The Weird History Podcast

Joe Streckert

  • 35 minutes 20 seconds
    238 In the Garden of Monsters with Crystal King

    Crystal King is a long-time friend of the program, and has appeared previously to talk about her debut novel Feast of Sorrow, and her follow-up The Chef’s Secret. Her newest novel, In the Garden of Monsters, blends Greek and Roman mythology, the history of postwar Italy, and surrealism into a page-turning gothic romance. In our interview we talked about the unique setting of her book, the mythological elements she drew upon, and Salvador Dali.

    30 September 2024, 5:53 pm
  • 36 minutes 46 seconds
    237 A Danger Shared with Bill Lascher

    A Danger Shared: A Journalist’s Glimpses of a Continent at War is the latest book from Portland journalist and author Bill Lascher. Bill joined us to talk about WWII in Asia through the eyes of journalist Melville Jacoby, his own connection with Jacoby, and what he learned from going through an archive of images that included Macau, the Philippines, Vietnam, and beyond. Jacoby’s coverage included scenes of everyday life as battle raged on, up-close images of conflict, and the human faces behind a world at war.

    26 March 2024, 7:01 pm
  • 29 minutes 31 seconds
    236 Piracy in the South China Sea with Rita Chang-Eppig

    By all reasonable metrics Shek Yeung, who raided the South China Sea in the early 1800s, is one of the most successful pirates of all time. In her new novel Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea author Rita Chang-Eppig tells a fictionalized version of the pirate queen’s life, her rise to power, and her relationship with powers both temporal and spiritual.

    12 May 2023, 3:38 am
  • 15 minutes 48 seconds
    235 Shakespeare Versus Hedgehogs

    William Shakespeare seems to have hated hedgehogs. We don’t quite know why, but it could have something to do with how the tiny animal is depicted by the Roman scholar Pliny the Elder. Special Thanks to Jamie Jeffers of The British History Podcast and Miles Stokes of Jay and Miles X-Plain the X-Men for providing voicework for this episode.

    1 March 2023, 9:47 pm
  • 14 minutes 20 seconds
    234 Lupercalia

    Before Valentine’s Day, ancient Romans celebrated a festival of fertility in the shadow of the Palatine Hill. Lupercalia was a popular holiday that featured blood, goat sacrifice, and getting whipped by naked guys.

    13 February 2023, 9:27 pm
  • 37 minutes 28 seconds
    233 The Golden Fortress with Bill Lascher

    During the Dust Bowl city officials in Los Angeles, fueled by anti-communist paranoia and xenophobia, were determined to keep migrants out of California. To that end, they dispatched the LAPD to remote border crossing points far outside the city in order to keep out anyone who looked like they were fleeing blight or didn’t have work. Author Bill Lascher spoke with us about his new book The Golden Fortress, which outlines how in 1936 LA law enforcement went to the far reaches of the Golden State to keep California closed.

    9 October 2022, 6:58 pm
  • 42 minutes 58 seconds
    232 Navigating the Asian Maritime World with Eric Tagliacozzo

    Eric Tagliacozzo is a professor of history at Cornell University, and his new book In Asian Waters: Oceanic Worlds From Yemen to Yokohama outlines five centuries of maritime history in the Asian world. In this wide-ranging interview, we discussed how China created trade routes that stretched all the way to Africa’s Swahili coast, the ocean-going history of Vietnam, and the role of consumer goods, piracy, slavery, and religion in the Indian Ocean, South China Sea, Pacific, and beyond.

    11 July 2022, 6:58 pm
  • 55 minutes 18 seconds
    231 The History of Archaeology with Ann R. Williams

    Archaeology has changed considerably over the past century. In this episode, we spoke with Ann R. Williams of National Geographic about the new book Lost Cities Ancient Tombs, significant discoveries from the past century, and what it means to dig up the past.

    23 January 2022, 9:11 pm
  • 11 minutes 47 seconds
    230 The Adventures of Mussolini’s Corpse

    After his death in 1945, Mussolini’s corpse was autopsied and thrown into a pauper’s grave. But, that was just the beginning of the cadaver’s posthumous career. Eventually the body was stolen by neofascists, hidden away for over a decade, and used as a political bargaining chip in postwar Italy.

    8 November 2021, 8:08 pm
  • 59 minutes 3 seconds
    229 Douglas Wolk on All of the Marvels

    The Marvel Universe is massive. Marvel comics go back well over half a century, and span thousands upon thousands of pages. Reading all of them would be a Herculean undertaking. And one man, Douglas Wolk, did exactly that, and wrote a book about it. We talked his new release All of the Marvels, and about how one of the most well-known fictional universes in the world has dealt with real-world history, like war, civil rights, crime, AIDS, Watergate, and more.

    12 October 2021, 7:04 pm
  • 17 minutes 31 seconds
    228 The Mustache Strike

    In 1907 French waiters went on strike, and won the right to wear facial hair.

    6 September 2021, 2:52 am
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