Front Burner - The books that explained 2025 (Part 2)
Episode Date: December 30, 2025Today we’re joined by lawyer and author Bryan Stevenson for a conversation about the historical Mother Emanuel AME church, and what it means to tell the story of American history through a single in...stitution. Then Canadian journalist Paul Wells stops by for a look at the rise of The New York Times, and the lessons for news media writ large. And finally, Bookends host Mattea Roach chats with Jayme about Ukraine, the power of the novel, and some very endangered snails.The books:Mother Emanuel by Kevin SackThe Times by Adam NagourneyEndling by Maria Reva
Transcript
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Hey, everybody, it's Jamie.
If you tuned into the show yesterday, you heard part one of our books to understand 2025 series featuring some of our favorite guests from the year.
Today, we bring you the second installment in this series about books that help make 2025 make some sense.
Today, Jeopardy Champ and host of CBC's literary book show bookends, Matea Roach, is back,
and they'll be talking to us about Ukraine and the power of the novel.
Canadian journalist and author Paul Wells will make the case that tracking the rise of the New York Times
is a good map for the broad challenges facing news media everywhere.
But we'll be starting with the American lawyer and author Brian Stevenson.
who joined us earlier this year to talk about Donald Trump's campaign on the Smithsonian Museum and Black History more broadly.
Brian, it's good to have you back. Thank you.
It's great to be with you.
So when we asked you to pick a book that helps explain the year we've just lived through,
you chose Mother Emanuel by reporter and author Kevin Sack.
The book is a chronicle of one of the oldest black churches in the United States, some 200 years old.
And can you walk me through this book?
And why have you chosen it?
And why does it help explain 2025 to you?
Oh, it's a really well-written work of history and an examination of the role of race in America.
And it's just got a lot of beautiful insights and details.
But the book begins with the tragic killing of nine black people at Mother Emanuel Church in Charleston that took place in June of 2015.
when a young white man went into that church and shot and killed these nine people while they were
literally praying at a church meeting. He was motivated by racial narratives online, the Confederacy,
white supremacy. He wanted to start a race war. And I think it's relevant for this year,
because it just speaks to the destructive power of narratives that are fueled by fear and anger.
And I think the book does a great job of documenting how the history of racial injustice,
how the narrative of racial difference that has so undermined societies like the United States and Canada
can create distortions and abuse and violence and a future that has mired,
in bigotry. And I think that's the great challenge that we're facing now. We're in a narrative
struggle in this country, I think, across the globe. And you have voices that are preaching
fear and anger as a way to cane and sustain power. And combating that, I think, requires
a deep understanding of the harms of these narratives over a historical period of time. And that's what
I think Kevin Sack document beautifully in this book, Mother Emanuel.
One of the remarkable things about this book is that it tells the story of a version of American history through this single institution.
Mother Emanuel is not just a place of worship.
It's been a site of revolts and radicalism of state surveillance, of political violence, of civil rights organizing, and as you've said, most recently an incident of mass killing.
And just what does it mean to tell the story of American history through like a single place or an institution, you think?
I think it concretizes and dramatizes one of the important lessons of history that I think in America we still haven't fully embraced.
I mean, I continue to believe that in our country, we are burdened by this history of racial injustice and that this history has been sustained by a narrative of racial difference that we have embraced.
I don't think, you know, what undermine the evolution of democracy and
liberty and justice in America was just political developments. I think there were narratives in
this country. We never acknowledged the role of indigenous peoples before Europeans. And we created our
constitution to guarantee equality and liberty and justice, but we said, oh, no, those native people
are savages. And we created this narrative of racial difference to justify their displacement and
their abuse. We did the same thing to sustain and justify 246 years of slavery. And what I think
Mother Emanuel allows is for us to examine what it means to be governed by this narrative of
racial difference. And I think the history of the church, in some ways, is the history of America
because in many ways the great evil of slavery in America. And the book begins with this effort by
enslaved people to find a place of freedom to worship, to develop, to be seen as fully human,
I think the defining aspect of slavery in America was the narrative we created to justify
enslavement. And Sack, I think, dramatizes this because what he reveals is that even people
in the church who were espousing Christianity, who were preaching redemption and grace and
mercy and all of these things were constrained by these narratives.
of racial difference that constrained and limited their ability to see black people as fully human.
