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PODCAST · education

Playing Books

Learn from Audio Conversations on the World’s Most Unputdownable Books. The Playing Books Podcast 🎙️ is on Spotify, Apple, and other Platforms. More at playingbooks.org

  1. 107

    Meg-John Barker’s Revolution: The Psychology of Sex and Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning in to the sex episode of the podcast. We're exploring one of the most misunderstood aspects of human experience: sex. This episode focuses on Meg-John Barker’s The Psychology of Sex (The Psychology of Everything).What can psychology teach us about sex? How do different bodies and brains respond sexually? How can we prevent people from being stigmatized for their sexuality? Many such questions are explored in this episode and in Meg-John Barker’s The Psychology of Sex. On the side, we love to hear your take on this: how is Artificial Intelligence (AI) influencing sex today? What will the future of sex be like?Barker takes us on a remarkable tour of how psychologists have created and sustained certain understandings of sex and sexuality. Since so much of our sexual relationship happens in the mind, understanding where our ideas about sex come from becomes essential. We discuss cultural concerns around sexualization, pornography, and sex addiction while drawing on cutting-edge research from sexual communities and the applied field of sex therapy.In this episode, we reveal how psychology reshapes your understanding of desire, attraction, and intimacy. You should discover the surprising ways your brain influences your sexuality, challenge the narratives you've absorbed, and gain permission to question what you've always been told. This practical episode helps you navigate your own sexual identity, build healthier relationships, or simply be curious about human sexuality. This episode should shift how you think about this subject.Meg-John Barker’s The Psychology of Sex (The Psychology of Everything) deserves close reading and thoughtful engagement with Barker’s expository approach to this subject. We recommend it from Amazon, your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library. The author would greatly appreciate your support, and the publishers who wager on such matters.How was sex regarded in your childhood? Do you take the Scriptural or liberal view on sex and gender, male and female? What is your stance on sex before marriage? Is protection during sex enough to prevent sexually transmitted diseases? Which gender and race loves sex the most?Please, we love to hear your thoughts. Comment, share this episode, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast for more racy conversations like this.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgplayingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you again so much for your time and for listening to our sex episode of the podcast.

  2. 106

    The Unfragile Mind: Rethinking Mental Health and Human Nature.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the mental health episode of the podcast.Today’s conversation centers on a book that feels urgent, humane, and quietly revolutionary. The Unfragile Mind: A Physician’s Call for Restoring Hope and Humanity to Mental Health Care by Gavin Francis is not just another title in the mental‑health space. It’s a reminder, delivered with clarity, compassion, and clinical honesty, that people are not diagnoses, and care should never feel mechanical, rushed, or stripped of dignity.In this episode, we talk about what it means to build a mind that bends without breaking, a mind strengthened by connection, meaning, and the simple act of being seen. Francis writes with the rare combination of medical authority and human warmth, and his message lands with force: mental health care can be better, kinder, and more hopeful, and we all have a role in shaping that future.This is a conversation for anyone who has felt overwhelmed, overlooked, or misunderstood. Anyone who wants a mental health system that treats people as whole beings, anyone who believes that with a positive attitude, and wants to fight many dilutions and isolations that follow mental health misdiagnosis, and the like, should consider listening to this episode as many times as possible.Learn how the quote, ‘the map is not the territory’ applies to mental health and other surprising tips for sound mental health from the book. Consider purchasing The Unfragile Mind on Amazon, at your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library.Mental health is getting discussed more today. What is your call on Gavin Francis’ The Unfragile Mind: A Physician’s Call for Restoring Hope and Humanity to Mental Health Care, and this episode? Please comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books podcast to someone who might need a moment of clarity or encouragement today.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you again so much for your time and for listening to our mental health episode. Please, take a preventative approach to your mental health and don’t let anyone shame you for your temporary mental health challenges.

  3. 105

    Arnold Schwarzenegger's Revolution: Seven Tools for Useful Life And Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the memoir episode of the podcast. You made a great choice.This episode is largely about desiring a quality life, dreaming it, and going to work with everything you’ve got to make it a reality. We discuss Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life, one of the most unexpectedly raw, refreshingly honest, and genuinely life-changing books to come out in years.Yes, that Arnold, the BIG MUSCULAR, HEAVY WEIGHT BODYBUILDER, with the last name, Schwarzenegger, that is hard to pronounce. Schwarzenegger went from a small, cold-water farmhouse in rural Austria, where ambition itself felt illegal, to becoming the greatest bodybuilder on the planet, the highest-paid movie star in Hollywood history, and the Governor of California's $2.7 trillion economy. Three completely different worlds. Three mountain peaks. One man: Arnold Schwarzenegger.That's not luck. That's not genetics. That's persistence, determination, focus, and intense desire.In Be Useful, Arnold breaks down the exact mental tools he forged as a young man with nothing but a dream too big for anyone around him to take seriously. And here's the thing that hits hardest: he doesn't sugarcoat a single word. This isn't a celebrity memoir dressed up as a self-help book. It's a no-nonsense, blunt, almost uncomfortable conversation about vision, hard work, resilience, and one lesson his father never let him forget: be useful. Not famous. Not rich. Useful.What makes this book feel different? Arnold doesn't just tell you what to do, he shows you how it cost him, in failures, near-disasters, and defining moments he's never spoken about publicly before. He talks about purpose the way a man talks about something he fought for, not something he stumbled into, accidentally.Too many of us are stuck. Waiting. Spinning in self-pity, scrolling instead of building, hoping someone will arrive with the answers. Arnold's message, delivered in that unmistakable, no-filter voice, is both a cold splash of water and a warm hand on the shoulder: no one is coming to rescue you. But the good news? You're all you need.If you've ever felt like your life has more in it than what's currently showing up on the surface, this episode and this book are for you.Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life is an invaluable addition to your library. You can purchase the book on Amazon, at your favorite local bookstore, or request it at your public library. However you get it, just get it.Please, we love to hear from you. What tool from Arnold's life hit closest to home for you? Feel free to drop your thoughts in the comments; your perspective might be exactly what another listener needs to read today.If this episode added something to your day, share it with someone who's ready to stop waiting and start building. And if you haven't already, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to anyone who believes that the right book at the right moment can genuinely change a life. Because it can, we've seen it happen.Connect with our community of readers, thinkers, and dreamers:playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for being here. Truly. In a world full of noise, you chose to spend your time with words that matter, and that says everything about who you are and who you're becoming. We'll see you in the next episode. Keep reading. Keep growing. Keep being useful.

  4. 104

    Ivan Van Sertima’s Revolution: Black Africans in pre-Columbian America - Their Overwhelming Impact on the Civilizations, and Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the history episode of the podcast.What if the "New World" wasn't new to everyone?Our conversation is about Ivan Van Sertima’s They Came Before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America (Journal of African Civilizations). We step outside the lines of traditional history to explore a masterpiece that didn’t just stir the pot; it shattered it.Forget the standard 1492 narrative. Van Sertima presents a meticulously researched, revolutionary case for a pre-Columbian African presence in the Americas. From the colossal Olmec stone heads with distinct African features to the botanical mysteries of the African bottle gourd and the chemical signatures of West African gold alloys found in the Caribbean, this isn’t just speculation; it’s a forensic investigation into our global past.This episode is not about portraying any race as the most ancient and intelligent; it is about uncovering history as it is.Ivan Van Sertima’s They Came Before Columbus is more than a history lesson; it’s a paradigm shift. It challenges us to rethink the capabilities of ancient civilizations and the vast, interconnected nature of our world long before the age of steam and steel. If you’ve ever felt like the story of human achievement was missing a few vital chapters, this episode is your invitation to find them.We recommend you read about the research and archaeological evidence that answers questions about the pre-Columbus era, settling controversies that are accepted without books like Sertima’s They Came Before Columbus. You can purchase the book on Amazon, at your regular bookstore, or get it through your local library.Get ready to change how you view the map, prevailing historical perspectives, and the Columbus Day holiday in the U.S., celebrated every October since 1937. How have you always doubted the narratives about Columbus as the first to discover and settle in the New World? Or are you a proponent of that history?Please leave us your feedback, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast to continue to learn the realities of our world as objectively as possible.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokHappy Columbus Day in advance :). Thank you for tuning in and for giving us some of your precious time.

  5. 103

    Barbara Oakley, PhD, Teaches How to Excel at Highly Cognitive Subjects and Fields: The Human Brain Needs Regular Exercise, Too.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the cognitive episode of the podcast.We discuss Barbara Oakley, PhD’s A Mind for Numbers: How to Excel at Math and Science (Even If You Flunked Algebra). Being a human being itself makes everyone highly intelligent and cognitive, far more than imagined. Many students, parents, teachers, bosses, and supposed geniuses have assumed that being smart isn’t for everyone. Only a handful of people are geniuses. But as cognitive researchers and experts like Dr. Oakley would find, intelligence is innate and requires learning how to release it.That is what this episode explores:Learn the importance of mindsetLearn the difference between long and short-term memoryRegular exercise is so useful to the brainUtilize mental techniques like chunking to learn abstract subjects like Physics, Maths, Chemistry, and others.Understand the power of persistent, focused practiceDr. Oakley is known to always say, ‘Practice makes permanent.” Which, in reality, is what makes anyone a genius. Just as biological growth takes time, cognitive growth is no different. The nervous system expects human beings to practice and be patient for that wow spark to strike naturally.It is available on Amazon, in other bookstores, or through your local library.You are not an unintelligent, dense person. As you allow this episode and Dr. Oakley’s A Mind for Numbers to change your mindset while you make a consistent, diligent, persistent effort to learn how to code, communicate better, and exercise as a lifestyle, you will find out your intelligence is rare, waiting this long to be tapped out and utilized to accomplish significant feats. Please leave your feedback, share this cognitive episode with inquisitive folks, follow the podcast, subscribe for more insights, and recommend the Playing Books podcast.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokWe challenge you to disabuse yourself of the belief that math and other abstract subjects and fields are way out of your league and not for your type.Please, when you start tackling some of the world’s most cognitive problems, remember Barbara Oakley, PhD’s A Mind for Numbers: How to Excel at Math and Science (Even If You Flunked Algebra), and this episode.Thank you again for listening.

  6. 102

    Doctor Li’s Revolution: Eat to Beat Diseases. Let Food Become Your Pills and Medicine.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the health episode of the podcast.What if your grocery list could become your first line of defense against disease?In this week’s episode, we dive into the groundbreaking book Eat to Beat Disease: The New Science of How Your Body Can Heal Itself by William W. Li, MD, a powerful, eye-opening exploration of how food can do far more than just fuel and fill you; it can heal you or make you sick.This isn’t another “don’t eat this, avoid that” conversation. Instead, it’s a refreshing shift: a celebration of what you can add to your plate to unlock your body’s natural defense systems. Think every day, accessible foods like plums, cinnamon, jasmine tea, red wine (yes, really), black beans, San Marzano tomatoes, olive oil—and so much more.We unpack how these foods activate five critical health systems—angiogenesis, regeneration, microbiome, DNA protection, and immunity—helping your body fight cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune conditions, and beyond. It’s science made practical, empowering, and surprisingly delicious.You’ll hear why this book has been called “groundbreaking” by Mehmet Oz, praised by Cindy Crawford as a total mindset shift, and described by Bono as both entertaining and empowering. But more importantly, you’ll discover how to apply these insights in real life without turning your lifestyle upside down.If you’ve ever wondered whether your daily meals could be doing more for you, this episode might just change how you shop, cook, and eat forever.Food is medicine. That is a solid reason to purchase William W. Li, MD’s Eat to Beat Disease: The New Science of How Your Body Can Heal Itself. It is available on Amazon, in other bookstores, or through your local library.Don’t you feel sick or lively when you eat some food? Food is beyond taking care of hunger; eat to beat disease should come to mind at breakfast, lunch, dinner, or whenever hunger hits. Please, leave your feedback, share this health episode with someone you care about, follow the podcast, subscribe for more insights, and recommend the Playing Books podcast to your health enthusiasts.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokWe challenge you to start eating to beat disease and lead a healthier lifestyle.Thank you for listening and for choosing to grow, learn, and live better with us.

