Podcast hosts
No host has claimed this podcast yet, if you are the host you can verify ownership by claiming this podcast
© The Podglomerate LLC
Missing Pages
Reviews
HolmesandWatson
2 out of 5 stars
Bad writing
The stories are fascinating but the writing of the episodes is so confusing and muddled and clearly biased that it’s almost impossible to tell what the story is actually about. The last episode about three cups of tea was nonsensical. I couldn’t understand the story, and then the third act was a weird moralistic take on a largely irrelevant interview with a comedian who hadn’t even read the book, the book which wasn’t a comedy? What a disappointment. Great idea though.
REZNIL JANNERY
4 out of 5 stars
Interesting but….
Too much review and rehashing already discussed info = padding?
Avoidoid
1 out of 5 stars
Amateurish and Silly
This podcast isn't terrible in theory. There's enough chicanery happening in the publishing world for good stories but this podcast just can't find it's footing. Too trashy to be journalism and too journalistic to be trashy Missing Pages occupies an uncomfortable space in the middle. Also the scripts need an editor and the host's delivery is wooden and unsure. I made it to episode 8 before I threw in the towel. If you're desperate to hear poorly presented stories about the publishing world, this may be for you but if you like well made podcasts, I'd skip this one.
n9006
1 out of 5 stars
Preachy and Annoying
I was really excited about this podcast but I had to turn it off after the second episode. I think a podcast exploring inequities in publishing could be really great! But a podcast posing as unsolved weirdies, that then just preaches for 45 minutes without any concrete evidence is lame. I want to know WHY Dan Mallory did what he did, and a deep dive into the physical infrastructure that allowed him to do so. Not an interview with a completely unrelated author and a vague thesis statement about abuses of power. Doesn’t matter how right you are, soapboxing (especially in podcast form) is always irritating.
sgordon1126
3 out of 5 stars
going downhill
I’ve been enjoying this podcast so far, but todays episode made me very annoyed. the “dreams vs. reality” was a whole episode of being condescended to. Someone must have not felt like writing an actual episode this week, so we all had to suffer through the kindergarten class version of this pod.
Ken-dar
1 out of 5 stars
Judgmental without any self reflection
The show frequently judges others for doing things for dubious reasons, while seeming completely oblivious that the show is 100% capitalizing on salacious gossip. Gossip is bitter when delivered in such a holier than thou frame.
🌠🌈🌌🌄🌊🗻🌅🌋🗾
1 out of 5 stars
Fangirling over a plagiarist?
If you’re looking for an explanation for how 40 passages from Megan McCafferty’s “Sloppy Firsts” ended up in Kaavya Viswanathan’s “Opal Mehta” well…you aren’t going to get an answer here. I agree with other reviewers who found this first interview with Viswanathan in 15 years extremely disappointing and not at all illuminating. If Viswanathan didn’t intentionally plagiarize, then who did? “I guess we’ll never know the truth,” Patrick says. And why not? PATRICK DIDN’T ASK. At another point, someone says something to the effect of, “We’ll never know if someone at Alloy gave McCafferty’s books to Viswanathan.” Again, we’ll never know because PATRICK DIDN’T ASK. Patrick praises KV for her candor, but it seemed clear to this listener that Viswanathan the lawyer definitely set some ground rules that the most important questions were the ones she wouldn’t answer. Even worse for a respected critic and reviewer like Patrick? Her reluctance to call the large scale theft of another author’s work what it was--plagiarism. Not "alleged." Plagiarism. And contrary to the "bombshell" in the interview, Harvard's internal investigation was about Kaavya’s *academic* work while a student. It did not absolve her from the plagiarism in Opal Mehta because that was outside Harvard's purview. (Another investigation went into articles she wrote for a local newspaper, which also found no plagiarism.) Viswanathan talks about “incentives” in publishing. The incentives here are clear. Patrick got a “scoop” and Viswanathan got to take the first step in her redemption tour—one that will culminate with the inevitable press cycle for the publication of her literary adult novel in progress. I expected better from Patrick, a respected book critic and interviewer. I will not be listening to any future episodes.
