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    <title>KBC - Kirti’s Book Club</title>
    <description>KBC (Kirti’s Book Club) is where amazing books meet brilliant readers. Hosted by Kirti Mutatkar, each episode features intimate, genre-spanning conversations that explore why certain stories stay with us and cause a shift in our thought process. 

With the KBC Book Radar—our signature rating system for Brain Fizz Factor and Bookshelf Worthy—plus virtual book circles where listeners join in post-episode discussions, KBC builds a vibrant reading community.

This is Season 1. Season 2 launches November 2025. Subscribe now and grab your spot in the next circle.</description>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:57:02 +0000</pubDate>
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    <itunes:summary>KBC (Kirti’s Book Club) is where amazing books meet brilliant readers. Hosted by Kirti Mutatkar, each episode features intimate, genre-spanning conversations that explore why certain stories stay with us and cause a shift in our thought process. 

With the KBC Book Radar—our signature rating system for Brain Fizz Factor and Bookshelf Worthy—plus virtual book circles where listeners join in post-episode discussions, KBC builds a vibrant reading community.

This is Season 1. Season 2 launches November 2025. Subscribe now and grab your spot in the next circle.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:author>Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:name>Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:name>
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      <title>Anagha Bapat &amp; Kirti discuss Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode Summary: "Demon Copperhead" by Barbara Kingsolver</strong></p><p>Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Anagha Bapat to discuss Barbara Kingsolver's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "Demon Copperhead," a modern retelling of Charles Dickens' "David Copperfield" set in Appalachia.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Demon Copperhead is born into poverty in rural Virginia to a drug-addicted mother. The novel follows his journey from a difficult birth found on a kitchen floor, through multiple foster homes, and into the grip of the opioid crisis. Despite his intelligence and artistic talent, Demon faces systemic failures at every turn—from tobacco farms where he's exploited for labor, to a football career cut short by injury and prescription drug addiction.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>The Broken Foster Care System</strong> - Anagha discusses how the novel exposes the challenges of foster care, particularly for older children. Demon cycles through multiple homes, some exploitative, knowing caseworkers are too overwhelmed to help. The system that's supposed to protect him often fails him most.</p><p><strong>The Opioid Crisis</strong> - When Demon finally finds stability with Coach and becomes a football star, an injury leads to prescribed opioids. The book shows how addiction isn't a moral failing but a systemic problem—pharmaceutical companies, doctors, coaches, and society all play a role in perpetuating the crisis.</p><p><strong>Timeless Poverty</strong> - Despite being set 200 years apart, the themes from "David Copperfield" remain unchanged. Kirti notes how the same societal problems—poverty, child exploitation, class barriers—persist from Victorian England to modern Appalachia.</p><p><strong>Art as Survival</strong> - Demon's talent for drawing superheroes becomes crucial. Anagha explains how art gives him power when he has none, allowing him to escape his reality and give himself and his friends the strength they lack in real life.</p><p><strong>Resilience and Hope</strong> - Despite overwhelming trauma, Demon's simple dream of seeing the ocean represents hope. His resourcefulness in finding his grandmother and ultimately achieving his dream provides a hopeful ending without minimizing the darkness of his journey.</p><p><strong>The Narrator's Voice</strong> - Both readers loved Kingsolver's choice to have Demon narrate his own story. His voice—"this is how I remember it" as a young kid—creates an intimate conversation with readers. He foreshadows events, then pulls back, making the reading experience feel personal and immediate.</p><p><strong>Connections:</strong> The conversation draws parallels to:</p><ul><li>JD Vance's "Hillbilly Elegy" (similar Appalachian setting and themes)</li><li>"Dopesick" TV series and "Empire of Pain" book (understanding the opioid crisis)</li><li>Denzel Washington film exploring foster care trauma and fear of losing stability</li></ul><p><strong>KBC Book Radar Ratings:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5</strong> - A book that stays with you and keeps coming back. Anagha has recommended it to multiple friends and family, something she rarely does</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: 4.3-4.5/5</strong> - A keeper that both readers own and treasure. "I'll lend it, but I need it back"</li></ul><p><strong>Notable Discussion:</strong> The audiobook narrator uses a Southern accent that some readers found difficult, affecting their experience. This sparked discussion about how we imagine characters' voices and appearances while reading, and how adaptations can clash with our mental images.</p><p><strong>Should it be a movie?</strong> Both agreed probably not. The unique power lies in Demon's intimate, conversational narration—"I'm just a little kid, this is how I remember it"—which would be difficult to capture on screen without losing what makes the book special.</p><p>A powerful, emotional read that exposes systemic failures while celebrating human resilience and the simple dreams that keep us going.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Anagha Bapat<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:57:02 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Kirt Mutatkar, Anagha Bapat, Aniket Mutatkar)</author>
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      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode Summary: "Demon Copperhead" by Barbara Kingsolver</strong></p><p>Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Anagha Bapat to discuss Barbara Kingsolver's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "Demon Copperhead," a modern retelling of Charles Dickens' "David Copperfield" set in Appalachia.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Demon Copperhead is born into poverty in rural Virginia to a drug-addicted mother. The novel follows his journey from a difficult birth found on a kitchen floor, through multiple foster homes, and into the grip of the opioid crisis. Despite his intelligence and artistic talent, Demon faces systemic failures at every turn—from tobacco farms where he's exploited for labor, to a football career cut short by injury and prescription drug addiction.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>The Broken Foster Care System</strong> - Anagha discusses how the novel exposes the challenges of foster care, particularly for older children. Demon cycles through multiple homes, some exploitative, knowing caseworkers are too overwhelmed to help. The system that's supposed to protect him often fails him most.</p><p><strong>The Opioid Crisis</strong> - When Demon finally finds stability with Coach and becomes a football star, an injury leads to prescribed opioids. The book shows how addiction isn't a moral failing but a systemic problem—pharmaceutical companies, doctors, coaches, and society all play a role in perpetuating the crisis.</p><p><strong>Timeless Poverty</strong> - Despite being set 200 years apart, the themes from "David Copperfield" remain unchanged. Kirti notes how the same societal problems—poverty, child exploitation, class barriers—persist from Victorian England to modern Appalachia.</p><p><strong>Art as Survival</strong> - Demon's talent for drawing superheroes becomes crucial. Anagha explains how art gives him power when he has none, allowing him to escape his reality and give himself and his friends the strength they lack in real life.</p><p><strong>Resilience and Hope</strong> - Despite overwhelming trauma, Demon's simple dream of seeing the ocean represents hope. His resourcefulness in finding his grandmother and ultimately achieving his dream provides a hopeful ending without minimizing the darkness of his journey.</p><p><strong>The Narrator's Voice</strong> - Both readers loved Kingsolver's choice to have Demon narrate his own story. His voice—"this is how I remember it" as a young kid—creates an intimate conversation with readers. He foreshadows events, then pulls back, making the reading experience feel personal and immediate.</p><p><strong>Connections:</strong> The conversation draws parallels to:</p><ul><li>JD Vance's "Hillbilly Elegy" (similar Appalachian setting and themes)</li><li>"Dopesick" TV series and "Empire of Pain" book (understanding the opioid crisis)</li><li>Denzel Washington film exploring foster care trauma and fear of losing stability</li></ul><p><strong>KBC Book Radar Ratings:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5</strong> - A book that stays with you and keeps coming back. Anagha has recommended it to multiple friends and family, something she rarely does</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: 4.3-4.5/5</strong> - A keeper that both readers own and treasure. "I'll lend it, but I need it back"</li></ul><p><strong>Notable Discussion:</strong> The audiobook narrator uses a Southern accent that some readers found difficult, affecting their experience. This sparked discussion about how we imagine characters' voices and appearances while reading, and how adaptations can clash with our mental images.</p><p><strong>Should it be a movie?</strong> Both agreed probably not. The unique power lies in Demon's intimate, conversational narration—"I'm just a little kid, this is how I remember it"—which would be difficult to capture on screen without losing what makes the book special.</p><p>A powerful, emotional read that exposes systemic failures while celebrating human resilience and the simple dreams that keep us going.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Anagha Bapat<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Anagha Bapat &amp; Kirti discuss Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kirt Mutatkar, Anagha Bapat, Aniket Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/71120bab-a5de-44f9-aaa9-9f7ba8f10341/3000x3000/image.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:31</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kirti Mutatkar and Anagha Bapat discuss Barbara Kingsolver&apos;s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, a modern retelling of &quot;David Copperfield&quot; set in Appalachia.

The Story:
Demon Copperhead is born into poverty in rural Virginia to a drug-addicted mother. The novel follows his journey through multiple foster homes and into the opioid crisis. Despite his intelligence and artistic talent, Demon faces systemic failures at every turn—from exploitative tobacco farms to a football career cut short by injury and prescription drug addiction.
Key Themes:

Broken Foster Care - Older children trapped in an overwhelmed system with caseworkers too stretched to help
Opioid Crisis - How prescription drugs, not moral failing, create addiction when doctors, coaches, and systems all push pills
Timeless Poverty - Dickens&apos; 200-year-old themes remain unchanged from Victorian England to modern Appalachia
Art as Survival - Demon&apos;s superhero drawings give him power and escape when he has none
Simple Dreams - His goal to see the ocean represents hope despite overwhelming trauma

The Narrator&apos;s Voice:
Kingsolver&apos;s choice to have Demon tell his own story—&quot;this is how I remember it&quot; as a young kid—creates intimate, conversational reading. He foreshadows, then pulls back, making readers feel he&apos;s talking directly to them.
Connections:
Parallels to JD Vance&apos;s &quot;Hillbilly Elegy,&quot; &quot;Dopesick&quot; series, and &quot;Empire of Pain&quot; book exploring the opioid crisis and Appalachian struggles.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5 - Stays with you long after reading; Anagha has recommended it to multiple people
Bookshelf Worthy: 4.3-4.5/5 - &quot;I&apos;ll lend it, but I need it back&quot;

Notable: The audiobook&apos;s Southern accent divided readers. Both agreed the book probably shouldn&apos;t be a movie—Demon&apos;s intimate narration would lose its power on screen.
A powerful read exposing systemic failures while celebrating human resilience and the simple dreams that sustain us.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Anagha Bapat
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kirti Mutatkar and Anagha Bapat discuss Barbara Kingsolver&apos;s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, a modern retelling of &quot;David Copperfield&quot; set in Appalachia.

The Story:
Demon Copperhead is born into poverty in rural Virginia to a drug-addicted mother. The novel follows his journey through multiple foster homes and into the opioid crisis. Despite his intelligence and artistic talent, Demon faces systemic failures at every turn—from exploitative tobacco farms to a football career cut short by injury and prescription drug addiction.
Key Themes:

Broken Foster Care - Older children trapped in an overwhelmed system with caseworkers too stretched to help
Opioid Crisis - How prescription drugs, not moral failing, create addiction when doctors, coaches, and systems all push pills
Timeless Poverty - Dickens&apos; 200-year-old themes remain unchanged from Victorian England to modern Appalachia
Art as Survival - Demon&apos;s superhero drawings give him power and escape when he has none
Simple Dreams - His goal to see the ocean represents hope despite overwhelming trauma

The Narrator&apos;s Voice:
Kingsolver&apos;s choice to have Demon tell his own story—&quot;this is how I remember it&quot; as a young kid—creates intimate, conversational reading. He foreshadows, then pulls back, making readers feel he&apos;s talking directly to them.
Connections:
Parallels to JD Vance&apos;s &quot;Hillbilly Elegy,&quot; &quot;Dopesick&quot; series, and &quot;Empire of Pain&quot; book exploring the opioid crisis and Appalachian struggles.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5 - Stays with you long after reading; Anagha has recommended it to multiple people
Bookshelf Worthy: 4.3-4.5/5 - &quot;I&apos;ll lend it, but I need it back&quot;