  7. 101

    The Knights Templar, Freemasons, Illuminati ... The New World Order And Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. We thank you for tuning into the mystery episode of the podcast.Do you ever feel like invisible hands manage the world’s stage? Do you suspect that history isn’t a series of accidents, but a carefully scripted play? Humans must never be independent! We must become docile.In this episode of Playing Books, we discuss Jüri Lina’s "Architects of Deception." Lina didn't just write a book; he beat out an expository blueprint that strips the gold leaf from global power structures, revealing the cold, hard machinery underneath. Many things, including good ones, were founded on deception from many years ago.Lina moves beyond mere theory. He delivers a chillingly documented exploration of the occult influences and secret societies that quietly steered the course of human events for centuries. We discuss why this eye-opening work remains one of the most controversial texts in modern literature and how its revelations will change the way you view the evening news forever.There are groups in the underworld determined to control what people see, think, eat, read, hear, and where they live. The attempts to create a New World Order go beyond rumors, controversies, fear-mongering, or ignorance. This episode and Lina’s book, Architects of Deception, should at least challenge your mind to recognize that something dark, more than imagined, is going on, and that it is not for the good of the people; it is for the evil interests of a few, primarily to accomplish satan’s mission for humans, animals, places, and things. Please, we beg you to share this episode and recommend the book Architects of Deception at your Church, workplace, business, and to your family, relatives, friends, significant other, neighbors, colleagues, roommate, classmates, schoolmates, buddies, and others.Deception in any sense deserves caution, a proactive one at that. Don’t just take our word for it; examine the evidence yourself. Purchase your copy of "Architects of Deception" on Amazon, at your local library, or visit your favorite local bookstore. After reading the book and listening to this episode, you may reexamine what you think of Napoleon, Lenin, Trotsky, Hitler, Mao Zedong, Roosevelt, Truman, and others.Watch out for the elites' ancient desires of microchipping every human being as their puppets.Have you encountered anything secretive at this level that Lina exposed in Architects of Deception? Do you belong to any of one or all of these secret societies? What do you think of your fate as JESUS CHRIST is on His way? Please, comment, share, follow, tag us, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time and for tuning in to this episode of the Playing Books podcast.

  8. 100

    CJ Mahaney’s Revolution: Why Your Pride Is Quietly Sabotaging Your Greatest Life (And How to Fix It).

    Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books podcast. Welcome to the character episode of the podcast.What if the fastest way to real success, truly loving, mutual relationships, and lasting influence isn’t grinding harder or posting louder, but getting smaller on purpose?  In this fresh, no-fluff episode of Playing Books, we crack open Humility: True Greatness by C.J. Mahaney, a foundational, expository book that quietly dismantles every cultural myth about what “winning” actually looks like.  We explore why humility isn’t weakness or false modesty; it’s the hidden engine behind every truly great leader, parent, friend, and dreamer. Through sharp biblical insight and disarmingly practical steps, Mahaney shows how pride sneaks in wearing success’s clothes and how choosing humility instead unlocks freedom, favor, and fruit that self-promotion can never touch.  If you’re tired of the highlight-reel life, craving something real, and ready to trade ego for impact, this episode will hit you right where you live.  Purchase the book today on Amazon, at any bookstore, or library, and start applying these truths immediately. Your next level of greatness might be one humble choice away.  Does humility make sense to you? Does the idea of God opposing the proud scare you or encourage you to be humble? Comments, text it to that one friend who needs it most. Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time and for tuning in to this episode of the Playing Books podcast.

  9. 99

    Neal Allen and Anne Lamott Reveal 36 Ways to Improve Your Writing Skills, Avoid Bad Sentences, and Enjoy Writing.

    Thank you for tuning into the Playing Books Podcast. Welcome to the writing episode of the podcast. Have you felt it, that sinking moment when you reread something you wrote and thought: this isn't it? The idea was there. The feeling was real. But somehow, between the brain and the page, something leaked out, leaving behind a sentence that works but doesn't sing."Most writers know what they want to say. Fewer know how to actually say it. That gap? That's where Neal Allen and Anne Lamott live."In this episode of Playing Books, we discuss Neal Allen and Anne Lamott’s Good Writing: 36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences, a small, precise, and genuinely revelatory book that treats the sentence not as grammar homework but as the fundamental unit of human thought. Thirty-six techniques. No fluff. And co-authored by a writing teacher whose structural insight cuts like a scalpel, alongside Anne Lamott, one of the most beloved writing voices of the last thirty years.We talk about why so many writers unknowingly bury their strongest words in the middle of their sentences. Why passive voice isn't always villainous, but usually is foul. Why clarity and beauty are not opposites, and how the space between a comma and a period can change everything a reader feels.Artificial Intelligence (AI) and growing technological advancements are making writing a necessity for survival. Everyone, even in developing countries, has to write emails, send texts, or reply to lead a normal life. Since writing is essential, why not learn how to write well? This episode would help you avoid those awkward feelings about your essays, novels, blog posts, or just long messages that somehow never land the way you meant them to, especially in an embarrassing way, giving the impression that you are not an intelligent person. Neal Allen and Anne Lamott’s Good Writing: 36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences addresses everyday situations. It’s practically useful, and a reliable reference to consult at your key moment of getting a writing out, and you don’t want to come short. Consider purchasing Good Writing: 36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences on Amazon, borrowing it from your library, or purchasing it from your favorite bookstore.This is a relevant episode you want to share with your family, friends, colleagues, and other significant people in your life. Please, comment, follow, like, and subscribe to the Playing Books Podcast.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media, please: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much once again for your time and for listening.

  10. 98

    Walter Isaacson on the Apple Founder, Steve Jobs, and Everything in Between.

    Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books Podcast. We welcome you to the biography episode of our podcast.In this episode of the Playing Books Podcast, we discuss Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, a book that strips away the myth, the marketing fog, and the glossy hero stories to reveal the real human behind Apple’s iconic glow. This isn’t just a biography; it’s a brutally honest autopsy of genius, ambition, obsession, and the messy edges of creativity.If you’ve ever felt torn between your ideas and your reality, if you’ve wrestled with perfectionism, or if you’ve wondered whether passion can coexist with peace, Jobs’s story hits harder than expected. Isaacson doesn’t glorify him; he exposes him. And in that exposure, we find lessons we can actually use: how to build, how to think, how to simplify, how to dream audaciously, and how not to treat people along the way.We’re unpacking what makes the book unforgettable, what makes Jobs magnetic and maddening at the same time, and how you can take these lessons into your own creative, entrepreneurial, or personal journey. If you want to read along, you can grab the book on Amazon, at your favorite local bookstore, or library.After you listen, tell us what resonated with you. Please, comment, share this episode with another curious mind, follow the show, subscribe for more book-deep-dives, and recommend the podcast to a friend who needs a spark of inspiration today.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media, please: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much once again for your time and for listening.

  11. 97

    Dani Robertson’s Revolution: 100 Animals That Come Out at Night And Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books Podcast. We welcome you to our episode about animals."Ever wondered what truly awakens when the sun dips below the horizon? Most of us live our lives bathed in daylight, oblivious to the vibrant, mysterious world that thrives under the cloak of night. In this captivating new episode of the Playing Books podcast, we plunge into the shadows with Dani Robertson's eye-opening book, 'Creatures of Darkness: 100 of the Planet’s Weird and Wonderful Animals That Come Out at Night.'Prepare to embark on a global journey to the planet's most exclusive nightclub, our nocturnal world. Dani Robertson, a masterful storyteller, peels back the darkness to reveal astonishing creatures you never knew existed. From the tiny, armored Pink Fairy Armadillo to the majestic African Leopard, the enigmatic Aye-aye, and even the bioluminescent Starry Night Octopus, you'll meet 100 incredible animals that call the night their home. Discover the silent flight of the Barn Owl, the surprising intelligence of the Raccoon, the perplexing Night Parrot, and the vital role of the humble European Mole. You'll even encounter stargazing beetles navigating by the Milky Way!But this isn't just a fascinating exposé of wildlife; it's a vital call to action. Dani reveals how our artificial lights are threatening these delicate nocturnal habitats, pushing many species to the brink. Learn how light pollution impacts everything from the navigation of dung beetles to the mating rituals of sea turtles, and how we can all 'embrace the dark side' by simply flicking a switch. This book is a revealing, expository look at the hidden rhythms of our planet and our profound connection to them. It's not generic; it's a compelling, original, and enjoyable read that will skillfully transform your perception of the dark.Dani Robertson’s Creatures of Darkness: 100 of the Planet’s Weird and Wonderful Animals That Come Out at Night is an unconventional book. Robertson didn’t just discuss a few animals. He wrote extensively on one hundred animals. This is fascinating and deserves reading.Consider purchasing Creatures of Darkness on Amazon, at your local library, or at other fantastic bookstores worldwide.We love hearing from you. Please comment below with your favorite nocturnal animal, share this episode with fellow night-owls, and don't forget to follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books podcast for more literary adventures.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media, please: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much once again for your time and for listening.

  12. 96

    Why the Jews? A Factual Examination of Antisemitism And Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Thank you for your time and for tuning in to our expository episode of the Playing Books podcast. In this new episode of the Playing Books Podcast, we sit down with Dennis Prager and Joseph Telushkin’s Why the Jews? The Reason for Antisemitism (An Examination of Antisemitism), a book that doesn’t tiptoe around the hard questions. Instead, it walks straight into them with clarity, realism, and a kind of expository honesty that feels rare today.You may have asked this question yourself: Why the Jews? Welcome to your long-awaited answers or attempts to ask further questions and clarify the mysteries surrounding this question. There are compelling data, research, and books that Why the Jews used to discuss this question. It is an interesting and enlightening episode, and the book should be unputdownable.The conversation isn’t abstract or academic. It’s grounded, relatable, and deeply human. The episode explores why antisemitism has persisted across centuries and cultures, why it mutates but never disappears, and what this says about human nature, identity, envy, morality, and the stories societies tell themselves. Prager and Telushkin don’t just diagnose a problem; they illuminate patterns that help us understand our world with sharper eyes.Learn the sequences that are consistent with oppressing the Jewish people. These sequences are close to those employed in hating and oppressing Christians, women, blacks, children, the elderly, albinos, and other marked minorities or isolated groups.Wherever you are with Jewish history or approaching this topic for the first time, this episode invites you to think, question, and reflect.Dennis Prager and Joseph Telushkin’s Why the Jews? The Reason for Antisemitism (An Examination of Antisemitism) deserves a deeper and reflective read. Please consider purchasing the book on Amazon, at a major bookstore, or at a local library. You will learn all the different types of antisemitism and other interesting aspects of hate and how it is perpetrated and sustained.Please comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast with folks who always want to go beyond the surface of any prevailing issue.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media, please: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much once again for your time and for listening.

  13. 95

    Laura Bates' Revolution: Men Who Hate Women - The Deep Challenge of Inner Bondage, Identity Crisis, and Outburst Frustration.

