Episodes

  • Celebrating Chesterton's Vision of Sanity at the 2026 Conference
    May 5 2026
    Gretelyn Darkey and Joe Grabowski invite listeners to join them this June at the 2026 Chesterton Society Conference in Ave Maria, Florida. This year's conference celebrates three remarkable centenaries: the publication of The Outline of Sanity, The Queen of Seven Swords, and Frances Chesterton's conversion to the Catholic Church. With speakers including Dale Ahlquist and Nancy Brown, the conference promises talks on distributism, sanity in an insane world, and Frances's journey to Rome. In This Episode: The 2026 conference returns to a university campus setting with dorm-style lodging at Ave Maria, recapturing the old-school Chesterton conference atmosphereThree major centenaries: The Outline of Sanity (1926), The Queen of Seven Swords (1926), and Frances Chesterton's conversion to Catholicism (1926)Dale Ahlquist will explore what Chesterton meant by sanity and how the modern world alters humans to fit conditions rather than shaping the world to fit the human soulNancy Brown will speak on Frances Chesterton's four-year journey to Rome after Gilbert's conversion, offering hope for those navigating similar family situationsAve Maria's Catholic town center, built around a striking church, embodies Chestertonian localism and provides the perfect setting for this year's theme Chapters: 00:00: Welcome and Conference Announcement00:24: Ave Maria, Florida—Location and Registration01:09: Return to University Campus Format03:27: First Theme: The Outline of Sanity 100th Anniversary06:40: Speakers on Distributism and Localism16:09: Second Theme: The Queen of Seven Swords19:59: Third Theme: Frances Chesterton's Conversion25:19: Nancy Brown on Frances's Journey to Rome28:05: Afterglow and Conference Experience34:20: Closing Invitation Resources Mentioned: Conference RegistrationThe Woman Who Was Chesterton by Nancy Carpentier BrownGilbert Magazine FOLLOW US InstagramFacebookX SUPPORT Consider making a donationVisit our Shop Produced by Saint Kolbe Studios
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    35 mins
  • The Man Who Carried a Swordstick and a Pen: Holly Gyger Lee on Writing Chesterton for Young Readers
    Apr 28 2026
    GK Chesterton was many things—journalist, philosopher, poet, and debater—but what does his life look like through the eyes of a young reader? In this episode, Joe sits down with Holly Gyger Lee, author of the new young reader's biography The Man Who Carried a Swordstick and a Pen, to explore what drew her to Chesterton, what surprised her in the research, and why a boy who didn't fit the classroom mold became one of the most prolific writers in the English language. From Charlotte Mason's "living books" philosophy to Chesterton's theology of play, this conversation is a delight for readers of all ages. In This Episode: How Holly discovered GK Chesterton through C.S. Lewis—and why The Man Who Was Thursday wasn't the right entry pointThe Charlotte Mason "living books" philosophy that inspired Holly to write a biography for young readersWhat surprised Holly most in her research: Chesterton the unconventional student, and the headmaster's famous remark—"He is six feet of genius"The swordstick, the cloak, and how Frances shaped the image of a man who was a walking anachronism—out of time, and for all timesChesterton's theology of play and leisure, from the Toy Theater essay to his belief that the heavy work is the play Chapters: 00:00: Welcome and Introduction00:54: Holly's Background, Homeschooling, and Life in North Carolina04:01: Discovering Chesterton Through C.S. Lewis09:11: Charlotte Mason, Living Books, and the Inspiration Behind the Biography13:39: The Swordstick, the Cloak, and Chesterton's Persona16:18: Chesterton on Leisure, Play, and the Toy Theater19:14: Taking Children Seriously—Chesterton, Tolkien, Lewis, and MacDonald24:32: Research Surprises: The Unconventional Student28:43: The Junior Debating Club, Frances, and a Life of Hospitality33:37: Holly's Current Projects and Where to Find Her Resources Mentioned: Get the BookHolly's WebsiteHolly's YouTubeGilbert MagazineAmerican Chesterton Society Shop FOLLOW US: InstagramFacebookX SUPPORT: Consider making a donationVisit our Shop Produced by Saint Kolbe Studios
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    37 mins
  • What Bilbo and Boethius (and Chesterton) Teach Us About Adventure
    Apr 21 2026
    What does it mean to be inconvenienced? Chesterton has a paradoxical answer. Joe Grabowski and Grettelyn Darkey unpack one of Chesterton's most beloved aphorisms — "An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered; an inconvenience is only an adventure wrongly considered" — tracing it from its original context in a real 1906 London flood, through the essay "On Running After One's Hat," and all the way to Boethius, St. Lawrence, and the Christian vocation to embrace the cross. In This Episode: The original context of the quote in Chesterton's essay "On Running After One's Hat" from All Things Considered, prompted by the great London flood of June 1906What running after a windblown hat has to do with Innocent Smith in Manalive—and why the sport of hat-hunting haunted Chesterton's imagination for yearsThe difference between a sunny attitude and a genuinely Chestertonian embrace of inconvenience, and why it matters on a spiritual levelBoethius, St. Lawrence, and St. Peter hanging upside down—what the saints reveal about the adventure of embracing the crossThe thread running through all of Chesterton: how a single paradox in a flood-inspired newspaper column illuminates his entire worldview Chapters: 00:00: Introduction01:52: Parsing the Quote04:50: Bilbo Baggins and Engaging with Life07:49: The 1906 London Flood20:23: Running After One's Hat23:05: Innocent Smith in Manalive28:41: The Thread of Chesterton's Philosophy35:00: Daily Inconveniences37:06: The Spiritual Dimension Resources Mentioned: All Things Considered by G.K. Chesterton (includes "On Running After One's Hat")Manalive by G.K. ChestertonThe Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius FOLLOW US InstagramFacebookX SUPPORT Consider making a donationVisit our Shop Produced by Saint Kolbe Studios
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    44 mins
  • Chesterton on Almsgiving, Art, and American Idiom
    Apr 14 2026
    In this episode, Grettelyn Darkey and Joe Grabowski walk through three newly unearthed Chesterton essays from the latest issue of Gilbert Magazine—exploring almsgiving, portraiture, and a delightful transatlantic linguistic puzzle—and invite you to discover why the magazine is one of the best-kept secrets in Chesterton studies. In This Episode: Why Chesterton's "promiscuous charity" upends our instinct to vet the needy before giving—and what that reveals about the giver's own soulThe overlooked personal dimension of almsgiving versus institutional philanthropy, and how Chesterton draws on virtue ethics to expose the differenceA debate as old as the daguerreotype: does a photograph capture truth, or does a painted portrait go deeper—and what does Chesterton mean when he says truth is a "moral state"?Chesterton's fondness for paradox applied to art, literature, and the limits of realismHow a single American phrase, "rare steak," sent Chesterton on a linguistic rabbit trail through Irish immigration and transatlantic idiom in 1934 Chapters: 00:00: Introduction00:24: Welcome & the Gilbert Read-Along Format02:12: The Significance of Almsgiving04:07: "On Giving Money to Beggars"—Chesterton's Humor and Opening10:03: Prudence, Charity, and Getting the Monkey Off Your Back14:40: Personal Giving vs. Institutional Philanthropy20:49: Transitioning to "Portraits"22:00: Photography vs. Portrait Painting in 190126:29: Truth in Art and Chesterton's Paradox36:28: "A Query for Philologists"—Why Americans Call It "Rare" Resources Mentioned: Gilbert Magazine What I Saw in America by G.K. Chesterton FOLLOW US Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chestertonsocietyFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/AmericanChestertonSocietyX: https://twitter.com/chestertonsoc SUPPORT Consider making a donation: https://www.chesterton.org/give/Visit our Shop: https://www.chesterton.org/shop/ Produced by Saint Kolbe Studios
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    47 mins
  • Reclaiming Joy in a Mechanical World w/ Filmmaker Nick Bash
    Apr 7 2026
    Joe Grabowski sits down with Nick Bash, a Biola University alum who studied filmmaking alongside the Rhetoric Honors Great Books Program, to discuss his senior thesis short film The Last Bonaparte—a loose adaptation of Chesterton's The Napoleon of Notting Hill. In This Episode: How film, as a relatively young art form, is still learning to match the depth and immersion of literatureWhat Chesterton's Orthodoxy revealed to Nick about joy, and how that discovery drove the making of The Last BonaparteThe communal nature of filmmaking and how the process of telling a story begins to mirror its themesHow setting the film in 2084 draws on Orwellian themes to sharpen Chesterton's critique of standardization and bureaucracyWhy Tolkien's philosophical writings on creativity convinced Nick that faithful Christian storytelling means crafting a story, not a sermon Chapters: 00:00: Introduction00:36: Nick's Background: Biola, Great Books, and Chesterton03:06: Film as a Young Art Form05:50: Drama, Embodiment, and the Communal Art of Filmmaking09:39: Film as Synthesis of the Arts14:02: Reclaiming Joy in a Machine-Oriented World18:52: Chesterton, Orwell, and the Year 198425:34: Tolkien on Adventure and Sub-Creation28:42: Story vs. Allegory Resources Mentioned: The Last Bonaparte FOLLOW US Instagram | Facebook | X SUPPORT Consider making a donation: chesterton.org/give Visit our Shop: chesterton.org/shop Produced by Saint Kolbe Studios
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    34 mins
  • The Poetic Genius of G.K. Chesterton's "The Donkey"
    Mar 24 2026

