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Noo's Nook

Podcast de Niamh Jones

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Cultura y ocio

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Hosted by Niamh Jones, Noo's Nook is a cosy exploration of the arts, with each week discussing what I have been reading and watching that has made me think. Tune in to hear about a new book, film and sometimes even a play. It is in the arts that we find empathy, the opportunity to learn about ourselves and the world. But, there is also comfort to be found. So, curl up with a cup of tea and listen to find your next obsession... Or just learn something new!

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9 episodios

episode Episode 3 - The Land of Mist and Magic, V. E. Schwab artwork

Episode 3 - The Land of Mist and Magic, V. E. Schwab

Join me this week as I enjoy being snowed in on the Orkney Islands, watching the flakes fall as I'm tucked into my gable room with my books. Listen as I discuss British folktale and take a deep dive into my most read author of 2025. This week I'll be considering The Land of Mist and Magic by Philip Parker and taking a deep dive on fantasy author V. E. Schwab. We'll discuss The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, A Darker Shade of Magic, This Savage Song and Vicious. References made Cardews - Oxford based tea and coffee retailers. Found in the Covered Market. Daunt Books - British independent bookshop chain.  Chloé Hayden - Autistic Australian YouTuber, actor and activist. Patience - British–Belgian detective drama based in York. Geek Girl - Book series by Holly Smale and Netflix series about a quirky young girl tackling the modelling industry. A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder - 2019 novel by Holly Jackson and Netflix series about a cold case that a school girl decides to crack. Stonehenge - Britain’s most famous stone circle, found on Salisbury Plain, alongside a range of other significant Neolithic sites. Marginalia - Doodles found in the margins of manuscripts. Typically strange animals and knights on snails. Lady Godiva - 11th century Anglo-Saxon noblewoman best known for riding naked through the streets of Coventry. Robin Hood - Outlaw hero best known for stealing from the rich to feed the poor. Depicted in Disney as a fox. Beowulf - Anglo-Saxon tale of a hero’s battle against supernatural monsters in a historic Germanic landscape. Hagiography - a saint’s life or biography of a saint, popular during the medieval period. Selkie - Seal people, who shed their skins to become humans on land. Sarah J Maas - American fantasy author best known for A Court of Thorns and Roses series and Throne of Glass series. Cassandra Clare - American fantasy author best known for The Mortal Instruments and the invention of Shadowhunters. J. R. R. Tolkien - Oxford professor and creator of Middle Earth. C. S. Lewis - Oxford academic and creator of Narnia. Philip Pullman - British author most famous for His Dark Materials, a series set in a world where souls manifest on the outside of people’s bodies. * Addie LaRue was actually published in 2020 *  Dorian Grey - Oscar Wilde’s most notorious character, who sold his soul to a painting for eternal youth. Titular character of The Picture of Dorian Grey. Blackwell’s Bookshop - Oxford’s most famous bookshop, now a chain and found in most academic cities. Byronic hero - Proud and brooding romantic heroes, inspired by Lord Byron. Think Rochester in Jane Eyre. The Name of the Wind - Fantasy novel by American author Patrick Rothfuss. First in the incomplete Kingkiller trilogy. Atonement - Award winning novel by Ian McEwan, published in 2001, set during the interwar period and Second World War. Voldemort - Nose-less villain of J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. Vecna - Nose-less villain of Netflix/Duffer Brothers’ Stranger Things TV series. DC - Comic book publishers and film producers, known for Superman and Batman stories. Metropolis - Fictional American city in the DC universe, home to Superman. Gotham - Corrupt fictional American city where crime bosses rule and Batman attempts to battle them. J. K. Rowling - Author of Harry Potter and the Cormoran Strike novels. Leigh Bardugo - American fantasy author best known for the Six of Crows duology. Bookworm - Australian film starring Elijah Wood and Nell Fisher about a bookworm child. Like, Comment, Follow :)

8 de ene de 2026 - 55 min
episode Episode 2 - Thursday Murder Club, Inferno, Sally Lockhart artwork