And that narrative of racial difference is the, it's kind of what survives slavery.
You know, I often argue it's at the North Wall and the Civil War, but the South won the
narrative war.
And so it continues into the 20th century.
And that's watching the evolution of Mother Emmanuel over, you know, two centuries, I think gives us a way of documenting what happens
when you keep pushing this narrative of racial difference,
this idea that black people aren't as good as white people,
or less human, less capable, less evolved,
less deserving of equality and justice.
And to see it play out over two centuries
is to see the challenge we still face in America
to overcome this history,
which is so rooted in bigotry and violence.
As I understand it, this book deals a lot with the question of forgiveness and contrition.
The forgiveness that some offered the shooter, Dylan Roof, after the violence that he perpetrated, how some struggled to forgive him.
Some people listening might remember Barack Obama singing Amazing Grace at the church's memorial,
following the incident.
But it's also true, right, that forgiveness can become weaponized and so can things like hope.
And I wonder how you think this book navigates complicated concepts like forgiveness and hope.
Yeah, well, I think he's very honest about detailing the ways in which it's challenging to respond to
heartache and abuse and oppression with a mindset that is first and foremost forgiving.
And I think what I take from the book is that the complexity of overcoming oppression is rooted in
the idea that while forgiveness is part of it, it's not the only part of it. And I think that's
what I believe the book helps people understand. You know, after the Civil War, the four million
and black people were emancipated in the United States. They could have easily said, we want
revenge and retribution against the people who enslaved us. We want the people who sold our children.
We want the people who took our spouses and our parents and our siblings. We want them to suffer.
And they made a difficult choice to choose citizenship, to say, no, we're not going to do that.
We're going to build churches. We're going to build schools. Mother Manuel was built and developed
on that idea, even while it was being attacked by those who did not want black people to have
that kind of autonomy, that kind of power. But it was rooted in that hope that hatred isn't
just something you can deploy to hurt someone else, but that it will also hurt you. This idea that
true liberation, true freedom, true justice has to be disconnected from revenge and retribution
and hating people back is, I think, a constant theme in the struggle at Mother Emmanuel,
but also more broadly the struggle for justice in this country. And the reason why I think it's
important, and the story of Mother Emmanuel is powerful in that way, you know, our country
in the American, certainly the black experience of this, is not like other histories of
where transitional justice took place. In South Africa, a black majority took over after apartheid.
There was a change in power. In Germany,
the Nazis lost the war, a change in power.
And so we've seen efforts at memory
and confronting the history of the Holocaust.
In Rwanda, military intervention changed power.
So you see memorialization and a reckoning with that harm.
We've never had to change of power in the United States.
Many of the people who benefited from enslavement
continued to prosper in the 20th century.
The perpetrators of lynching violence were never held accountable.
They remained in power,
even during the civil rights movement, the people who segregated and excluded and humiliated
black people for decades never lost power.
It was a political shift when black people could fully participate, but even that is now
under attack.
And so the question becomes, how do you respond to oppression and justice and violation of basic
human rights when you don't have the political power, military power, or economic power
to force a change?
Well, it has to be rooted in something that goes beyond traditional conceptions of power.
And that's where the moral idea, the power of grace and mercy and love it, Dr. King talked about a beloved community being the answer to all of these dynamics.
And we have seen that succeed. And that certainly is evident in the story of Mother Emmanuel. The civil rights movement in this country was rooted not in money or violence or military. It was rooted in the kind of a moral integrity that says our decency, our humanity, our dignity, our dignity.
is more powerful than your violence and your brutality and your and your hatred.