Andrea Dunlop
5 out of 5 stars
All the literary goss
This feels like my author group chats but with reporting. Basically exactly what I want!
cashew110
5 out of 5 stars
Big fan so far
Stories I’d almost forgotten about!! Very excited for upcoming Greg Moretensen episode. Also appreciate the book reviews at the end of each episode. Subscribed!
Historian 1766
1 out of 5 stars
Weirdly apologist for plagiarism
I understand the angle of the episode on Kaavya Viswanthanan: the author was really just a figurehead for a YA book project cobbled together by others. While that is worth exploring, the episode glosses over the sheer amount of brazen plagiarism in “How Opal Mehta Got Kissed” and the author’s obvious role in it. She is depicted as a victim or dupe who needed to “heal” (!) after getting caught up in a massive con job. Really?
Ivriyah18
1 out of 5 stars
Great story, terrible packaging, unlistenable
Repetitive, slow, full of filler and unnecessary digressions. The host assumes listeners are familiar with events that occurred in the 90s - thirty years ago! - and feels the need to explain things like how instagram works. There is a crazy amount of social justice throat clearing, especially given that the YA world is now EXTREMELY into this stuff and has regular drama around it. If this was more tightly packaged and better edited, it would have been a great listen. Unfortunately, as it is it puts me to sleep.
Fluffster Normalpaws
2 out of 5 stars
Too Slow
The host talks sooooo slowly. Her delivery is incredibly stiff, too. Sounds like she’s not used to reading aloud, or unsure of her ability to read aloud, or self-conscious about thinking about her stiff & slow delivery. Tried it at 1 & 1/4 speed but then the other ppl are too fast. Can’t be bothered to slog thru this. There’s also a quality of gloating schadenfreude that comes off as kind of distasteful. Sort of like listening to petty gossip.
mjj8385
2 out of 5 stars
Needs editing
I find it ironic that a show about the publishing industry would need editing but the episode I heard was very bloated and repetitive. There is just a lot of structural bloat and talking that doesn’t contribute to the topic being presented. Furthermore there’s a lot of fawning over guests who often just repeat which already been said. There’s also some awkward tropes which I guess are supposed to be funny but are more condescending than anything else.
mf-bc
1 out of 5 stars
Publishing “expert” getting a lot of details wrong
This is billed as an insider look at publishing industry but a lot of the little details are being incorrectly reported? It also moves soooooooo slooooowly
bam526
3 out of 5 stars
Just tell the story
Starts out promising but veers into sensationalism when it tries to “expose” the publishing industry for its alleged crimes against social justice. Surely there’s another way to frame whatever lessons exist here, or at least deploy a more journalistic method to prove the host’s point? The Dan Mallory episode — which is about exploitation of facts — is a WILD example of thesis supporting evidence (rather than the other way around). Also — the scripts badly need an editor. I should have given it 2 stars, actually.
Garden Perfect
1 out of 5 stars
Sourit of the Age
Too much ‘Spirit of the Age’.:(
fisksfhrbt😂
1 out of 5 stars
Why?
I don’t understand the point of this podcast. It claims to be investigative and yet it can’t seem to actually tell a story. It claims to be progressive and yet speaks for protected classes instead of elevating them to represent themselves. But the kicker for me was when the host took it upon herself to explain how instagram works. She clearly thinks very highly of herself, and yet manages to spend over an hour saying absolutely nothing remarkable.