    Thank you so much for tuning in to the Playing Books podcast. Welcome to yet another episode to honor women in this International Women's Month.  This episode explores the conversation we’ve all been avoiding until now.We discuss Laura Bates' Men Who Hate Women: From Incels to Pickup Artists: The Truth about Extreme Misogyny and How it Affects Us All (Essential Book for Women's History Month), one of the most unflinching voices of our time rips the lid off the online rabbit holes where “nice guys” morph into incels, where pickup artists train men to treat women like targets, and where everyday misogyny quietly poisons dating apps, offices, bedrooms, and even friendships.This isn’t theory. It’s real screenshots, real stories, and real data that will make your stomach drop, then make you nod because you’ve felt it. Whether you’re a woman exhausted by the “not all men” debate, a man who wants to do better but doesn’t know where to start, or anyone who just wants relationships to feel safe again, Laura Bates hands you the flashlight.We’re talking about the book everyone’s quietly recommending to their group chats right now; the one that feels like essential Women’s History Month reading because it’s not about the past. It’s about right now.Bates' book isn't about women as it seems on the surface; it is about freedom. Men consumed with sexual drive are in spiritual, social, biological, and psychological bondage; hating women only shows their in-depth frustration. On the other hand, women are seen to be people who can't have their say, even on issues about their bodies and when to have sex. Women exist, according to men who hate women, for sex and other errands. We recommend the book for you. Consider purchasing it on Amazon, at your favorite bookstore, or at your local library. Have you read Bates' Men Who Women before? Are her expository ideas relatable? Please, comment with the one sentence that stayed with you. Please, share the episode with the friend who needs to hear it (you know exactly who), and among men's groups dedicated to hating women.Please subscribe, follow, and recommend Playing Books to help us keep pushing books about freedom to every ear possible.Thank you for listening with open hearts and braver minds. Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much once again.

  14. 94

    Operation AJAX in Iran in 1953: How The CIA Turned Iran into an Extreme Islamic Country and Prevented True Democracy in the Entire Middle East.

    Thank you for your time and for tuning in to the Playing Books podcast. Welcome to the spycraft episode of the Playing Books podcast. In this episode of Playing Books, we discuss Operation Ajax: The Story of the CIA Coup that Remade the Middle East by Mike de Seve, illustrated by Daniel Burwen, with a foreword by Stephen Kinzer, and ask a simple question: what really happened in Iran in 1953, and why does it still shape every headline you scroll past today?This episode and the book, Operation Ajax, remind us that history repeats itself. What we see going on in Iran today follows the pattern of the CIA operation in Iran in 1953. The use of protests, attacks on Iran’s autonomy, CIA dirty operations in foreign governments, and how the West interferes in foreign countries for its own interests. The U.S. government complains of Islamic tyranny in Iran, but they forget that it laid the foundation for Iran to become an extreme Islamic country.This isn’t a dry history class. It’s a graphic, true-life spy thriller where oil prices are soaring, British and American agents are playing chess with a sovereign nation, and a democratically elected leader, Mohammad Mossadegh, is caught between popular hope and secret backroom deals. We talk about how this story of propaganda, paid mobs, and a hidden CIA–MI6 operation didn’t just topple a government—it helped script the next seventy years of Middle East politics and Western foreign policy.We also dig into why telling this story as a graphic novel hits differently: the panels, the pacing, and the way de Seve and Burwen turn declassified documents and historical research into a visual narrative you actually feel in your gut. If you’ve ever wondered why Iran’s relationship with the West is so fraught, or how our global addiction to oil became “just the way things are,” this book—and this conversation—will stay with you long after you hit pause.This is an intense spy story. The book is packed with many applicable lessons. Learn from the book, apply its lessons to how you read the news, and consider purchasing a copy of Operation Ajax on Amazon, from your favorite bookstore, or from your library.If you enjoy this conversation, please comment with your thoughts, share the episode with a friend who loves history or graphic novels, follow and subscribe to Playing Books, and recommend the podcast to someone who needs a fresh way into serious topics. Your support helps us keep turning powerful books into unforgettable, real-world conversations.Remember that the CIA prevented the success of true democracy in the Middle East through Operation AJAX in Iran in 1953.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time and for listening.

  15. 93

    Mary Beard’s Revolution: Women and Power And Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books Podcast. We're recording this episode in a month when the world marks International Workers’ Day, making it the perfect time to ask: whose voices are actually being heard in the workplace, in politics, and in public?In this episode, we’re discussing Women & Power: A Manifesto by Mary Beard. A book that The Guardian calls one of the 100 Best Books of the 21st Century, and a "modern feminist classic." But let’s be clear: this isn't a typical self-help guide on how to "lean in" or speak with more authority. Mary Beard, a renowned Cambridge classicist, does something far more interesting. She takes us back to the very beginning of Western culture, to Ancient Greece and Rome, to show us that the way we treat powerful women today was baked into our DNA thousands of years ago.We talk about,The First "Shut Up": It starts with Homer’s Odyssey. Beard points to the moment when Telemachus tells his mother, Penelope, to be quiet and return to her weaving. Public speech, from the very foundation of Western literature, was defined as a male right. Women’s voices were seen as a threat to order. The Monster Myth: Why are powerful women still compared to monsters? Beard brilliantly connects the dots between the ancient snake-haired Medusa and the modern depictions of Hillary Clinton, Angela Merkel, and Theresa May. It’s a visual shorthand for fear: a powerful woman is a dangerous creature that must be beheaded. The "Miss Triggs" Effect: There’s a famous Punch cartoon Beard references where a woman makes a brilliant point in a meeting, and the chairman says, "That's an excellent suggestion, Miss Triggs. Perhaps one of the men here would like to make it." This isn't just a joke; it's the reality of how women's ideas are processed and dismissed. Redefining Power Itself: This is where the book becomes a true "manifesto." Beard argues that women don't just need a seat at a broken table; they need a seat at a table. We need to flip the table over. Instead of trying to fit into a male template of authority (deep voices, aggression), we need to redefine what power looks like. What if power were about giving power to others, rather than hoarding it for yourself? This book is realistic. It doesn't promise easy solutions, but it arms you with the vocabulary and the history to understand why the fight is so hard. It’s a slim volume, just over 100 pages, but it packs the punch of a thousand-year history lesson. If you’ve ever been interrupted in a meeting, told to smile more, or felt like your voice just wasn't landing, this episode, and this book, Women & Power: A Manifesto by Mary Beard, is for you. Consider purchasing it on Amazon, at your local bookstore, or at the library.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time, for listening, and for being part of this literary community. Until next time, keep reading.

  16. 92

    Argue Less, Avoid Fights, and Win More Without Giving In: The Negotiation Strategy Everyone Should Know The Art of Smart Agreements – Inside Getting to Yes.

    Welcome to a new practical episode of the Playing Books podcast. We discuss the mechanics of human agreement in this episode. Every day, we negotiate at work, at home, in relationships, even with ourselves. The question is: Are we negotiating well?In this episode of the Playing Books Podcast, we talk about the timeless negotiation classic Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In by William L. Ury and Roger Fisher. This groundbreaking book reshaped how people think about conflict, persuasion, compromise, and win-win outcomes.Instead of arguing harder or trying to dominate the other side, Ury and Fisher reveal a smarter path: separate the people from the problem, focus on interests instead of positions, and create solutions where everyone walks away with dignity. From workplace deals to family disagreements and business negotiations, these ideas are practical, human, and surprisingly powerful.In this episode, we break down the book’s most valuable negotiation strategies, share relatable real-life examples, and explore how these principles can help you communicate better, resolve conflicts faster, and build stronger relationships.If you want to negotiate with confidence, without losing your values, this conversation will change how you approach every important discussion. Some statements in the book require multiple readings and careful thought; therefore, having a copy of Getting to Yes is truly worth it. The book is only 224 pages. You can purchase it on Amazon or at your local or favorite bookstore.This episode has daily application. Share how this episode and the book are changing how you handle conflict and agreements. Please, comment, share the episode, follow the podcast, subscribe, and recommend Playing Books to someone who loves learning from great books.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time and for listening. You should get to yes at least in your love relationship :).

  17. 91

    Daniel S. Peña's Revolution: Your First 100 Million - A Ruthless Approach to Great Success.

    Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books Podcast. Welcome to the entrepreneurial episode of the podcast. We discuss Daniel S. Peña’s Your First 100 Million and ask a simple, uncomfortable question: what if the gap between your current life and your first serious wealth is not talent, luck, or followers, but the price you’re truly willing to pay for it? Did you know happiness comes from massive wealth?In this episode of the Playing Books podcast, we step into the brutal, high-pressure world of Daniel S. Peña’s Your First 100 Million, a book that mixes autobiography, tough-love mentorship, and unapologetically aggressive wealth-building strategy. This isn’t a “manifest and wait” conversation; it’s about mindset, risk, reputation, and the uncomfortable truth that there is always a “pay price to action” for the future you say you want.We talk about what it really means to build credibility from nothing, use other people’s money, leverage relationships, and think in terms of deals rather than tasks, without pretending everyone has a safety net or a trust fund. We explore Peña’s Quantum Leap Advantage philosophy, why conventional wisdom keeps most people stuck, and how his high-risk, high-responsibility approach can be adapted to a realistic life with bills, kids, self-doubt, and deadlines.If you’re tired of vague motivation and want a raw, practical conversation about ambition, fear, courage, and the emotional cost of going bigger, this episode is for you. Listen, learn, and then apply, and if you want to write out some key points directly from the book, consider purchasing Your First 100 Million on Amazon or from your favorite bookstore and make it one of your reference books.Share this episode with a friend or team who’s quietly dreaming bigger than their current reality. Please, follow, subscribe, rate, and recommend the Playing Books podcast so more ambitious, everyday people can turn powerful books into practical action and achieve supersonic successes. Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for tuning in, for your time, and for listening.

  18. 90

    Arnold Bennett: The Price of Love - Which is Why Love is Transactional Today. Is Love Worth It?

    Thank you for your time and for tuning in to the love episode of the Playing Books podcast.What is the actual cost of following your heart? Is it your reputation? Your peace of mind? Your bank account?In today’s episode of the Playing Books podcast, we are dusting off a masterpiece of realism that has been unfairly forgotten. We’re diving into Arnold Bennett’s 1914 classic, The Price of Love.While Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury set may have turned their noses up at Bennett (calling him unfashionable), we argue that he is one of the most insightful psychologists of the early 20th century, and his work is just as addictive as any modern thriller.In This Episode, We Discuss:The Realist’s Mirror: We explore why Bennett’s work is the epitome of realism. This isn't a fairy tale; it’s a mirror held up to the grime, the gaslights, and the complicated social machinery of the Five Towns.The Fateful Choice: Meet Rachel Fleckring, a young, plain, "straight-as-a-die" companion to an elderly widow. She finds herself torn between two men: the dependable but boorish Julian and the devastatingly charming, elegant, but deeply dishonest Louis Fores.That Shocking Scene: We dissect the most haunting moment in the novel, a proposal and a death rattle occurring simultaneously. As Louis proposes and Rachel accepts her fate, Mrs. Maldon dies in the next room. It’s macabre, masterful, and sets the tone for a marriage built on a lie.The Mystery: Money goes missing. Is it a burglary? A misunderstanding? Or is love itself the ultimate theft of common sense? We unravel the plot without spoiling the delicious tension.The Timeless Question: Rachel makes a choice at the end of this book that might infuriate you. We ask the hard question: Would you have stayed? In a world where a woman’s status depended entirely on her husband, was Rachel’s final, divine sacrifice a sign of strength or a prison sentence?If you’ve ever loved someone you knew was wrong for you, if you’ve ever made a deal with your own heart to overlook a flaw in exchange for affection, this book is for you. Bennett doesn't judge his characters; he simply lays them bare. He shows us that the "price of love" isn't just about money. It's about the slow erosion of trust, the quiet desperation of a marriage, and the resilience it takes to lift your chin and walk down the street, having chosen your burden.Bennett’s work is a masterclass in boundaries. As you listen, ask yourself: Are you in love with a person, or with the idea of fixing them? Rachel’s story is a cautionary tale wrapped in a love story, a reminder that character is fate.We highly encourage you to grab a copy and experience Bennett’s sharp wit and keen observational skills for yourself. You can purchase The Price of Love on Amazon and at other fine bookstores.Have you read Arnold Bennett? Do you think he deserves a revival? Would you have chosen the "bounder" or the "boor"? We want to hear your take!Comment below with your thoughts on Rachel’s decision. Share this episode with a friend who needs to hear that they aren't alone in their romantic struggles.Follow and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast so you never miss an episode where we resurrect the greats.Recommend us to your book club, let’s talk about the realities of love. Are you currently in love, and do you feel you are paying some heavy prices? Is it worth it?Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time.

