Books on the Bed

Inspired by a visit to Tuskegee, Alabama in April of 2021, I’m traveling through the country asking our hosts, ”If I came to your town and stayed at your house, what books would you put on my bed?” Each host will share 6 books for me to carry with me on the journey of my life.

As we go, we’ll build a digital library for you to explore and find the stories that will part a curtain between us, make your heart shift, and change your life.

Episodes

Reena Shah

5 days ago

5 days ago

1hr 54 min

This week we visit with Reena Shah on Roosevelt Island in New York City. 
Reena Shah is the author of Every Happiness, her debut novel. Her work has been featured in the Masters Review, Electric Literature, Joyland, BBC, the American Prospect, National Geographic, and the Guardian, among other publications. She has been awarded fellowships and residencies from the Martha Heasley Cox Center for Steinbeck Studies, Millay Arts, Tin House, Sustainable Arts Foundation, Cuttyhunk Island Residency, and the Fulbright Foundation. She received an MFA in fiction from the Michener Center for Writers, where she won the Keene Prize for Literature. For many years she was a kathak dancer in New York and India. She now lives on Roosevelt Island, NY with her family and teaches in a public school.
BUY AND READ EVERY HAPPINESS!
For more on Reena: reenadshah.com
Reena's Books on the Bed:
Ghachar Ghochar by Vivek Shanbhag
The Story of a Brief Marriage by Anuk Arudpragasam
We the Animals by Justin Torres
Carryout by Hasan Dudar
We Pretty Pieces of Flesh by Colwill Brown
Make Your Way Home by Carrie R. Moore
 
Matt's Gifts for Reena:
Under Water by Tara Menon
But Where's Home? by Toni Ann Johnson
A Good Country by Laleh Khadivi

Helen Whybrow

Jul 2, 2026

Jul 2, 2026

1hr 39 min

This week we visit with Helen Whybrow at Knoll Farm in Fayston, Vermont. 
Helen Whybrow is the author of The Salt Stones: Seasons of a Shepherd's Life (Longlisted for the National Book Award & Winner of the Vermont Book Award), A Man Apart: Bill Coperthwaite’s Radical Experiment in Living and Dead Reckoning: Great Adventure Writing from 1800–1900. She is also the editor of many anthologies, including Hearth: A Global Conversation on Community, Identity, and Place and Coming to Land in a Troubled World. Her writing has appeared in Cagibi, Hunger Mountain, EatingWell, and Orion. She is a visiting professor at Middlebury College and has taught at the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers’ Conference. She lives in the Green Mountains of Vermont, where she shepherds a two-hundred-acre organic farm.
BUY AND READ THE SALT STONES - Paperback and Audio release August 4th!
For more on Helen and Knoll Farm: knollfarm.org
Helen's Books on the Bed:
The Serpent of Stars by Jean Giono
IWÍGARA: The Kinship of Plants and People by Enrique Salmón
Sprout Lands: Tending the Endless Gift of Trees by William Bryant Logan
Rehearsing with Gods: Photographs and Essays on the Bread & Puppet Theater by Ronald T. Simon and Marc Estrin
House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday
Trace: Memory, History, Race, and the American Landscape by Lauret Savoy
 
Matt's Gifts for Helen:
Land, Language, and Women by Julie L. Reed
On Wholeness: Anishinaabe Pathways to Embodiment and Collective Liberation by Quill Christie-Peters
Dispatches from Pluto: Lost and Found in the Mississippi Delta by Richard Grant
 
 
 

Elisa Faison

Jun 18, 2026

Jun 18, 2026

1hr 58 min

This week we visit with Elisa Faison in Carrboro, North Carolina. 
Elisa Faison is a writer and freelance editor living in Carrboro, North Carolina with her partner and two-year-old twins. Her debut novel SKIN CONTACT will be published on June 23, 2026. She has published stories in The Missouri Review, Electric Literature, Smokelong Quarterly, and more. Her story “Motherlove” was the recipient of the 2024 Peden Prize, awarded by The Missouri Review and judged by Rachel Yoder. Her story “Group Sex” was the third most-read story in Electric Literature in 2023. Elisa formerly worked as a bookseller at Flyleaf Books and the book reviews editor of The Carolina Quarterly. She holds a PhD in English from The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where she specialized in twenty-first century climate change novels.
ORDER AND READ SKIN CONTACT!
For more on Elisa: elisafaison.com/
Elisa's Books on the Bed:
A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
A Gate at the Stairs by Lorrie Moore
Girlhood by Melissa Febos
The Lover by Lily King
Ulysses by James Joyce
Sorrow and Bliss by Meg Mason
Matt's Gifts for Elisa:
The End of Romance by Lily Meyer
The Computer Room by Emma Ensley
Strange as This Weather Has Been by Ann Pancake

