46 min listen
Myths, Legends and Fables
ratings:
Length:
44 minutes
Released:
Feb 10, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
This week Marlon and Jake go back in time-way, way back-and revisit the myths and legends that have terrified and tantalized us for centuries. Gods and monsters. The powerful and the petty. The shape-shifting and the rampantly naked. From ancient Greece and Africa to Jamaica and Ireland, Marlon and Jake explore the world's myths and legends-how they persist and how we absorb, sanitize and subvert them. Whether it's Jason and the Golden Fleece, the trickster Anansi, or the non-consenting kiss in Sleeping Beauty, Marlon and Jake get real about fairy tales and folklore. And for all Black Leopard, Red Wolf fans, tune in to learn more about which of these traditions influenced Marlon's epic fantasy and how he's turning the wicked witch trope on its head in the trilogy's next novel!
Select titles mentioned in this episode:
The Greek Myths
The Labors of Hercules
Jason and the Golden Fleece
Daedelus and Icarus
Bullfinch's Mythology
African Myths of Origin
Anansi the Spider
Apep and Ra
Black Heart Man
Rolling Calf
Sukuyan
The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales
Snow White
Rapunzel
Sleeping Beauty
Hansel and Gretel
The Twelve Dancing Princesses
The Little Mermaid
The Little Match Girl
Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales
Irish Fairy and Folk Tales by William Butler Yeats
Select titles mentioned in this episode:
The Greek Myths
The Labors of Hercules
Jason and the Golden Fleece
Daedelus and Icarus
Bullfinch's Mythology
African Myths of Origin
Anansi the Spider
Apep and Ra
Black Heart Man
Rolling Calf
Sukuyan
The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales
Snow White
Rapunzel
Sleeping Beauty
Hansel and Gretel
The Twelve Dancing Princesses
The Little Mermaid
The Little Match Girl
Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales
Irish Fairy and Folk Tales by William Butler Yeats
Released:
Feb 10, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (35)
Questions, Questions: This week Marlon and Jake answer some of the questions that listeners have asked. What dead author or book did they initially hate but have come around to love? What is the best book by the worst dead author? And who is the most annoying character by a dead author? (Spoiler alert: Heathcliff. Obviously.) Along the way Jake confesses a lack of enthusiasm for William Faulkner and, yes, Virginia Woolf, while Marlon bemoans the insufferably boring Thomas Hardy and makes a plug for the poetic darkness of Shakespeare’s Richard III. Their shared hatred of A Tale of Two Cities is back and stronger than ever. Will Jake re-read Absalom, Absalom!? Will Marlon let go of his Edith Wharton grudge? Should we take relationship advice from Jane Austen? Was D.H. Lawrence the 20th Century’s bridesmaid but never its bride? Has the “Great Pirate Novel” been written? Tune in to learn the answers to these essential questions and so much more! Select titles discussed in this episode: by Marlon and Jake Read Dead People