{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/6a155584cb11d38a8ba85c2c?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Dead Writers Club","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/6a155584cb11d38a8ba85c2c/1779819817633-f6debbce-a37a-44ce-b25d-faa82e8018dc.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>The greatest novels ever written already solved your problems. You just haven't read them yet.</p><p><br></p><p>Dead Writers Club is a podcast about the greatest novels ever written and why they still matter. Not as literary achievements to admire from a distance. As tools. Tools for understanding what it means to be anxious, or purposeless, or lonely, or in love, or afraid of dying.</p><p><br></p><p>Every episode takes one classic work and asks a single question: what does this book understand about modern life that we have forgotten?</p><p><br></p><p>We've covered Dostoevsky on guilt and anxiety. Camus on the one line everyone quotes and almost nobody understands. Kafka on conditional love inside families. Orwell on what actually happens to a person when language is taken away. Virginia Woolf on the self you left behind.</p><p><br></p><p>No academic jargon. No reading list pressure. No assumption that you've read any of these books before. Just the ideas, made genuinely accessible — the way a knowledgeable friend would explain them, not the way a university lecture would.</p><p><br></p><p>New episodes every week.</p><p><br></p><p>Topics: classic literature · literary analysis · books explained · Dostoevsky · Tolstoy · Camus · Kafka · Orwell · Virginia Woolf · reading classics · philosophy through fiction · what great novels teach us · anxiety · identity · meaning · purpose</p>","author_name":"Dead Writers Club"}