  19. 89

    Bill Newman’s 10 Laws of Leadership And How to Use Them Today - Lead with Influence and Get Results.

    Welcome to a new episode of the Playing Books Podcast, where we open the pages of ideas that shape leaders, movers, and world‑builders. Today, we’re stepping into the timeless wisdom of Bill Newman’s 10 Laws of Leadership, a compact but powerful guide that has shaped executives, pastors, entrepreneurs, and everyday people who simply want to lead their lives with clarity and conviction.Leadership isn’t a title; it’s a way of positively influencing people and getting things done. In this episode, we explore Bill Newman’s 10 Laws of Leadership and uncover why these principles still feel startlingly fresh, relevant, and necessary. Newman reminds us:“Here are ten laws which are absolutely essential if you are in a position of leadership. Just as there are principles that govern nature, so there are definite principles which are vital in leadership. Don't stagger on in ignorance. Leaders are readers. Study well these principles to become the leader you are meant to be.”This episode breaks down each law with relatable stories, modern applications, and honest reflections about what it really means to lead in a world full of noise, pressure, and distraction. Whether you’re guiding a team, raising a family, building a business, or simply trying to lead yourself well, these laws offer a roadmap toward purpose-driven influence.We also revisit Newman’s simple but unforgettable definition of a leader, one that hits harder the more you think about it: A leader is someone who knows the way, goes the way, and leads the way.  Someone who moves people toward beneficial goals, not just activity. Someone who models the path before they ever ask others to follow.This episode is crafted to be engaging, revealing, practical, and deeply relatable, with fresh insights that help you apply each law immediately—at work, at home, and in your personal growth journey.If you want to go deeper, consider purchasing the book on Amazon, bookshop.org, or find it at your favorite bookstore. It’s a short read with a long-lasting impact, and you can return to the ideas in the book until you have internalized them.Please, we invite you to comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to someone who’s ready to grow. Your engagement helps this community of readers and leaders expand.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time.

  20. 88

    Where There is No Doctor - Taking Knowledgeable Risk to Save Lives and Contribute to Better Healthcare for All.

    Thank you for your time and for tuning in to the Playing Books podcast. Welcome to a health episode of the podcast. We are not giving medical advice in this episode, please. Please consult your doctor for your health matters.In this episode, we open a book that has quietly shaped communities, empowered families, and saved lives for nearly half a century: Where There Is No Doctor: A Village Health Care Handbook by David Werner, Carol Thuman, and Jane Maxwell.This isn’t just a medical guide. It’s a survival companion. A confidence-builder. A reminder that knowledge, practical, clear, human knowledge, can be the difference between fear and action, between uncertainty and empowerment.Today, we explore why this handbook has become one of the most widely used community health books in the world. We talk about the stories behind its pages, the simple yet powerful lessons it teaches, and how it turns everyday people into capable first responders in places where professional help is far away or simply unavailable.We will discuss:How the book demystifies health care with plain language and real-life examplesThe way it blends medical guidance with cultural sensitivity and community wisdomWhy its step‑by‑step instructions still feel fresh, relevant, and deeply humaneWhat modern readers, yes, even those with access to hospitals, can learn from it todayThis episode is all about practical health wisdom, self-reliance, and the kind of knowledge that stays with you long after you close the book.If you want to explore the handbook yourself, you can pick up a copy on Amazon, bookshop.org, or find it at your favorite bookstore. It’s one of those rare books that earns its place on every shelf.Please comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to someone who loves learning in a way that feels real, grounded, and empowering.Thanks for listening, and for being part of a community that believes knowledge should always be within reach.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokPlease, this episode is not health advice. Contact a physician for your healthcare issues. Thank you for listening, for your time, and for learning about healthcare at the grassroots.

  21. 87

    Joe Collins: Rent - Power, Target Capitalism, Sexual Harassment, Revenge Evictions, Planned Housing, and Others.

    Thank you for your interest and for tuning in to the Playing Books podcast. Welcome to a practical, relatable episode of the podcast. We discuss rent in this Playing Book podcast. You pay it. You dread it. You argue about it. Let's go beyond the surface of this complex subject.Rent is one of those words so woven into daily life that we've stopped questioning what it really means, whom it serves, whom it punishes, and why entire economies have been quietly reorganized around it. In this episode of the Playing Books podcast, we explore Joe Collins' sharp, eye-opening book, Rent (What is Political Economy?), and what we found inside will make you look at your monthly payment very differently.Here's a number to think about: 1 in 3 people across the 38 OECD nations rent their homes. In Switzerland, one of the wealthiest countries on earth, that figure climbs to 55%. In Germany, 45%. So before anyone tells you renting is a sign of financial failure, Collins dismantles that myth completely. Renting isn't a marker of poverty. It is, at its core, a question of power, who holds it, who extracts it, and who never quite escapes it.And the power dynamics Collins exposes are, at times, deeply disturbing. Did you know that thousands of women face sexual harassment directly tied to their housing situation, trading safety and dignity just to keep a roof over their heads? Did you know that revenge evictions, landlords pushing out tenants who dare to complain or organize, are a quiet epidemic reshaping entire neighborhoods? These aren't edge cases. These are features of a system, not bugs.Collins takes us on a global tour of what rent actually does to the world. We travel with him from São Paulo to Dublin, watching gentrification hollow out communities in real time. We move through Taipei and San Francisco, where Big Tech's stranglehold on housing has turned entire cities into playgrounds for the wealthy. We stop in Sekondi and Karratha, where extractivism, the industrial-scale stripping of land and resources, reveals rent's rawest, most exploitative face.But this episode goes even deeper than housing. Learn how rent traps many people, especially economically. Learn the three kinds of rent and other valuable lessons.Collins convincingly argues that rent is at the root of some of the most urgent crises of our time: the climate emergency, spiraling economic inequality, and the slow-motion fallout from global financial crises. Rentier capitalism, the system where wealth is generated not by making things but by owning things, is quietly running the show, and most of us are funding it one monthly payment at a time.We also nerd out (in the best way) on something you might not expect: the origin of the word "rent" itself, and what its linguistic history reveals about how deeply extraction has always been baked into economic life.Rent decides so much; we encourage you to listen, comment, share your experience with renting, and do you prefer renting to owning? Consider buying Joe Collins’ Rent (What is Political Economy?) on Amazon, at your local bookstore, or on your ereader like Kindle.Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for tuning in, for your time, and for listening.

  22. 86

    The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement - David Brooks.

    Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books podcast.This episode is a revelation. On the Playing Books podcast, we discuss David Brooks’s The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement, a masterful blend of psychology, sociology, and storytelling that uncovers the invisible forces shaping our lives. David Brooks dismantles the myth that success is built solely on logic and credentials. Instead, he reveals the emotional, social, and unconscious forces that also shape who we are, why, and how we thrive. Through the fictional journey of Harold and Erica, Brooks explores how unconscious emotions, social connections, and cultural influences drive our decisions far more than logic ever could. The Social Animal is not about surface-level success. It’s about the deep wiring of human behavior. Humans are largely wired to connect with others.Love, character, and achievement are mostly about the relationships we have with others. It is okay to have a fancy resume, quality education, great background, and other surface factors, but true success is founded on relationships, empathy, deep passion, a sense of mission, and emotional intelligence.In this episode, we talk about:Why your subconscious mind is more powerful than you thinkHow early life experiences shape your futureThe surprising science behind motivation, connection, and fulfillmentWhat it really takes to live a meaningful, successful lifeThis episode should help you understand why achievement isn’t just about effort alone, but also about being deeply connected to others, to purpose, and to yourself.The Social Animal is an oddly interesting book. You should consider purchasing it on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore. It’s a book that you can return to again and again.May you please follow, subscribe, comment, and recommend the Playing Books podcast and connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much for your time and for listening.

  23. 85

    Legitimate Rules & Ways to Avoid Taxes — Build Wealth, Enjoy It & Hold It for Coming Generations. Based on Tommy D. Heckman's "Ways To Avoid Taxes..."

    Welcome to the Playing Books podcast. Thank you for tuning in to the tax episode of the podcast.Every April, the government takes a massive cut of your paycheck. And most people just accept it. Do you also shrug, sign the forms, and watch thousands of dollars vanish and tell yourself, "That's just how it works?"But here's what nobody tells you: the wealthy aren't playing the same game you are. This episode explains how taxes work. We discuss Tommy D. Heckman’s Ways To Avoid Taxes: Ultimate Guide To Creating Tax-free Wealth And Keeping More Of Your Money Legally.It's not a loophole. It's not a scheme. It's not something shady your neighbor whispered about at a barbecue.It's just knowledge. Boring, powerful, life-changing knowledge that wealthy families have quietly used for decades while the rest of us overpaid and moved on.Tommy Heckman walks you through exactly how this works — in plain English, without making your eyes glaze over. We're talking about how the proper business structure can turn your everyday expenses into legitimate tax deductions. How life insurance, when set up correctly, quietly builds wealth in the background. How real estate isn't just an investment — it's one of the most generous tax shelters the code allows, how your retirement plan, your home, and even your side hustle may already be tools you're not entirely using.And perhaps most importantly, how to leave money to your kids rather than to the IRS.Here's the thing that really sticks with you after reading this book:The tax code isn't punishing you on purpose. It's just written for people who bothered to understand it. Every deduction, every structure, every legal strategy in this book exists because someone sat down, read the rules, and decided to use them.You don't need to earn more. You don't need to work harder. You just need to stop letting money walk out the door that doesn't have to, and learn practical and legitimate ways to keep your money.As a business owner, investor in property, working a 9-to-5 with a side income, or you're just someone who's finally tired of watching a huge chunk of every paycheck disappear, this episode will shift how you think about money. Tommy D. Heckman’s Ways To Avoid Taxes: Ultimate Guide To Creating Tax-free Wealth And Keeping More Of Your Money Legally is a must-have personal financial education that would benefit you and your future generations.We recommend Tommy D. Heckman’s Ways To Avoid Taxes: Ultimate Guide To Creating Tax-free Wealth And Keeping More Of Your Money Legally. It at least challenges you to plan your tax expenses like the wealthy do, intentionally, and months to years in advance. The book is available on Amazon, at your local library, and in your local bookstores. This is a practical episode. Let us know how the episode changes how you file your taxes, prepare wealth for your children, and improve your overall financial life.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you so much for listening and for contributing to reducing financial stress in legitimate ways.

  24. 84

    The Complete Story of Aviation: From Wooden Wings to Jet Engines, The Wright Brothers, Pioneer Pilots, Airports - Based on R. G. Grant's Flight.