ArtistLike
3 out of 5 stars
Appreciate the Effort; Could Use Editing
I was just introduced to this podcast and I've listened to the first Caroline Calloway episode. I enjoy the way the presenter speaks and overall, the way Calloway's story is told is engaging. That said, the episode is about 45 minutes long, and the story of Calloway didn't even start until after the 10-minute mark, following an introduction, promotions, more teasers, and more ads. By the time the story did begin, I found myself frustrated in the way I get with online recipes or infomercial-y clickbait sales pitches that lure you in with the promise of something interesting and 10 minutes later have not told you anything about it, just a lot of sales-y chatter. I understand that this podcast is a commercial endeavor and so the ads are a given, but I do think the host and producers could lose much if not most of the introductory chatter and just cut to the story itself. I do plan to listen to the part-two episode of Calloway's story, but I'm anticipating skipping over the first 10-15 minutes to get to the story part and I do wonder whether the story couldn't have just been a single episode if the unnecessary filler talk were cut out. As a listener, I am coming for the story itself and personally, I don't get much from all the lead-ins, being told over and over that everyone knows the story already and about what a scandal it was.
I hate lines!
5 out of 5 stars
mystery science theatre but literary
Love the host! She threads the needle in such a way that makes the inner workings of books actually not a snore. Caroline Calloway ep is fascinating!!
relssekharas
2 out of 5 stars
Stay in your lane
Tbh I was enjoying this podcast until the host attempted to provide a brief history of trans representation, which she admitted she was unqualified to do yet did anyway. Can’t stomach the rest.
Rilke2012
1 out of 5 stars
Smug, Entitled, Dull
What is the point to this hopelessly dumb podcast? This podcast and its host are very pretentious, and every voice presented is equally bad. It seems the only thing that upsets publishing insiders is when someone breaks their internal rules without crossing the correct palms with silver. You can be a liar, a cheat, a plagiarist or anything else you want as long as you are from a properly wealthy family and attend an elite approved school. I have yet to hear the voice of one person who has actually worked a day in their life. If you like smug self important jerks, then please dive right in.
seasoned photog
5 out of 5 stars
Interesting
The missing pages episode on Dan Mallory opened my eyes to how book publishing works. It was also surprising and disappointing in how Mallory manipulated his way to the heights of the writing profession and has managed to stay there. With the Untold Story there’s a window into the unintended consequences and damage from the process… Looking forward to more reveals in missing pages…
WooBlackRose
5 out of 5 stars
Fun AND Informative
Podglomerate has put together yet another hit, they just can’t seem to miss. Guaranteed to learn something to make you sound smarter than you actually are at your next cocktail party.
Dirtymike&theboyz
5 out of 5 stars
I LOVE this—despite not-caring about publishing
The stories are so engaging and packed with detail and intrigue! So much great insider info. I thought publishing/books would be boring since I usually don’t follow that stuff, but I’m hooked. Who knew that industry had so much dirt! More please!
Krumbled Kookie
1 out of 5 stars
Tremendous waste of time…
… that I’m sure hundreds or thousands of you will eat up. Get a life.
hAwkemsockem
5 out of 5 stars
Excellent Podcast - Looking forward to more!
D. Christo and team have some great material here. Looking forward to future releases.
likz2read
5 out of 5 stars
Missing Pages: Dan Mallory:The Good Liar
It disappoints me how far someone can still run with lies in a professional setting. Since this has been uncovered before,readers would assume there would be more fact checking safeguards in place. Still, I found the episode very interesting, and look forward to more “Missing Pages”.
Forces unknown
1 out of 5 stars
Disgusting excuses for extraordinary privilege and lying
I could not believe the host’s bootlicking of Kavvya Viswanathan, a young woman so privileged that her parents hired someone to get her into Harvard. Kaavya demonstrates absolutely no humility, no remorse, and the host is right there beside her to speculate wildly about how someone else is to blame for her extensive plagiarism. The host essentially absolves her from any responsibility, believes her unbelievable and universally discredited lies, and closes with the softball: “ So have you healed from the trauma of the media attention?” UGH. A weird and pointless podcast that told us almost nothing about what actually happens with packaging companies. Shame on you both.
Jan Sav
1 out of 5 stars
Turned it off when you blamed racism
The story of AJ Finn was interesting- then you just had to inject your own personal opinion that he “got away” with lying because of a white racist, patriarchal, cis society. What a cop out. How about he got away with it because he made the publishers a ton of money… so easy to go the racist route when the truth is more boring. No more of your podcast for me.