May 24, 2026

1hr 43 min

This week we visit with Jacquelyn Zong-Li Ross in Vancouver, British Columbia. 
Jacquelyn Zong-Li Ross is a writer and editor based in Vancouver, the unceded territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. Her fiction, poetry, essays, and art criticism have appeared in BOMB, C Mag, The Ex-Puritan, Fence, Mousse, and elsewhere, as well as in the chapbooks Mayonnaise and Drawings on Yellow Paper (with Katie Lyle). By day, she works as an editor at The Capilano Review. By night, she drafts suspended scenarios and propositions. The Longest Way to Eat a Melon, her debut collection of fictions, was published by Sarabande Books in 2025. She is at work on a novel.
BUY AND READ THE LONGEST WAY TO EAT A MELON
For more on Jacquelyn: jacquelynzross.com
Jacquelyn's Books on the Bed:
Three Steps on the Ladder of Writing by Hélène Cixous
The Importance of Being Iceland by Eileen Myles
The Story of My Teeth by Valeria Luiselli
Pure Colour by Sheila Heti
lettuce lettuce please go bad by Tiziana La Melia
The Cloud Notebook by Ada Smailbegović
Matt's gifts for Jacquelyn:
Little Bird by Claudia Ulloa Donoso (translated by Lily Meyer)
Undermajordomo Minor by Patrick deWitt
Temporary by Hilary Leichter 

Alison Lyn Miller

Apr 26, 2026

Apr 26, 2026

2hr 6 min

This week we visit with Alison Lyn Miller in Athens, Georgia.
Alison Lyn Miller grew up in Hartwell, Georgia, and worked as a magazine editor in New York City and Dallas before moving to Athens, Georgia, in 2017. In 2020, she started reporting and writing about independent professional wrestlers around the state and published pieces in Sports Illustrated and Gravy. Her first book, Rough House (W.W. Norton, Jan. ’26), set in Georgia’s small-town professional wrestling scene, explores themes of escapism, self-actualization, performance and violence, and reveals the depth of an often-dismissed American pastime. She has written for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Washington Post, and Garden & Gun, among others, and has been awarded residencies at the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts & Science (2023) and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts (2024). She is 2021 graduate of the Narrative Nonfiction MFA program at The University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism & Mass Communication.
BUY AND READ ROUGH HOUSE
For more on Alison: alisonlynmiller.com
Alison's Books on the Bed:
The Last Cowboys: A Pioneer Family in the New West by John Branch
The Last Fine Time by Verlyn Klinkenborg
The Library Book by Susan Orlean
The Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit by Michael Finkel
Hiroshima by John Hersey
Dirtbag Queen: A Memoir of My Mother by Andy Corren
Matt's Gifts for Alison:
Bookshop Cats by Daphne Du Meowier
They Said They Wanted Revolution by Neda Toloui-Semnani
A Race to the Bottom of Crazy: Dispatches from Arizona by Richard Grant
Gene Smith's Sink: A Wide-Angle View by Sam Stephenson

Alice Martin

Mar 8, 2026

Mar 8, 2026

2hr 3 min

This week we visit with Alice Martin in Waynesville, North Carolina.
Alice Martin is a writer, reader, and teacher from North Carolina. She holds a PhD in Literature from Rutgers University and works as an Assistant Professor of English Studies at Western Carolina University, where she teaches fiction writing and American literature. She lives outside of Asheville, North Carolina with her husband, her son, and too many typewriters. Westward Women is her debut novel.
For more on Alice: alicejmartin.com
BUY WESTWARD WOMEN
Alice’s Books on the Bed:
The Extraordinary Work of Ordinary Writing: Annie Ray's Diary by Jennifer Sinor
Envelope Poems: Poetry by Emily Dickinson (edited by Jen Bervin and Marta Werner)
If I Had Two Wings: Stories by Randall Kenan
The Edible Woman by Margaret Atwood
Bad Behaviour by Mary Gaitskill
The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter
Matt’s Gifts for Alice:
The Night Journal by Elizabeth Crook
Call It Horses by Jessie van Eerden
Girl’s Girl by Sonia Feldman (forthcoming June 2nd)

Nathaniel Roy

Feb 15, 2026

Feb 15, 2026

1hr 33 min

This week we visit with Nathaniel Roy in Ypsilanti, Michigan. 
Nathaniel Roy is a book designer, collage maker, photo taker, self-publisher, and a few other things.
He's a graphic designer who specializes in book design, but for the right cause, he'll design just about anything. He's keenly interested in local, independent, and non-profit projects and is currently an in-house designer at the Ann Arbor District Library and available for freelance opportunities. His clients include Simon & Schuster, W. W. Norton, Wayne State University Press, University of Texas Press, Penn State University Press, Minnesota Historical Society Press.
HIRE THIS GUY: nathanielroy.com
Nate's Books on the Bed:
The Clothing of Books by Jhumpa Lahiri
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman
The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation by Rainer Maria Rilke
Letters of Note: An Eclectic Collection of Correspondence Deserving of a Wider Audience by Shaun Usher
Boom Town: The Fantastical Saga of Oklahoma City, Its Chaotic Founding... Its Purloined Basketball Team, and the Dream of Becoming a World-class Metropolis by Sam Anderson
Matt's Gifts for Nate:
The Salt Stones: Seasons of a Shepherd's Life by Helen Whybrow
American Bulk by Emily Mester
A History of Half-Birds by Caroline Harper New
 

