Episodes

  • Grief, Meteoric Fame and Parasocial Relationships: Ashley Winstead's The Future Saints
    Feb 3 2026

    This week, Gare and I talk with Ashley Winstead about her new contemporary fiction (tragi-comedy but don't tell Ashley's publicists we said so) The Future Saints! We dive into her inspiration for the book, how it changed over the years through rounds of edits, and her fascination with ambitious women and how the world reacts to them.

    The Future Saints Synopsis

    This is a love story, but not the one you’re expecting.

    When record executive Theo meets the Future Saints, they’re bombing at a dive bar in their hometown. Since the tragic death of their manager, the band has been in a downward spiral and Theo has been dispatched to coax a new—and successful—album out of them, or else let them go.

    Immediately, Theo is struck by Hannah, the group’s impetuous lead singer, who’s gone off script by debuting a whole new sound, replacing their California pop with gut-wrenching rock. When this new music goes viral, striking an unexpected chord with fans, Theo puts his career on the line to give the Saints one last shot at success with a new tour, new record, and new start.

    But Hannah’s grief has larger consequences for the group, and her increasingly destructive antics become a distraction as she and her sister Ginny—her lifelong partner in crime—undermine Theo at every turn. Hannah isn’t ready to move on or prepared for the fame she’s been chasing, and the weight of her problems jeopardize the band, her growing closeness with Theo, and, worst of all, her relationship with her sister—all while the world watches closely. The Future Saints’s big break is here—if only they can survive it.

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    1 hr and 38 mins
  • Body Swapping, Dark Academia & Personal Magic: Petra Lord's Queen of Faces
    Feb 3 2026

    This week, I talk with Petra Lord about her debut genre bending fantasy-sci-fi-dark-academia book Queen of Faces. She shares the eight year journey of writing the book, how she injured herself while writing it, and how fantasy worlds are so effective for social commentary.

    Queen of Faces Synopsis

    Anabelle Gage is trapped in a male body, and it’s rotting from the inside out. In Caimor, where the magical elite buy and swap designer bodies like clothes, Ana can’t afford to escape her tattered form. When she fails the entrance exam to the prestigious Paragon Academy, her last hope of earning a new body implodes. As the clock ticks down to her last breath, she’s forced to use her illusion magic to steal a healthy chassis—before her own kills her.

    But Ana is caught by none other than the headmaster of Paragon Academy, who poses a brutal ultimatum: face execution for her crime or become a mercenary at his command. Revolt brews in Caimor's smog-choked underworld, and the wealthy and powerful will stop at nothing to take down the rebels and the infamous dark witch at their helm, the Black Wraith.

    With no choice but to accept, Ana will steal, fight, and kill her way to salvation. But her survival depends on a dangerous band of an impulsive assassin, a brooding bombmaker, and an alluring exile who might just spell her ruin. As Ana is drawn into a tangled web of secrets, the line between villain and hero shatters—and Ana must decide which side is worth dying for.

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    49 mins
  • Motherhood, Memory, and Murder: The Water Lies by Amy Meyerson
    Feb 1 2026

    This week, I talk with Amy Meyerson about her new mystery thriller The Water Lies. We dive into her inspiration for the book, how audiobooks changed her approach to pacing, and how she grappled with intuition, pregnancy and motherhood.

    *This was supposed to be released on January 1, but I put it in my release calendar for February 1, so some of our conversation may seem dated!*

    The Water Lies Synopsis

    Heavily pregnant with her second child, Tessa Irons has enough on her mind without her toddler throwing tantrums at the local coffee shop. The boy is inconsolable, shouting “Gigi!” to a woman Tessa’s never seen before—and never will again. The next morning, the woman’s body is dredged up from the canal outside the Ironses’ posh Venice Beach home, and Tessa’s gut tells her it’s no coincidence.

    Barb Geller refuses to believe that her daughter’s death was just some drunken accident. She heads to California for answers, where she crosses paths with Tessa. Together they hunt for the truth, certain they’ll find a connection between their children.

