Sinopsis
Looking for illumination? Here at LITSOT, books are lighthouses erected on the great sea of time. They are windows into other worlds. Keyholes into other minds. They reflect or distort aspects of our world to sharpen our eyes toward unnoticed things. Join us as we read together. Each Tuesday, Gabe, Aidan, and Isabel analyze with insight, imagination, and attention to detail. We welcome your contribution at litsot.mail@gmail.com. Reading and ranting diverts and delights us, and we hope to share that with you. Each book contains a shout in the dark, and this is ours.
Episodios
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Supply and Demand: Dune #010
20/09/2017 Duración: 01h08minLife on Dune isn’t a jigsaw puzzle, it’s a roiling sack of snakes. Isabel, Aidan and Gabe ponder just what makes intrigue so repulsive. Why do we want a character to come out on top? How do the characters (and the author) use information? Join us in discussing a world where water, like information, is a currency that comes at a dear price.
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Oh, Go To...Purgatory? Purgatorio #009
13/09/2017 Duración: 51minOne is not to discuss religion and politics in polite company. Dante’s Purgatorio contains more than a dab of both, so unsurprisingly our opinions were a lot more adamant than usual. Is Purgatory possible within the parameters of the Bible? Is it an abstract construct or a physical place? Why do we read this thing anyway? Join Aidan, Gabe, and Isabel and take your stand!
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Mysterious Allurement: The Valley of Fear #007
30/08/2017 Duración: 38minEveryone loves a good mystery--but why? And what makes Sherlock Holmes especially shine? Join Gabe, Aidan and Isabel in their attempt to solve this case!
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God, Man, and Heartbreak: Frankenstein #008
30/08/2017 Duración: 53minWhere is God? Do we owe him, or does he owe us? Percy Shelley’s Frankenstein’s Monster explores the tragedy of a fallen existence. Isabel, Aidan and Gabe weigh in on loneliness, sin, and the result of playing God. On a cheerful note, it’s Isabel’s birthday. Tune on in!
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Pleasure without Pain: Plausible?: Brave New World #006
29/08/2017 Duración: 01h03minIn which Gabe and Aidan struggle to convince the singularly obtuse Isabel that Brave New World is a plausible book. What would heaven look like for you? Is pleasure possible without pain? And how does our current culture line up with Huxley’s dark prophecies? We’re excited to share the discussion with you!
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Red Hands: Macbeth #005
15/06/2017 Duración: 01h05minThe old man has lots of blood in him, and now it’s on Macbeth’s hands. Join Gabe and Isabel in welcoming Joeli as a guest on the podcast as we interpret Shakespeare’s tragedy Macbeth. Were the prophecies binding? What is guilt? Was Macbeth a narcissist, or just proud?
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The Phoenix Rises on Monday: Fahrenheit 451 #004
08/06/2017 Duración: 52minBooks are burning, but it’s a symptom of something deeper: a spontaneous culture-wide amnesia of mankind’s best ideas. Can it be reversed? What makes the Phoenix rise? Join Aidan, Isabel and Gabe as they follow Montag’s journey from mindless lethargy to kindled hope.
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Dream of Lions: The Old Man and the Sea #003
04/06/2017 Duración: 47minHe was a strange old man who had gone 40 days without a fish, and so are we. Gabe, Aidan, and Isabel go angling in Hemmingway’s deceptively simple novella, The Old Man and the Sea. What was he fishing for? Did he withstand the sharks? Explore with us this tale of endurance and dignity. Go fishing, don’t go out too far, and dream of lions!
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Of Duty and Obstinance: Theban Trilogy #002
02/06/2017 Duración: 01h01minIn which Gabe gabs and Aidan adages over Oedipus at Colonus, part 2 of Sophocles’s Theban Trilogy. Isabel interrupts in time to tackle Antigone. Does pride lead to a fall, or only obstinacy? Ought one oblige the gods, one’s leaders, or one’s self? Mull it over with us!
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The Tragedy of Never Knowing Yourself: Oedipus Tyrannus #001
03/02/2016 Duración: 52minJoin us on the Lighthouse podcast. Gabe, Isabel, and Aidan convene for the first time to discuss Oedipus Tyrannus. The first play of the Theban Trilogy, Oedipus is a tragedy of crime and denial. In a world where blind men see and seeing men are introspectively blind, is Oedipus the culprit or the victim? Are we fighting fate, or against ourselves?