    In this episode, Joe talks about one of Chesterton's most famous, but still too little studied, poems, "The Donkey." Learn a bit more about the poem through a New Critical based reading, consider just some of the allusions that may have shaped the poem in Chesterton's mind, and - perhaps - discover anew a great source for Lenten meditation!

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    44 mins
  • "The Ireland That We Dreamed Of"
    Mar 17 2026

    Happy Saint Patrick's day! In this episode, Joe talks about some of Chesterton's insights upon and sympathies with the Irish, particularly their faith and culture.

    Mentioned in this video:

    "Irish Politics and Irish Religion" by G.K. Chesterton: https://library.chesterton.org/irish-politics-and-irish-religion-33426/

    On Chesterton and Michael Collins: https://www.catholicarena.com/latest/chestertoncollins220822

    On the "Turning the Tide" report: https://theway.ie/new-report-shows-shifting-religious-trends-and-signs-of-renewal-among-young-adults-in-ireland/

    Archbishop Eomon Martin's introduction of the report: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7LO_7U2ME-k

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    40 mins
  • A Thing Worth Doing is Worth Doing Badly?
    Mar 10 2026

    In this episode, Joe talks about a (in)famous Chesterton quotation, often misunderstood, sometimes misapplied. He digs into its origins and context(s) and shares some interesting facts about it you may not know!

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    FOLLOW US

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chestertonsociety
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AmericanChestertonSociety
    X: https://twitter.com/chestertonsoc

    SUPPORT

    Consider making a donation: https://www.chesterton.org/give/
    Visit our Shop at https://www.chesterton.org/shop/

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    32 mins