Episode 2 - Thursday Murder Club, Inferno, Sally Lockhart

Join me this week as I curl up with tea from my Bird and Blend advent calendar, enjoying the festive season as I wrap up my Goodreads Reading Challenge for the year. Listen as I discuss the art of storytelling, adventure into Hell, and contemplate opportunities for women in Victorian London. This week I'll be considering The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman, a fast paced bestseller based in a retirement village. Discovering a new perspective on sin as I explore Hell with Dante in Inferno. And rereading some old favourites with Philip Pullman; The Ruby in the Smoke and The Shadow in the North. Leaving the literary world behind, we will also be discussing THAT ending to the new Stranger Things episodes and a unique take on Shakespeare with Liz Duffy Adams' Born With Teeth. References Made Bird and Blend - Tea company known for its creative flavours. Land of Mist and Magic (Philip Parker) - Book of British myths and folklore published by the British Library. Hatchards - Piccadilly based bookshop founded in 1797. Oldest bookshop in the UK. Fortnum and Mason - Piccadilly based department store founded in 1707. Tourist trap. St David - Patron saint of Wales, often connected with leeks. Oxford and Cambridge Club - Members club on Pall Mall founded in 1821 for students and graduates of Oxford or Cambridge. World of Books - British online second hand book retailer. Hallmarked Man (Robert Galbraith) - Latest in crime series about detectives Strike and Ellacott set in 2010s London. Written by J. K. Rowling. Strange Houses - Japanese mystery bestseller written by YouTuber Uketsu. Virgil - Augustinian Latin poet most famous for The Aeneid.  The Odyssey - Ancient Greek epic poem by Homer about the ten year journey of Odysseus home to Ithica after the Trojan War. The Aeneid - Latin epic written by Virgil in the style of Homer about proto-Roman hero Aeneas. George R R Martin - American fantasy author most famous for The Game of Thrones. The Book of Dust - Fantasy series by Philip Pullman, set before and after His Dark Materials. His Dark Materials - Trilogy by Philip Pullman set in a world where souls are on the outside of people’s bodies. East India Company - British joint-stock company, running between 1600–1858, connected with colonialism.  Bram Stoker - Gothic author most famous for Dracula. Sally Lockhart series - BBC One series airing in 2006 and 2007. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban - Third Harry Potter book, written by J. K. Rowling. Testament of Youth - Memoir written by Vera Brittain about her time at Oxford and as a nurse in the First World War. Dungeons and Dragons - Fantasy Tabletop Role Play Game first published in 1974. Weta Workshop and Weta Digital - New Zealand based creative company working with film, television and video game companies. The Lord of the Rings - Written by J. R. R. Tolkien. Adapted for film by Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, directed by Peter Jackson. Avatar - James Cameron film about brutality towards indigenous communities. Set on another planet. The Adventures of Tintin - 2011 film based on the Tintin comic series by Hergé. Panto - British Christmas tradition. Comedic play typically starring a man in drag. Love Actually - British classic Christmas movie written and directed by Richard Curtis. Donut Drive - Finella Waddilove’s latest play. A two-hander set in Essex. Snatch - Early movie by British director Guy Ritchie. Starring Brad Pitt as a bare knuckle boxer. Guy Ritchie - British crime film director and screenwriter.  Henry VI - One of Shakespeare’s Histories. Supposedly co-written. Marlowe - Elizabethan playwright known for Doctor Faustus. Shakespeare - Elizabethan theatre’s most famous playwright. RSC - Royal Shakespeare Company. British theatre company based in Stratford-Upon-Avon, founded 1879. V. E. Schwab - American fantasy writer known for The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue. Vicious - Story about ExtraOrdinary people. Written by V. E. Schwab.

24 de dic de 2025 - 54 min
episode Episode 1 - The Quiet Music of Gently Falling Snow, The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, and Blood Queen artwork

Episode 1 - The Quiet Music of Gently Falling Snow, The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, and Blood Queen

Join me this week as I grapple with the summer weather in the city, casting my mind to rainier plains. Listen as I discuss the art of storytelling, adventure with an immortal being, and contemplate political succession played out upon blood soaked moorland. This week I'll be considering The Quiet Music of Gently Falling Snow by Jackie Morris, a collection of beautiful illustrations tied together through stories about music and storytelling. Discovering a new author as I delve into the world of V. E. Schwab's The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue. And learning about a new period in history with the help of Scotland's most infamous queen with Joanna Courtney's Blood Queen. References made Harry Potter (J. K. Rowling) - Book series about a boy wizard. A Discovery of Witches (Deborah Harkness) - Academic and witch Diana Bishop accidentally starts a war over a Bodleian Library manuscript. Twilight meets Oxford. The Name of the Wind (Patrick Rothfuss) - The story of Kvothe, innkeeper, travelling player, magician... Cornerstone of fantasy corpus, meaning the books are book enough to act as bricks. The Mercies (Kirran Millwood Hargrave) - Novel about storms and witch trials in 17th century Norway. Robin Hobb - Fantasy author whose tomes on dragons and magical worlds could help to build the keep that Rothfuss began. J. R. R. Tolkien - The father of fantasy, author of The Lord of the Rings, professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford... The Keys to Avalon (Steve Blake & Scott Lloyd) - Two Welsh writers take on and try to reframe the entire Arthurian corpus in Wales. Beowulf - Anglo-Saxon poem about a hero who takes on near impossible feats to save a Hall from marauding beasts. My mum - Because she gets a shout out she deserves to be in the reference list... @ofmoorandmountain The Age of Adaline - Film staring Blake Lively about a women who is caught in a freak storm and no longer ages. T. S. Elliot - Anglo-American interwar poet most famous for The Wasteland and The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. A Court of Thorns and Roses (Sarah J. Maas) - Series about a human girl who gets spirited into the fae world. Fairy smut. Stephen Fry - British actor, author, inspirational extraordinaire and no doubt one of the smartest people alive. Philip Pullman - Oxford based author know for controversial fantasy series His Dark Materials. Other works include the Sally Lockhart mysteries. Macbeth (Shakespeare) - Scottish lord is visited by three witches who tell him he'll be king and instead of leaving this up to fate he ensures that it happens in one of Shakespeare's bloodiest tragedies. Game of Thrones (George R. R. Martin) - In a fantasy land warring families vie for control, some with the help of dragons. Anyone who lives north of Hadrian's Wall is an icy supernatural beast... just saying. Bridgerton (Shondaland) - Open door Regency style romance series about alphabetically named siblings finding love. Riverdale (Netflix) - Series about a group of teens attempting to solve a murder which gets progressively more unhinged season by season. Downton - Sweeping 20th century drama about the upstairs and downstairs lives of the inhabitants of Downton Abbey. Poirot - Agatha Christie detective. Joan (ITV) - Mother turned diamond thief teams up with a questionable partner in order to fund the return of her daughter. The History Boys (Alan Bennett) - Play about a group of state school boys attempting to get into Oxbridge in an unconventional manner. American Gods (Neil Gaiman) - What if the old gods and the new were battling right now? Would Odin or the TV win? Norse Mythology (Neil Gaiman) - Retelling of the Norse myths. Alice in Wonderland - Book by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson or Lewis Carroll about a girl who falls down a rabbit hole. Sherlock (BBC) - Adaptation of Conan Doyle's serialised tales of the eccentric detective and his doctor sidekick in which we are in modern day London. The Winter King - Series based on Bernard Cornwell's books about King Arthur.

