episode)

Come Peter Panning with us as we discuss the 1991 Steven Spielberg film Hook, inspired by the classic book Peter Pan (Episode 165). It's time to name as many movies as we can, discuss the perils of overstaying your welcome in Neverland, and explore how such a stellar cast churned out a less-than-stellar movie.

Ep 201 - Howl's Moving Castle, by Diana Wynne Jones

This week is the start of Overdue’s third-annual Spooktober spookfest, a month full of scary (or at least somewhat spooky) books that will get you in the mood for Halloween!

Our first book is Diana Wynne Jones' Howl's Moving Castle, a book about a young girl transformed into an elderly woman, who gets wrapped up in a charming wizard's quest to avoid all responsibility whatsoever.

With our special guests Siri and the Christmas Creep, we touch upon the horrors and benefits of aging, the Billboard Magic Charts, Prince Justin, and WitchYelp.

Support the show by buying the book!
Bookshop.org · Kobo · Nook

Ep 200 - Infinite Jest, by David Foster Wallace

Here it is: the big two-hundo! This week, Andrew tackles David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest in a show that is nearly 2.5 hours long and yet somehow still not quite long enough to get to everything.

We break down the plot and the structure, such as they are, and we also dive deeper into the role of addiction and depression in the book and the book’s at-times antagonistic relationship with the reader. It’s a book worth reading, but perhaps more than anything we’ve yet done for the show, it resists being read.

Support the show by buying the book!
Bookshop.org · Kobo · Nook

Ep 199 - Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt

It's my life...and it's now or never. I ain't gonna live forever! OR AM I?

Natalie Babbitt's beloved children's novel Tuck Everlasting tackles the tough questions. What would happen if I could live forever? What will I do with the time I'm allotted on this mortal coil? Would it be creepy for a teenager to tell a ten-year old to drink immortality water in seven years so that he can be her forever husband?

Support the show by buying the book!
Bookshop.org · Kobo · Nook

Ep 198 - The Magicians, by Lev Grossman

What if magic were real? What if your favorite fantasy world was a place you could actually go? Would you be happy? Could you be happy?

These are the questions posed by Lev Grossman's The Magicians, an en*gross*ing urban fantasy novel that's spawned two sequels and a SyFy original series.

Other questions we pose ask about the following: the Fall of Flirting, One-Star Amazon Reviews, Jurassic Park Trespasser, and sexy foxes (we're sorry).

Support the show by buying the book!
Bookshop.org · Kobo · Nook

Ep 197 - Open: How Compaq Ended IBM's PC Domination and Helped Invent Modern Computing, by Rod Canion

Something a little different this week: Andrew read a non-fiction book about the personal computer era, something he was reading about mostly because he was also watching AMC’s Halt and Catch Fire. There’s an interesting story at the heart of it, but delivered through the dry and often sterilized viewpoint of its one-time CEO it often seems lifeless.

Support the show by buying the book!
Bookshop.org · Kobo · Nook