    Hello, history admirers. Welcome to a thrilling new episode of the Playing Books podcast, where we take you on a sky-high journey through the captivating world of aviation history with R.G. Grant’s Flight: The Complete History of Aviation (DK Definitive Visual Histories). This visually stunning, richly detailed book chronicles humanity’s timeless dream to conquer the skies, from the earliest flying machines and daring pioneers to the cutting-edge technology shaping modern flight.The episode is about airports, the people who dare dream of inventing aeroplanes, the pioneer crazy pilots, and all the things that complement airplanes.Join us as we explore the heroic feats of aviators, the evolution of aircraft design, and the pivotal moments that transformed aviation forever. This memory-lane episode offers fresh insights and fascinating stories that will inspire and inform aviation enthusiasts, history buffs, or those simply curious about how flight changed the world.Discover how the bravery of early pilots, the innovation of test pilots, and the relentless progress in aerospace technology have made flight an everyday miracle. We’ll reveal why R.G. Grant’s Flight is more than just a book; it’s a visual celebration of human ingenuity, patience, determination, curiosity, and the spirit of adventure.The pictures in R.G. Grant’s Flight: The Complete History of Aviation (DK Definitive Visual Histories) should make anyone want to purchase the book. We recommend it. Grant didn’t write it out of proving a point; he wrote it out of a deep fascination and appreciation of the efforts and lengths humans went to invent airplanes, airports, and everything aviation. Flight is available now on Amazon and at any standard bookstore.Please, comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the Playing Books Podcast to your inquisitive folks. Your support encourages us to keep searching for all the interesting books ever written, at least for your literary thrills.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokThank you for your time and for flying with us today.

  25. 83

    Mary Robinson's Memoir - Everybody Matters.

    Welcome to a memoir episode of the Playing Books Podcast. What lens have you used to divide people into, and accordingly, how do you treat others based on this division?In this episode of the podcast, we discuss Mary Robinson’s memoir, Everybody Matters. We want to believe everyone is important and relevant, but in reality, we base who gets attention, opportunity, respect, and love on metrics that truly shape our beliefs, from upbringing, culture, education, and experience to wealth and subtle realities. Then, going by the belief that Everybody Matters, comes with undesirable, unfriendly, and unwelcoming consequences. Mary Robinson shares how believing that everybody is valuable isolated her, for example, her parents didn’t attend her wedding. Her dad was alive, but he didn’t walk her down the aisle.This episode is packed with practical insights and realistic lessons. You will learn how many class beliefs divide Ireland, as they do the rest of the world. Women don’t matter. Catholics are the truest of all religious denominations. There are many such conclusions that only further hurt, divide, and isolate people. Should you sit down and let these beliefs thrive and dominate? Or would you imitate Mary Robinson, challenge them from your heart, and rise to do something fundamental about these limiting stances?We encourage you to listen with the intention of fostering positive, unifying beliefs, to insist that Everybody Matters, regardless of sex, location, accent, education, money, race, or background.Mary Robinson’s memoir can serve as a guide for creating lasting change. Get it to refer to it as often as possible. You can purchase Mary Robinson’s Memoir, Everybody Matters, on Amazon, bookshop.org, and at your local bookstore. Learn how to be different, create positive changes, and treat yourself with importance and self-respect.Please, connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokPlease let us know if you believe Everybody Matters. In reality, do your family, community, Church, workplace, and the like share this belief that Everybody Matters?Thank you for listening, for your time, and for being part of our memoir episode. A much better world for all through books is possible, and you are part of it.Thank you.

  26. 82

    The Resume That Gets Interviews - Knock ’em Dead Resumes: A Killer Resume Gets MORE Job Interviews by Martin Yate, CPC.

    Hello, bookish, literature advocates.Thank you for tuning in to the Playing Books Podcast.Have you been applying for jobs, but never get interviews? Highly likely, it is your resume. Your resume isn’t knocking out the Applicant Tracking Systems, let alone getting into the hands of recruiters.Your resume gets one shot, and usually less than 10 seconds.In this episode of Playing Books, we break down Martin Yate, CPC’s Knock ’em Dead Resumes: A Killer Resume Gets MORE Job Interviews, one of the most practical and trusted guides for modern job seekers. You will learn how to read job descriptions, how to know the skills and experience that are relevant, the structure of a modern, professional resume, and how to write an unputdownable resume.Learn how recruiters actually read resumes, why most resumes fail, and how to position your experience as a solution to employer problems. We discuss how to write resumes that pass applicant tracking systems (ATS), grab human attention, and clearly communicate value. Whether you’re changing careers, re-entering the workforce, or aiming for your next big move. If you’ve ever applied to dozens of jobs and heard nothing back, this episode is for you. The strategies in Knock ’em Dead Resumes are actionable, timeless, and designed to help you get more interviews, not just more applications sent.Martin Yate, CPC’s Knock ’em Dead Resumes: A Killer Resume Gets MORE Job Interviews, goes beyond templates and buzzwords. The book even discusses words and phrases to avoid on a resume and what never to include. We recommend Martin Yate’s Knock ’em Dead Resumes for a successful, desirable career, where a pro resume is the foundation. You can purchase it on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore; it's an investment in your career that pays dividends with every interview you land. Apply these strategies, refine your resume, and watch your response rate soar.Listen, learn, apply—and if this resonates, consider picking up Knock ’em Dead Resumes on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Network with other career professionals on our social media.YouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokPlease comment, share, follow, and subscribe to Playing Books. Recommend this episode on LinkedIn and to friends, job seekers, and anyone who is interested in upgrading their career. It is time to polish your resume to reflect your values.Thank you for your time and for listening.

  27. 81

    The Idea of America. A Hard Look with Darren Walker.

    What is your idea of America? Could you share in the comments, please? Is the American Dream a promise, a myth, or a work-in-progress? In a moment of deep polarization, it’s easy to think we share nothing in common. But what if the key to our future lies in reckoning with our shared past and our shared values? Remember, it is the United States of America. There are many values that knit us together.In this compelling and deeply human episode of the Playing Books podcast, we discuss Darren Walker’s "The Idea of America: Reflections on Inequality, Democracy, and the Values We Share.” Darren Walker is the president of the Ford Foundation. This isn't just a book about what's broken; it's a masterclass in courageous hope and pragmatic solutions.We explore Walker’s unique journey from childhood in the segregated South to the pinnacle of global philanthropy, and how his personal story informs his urgent vision for the nation. We’ll discuss the uncomfortable truths about systemic inequality, racial justice, and the fragility of American democracy, as well as the profound, actionable ideas for repair, community, and belonging.In this episode, we ask:How do we move from "charity,” generosity, to justice?What does it mean to be a patriot in a time of critique?Can our shared values, integrity, fairness, perseverance, dignity, opportunity, hard work, generosity, humor, thinking big, and accomplishing otherworldly dreams become a blueprint, not just a slogan?What is the role of each of us in rebuilding the "Idea of America"?If you’re yearning for a conversation that goes beyond the headlines and offers a fresh, constructive framework for change, this episode is for you. Darren Walker provides not just a diagnosis, but a prescription rooted in empathy and unwavering belief in our capacity to evolve.We highly encourage you to listen with rapt attention, learn, and apply the lessons from this vital book. You can find Darren Walker’s "The Idea of America: Reflections on Inequality, Democracy, and the Values We Share” on Amazon, bookshop.org, and at your local independent bookstore. The journey to a more peaceful union starts with a single page.Help our community grow, please. Connect with other art and literature advocates on our social media: playingbooks.orgYouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokPlease leave us a comment with your thoughts, share this episode with a friend, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast on your favorite platform. Your recommendations are our best asset.Thank you for listening, for caring, and for being part of the conversation. A much better world for all through books is possible, and you are part of it.

  28. 80

    The 4th Habit to the 7th Habit of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey.

    Hello, principled people.Thank you for tuning in to this practical episode of the Playing Books podcast.In this episode, we conclude our discussion of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey, a timeless guide to principle-centered living and lasting effectiveness.Covey’s message is simple but powerful: real success comes from character, values, and intentional action. While the first three habits focus on self-mastery, Habits 4 through 7 move us into effective relationships and long-term growth.Habit 4: Think Win-Win teaches us to seek mutual benefit rather than competition.Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood emphasizes empathetic listening as the foundation of trust.Habit 6: Synergize shows how valuing differences leads to better outcomes through collaboration.Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw reminds us that continuous renewal—physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually—is essential for sustained effectiveness.Together, all seven habits form a complete framework for personal responsibility, meaningful relationships, and lifelong improvement.If this episode resonated, consider purchasing The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Please, connect with us on our social media.Be sure to comment, share, follow, and subscribe to the podcast, and let us know which book you’d like us to discuss next.YouTubeInstagramTwitterTikTokWe thank you for your time and active participation in contributing to a more positive world for everyone.

  29. 79

    Habits 1 to 3 of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey.

    Welcome to the Playing Books Podcast. Today, we’re diving into the timeless wisdom of this book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey. This episode is designed for listeners who want to transform their lives through practical, actionable habits.Stephen R. Covey’s work is a cornerstone in personal development and leadership. Unlike quick-fix advice, this book focuses on building character and mastering fundamental principles that lead to lasting effectiveness. It shifts the focus from personality traits to deep, character-based growth, guiding us from dependence to independence and ultimately to interdependence—the highest level of human effectiveness.Let’s explore the first three habits, which form the foundation of what Covey calls the Private Victory. These habits focus on self-mastery and personal responsibility.Habit 1: Be ProactiveBeing proactive means taking full responsibility for your life. Instead of reacting to external circumstances, you choose your response. Covey introduces the concept of the Circle of Influence—focusing your energy on what you can control rather than worrying about what you cannot. This mindset empowers you to act intentionally and shape your own destiny.Practical Application: Identify one area where you tend to react passively. Challenge yourself to take a proactive step this week, no matter how small.Habit 2: Begin with the End in MindThis habit is about clarity of purpose. Covey encourages creating a personal mission statement. A clear vision of what you want your life to stand for. By defining your values and goals upfront, you ensure that your daily actions align with your ultimate purpose.Practical Application: Take time to reflect on your core values and write a brief personal mission statement. Use it as a compass for decision-making.Habit 3: Put First Things FirstExecution is key. This habit teaches effective time management by distinguishing between urgent and important tasks. Covey’s Time Management Matrix helps you prioritize activities that contribute to long-term success and personal growth, rather than getting caught up in distractions.Practical Application: Schedule at least one important, non-urgent activity this week—whether it’s planning, relationship-building, or self-care—and protect that time.Together, these habits build your independence and prepare you for deeper interpersonal effectiveness. They challenge you to take control of your life, define your purpose, and manage your time wisely.In our next episode, we’ll explore Habits 4 through 7, which focus on building strong relationships and continuous growth: Think Win-Win, Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood, Synergize, and Sharpen the Saw.I invite you to engage actively with these ideas. Let this book’s principles enhance your life. Purchase The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore to deepen your understanding and revisit these lessons anytime.Connect with the author and fellow readers on social media to share your journey and insights.Thank you for listening to the Playing Books Podcast. Please follow, subscribe, and share it with others who want to grow.Thank you for listening, reading with us, learning, and growing through books. Please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time, for listening, and for continuing to play your key roles in making the world a lot better for everyone.

  30. 78

    The Autobiography of Martin Luther King Jr.