CurVexas
5 out of 5 stars
Amazing
Excellent podcast. I really enjoyed the show on Dan Mallory. It’s such an interesting “behind the scenes” look.
Bsarge23
5 out of 5 stars
I’m fully hooked on this
Heard about this podcast from a friend and was intrigued by the premise and after one episode I’m totally hooked. Love the concept, love the narrator, and it just feels like there’s a very deep well of content to draw from in the publishing world. Very excited to keep listening!
john Lakrore
5 out of 5 stars
Missing pages
Great story. Riveting
Podcast information
- Amount of episodes
- 13
- Subscribers
- 44
- Verified
- No
- Website
- Explicit content
- No
- Episode type
- serial
- Podcast link
- https://podvine.com/link/..
- Last upload date
- May 1, 2023
- Last fetch date
- May 28, 2023 11:55 AM
- Upload range
- MONTHLY
- Author
- The Podglomerate
- Copyright
- The Podglomerate LLC
- Missing Pages Unabridged: Constance Grady on How the Book World WorksTo get a better sense of the book world Caroline Calloway found herself in, we talked to Constance Grady, a senior correspondent and culture critic for Vox, who covers film, TV, and of course, book publishing. In this bonus episode, previously only available in our premium feed on Apple Podcasts, "Missing Pages Unabridged," Constance shares her wisdom about books, the publishing industry, and how she wound up writing the most-referenced explainer there is on Caroline Calloway.0 comments0
- Missing Pages Unabridged: The Full Kaavya Viswanathan InterviewIn Kaavya Viswanathan: The Full Package, we looked back into "How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life," and the plagiarism scandal that brought everything down. As we unearthed new details about the fiasco, we thought it was important to talk to Viswanathan herself to find out what really happened. In this extended interview, previously only available in our premium feed on Apple Podcasts, "Missing Pages Unabridged," and Viswanathan's first about the YA novel in 15 years, we talk about everything from her experience on the Today Show, what it was like writing for a book packager, and what she's been up to in the years since. If you haven't listened to Kaavya Viswanathan: The Full Package yet, we recommend you listen to that first.0 comments0
- Missing Pages Mar 8 · 18m Introducing YE GODSIntroducing YE GODS from award-winning producer-playwright Scott Carter. We all know that faith and ethics are recurring themes in literature from Greek mythology to Shakespeare, to the great Russian novels, Charles Dickens, Emily Dickinson and everything between and after. In this new podcast series, YE GODS WITH SCOTT CARTER takes us on a pilgrimage of sorts, each week he’ll be talking to celebrity guests like historian Ken Burns, actor Susie Essman from HBO’s Curb Your Enthusiasm, Pulitzer Prize nominated playwright Anna Deavere Smith, neuroscientist-philosopher Sam Harris, best selling author Rabbi Steve Leder and others. Follow and subscribe to YE GODS WITH SCOTT CARTER wherever you’re listening to this podcast so you don’t miss new episodes every Wednesday.0 comments0
- Greg Mortenson: Cups Half-FullHe enlightened millions with his writings and built dozens of schools in the Middle East. But despite his praiseworthy deeds, author-philanthropist Greg Mortenson suffered an immense fall from grace. Was Greg Mortenson, author of Three Cups of Tea, a manipulative scammer or an idealist in over his head? Bethanne delves into a story of good intentions and very bad bookkeeping. Produced by The Podglomerate.0 comments0
- Dreams vs. RealityIn writers’ dreams, every published author is a millionaire, every title sells at auction, every editor is brilliant and attentive, and every book hits the bestseller list. Alas, writers’ dreams and the publishing industry’s reality don’t always mesh. Bethanne breaks down the lifespan of a book and the overworked and underpaid workers who make the industry (barely) run. Produced by The Podglomerate.0 comments0
- Anna March: Inventing AnnaBethanne doesn’t just talk about scandals after the fact: Sometimes she’s embroiled in them as they happen. In this episode, Bethanne spills the tea on the story of “Anna March,” a notorious figure who racked up big bills in the service of literature — and left others to pay them. Produced by The Podglomerate. As a bonus, please find a collection of all of the books mentioned in the podcast on Apple Books at this link: https://apple.co/booksmissingpages0 comments0