And so I think that's the story that that SAC documents and details and it becomes harder
as we get into a modern era when people feel less, you know, vulnerable because the more
privilege you are, I think the harder it is for you to kind of see how you shouldn't use
your privilege and power to just get the things you want. And I just feel like in this moment
when we're dealing with so much hostility and anger and fear and violence, we're going to have to
ask important questions about do we want to be moral people? Do we want to actually value rights
over what is kind of enriching to us in the moment? What kind of character do we want to hold up,
lift up, embrace, celebrate? And I think those themes are very much at the heart of the Black Church
broadly, which has preached grace and mercy, has broadly argued against giving into hatred and
violence, not because it's not convenient or that it's not at times effective, but because it is
corrosive. It takes away the important part of what living wholly and honestly and fully
requires. And I just think this church is a powerful space to see that struggle play out
across two centuries.
And when you think about that historical arc, considering the moment that we're in today,
like, how does it leave you feeling about the future?
Well, I think it just reminds me that we have to remain committed to truth-telling
in the face of this moment when there's so much effort being placed on erasure.
I mean, what pains me a little bit is when I think about the killing of those people
in Mother Emmanuel in 2015, it shocked our nation.
And the South Carolina governor, Nikki Haley,
did something that had been considered impossible until then.
She took down the Confederate flag from the state capital.
A lot of communities began reassessing their comfort level
with Confederate ideology and these icons.
We started stepping back from this embrace,
this tolerance of racial bigotry. And a lot of things changed because we were so just heartbroken.
Ten years later, I think we're in a very different political space. We now seem to be willing
to look the other way when people engage in acts of racial hatred and animosity. We mock the
victims of horrific crimes and violence. We demonize those who want us to think more broadly about
what this history of racial injustice has done. We're putting the name.
of these Confederate white supremacists who fought against the United States to preserve slavery
back on the military basis across our country. And I just think what it reveals is that if we're
not honest about history, if we're not focused on the harm of history, we will replicate the
same problems that are detailed in Mother Emanuel. We will become indifferent to the plight
of people who are trafficked and enslaved. We will become indifferent to the victimization of people
who are lynched and targeted with mob violence.
We won't care about the humiliation and degradation of people who are being excluded
just because of their color or their religion or their ethnicity will tolerate things
we wouldn't otherwise tolerate.
We'll accept things we wouldn't otherwise accept.
And that is the great, I think, warning that I take from this book is that if we give
into these narratives that have been with us for so long, we risk replicating a world
that doesn't create a very hopeful future.
And I just think the other part of the story for me
that I think is powerful
is that so many have done so much
to get us to a point where we can finally step forward.
It details the work of Richard Allen
and the creators of the AME Church
that sacrifice so much to create this institution
and they had to do things that were so much harder
than what we have to do.
I often say living in Montgomery,
I live in a city where I stand on the shoulders
of people who did so much more with so much less. And that for me means that we don't have the
option to say, oh, that's too hard. And I think that's the power of history to kind of root us
into something that gets us beyond just trying to see how many clicks we can get on social media
by saying something hateful or angry or violent, tolerating things that we know are unacceptable,
just looking the other way when horrific things are happening to people, where they're being
pulled off the street just because of their ethnicity or their race or we're mocking horrific
crimes because we don't like the politics of the person who's the victim of that crime.
I think that's the kind of the takeaway I have from this book and this history is that,
you know, I often say this you can't claim to have been on the right side of slavery.
Everybody wants to say they would have been an abolitionist during the time of slavery.
Everybody says they would like to, they would have been against mob violence.
and lynching during the era of the first half of the 20th century, they would have been with
Ida B. Wells when she was trying to end that horrific practice. Everybody wants to claim that they
would be with Dr. Kane marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge and Selma in 1965, but you can't
claim to be on the right side of history during the time of slavery or lynching or civil rights
activism if you are silent today, if you are not responding to horrific acts of violence and
bigotry today. And the murder of those nine people at Mother Emmanuel was a moment for this
country to reflect on which side of history are we going to align ourselves with as we move
forward. And it's both heartbreaking to me that we're in a less positive, less favorable place
in responding to that question 10 years later. And also a kind of reminder to me that we have
to kind of be rooted in understanding this history if we're going to create the kind of world that
most of us want to live in.
Okay.
Brian, thank you so much for this.