    Hello, history enthusiasts.We welcome you to the Playing Books Podcast. Thank you for tuning in to this special episode. This episode is not about increasing the divide between Black and White and other races. Do you remember that high school girl who wrote Dr. King thus: "Dear Dr. King: I am a ninth-grade student at the White Plains High School." She said,"While it should not matter, l would like to mention that I am a white girl. I read in the paper of your misfortune and of your suffering. And I read that if you had sneezed, you would have died. And I'm simply writing you to say that I'm so happy that you didn't sneeze."Source: - The Autobiography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, Edited by Claireborne Carson.It is Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Day this week in the U.S. and around the world, where they remember the icon for his stance, vision, dedication, sacrifice, intelligence, good heart, wisdom, persistence, courage, prescience, eloquence, humor, and most importantly, love, which was the cornerstone of his civil rights work. Dr. King didn’t make excuses like some black people for not getting a quality, higher education, and consequently, failing to lead an inspiring and fulfilling life. He spent almost two decades acquiring a high level of education. Do you want to know what inner hunger, vision, hard work, and thinking of others could do to a person? MLK is an exemplar of this. He was ordinary in many respects; he didn’t expect his life to take the turn it did, but because he had prepared early in life, he attained the greatness that deserved and exceeded his attitude toward life and the responsibilities that come with it. Listen as we learn some key lessons from this episode in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. We encourage you to donate to The King Center at https://thekingcenter.org/donate-now/#donate_now. Thank you so much for your kind generosity and for your interest in this iconic figure.We recommend Clayborne Carson’s The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr to you. The pictures, captions, and other unique features of the book should make you buy it. It is available on Amazon and your favorite local and online bookstores. MLK and his greatness follow most archetypal American stories of rising from grass to grace.Please join the conversation, comment on your favorite takeaway, share this episode with a fellow book lover, and follow and subscribe to the Playing Books Podcast. Recommend the podcast to someone who loves powerful stories, please.Thank you for listening, reading with us, and growing through books. Please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time, for listening, and for playing your key roles in making the world a better place for everyone.

  31. 77

    John F. Kennedy’s Masterclass on Courage - Building an Indomitable American Spirit, Integrity, and Living by Sound Principles.

    Hi, history enthusiasts. Welcome to a history episode of the Playing Books Podcast. This episode is one you cannot skip.  It might be the most powerful discussion we’ve ever brought to the Playing Books community.If you’ve ever questioned your own bravery, felt pressured to conform, or wondered how to stand firm when everything around you pushes back, this conversation is your turning point.This is the most inspiring, perspective-shifting breakdown of John F. Kennedy’s Profiles in Courage you’ll hear anywhere. It gives you a clear path to understanding what real courage looks like—and how to apply it in your own life starting today.In this episode, we explore the extraordinary stories of eight U.S. senators who risked their careers, reputations, and safety to defend principle over popularity. These aren’t just historical anecdotes. They’re blueprints for moral strength, personal conviction, and the kind of integrity that reshapes lives.It is a New Year, Year 2026. You need courage to make this year an unforgettable, positive, life-changing, and fulfilling one.Learn how these leaders came from different eras, different struggles, and different political climates, but every one of them faced moments that could have broken them. Instead, they chose character over comfort. Their stories prove that courage isn’t reserved for the powerful. It’s built through choices, discipline, and refusing to bend when it matters most.By the end of this episode, you’ll feel equipped with the mindset, clarity, and motivation to stand tall in your own defining moments, throughout 2026 and beyond.You know those principles you want to live by that would distinguish you, but you fear the pressure of what people might say. You may lose the attention and love of someone or those you love. You need courage. We encourage you to stay courageous till the end. Consider purchasing Kennedy’s Profiles in Courage on Amazon and wherever books are sold.When you’re done listening and reading, you won’t just admire courage, you’ll start practicing it, which is when you start to be your true self.Let us hear how differently you see courage after this episode. Please, comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the podcast.Please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time and for listening. Please take your key roles in making the world a better place for everyone seriously.

  32. 76

    The Guinness World Records 2025 - The Boggling Capacity of the Human Mind and Sustained Focus.

    Hello, record-breakers. Welcome to the Playing Books Podcast. This episode explores the remarkable capacity of the human mind and the importance of maintaining sustained focus.This episode is pure joy, pure wonder, and pure “I can’t believe that’s real.” Though you can achieve any feat at time in life, it is still far apt to take risks and pursue difficult ambitions while you are young.If you’ve ever needed a reminder that the world is far stranger, funnier, more inspiring, and more creative than we give it credit for, this episode is your invitation to rediscover that sense of awe.Today, we discuss the Guinness World Records 2025, the iconic annual collection of the most unbelievable human achievements, wild animal feats, mind‑bending natural wonders, and record‑breaking moments from around the globe. This isn’t just a book, it’s a celebration of possibility.We explore the stories behind the records, the individuals who push the limits of what’s possible, and the surprising lessons hidden within these extraordinary accomplishments. From the fastest, tallest, longest, and weirdest to the most heartwarming and heroic, this episode explores how record‑breaking isn’t just entertainment, it’s motivation.This podcast episode is fun, fresh, and full of energy.  It’s about curiosity.  It’s about ambition.  It’s about the human drive to try, fail, try again, and eventually do something no one else on Earth has ever done.By the end, you’ll feel inspired to stretch your own limits—maybe not to break a world record, but to break out of your comfort zone.This episode and Guinness World Records should challenge your imagination. Please comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the podcast to someone who loves learning new things. And if you want to explore the wild world of record‑breaking yourself, pick up Guinness World Records 2025 on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.And please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time and for listening. Please pursue ambitious goals that will make your life and the world a lot better for all.

  33. 75

    Why Good Things Happen to Good People.

    Hello, generous listeners.Welcome to the Playing Books Podcast. We wish you good health and longevity, free from sickness, disease, and any kind of distress. This episode shows you how to lead such a life where you are, right now.This episode is the kind of conversation that stays with you long after you hit pause. Have you heard of the Helper’s High?If you’ve ever wondered whether kindness really matters… whether generosity actually changes your life… whether doing good for others can genuinely make you healthier, happier, and more fulfilled, this episode is your proof.Today, we discuss Stephen Post and Jill Neimark’s Why Good Things Happen to Good People: The Exciting New Research that Proves the Link Between Doing Good and Living a Longer, Healthier, Happier Life, a groundbreaking exploration of the science behind kindness. This isn’t just a feel‑good idea. It’s real research showing that compassion, gratitude, and giving aren’t just moral choices—they’re biological advantages.This book reveals how acts of generosity strengthen your immune system, reduce stress, improve relationships, and even extend your lifespan. And in this episode, we break down the most powerful insights, the most surprising studies, and the most practical ways you can apply them in your everyday life.This isn’t a conversation about being perfect.  It’s about choosing to show up with a little more heart.  It’s about discovering that doing good for others is one of the smartest things you can do for yourself.  It’s about learning how kindness becomes a lifestyle that transforms everything it touches.Post and Neimark don’t mean giving with an ulterior motive or expecting something in return. This is entirely about genuine compassion through generosity. Have you been truly generous?Let this episode and Stephen Post and Jill Neimark’s Why Good Things Happen to Good People inspire, energize, and prepare you to bring more generosity into your world—not out of obligation, but because it genuinely makes your life and the lives of others a lot better, happier, more relaxed, and more truly grateful.Please, comment, share, follow, subscribe, and recommend the podcast to someone who could use a reminder that goodness is powerful. Learn the ten kinds of generosity, teaching others how to catch fish themselves, and other practical lessons in the book, Why Good Things Happen to Good People, on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Thank you for listening, reading with us, learning, and growing through books. Please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time and for listening — and for continuing to play your key roles in making the world a lot better for everyone.

  34. 74

    First Lady Michelle Obama's Mastery: The Look - First Impressions, Dressing Well, Real Confidence, and More.

    Hello, great friends.We welcome you to the Playing Books Podcast. We turn bestselling books into short, interesting audio for you to listen to and learn on the go.This episode is a conversation about First Lady Michelle Obama’s book, The Look. There are many quotes about dressing well, such as Bianca Frazier’s ‘Dress how you want to be addressed.’ What we look like reveals key information about us.First Lady Michelle’s The Look is a revealing, sincere, and deeply personal exploration of fashion, self-expression, and the stories we tell the world, often before we ever speak. This isn’t just a book about clothes. It’s about choice, voice, visibility, and owning your narrative.What does style really say about power, identity, confidence, and becoming who you are? This episode attempts to answer this question, as well as others.Michelle Obama takes us behind the scenes of some of her most iconic looks, revealing how personal style can serve as a form of storytelling, resistance, and self-respect. In this episode, we unpack the lessons, reflect on how they apply to everyday life, and discuss what the book, The Look, teaches us about confidence, authenticity, leadership, culture, dreams, and growth—no matter where you are in your journey.This episode and the book are about intentional first impressions. Take responsibility for how you come across when people first look at you, because you may not have the chance to say who you are, do you get this?We highly recommend The Look. It will challenge you to take your appearance at home, school, the store, Church, movies, the library, the street, the gym, and restaurants more seriously.The Look is available on Amazon or at your favorite local and online bookstores. Start making great, lasting, and positive first impressions through your dressing and overall appearance.Please join the conversation, comment on your favorite takeaway, share this episode with a fellow book lover, follow and subscribe to the Playing Books Podcast. Recommend the podcast to someone who loves powerful stories, please.Thank you for listening, reading with us, and growing through books. Please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time and for listening — and for playing your key roles in making the world a better place for everyone.

  35. 73

    Stephen Hawking Unveils the Universe in Ways the Curious Can Understand. It's The Universe in a Nutshell.

    Hello, literary friends.Welcome to a new episode of the Playing Books Podcast, where you listen to bestselling books and learn on the go.Have you been curious about the universe? You would enjoy this episode.In this episode, we discuss Stephen Hawking’s The Universe in a Nutshell — a book that somehow makes the strangest, most mind‑bending ideas in physics feel surprisingly human, visual, and even fun. Hawking doesn’t just explain the universe; he invites you to experience it, to stretch your imagination, and to see your everyday world through a wider, more curious lens.We explore the big themes: the nature of time, the shape of space, the possibility of multiple dimensions, and the wild theories that push the boundaries of what we think reality is. But we also talk about what all of this means for you — how understanding even a sliver of the cosmos can shift your perspective, spark creativity, and remind you that you’re part of something vast and extraordinary.This episode is all about making the complex feel accessible, the scientific feel personal, and the cosmic feel relatable. If you’ve ever looked up at the night sky and wondered what’s really going on out there, this conversation will feel like a fresh breath of curiosity.If you want to become familiar with the terminology and understand the concepts of the universe, consider picking up Stephen Hawking’s "The Universe in a Nutshell" on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore. It’s one of those books that rewards you every time you open it.Before you head out, join the conversation. Drop a comment, share this episode with someone who loves big ideas, follow the show, subscribe on your favorite platform, and recommend Playing Books to anyone who enjoys learning in a way that feels alive and inspiring.Please, connect with us on YouTubeInstagramTwitter TikTokThank you for your time and for listening — and for playing your key roles in making the world a better place for everyone.

  36. 72

    Never Lie - Everyone Lies & No One Appears to Be Who They Are.

    Welcome back to the Playing Books Podcast, where stories aren’t just read — they’re experienced, questioned, and applied to real life. Do you lie? Do you successfully spot lies and liars? This episode is about lies. Hope it challenges you to NEVER LIE again.Today’s episode discusses the twist‑packed psychological thriller, Freida McFadden’s Never Lie, a book that grips you from page one and refuses to let go.This episode will convince you even more that everyone lies. It unpacks the tension, the secrets, the unreliable truths, and the psychological traps that make McFadden’s work so addictive. Learn why no one is who they appear to be and be cautious with people, not to suspect everyone, but to avoid being too surprised.More importantly, we talk about what this story reveals about trust, intuition, and the lies people tell — including the ones they tell themselves.As you listen, consider how the book’s themes manifest in your own world. What does it mean to trust your instincts? How do you navigate situations where something feels “off,” even when everything looks normal on the surface? McFadden’s storytelling isn’t just entertainment — it’s an invitation to sharpen your awareness and reflect on the psychology of truth and deception.If you haven’t read Never Lie yet, this is the perfect moment to pick up a copy. You can find it on Amazon, at your favorite local bookstore, or anywhere great thrillers are sold. Experiencing the full story for yourself will make this episode even more powerful and applicable.Before you go, join the conversation. Drop a comment, share your thoughts, and tell us what shocked you most. Follow the podcast, subscribe on your favorite platform, and recommend Playing Books to someone who loves a good twist. Your support helps this community grow and keeps these deep, story‑driven conversations alive.Thank you for your time and for listening. Until next time, keep reading boldly, change your life, and commit to making the world a better place for everyone.

