• How Heather Marshall brings readers into places of the past
    Apr 29 2026

    Michael Tamblyn spoke with novelist Heather Marshall. She is a writer of historical fiction, including her 2022 debut bestselling novel Looking for Jane and 2024's with The Secret History of Audrey James. Heather Marshall's new book is Liberty Street. It's the story of a young journalist's quest to expose the cruelty and corruption of the Mercer Women's Prison from the inside, the women she meets there, and a police detective trying to uncover a secret 30 years later.

    How Heather Marshall brings readers into places of the past

    Show More Show Less
    37 mins
  • Why Rainbow Rowell's Cherry Baby had to be her sexiest book yet
    Apr 15 2026

    Nathan Maharaj spoke with novelist Rainbow Rowell. She's the author of books including Eleanor & Park, Fangirl, as well as the novel Slow Dance, which she discussed on the show in 2024. Rainbow Rowell's new book is the novel Cherry Baby. It's about a woman named Cherish, who everybody calls Cherry, at a moment in her life when her marriage seems to have ended and she's figuring out what comes next.

    Why Rainbow Rowell's Cherry Baby had to be her sexiest book yet

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • Tara Gereaux on finding the words for an unspoken identity
    Apr 1 2026

    Nathan Maharaj spoke with Tara Gereaux, author of the novel Saltus and the novella Size of a Fist. Her new book is called Wild People Quiet. Set in 1946, it's the story of Florence, or Mrs. Banks as she's known down at Pratt's Insurance, the company where she's worked diligently for years. While out for lunch with her colleagues one day, Florence encounters a man whose mere presence threatens to upend the life she's made for herself in the town of Torduvalle, Saskatchewan.

    Tara Gereaux on finding the words for an unspoken identity

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • How Eliana Ramage set her sights on the stars for her debut novel
    Mar 18 2026

    Michael Tamblyn spoke with Eliana Ramage, author of To the Moon and Back. It's a novel about Steph, a young Cherokee woman who from the earliest age is obsessed with space and space travel, dreaming about one day becoming a NASA astronaut.

    How Eliana Ramage set her sights on the stars for her debut novel

    Show More Show Less
    53 mins
  • George Newman on getting good at bad ideas—so great ideas can happen
    Mar 4 2026

    Nathan spoke with George Newman, psychologist and associate professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto. His new book is How Great Ideas Happen: The Hidden Steps Behind Breakthrough Success. It's a guide to generating ideas, hopefully great ideas, and learning about mental habits that often get in the way, and how creativity is a skill you can train and exercise.

    George Newman on getting good at bad ideas—so great ideas can happen | Kobo Books Blog

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • Leanne Toshiko Simpson on self-care and writing a prize-winning rom-com
    Feb 18 2026

    Joined by a live audience in Kobo's intimate event space, Michael Tamblyn spoke with novelist Leanne Toshiko Simpson, author of Never Been Better and winner of the 2025 Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prize. Never Been Better is the story of a group of three friends who met in a psych ward, but time has passed and now two of whom are about to get married while the third tries to figure out whether to swallow her feelings or let it all out.

    Leanne Toshiko Simpson on self-care and writing a prize-winning rom-com

    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • Booktalking - Publishers wannabe booksellers, the book business's third rail, dark matter sales data, and more
    Feb 11 2026

    Hosts Michael Tamblyn and Nathan Maharaj caught up on the latest private equity-fueled mergers & acquisitions, what we're not talking about when we're talking about the money made from books, plus a whole lot more.

    This episode covers:

    • Rosetta Books acquired by Open Road Media
    • Why private equity is (still) interested in the book business, most recently in German companies Bookwire and Zebralution
    • Independent Publishing Group's move to add more direct-to-consumer services for their publisher clients (and why becoming a bookseller is harder than it looks)
    • The "dark matter"* that's not being reported when we talk about the health of the book business
    • Publishers and librarians duking it out over digital book pricing
      • Sidebar on Heated Rivalry and the NYPL
    • And a remembrance of Porter Anderson

    Beloved backlist books cited in this episode include Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, The Queen's Gambit by Walter Tevis, The Rise and Fall fo the Third Reich by William L. Shirer, the works of Octavia E. Butler and William Styron.

    More author interviews at kobo.com/conversation

    Find past Booktalking episodes here

    *Nathan said "grey matter" in the episode because his was failing him at the time.

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
  • Dan Rubinstein on finding community on waterfronts
    Feb 4 2026

    Host Nathan Maharaj spoke with Dan Rubinstein, author of Water Borne: A 1,200-Mile Paddleboarding Pilgrimage. In it he tells the story of his journey via stand-up paddleboard through waterways around Montreal, New York City, Toronto, and his home in Ottawa. But it's also the story of all of us, and how we benefit from spending time near bodies of water.

    Dan Rubinstein on finding community on waterfronts

    Show More Show Less
    48 mins