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Our summer books and films special: what to read and watch
This week is our summer books and films spectacular, full of recommendations of things to read and watch. First, Lilah is joined by literary editors Fred Studemann and Laura Battle to explore the FT's Summer Books special. They suggest a range of light summer reads, sharp non-fiction, deep dives, thrillers and classics to take on your summer holiday, and talk trends in book publishing. Then, deputy arts editor Raphael Abraham recommends the top films to look out for this summer. After watching 24 films in less than a week at the Cannes film festival, he's filtered the new releases down to a must-see list.
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Tell us about your own favourite new books and films! Weāll share them alongside the episode on our social platforms. Email us at ftweekendpodcast@ft.com. Weāre on Twitter @ftweekendpod, and Lilah is on Instagram and Twitter @lilahrap.
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Hereās Lauraās list of the best fiction summer reads: āāhttps://on.ft.com/3AvtuPg. The whole summer books special is at http://ft.com/summerbooks.
Books mentioned:
āAudiobooks: Bad Actors by Mick Herron and Ulysses by James Joyce
āNovels that span centuries: To Paradise by Hanya Yanagihara and Sea of Tranquility by Emily St John Mandel
āBeach read: You Made a Fool of Death with your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
āFun non-fiction: Circus of Dreams by John Walsh
āEmpire books: Legacy of Violence by Caroline Elkin and In the Shadow of the Gods by Dominic Lieven
āBRussian influence: Putinās People by Catherine Belton and Butler to the World by Oliver Bullough
āAI simulation: The Anomaly by HervĆ© Le Tellier
Stories mentioned:
āMarriage in all its divine tedium: https://on.ft.com/3KXOBfm
āEdward Luce on whether America is headed for another civil war: https://on.ft.com/3yJ43az
Films to watch this summer, from Raph:
āAftersun: https://on.ft.com/3uUt9lJ
āNitram: https://on.ft.com/3auhgvs
āHit the Road
āMcEnroe
āThree Thousand Years of Longing: https://on.ft.com/3nMshLK
āElvis: https://on.ft.com/3P1Uaeu
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Special offers for FT Weekend listeners, from 50% off a digital subscription to a $1/Ā£1/ā¬1 trial can be found here: http://ft.com/weekendpodcast
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Original music by Metaphor Music. Mixing and sound design by Breen Turner and Sam Giovinco.
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
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Our final episode: thank you
59:39|This is it. Today we present you a massive special episode full of wisdom, which answers your final pressing questions. Listeners wrote in from around the world ā from Perth to Virginia to Prague ā asking about music, cooking, careers, home, fashion and how to live a good life. Lilah invites her colleagues and friends on to explore them. And now, all there is left to say is a big, loud, wholehearted, vigorous thank you.-------Please keep in touch ā Lilah loves hearing from you and will still be posting about culture, food, art and more on Instagram @lilahrap. Email her at lilahrap@ft.com.You can read Globetrotter at ft.com/globetrotter and follow along @ftglobetrotter on Instagram.-------Links (all FT links get you past the paywall): ā Tim Harfordās podcast is called Cautionary Tales, and his column is The Undercover Economist. He references Adam Gopnik and Oliver Burkeman, and if you want to lead a better life by spending less time on the internet, he recommends Cal Newport's book Digital Minimalism.ā Here are the cookbooks Harriet Fitch Little and Lilah mentioned: Fuchsia Dunlop's The Food of Sichuan, Fadi Kattan's Bethlehem, Maria Bradford's Sweet Salone, and Pati Jinich's Treasures of the Mexican Table. Harriet is on Instagram at @hufffffle.ā Isabel Berwickās Working It newsletter is here, and her book is called The Future-Proof Career.ā Eric Platt, at the time of recording, was wearing a heather gray turtleneck and navy corduroys from Officine GĆ©nĆ©rale and black Prada combat boots. If youāre interested in corporate finance, heās on X and Bluesky @EricGPlatt.ā Ludovic Hunter-Tilney mentions Gang Starrās 1994 song āMostly tha Voiceā, A Tribe Called Quest, Public Enemy's first album Yo! Bum Rush the Show (1987), and Migos. One of his most listened to songs of 2024 was āBande organisĆ©eā, by Marseille rap group 13'OrganisĆ©. Hereās another episode we love with Ludo, on Taylor Swift (Apple, Spotify).ā Enuma Okoro is an FT Weekend columnist. Hereās her most recent column, on new ways to think about the new year.-------Special FT subscription offers for Life and Art listeners are here: http://ft.com/lifeandart-------Music credits: Jive Records, Chrysalis and EMI Records, Quality Control MusicRead a transcript of this episode on FT.comCultural predictions for 2025: the year we accept the chaos