Notable: The audiobook&apos;s Southern accent divided readers. Both agreed the book probably shouldn&apos;t be a movie—Demon&apos;s intimate narration would lose its power on screen.
A powerful read exposing systemic failures while celebrating human resilience and the simple dreams that sustain us.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Anagha Bapat
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau
</itunes:subtitle>
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      <itunes:episode>12</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Lynne Yadlin &amp; Kirti discuss Somewhere Beyond the Sea by T J Klune</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In this Season 2 episode, Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Lynne Yadlin to discuss TJ Klune's "Somewhere Beyond the Sea," the sequel to "The House in the Cerulean Sea."</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Arthur Parnassus runs an orphanage on Marsyas Island for magical youth—children with special abilities marginalized by society. Arthur, himself a phoenix and former abused orphan, creates a safe haven where these children can be themselves, despite pressure from the Department in Charge of Magical Youth (DICOMY) to control and isolate them.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>Acceptance and Difference</strong> - The book tackles society's treatment of those who are different, with "See something, say something" messaging everywhere. The magical youth—including Chauncey (a green being with tentacles), a garden gnome, and a Sprite—are expected to conform rather than celebrated for who they are.</p><p><strong>Unconditional Love</strong> - Arthur and his partner Linus parent with two key principles: allowing children to be exactly who they are and loving them unconditionally. Unlike traditional parenting that molds children toward societal expectations, Arthur encourages authenticity.</p><p><strong>Community and Hope</strong> - The most powerful moment comes when the nearby town, initially hostile, eventually sides with the magical youth against government officials. This community solidarity offers profound hope about human goodness and collective resistance.</p><p><strong>Representation</strong> - TJ Klune intentionally includes diverse relationships—gay couples, mixed-culture families, different identities. As a queer author who felt the absence of representation growing up, he deliberately created a world where everyone belongs.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar Ratings:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4/5</strong> - Despite simple prose, the book tackles weighty themes in deeply engaging ways</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: 4/5</strong> - A keeper to share with others; Lynne has read it twice and all 4 of her daughters loved it</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read This:</strong> Beyond creative fantasy and humor, the book offers refreshment for the soul. It provides hope that communities can unite, love can triumph, and we can create spaces where everyone belongs exactly as they are.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong></p><p>Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Lynne Yadlin<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:56:53 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Lynne Yadlin, Kirti Mutatkar, Aniket Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/lynne-yadlin-and-kirti-discuss-somewhere-beyond-the-sea-by-t-j-klune-Napp0LWl</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/23c8781c-9548-4176-b947-a5e001402449/kbc-20main-20.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this Season 2 episode, Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Lynne Yadlin to discuss TJ Klune's "Somewhere Beyond the Sea," the sequel to "The House in the Cerulean Sea."</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Arthur Parnassus runs an orphanage on Marsyas Island for magical youth—children with special abilities marginalized by society. Arthur, himself a phoenix and former abused orphan, creates a safe haven where these children can be themselves, despite pressure from the Department in Charge of Magical Youth (DICOMY) to control and isolate them.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>Acceptance and Difference</strong> - The book tackles society's treatment of those who are different, with "See something, say something" messaging everywhere. The magical youth—including Chauncey (a green being with tentacles), a garden gnome, and a Sprite—are expected to conform rather than celebrated for who they are.</p><p><strong>Unconditional Love</strong> - Arthur and his partner Linus parent with two key principles: allowing children to be exactly who they are and loving them unconditionally. Unlike traditional parenting that molds children toward societal expectations, Arthur encourages authenticity.</p><p><strong>Community and Hope</strong> - The most powerful moment comes when the nearby town, initially hostile, eventually sides with the magical youth against government officials. This community solidarity offers profound hope about human goodness and collective resistance.</p><p><strong>Representation</strong> - TJ Klune intentionally includes diverse relationships—gay couples, mixed-culture families, different identities. As a queer author who felt the absence of representation growing up, he deliberately created a world where everyone belongs.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar Ratings:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4/5</strong> - Despite simple prose, the book tackles weighty themes in deeply engaging ways</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: 4/5</strong> - A keeper to share with others; Lynne has read it twice and all 4 of her daughters loved it</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read This:</strong> Beyond creative fantasy and humor, the book offers refreshment for the soul. It provides hope that communities can unite, love can triumph, and we can create spaces where everyone belongs exactly as they are.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong></p><p>Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Lynne Yadlin<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Lynne Yadlin &amp; Kirti discuss Somewhere Beyond the Sea by T J Klune</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Lynne Yadlin, Kirti Mutatkar, Aniket Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/4a2b515c-298b-4d80-9cc6-d19f05b56ef5/3000x3000/image.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:21:00</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kirti Mutatkar and Lynne Yadlin discuss TJ Klune&apos;s &quot;Somewhere Beyond the Sea,&quot; the sequel to &quot;The House in the Cerulean Sea.&quot;

The Story:
Arthur Parnassus, a phoenix and former orphan, runs an island orphanage for magical youth who are marginalized by society. Despite government pressure to control these children, Arthur creates a safe haven where they can be themselves.
Key Themes:

Acceptance - Society demands conformity with &quot;See something, say something&quot; messaging, but the book celebrates being different
Unconditional Love - Arthur and Linus parent by allowing children to be exactly who they are
Community Hope - The nearby town transforms from hostile to protective, literally standing between the children and government officials
Representation - Diverse relationships and identities are centered throughout

KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4/5 - Simple prose with weighty themes
Bookshelf Worthy: 4/5 - A keeper that resonates across ages

A hopeful, humorous fantasy that reminds us communities can unite, love can triumph, and everyone deserves to belong exactly as they are.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Lynne Yadlin
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kirti Mutatkar and Lynne Yadlin discuss TJ Klune&apos;s &quot;Somewhere Beyond the Sea,&quot; the sequel to &quot;The House in the Cerulean Sea.&quot;

The Story:
Arthur Parnassus, a phoenix and former orphan, runs an island orphanage for magical youth who are marginalized by society. Despite government pressure to control these children, Arthur creates a safe haven where they can be themselves.
Key Themes:

Acceptance - Society demands conformity with &quot;See something, say something&quot; messaging, but the book celebrates being different
Unconditional Love - Arthur and Linus parent by allowing children to be exactly who they are
Community Hope - The nearby town transforms from hostile to protective, literally standing between the children and government officials
Representation - Diverse relationships and identities are centered throughout

KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4/5 - Simple prose with weighty themes
Bookshelf Worthy: 4/5 - A keeper that resonates across ages

A hopeful, humorous fantasy that reminds us communities can unite, love can triumph, and everyone deserves to belong exactly as they are.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Lynne Yadlin
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Smitha Rau &amp; Kirti discuss Ghachar Ghochar by Vivek Shanbhag</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Ghachar Ghochar  by Vivek Shanbhag</strong></p><p>Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Smitha Rau to discuss Vivek Shanbhag's slim but powerful novella about a family transformed by sudden wealth.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> A modest Indian family lives within their means—the father is a salesman, they eat out weekly with set dishes, and if the kids want something extra, dad suddenly won't have coffee. They're in tune with each other's needs. But when money arrives, everything changes. This 70-130 page novella, originally written in Kannada and translated to English, follows the family's moral unraveling through the eyes of an unnamed narrator.</p><p><strong>The Title:</strong> "Ghachar Ghochar" is a made-up family word meaning tangled up, mixed up, all tied up—not clean or clear. Most families have these secret words. The title perfectly captures the story: everything becomes tangled, including the ending, which leaves readers to untangle meaning themselves.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>Money's Corrupting Power</strong> - "It's not we who control money, it's the money that controls us. When there's only a little, it behaves meekly. When it grows, it becomes brash and has its way with us." The sister changes most dramatically—gaining "clout," treating people poorly, even leaving her decent husband and returning with goons to steal jewelry from her in-laws.</p><p><strong>The Suddenly Rich</strong> - The author writes that "the suddenly rich start holding an umbrella in the moonlight." Is it showing off or newfound sensitivity? Smitha notes only about a third of lottery winners actually go broke, but many do put on airs. Newly wealthy want the world to know—what's the point of being rich if nobody knows?</p><p><strong>Narrator as Unreliable Participant</strong> - The narrator tells the story as if he did everything right, but readers catch hints of his complicity. He's uncomfortable—his wife judges him for not working, taking money from the family business—but he doesn't change. His gift-giving on their honeymoon falls flat when his wife realizes it's not his money. Some readers dislike him, but if an author makes you dislike a character that deeply, they've done their job.</p><p><strong>Clues and Rereading</strong> - The first read is good; subsequent reads reveal layers. Smitha read it 3 times and found more each time. The author plants clues throughout that only make sense after the ending. Because nothing is explicitly resolved, readers question everything: Why the ants? Why that incident? Where are the clues?</p><p><strong>The Ant Metaphor</strong> - Early on, the mother wages war on kitchen ants, tracking them with a flashlight at night. She eliminates anything threatening family enjoyment. Later, the narrator squishes ants; his wife is horrified—"What did they do to you?" This foreshadows how the family treats bigger "problems"—possibly a dog, possibly people. Nothing is explicit, but the parallel is chilling.</p><p><strong>Vincent the Waiter</strong> - Like Jeeves from P.G. Wodehouse, Vincent appears subservient but drops wisdom: "One story, many sides" when customers fight. At the end: "Sir, you want to wash your hand? There's blood on it." Is it literal or figurative? Readers don't know. His perfect timing and pithy comments punctuate the moral decay.</p><p><strong>No Clean Ending</strong> - Some readers want closure, neat bows. This book is decidedly "ghochar"—tangled up with no resolution. Did something terrible happen? Maybe. Accidents happen, right? People die in accidents. But just saying that makes you uncomfortable. The ambiguity keeps the book with you.</p><p><strong>Gender Dynamics</strong> - Four female characters: the girlfriend and wife are feminist, voicing concerns about women's rights. The mother and sister don't engage in those conversations. But are they not feminist, or are they survivalists? They cater to the breadwinner—not because he's male, but because he brings money. The sister can't handle her decent husband's modest life and returns to wealth, even using violence to get what she wants.</p><p><strong>Relatable Details</strong> - Sisters making excuses to avoid chores, hiding in bathrooms. Ant infestations where dishes sit in plates of water. Joint family dynamics. The breadwinner's schedule dictating the entire household. Business families saw themselves completely: "Oh my God, this is us!"</p><p><strong>Cultural Accessibility</strong> - Non-Indian readers can appreciate family dynamics, the corrupting influence of wealth, and moral ambiguity. Indian readers recognize specific cultural touchstones. The translation from Kannada works remarkably well—nuances come through despite language change.</p><p><strong>Translation Quality</strong> - Smitha, a Kannada speaker, didn't initially realize it was translated—high praise for translator Srinath Perur. Some nuances may be lost, but the author's skill shines through. The audiobook, narrated by an Indian voice (though not Kannada), is also excellent.</p><p><strong>Small Details, Big Impact</strong> - The author says things without saying them. Second and third reads reveal how carefully crafted each moment is. When you think the story goes one direction—whoops—it pivots. This skill keeps readers engaged and thinking long after finishing.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4-4.5 out of 5</strong> - Deceptively simple but deeply layered. Stays with you. Makes you question everything</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: High (Smitha read it 3 times)</strong> - Short enough to reread, rich enough to deserve it. Easily accessible through libraries and audiobook</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> Only 70-130 pages—can finish in 1 session. Easy, relatable, readable. But don't mistake simplicity for shallowness. This book rewards rereading and discussion. Perfect for roundtables even without reading—rich themes about wealth, morality, family, complicity, and how we become what we once despised.</p><p><strong>Discussion Gold:</strong> What happened at the end? Is the narrator sympathetic? How does money change people? What's the blood on his hands? Why the ants? Indian vs. non-Indian perspectives? Could this be a movie? (Yes, both agree—it should be.)</p><p>A masterclass in saying everything by saying nothing explicitly.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Smitha Rau<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:56:42 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Smitha Rau, Kirti Mutatkar, Aniket Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/smitha-rau-kirti-ghachar-ghochar-by-vivek-shanbhag-l3kwsjzK</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/23c8781c-9548-4176-b947-a5e001402449/kbc-20main-20.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Ghachar Ghochar  by Vivek Shanbhag</strong></p><p>Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Smitha Rau to discuss Vivek Shanbhag's slim but powerful novella about a family transformed by sudden wealth.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> A modest Indian family lives within their means—the father is a salesman, they eat out weekly with set dishes, and if the kids want something extra, dad suddenly won't have coffee. They're in tune with each other's needs. But when money arrives, everything changes. This 70-130 page novella, originally written in Kannada and translated to English, follows the family's moral unraveling through the eyes of an unnamed narrator.</p><p><strong>The Title:</strong> "Ghachar Ghochar" is a made-up family word meaning tangled up, mixed up, all tied up—not clean or clear. Most families have these secret words. The title perfectly captures the story: everything becomes tangled, including the ending, which leaves readers to untangle meaning themselves.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>Money's Corrupting Power</strong> - "It's not we who control money, it's the money that controls us. When there's only a little, it behaves meekly. When it grows, it becomes brash and has its way with us." The sister changes most dramatically—gaining "clout," treating people poorly, even leaving her decent husband and returning with goons to steal jewelry from her in-laws.</p><p><strong>The Suddenly Rich</strong> - The author writes that "the suddenly rich start holding an umbrella in the moonlight." Is it showing off or newfound sensitivity? Smitha notes only about a third of lottery winners actually go broke, but many do put on airs. Newly wealthy want the world to know—what's the point of being rich if nobody knows?</p><p><strong>Narrator as Unreliable Participant</strong> - The narrator tells the story as if he did everything right, but readers catch hints of his complicity. He's uncomfortable—his wife judges him for not working, taking money from the family business—but he doesn't change. His gift-giving on their honeymoon falls flat when his wife realizes it's not his money. Some readers dislike him, but if an author makes you dislike a character that deeply, they've done their job.</p><p><strong>Clues and Rereading</strong> - The first read is good; subsequent reads reveal layers. Smitha read it 3 times and found more each time. The author plants clues throughout that only make sense after the ending. Because nothing is explicitly resolved, readers question everything: Why the ants? Why that incident? Where are the clues?</p><p><strong>The Ant Metaphor</strong> - Early on, the mother wages war on kitchen ants, tracking them with a flashlight at night. She eliminates anything threatening family enjoyment. Later, the narrator squishes ants; his wife is horrified—"What did they do to you?" This foreshadows how the family treats bigger "problems"—possibly a dog, possibly people. Nothing is explicit, but the parallel is chilling.</p><p><strong>Vincent the Waiter</strong> - Like Jeeves from P.G. Wodehouse, Vincent appears subservient but drops wisdom: "One story, many sides" when customers fight. At the end: "Sir, you want to wash your hand? There's blood on it." Is it literal or figurative? Readers don't know. His perfect timing and pithy comments punctuate the moral decay.</p><p><strong>No Clean Ending</strong> - Some readers want closure, neat bows. This book is decidedly "ghochar"—tangled up with no resolution. Did something terrible happen? Maybe. Accidents happen, right? People die in accidents. But just saying that makes you uncomfortable. The ambiguity keeps the book with you.</p><p><strong>Gender Dynamics</strong> - Four female characters: the girlfriend and wife are feminist, voicing concerns about women's rights. The mother and sister don't engage in those conversations. But are they not feminist, or are they survivalists? They cater to the breadwinner—not because he's male, but because he brings money. The sister can't handle her decent husband's modest life and returns to wealth, even using violence to get what she wants.</p><p><strong>Relatable Details</strong> - Sisters making excuses to avoid chores, hiding in bathrooms. Ant infestations where dishes sit in plates of water. Joint family dynamics. The breadwinner's schedule dictating the entire household. Business families saw themselves completely: "Oh my God, this is us!"</p><p><strong>Cultural Accessibility</strong> - Non-Indian readers can appreciate family dynamics, the corrupting influence of wealth, and moral ambiguity. Indian readers recognize specific cultural touchstones. The translation from Kannada works remarkably well—nuances come through despite language change.</p><p><strong>Translation Quality</strong> - Smitha, a Kannada speaker, didn't initially realize it was translated—high praise for translator Srinath Perur. Some nuances may be lost, but the author's skill shines through. The audiobook, narrated by an Indian voice (though not Kannada), is also excellent.</p><p><strong>Small Details, Big Impact</strong> - The author says things without saying them. Second and third reads reveal how carefully crafted each moment is. When you think the story goes one direction—whoops—it pivots. This skill keeps readers engaged and thinking long after finishing.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4-4.5 out of 5</strong> - Deceptively simple but deeply layered. Stays with you. Makes you question everything</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: High (Smitha read it 3 times)</strong> - Short enough to reread, rich enough to deserve it. Easily accessible through libraries and audiobook</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> Only 70-130 pages—can finish in 1 session. Easy, relatable, readable. But don't mistake simplicity for shallowness. This book rewards rereading and discussion. Perfect for roundtables even without reading—rich themes about wealth, morality, family, complicity, and how we become what we once despised.</p><p><strong>Discussion Gold:</strong> What happened at the end? Is the narrator sympathetic? How does money change people? What's the blood on his hands? Why the ants? Indian vs. non-Indian perspectives? Could this be a movie? (Yes, both agree—it should be.)</p><p>A masterclass in saying everything by saying nothing explicitly.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Smitha Rau<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Smitha Rau &amp; Kirti discuss Ghachar Ghochar by Vivek Shanbhag</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Smitha Rau, Kirti Mutatkar, Aniket Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/23dab513-5048-41ed-b5e3-3b801b817a4c/3000x3000/image.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:01</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kirti Mutatkar and Smitha Rau discuss Vivek Shanbhag&apos;s slim but powerful novella about a family transformed by sudden wealth.