24 de jul de 2025 - 1 h 19 min
episode Episode 4 - And He Shall Appear, The King & Loveliest of trees, the cherry now artwork

Episode 4 - And He Shall Appear, The King & Loveliest of trees, the cherry now

Join me this week as I settle back into city life, enjoying a moment of peace before Oxford comes alive for the day. Listen as I discuss a Cambridge based story of growing up, adventure through a political battlefield, and contemplate the links between poetry and memory. This week I'll be considering And He Shall Appear by Kate van der Borgh, a tale of the trails and tribulations of attempting to capture the attention of the most popular boy in your Oxbridge college. Learning about a new period in history with the help of Timothée Chalamet's compelling performance in The King. And considering a poem which is referenced in one of my favourite plays. References made The Graces (Laure Eve) - A YA novel about a family who claim to be witches and the girl who is desperate to be one of them... perhaps she already is. Atonement (Ian McEwan) - A novel about the Tallis family told from the perspectives of the two daughters and the housekeeper's son. The best lesson in perspectives within fiction you will find. Evelyn Waugh - Oxford educated English writer best known for Brideshead Revisted, a novel set at Oxford. This is probably not where the trope in question originated from, but it's earliest example I can think of. Saltburn - 2023 thriller comedy directed and written by Emerald Fennell set partly in Oxford during 2006. Controversial for its content but accurate in its capturing of the essence of Oxford. A Discovery of Witches - First novel of the All Souls series written by Deborah Harkness about magical creatures at Oxford, adapted into television series staring Matthew Goode and Teresa Palmer. Dr Bishop, a witch and academic encounters a strange manuscript which captures the interest of vampire Professor Matthew Clairmont. Ninth House - First of (currently) two novels by Leigh Bardugo set at Yale, where Alex Stern is one of a number of students responsible for monitoring the antics of a number of occult societies. Well worth a read! Henry V & VI Part 1 & 2 - Three of Shakespeare's Histories. Testament of Youth - Memoir by Vera Brittain about her life from childhood, through Oxford and the experiences of nursing during the First World War. A beautiful and moving story about love and loss and even more loss. Wilfred Owen - British First World War poet. The Professor and the Madman - 2019 film starring Mel Gibson and Sean Penn about the making of the Oxford English Dictionary. A good insight into quite how laborious a process it was. Narnia - Fictional world created by Oxford academic C. S. Lewis in book series The Chronicles of Narnia. Twilight - Romance book series by Stephanie Meyer about Bella Swan and her vampire boyfriend Edward Cullen. Addictive writing that still remains one of the most read series and the most hated. Cedric Diggory - Character from the Harry Potter series, specifically the books Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and the film Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Water for Elephants - 2011 film staring Reese Witherspoon and Robert Patterson based on 2006 novel by Sara Gruen. Set at a circus during the Great Depression. Y Gododdin - Collection of 6th century elegy poems by Welsh court poet Aneirin. The History Boys - Play by Alan Bennett about a group of History students aiming for Oxbridge against all odds. Full of clever lines and literary references. Wind in the Willows - Book by Kenneth Grahame about Mr Mole and his friends. Beloved British childhood classic. King Lear - Tragic Shakespeare play loosely based on the mythological Leir of Britain in which the king attempts to divide his kingdom between his three daughters with tragic repercussions. Brief Encounter - 1945 film written by Noel Coward and based on the one act play Still Life. The story of a jaded housewife who begins a relationship with a chance encounter. The Secret History - Cult academic favourite written by Donna Tartt. If We Were Villains - Dark academia novel by M. L. Rio.

6 de may de 2025 - 41 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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