  37. 71

    The Rules of Work: Your Job Should Be a Breeze. Get to Know the Rules for What You Do and How You Do It.

    Hello, friends, and happy New Year.Welcome to the Playing Books Podcast. We thank you for your goodwill, attention, follow, comments, and feedback. We will continue to create engaging, thought-provoking episodes based on best-selling books that are both interesting and eye-opening.This new episode is about work. Securing a job is challenging in this era of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and massive layoffs worldwide.This means that both maintaining a job and enjoying it are extra challenging and nearly impossible, as well as being promoted and earning more on the job. This episode addresses various aspects of work, career, colleagues, bosses, communication, and more. We discuss Richard Templar’s The Rules of Work in this first episode of the year 2026.You are about to join those who enjoy their job, are adept at dealing with people at work, get promoted, respect boundaries, and accomplish a lot personally and professionally.The Rules of Work is a top bestseller. Richard Templar is a specialist career, life, and psychological coach; his objective knowledge, keen observation, and expertise continue to provide the professional edge needed in the competitive world of careers.There are many insights and secrets that successful workers know, which many career men, women, and millennials don’t even think of, let alone apply. To succeed in these times of AI and unemployment, you need to learn, understand, think, and apply the Rules of Work. Working should be a breeze and enjoyable.It is 2026, a New Year, and it’s time to learn the principles that will improve what you do and how you do it. These rules will give you the unmistakable air of confidence that will win you admiration, respect, and help you towards your next promotion. Templar’s The Rules of Work should be one of the books you read regularly. Consider purchasing a copy on Amazon or from your favorite bookstore. In this new edition of the international bestseller, Richard Templar has added 10 new Rules to help professionals get heard, noticed, acknowledged, and followed at work, even in their respective industry.This episode is highly recommended for sharing with your siblings, colleagues, friends, and other significant individuals in your life. We would appreciate your feedback, as well as your support by following, subscribing, and listening to the Playing Books podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, iHeartRadio, and other platforms where you listen to podcasts.Thank you so much, and have an interesting and literary 2026.

  38. 70

    How to Get a Job: Who's Hiring Who - Resume, Cover Letter, Interview, and More.

    Hello, booklovers and lifelong readers.You have searched for jobs and attempted to change career the wrong way enough.In this episode, you are going to get some practical, tested, and valuable knowledge about getting a job. Layoffs affect every professional and industry, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is only becoming formidable and the next professional. This is why the proper know-how of getting hired is key.Getting hired starts with persistent hope and a strong belief that you have the personality, skills, education, experience, and team spirit that are unique and valuable to many companies and industries. They need to take a chance on you.Learn the core of landing your dream job in this episode. 2026 is less than three weeks away; this episode should enliven, challenge, teach, and guide you in your job search endeavor. This episode is only for those who urgently need to change their job search approach. It is not junk; it is based on Richard Lathrop's Who's Hiring Who. Stop wasting time, effort, and frustration. This episode will help you escape the high levels of negative emotions that often follow job search disappointments.It is available on Amazon and at your local bookstores.Please share your feedback, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast. We are excited for your next job and this literary incentive for your career.Thank you.

  39. 69

    The Power of Writing It Down: Neglected, Forgotten, Irrelevant because of AI.

    Hello, friends.Welcome to the Playing Books Podcast. This episode is practical and applicable, yet enjoyable. You will learn, relearn, or reinforce a pivotal habit that many great people credit to their accomplishments. Lee Iacocca recalls the importance of this habit in living with integrity with oneself and others. Iacocca was an executive at Ford and later President and CEO of Chrysler. He writes about how Robert McNamara challenges him to always write down what he wants to accomplish or pursue. It should be specific and dated. This episode is about the underrated art of writing down goals, activities, expectations, commitments, achievements, and other important information. Do you write things down? Have you noticed any power from writing things down? Have you kept up this habit?True joy follows the act of writing down goals, especially when the goals are accomplished. Besides this, writing things down is a needful exercise for the brain. Writing can be the first phase of cognitive exercise, which follows reading and remembering what was written down, which can nourish the brain more than anything else over time. It tricks or empowers the brain to augment the writer’s identity to that of an achiever.Our episode aims to encourage listeners to read, think, recall, and apply the knowledge from great books, as a way to contribute to a better world through individual positive changes and success. This episode is based on Allison Fallon’s, ’The Power of Writing It Down: A Simple Habit to Unlock Your Brain and Reimagine Your Life.’ You shared that the art of writing it down has many useful applications and benefits. Identify your ruts and create new neurological grooves toward better habitsFind fresh motivation and take ownership of your lifeHeal from past pain and traumaRelieve anxiety and depressionContextualize life's setbacks and minor frustrationsLive a more confident, balanced, and healthy life … and so much more.Are you ready for this regular cognitive exercise? Consider purchasing a copy of Allison Fallon’s The Power of Writing It Down: A Simple Habit to Unlock Your Brain and Reimagine Your Life on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Please give feedback, tell us your favorite takeaway, and let us know how this episode challenges you. Please comment on any books you'd like us to discuss next.Follow, subscribe, and share the Playing Books Podcast — where you listen to bestselling books and learn on the go.Thank you.

  40. 68

    Kamala Harris and The 107 Days to The 2024 Election Day.

    Hello, curious friends.Thank you for your time and for tuning in to this revealing episode. It’s Kamala Harris’s 107 Days. It is now a historical fact. Kamala is the first female U.S. Vice President.The U.S. is often seen as a shining example of democracy, but in reality, many challenges, contradictions, and unfair treatment of women and minorities coexist with this supposed fairness, openness, equality, and justice. Many people face immense difficulties in U.S. politics. Serving in the U.S. Congress isn’t bread and butter; it is tough, cutthroat, competitive, and dominating. And, writing about it comes with its own price, because the public shouldn’t have to know about the struggles, embarrassment, racism, caricatures, mockery, and hostility that come with representing the people at that level.We’ll be discussing Kamala Harris and how she navigates this hostile political environment, including the events, expectations, debates, setbacks, media scrutiny, unexpected moments of humor, and spite she experienced while running to become the first female U.S. President. You will hear how she decided to select Tim Walz as her running mate, and other similar critical decisions.Does this sound familiar to you, in your life, workplace, community, and everyday experiences? Are you dealing with this kind of hostility, or are you able to find ways to address it in a positive manner? Are you succeeding amid the hostility? You might be a woman facing unfair treatment, domination, and harassment. This episode is here to offer you encouragement. You’ll get to hear what Kamala went through, which should give you hope and understanding that these challenges are shared and universal. Then, you’ll learn how to anticipate and effectively handle such domination.Did you think Kamala Harris was well-prepared for the responsibilities of being Vice President before stepping into the role of U.S. President? What impact did having or not having a supportive team have on her journey to becoming the first female U.S. President? Does her book, 107 Days, answer some of the big questions you were hoping to find answers to, and does she have a good chance of becoming the U.S. President and succeeding in the future?Do you want to know Kamala Harris’s Secret Service Code Name? Read the book in full yourself to find out, and share your feedback, please. Kamala Harris’s 107 Days is available on Amazon and most standard bookstores worldwide. It is now a Number 1 New York Times Bestseller. Please share, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast wherever you listen to your podcasts.Thank you.

  41. 67

    You’re Not a Weakling. Learn the Right Ways to Discover the Strengths You Already Have.

    In today’s episode, we will discuss how to discover your strengths. You have likely felt unhappy, stuck, frustrated, unappreciated, and unfulfilled, and these feelings may persist until you find a functional way to find your strengths or live like you’re a big weakling.Those tons of questions were not indicative that something was wrong with you. You just knew there was something more grand, impactful, and memorable about you and your talents. You are about to get rewarded for not giving up and settling for a mediocre life, but that burning desire was there to urge you to pursue a fulfilling life. You already possess the tenacity to find, develop, and grow your strengths. Learn not only how to leverage your strengths, but also how to maximize them, and even create a lasting legacy of your strengths.This episode draws inspiration from Tom Rath’s StrengthsFinder 2.0, a bestselling book published by Gallup. StrengthsFinder has empowered individuals worldwide to discover and optimize their talents, especially in competitive environments.We encourage you to leverage your strengths to fully develop your talents and lead the life you’ve always dreamed of and talked about to yourself and others. Consequently, join those making a difference in tackling global challenges, both locally, nationally, and internationally, using your newfound strengths.Discovering and developing strengths requires continuous reading and learning. Consider purchasing Tom Rath’s StrengthsFinder 2.0 on Amazon, or at your preferred bookstore.What a decisive journey you are about to begin. It is worthwhile to identify your strengths before someone else convinces you of your inadequacies and concludes you are a lifelong weakling.Please leave us your feedback, and share, follow, and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast.Thank you once again for tuning in.

  42. 66

    Unreasonable Hospitality: It’s what turned Eleven Madison Park into the #1 Best Restaurant in the World.

    Hello, lifelong learners and booklovers. Do you budget for hospitality? Is generosity that important to you? That sounds unreasonable, right?We are absolutely thrilled to have you tune in to another game-changing episode of Worthscope’s Playing Books podcast.Today, we explore a book that doesn’t just change how you do business; it changes how you treat people. We are discussing the transformative surprises of “Unreasonable Hospitality: The Remarkable Power of Giving People More Than They Expect” by Will Guidara.Will Guidara took Eleven Madison Park from a struggling, middling brasserie to the #1 Best Restaurant in the World. How? Not just by serving better food, but by serving people in a way that was so over-the-top, so thoughtful, and so "unreasonable," that it became legendary.In this episode, you will learn:The difference between Service and Hospitality: Service is getting the right plate to the right person (Black & White). Hospitality is how you make them feel while doing it (Color).The Legend of the Hot Dog: The iconic story of how a cheap street hot dog served on fine china changed the trajectory of a business forever.The Rule of 95/5: How to manage 95% of your budget down to the penny so you can spend the last 5% "foolishly" on creating hospitality.Improvisational Hospitality: How to stop treating customers like transactions and start treating them like VIPs in your own home.As a CEO, a freelancer, parent, athlete, entrepreneur, delivery driver, teacher, or just someone who wants to build better relationships, this episode is your masterclass in the power of human connection.We know life moves fast. You want the knowledge, but you don’t always have the time to sit down with a book. The Playing Books Podcast bridges that gap. We curate and deliver audio versions of the world’s most impactful and best-selling books for demanding professionals, students, young people, leaders, lifelong learners, and anyone looking to learn on the go.However, nothing beats reading the actual book. We encourage you to purchase a copy of this practical book for your library. It is available on Amazon and at your local independent bookstores.Please, share your feedback. What was your favorite "unreasonable" takeaway? Follow and subscribe, please.Thank you.

  43. 65

    Forgotten Civilizations & Enduring Mysteries: Ethiopians & Ethiopia Only Continue to Puzzle.