The Story:
A modest Indian family lives within their means—the father is a salesman, they eat out weekly, and if the kids want something extra, dad suddenly won&apos;t have coffee. When money arrives, everything changes. This 70-130 page novella, originally written in Kannada, follows the family&apos;s moral unraveling through an unnamed narrator&apos;s eyes.
The Title:
&quot;Ghachar Ghochar&quot; is a made-up family word meaning tangled up—not clean or clear. The title captures everything: the story, relationships, and ambiguous ending all remain tangled.
Key Themes:
Money&apos;s Corrupting Power - &quot;It&apos;s not we who control money, it&apos;s the money that controls us. When there&apos;s only a little, it behaves meekly. When it grows, it becomes brash and has its way with us.&quot; The sister changes most—gaining &quot;clout,&quot; treating people poorly, leaving her decent husband, returning with goons to steal jewelry. &quot;The suddenly rich start holding an umbrella in the moonlight.&quot;
Narrator as Unreliable Participant - He tells the story as if he did everything right, but readers catch his complicity. He&apos;s uncomfortable—his wife judges him for not working—but he doesn&apos;t change. His honeymoon gifts fall flat when she realizes it&apos;s not his money.
The Ant Metaphor - The mother wages war on kitchen ants, eliminating anything threatening family enjoyment. Later, the narrator squishes ants; his wife is horrified. This foreshadows how the family treats bigger &quot;problems&quot;—possibly a dog, possibly people. Nothing is explicit.
No Clean Ending - The book is decidedly &quot;ghochar&quot;—tangled with no resolution. At the end, Vincent the waiter says: &quot;Sir, you want to wash your hand? There&apos;s blood on it.&quot; Literal or figurative? Did something terrible happen? &quot;Accidents happen, right?&quot; The ambiguity haunts.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4-4.5 out of 5 - Deceptively simple but deeply layered
Bookshelf Worthy: High - Smitha read it 3 times; short enough to reread, rich enough to deserve it

Why Read: Only 70-130 pages—can finish in one session. Easy, relatable, readable. But don&apos;t mistake simplicity for shallowness. Rewards rereading and discussion. Rich themes about wealth, morality, family, and complicity.
A masterclass in saying everything by saying nothing explicitly.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Smitha Rau
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kirti Mutatkar and Smitha Rau discuss Vivek Shanbhag&apos;s slim but powerful novella about a family transformed by sudden wealth.

The Story:
A modest Indian family lives within their means—the father is a salesman, they eat out weekly, and if the kids want something extra, dad suddenly won&apos;t have coffee. When money arrives, everything changes. This 70-130 page novella, originally written in Kannada, follows the family&apos;s moral unraveling through an unnamed narrator&apos;s eyes.
The Title:
&quot;Ghachar Ghochar&quot; is a made-up family word meaning tangled up—not clean or clear. The title captures everything: the story, relationships, and ambiguous ending all remain tangled.
Key Themes:
Money&apos;s Corrupting Power - &quot;It&apos;s not we who control money, it&apos;s the money that controls us. When there&apos;s only a little, it behaves meekly. When it grows, it becomes brash and has its way with us.&quot; The sister changes most—gaining &quot;clout,&quot; treating people poorly, leaving her decent husband, returning with goons to steal jewelry. &quot;The suddenly rich start holding an umbrella in the moonlight.&quot;
Narrator as Unreliable Participant - He tells the story as if he did everything right, but readers catch his complicity. He&apos;s uncomfortable—his wife judges him for not working—but he doesn&apos;t change. His honeymoon gifts fall flat when she realizes it&apos;s not his money.
The Ant Metaphor - The mother wages war on kitchen ants, eliminating anything threatening family enjoyment. Later, the narrator squishes ants; his wife is horrified. This foreshadows how the family treats bigger &quot;problems&quot;—possibly a dog, possibly people. Nothing is explicit.
No Clean Ending - The book is decidedly &quot;ghochar&quot;—tangled with no resolution. At the end, Vincent the waiter says: &quot;Sir, you want to wash your hand? There&apos;s blood on it.&quot; Literal or figurative? Did something terrible happen? &quot;Accidents happen, right?&quot; The ambiguity haunts.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4-4.5 out of 5 - Deceptively simple but deeply layered
Bookshelf Worthy: High - Smitha read it 3 times; short enough to reread, rich enough to deserve it

Why Read: Only 70-130 pages—can finish in one session. Easy, relatable, readable. But don&apos;t mistake simplicity for shallowness. Rewards rereading and discussion. Rich themes about wealth, morality, family, and complicity.
A masterclass in saying everything by saying nothing explicitly.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Smitha Rau
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:subtitle>
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      <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
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      <title>Reva Nevrekar and Kirti discuss On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Kirti Mutatkar and Reva Nevrekar from Pune discuss Ocean Vuong's lyrical debut novel about immigration, identity, and intergenerational trauma.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Written as a letter from a son to his illiterate mother, the novel follows Little Dog, a Vietnamese American immigrant in Hartford, Connecticut. Through non-linear storytelling, Vuong explores poverty, language barriers, his first love with Trevor, and his mother's PTSD-driven abuse.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>Poetry in Prose</strong> - Vuong's poet background infuses every page. The writing flows like a long poem, shifting between prose and verse. Sentences feel like complete poems—readers pause to absorb their beauty.</p><p><strong>Language Divides and Connects</strong> - Little Dog writes in English to a mother who can't read it. As he becomes more American, he drifts from his origins. Yet he imagines rebirth: maybe she'll return as a girl named Rose in a peaceful nation where she can finally read his words.</p><p><strong>Immigration Reality</strong> - Success means food on the table, not becoming a doctor. His mother works in a nail salon. The American Dream myth shatters against survival reality.</p><p><strong>Authentic Queer Experience</strong> - Trevor's story—poor white boy from tobacco fields also struggling with sexuality and abuse—runs parallel to Little Dog's. Vuong writes from lived experience, avoiding exploitative trauma that plagues much queer literature.</p><p><strong>PTSD and Complex Love</strong> - His mother hits him for mispronouncing English. It's abuse rooted in war trauma and desperate love—she wants him safe, assimilated, protected from her suffering. The relationship defies simple labels.</p><p><strong>Model Minority Erasure</strong> - The Tiger Woods example shows how Asian identities get downplayed. His Thai heritage is ignored—illustrating unique Asian American marginalization.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5</strong> - Demands processing time; subtext about identity, war, and belonging lingers for days</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: 3.5-4/5</strong> - Short, poetic, perfect for rereading. Open any page and find meaning</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> Under 250 pages but profound. Accessible entry to Asian American diaspora and queer literature. Non-linear structure mirrors how memory actually works. Can finish in a week even while working.</p><p>A devastating, beautiful exploration of surviving, loving, and writing your story in a language your mother cannot read.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Reva Nevrekar (Instagram: @nibblingonnovels)<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:56:31 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Reva Nevrekar, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/reva-nerekar-and-kirti-discuss-on-earth-were-briefly-gorgeous-by-ocean-vuong-hUemegmx</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/23c8781c-9548-4176-b947-a5e001402449/kbc-20main-20.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kirti Mutatkar and Reva Nevrekar from Pune discuss Ocean Vuong's lyrical debut novel about immigration, identity, and intergenerational trauma.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Written as a letter from a son to his illiterate mother, the novel follows Little Dog, a Vietnamese American immigrant in Hartford, Connecticut. Through non-linear storytelling, Vuong explores poverty, language barriers, his first love with Trevor, and his mother's PTSD-driven abuse.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>Poetry in Prose</strong> - Vuong's poet background infuses every page. The writing flows like a long poem, shifting between prose and verse. Sentences feel like complete poems—readers pause to absorb their beauty.</p><p><strong>Language Divides and Connects</strong> - Little Dog writes in English to a mother who can't read it. As he becomes more American, he drifts from his origins. Yet he imagines rebirth: maybe she'll return as a girl named Rose in a peaceful nation where she can finally read his words.</p><p><strong>Immigration Reality</strong> - Success means food on the table, not becoming a doctor. His mother works in a nail salon. The American Dream myth shatters against survival reality.</p><p><strong>Authentic Queer Experience</strong> - Trevor's story—poor white boy from tobacco fields also struggling with sexuality and abuse—runs parallel to Little Dog's. Vuong writes from lived experience, avoiding exploitative trauma that plagues much queer literature.</p><p><strong>PTSD and Complex Love</strong> - His mother hits him for mispronouncing English. It's abuse rooted in war trauma and desperate love—she wants him safe, assimilated, protected from her suffering. The relationship defies simple labels.</p><p><strong>Model Minority Erasure</strong> - The Tiger Woods example shows how Asian identities get downplayed. His Thai heritage is ignored—illustrating unique Asian American marginalization.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5</strong> - Demands processing time; subtext about identity, war, and belonging lingers for days</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: 3.5-4/5</strong> - Short, poetic, perfect for rereading. Open any page and find meaning</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> Under 250 pages but profound. Accessible entry to Asian American diaspora and queer literature. Non-linear structure mirrors how memory actually works. Can finish in a week even while working.</p><p>A devastating, beautiful exploration of surviving, loving, and writing your story in a language your mother cannot read.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Reva Nevrekar (Instagram: @nibblingonnovels)<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Reva Nevrekar and Kirti discuss On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Reva Nevrekar, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/b5b021fb-f44e-46cc-b923-0796ba1afc08/3000x3000/image.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:37</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kirti Mutatkar and Reva Nevrekar from Pune discuss Ocean Vuong&apos;s lyrical debut novel about immigration, identity, and intergenerational trauma.
The Story:
Written as a letter from a son to his illiterate mother, the novel follows Little Dog, a Vietnamese American immigrant in Hartford, Connecticut. Through non-linear storytelling, Vuong explores poverty, language barriers, his first love with Trevor, and his mother&apos;s PTSD-driven abuse.
Key Themes:
Poetry in Prose - Vuong&apos;s poet background infuses every page. The writing flows like a long poem, shifting between prose and verse. Sentences feel like complete poems—readers pause to absorb their beauty.
Language Divides and Connects - Little Dog writes in English to a mother who can&apos;t read it. As he becomes more American, he drifts from his origins. Yet he imagines rebirth: maybe she&apos;ll return as a girl named Rose in a peaceful nation where she can finally read his words.
Immigration Reality - Success means food on the table, not becoming a doctor. His mother works in a nail salon. The American Dream myth shatters against survival reality.
Authentic Queer Experience - Trevor&apos;s story—poor white boy from tobacco fields also struggling with sexuality and abuse—runs parallel to Little Dog&apos;s. Vuong writes from lived experience, avoiding exploitative trauma that plagues much queer literature.
PTSD and Complex Love - His mother hits him for mispronouncing English. It&apos;s abuse rooted in war trauma and desperate love—she wants him safe, assimilated, protected from her suffering. The relationship defies simple labels.
Model Minority Erasure - The Tiger Woods example shows how Asian identities get downplayed. His Thai heritage is ignored—illustrating unique Asian American marginalization.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5 - Demands processing time; subtext about identity, war, and belonging lingers for days
Bookshelf Worthy: 3.5-4/5 - Short, poetic, perfect for rereading. Open any page and find meaning

