Better World With Design

Tom Lake Review: Why Ann Patchett’s Novel Feels Shallow (and Overpraised)

11 min · 15 apr 2026
aflevering Tom Lake Review: Why Ann Patchett’s Novel Feels Shallow (and Overpraised) artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode of Better World With Design, I give a clear-eyed review of Tom Lake by Ann Patchett. I break down why the novel reads to me as a polished but shallow comfort-read: how the framing device makes the listener feel managed, how withholding gets mistaken for depth, and how nostalgia and unmarked whiteness are treated as the default “universal” setting. We also look at why Peter Duke’s celebrity pull becomes the book’s narrative gravity, even as the story claims to critique that hunger. If you’re searching for a Tom Lake summary, themes, and an honest critique of the praise, this is for you.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Better World With Design community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

18 afleveringen

aflevering The Wax Child: The Witch Trial That Started With a Rumor (Olga Ravn) artwork

The Wax Child: The Witch Trial That Started With a Rumor (Olga Ravn)

In this episode of Better World With Design, we dive into Olga Ravn’s The Wax Child—a haunting historical novel narrated by a beeswax figure created in 1615 Denmark amid witch-trial paranoia. We unpack the book’s structure, themes, and “rumor-as-machinery” storytelling, including how grief, misogyny, and institutional power turn gossip into evidence. You’ll also hear a clear breakdown of the key characters (Costanza/Christenza, Anna, Usa, Eiler) and the church-and-court system that drives the accusations, plus how the Wax Child’s long, centuries-spanning perspective connects early modern persecution to modern systems of control. Perfect for readers who love literary fiction, feminist historical fiction, and books about witch trials, this conversation offers context, interpretation, and a guided way into the novel—whether you’re reading for the first time or returning for a deeper understanding.

19 apr 20262 h 12 min
aflevering The Better World with Design Book Review: If We Were Villains artwork

The Better World with Design Book Review: If We Were Villains

Join us as we dissect M.L. Rio's dark academia thriller If We Were Villains — not just as a story, but as a case study in craft, morality, and the seductive danger of performance. This isn't your typical book club. We're going deep: examining the Shakespearean architecture, the groupthink mechanics, and the character roles that turn seven theater students into a tragic machine. Hosted by a reader who believes every great book has an argument worth debating, this series breaks down the novel act by act — exploring how language becomes identity, how roles become cages, and how the pursuit of being extraordinary can cost you your humanity. Perfect for readers who want to understand not just what happens in a story, but why it feels the way it does, and what it means when you close the book. Spoiler-smart, structure-focused, and designed for the conversations you'll have long after the last page.

22 mrt 202656 min
aflevering Working with My 20-Year-Old Self: Birth of The Answer Engine artwork

Working with My 20-Year-Old Self: Birth of The Answer Engine

In this episode, I explore what happens when you let your younger self speak without interference—when you refuse to edit, improve, or apologize for who you were. Drawing from my 1996 handwritten journals, written as a nineteen-year-old immigrant in Florida, I discuss how those carefully crafted words became the lyrics for "Pop A Pill"—a track that bridges three decades without compromise. This isn't about nostalgia or revival. It's about genuine dialogue across time, made possible by one rule: use the archive exactly as you find it, or don't use it at all. Topics covered: * Why your younger self might have access to truths your older self has lost * The political dimension of refusing to disavow earlier versions of yourself * How handwritten journals from 1996 become forensically valuable in the age of AI * What it means to dance to the rhythm of who you used to be * The double-dog dare at the heart of working with unedited archival material Full lyrics to "Pop A Pill" included in the essay. Links: * Read the full essay: [Your website/Notion page URL] * Listen to "Pop A Pill": [Streaming link]

6 mrt 202617 min