#409 “In the First Circle” by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

In 1967, Russian author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn edited his new novel down from 96 chapters to 87 chapters in the hopes that a censored version would be more palatable to Soviet publishers. It was not.

In 1968, he was able to successfully get the novel published in Europe. It was, however, the shortened 87-chapter version.

In 1978, the full unedited version was finally published in Russia. A full English translation would not land in America until 2009.

In 2025, seeing that In The First Circle was a lengthy Russian novel about military prisons in WWII, the cast of Just In Case We Die almost vetoed it. All three of them are now grateful that they did not. This novel– long considered to be Solzhenitsyn’s masterpiece–is really something special.

Press “PLAY” below to hear the discussion!

July 2025 — Bonus Episode (Mike Trippiedi)

In Champaign, Illinois– the city that serves as the home base for this podcast– there is a man named Mike Trippiedi. He is an award-winning filmmaker, an accomplished stage actor and director, and the author of three novels. He also happens to be someone that Aaron has known for most of his life.

Mike’s new novel is called Abraham Lincoln’s Traveling Medicine Show. It’s a very entertaining revision of the assassination of our nation’s 16th President, as well as the ensuing aftermath. Aaron really enjoyed this novel and wanted to give Mike an opportunity to talk about the process of writing it. Along the way, they chat about being an independent filmmaker, revisionist history, Jack London, A Confederacy of Dunces, and that one horror writer that Rebecca is tired of us bringing up in every episode!

Press “PLAY” below to hear the interview!

#932 “Play It As It Lays” by Joan Didion

It’s June! This means that we discuss a book hand-selected from the list by Rebecca.

The last time she did this, she selected The Book of Illusions, a novel she had never read that was written by a novelist she admires. She took a wholly different approach this time: couple the desire to read a writer she had never experienced before with the realization that we almost never read books by women. The end result was Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion. Considered one of the classic “Los Angeles novels”, the nihilistic content of this book certainly left us with much to discuss.

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June 2025 — Bonus Episode (Literary BBQ)

It’s summertime!

That means beautiful weather, afternoons at the pool, and maybe some time to relax and catch up on our ever-growing TBR piles. It also means, however, that things are going to get chaotic around here– prepping for trips to Alaska, summer camp with the kids, schoolwork, jobs. Before the three of us get bogged down in real life, we decided to throw ourselves a backyard patio BBQ . . . and invite some of our favorite writers.

Each of us invited three writers to the shindig– one living, one dead, and one we’ve never discussed on our show before. That means our hypothetical backyard will be hosting nine writers from different eras and genres! What results is a fun and lively discussion in which we speculate on what all of these authors would bring to a conversation. Will a fight break out? Why did Rebecca want to spend the evening with eleven men? Will Rodney’s selections surprise anyone? Will Kurt Vonnegut be sad that Aaron didn’t invite him to attend?

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#564 “The Expedition of Humphry Clinker” by Tobias Smollett

The first movie released in the DVD format was the 1996 disaster film Twister.

Bullfrogs never sleep.

The nation of China is credited with the invention of ice cream.

Africa is the only continent with land in all four hemispheres.

Queen guitarist Brian May holds a PhD in astrophysics.

Aaron, Rodney, and Rebecca are going to remember these five random bits of trivia before they ever remember anything about The Expedition of Humphry Clinker.

Press “Play” on the media player below to hear the latest discussion!

May 2025 — Bonus Episode (National Short Story Month 2)

Remember last year when we decided to celebrate National Short Story Month by discussing six short stories hand-selected by the cast? Well, we had so much fun last year that we decided to do it again!

This year, Rodney actually chooses a short story instead of a novella, Rebecca reveals an interesting way to select material for our show, and Aaron must endure insulting words about one of his favorite writers. Also– and probably most importantly– Aaron and Rodney are once again vindicated when Rebecca is impressed by one of their favorite science-fiction authors.

In this episode, the following writers and stories are discussed:
— “The Briefcase” by Rebecca Makkai
— “The Light Through The Window” by Kevin Brockmeier
— “The Swimmer” by John Cheever
— “The Runner” by Don Delillo
— “The Hunger Artist” by Franz Kafka
— “I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon” by Philip K. Dick

To join the fun, press “Play” on the media player below!

“A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius” by Dave Eggers — Veto #2

So what happened was this . . . At the end of the episode on “Les Miserables” by Victor Hugo, the random number generator gave us #355. The book corresponding to this number was “Emma” by Jane Austen. Rebecca ixnayed that itshay quicker than quick, but she then had to use the random number generator to pick a tome from her veto list. The redraw gave us A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, Dave Eggers’ powerful 2000 memoir about caring for his younger brother after the death of his parents.

This book is hard to categorize. The Pulitzer Prize committee felt it was, in fact, a memoir when they shortlisted it for the prize. The author himself acknowledges throughout the book that some of it is fictionalized and not at all depicted the way that events actually happened. Aren’t memoirs by their very nature technically post-modern works?

Is it a comedy? Is it a drama? Is it totally fabricated? Regardless of which genre you choose, however, it cannot be denied that the book is aptly named.

Press “Play” below to hear our discussion!

April 2025 — Bonus Episode (National Library Week)

Did you know that there is a library in Oslo doing quite possibly the coolest literary thing that we have ever read about? Too bad none of us will be alive to experience it!

It’s National Library Week, and the cast here at Just In Case We Die are celebrating with some reminiscing about our favorite memories of the library. They talk about Aaron’s mother and what she is doing for the library in a small town with a population of 500 people. They discuss some fun facts about libraries, librarians, and the library systems in foreign countries.

Push ‘Play” below to hear the discussion, and then make sure you visit your local library!

#1157 “The Third Policeman” by Flann O’Brien

A nameless narrator commits a murder. As a result, he must traverse an absurdist landscape of two-dimensional buildings, bumbling police officers, and philosophical meanderings about bicycles. What percentage of one man can become a bicycle before he ceases to be more man than bicycle?

Born in 1911, Irish novelist and playwright Brian O’Nolan made a name for himself in the metafiction movement of the 1940s under the pseudonym of Flann O’Brien. The Third Policeman, a novel that never found a publisher until after the author’s death in 1966, is truly one of the strangest novels that any one of us has ever read. It also happens to be one of the more thought-provoking.

Join us on our descent into absurdity by pressing “Play” on the media player below.

March 2025 — Bonus Episode (Independent Bookstore Crawl)

On Saturday, February 22, 2025, Rodney and Aaron spent a rather brisk winter day wandering around the town of Rockford for an annual event called The Independent Bookstore Crawl. It’s like a bar crawl with books. There was also comics, though. And vinyl. There was lunch at a local burger joint. We bought battered paperbacks of Robert Heinlein, fantasy novels written by a Rockford native, and a lot of coffee. They met a very interesting woman who seemed to live and breathe charity for her community. They talked with strangers about their favorite writers from Peoria. They saw a painting of a woman performing lewd acts on a rocket ship, an impressive collection of old-school typewriters, and a taxidermied crocodile. It was quite a day y’all!

Press ‘Play’ below to hear the newest episode!

(Incidentally . . .this is the inscription that is mentioned during our interview with the owner of Maze Books . . .

. . . and it’s just as bonkers as you were thinking!)