Why Read: Under 250 pages but profound. Accessible entry to Asian American diaspora and queer literature. Non-linear structure mirrors how memory actually works. Can finish in a week even while working.
A devastating, beautiful exploration of surviving, loving, and writing your story in a language your mother cannot read.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Reva Nevrekar (Instagram: @nibblingonnovels)
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kirti Mutatkar and Reva Nevrekar from Pune discuss Ocean Vuong&apos;s lyrical debut novel about immigration, identity, and intergenerational trauma.
The Story:
Written as a letter from a son to his illiterate mother, the novel follows Little Dog, a Vietnamese American immigrant in Hartford, Connecticut. Through non-linear storytelling, Vuong explores poverty, language barriers, his first love with Trevor, and his mother&apos;s PTSD-driven abuse.
Key Themes:
Poetry in Prose - Vuong&apos;s poet background infuses every page. The writing flows like a long poem, shifting between prose and verse. Sentences feel like complete poems—readers pause to absorb their beauty.
Language Divides and Connects - Little Dog writes in English to a mother who can&apos;t read it. As he becomes more American, he drifts from his origins. Yet he imagines rebirth: maybe she&apos;ll return as a girl named Rose in a peaceful nation where she can finally read his words.
Immigration Reality - Success means food on the table, not becoming a doctor. His mother works in a nail salon. The American Dream myth shatters against survival reality.
Authentic Queer Experience - Trevor&apos;s story—poor white boy from tobacco fields also struggling with sexuality and abuse—runs parallel to Little Dog&apos;s. Vuong writes from lived experience, avoiding exploitative trauma that plagues much queer literature.
PTSD and Complex Love - His mother hits him for mispronouncing English. It&apos;s abuse rooted in war trauma and desperate love—she wants him safe, assimilated, protected from her suffering. The relationship defies simple labels.
Model Minority Erasure - The Tiger Woods example shows how Asian identities get downplayed. His Thai heritage is ignored—illustrating unique Asian American marginalization.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: 4.5/5 - Demands processing time; subtext about identity, war, and belonging lingers for days
Bookshelf Worthy: 3.5-4/5 - Short, poetic, perfect for rereading. Open any page and find meaning

Why Read: Under 250 pages but profound. Accessible entry to Asian American diaspora and queer literature. Non-linear structure mirrors how memory actually works. Can finish in a week even while working.
A devastating, beautiful exploration of surviving, loving, and writing your story in a language your mother cannot read.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Reva Nevrekar (Instagram: @nibblingonnovels)
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>literary, ocean vuong, reading groups, reading, inspiring stories, stories, literature, hobbies, reading circles, books, book clubs, dicussions</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
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      <title>Paige Macias &amp; Kirti discuss Master Slave Husband Wife by Ilyon Woo</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Kirti Mutatkar and Paige Macias discuss Ilyon Woo's extensively researched account of Ellen and William Craft's daring 1848 escape from slavery.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Ellen, who was 3 quarters white, disguised herself as a white male slaveholder traveling with her "slave"—actually her husband William. Their journey from Georgia took them to Boston, then England, and eventually back to America after the Civil War. The book covers their entire lives from escape to death.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>History Beyond Textbooks</strong> - The book reveals pre-Civil War political complexities, abolitionist movements, and the Fugitive Slave Act's impact that standard education glosses over. Even in "free" Northern states, escaped slaves faced extreme danger, making true freedom impossible in America.</p><p><strong>Slavery's Dehumanizing Economics</strong> - Slaves were assets on balance sheets. A 60-year-old had zero value; a 5-year-old was worth a fortune. Women of childbearing age were particularly valuable because their children became property. Ellen's own half-sister was her mistress—same father, different treatment.</p><p><strong>The One Drop Rule</strong> - Ellen looked white but was enslaved because of "1 drop" of Black blood. She identified as Black, as a slave. Being called "the white slave" annoyed her—that wasn't her identity.</p><p><strong>Resilience Through Setbacks</strong> - Despite freedom, their house burned down, William's Africa business venture ended in debt, but they always got back up. They kept searching for lost family members, kept building, kept persevering.</p><p><strong>International Perspective</strong> - The abolitionist movement in Britain provided crucial support. The World's Fair scene where Ellen and William walk arm-in-arm as free people in England symbolizes triumph. American slavery had ripple effects across the pond.</p><p><strong>Normalized Horror</strong> - Ellen's half-sister owned her sister. How? She was trapped in an economic system with little power as a woman in that era. This raises uncomfortable questions: what are we normalizing today that future generations will find horrifying?</p><p><strong>Historical Divisions</strong> - You have to go back to the Civil War to find America as divided as today. The North/South moral divide was irreconcilable without war. The comparison to modern political division is sobering.</p><p><strong>The Author's Approach:</strong> Ilyon Woo, a Korean American researcher, brings meticulous detail and transparency about what she knows versus infers. When documentation is sparse (like William's time in Africa), she says so. This honesty strengthens the narrative.</p><p><strong>Historical Connections:</strong> Paige connected the book to "Two Years Before the Mast"—author Henry Dana later became a lawyer in events related to Ellen and William's story.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4 out of 5</strong> - Rich historical detail, compelling narrative. Some sections drag but overall fascinating</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: High</strong> - Not a reread, but stays with you. Keeps connecting to current events</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> About 400 pages. First section (the escape) reads like a thriller—suspenseful, well-documented since Ellen and William wrote about it themselves. Second half provides historical context. There's also a movie/documentary for those wanting the story without reading.</p><p>A meticulously researched story proving truth is more compelling than fiction, with themes that resonate deeply today.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Paige Macias<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:56:20 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Paige Marcias, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/paige-macias-kirti-discuss-master-slave-husband-wife-by-ilyon-woo-7Yn_jQLd</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/23c8781c-9548-4176-b947-a5e001402449/kbc-20main-20.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kirti Mutatkar and Paige Macias discuss Ilyon Woo's extensively researched account of Ellen and William Craft's daring 1848 escape from slavery.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> Ellen, who was 3 quarters white, disguised herself as a white male slaveholder traveling with her "slave"—actually her husband William. Their journey from Georgia took them to Boston, then England, and eventually back to America after the Civil War. The book covers their entire lives from escape to death.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>History Beyond Textbooks</strong> - The book reveals pre-Civil War political complexities, abolitionist movements, and the Fugitive Slave Act's impact that standard education glosses over. Even in "free" Northern states, escaped slaves faced extreme danger, making true freedom impossible in America.</p><p><strong>Slavery's Dehumanizing Economics</strong> - Slaves were assets on balance sheets. A 60-year-old had zero value; a 5-year-old was worth a fortune. Women of childbearing age were particularly valuable because their children became property. Ellen's own half-sister was her mistress—same father, different treatment.</p><p><strong>The One Drop Rule</strong> - Ellen looked white but was enslaved because of "1 drop" of Black blood. She identified as Black, as a slave. Being called "the white slave" annoyed her—that wasn't her identity.</p><p><strong>Resilience Through Setbacks</strong> - Despite freedom, their house burned down, William's Africa business venture ended in debt, but they always got back up. They kept searching for lost family members, kept building, kept persevering.</p><p><strong>International Perspective</strong> - The abolitionist movement in Britain provided crucial support. The World's Fair scene where Ellen and William walk arm-in-arm as free people in England symbolizes triumph. American slavery had ripple effects across the pond.</p><p><strong>Normalized Horror</strong> - Ellen's half-sister owned her sister. How? She was trapped in an economic system with little power as a woman in that era. This raises uncomfortable questions: what are we normalizing today that future generations will find horrifying?</p><p><strong>Historical Divisions</strong> - You have to go back to the Civil War to find America as divided as today. The North/South moral divide was irreconcilable without war. The comparison to modern political division is sobering.</p><p><strong>The Author's Approach:</strong> Ilyon Woo, a Korean American researcher, brings meticulous detail and transparency about what she knows versus infers. When documentation is sparse (like William's time in Africa), she says so. This honesty strengthens the narrative.</p><p><strong>Historical Connections:</strong> Paige connected the book to "Two Years Before the Mast"—author Henry Dana later became a lawyer in events related to Ellen and William's story.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: 4 out of 5</strong> - Rich historical detail, compelling narrative. Some sections drag but overall fascinating</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: High</strong> - Not a reread, but stays with you. Keeps connecting to current events</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> About 400 pages. First section (the escape) reads like a thriller—suspenseful, well-documented since Ellen and William wrote about it themselves. Second half provides historical context. There's also a movie/documentary for those wanting the story without reading.</p><p>A meticulously researched story proving truth is more compelling than fiction, with themes that resonate deeply today.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Paige Macias<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="27664577" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/4740a67c-b052-41de-8805-5bcd8a8c02ad/episodes/bb80772a-9b98-4582-996d-1b6b5349ea0f/audio/b5a01c29-1ccd-467f-a86e-a5f94d9fad7d/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=v89XdrVX"/>
      <itunes:title>Paige Macias &amp; Kirti discuss Master Slave Husband Wife by Ilyon Woo</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Paige Marcias, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/e232bb64-dd57-4bbc-a258-dee01c98178a/3000x3000/image.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kirti Mutatkar and Paige Macias discuss Ilyon Woo&apos;s meticulously researched account of Ellen and William Craft&apos;s daring eighteen forty-eight escape from slavery.
The Story:
Ellen, three quarters white, disguised herself as a white male slaveholder traveling with her &quot;slave&quot;—actually her husband William. Their audacious journey from Georgia took them to Boston, England, and eventually back to America after the Civil War.
Key Themes:
History Beyond Textbooks - Reveals pre-Civil War complexities, the abolitionist movement, and the Fugitive Slave Act&apos;s impact that standard education misses. Even &quot;free&quot; Northern states weren&apos;t safe for escaped slaves.
Dehumanizing Economics - Slaves were balance sheet assets. A sixty-year-old: zero value. A five-year-old: worth a fortune. Women of childbearing age: valuable for future &quot;property.&quot; Ellen&apos;s own half-sister was her mistress.
Identity and The One Drop Rule - Ellen looked white but identified as Black, as a slave. Being called &quot;the white slave&quot; annoyed her—that wasn&apos;t her reality.
Resilience - Despite freedom, they faced constant setbacks: house burned, business failed, family lost. But they always got back up, kept searching, kept building.
Normalized Horror - How could Ellen&apos;s half-sister own her sister? She was trapped in an economic system with little power. This raises uncomfortable questions: what are we normalizing today that future generations will condemn?
Historical Divisions - You have to go back to the Civil War to find America as divided as today. The comparison is sobering.
The Author&apos;s Approach:
Korean American researcher Ilyon Woo brings meticulous detail and transparency about sources. When documentation is sparse, she acknowledges it—this honesty strengthens the narrative.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: four out of five - Rich detail, compelling narrative; some sections drag
Bookshelf Worthy: High - Stays with you, connects to current events