- An Apple Books Collection: How Books Get FeaturedIn this short bonus episode, Bethanne chats with Missing Pages Executive Producer Jeff Umbro about a new Apple Books collection of books and authors featured in the podcast. You can explore the collection at apple.co/booksmissingpages. Produced by the Podglomerate0 comments0
- Caroline Calloway Part II: Heavy Is The Head That Wears The Flower CrownSome stories are too big, or at least too entertaining, to fit into a single episode. In part two, Bethanne speaks to authors, publishers, and NYC night life reporters to find out what Caroline Calloway might have up her sleeve next. Make sure to listen to part one if you haven't yet. Produced by The Podglomerate. As a bonus, please find a collection of all of the books mentioned in the podcast on Apple Books at this link: https://apple.co/booksmissingpages0 comments0
- Missing Pages Aug 29 · 46m Caroline Calloway Part 1: Essential Snake OilsThey say that being too online will mess with your head, and no one was more online than Caroline Calloway, the mega-influencer who is known for botching not one but two books deals. Bethanne follows her trail of obsessed superfans, betrayed friends, and abandoned book deals across Instagram, Twitter, Reddit, and even OnlyFans. Find a full transcript of this episode here. Produced by The Podglomerate. As a bonus, please find a collection of all of the books mentioned in the podcast on Apple Books at this link: https://apple.co/booksmissingpages0 comments0
- J.T. LeRoy: The Last Literary RockstarRaw, transgressive, and true: Praise for hard-hitting books like Sarah and The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things made Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy the talk of the town. But was J.T. who he said he was? Follow our winding journey as we parse good intentions and messy outcomes in one of the book world’s most complicated stories and biggest hoaxes. Find the full transcript of this episode here. Produced by The Podglomerate. As a bonus, please find a collection of all of the books mentioned in the podcast on Apple Books at this link: https://apple.co/booksmissingpages0 comments0
- Dan Mallory: The Good LiarA.J. Finn — also known as Dan Mallory, former Executive Editor at William Morrow and Co. — overcame tragedy and illness to publish "The Woman in the Window", a huge bestseller and the inspiration for a Netflix film. But the story of the talented Mr. Mallory has more twists and turns than the book that made his reputation. Bestelling Pulitzer finalist Luis Alberto Urrea is a featured guest. You can find a full transcript of this episode here. Produced by The Podglomerate. As a bonus, please find a collection of all of the books mentioned in the podcast on Apple Books at this link: https://apple.co/booksmissingpages0 comments0
- Kaavya Viswanathan: The Untold StoryAt the start of 2006, 19-year-old Kaavya Viswanathan seemed to have it all. From a high profile six-figure book deal to good standing at Harvard University, the world was at her feet. But by the end of the year, her name was only brought up in conversations about "cautionary tales." How did she end up on a national television apology tour? Bethanne speaks to experts to set the story straight— and conducts a revelatory and exclusive interview with Kaavya herself. You can find a full transcript of this episode here. Produced by The Podglomerate. As a bonus, please find a collection of all of the books mentioned in the podcast on Apple Books at this link: https://apple.co/booksmissingpages0 comments0
- Introducing Missing PagesAn all-new investigative podcast hosted by world-renowned literary critic and publishing insider Bethanne Patrick. Across its eight-episode debut season, Missing Pages uncovers the power struggles, mistaken identities, and unfathomably bad behavior within the secretive world of book publishing. Each episode brings in authors, experts, publishing insiders, and a circus of NYC media elites to tell the real story; unfit for print. Produced by the Podglomerate.0 comments0
✋ Yay! You have heard it all
Podcast hosts
No host has claimed this podcast yet, if you are the host you can verify ownership by claiming this podcast
© The Podglomerate LLC