    Hello, curious bookworms. Welcome to another eye-opening episode of Worthscope’s Playing Books Podcast🎙️. History! History! History! This is a fascinating piece on history. Formative, interesting history at that. You are about to discover the origins of civilization, core creativity, language, culture, prescience, science, art, and music in one of the world’s oldest places, Ethiopia, East Africa. Whatever assumptions you hold dear about the past, this episode will challenge and even shake them off with accurate knowledge and first-hand accounts.Ethiopia is one of the places on Earth with numerous traces and evidence of a complex and enduring civilization. We explore Steven Kaplan’s The Ethiopians: Lost Civilizations in this episode. Biased historians often portray Ethiopia as the ultimate geographical and cultural conundrum as far as history is concerned. However, substantial historical evidence suggests that it is far from the reality. Mentioned forty-five times in the Hebrew Bibe, Ethiopia, and Ethiopians pioneered many positive inventions, including mechanical agriculture, writing, and knowing the time. Did you know what Ethiopia means? Burnt face. You don’t want to miss this interesting podcast episode. It is complex, revealing, suspenseful, fun, and palpable. We don’t yet know how Ethiopia came to be such a key hub of a rich and intriguing past. Do you know? Do you know any studies, books, or research that unveil this? Ethiopians and Ethiopia will continue to puzzle many, such as how they successfully withstood European colonialism, and the beginning of Christianity.Take your curiosity beyond this episode. Consider purchasing a copy of The Ethiopians: Lost Civilizations by Steven Kaplan on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Please share your feedback, tell us your favorite takeaway, and let us know how this episode resonates with you.Follow, subscribe, and share the Playing Books podcast, where every story becomes an audiobook for the on-the-go learner.Thank you.

  44. 64

    Healthspan Secrets for a Better, Longer, Meaningful Lifespan.

    Hello bookworms and history buffs. Welcome to another practical episode of Worthscope’s Playing Books Podcast🎙️. We discuss living long and enjoying it right now based on “Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity” by Peter Attia, MD, and Bill Gifford. Longevity with hearing difficulty, arthritis, long or short-sightedness, loneliness, loss of memory, and being on medication is the norm in many societies. Why is that? We attempt to answer it in this episode as well. Since nothing happens suddenly, leading a sickly life later is largely because of the failure to decide and choose the type of old age that is fun, energetic, meaningful, and healthy in advance. We didn’t proactively choose a healthy lifestyle. We only go for a checkup when the condition has become a part of our lives. We discard exercises until the doctor recommends them, and we actively eat healthy until a particular sickness or disease forces us to adjust our diets. Listen and learn from this applicable episode. We can’t change our chronological age, but we can absolutely change our biological age. This is a comprehensive and strategic blueprint for leading a better, healthier life from now till the lifespan you desire. First, you need to make an immediate shift in your mindset, backed by serious action and adjustments to your habits. Begin to think about your healthspan, or the quality of your life in everything you do. Pursue a personalized, proactive strategy for longevity, with formidable action now. Waiting till you have become weak is largely what paralyzes your health and life later.Start your “biohacking,” the science of taking a calculated and preventive strategic and tactical approach to extending your lifespan while also improving your physical, cognitive, and emotional health. You can do it, and it will impact more than just yourself - your family, friends, colleagues, and others in your life.If you want more than this episode, you can purchase your copy of “Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity" by Peter Attia, MD, and Bill Gifford from Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Please share your feedback, tell us your favorite takeaway, and let us know how this episode resonates with you.Follow, subscribe, and share Playing Books, where every story becomes an audiobook for the on-the-go learner.Thank you.

  45. 63

    The Modern Man's Essential Manners: Feel Great, Effortlessly Win Love, Command Respect, and Stand Out

    Hello bookworms and history buffs. Welcome to another thrilling episode of Worthscope’s Playing Books Podcast🎙️. Today’s episode dives into a modern gentleman’s guide for mastering life’s unspoken rules — “Essential Manners for Men: What to Do, When to Do It, and Why” by Peter Post. Whether you’re stepping into a boardroom, a first date, or your best friend’s wedding, this episode helps you handle every moment with confidence, class, and character.In this insightful and practical listen, we unpack timeless etiquette for modern men — from introductions and dressing right to handling digital communication and everyday interactions. Peter Post, the great-grandson of etiquette icon Emily Post, brings wisdom that turns politeness into power and respect into everyday practice.Perfect for on-demand people and audiobook lovers, Worthscope’s Playing Books brings you the lessons and life-changing insights from great books — to listen, learn, and grow on the go.Purchase your copy of Essential Manners for Men on Amazon or at your favorite bookstore.Please, give your feedback, tell us your favorite takeaway, and share your thoughts, rate this episode, and let us know how this episode reveals and challenges you.Follow, subscribe, and share Playing Books — where every story becomes an audiobook for the on-the-go learner.Thank you.

  46. 62

    David vs Goliath - Why the Small and Smart Win.

    Hello bookworms and history buffs. Welcome to another thrilling episode of Worthscope’s Playing Books Podcast🎙️. Where we bring the world’s most transformative books straight to your ears — made for busy thinkers, dreamers, and doers who love to listen and learn on the go.Today, we dive into Malcolm Gladwell’s groundbreaking masterpiece, David and Goliath, a book that redefines what it means to face impossible odds. Have you ever wondered why the underdog sometimes wins? Gladwell flips the classic Bible story on its head and uncovers how weakness can become strength, and disadvantage can turn into destiny.Join us as we explore:The hidden power behind being underestimatedWhy apparent disadvantages often lead to innovation and resilienceReal-life “Davids” who transformed challenges into triumphs across history, business, and sportsThis isn’t just a story about underdogs, but it’s a lesson in rethinking power, strategy, and success. Whether you’re a student, entrepreneur, or leader, this episode will help you see your obstacles in a whole new light.Purchase your copy of David and Goliath on Amazon or at other major bookstores.Please, share your thoughts, rate this episode, and let us know your favorite “David vs. Goliath” moment.Follow, subscribe, and share Playing Books — where every story becomes an audiobook for the on-the-go learner.Thank you.

  47. 61

    Anna Louise Strong's 3 Interviews with Chairman Mao Zedong.

    Hello bookworms and history buffs. Get ready to learn more on the go. The Playing Books podcast is back, and we're bringing you an episode that's going to blow your mind.In this episode, we're discussing "Anna Louise Strong: Three Interviews with Chairman Mao Zedong." Prepare to be captivated as we dissect the groundbreaking conversations between the American journalist Anna Louise Strong and the enigmatic leader of Communist China, Chairman Mao Zedong.This isn't just a history lesson; it's a thrilling journey into the heart of power, ideology, and the clash of cultures.Purchase your copy of "Right in Her Soul: The Life of Anna Louise Strong on Amazon and at your local bookstore.Please, share this episode with your friends and fellow history enthusiasts. Follow and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast, leave us a review, and let us know what you thought, please.You can share your thoughts on social media using #PlayingBooks and #AnnaLouiseStrong.Let's explore the world, one book at a time.Thank you.

  48. 60

    Tested Patriotism: Eric Trump on Under Siege and the Fierce Fight to Save the United States.

    Hey everyone — welcome back to Worthscope’s Playing Books! We’ve got an unmissable episode for you today. Get ready for a deep, emotional, and patriotic ride as we open the pages of Under Siege: My Family’s Fight to Save Our Nation by Eric Trump, with a foreword from President Donald J. Trump.This isn’t just another political memoir — it’s the raw, human story of what it’s like to grow up in a household that has lived every headline, every accusation, and every moment of triumph and fear under the brightest and often harshest spotlight in America. Eric Trump takes us behind the scenes — from his childhood memories at Mar-a-Lago to standing shoulder to shoulder with his father through two presidential campaigns and unprecedented battles for the truth.You’ll hear about raids, courtroom drama, the chaos of fake news, and even moments when their own safety was at risk. But through it all, one message rings loud and clear: the fight wasn’t just for their family — it was for America itself.If you’ve ever wondered what really happens when a family takes on the full force of politics, power, and the media, this episode pulls no punches. It’s emotional, revealing, and deeply personal.Grab your copy of Under Siege on Amazon today at https://amzn.to/4o3hzhl or pick it up at your favorite bookstore. Trust us, you’ll want to read along as we break down this remarkable story.We’d love to know what you think. Please, share your thoughts, tell us what moments moved you the most, and don’t forget to share this episode with someone who needs to hear it. Please follow and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast for more powerful stories, moving discussions, and unforgettable insights that connect today’s reads to tomorrow’s conversations, action, and outcomes.Thank you.

  49. 59

    The Wealth Ladder: What It Is and How to Climb It — Fast.

    Welcome back to another exciting episode of Worthscope’s Playing Books—the show where we don’t just read books, we live them! 🎙️In this episode, we’re diving deep into Nick Maggiulli’s NEW YORK TIMES bestseller, The Wealth Ladder: Proven Strategies for Every Step of Your Financial Life. From the mastermind behind Just Keep Buying, this isn’t your average money manual. It’s your roadmap to financial freedom, no matter where you are on your journey.Are you hustling harder but barely moving up the financial ladder? You’re not alone—and this book has the answer. Maggiulli breaks down wealth into six strategic levels, each with unique mindsets, tools, and tactics to help you grow your income, invest smarter, and stress less. Because true wealth-building isn’t about working endlessly—it’s about working intelligently, one level at a time.We’ll unpack practical lessons from each level so you’ll know exactly how to navigate your next move. Whether you’re just getting started or optimizing your investments, you’ll walk away knowing how to make every dollar count toward your goals.Ready to take the next step on your financial journey? Grab your copy of The Wealth Ladder on Amazon https://amzn.to/4oCBq7g or at your favorite local bookstore.If this episode helps you rethink your financial strategy, share it with a friend, drop us your thoughts, and don’t forget to follow and subscribe to Playing Books—your personal guide to learning from the world’s best ideas, one book at a time.

  50. 58

    The Untold Story of The English Language: Everything You Wanted to Know.

    Welcome, Playing Books listeners. Prepare to have your mind blown about the very language you are reading this in.You think English is just a blend of German and French words? Think again. It's a glorious, chaotic mutt—a linguistic Frankenstein stitched together by invading armies, lazy speakers, and historical accidents.Join us for an exhilarating ride through John McWhorter’s brilliant and irreverent book, Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue: The Untold History of English.McWhorter, a world-class linguist, unearths the shocking truth: English is structurally bizarre. We're talking weird on a global scale. We're going to pull back the curtain on the linguistic crime scenes that gave us:The Viking Vandalism: How Norse invaders didn't just add words, they smashed our sophisticated Old English grammar, leaving us with shockingly simple verbs. Did the Vikings ruin English, or save it?The Celtic Curveball: That tiny word 'do' that we use constantly ("Do you like it? I do not.")? It's a bizarre feature almost unique to English, and we owe it all to the influence of low-status Celtic speakers.The Magnificent Mess: Why the things that make English hard to learn for non-native speakers are exactly what prove its wild, untamed, and truly magnificent history.If you love history, language, etymology, or just a good intellectual thrill ride, you cannot miss this episode. Find out why your everyday vocabulary is a constant reminder of invasions, chaos, and linguistic evolution.Ready to argue with your high school English teacher? Purchase your copy of Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue today. Please, support the author and the podcast, purchase the book on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3KWyWlo, or find it at your favorite local bookstore.Please, follow and subscribe to the Playing Books podcast wherever you listen to your podcasts. Did this episode change how you think about the English language? Share this episode with a friend and send us your feedback—we love to hear your linguistic 'A-HA!' moments, please.Thank you.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Learn from Audio Conversations on the World’s Most Unputdownable Books. The Playing Books Podcast 🎙️ is on Spotify, Apple, and other Platforms. More at playingbooks.org

HOSTED BY

Worthscope

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Playing Books have?

Playing Books currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Playing Books about?

Learn from Audio Conversations on the World’s Most Unputdownable Books. The Playing Books Podcast 🎙️ is on Spotify, Apple, and other Platforms. More at playingbooks.org

How often does Playing Books release new episodes?

Playing Books has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Playing Books?

You can listen to Playing Books on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Playing Books?

Playing Books is created and hosted by Worthscope.
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