Why Read: Four hundred pages. First section reads like a thriller; second provides historical context. There&apos;s also a documentary for those wanting the story without reading.
Truth more compelling than fiction, with themes resonating deeply today.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Paige Macias
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kirti Mutatkar and Paige Macias discuss Ilyon Woo&apos;s meticulously researched account of Ellen and William Craft&apos;s daring eighteen forty-eight escape from slavery.
The Story:
Ellen, three quarters white, disguised herself as a white male slaveholder traveling with her &quot;slave&quot;—actually her husband William. Their audacious journey from Georgia took them to Boston, England, and eventually back to America after the Civil War.
Key Themes:
History Beyond Textbooks - Reveals pre-Civil War complexities, the abolitionist movement, and the Fugitive Slave Act&apos;s impact that standard education misses. Even &quot;free&quot; Northern states weren&apos;t safe for escaped slaves.
Dehumanizing Economics - Slaves were balance sheet assets. A sixty-year-old: zero value. A five-year-old: worth a fortune. Women of childbearing age: valuable for future &quot;property.&quot; Ellen&apos;s own half-sister was her mistress.
Identity and The One Drop Rule - Ellen looked white but identified as Black, as a slave. Being called &quot;the white slave&quot; annoyed her—that wasn&apos;t her reality.
Resilience - Despite freedom, they faced constant setbacks: house burned, business failed, family lost. But they always got back up, kept searching, kept building.
Normalized Horror - How could Ellen&apos;s half-sister own her sister? She was trapped in an economic system with little power. This raises uncomfortable questions: what are we normalizing today that future generations will condemn?
Historical Divisions - You have to go back to the Civil War to find America as divided as today. The comparison is sobering.
The Author&apos;s Approach:
Korean American researcher Ilyon Woo brings meticulous detail and transparency about sources. When documentation is sparse, she acknowledges it—this honesty strengthens the narrative.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: four out of five - Rich detail, compelling narrative; some sections drag
Bookshelf Worthy: High - Stays with you, connects to current events

Why Read: Four hundred pages. First section reads like a thriller; second provides historical context. There&apos;s also a documentary for those wanting the story without reading.
Truth more compelling than fiction, with themes resonating deeply today.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Paige Macias
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>literary, leadership, story telling, reading, inspiring stories, stories, literature, kirti mutatkar, books, book clubs, inspirational stories, paige macias</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
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      <title>Meenal Limaye &amp; Kirti discuss Let My People Go Surfing, The Education of Reluctant Businessman by Yvon Chouinard</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Meenal Limaye to discuss Yvon Chouinard's business memoir about building Patagonia while staying true to environmental values.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> A reluctant businessman transforms his passion for rock climbing and surfing into Patagonia, one of the most respected outdoor brands in the world. Starting from Ventura, California over fifty years ago, Chouinard built equipment for friends, then evolved into a company that balances profit with environmental responsibility.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>The Reluctant Businessman</strong> - Chouinard never set out to build an empire. He simply wanted better equipment for climbing. His friends and family became his first employees, creating a culture where passion drove product development. Success came from authenticity, not ambition.</p><p><strong>"Let My People Go Surfing"</strong> - The philosophy that empowered employees to test products by actually using them. Workers could leave to surf, climb, or pursue their passions—leading to better work quality and genuine product feedback. This approach was revolutionary in the sixties and seventies, decades ahead of modern work-life balance discussions.</p><p><strong>Environmental Responsibility</strong> - When Chouinard realized his pitons were damaging the rocks he loved, he stopped production entirely and started over. His roots in nature made him hypersensitive to environmental impact. The book details how one T-shirt's production costs the environment massively in water and resources.</p><p><strong>Anti-Consumerism from a Retailer</strong> - Remarkably, Patagonia pushes customers NOT to buy more. They encourage reuse, repair, and conscious consumption. Chouinard truly believes in this—it's not marketing. His personal life reflects simplicity and sustainability.</p><p><strong>"Evil is the Absence of Good"</strong> - If you have ability, resources, and opportunity to do good but don't act, that itself is evil. This philosophy drives every business decision at Patagonia.</p><p><strong>Quality Over Quantity</strong> - Build the best product, keep it simple (KISS principle). Patagonia products aren't cheap, but they last. This counters fast fashion's use-and-throw culture. Both readers acknowledged guilt about frivolous shopping and overabundance enabled by one-click purchasing.</p><p><strong>Leave No Mark</strong> - European vs. American climbing philosophy: Americans want to leave marks proving conquest; Europeans believe nobody should know you were there. Nature should remain unchanged for the next person. A powerful metaphor for how we should live.</p><p><strong>Corporate Culture Lessons</strong> - Onsite daycare in the sixties/seventies, empowering employees, hiring for passion over credentials, building aspirational marketing through storytelling (catalogs that made you want the lifestyle, not just the product), supply chain management, and learning business fundamentals while staying true to values.</p><p><strong>Business Reality</strong> - Passion alone doesn't sustain a company. Chouinard had to learn accounting, supply chain, and hard business lessons. The book honestly addresses struggles and hurdles, not just successes.</p><p><strong>Writing Style</strong> - Not polished or conventionally structured, but authentic. Written from the heart by someone without fancy degrees. Some repetition reflects his passion for certain topics. Divided into sections: his story, business philosophies, lessons learned—can be read in parts.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: four out of five</strong> - Rich with lessons for corporate professionals, environmentalists, and anyone interested in building values-driven businesses. For general readers: three out of five</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: four out of five</strong> - A keeper for reference. Meenal liked it so much she couldn't wait for the library hold and bought it immediately</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> Quick read (can finish in a week), packed with business lessons, environmental philosophy, and inspiration for living more sustainably. Even without reading, the roundtable discussion offers rich topics: sustainability, conscious consumption, work-life integration, quality over quantity, and building purpose-driven businesses.</p><p>A book about doing well by doing good—proving you can build a successful company without compromising your values.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Meenal Limaye<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 05:56:06 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Meenal Limaye, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/meenal-limaye-kirti-discuss-let-my-people-go-surfing-the-education-of-reluctant-businessman-by-yvon-chouinard-GX0W6egV</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/23c8781c-9548-4176-b947-a5e001402449/kbc-20main-20.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kirti Mutatkar sits down with Meenal Limaye to discuss Yvon Chouinard's business memoir about building Patagonia while staying true to environmental values.</p><p><strong>The Story:</strong> A reluctant businessman transforms his passion for rock climbing and surfing into Patagonia, one of the most respected outdoor brands in the world. Starting from Ventura, California over fifty years ago, Chouinard built equipment for friends, then evolved into a company that balances profit with environmental responsibility.</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p><strong>The Reluctant Businessman</strong> - Chouinard never set out to build an empire. He simply wanted better equipment for climbing. His friends and family became his first employees, creating a culture where passion drove product development. Success came from authenticity, not ambition.</p><p><strong>"Let My People Go Surfing"</strong> - The philosophy that empowered employees to test products by actually using them. Workers could leave to surf, climb, or pursue their passions—leading to better work quality and genuine product feedback. This approach was revolutionary in the sixties and seventies, decades ahead of modern work-life balance discussions.</p><p><strong>Environmental Responsibility</strong> - When Chouinard realized his pitons were damaging the rocks he loved, he stopped production entirely and started over. His roots in nature made him hypersensitive to environmental impact. The book details how one T-shirt's production costs the environment massively in water and resources.</p><p><strong>Anti-Consumerism from a Retailer</strong> - Remarkably, Patagonia pushes customers NOT to buy more. They encourage reuse, repair, and conscious consumption. Chouinard truly believes in this—it's not marketing. His personal life reflects simplicity and sustainability.</p><p><strong>"Evil is the Absence of Good"</strong> - If you have ability, resources, and opportunity to do good but don't act, that itself is evil. This philosophy drives every business decision at Patagonia.</p><p><strong>Quality Over Quantity</strong> - Build the best product, keep it simple (KISS principle). Patagonia products aren't cheap, but they last. This counters fast fashion's use-and-throw culture. Both readers acknowledged guilt about frivolous shopping and overabundance enabled by one-click purchasing.</p><p><strong>Leave No Mark</strong> - European vs. American climbing philosophy: Americans want to leave marks proving conquest; Europeans believe nobody should know you were there. Nature should remain unchanged for the next person. A powerful metaphor for how we should live.</p><p><strong>Corporate Culture Lessons</strong> - Onsite daycare in the sixties/seventies, empowering employees, hiring for passion over credentials, building aspirational marketing through storytelling (catalogs that made you want the lifestyle, not just the product), supply chain management, and learning business fundamentals while staying true to values.</p><p><strong>Business Reality</strong> - Passion alone doesn't sustain a company. Chouinard had to learn accounting, supply chain, and hard business lessons. The book honestly addresses struggles and hurdles, not just successes.</p><p><strong>Writing Style</strong> - Not polished or conventionally structured, but authentic. Written from the heart by someone without fancy degrees. Some repetition reflects his passion for certain topics. Divided into sections: his story, business philosophies, lessons learned—can be read in parts.</p><p><strong>KBC Book Radar:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Brain Fizz Factor: four out of five</strong> - Rich with lessons for corporate professionals, environmentalists, and anyone interested in building values-driven businesses. For general readers: three out of five</li><li><strong>Bookshelf Worthy: four out of five</strong> - A keeper for reference. Meenal liked it so much she couldn't wait for the library hold and bought it immediately</li></ul><p><strong>Why Read:</strong> Quick read (can finish in a week), packed with business lessons, environmental philosophy, and inspiration for living more sustainably. Even without reading, the roundtable discussion offers rich topics: sustainability, conscious consumption, work-life integration, quality over quantity, and building purpose-driven businesses.</p><p>A book about doing well by doing good—proving you can build a successful company without compromising your values.</p><p><strong>Credits:</strong> Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar<br />Guest: Meenal Limaye<br />Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar<br />Logo & Design: Smitha Rau</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Meenal Limaye &amp; Kirti discuss Let My People Go Surfing, The Education of Reluctant Businessman by Yvon Chouinard</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Meenal Limaye, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/8727dcca-eb39-4058-b497-17e4eae29bd0/3000x3000/image.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:27:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kirti Mutatkar and Meenal Limaye discuss Yvon Chouinard&apos;s business memoir about building Patagonia while staying true to environmental values.
The Story:
A reluctant businessman transforms his passion for rock climbing into Patagonia, one of the world&apos;s most respected outdoor brands. Starting in Ventura, California over fifty years ago, Chouinard built equipment for friends that evolved into a company balancing profit with environmental responsibility.
Key Themes:
Passion-Driven Business - &quot;Let My People Go Surfing&quot; empowered employees to test products by using them. Workers could leave to surf or climb—leading to better work and genuine feedback. Revolutionary in the sixties/seventies, decades ahead of modern work-life balance.
Environmental Responsibility - When Chouinard realized his pitons damaged the rocks he loved, he stopped production and started over. His nature roots made him hypersensitive to environmental impact. One T-shirt&apos;s production massively costs the environment in water and resources.
Anti-Consumerism Retailer - Patagonia pushes customers NOT to buy more. They encourage reuse, repair, conscious consumption. Chouinard&apos;s personal life reflects this simplicity—it&apos;s authentic, not marketing.
&quot;Evil is the Absence of Good&quot; - If you have ability and opportunity to do good but don&apos;t act, that itself is evil. This philosophy drives every business decision.
Quality Over Quantity - Build the best, keep it simple. Patagonia products aren&apos;t cheap but last, countering fast fashion&apos;s throwaway culture. Both readers felt guilt about frivolous shopping and one-click overabundance.
Leave No Mark - Europeans believe nobody should know you were there; Americans want proof of conquest. Nature should remain unchanged for the next person—a powerful life metaphor.
Corporate Lessons - Onsite daycare in the sixties, hiring for passion over credentials, aspirational storytelling, supply chain management, learning business fundamentals while staying true to values.
Writing Style - Not polished but authentic. Written from the heart without fancy credentials. Some repetition reflects passion. Divided into sections—can be read in parts.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: four out of five - Rich business and environmental lessons (general readers: three out of five)
Bookshelf Worthy: four out of five - Meenal bought it immediately after starting online

