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Lit on Fire

Lit on Fire

De : Elizabeth Hahn and Peter Whetzel
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“Welcome to Lit on Fire — the podcast where literature meets controversy, where banned books, silenced voices, and dangerous ideas refuse to stay quiet. From classrooms to courtrooms, novels to news cycles, we explore how stories challenge power, expose injustice, and ignite social change.


Our logo — a woman bound atop a burning stack of books — isn’t just an image. It’s a warning and a promise. A warning about what happens when voices are erased… and a promise that stories, once lit, are impossible to put out.


So if you’re ready to question, to argue, to feel uncomfortable, and to think deeper — you’re in the right place. This is - Lit on Fire.

© 2026 Lit on Fire
Art Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • The Road by Cormac McCarthy
      Jan 25 2026

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      Ash falls, trees stand like burnt ribs, and a father tells his son to carry the fire. We dive into Cormac McCarthy’s The Road not just as a survival story, but as a sharp mirror reflecting who gets to be called human when every system fails. We wrestle with the novel’s treatment of women—the mother’s contested agency, the near-total silencing of female voices, and the brutal imagery of bodies reduced to utility—and ask what it means when the narratives that endure in catastrophe preserve only certain kinds of power.

      From there, we track the book’s braided symbols of faith and ethics. Is the boy a messiah, or is he conscience made flesh? We unpack biblical echoes, Eli’s provocation that “there is no God and we are his prophets,” and the stubborn instruction to “carry the fire” as a portable moral code. When institutions collapse and scripture loses authority, the story suggests the only commandment left is what we practice: care, restraint, and responsibility that costs us something.

      We also connect the ash-gray world to our own: environmental collapse, cannibalistic capitalism, and the thin line between survival and savagery. The road becomes a ritual of movement that refuses despair—keep walking, keep the flame, keep the code—while the ending hands that fragile hope to the next generation. If you’ve ever wondered whether hope is naïve or necessary, or how literature can expose the price of outsourcing morality, this conversation offers a rigorous, compassionate guide through the smoke.

      If the episode resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review telling us what “carrying the fire” means to you. Your notes help more curious readers find the spark.

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      26 min
    • Dungeon Crawler Carl, Book 1 by Matt Dinniman
      Jan 22 2026

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      A death game with loot drops shouldn’t feel this human, but Dungeon Crawler Carl sneaks past your guard with jokes and then hits you with a mirror. We dive into the LitRPG’s wild premise—Earth flattened by aliens, survivors herded into a televised dungeon—and explore why Carl and Princess Donut work as more than a meme. Their bond isn’t comic relief; it’s the engine of a found family story about dignity, tenderness and the cost of staying human when survival is monetized.

      We unpack how the book skewers late-stage capitalism and our culture of spectacle without turning into a lecture. From ratings agents who coach contestants on being “more entertaining” to a boss encounter that exposes how media flattens people into stereotypes, the satire lands because the characters care. Carl’s mantra—“you will not break me”—becomes a refusal to surrender empathy to an algorithm. We also dig into the ethical knots: NPCs with memories and personality, an AI that turns stat sheets into character, and the uneasy line between performance and personhood.

      If you’re new to LitRPG, we cover the basics and why this one reads fast: punchy worldbuilding, action that moves, and humor that serves the story instead of smothering it. If you’re already deep in the fandom, we trade notes on the series scope, upcoming adaptations, and where to go next with recommendations that share Carl’s blend of heart and bite. Along the way, we celebrate the audiobook performance that brings every beat to life and talk about why a laser-eyed cat can carry more truth than a dozen “serious” novels.

      Press play, then tell us what moral line you’d draw inside a system that turns pain into content. If the show resonated, follow, rate, and share with a friend who loves big ideas wrapped in absolute chaos—we read everything you send and it helps more curious listeners find the pod.

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      28 min
    • The Women of Wild Hill by Kirsten Miller
      Jan 18 2026

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      What if a family legacy of witchcraft demanded more than survival—what if it demanded a reckoning? We dive into Kirsten Miller’s The Women of Wild Hill, where two estranged sisters collide with a centuries-old haunting, a thorny prophecy, and a world that keeps pretending it isn’t on fire. The scale is bigger than a single villain; it’s the machinery of patriarchy, wealth, and extraction, and the question is brutal: do you fix a rigged system from within, or do you burn it down and start over?

      We compare the intimate vigilante justice of The Change with Wild Hill’s push toward systemic upheaval, unpacking how lineage shifts the story from finding power to stewarding it. Brigid’s death-sight, Phoebe’s healing, and Sybil’s kitchen magic reveal three distinct expressions of agency—one burdened by finality, one built for repair, and one that turns care into strategy. Along the way, we trace the novel’s ecofeminist spine: storms herding the sisters home, a house kept by a wronged ancestor, and "the Old One" nudging fate with wind and quake when humans refuse to listen.

      The moral terrain isn’t tidy. We wrestle with prophecy as both guide and cage, with poison as a cure that hurts before it heals, and with the cost of toppling men who are monstrous in boardrooms rather than alleys. Are flawed women still fit to lead a revolution? Can rage be refined into a compass? By the end, we land on a hard truth: solidarity, not solitary heroics, moves the needle, and sometimes the clean solution is the fantasy that keeps everything broken.

      If this conversation sparks something in you, hit follow, share it with a friend who loves witchy fiction with teeth, and leave a review telling us whether you’d choose reform or reckoning—and why.

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      25 min
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