This was really excellent.
Thank you.
You're very welcome.
Happy to do it.
Okay.
Next, we'll be joined by Canadian journalist and author Paul Wells.
You've heard him on the show pretty often for a conversation about the gray lady, the New York Times.
Paul, hey, thanks so much for coming.
me bye. Hi, thanks for having me. So the book that you chose is The Times by Adam Nagorny. It's a
reported history of the New York Times. Why this book? Why now? Well, it's a book about my life.
All of our lives who work in media because it's about the transformation. The news industry
has gone through basically since the rise of the internet. At the beginning of the book,
the Times is essentially omnipotent. Not a perfectly happy place because the Times is plural.
and there's internal fights about how to be the New York Times,
but there's a sense of what that means to be the New York Times.
And then it goes through the titanic crisis
that the arrival of the internet, the collapse of traditional advertising,
caused for the whole industry.
And it comes out the other side, and then the book ends.
So it's a frustrating book because it ends with a family event at the Times
about the time that Donald Trump was inaugurated as president
in the beginning of 2016.
Yeah.
And Nogorny doesn't treat the last decade of the paper because he is a New York Times employee and the essential, I mean, I say this with all the love of my heart, he chickens out telling the story of his contemporaries.
But it sets up the current moment in a kind of a sweeping way that I found fascinating.
Well, just tell me a little bit more about that, how you think it sets up the current moment.
It starts with Abe Rosenthal, who was the Times editor in 1977, decided really to turn the New York Times from a New York City paper into a truly national institution that educated people had to, and people with a window into power and decision making, had to get their hands on a physical copy of the New York Times wherever they were in the United States and to some extent outside the United States.
By noon on the day it was published because they had to feel like they were in the loop.
And over time, Rosenthal's kind of starchy, white male, straight idea of what a proper newspaper should be comes under assault from his own staff.
And women on the paper go to court to get into a fair role in the running.
They actually sue the paper, several women staffers at the times.
and members of visible minorities
fight their way in
and people who live downtown
and don't have an Upper East Side lifestyle
in a thousand ways
fight to make the Times
their kind of paper too
and just as it seems like
the New York Times has been dragged
kicking and screaming into the late 20th century
it is then dragged again into the 21st century
that story really begins on 9-11
as they realize that they can post news
about the attacks on the World Trade Center
as they're reporting it on the website
and then having gone through a social revolution
that this majestic American institution
has to then go through an economic revolution
and that turns out to be even tougher.
Yeah. And just this idea that he kind of chickened out here
and didn't cover his contemporaries,
what were you hoping he would have done?
There's essentially a, well, there's a paradigm shift
in terms of the paper's place in American society,
and then in terms of the paper's economic and business model.
There's a story fairly early on in the paper
that shows you how dominant the New York Times used to be.
In 1987, Gary Hart drops out of the Democratic nomination race for president
because of an alleged affair.
And the Times decides it needs to know more about presidential candidates
than it already did.
And so they sent a letter out to 13 presidential candidates,
candidates, demanding their military records, school transcripts, income tax returns, net worth
statements, information on stock and real estate transactions, marriage and driver's license,
and medical records. And then it says to 13 candidates for the presidency of the United States,
we're going to have a reporter on our staff, Lawrence Altman, who is a medical doctor,
examine your reports of your physicals so that we can decide whether you're physically fit
for president. And 13 candidates for president pony up, because the New York Times is asking.
20 years later, that's gone.
20 years later, there's no media institution that has that kind of clout.
And the number of people who would berate the organization for having the gall to ask has multiplied.
At the same time, there's a change in business model.
Newspapers used to be paid for essentially by advertising.
I was taught as a cover reporter at the Montreal Gazette that 80% of our revenue came from advertising and 20% came
from circulation revenue, the cost of subscriptions.
The subscription essentially covered the cost of getting the newspaper to your doorstep,
but that everything else came from advertising.
And a newspaper can keep advertisers at arm's length.
It can let advertisers know about a kind of a basic deal, which is we're going to cover
what we want, how we want, and you don't get to tell us how to cover things.