A quick read proving you can build a successful company without compromising values.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Meenal Limaye
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kirti Mutatkar and Meenal Limaye discuss Yvon Chouinard&apos;s business memoir about building Patagonia while staying true to environmental values.
The Story:
A reluctant businessman transforms his passion for rock climbing into Patagonia, one of the world&apos;s most respected outdoor brands. Starting in Ventura, California over fifty years ago, Chouinard built equipment for friends that evolved into a company balancing profit with environmental responsibility.
Key Themes:
Passion-Driven Business - &quot;Let My People Go Surfing&quot; empowered employees to test products by using them. Workers could leave to surf or climb—leading to better work and genuine feedback. Revolutionary in the sixties/seventies, decades ahead of modern work-life balance.
Environmental Responsibility - When Chouinard realized his pitons damaged the rocks he loved, he stopped production and started over. His nature roots made him hypersensitive to environmental impact. One T-shirt&apos;s production massively costs the environment in water and resources.
Anti-Consumerism Retailer - Patagonia pushes customers NOT to buy more. They encourage reuse, repair, conscious consumption. Chouinard&apos;s personal life reflects this simplicity—it&apos;s authentic, not marketing.
&quot;Evil is the Absence of Good&quot; - If you have ability and opportunity to do good but don&apos;t act, that itself is evil. This philosophy drives every business decision.
Quality Over Quantity - Build the best, keep it simple. Patagonia products aren&apos;t cheap but last, countering fast fashion&apos;s throwaway culture. Both readers felt guilt about frivolous shopping and one-click overabundance.
Leave No Mark - Europeans believe nobody should know you were there; Americans want proof of conquest. Nature should remain unchanged for the next person—a powerful life metaphor.
Corporate Lessons - Onsite daycare in the sixties, hiring for passion over credentials, aspirational storytelling, supply chain management, learning business fundamentals while staying true to values.
Writing Style - Not polished but authentic. Written from the heart without fancy credentials. Some repetition reflects passion. Divided into sections—can be read in parts.
KBC Book Radar:

Brain Fizz Factor: four out of five - Rich business and environmental lessons (general readers: three out of five)
Bookshelf Worthy: four out of five - Meenal bought it immediately after starting online

A quick read proving you can build a successful company without compromising values.

Credits:
Host and Creator: Kirti Mutatkar
Guest: Meenal Limaye
Show Editor: Aniket Mutatkar
Logo &amp; Design: Smitha Rau</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
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      <title>Dave Shep &amp; Kirti discuss Sophie’s World by Jostein Gaarder</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar </strong>concludes Season 1 of KBC (Kirti's Book Club) with <strong>David Shepherd</strong> to discuss Jostein Gaarder's "Sophie's World" - a philosophical novel that serves as an accessible introduction to Western philosophy.</p><p> </p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder follows a teenage girl named Sophie who receives mysterious letters asking philosophical questions. As the story unfolds, Sophie discovers she's a character in a story being told by Hilde's father to teach his daughter about philosophy. The novel alternates between Sophie's narrative and comprehensive lessons covering major philosophers from ancient Greeks through modern times, exploring fundamental questions about existence, free will, and human consciousness.</p><p> </p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p>Brain Fizz Factor: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)</p><p>Bookshelf Worthy: David - Shelf Resident, worth rereading (4/4), Kirti - Shelf Resident (4.5/5)</p><p> </p><p><i><strong>Season 1 of KBC concludes with this episode. Virtual roundtable discussions for all six books begin in July 2025.</strong></i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jul 2025 00:23:33 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (David Shepherd, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/dave-shep-kirti-discuss-sophies-world-by-jostein-gaarder-jgV2HN_v</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/801d02c7-6535-4dac-af89-c26137886283/kbc-20sophies.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar </strong>concludes Season 1 of KBC (Kirti's Book Club) with <strong>David Shepherd</strong> to discuss Jostein Gaarder's "Sophie's World" - a philosophical novel that serves as an accessible introduction to Western philosophy.</p><p> </p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder follows a teenage girl named Sophie who receives mysterious letters asking philosophical questions. As the story unfolds, Sophie discovers she's a character in a story being told by Hilde's father to teach his daughter about philosophy. The novel alternates between Sophie's narrative and comprehensive lessons covering major philosophers from ancient Greeks through modern times, exploring fundamental questions about existence, free will, and human consciousness.</p><p> </p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p>Brain Fizz Factor: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)</p><p>Bookshelf Worthy: David - Shelf Resident, worth rereading (4/4), Kirti - Shelf Resident (4.5/5)</p><p> </p><p><i><strong>Season 1 of KBC concludes with this episode. Virtual roundtable discussions for all six books begin in July 2025.</strong></i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Dave Shep &amp; Kirti discuss Sophie’s World by Jostein Gaarder</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>David Shepherd, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/a41f61e2-b5f1-4e70-8869-fad98abc1f60/3000x3000/kbc-20sophies.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:33:05</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Host Kirti Mutatkar concludes Season 1 of KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with David Shepherd to discuss Jostein Gaarder&apos;s &quot;Sophie&apos;s World&quot; - a philosophical novel that serves as an accessible introduction to Western philosophy.

About the Book
Sophie&apos;s World by Jostein Gaarder follows a teenage girl named Sophie who receives mysterious letters asking philosophical questions. As the story unfolds, Sophie discovers she&apos;s a character in a story being told by Hilde&apos;s father to teach his daughter about philosophy. The novel alternates between Sophie&apos;s narrative and comprehensive lessons covering major philosophers from ancient Greeks through modern times, exploring fundamental questions about existence, free will, and human consciousness.

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)
Bookshelf Worthy: David - Shelf Resident, worth rereading (4/4), Kirti - Shelf Resident (4.5/5)

Season 1 of KBC concludes with this episode. Virtual roundtable discussions for all six books begin in July 2025.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Host Kirti Mutatkar concludes Season 1 of KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with David Shepherd to discuss Jostein Gaarder&apos;s &quot;Sophie&apos;s World&quot; - a philosophical novel that serves as an accessible introduction to Western philosophy.

About the Book
Sophie&apos;s World by Jostein Gaarder follows a teenage girl named Sophie who receives mysterious letters asking philosophical questions. As the story unfolds, Sophie discovers she&apos;s a character in a story being told by Hilde&apos;s father to teach his daughter about philosophy. The novel alternates between Sophie&apos;s narrative and comprehensive lessons covering major philosophers from ancient Greeks through modern times, exploring fundamental questions about existence, free will, and human consciousness.

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)
Bookshelf Worthy: David - Shelf Resident, worth rereading (4/4), Kirti - Shelf Resident (4.5/5)

Season 1 of KBC concludes with this episode. Virtual roundtable discussions for all six books begin in July 2025.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>self help, philosophy, philosophers, reading, stories, literature, best sellers, books, book clubs, sophie’s world, book, plato, inspiringstories, jostein gaarder</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
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      <title>Dr. Pankaj Rao &amp; Kirti discuss Why We Die by Venki Ramakrishnan</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar </strong>continues KBC (Kirti's Book Club) with <strong>Dr. Pankaj Rao</strong> to discuss <strong>Venki Ramakrishnan's Why We Di</strong>e - a scientific exploration of aging, death, and the quest for immortality.</p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Why We Die by Venki Ramakrishnan examines the biological mechanisms behind aging and death from a Nobel laureate's perspective. The book explains complex genetic concepts in accessible terms, covering DNA, cellular aging, environmental factors, and the current scientific understanding of mortality. Rather than philosophical speculation, Ramakrishnan focuses on evidence-based science while addressing the human desire for longevity and the reality of our biological limitations.</p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Factor</strong>: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy</strong>: Dr. Pankaj Rao - Shelf Resident/Donate (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]</p><p> </p><p>Next Episode: "Sophie's World" by Jostein Gaarder - concluding Season 1 of KBC</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jul 2025 00:23:11 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Dr. Pankaj Rao, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/dr-pankaj-rao-kirti-discuss-why-we-die-by-venki-ramakrishnan-UQ1sLfaj</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/62038b3e-5c1c-4a8c-90ef-ba012f358d5a/kbc-20why-20we-20die.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar </strong>continues KBC (Kirti's Book Club) with <strong>Dr. Pankaj Rao</strong> to discuss <strong>Venki Ramakrishnan's Why We Di</strong>e - a scientific exploration of aging, death, and the quest for immortality.</p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Why We Die by Venki Ramakrishnan examines the biological mechanisms behind aging and death from a Nobel laureate's perspective. The book explains complex genetic concepts in accessible terms, covering DNA, cellular aging, environmental factors, and the current scientific understanding of mortality. Rather than philosophical speculation, Ramakrishnan focuses on evidence-based science while addressing the human desire for longevity and the reality of our biological limitations.</p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Factor</strong>: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy</strong>: Dr. Pankaj Rao - Shelf Resident/Donate (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]</p><p> </p><p>Next Episode: "Sophie's World" by Jostein Gaarder - concluding Season 1 of KBC</p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Dr. Pankaj Rao &amp; Kirti discuss Why We Die by Venki Ramakrishnan</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Dr. Pankaj Rao, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/5404d57e-e31f-4131-b1d6-775f609008fb/3000x3000/kbc-20why-20we-20die.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:23:44</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Dr. Pankaj Rao to discuss Venki Ramakrishnan&apos;s Why We Die - a scientific exploration of aging, death, and the quest for immortality.

About the Book
Why We Die by Venki Ramakrishnan examines the biological mechanisms behind aging and death from a Nobel laureate&apos;s perspective. The book explains complex genetic concepts in accessible terms, covering DNA, cellular aging, environmental factors, and the current scientific understanding of mortality. Rather than philosophical speculation, Ramakrishnan focuses on evidence-based science while addressing the human desire for longevity and the reality of our biological limitations.

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)
Bookshelf Worthy: Dr. Pankaj Rao - Shelf Resident/Donate (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]

Next Episode: &quot;Sophie&apos;s World&quot; by Jostein Gaarder - concluding Season 1 of KBC</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Dr. Pankaj Rao to discuss Venki Ramakrishnan&apos;s Why We Die - a scientific exploration of aging, death, and the quest for immortality.

About the Book
Why We Die by Venki Ramakrishnan examines the biological mechanisms behind aging and death from a Nobel laureate&apos;s perspective. The book explains complex genetic concepts in accessible terms, covering DNA, cellular aging, environmental factors, and the current scientific understanding of mortality. Rather than philosophical speculation, Ramakrishnan focuses on evidence-based science while addressing the human desire for longevity and the reality of our biological limitations.