    But the police don’t believe them. Tessa’s husband dismisses her worries as pregnancy jitters, and even though people are always watching along the canals, no one saw a thing. Tessa and Barb only have each other, their intuition, and the creeping sense of danger that grows with every shocking revelation.

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    45 mins
  • Predicting Our 2026 Favorite Books with Gare and Steph
    Jan 30 2026

    This week, Gare and Steph and I attempt to predict which books will be some of our favorite books in 2026!

    Kate’s Books

    Dead Beat Alex Stern Leigh Bardugo

    Hot Girl Murder Club by Ashley Winstead

    The Caretaker Marcus Kliewer

    Honey by Imani Thompson

    Queen of Faces

    Gare’s Books

    The Secret Lives of Murderers Wives by Elizabeth Arnott

    This Story Might Save Your Life by Tiffany Crum

    Helpless by Jessica Knoll

    Heather by Caitlin Mullen

    Heart of Glass Jennifer Hillier

    Steph’s Books

    It Could Have Been Her by Lisa Jewell

    Cleo Dang Would Rather Be Dead by Mai Nguyen

    Forget You Saw Her by Noelle W. Ihli

    Good Joy, Bad Joy by Mikki Brammer

    Let’s Not Go Overboard Here by Erica Hendry

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • History, Horror, and Identity: L.S. Stratton's Sundown Girls
    Jan 27 2026

    This week, I talk with L.S. Stratton about the her new YA mystery thriller Sundown Girls. Stratton discusses how the story began as an adult novel and transformed into YA once she shifted the perspective to a sixteen-year-old protagonist, allowing the narrative to flow more naturally.

    She shares the real-world inspiration behind the book, including historical sundown towns, racial violence, and real kidnapping cases, and how these histories shaped both the setting and Naomi’s identity as a formerly missing girl.

    We discuss her use of themes of belonging, family reunification, generational trauma, and racism—particularly how uncertainty, gaslighting, and “is this real or am I imagining it?” in the book mirror lived experiences of racism. She also dive into blending supernatural elements with psychological tension, the challenges of writing historical horror, the importance of family dynamics and emotional pacing in thrillers, and the decision to leave some questions—especially around Naomi’s kidnapped childhood—unresolved as part of her growth.

    Follow L.S. Stratton here

    Sundown Girls Synopsis

    When sixteen-year-old Naomi Stoakes and her family head to a secluded cabin in the Shenandoah Valley for summer vacation they don’t know the small, mountainous town of Sparksburg, Virginia has a dark and twisted past. But when they arrive, Naomi can’t shake the feeling that something about Sparksburg just isn’t right. When she learns Sparksburg had once been a Sundown Town—a town where Blacks weren’t allowed after sunset lest they be murdered—well Naomi’s unease starts to make sense.

    As Naomi digs more into Sparksburg’s violent origins, she finds herself haunted by the ghost of a girl, appearing nightly outside her window. Then she learns of two girls who’ve recently gone missing and suspects the past may still be present in Sparksburg and beneath the quaint façade of this tourist town is a palpable danger.

    When Naomi decides to track the disappearance of the two girls herself and confronts the ghost of another, she become suspicious of a local man who has kindled fear in Naomi more than once. When she learns he has a connection to one of the missing girls, Naomi is certain he’s responsible for the disappearances.

    When no one believes her, Naomi takes matters into her own hands. But to save the missing girls, she’ll have to finally face her own past trauma as a “missing girl”, and risk losing everything she loves.

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    43 mins
  • How the NYC Reagan 80s Taught America to Excuse Violence: Heather Ann Thompson's Fear and Fury
    Jan 27 2026

    This week, I talk with historian Heather Ann Thompson about her new non-fiction Fear and Fury, which traces how the 1984 Bernie Goetz subway shooting became a flashpoint for the Reagan-era rollback of public investment, the rise of punitive policing, and the normalization of white vigilantism.