34:37|Itās a time-honored tradition: for the third year in a row, FT Weekend editor-at-large Matt Vella joins Lilah to reflect on this past year, and muse on the coming one. Weāve asked listeners to send their predictions and wishes for 2025, and today weāre talking through them! Will next year bring an end to meme culture? How do we step away from restaurant reservation wars? Will Lena Dunham make a comeback? Plus, Matt tells us why he is embracing chaos, and why we should all let go of the fear of being watched.------ As you know, the show is ending in early January ā and you can still send in a cultural question through December. Whatās rolling around in your head? How can we help? Email Lilah at lilahrap@ft.com, or connect with her on Instagram @lilahrap.-------Links (all FT links get you past the paywall): ā You can flip through all of our listenersā and colleaguesā predictions on Instagram, hereā You can read Lena Dunham on Sally Rooney in our 2024 Women of the Year round-up here: https://www.ft.com/womenof2024ā Lilah mentions this piece by Anne Helen Petersen on how weāre all posting less on social media, and this opinion piece by Michael Grunwald about the future of farmingā Matt mentions the rise of the noodle boysā You can listen to last yearās predictions here, or by searching āLife and Art 2024 cultural predictionsāā Matt is on X @mattvella-------Special FT subscription offers for Life and Art podcast listeners, from 50% off a digital subscription to a $1/Ā£1/ā¬1 trial, are here: http://ft.com/lifeandart-------Music clip from Family ProductionsRead a transcript of this episode on FT.comThe perfect winter survival guide
29:50|Today we are bringing you a winter survival guide, full of deceptively small tips that will make winter unmeasurably better. How do we best appreciate these cold, dark months? How do we stay stimulated, but also reject the grind? Our FT Weekend Magazineās resident āwinter goddessesā Griselda Murray Brown and Cordelia Jenkins join Lilah armed with tons of delightful suggestions, from buying warm lightbulbs to reading your friendsā dusty old books. They also fight about electric vests. Itās a joy. We hope you love it.------ As you know, the show is ending in early January ā weāre still collecting your cultural questions. Whatās rolling around in your head? How can we help? Email Lilah at lilahrap@ft.com, or connect with her on Instagram @lilahrap. -------Links (all FT links get you past the paywall): ā For our summer episode, search āHow to have the perfect summerā wherever you listen. Here it is on Spotifyā The FT Magazineās advent special is full of tips for enjoying winterā Luluās piece about watching 100 Christmas films is here: https://on.ft.com/3BBYrURā Cordelia mentioned ājealousy listsā: hereās the FTās list of favourite non-FT articles published this year. Hereās Bloombergās (paywall). Cordelia is most jealous of this Guardian piece by Jonathan Nunn about Nicholas Saunders: āHippy, capitalist, guru, grocer: the forgotten genius who changed British foodā ā Gris loved Laura Marlingās album Patterns in Repeat. She also mentioned the book Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat by Katherine May. ā Gris is on Instagram @griseldamurraybrown. Cordelia is on Bluesky @cordeliajenkins-------Special FT subscription offers for Life and Art podcast listeners, from 50% off a digital subscription to a $1/Ā£1/ā¬1 trial, are here: http://ft.com/lifeandart-------Music clip from Chrysalis RecordsRead a transcript of this episode on FT.comNovelist Elif Shafak: āWriters are the memory keepersā