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Both - Mental Fireworks (4/4)
Bookshelf Worthy: Dr. Pankaj Rao - Shelf Resident/Donate (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]

Next Episode: &quot;Sophie&apos;s World&quot; by Jostein Gaarder - concluding Season 1 of KBC</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>self help, teachers, why we die, reading, stories, literature, kirti mutatkar, hobby, books, book clubs, aniket mutatkar, nobel laureate, pranav mutatkar, inspiringstories</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Sarah Ahmad &amp; Kirti discuss The Midnight Library by Matt Haig</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> continues KBC (Kirti's Book Club) with <strong>Sarah Ahmad</strong> to discuss <strong>Matt Haig's  The Midnight Library</strong> - a novel about alternate realities and the choices that shape our lives.</p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p><strong>The Midnight Library by Matt Haig </strong>follows Nora Seed, a woman in her thirties who finds herself in a magical library between life and death. Each book represents a different life she could have lived based on different choices. As Nora explores these alternate realities, she discovers the weight of regret and societal expectations while searching for a life worth living. The novel explores themes of mental health, purpose, and self-acceptance.</p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Facto</strong>r: Sarah - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy:</strong> Both - Keep on shelf, recommend to others struggling with regrets or life decisions</p><p> </p><p><i>Next Episode: "Why We Die" by Venki Ramakrishnan - continuing Season 1 of KBC</i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jul 2025 00:22:50 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Sarah Ahmad, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/sarah-ahmad-kirti-discuss-the-midnight-library-by-matt-haig-b39zLNMI</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/bb1f190f-cb28-48a8-9538-d1b72b69acd5/kbc-20midnight-20library.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> continues KBC (Kirti's Book Club) with <strong>Sarah Ahmad</strong> to discuss <strong>Matt Haig's  The Midnight Library</strong> - a novel about alternate realities and the choices that shape our lives.</p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p><strong>The Midnight Library by Matt Haig </strong>follows Nora Seed, a woman in her thirties who finds herself in a magical library between life and death. Each book represents a different life she could have lived based on different choices. As Nora explores these alternate realities, she discovers the weight of regret and societal expectations while searching for a life worth living. The novel explores themes of mental health, purpose, and self-acceptance.</p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Facto</strong>r: Sarah - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy:</strong> Both - Keep on shelf, recommend to others struggling with regrets or life decisions</p><p> </p><p><i>Next Episode: "Why We Die" by Venki Ramakrishnan - continuing Season 1 of KBC</i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="31354739" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/4740a67c-b052-41de-8805-5bcd8a8c02ad/episodes/d391f4dd-6ef2-41d0-b51a-e2f94cd0c59c/audio/626a8569-122c-4849-be1d-1383c32ea95e/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=v89XdrVX"/>
      <itunes:title>Sarah Ahmad &amp; Kirti discuss The Midnight Library by Matt Haig</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Sarah Ahmad, Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/86f275e2-bada-40c5-8b79-0bd2d8df1d5a/3000x3000/kbc-20midnight-20library.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:32:39</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Sarah Ahmad to discuss Matt Haig&apos;s  The Midnight Library - a novel about alternate realities and the choices that shape our lives.

About the Book
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig follows Nora Seed, a woman in her thirties who finds herself in a magical library between life and death. Each book represents a different life she could have lived based on different choices. As Nora explores these alternate realities, she discovers the weight of regret and societal expectations while searching for a life worth living. The novel explores themes of mental health, purpose, and self-acceptance.

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Sarah - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]
Bookshelf Worthy: Both - Keep on shelf, recommend to others struggling with regrets or life decisions

Next Episode: &quot;Why We Die&quot; by Venki Ramakrishnan - continuing Season 1 of KBC</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Sarah Ahmad to discuss Matt Haig&apos;s  The Midnight Library - a novel about alternate realities and the choices that shape our lives.

About the Book
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig follows Nora Seed, a woman in her thirties who finds herself in a magical library between life and death. Each book represents a different life she could have lived based on different choices. As Nora explores these alternate realities, she discovers the weight of regret and societal expectations while searching for a life worth living. The novel explores themes of mental health, purpose, and self-acceptance.

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Sarah - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]
Bookshelf Worthy: Both - Keep on shelf, recommend to others struggling with regrets or life decisions

Next Episode: &quot;Why We Die&quot; by Venki Ramakrishnan - continuing Season 1 of KBC</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Pranav Mutatkar &amp; Kirti discuss Augustus by John Williams</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> continues <strong>KBC (Kirti's Book Club)</strong> with <strong>Pranav Mutatkar</strong> to discuss <strong>John Williams' "Augustus" </strong>- a Pulitzer Prize-winning historical fiction novel about Rome's first emperor told through letters and documents.</p><p> </p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Augustus by John Williams follows the life of Octavius (later Emperor Augustus) through an epistolary structure of letters, documents, and correspondence. The novel humanizes the legendary first Roman Emperor, showing his rise to power, personal relationships, and the burden of leadership. Rather than traditional narrative, readers discover Augustus through the perspectives of friends, family, and contemporaries.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Key Discussion Points</strong></p><ul><li>Leadership and performance - How Augustus had to "play" the role of emperor while remaining human underneath</li><li>Destiny vs. free will - The tension between personal choice and being "crushed in the gears of history"</li><li>Nobility and legacy - Building for future generations rather than personal gain, exemplified by Roman public works</li><li>Humanization of greatness - Moving beyond the "Great Man theory" to see historical figures as complex, flawed humans</li></ul><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p>Brain Fizz Factor  Both - Fireworks (4/4)</p><p>Bookshelf Worthy Both - Shelf Resident (3/4)</p><p>Both hosts enthusiastically recommend "Augustus" for its masterful writing, authentic historical research, and accessibility to non-history readers. The book offers rich themes of leadership, destiny, and human nature that resonate with modern readers. Williams' ability to create distinct character voices through letters makes ancient Rome feel immediate and relatable.</p><p>*<i><strong>Next Episode: "Tom Lake" by Ann Patchett - continuing Season 1 of KBC*</strong></i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jul 2025 00:22:33 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Aniket Mutatkar, Pranav Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/pranav-mutatkar-kirti-discuss-augustus-by-john-williams-3mh12grp</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/ff8a1dc7-bb12-465c-9a66-f97845c86bd5/kbc2.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> continues <strong>KBC (Kirti's Book Club)</strong> with <strong>Pranav Mutatkar</strong> to discuss <strong>John Williams' "Augustus" </strong>- a Pulitzer Prize-winning historical fiction novel about Rome's first emperor told through letters and documents.</p><p> </p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Augustus by John Williams follows the life of Octavius (later Emperor Augustus) through an epistolary structure of letters, documents, and correspondence. The novel humanizes the legendary first Roman Emperor, showing his rise to power, personal relationships, and the burden of leadership. Rather than traditional narrative, readers discover Augustus through the perspectives of friends, family, and contemporaries.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Key Discussion Points</strong></p><ul><li>Leadership and performance - How Augustus had to "play" the role of emperor while remaining human underneath</li><li>Destiny vs. free will - The tension between personal choice and being "crushed in the gears of history"</li><li>Nobility and legacy - Building for future generations rather than personal gain, exemplified by Roman public works</li><li>Humanization of greatness - Moving beyond the "Great Man theory" to see historical figures as complex, flawed humans</li></ul><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p>Brain Fizz Factor  Both - Fireworks (4/4)</p><p>Bookshelf Worthy Both - Shelf Resident (3/4)</p><p>Both hosts enthusiastically recommend "Augustus" for its masterful writing, authentic historical research, and accessibility to non-history readers. The book offers rich themes of leadership, destiny, and human nature that resonate with modern readers. Williams' ability to create distinct character voices through letters makes ancient Rome feel immediate and relatable.</p><p>*<i><strong>Next Episode: "Tom Lake" by Ann Patchett - continuing Season 1 of KBC*</strong></i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="33983702" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/4740a67c-b052-41de-8805-5bcd8a8c02ad/episodes/3bde124a-6c36-4429-985a-63cbad1722a4/audio/36556746-ece1-4b15-96f4-2d743279829e/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=v89XdrVX"/>
      <itunes:title>Pranav Mutatkar &amp; Kirti discuss Augustus by John Williams</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Aniket Mutatkar, Pranav Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/86e6f9b6-7480-47f3-8d74-ccbf154390cb/3000x3000/kbc2.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:35:23</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Pranav Mutatkar to discuss John Williams&apos; &quot;Augustus&quot; - a Pulitzer Prize-winning historical fiction novel about Rome&apos;s first emperor told through letters and documents.

About the Book
Augustus by John Williams follows the life of Octavius (later Emperor Augustus) through an epistolary structure of letters, documents, and correspondence. The novel humanizes the legendary first Roman Emperor, showing his rise to power, personal relationships, and the burden of leadership. Rather than traditional narrative, readers discover Augustus through the perspectives of friends, family, and contemporaries.

Key Discussion Points

Leadership and performance - How Augustus had to &quot;play&quot; the role of emperor while remaining human underneath
Destiny vs. free will - The tension between personal choice and being &quot;crushed in the gears of history&quot;
Nobility and legacy - Building for future generations rather than personal gain, exemplified by Roman public works
Humanization of greatness - Moving beyond the &quot;Great Man theory&quot; to see historical figures as complex, flawed humans

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor  Both - Fireworks (4/4)
Bookshelf Worthy Both - Shelf Resident (3/4)

Both hosts enthusiastically recommend &quot;Augustus&quot; for its masterful writing, authentic historical research, and accessibility to non-history readers. The book offers rich themes of leadership, destiny, and human nature that resonate with modern readers. Williams&apos; ability to create distinct character voices through letters makes ancient Rome feel immediate and relatable.

---

*Next Episode: &quot;Tom Lake&quot; by Ann Patchett - continuing Season 1 of KBC*</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Pranav Mutatkar to discuss John Williams&apos; &quot;Augustus&quot; - a Pulitzer Prize-winning historical fiction novel about Rome&apos;s first emperor told through letters and documents.

About the Book
Augustus by John Williams follows the life of Octavius (later Emperor Augustus) through an epistolary structure of letters, documents, and correspondence. The novel humanizes the legendary first Roman Emperor, showing his rise to power, personal relationships, and the burden of leadership. Rather than traditional narrative, readers discover Augustus through the perspectives of friends, family, and contemporaries.

Key Discussion Points

Leadership and performance - How Augustus had to &quot;play&quot; the role of emperor while remaining human underneath
Destiny vs. free will - The tension between personal choice and being &quot;crushed in the gears of history&quot;
Nobility and legacy - Building for future generations rather than personal gain, exemplified by Roman public works
Humanization of greatness - Moving beyond the &quot;Great Man theory&quot; to see historical figures as complex, flawed humans

KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor  Both - Fireworks (4/4)
Bookshelf Worthy Both - Shelf Resident (3/4)

Both hosts enthusiastically recommend &quot;Augustus&quot; for its masterful writing, authentic historical research, and accessibility to non-history readers. The book offers rich themes of leadership, destiny, and human nature that resonate with modern readers. Williams&apos; ability to create distinct character voices through letters makes ancient Rome feel immediate and relatable.

---

*Next Episode: &quot;Tom Lake&quot; by Ann Patchett - continuing Season 1 of KBC*</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>literary, reading, literature, john edward williams, kirti mutatkar, hobby, books, book clubs, aniket mutatkar, augustus, pranav mutatkar</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Peggy Plair &amp; Kirti discuss Tom Lake by Ann Patchett</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> continues <strong>KBC (Kirti's Book Club)</strong> with <strong>Peggy Plair</strong> to discuss <strong>Ann Patchett's "Tom Lake" </strong>- a novel about family, memory, and the stories we tell about our lives, set during the COVID-19 pandemic.</p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Tom Lake by Ann Patchett follows a mother telling her three adult daughters stories about her past while they work together on their family cherry farm in Michigan during COVID-19 lockdown. Through flashbacks, the daughters discover their mother's previous life as a young actress, her first love with a charismatic but unsuitable actor, and how she met their father. The novel explores how our children perceive us versus who we really are.</p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Factor</strong>: Peggy - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy</strong>. Both - Purchased after library rental, plan to revisit and recommend to others</p><p>Both hosts recommend "Tom Lake" as a relatable, feel-good read that resonates with anyone who has navigated unexpected life changes. Patchett's masterful character development creates distinct personalities for each daughter while exploring universal themes of family relationships, finding peace in ordinary life, and understanding that every person we encounter shapes who we become.</p><p><i><strong>Next Episode: "The Midnight Library" by Matt Haig - continuing Season 1 of KBC</strong></i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jul 2025 00:22:11 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Peggy Plair, Kirti Mutatkar, Aniket Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/peggy-plair-kirti-discuss-tom-lake-by-ann-patchett-_CAd5c7r</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/263aeff4-2506-4194-9d2d-7c4eee68c73a/kbc-20tom-20lake-20.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> continues <strong>KBC (Kirti's Book Club)</strong> with <strong>Peggy Plair</strong> to discuss <strong>Ann Patchett's "Tom Lake" </strong>- a novel about family, memory, and the stories we tell about our lives, set during the COVID-19 pandemic.</p><p><strong>About the Book</strong></p><p>Tom Lake by Ann Patchett follows a mother telling her three adult daughters stories about her past while they work together on their family cherry farm in Michigan during COVID-19 lockdown. Through flashbacks, the daughters discover their mother's previous life as a young actress, her first love with a charismatic but unsuitable actor, and how she met their father. The novel explores how our children perceive us versus who we really are.</p><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Factor</strong>: Peggy - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy</strong>. Both - Purchased after library rental, plan to revisit and recommend to others</p><p>Both hosts recommend "Tom Lake" as a relatable, feel-good read that resonates with anyone who has navigated unexpected life changes. Patchett's masterful character development creates distinct personalities for each daughter while exploring universal themes of family relationships, finding peace in ordinary life, and understanding that every person we encounter shapes who we become.</p><p><i><strong>Next Episode: "The Midnight Library" by Matt Haig - continuing Season 1 of KBC</strong></i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="26793968" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/4740a67c-b052-41de-8805-5bcd8a8c02ad/episodes/76a01739-58d2-42da-aca5-bac200521385/audio/bb51efac-5172-4b19-8c6c-3af2c09467ae/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=v89XdrVX"/>
      <itunes:title>Peggy Plair &amp; Kirti discuss Tom Lake by Ann Patchett</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Peggy Plair, Kirti Mutatkar, Aniket Mutatkar</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/90bd4b1d-9f57-4be9-8225-e81cf7661e64/3000x3000/kbc-20tom-20lake-20.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:27:54</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Peggy Plair to discuss Ann Patchett&apos;s &quot;Tom Lake&quot; - a novel about family, memory, and the stories we tell about our lives, set during the COVID-19 pandemic.

