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  • Else Jerusalem — Red House Alley with Translator Stephanie Gorrell Ortega
    2025/07/08

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    Else Jerusalem’s Red House Alley is a riveting exposé of the sex industry in fin-de-siècle Vienna. A bestseller upon its 1909 publication, the novel was banned by the Nazis in 1933 (along with its 1928 film adaptation) and fell into obscurity. Boiler House Press published the first full English translation of this landmark work last year, and translator Stephanie Gorrell Ortega joins us to discuss Jerusalem’s richly-drawn account of brothel workers (based on accounts from real prostitutes). We also draw comparisons with this year’s Academy Award-winning “Best Picture,” Anora.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    Red House Alley by Else Jerusalem

    Life and photos of Else Jerusalem

    Anora

    The Diary of a Lost Girl by Margarite Böhme

    The DIary of a Lost Girl film

    Young Vienna movement

    Rebellion in the Brothel documentary about the Regina Riehl trial

    Celestina Truxa

    Felix Salten

    Hermann Bahr

    Arthur Schnitzler

    Karl Wittgenstein

    Ludwig Wittgenstein

    Pretty Baby

    David Copperfield

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 106 on Dirty Helen Cromwell

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 197 on Helen Tracy Lowe Porter


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    44 分
  • Edna O'Brien — The Country Girls with Edan Lepucki
    2025/06/24

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    When Edna O’Brien published her debut novel The Country Girls in 1960, she was branded a “Jezebel” in her native Ireland—but that didn’t stop her from completing a poignant trilogy about a pair of friends coming of age in a world for which village life and convent school failed to prepare them. Despite initial backlash to her sexually frank depiction of young women’s lives and desires, O’Brien’s writing brought her acclaim and celebrity status—Vanity Fair dubbed her “the playgirl of the western world.” Novelist Edan Lepucki joins us to discuss the trilogy’s timeless appeal and the complicated-but-endearing friendship of characters Kate Brady and Baba Brennan.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    The Country Girls trilogy by Edna O’Brien

    Edna O’Brien interview on BBC’s “World Book Club”

    Time’s Mouth by Edan Lepucki

    California by Edan Lepucki

    Woman No. 17 by Edan Lepucki

    Mother’s Before by Edan Lepucki

    Italics Mine Substack by Edan Lepucki

    Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 35 on Maud Hart Lovelace

    Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management

    Ernest Gébler

    Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry

    The Last Picture Show by Larry McMurtry

    “Laverne & Shirley”

    Beaches film

    Th

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    43 分
  • Brigid Brophy — The King of a Rainy Country
    2025/06/10

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    If Brigid Brophy’s The King of a Rainy Country had a soundtrack, it might include the soft patter of rain on a garret window, jazz drifting from a smoky cafe, the hum of a Vespa on narrow cobblestone streets … and the obnoxious griping of a few dozen uncultured Americans! As the description suggests, Brophy’s 1956 novel has a little bit of everything — atmosphere, nostalgia and poignancy mixed with subversive wit and madcap antics. Kim and Amy play “tour guide” examining Brophy’s life and accomplishments, including this wonderfully quirky book, recently reissued by McNally Editions.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    McNally Editions The King of a Rainy Country by Brigid Brophy

    Marginalia article about Brigid Brophy and Iris Murdoch by Maria Popova

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 51 on Rosamond Lehmann

    Dusty Answer by Rosamond Lehmann

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 150 on Elizabeth Smart

    By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept by Elizabeth Smart

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 184 on Elizabeth Taylor Vs. Elizabeth Taylor

    BBC program “Take it Or Leave It”

    In Transit by Brigid Brophy

    Hackenfeller’s Ape by Brigid Brophy

    The Snowball by Brigid Brophy

    Fifty Works of English Literature We Could Do Without by Brigid Brophy, Michael Levey and ??

    The Crown Princess and Other Stories by Brigid Brophy

    “Spleen” by Beaudelaire

    Death in Venice by Thomas Mann

    “As You Like It” by William Shakespeare


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    LostLadiesofLit.com

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    28 分
  • Jessie Redmon Fauset — Plum Bun with Bremond Berry MacDougall and Lisa Endo Cooper
    2025/05/27

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    Langston Hughes called Jessie Redmon Fauset “the midwife of the Harlem Renaissance” with good reason. As literary editor at The Crisis magazine from 1919 until 1926, Fauset discovered and championed some of the most important Black writers of the early 20th century. Her own novels contributed to The New Negro Movement’s cultural examination of race, class and gender through the lens of women’s experiences. Fauset’s 1928 novel Plum Bun was republished this spring by Quite Literally Books, a new publishing venture that reissues books by American women authors. The founders, Bremond Berry MacDougall and Lisa Endo Cooper, join us to discuss their mission and take a closer look at Fauset’s life and work.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    Quite Literally Books

    Plum Bun by Jessie Redmon Fauset

    The Pink House by Nelia Gardner

    The Home-Maker by Dorothy Canfield Fisher

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 9 on Dorothy Canfield Fisher

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 140 on Zora Neale Hurston

    Persephone Books

    Virago Books

    Cita Press

    The Crisis magazine

    “What is Racial Passing?” on PBS’s The Origin of Everything

    “The Dinner Party That Started the Harlem Renaissance” by Veronica Chambers and Michelle May-Curry

    Langston Hughes

    Jean Toomer

    Arna Bontemps

    Countee Cullen

    Gwendolyn Bennett

    W.E.B. Dubois

    Charles Johnson

    Alain Locke

    Regina Andrews

    The Talented Tenth

    “The New Negro Movement”

    Harlem Rhapsod

    Support the show

    For episodes and show notes, visit:

    LostLadiesofLit.com

    Subscribe to our
    substack newsletter.