29:46|Elif Shafakās new novel brings together four stories set in three different centuries: ancient Mesopotamia, 19th century London, a Yazidi village in 2014, and the present day. It connects them through the epic of Gilgamesh, and a single drop of fresh water. Making history come alive is one of Elifās many talents, and today she shares her thoughts on how novels can fill in the gaps in authorised history. She also talks with Lilah about the importance of the unwritten word ā and why she looks to oral traditions to make sense of the past.-------As you know, the show is ending in early January ā weāre still collecting your cultural questions. Whatās rolling around in your head? How can we help? Email Lilah at lilahrap@ft.com or message her on Instagram @lilahrap.-------Links (all FT links get you past the paywall): ā Elif Shafakās new novel There are Rivers in the Sky, is out now in the US and the UKā Read the FTās review of the book here: https://on.ft.com/4gC9cWdā Lilah spoke with Elif about her previous novel The Island of Missing Trees and the stories we tell ourselves back in 2020. Listen to that interview hereRead a transcript of this episode on FT.comBooks books books! Our top picks from 2024
26:21|The FTās books of the year special is out, and today, our literary editor Fred Studemann and outgoing deputy books editor Laura Battle join us one last time to talk about their top picks of 2024. This year has seen some huge releases from authors including Sally Rooney, Miranda July, Alexei Navalny, Al Pacino and Salman Rushdie. What trends did Fred and Laura notice this year? What books did they love? -------As you know, the show is ending in early January ā weāre still collecting your cultural questions. Whatās rolling around in your head? How can we help? Email Lilah at lilahrap@ft.com or message her on Instagram @lilahrap.-------Links (all FT links get you past the paywall): ā Books we mentioned: Orbital by Samantha Harvey; Patriot by Alexei Navalny; All Fours by Miranda July; Haunted Wood by Sam Leith; Rosarita by Anita Desai; There are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Shafak; Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World by David van Reybrouck; A Voyage Around the Queen by Craig Brown; Killing Time by Alan Bennett; Meditations for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman; The Wizard of the Kremlin by Giuliano da Empoli; Hope by Pope Francis (2025); and Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (2025)ā The FT Books of the Year are out now! Here is a roundup of the FTās top columnists and editorsā book recommendations for 2024, including Fredās top picks. Lauraās fiction picks are here.ā Food, drink and travel books are here. Music books here. Art and design books are here. Check out the full guide for more (paywall)Read a transcript of this episode on FT.comThe oldest cuisine in the world
27:46|Have you ever wondered about the oldest recipes in history? They were discovered on four clay tablets from about 1,700 BCE at the time of the Assyrian Empire. Did you know that about 5 million Assyrians still live around the world today? This year, a cookbook was published that is the first modern collection of exclusively Assyrian cuisine, food that has a lot of overlap with those ancient tablets. Itās called The Oldest Kitchen in the World, and in it, Matay de Mayee records the recipes of his mother, Smuni Turan ā recipes her ancestors have been passing down orally for centuries. Today, they join Lilah in the studio to talk about their kitchen.-------The Oldest Kitchen in the World is published in English, Dutch and German ā in Dutch and German its title is HaniyĆ©. You can find it in bookshops in the US, Canada, The Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Austria and Switzerland, and online.-------Send us your predictions! Write to Lilah at lilahrap@ft.com or on Instagram @lilahrap. And ā thank you.Read a transcript of this episode on FT.comOur massive holiday gift guide, and tips for a less stressful Christmas
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21:16|Filmmaker Richard Linklaterās movies span blockbusters, such as School of Rock, cerebral indie classics like Boyhood, and a hard-to-define The Before Trilogy. His most recent film, Hit Man, is a thriller, but it picks up on many themes that Linklater has explored before, such as identity and masculinity. Today, he reflects on the film in conversation with Lilah. -------Our film critic Danny Leighās review of Hit Man is here: https://on.ft.com/4fGIDidDanny also spoke with Richard Linklater in 2018 about his portrayal of masculinity in the movie Last Flag Flying: https://on.ft.com/3Va6v5L-------The show is ending in early January. But we want to know your cultural questions! Write to Lilah at lilahrap@ft.com or on Instagram @lilahrap. And ā thank you.Read a transcript of this episode on FT.comHow Eli Zabar made America more gourmet
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