The Jennys bid the podcast farewell with a final episode containing a game, a strong effort not to recap the working horse controversy, and a chat about the lovely and charming Enchanted April, by Elizabeth von Arnim.
The Jennys catch up on The Three Musketeers, chat about the ethics of using other people's lives in your writing, and review TL Huchu's The Library and the Dead.
The Jennys chat about the books they're excited for in the second half of 2021 -- the only joy we can experience in this world is books! -- and then review Jessie Q. Sutanto's comedy novel Dial A for Aunties.
Abandoning books that aren't working for you is a glorious gift you can give yourself! The Jennys chat about DNFing books and review Uzma Jalaluddin's new novel Hana Khan Carries On.
Gin Jenny interviews Brina Starler, author of the new romance novel and LM Montgomery homage Anne of Manhattan. We chat about the book, what's relatable about Anne Shirley, and whether the bananas thing is true.
Gin Jenny interviews author CL Clark about their new military fantasy novel, The Unbroken, and finally discovers the distinction between Kansas City, KS, and Kansas City, MO.
Gin Jenny chats with Rose Lerner about her new Audible Original romance, The Wife in the Romance, and her timeless obsession with an Edwardian Holmes/Watson gay jewel thief AU.
Gin Jenny is enjoyed by special guest star Renay to chat about the best of SF in 2020 across all genres. Then Renay shares a gaming starter pack for nervous gamers, and Gin Jenny explains cross-stitching.
The Jennys are joined by Friend of the Pod Ashley to talk about scary books, review a romance novel that didn't quite work for them, and play a Goosebumps-inspired game.
The Jennys return to their Three Musketeers readalong, chat about fictional places they'd like to visit, and review Elizabeth Little's mystery novel Pretty as a Picture.
The Jennys chat about the Fall 2020 books they're anticipating, then review another romance novel about a viral moment, Girl Gone Viral, by Alisha Rai.
Gin Jenny talks to debut novelist Andrea Stewart about her new book, scuba diving, and how her job as a grants and contracts analyst prepared her for writing The Bone Shard Daughter.
The Jennys catch up on all the books we've bought under quarantine, then review a romance novel they both absolutely loved, Talia Hibbert's Take a Hint, Dani Brown.
Gin Jenny assembles a roundtable to scream about Tamsyn Muir's Harrow the Ninth. She's joined by Bria LaVorgna of Tosche Station, Constance Grady of Vox, and Natalie Zutter of many places including Tor.com, and they all have feelings about Gide
Gin Jenny is joined by Hugo finalist Claire Rousseau to discuss our quarantine media consumption, preview some Summer 2020 books we're excited for, and review NK Jemisin's The City We Became.