And in return, we will show our readers your ads.
But then at the end of the story, that's gone.
advertising revenue has collapsed, including for the New York Times.
I mean, there's still our ads, but it's not nearly enough to cover the cost of the product.
And the reader is paying much more of the freight through their subscription paywall.
Readers don't believe that they should be kept at arm's length.
They believe that their subscription money gives them a vote in how the newspapers should cover the world.
And, you know, during the upheavals of 2020, which is Black Lives Matter and COVID and the later
stages of Me Too. And during the presidency of Donald Trump, readers, especially affluent, educated
readers of the New York Times, believed that they absolutely had a vote in how the New York Times
was supposed to cover stuff. And they absolutely had the right to cancel or threaten to cancel
their subscriptions that they didn't like what they read. And so suddenly the paper is in a direct
tug of war with the people it needs to survive. And I think the New York Times has a bit of a
mixed record and how it dealt with those pressures. And the premise of this conversation,
I'm supposed to talk about, you know, why I found the book interesting. The book is interesting
because it doesn't touch any of that. Right. You know, so it's like a choose-your-own
adventure in a way. I'm like, okay, and then what? And then what? And we'll have to wait for
a sequel, which I assume Adam Negerney will not be the one to write. It's funny. You're like the only
person who's come on to talk about a book that, well, I'm not saying you didn't
like it, but that, you know, raises, raise more questions for you than gave you answers
and trying to understand this moment. I mean, I just, some of what you're talking about there,
like, how did you see some of the consequences of that play out this year, business model
consequences, right? That kind of stuff. Absolutely. It's huge in the context of presidential
politics in many organizations, including in my little substack, but played out at
operatic scale at the New York Times, because it was the times that didn't get along
well with Joe Biden as president. Joe Khan, the to me somewhat mysterious current executive editor of
the Times, man, someone should write a book about him, complained that Biden hadn't given the Times
an interview. And then they started to do very intensive reporting on the question of Biden's
fitness for office, beginning before that amazing debate in the summer of 24. And Times readers
are furious, furious at their paper for daring to question their champion against Donald
Trump. And it continued through the question of whether Kamala Harris should face a primary
round. And it continued through the Brat summer when it seemed like Kamala Harris could do no
wrong. And then turned out she wasn't winning, you know. And it continues today. And Joe Khan,
the current executive editor, I think, sees himself as a useful corrective against the trend of
giving the readers what they want and in favor of giving the readers what they need. But the thing is,
the readers will never agree that they should get what they need instead of what they want.
And the readers are paying Jo Khan's salary. So that's a fascinating dynamic.
I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on the role you think the New York Times played in 2025
in shaping opinion, specifically with some of their opinion coldness.
Like, I'm thinking about someone like Ezra Klein.
Well, I think the main thing, the reason I snuck in that anecdote about 1987,
when they said, your appointment with Dr. Altman is next Tuesday,
is that that level of authority, the New York Times matters less than it ever has.
And it also has had to struggle in the rise of online journalism with the fact,
that some of its journalists have a bigger brand in some communities than the Times itself
does. You know, 15 years ago, there were people on staff who thought that was kind of cool
and wanted to elevate. People like Mark Bittman, their food writer, was bigger in food circles
than the damn New York Times was. And in recent years, they've tried to sort of tamp that
down. And so the role of, well, someone like Barry Weiss, who was sort of an ordinary
a newspaper reporter and turn out to have a personality too big to be contained by newspapers.
And now is back running CBS News and an extraordinary turnaround or guys like Ezra Klein,
who, you know, his podcast is normally sort of reported, but with an attitude and a perspective,
but he's also turned into a champion of a certain brand of democratic politics.
It's very uneasy for traditional newspaper managers to know what to do with
people like that. I mean, I remember I launched a blog at McLean's in 2003 and they didn't know what
the hell to do about this guy on the staff at a Rogers magazine who had a blog before Rogers
had a blogging policy. Those are the kinds of dilemmas that open up when windows, when the
readers windows on a news organization start to multiply. Again, Nagorny does a hell of a job of showing
us how we got to this point, but then he stops before we get to a consideration of what this
point is and means.