Dec 21, 2025

2hr 11 min

This week we visit with Ashleigh Bryant Phillips in Asheville, North Carolina. 
Ashleigh Bryant Phillips is from rural Woodland, North Carolina. She's a graduate of Meredith College and earned an MFA from the University of North Carolina, Wilmington. Her debut short story collection Sleepovers is the winner of the 2019 C. Michael Curtis Short Story Book Prize, selected by Lauren Groff. Her stories have appeared in The Oxford American, The Paris Review and others. 
For more on Ashleigh: ashleighbryantphillips.com
Ashleigh's Books on the Bed:
Will You Please Be Quiet, Please by Raymond Carver
Portraits and Dreams: Photographs and Stories by Children of the Appalachians  1976-1982, 2009-2018 by Wendy Ewald 
Bambi by Felix Salten, translated by Damion Searls
Free Day by Inès Cagnati, translated by Liesl Schillinger
The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century by Alex Ross
The Royal Diaries: Cleopatra VII: Daughter of the Nile, Egypt, 57 B.C. by Kristiana Gregory
Matt's Gifts for Ashleigh:
Where the Roots Reach for Water: A Personal & Natural History of Melancholia by Jeffery Smith
Reading Reconstruction: Sherwood Bonner and the Literature of the Post-Civil War South by Kathryn B. McKee
Room Swept Home by Remica Bingham-Risher

Nilo Tabrizy

Dec 7, 2025

Dec 7, 2025

1hr 51 min

This week we visit with Nilo Tabrizy in Brooklyn, New York.
Nilo Tabrizy is the co-author (with Fatemeh Jamalpour) of For the Sun After Long Nights, a moving exploration of the 2022 women-led protests in Iran, as told through the interwoven stories of two Iranian journalists. She is an investigative reporter at The Washington Post working for the visual forensics team, where she covers Iran using open-source methods. Previously, she was a video journalist at The New York Times, covering Iran, race and policing, abortion access, and more. She is an Emmy nominee and the 2022 winner of the Front Page Award for Online Investigative Reporting. She received an M.S. in journalism from Columbia University and a B.A. in political science and French from the University of British Columbia.
For more on Nilo: ntabrizy.com
Nilo's Books on the Bed:
Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám
Women's Voices from Kurdistan: A Selection of Kurdish Poetry (edited by Farangis Ghaderi, Clémence Scalbert Yücel, Yaser Hassan Ali)
Puerto Rico: A National History by Jorell Meléndez-Badillo
An Anthology of the Experiences of Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Victims (Third Collection) by Hiroshima Association for the Success of the Atomic Bomb Exhibition
Family Lexicon by Natalia Ginzburg (must-read afterword by Peg Boyers!)
They Said They Wanted Revolution: A Memoir of My Parents by Neda Toloui-Semnani
Matt's Gifts for Nilo:
As Seeds We Grow: Student Reflections on Resilience (edited by Elise Boulanger)
Heating the Outdoors and Between the Moments: Canadian Aboriginal Voices by Marie-Andrée Gill
Daughters of Palestine by Leyla K. King
 
 
 

Tessa Fontaine

Nov 30, 2025

Nov 30, 2025

1hr 40 min

This week we visit with Tessa Fontaine in Asheville, North Carolina. 
Tessa Fontaine is the author of The Electric Woman: A Memoir in Death-Defying Acts and The Red Grove, her debut novel. Raised outside San Francisco, Tessa teaches in Warren Wilson’s MFA program, started Salt Lake City’s Writers in the Schools program, and has taught in jails and prisons for years. She co-founded and teaches the Accountability Workshops with writer and pal Annie Hartnett, and lives in Asheville, North Carolina, with her daughter, silly dog and sassy cat.
For more on Tessa: tessafontaine.com
Tessa's Books on the Bed:
Sun Under Wood by Robert Hass
Coming Through Slaughter by Michael Ondaatje
Jazz by Toni Morrison
The Soul of an Octopus by Sy Montgomery
All My Puny Sorrows by Miriam Toews
We the Animals by Justin Torres
Matt's Gifts for Tessa:
Leaving Biddle City by Marianna Chan
Obit by Victoria Chang
Chooch Helped by Andrea L. Rogers (illustrated by Rebecca Kunz)
 
 

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