    Moving between the lived experiences of the four Black teenagers who were shot and the political, media, and economic forces that quickly transformed Goetz into a folk hero, Thompson shows how fear was deliberately manufactured and redirected away from structural inequality and toward racialized scapegoats.

    We compare 1980s New York to the present moment—drawing lines to media sensationalism, carceral logic, and modern cases of state and vigilante violence—while insisting that this history is neither accidental nor inevitable. By centering the long-term human cost borne by the victims and their families, the conversation ultimately argues that understanding how white rage was cultivated is essential to imagining a more just future.

    Fear and Fury: The Reagan Eighties, the Bernie Goetz Shootings, and the Rebirth of White Rage Synopsis

    On December 22, 1984, white New Yorker Bernhard Goetz shot four Black teenagers at point-blank in a New York City subway car. Goetz slipped into the subway tunnels undetected, fleeing the city to evade capture. From the moment Goetz turned himself in, the narrative surrounding the shooting became a matter of extraordinary debate, igniting public outcry and capturing the attention of the nation.

    While Goetz's guilt was never in question, media outlets sensationalized the event, redirecting public ire toward the victims themselves. In the end, it would take two grand juries and a civil suit to achieve justice on behalf of the four Black teenagers. For some, Goetz would go on to become a national hero, inciting a disturbing new chapter in American history. This brutal act revealed a white rage and resentment much deeper, larger, and more insidious than the actions of Bernie Goetz himself. Intensified by politicians and tabloid media, it would lead a stunning number of white Americans to celebrate vigilantism as a fully legitimate means for addressing racial fear, fracturing American race relations.

    Follow Heather here

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Last, Current and Next Reads with Erin Ashley
    Jan 24 2026
    This week, Erin Ashley is back, and we talk about our Last, Current and Next reads, as well as books we are intrigued by on our TBRs.Kate’s BooksKill Show — Daniel Swearen-BeckerWhen the Reckoning Comes — LaTanya McQueenThe Future Saints — Ashley WinsteadBlade — Wendy WalkerReader Bot — Naomi S. BaronOn Sunday She Picked Flowers — Yah-Yah ScholfieldGirl Gone Wild — Courtney KocakErin’s BooksTruly— Lionel RichieTiny Experiments — Anne-Laure Le CunffLittle One — Olivia MuenterHeart the Lover — Lily KingDeep Cuts — Holly BrickleyAn American Marriage — Tayari JonesKin — Tayari JonesSay Everything — Ione SkyeKeeper of Lost Children — Sadeqa JohnsonThe Ballad of Teena Marie — Teena Marie Check Out Author Social Media PackagesCheck out the Bookwild Community on PatreonCheck Out My Stories Are My Religion SubstackGet Bookwild MerchFollow @imbookwild on InstagramOther Co-hosts On Instagram:Gare Billings @gareindeedreadsSteph Lauer @books.in.badgerlandHalley Sutton @halleysutton25Brian Watson @readingwithbrianMacKenzie Green @missusa2mba
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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Silicon Valley, Body Horror and Shadowy Visions: Matt Casamassina's Degenerate
    Jan 20 2026

    This week, I talk with Matt Casamassina about his genre-bending sci-fi-horror-thriller Degenerate. He shares his unique approach to audiobook production, how reading Stephen King as a kid influenced his writing, and how one of his co-workers inspired the story.

    Degenerate by Matt Casamassina

    Mason Kowalski, a twenty-four year-old copywriter for a San Mateo startup, is on the verge of a nervous breakdown when he inexplicably suffers widespread vision loss in one eye. The doctors say it’s macular degeneration triggered by overwhelming stress, but he wonders if it’s something more, especially when the shadows in his peripheral vision begin to take shape and whisper wonderful and horrible things to him. Is it madness or destiny? The answer could destroy everything and everyone he holds dear.

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    Other Co-hosts On Instagram:

    Gare Billings @gareindeedreads

    Steph Lauer @books.in.badgerland

    Halley Sutton @halleysutton25

    Brian Watson @readingwithbrian

    MacKenzie Green @missusa2mba

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    41 mins