Bedside Reading

Bedside Reading Podcast
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Apr 22, 2025 • 21min

Bedside Poetry: Tom Oates and I explore "For Andrew Wood" by James Fenton

Send us Fan MailThere is a wonderful recording of James Fenton reading this wonderful poem here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-D3KcWVfQS8 it is well worth listening to.Follow Tom on bluesky here: https://bsky.app/profile/tpoates.bsky.social
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Apr 15, 2025 • 23min

Bedside Poetry: Sabina Dosani and I explore "Visit to the Vets" by Ilse Pedler

Send us Fan MailWelcome to the third in a short special series of "Bedside Poetry" podcasts.One poem, one guest, one conversation....I'm delighted to welcome psychiatrist and writer Sabina Dosani to explore "Visit to the Vets" by Ilse PedlerListen here to Ilse Pedler reading her poem herself:https://youtu.be/p3LTxg1SnP0?si=bMtri4HsTIAGMKcb
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Apr 8, 2025 • 21min

Bedside Poetry: Vicky Thomas and I explore "in time of daffodils" by ee cummings

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Apr 1, 2025 • 30min

Bedside Poetry: Beth Osmond and I explore "Ode to Dalya's Bald Spot" by Angel Nafis

Send us Fan MailWelcome to the first of a short special series of "Bedside Poetry" podcasts.One poem, one guest, one conversation....I'm delighted to welcome neonatologist and poet Beth Osmond to explore Angel Nafis' poem "Ode to Dalya's Bald Spot"find the poem here:https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/149508/ode-to-dalyas-bald-spot
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Mar 25, 2025 • 36min

Soldier Sailor

Send us Fan MailThis is the last episode in season eight of the podcast. What a season we've had, finishing off with discussion of Soldier Sailor by Claire Kilroy. I'm delighted to welcome Laura Shtaingos to the podcast today. Laura wears a number of hats, mostly working within the perinatal mental health space. And it was really, really good to be talking to her about Claire Kilroy's extraordinary, raw novel. which I think brings up lots of themes very pertinent for anybody who is looking after young parents, parents of small children, and looking after children, recognising that children do not exist in a vacuum.I would say if you are a new parent yourself and really struggling, this book might be a big challenge. It might be one where you really feel seen, heard and normalised or it might be quite traumatic and quite triggering. So I think it needs to come with a bit of a warning, but it was absolutely wonderful to welcome Laura today and really to think about this novel and what we can take away from it.Laura volunteers with https://www.babyumbrella.org.uk/Find Laura here: https://www.westkentcounsellor.co.uk/how-i-work
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Mar 18, 2025 • 36min

Dirty Laundry

Send us Fan MailI'm delighted to welcome Abi Lucking, GP and Medical Educator to Bedside Reading today. We are talking about Dirty Laundry by Richard Pink and Roxanne Emery. You may have come across Rich and Rox. They are the couple ADHD_love_ frequently to be found on Instagram and on Facebook and TikTok.  It was really, really good to find that they had written a great book, which is very short, very accessible, very readable, and one of the most compassionate and wise books I've read in the last few months. I really, really enjoyed it, and I've really enjoyed exploring it with Abi: thinking about ADHD, being the partner of somebody with ADHD, supporting colleagues or trainees who are or might have ADHD. It's a really, really good book and I have thoroughly, thoroughly enjoyed thinking about it.Abi recommended the book ADHD effect on marriage by Melissa Orlovhttps://adhdmarriage.com/content/adhd-effect-marriage-understand-and-rebuild-your-relationship-six-steps
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Mar 11, 2025 • 34min

The Madness of Grief

Send us Fan MailThe Reverend Richard Cole's memoir of grieving for his husband David, The Madness of Grief, is I think one of the most brilliant and moving books on the topic I have ever read. When I started the podcast, I imagined that it wouldn't be long before somebody got in contact and wanted to talk about it. So it's been astonishing that we are almost at the end of season eight before a guest has asked to come and talk about it. And I'm glad I waited because I have loved talking to Lynsey Bennett today and about grief, about complex grief, about communication in and around grief. This is such an accessible, moving and funny book, one which I have recommended to a lot of patients as well as to colleagues and it was really good to have a conversation about it.
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Mar 4, 2025 • 37min

A Beginners Guide to Dying

Send us Fan MailIt's a really warm welcome back today to Anna Baverstock, a paediatrician from Taunton in Somerset. We are talking today about A Beginner's Guide to Dying by Simon Boas. Don't let the word dying in the title put you off. This is an absolutely wonderful and incredibly uplifting short book. It was written by Simon Boas in the last few months of his life.It is reflections on a life immensely well lived and his reflections on the way to be. How to live life to the full, especially when you know that it's going to be short. It's very moving, it's properly laugh out loud funny and it's taught me and Anna a great deal.Follow Anna on social media here:https://bsky.app/profile/annabav.bsky.socialhttps://www.instagram.com/annadoodleaday/
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Feb 25, 2025 • 34min

When the Dust Settles - Lucy Easthope

Send us Fan MailLucy Easthope's book, When the Dust Settles, is quite possibly one of the most astonishing things I have ever read. Having come back to it for today's podcast, I am struck again by the compassionate wisdom with which Lucy writes and how relevant the themes from disaster recovery are to all of us, particularly those of us working in healthcare. It was such a treat to talk to Lucy herself.I think I managed not to be too fan girly during the course of this interview. You can let me know if I succeeded or not. It really is such a treat to welcome her to Bedside Reading, to think about her book When the Dust Settles, and also about her new book Come What May, which is going to be released in the UK in May 2025.Find Lucy on social media here:https://bsky.app/profile/lucygobag.bsky.socialhttps://twitter.com/LucyGoBag
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Feb 18, 2025 • 34min

The Heart of the Matter

Send us Fan MailToday I am talking to Kas Hawes, a GP in the North of England, about her book, The Heart of the Matter, A Day in the Life of a GP. On the jacket, it is described as "a unique story, the story of a doctor and the many patients she sees every day, a tale of the diversity of life, the uniqueness of individuals and the impact of deprivation on the health of society".  The blurb goes on to say this is a book about "being human, the challenge of being on the front line, trying to heal with kindness whilst fighting in an extra rising tide of need." This is such a good book. I'm a GP. I didn't learn anything new from it, but it wasn't a busman's holiday sort of a book. It really was one that made me think. I'm a little bit jealous actually that I didn't write it myself because Kas really does represent so well the consultations that are going on every day in every health centre. I really love the way that she reflects before and after those incidents with patients and really gives us some insight into the way that GPs think. It's a really good book and I really really enjoy talking to Kas about it.

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