Podcasts




Read and cry

Duration: 0:26:39

Does literature help develop empathy? Are we always ready to let the author bring us to tears? Are there win-win topics that are guaranteed to evoke pity in the reader? Grushnitsky and Pippi Longstocking, clerk Korotkov from "The Diaboliad" and Jude from "Little Life"


Language: Russian
Topics: LiteratureBooks

Tale of ballet shoes

Duration: 0:25:06

The host discusses the upcoming holiday season and reads a fairy tale she authored about ballet shoes. She mentions that the book will soon be published with illustrations by Anastasia Orlova. The show is about the atmosphere of anticipation and magic associated with the holiday season.


Language: Russian

Parfyonov, Feis, Shulman, Dolin, Solodnikov, Meshchaninova and the editors of Shelf about the best books of the year

Duration: 0:46:49

What did we read this year - from books written in Russian, and what remained in our memory? The editors of the Shelf project discuss the main reader experiences with the heroes of 2018 - those whom we have read and watched in the past twelve months .


Dust in your eyes

Duration: 0:26:08

Varvara Babitskaya, Lev Oborin, Polina Ryzhova and Yuri Saprykin talk about Russian classical literature . They say Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky are boring, boring, it's a "dusty yesterday"; it's not for us and not about today? Is it possible to make interesting old books that are boring?


Hello friend!

Duration: 0:40:07

"Polka" talks about what images #children's reading took in Russia and the world . The next episode of the Shelves podcast is dedicated to answering your questions . Ask us about what you would like to know and write in any convenient way .


Book results of the year

Duration: 1:19:10

On the eve of the New Year, the editors of "Shelf" gathered in the Moscow club "Dom 16" to discuss book results and trends in 2021 . Autofiction and poetry, censorship and the return of the historical novel, publishing projects and the boom of non-fiction about nature .


Intimate Man

Duration: 0:31:56

To the 120th anniversary of Andrei Platonov, Polk editors Varvara Babitskaya, Lev Oborin, Polina Ryzhova and Yuri Saprykin are discussing . Why do his books look more modern today than ever? Is he a Soviet writer? And what is the Soviet project for him? What is the peculiarity and strangeness of his language?