Books & Looks: Real Books for Real Readers was started as a literary podcast to supplement Blaine Desantis’ website, ViewsOnBooks.com, and expand into audio and video interviews with authors.
With Books & Looks, Blaine’s goal is to focus on real books that real people will read. At least half of the books he reviews are either new authors or unknown authors that many in the general public are unaware of. After a segment reviewing books or interviewing authors, Blaine ends each episode with a discussion of the movies and TV shows he is currently watching.
Learn more about BookTrib’s partner and Blaine at ViewsOnBooks.com.
This Week’s Episode
What if you had to tell the time without glancing at a watch, phone, or screen? In this episode of Books & Looks, host Blaine DeSantis sits down with best-selling author Cathy Haynes to explore the forgotten ways humanity once used the natural world to track the hours of the day. Tune in to discover how you can break free from rigid clock-watching and start reading the rhythmic, environmental cues hidden right in your own backyard.
Discussing her Wall Street Journal must-read book, The Fullness of Time, Cathy shares captivating historical timekeeping methods, from medieval scratch dials to Icelandic day marks that map the sun’s journey across the landscape. The conversation explores fascinating natural phenomena like ornithological clocks, the rhythmic waulking songs of the Scottish Hebrides, and why observing a sheep’s pupils can accurately reveal the approaching dusk. But can humans actually rely on biological timekeepers like “floral clocks” and circadian rhythms to plan a schedule, or do these blooming plants serve a completely different ecological purpose? Listen in to uncover the surprisingly complex relationship between pollinators, star movements, and the artificial time zones we live by today.
If you enjoyed this peaceful journey into natural timekeeping, be sure to subscribe to Books & Looks and leave us a review!
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