Paul, thank you.
Thank you.
We're taking a short break now, but coming up,
what connects the war in Ukraine, 2025, and endangered snails.
Bookends, Matea Roach explains.
I'm a bit of a spontaneous traveler, and I don't always know where I'm going to
or how long I'm going to be there, and that's where Aero Lo comes in.
An e-sim from Aerolo allows me to get internet coverage, whether I need it for a specific
country, an entire region, or globally.
It's easy to set up and I can top up as I go without having to swap out SIM cards.
It's the perfect way for me to stay connected.
Just download the Aeroa app, pick your destination E-Sim, including plan length and data
amount, install, and you're connected the moment you land.
No surprise roaming fees, no airport kiosks, or sketchy public Wi-Fi.
Instead, just pay for the data you need.
Stream your playlist, scroll, text, navigate, and video call home all without watching your phone bill explode.
Plus, AeroLo works in over 200 destinations and is trusted by over 20 million travelers.
So if you have an international trip, download the Aero app or visit Aero.com.
That's A-I-R-A-L-O.com and use the code ROMSmart for 15% off your first ESIM.
Terms apply.
Look, it's hard being the pop culture friend.
You're the one who knows exactly what new show is the most watched show on Netflix right now
or you're on top of the film festival calendar.
Whether you are that friend or you desperately need a friend like that,
allow commotion to enter your group chat.
It's a podcast hosted by me, Alameen Abdul-Mahmood,
where I talk to people about the arts and entertainment stories that you need to know,
and we share all the recommendations of what you should be reading or watching or listening to.
Find commotion wherever you get your podcasts.
All right.
Now, Matea Roach, who was a guest on our election night live stream, a mega-winning Jeopardy Champ, and also co-hosts CBC Bookends.
Matea, hey, thanks so much for doing this.
Hey, thanks for having me on.
Always good to talk to you.
So when people think about books that explain a year news, they often probably are expecting nonfiction, right?
History, politics, journalism.
Why Endling, a novel?
Why did it feel like a better lens for 2025?
So I don't want to say that this is definitive, but I think for me, I was thinking back on what did I personally read. And because of the show that I host bookends is a show where I talk to authors about their work, we do get on sometimes memoirists and people that are working in nonfiction, but largely I'm reading a lot of literary fiction. And so that's the lens that I have available to me to kind of understand what's going on in the world. I mean, literary fiction often deals with very real political problems. And Endling specifically is a non-
novel that is set in Ukraine. It starts before the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022,
but that event really breaks the whole novel open. And Ukraine is an, like, that's a story
that's been so in the news, the entirety of 2025. And so I think just like that alone makes
it very topical. But specifically why I think Endling explains 2025 for me is like there's a
moment of rupture in the novel where we think we're getting one.
story, which is a story about romance tour companies, kind of arranged marriages, a story about
snail conservation that's very interesting. There's a lot of weird stuff going on. And then all
of a sudden this event occurs that completely blows the whole narrative open. There's now a war
on the go. The characters in the novel have to figure out how they are going to contend with
this shift in their circumstances. But also, like, the reason why that happens in the novel is that
Maria Reva, the author, when she was writing this book, she was writing a book about Ukraine and then all of a sudden there was a war. And she had to contend with what does it mean to be a writer during a time of war as a Ukrainian Canadian? Do I have a responsibility to speak about this? How can I speak about events that are live and ongoing?
That's so interesting. Yeah. For me, like, I don't know if you feel this way at all, Jamie.
me, working in news, I feel sometimes a bit out of loss of how to react to certain events
that feel just so kind of extreme and like, sometimes goofy, sometimes horrifying.