About the Book
Tom Lake by Ann Patchett follows a mother telling her three adult daughters stories about her past while they work together on their family cherry farm in Michigan during COVID-19 lockdown. Through flashbacks, the daughters discover their mother&apos;s previous life as a young actress, her first love with a charismatic but unsuitable actor, and how she met their father. The novel explores how our children perceive us versus who we really are.

 KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Peggy - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]
Bookshelf Worthy. Both - Purchased after library rental, plan to revisit and recommend to others

Both hosts recommend &quot;Tom Lake&quot; as a relatable, feel-good read that resonates with anyone who has navigated unexpected life changes. Patchett&apos;s masterful character development creates distinct personalities for each daughter while exploring universal themes of family relationships, finding peace in ordinary life, and understanding that every person we encounter shapes who we become.

Next Episode: &quot;The Midnight Library&quot; by Matt Haig - continuing Season 1 of KBC</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Host Kirti Mutatkar continues KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club) with Peggy Plair to discuss Ann Patchett&apos;s &quot;Tom Lake&quot; - a novel about family, memory, and the stories we tell about our lives, set during the COVID-19 pandemic.

About the Book
Tom Lake by Ann Patchett follows a mother telling her three adult daughters stories about her past while they work together on their family cherry farm in Michigan during COVID-19 lockdown. Through flashbacks, the daughters discover their mother&apos;s previous life as a young actress, her first love with a charismatic but unsuitable actor, and how she met their father. The novel explores how our children perceive us versus who we really are.

 KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Peggy - Gentle Bubbles (3/4), Kirti - [not specified]
Bookshelf Worthy. Both - Purchased after library rental, plan to revisit and recommend to others

Both hosts recommend &quot;Tom Lake&quot; as a relatable, feel-good read that resonates with anyone who has navigated unexpected life changes. Patchett&apos;s masterful character development creates distinct personalities for each daughter while exploring universal themes of family relationships, finding peace in ordinary life, and understanding that every person we encounter shapes who we become.

Next Episode: &quot;The Midnight Library&quot; by Matt Haig - continuing Season 1 of KBC</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Aniket Mutatkar &amp; Kirti discuss Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to the inaugural episode of <strong>KBC (Kirti's Book Club)</strong>! Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> launches the podcast with <strong>Aniket Mutatkar</strong> to discuss <strong>Andy Weir's "Project Hail Mary" </strong>- a science fiction novel about an unlikely hero's mission to save Earth from extinction.</p><p><strong>About the book</strong></p><p>Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir follows Ryland Grace, a science teacher who awakens alone on a spaceship with no memory of how he got there. Through flashbacks, we learn he's humanity's last hope to solve a crisis threatening Earth's sun. The story becomes a tale of friendship, sacrifice, and problem-solving as Grace encounters Rocky, an alien facing the same threat to his home planet.</p><p><strong>Key Discussion Points</strong></p><ul><li>Communication across species - How physics and math become universal language when Grace and Rocky must learn to communicate</li><li>Heroism vs. survival- Unlike typical sci-fi heroes fighting to live, Grace's mission requires sacrificing himself for others</li><li>Global cooperation - How humanity unites during crisis, with parallels to COVID response</li><li>Science meets emotion - The friendship between Grace and Rocky drives the story beyond just problem-solving</li></ul><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Factor</strong>: Kirti - Mental Fireworks (4/4), Aniket - Rolling Boil (3/4)</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy</strong>: Aniket - Prized Possession (4/4), Kirti - Borrowed Time (2/4)</p><p><strong>Looking Ahead</strong></p><ul><li>Upcoming movie adaptation starring Ryan Gosling</li><li>Next KBC episode will feature "Augustus" by John Williams</li><li>Future roundtable discussions with listeners. Reach out to Kirti Mutatkar at kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</li><li>Challenge for sci-fi fans to try historical fiction and vice versa</li></ul><p>Both hosts enthusiastically recommend "Project Hail Mary" for its unique blend of hard science, emotional depth, and accessibility to non-sci-fi readers. Whether you're drawn to the scientific problem-solving or the touching friendship between species, this book offers something meaningful for diverse reading tastes.</p><p><i>*Next Episode: "Augustus" by John Williams - A historical fiction exploration that promises to challenge genre boundaries once again.*</i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 1 Jul 2025 00:21:53 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>kmutatkar@unitedag.org (Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar)</author>
      <link>https://kbc-kirtis-book-club.simplecast.com/episodes/aniket-mutatkar-kirti-discuss-project-hail-mary-by-andy-weir-ltM9zoYd</link>
      <media:thumbnail height="720" url="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/2dda78af-7797-4505-8bd3-436029dda559/3c65291d-06bb-491b-bfea-7f9923854f45/kbc1.jpg" width="1280"/>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to the inaugural episode of <strong>KBC (Kirti's Book Club)</strong>! Host <strong>Kirti Mutatkar</strong> launches the podcast with <strong>Aniket Mutatkar</strong> to discuss <strong>Andy Weir's "Project Hail Mary" </strong>- a science fiction novel about an unlikely hero's mission to save Earth from extinction.</p><p><strong>About the book</strong></p><p>Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir follows Ryland Grace, a science teacher who awakens alone on a spaceship with no memory of how he got there. Through flashbacks, we learn he's humanity's last hope to solve a crisis threatening Earth's sun. The story becomes a tale of friendship, sacrifice, and problem-solving as Grace encounters Rocky, an alien facing the same threat to his home planet.</p><p><strong>Key Discussion Points</strong></p><ul><li>Communication across species - How physics and math become universal language when Grace and Rocky must learn to communicate</li><li>Heroism vs. survival- Unlike typical sci-fi heroes fighting to live, Grace's mission requires sacrificing himself for others</li><li>Global cooperation - How humanity unites during crisis, with parallels to COVID response</li><li>Science meets emotion - The friendship between Grace and Rocky drives the story beyond just problem-solving</li></ul><p><strong>KBC Reading Radar</strong></p><p><strong>Brain Fizz Factor</strong>: Kirti - Mental Fireworks (4/4), Aniket - Rolling Boil (3/4)</p><p><strong>Bookshelf Worthy</strong>: Aniket - Prized Possession (4/4), Kirti - Borrowed Time (2/4)</p><p><strong>Looking Ahead</strong></p><ul><li>Upcoming movie adaptation starring Ryan Gosling</li><li>Next KBC episode will feature "Augustus" by John Williams</li><li>Future roundtable discussions with listeners. Reach out to Kirti Mutatkar at kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</li><li>Challenge for sci-fi fans to try historical fiction and vice versa</li></ul><p>Both hosts enthusiastically recommend "Project Hail Mary" for its unique blend of hard science, emotional depth, and accessibility to non-sci-fi readers. Whether you're drawn to the scientific problem-solving or the touching friendship between species, this book offers something meaningful for diverse reading tastes.</p><p><i>*Next Episode: "Augustus" by John Williams - A historical fiction exploration that promises to challenge genre boundaries once again.*</i></p>
<p><p><strong>Please join the KBC community by sending me an email at </strong><a href="mailto:kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com"><strong>kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Space for the virtual roundtables is limited to 12 participants and it's first come, first served. Please sign up ASAP to reserve your spot.</strong></p><p><strong>Also, please let me know if you would like to join the KBC WhatsApp community for ongoing book discussions and updates.</strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Aniket Mutatkar &amp; Kirti discuss Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Aniket Mutatkar, Kirti Mutatkar</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:38:20</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Welcome to the inaugural episode of KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club)! Host Kirti Mutatkar launches the podcast with Aniket Mutatkar to discuss Andy Weir&apos;s &quot;Project Hail Mary&quot; - a science fiction novel about an unlikely hero&apos;s mission to save Earth from extinction.

About the book 
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir follows Ryland Grace, a science teacher who awakens alone on a spaceship with no memory of how he got there. Through flashbacks, we learn he&apos;s humanity&apos;s last hope to solve a crisis threatening Earth&apos;s sun. The story becomes a tale of friendship, sacrifice, and problem-solving as Grace encounters Rocky, an alien facing the same threat to his home planet.

Key Discussion Points
Communication across species - How physics and math become universal language when Grace and Rocky must learn to communicate
Heroism vs. survival- Unlike typical sci-fi heroes fighting to live, Grace&apos;s mission requires sacrificing himself for others
Global cooperation - How humanity unites during crisis, with parallels to COVID response
Science meets emotion - The friendship between Grace and Rocky drives the story beyond just problem-solving

 KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Kirti - Mental Fireworks (4/4), Aniket - Rolling Boil (3/4)
Bookshelf Worthy: Aniket - Prized Possession (4/4), Kirti - Borrowed Time (2/4)

Looking Ahead
Upcoming movie adaptation starring Ryan Gosling
Next KBC episode will feature &quot;Augustus&quot; by John Williams
Future roundtable discussions with listeners. Reach out to Kirti Mutatkar at kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com
Challenge for sci-fi fans to try historical fiction and vice versa

Both hosts enthusiastically recommend &quot;Project Hail Mary&quot; for its unique blend of hard science, emotional depth, and accessibility to non-sci-fi readers. Whether you&apos;re drawn to the scientific problem-solving or the touching friendship between species, this book offers something meaningful for diverse reading tastes.

*Next Episode: &quot;Augustus&quot; by John Williams - A historical fiction exploration that promises to challenge genre boundaries once again.*</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Welcome to the inaugural episode of KBC (Kirti&apos;s Book Club)! Host Kirti Mutatkar launches the podcast with Aniket Mutatkar to discuss Andy Weir&apos;s &quot;Project Hail Mary&quot; - a science fiction novel about an unlikely hero&apos;s mission to save Earth from extinction.

About the book 
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir follows Ryland Grace, a science teacher who awakens alone on a spaceship with no memory of how he got there. Through flashbacks, we learn he&apos;s humanity&apos;s last hope to solve a crisis threatening Earth&apos;s sun. The story becomes a tale of friendship, sacrifice, and problem-solving as Grace encounters Rocky, an alien facing the same threat to his home planet.

Key Discussion Points
Communication across species - How physics and math become universal language when Grace and Rocky must learn to communicate
Heroism vs. survival- Unlike typical sci-fi heroes fighting to live, Grace&apos;s mission requires sacrificing himself for others
Global cooperation - How humanity unites during crisis, with parallels to COVID response
Science meets emotion - The friendship between Grace and Rocky drives the story beyond just problem-solving

 KBC Reading Radar
Brain Fizz Factor: Kirti - Mental Fireworks (4/4), Aniket - Rolling Boil (3/4)
Bookshelf Worthy: Aniket - Prized Possession (4/4), Kirti - Borrowed Time (2/4)

Looking Ahead
Upcoming movie adaptation starring Ryan Gosling
Next KBC episode will feature &quot;Augustus&quot; by John Williams
Future roundtable discussions with listeners. Reach out to Kirti Mutatkar at kirtimutatkar7@gmail.com
Challenge for sci-fi fans to try historical fiction and vice versa

Both hosts enthusiastically recommend &quot;Project Hail Mary&quot; for its unique blend of hard science, emotional depth, and accessibility to non-sci-fi readers. Whether you&apos;re drawn to the scientific problem-solving or the touching friendship between species, this book offers something meaningful for diverse reading tastes.

*Next Episode: &quot;Augustus&quot; by John Williams - A historical fiction exploration that promises to challenge genre boundaries once again.*</itunes:subtitle>
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