    Follow us on instagram @lostladiesoflit.

    Email us: Contact — Lost Ladies of Lit Podcast


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    47 分
  • E.D.E.N. Southworth — The Hidden Hand with Rose Neal
    2025/05/13

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    Dastardly villains are no match for Capitola Black, the audacious heroine at the center of E.D.E.N. Southworth’s 1859 bestseller, The Hidden Hand. Readers so admired this literary tomboy’s pluck that Capitola became a popular baby name for decades and inspired the name of a California town. Yet few readers today are familiar with Southworth, one of the highest-earning authors of her day (to whom Louisa May Alcott even gave a subtle nod in Little Women). Rose Neal, author of a brand new biography on Southworth, joins us this week to discuss the writer who gave 19th-century young women permission to imagine lives free from convention and restraint.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    E.D.E.N. Southworth’s Hidden Hand: The Untold Story of America’s Forgotten Nineteenth-Century Author by Rose Neal

    The Hidden Hand by E.D.E.N. Southworth

    The Company of Books bookstore

    Retribution by E.D.E.N. Southworth

    The Deserted Wife by E.D.E.N. Southworth

    Harriet Beecher Stowe

    Elizabeth Blackwell

    Wide, Wide World by Susan Warner

    Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson

    Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

    The Saturday Visitor

    The National Era

    John Greenleaf Whittier

    Jane Swisshelm

    The Awakening by Kate Chopin



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    For episodes and show notes, visit:

    LostLadiesofLit.com

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    43 分
  • ENCORE: Ursula Parrott: Ex-Wife with Marsha Gordon
    2025/04/29

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby may be the novel everyone’s talking about this month, but let’s not forget another “Jazz Age” novel that took this country by storm. Ursula Parrott’s Ex-Wife, a tragicomic indictment of early 20th-century romance, brought the author immense fame and wealth at the time of its publication in 1929. Yet by her death in 1957 she was penniless and homeless, a fate she all but predicted in the cautionary commentary of her writing. Our episode on Parrott (with her biographer, Marsha Gordon) originally aired two years ago this week, and we’re marking Spring Break with an encore presentation — including some updates on efforts to make sure Parrott isn’t confined to obscurity again.

    Links:

    Ex-Wife by Ursula Parrott

    Becoming the Ex-Wife by Marsha Gordon

    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    Sigmund Freud

    Lost Ladies of Lit episode on Marjorie Hillis with Joanna Scutts

    The Divorcee (1930 Film)

    Norma Shearer



    Support the show

    For episodes and show notes, visit:

    LostLadiesofLit.com

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    53 分
  • Angela Carter — The Bloody Chamber
    2025/04/15

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    Who’s afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? Not the heroines from Angela Carter’s 1979 short story collection The Bloody Chamber. The British author tackles dark, primal themes in her spin on classic fables and fairy tales, urging women to eschew victimhood, reclaim their power and bite back! Join us as we dive into this enchanted world of blood, sex and animal magnetism, and find out how Carter’s own life experiences may have prompted her to peel back the skin on tropes of subjugation.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter

    The Invention of Angela Carter by Edmund Gordon

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No. 216 on Elizabeth Garver Jordan

    Lost Ladies of Lit Episode No.150 on Elizabeth Smart

    The Company of Wolves trailer

    The Box of Delights by John Masefield

    “The Box of Delights” radio program

    “The Fall River Axe Murders” (or “Mise-en-Scène For a Parricide”) by Angela Carter

    Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

    Teresa Borrenpohl incident

    Nights at the Circus by Angela Carter

    Wise Children by Angela Carter


    Support the show

    For episodes and show notes, visit:

    LostLadiesofLit.com

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    31 分
  • Lucy Irvine — Castaway with Francesca Segal
    2025/04/01

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    When Lucy Irvine answered a classified ad to play Girl Friday to a real-life Robinson Crusoe on a remote tropical island, she embarked on an enthralling—and at times harrowing—year-long adventure. The result was her bestselling 1983 memoir, Castaway, a beautifully-written tale of survival. We’re diving into Irvine’s unforgettable story with special guest Francesca Segal, whose own island-centric novel, Welcome to Glorious Tuga, was recently optioned for TV by See-Saw Films.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    Castaway by Lucy Irvine

    The Lucy Irvine Foundation

    Welcome to Glorgious Tuga by Francesca Segal

    Runaway and Faraway by Lucy Irvine

    The Islander by Gerald Kingsland

    The Secret Life of a Schoolgirl by Rosemary Kingsland

    Castaway 1986 film trailer starring Amanda Donohoe and Oliver Reed

    Wild by Cheryl Strayed

    “Alone” on the History Channel

    See-Saw Films

    One is One by Lucy Irvine

    The Innocents by Francesca Segal


    Support the show

    For episodes and show notes, visit:

    LostLadiesofLit.com

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    substack newsletter.

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    37 分