I don't know what to say always. And I think sometimes like, you know, the responsibility to speak,
what can I say? How do I even react to say something like, I don't know, the Charlie Kirk
assassination? Do I laugh? Do I cry? Do I go on as I was before? Like all of these kinds of
questions I think kind of get addressed through the form of Endling as a novel. And that's why for me
it really sums up 2025. Well, just tell me more about what it, well, did it teach you something
on how to navigate those things or just let you sit with those thoughts?
that you're having? I don't know that it's so much taught me anything. Like I think when I hear the
idea of like a novel teaching you something, it sounds very didactic, right? It's almost like self-help
book. Like we expect that we maybe read something and we go away. We've learned a lesson. We have
takeaways, right? I don't know that I necessarily read to have takeaways. I read to have maybe
new frameworks. I think I found it very validating in a way to read a book written by an author
who so clearly was like contending with these questions of like how do I write, how do I think
in these very chaotic times, right? I think for me like what it really brought me back to was like
thinking about when I was doing more news reporting when I was reporting on Palestine, when I was
reporting on rising anti-Semitism in Canada, for instance, like, but then also contending
with, like, things that were going on in my personal life, like, how do those things kind of
existed at the same time? Can I feel personal grief while there are also, like, really big
things going on in the world? I think it was just nice to read a novel that was engaged
kind of in the same space of, I'm a writer, I'm creating art, and I'm having to balance the fact
that there are these stories that are going on
that are personal to me, but also much bigger than me.
Mm-hmm.
My understanding, and I haven't read this book yet,
but it is actually on my list of books to read over the holidays,
that the novel, like, just as for like a concrete example here,
uses humor or like absurdity to reflect the way war is processed and consumed
and even anesthetize in 2025.
And I just, like, how does it do that?
Yeah, so that's absolutely it, right? I think, I mean, it uses humor. So if I can use an example from kind of the middle point of the book, right? The point at which the war breaks out, we see the novel take a bit of a metafictional approach, where we see these kind of fake emails between the author Maria Reva and her publisher, kind of saying, oh, but, you know, can you write an article but maybe have it be sadder? Can you lean in to the
drama a little bit more. And it's a sort of satirical take on this expectation maybe that we have
of journalists writing about a specific thing to tell one particular narrative. I think just also
the mere premise of the novel that, again, this is a novel that's about war, but we're starting
out from a place if we're talking about arranged marriages and snail conservation. And we have
like a van that's driving through rural Ukraine and eventually goes into a war zone to save
this, you know, last snail of its kind. It's inherently absurd. And so it's hard to pin down
kind of one example. It's almost more that the confluence of these different plot elements
in and of itself feels absurd. That makes sense. Matea, you previously mentioned when we were
going back and forth about this, the book has sort of a meta-fiction.
quality, that sense that it's aware of itself as a story being told. And just can you tell me more
about that and like why you enjoyed that about it? Yeah, absolutely. So metafiction, generally
speaking, I would say it's a story that kind of acknowledges that it's a story. It's the theater
term would be kind of the breaking of the fourth wall, right? That there's an interaction a little
bit between the text and the real world. You're not just reading a story as it exists on the page.
The story is almost speaking back to you in a way.
And what I find really appealing about that, particularly in 2025, is I think that really, it taps into, I think, how we're consuming news, right, in 2025, right?
There's something that's very internet-y about metafiction to me, like even when the internet is not actually a plot device.
I often find myself feeling that I'm experiencing news events in a much more direct way that I was not present for because I'm experiencing things in real time on my phone.
I think a lot of people experience these days watching the news a sense of like both real presence because social media allows us to get like live up to the minute updates as things are going on, but also dislocation, like a sense of,
Detachment.
Yeah, detachment of I can see images of like buildings being bombed in Ukraine or in Gaza on my phone.
And I'm just bombarded with this.
And do I have a real human reaction to that anymore?
I think that like these ways of engaging in storytelling that kind of break apart conventional linear storytelling.
For me, I find them very of the moment, if that makes sense.
Yeah. No, it does. Big time. Matea, this was fabulous. Thank you. Thank you for this.
Thank you so much, Jamie.
Okay, that is all from us in 2025. But the feed is going to stay hot with some new episodes from other great CBC podcasts over the next few days.
So please do stay tuned. Have a really great new year, everyone. And talk to you in 20.
For me, 26.
For more CBC podcasts, go to cBC.ca slash podcasts.
