London Review Bookshop Podcast
Arts:Books
Everybody has a body, a source of both pleasure and pain. In her latest book Everybody (Picador) Olivia Laing uses the life and work of the radical psychiatrist Wilhelm Reich as an investigative tool to uncover the strange, subtle and sometimes perverted ways we think about the physical object we function within. Fundamentally, this exciting and challenging book is about how we might strive for freedom with, and not despite, our bodies. Olivia Laing was in conversation with Katherine Angel who has, most recently in Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again, and in several previous books, wrestled with issues of bodily integrity and bodily freedom.
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Tony Wood and James Meek: Russia Without Putin
Jenny Hval and Laura Snapes: Paradise Rot
TJ Clark and Jeremy Harding: Heaven on Earth
Iain Sinclair and Patrick Wright: Living with Buildings
Martin Moore and David Runciman: Democracy Hacked
Ben Marcus and Eley Williams: Notes from the Fog
Marina Warner and Eleanor Birne: Forms of Enchantment
Richard Powers and Benjamin Markovits: The Overstory
Slavoj Žižek and William Davies: Like a Thief in Broad Daylight
Carlo Rovelli and Pedro Ferreira: The Order of Time
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Out of My Head: Tim Parks and Laurence Scott
White Girls: Hilton Als and Bridget Minamore
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A.K. Blakemore, Victoria Adukwei Bulley, Amy Key and Zaffar Kunial
The Cost of Living: Deborah Levy and Olivia Laing
An Evening with James Wood
Sophie Mackintosh and Katherine Angel: The Water Cure
Crudo: Olivia Laing and Ali Smith
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