*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

Podcast review: Things Unseen, Poetry Unbound, You’re Dead to Me, and Leading: The Rest is Politics

07 March 2025

iStock

An episode of Things Unseen considered the question whether dogs will be reunited with their owners in heaven

An episode of Things Unseen considered the question whether dogs will be reunited with their owners in heaven

WHAT was the turning point for podcasts? Spotify reports that, during the first three months of the pandemic, streaming doubled. Podcasts were the perfect companion. Tech giants seized the opportunity to corner the market, and invested not only in the shows, but also in the infrastructure around them, making the three to five million podcasts in the pod-verse easier to find and enjoy. I have traversed the pod-verse on your behalf, and am delighted to share my recommendations.

First, Things Unseen (CTVC), not to be confused with another podcast of the same name which features Sinclair Ferguson: Ferguson offers very different listening. The episode released on 15 February, Will I Meet My Dog in Heaven?, is poignant and intriguing. Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, the theologian Dr Ruth Valerio, and others discuss animal companions. When pets die, do they enter an afterlife? The host, Mark Dowd, does a wonderful job of listening and provoking deeper thought, as his own dog takes it all in beside him. “Close your eyes, breathe them in; that love is for ever,” is a memorable phrase from a pagan witch who featured in the podcast.

Moving on from pets, we arrive at poems. You may find something special in Poetry Unbound (On Being Studios), hosted by the poet and philosopher Pádraig Ó Tuama. Season 9, episode 12, released on 17 February, featuring a powerful poem, “To Michael Menson”, by Benjamin Zephaniah, the Black British poet who died in 2023. The poem interrogates racial-justice failures in the British judicial system. The pattern of these bite-sized episodes involves listening to the poem, exploring it, and then hearing it again, enriched by Ó Tuama’s reflections.

So, from pets to poems to parliamentarians. In the podcast You’re Dead to Me (Radio 4), with Greg Jenner, a recent-ish episode, Causes of the British Civil War: Royalists vs Parliamentarians, is great. We meet King Charles I and learn about a cost-of-living crisis and subsequent riots, radical women protesters, and bishops’ provoking war. I have listened to many of these episodes: the secret sauce is in a strong pairing of comedians with historians. It works best when the comedian knows a little, and the historian has a light-hearted approach. This episode is instructive on Anglicanism and wider British society, and how the roots of the traditions and tribes that we see today are set within their larger social context.

So, where are we? Pets, poems, papyrus, and it was bound to happen: politics. Leading: The Rest is Politics, to be exact. This podcast is part of Gary Lineker’s Goalhanger network. It is co-hosted by the former Conservative minister Rory Stewart and the former Labour communications tsar Alastair Campbell, and their commentary is bold and insightful. I was stimulated by episode 378, one of their question-and-answer episodes. Their expert knowledge of geopolitics provides a strong framework through which to view the “unprecedented president”: that episode in particular dealt with the “ejection” of President Zelensky. The language can be spicy.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Church Times Bookshop

Save money on books reviewed or featured in the Church Times. To get your reader discount:

> Click on the “Church Times Bookshop” link at the end of the review.

> Call 01603 785905 (Mon-Fri, 10am-4pm).

The reader discount is valid for two months after the review publication date. E&OE

Forthcoming Events

English Mystics Series course

26 January - 25 May 2026

A short course at Sarum College.

tickets available now

 

Springtime for the Church of England: where are we seeing growth?

31 January 2026

Join us at St John's Church, Waterloo to hear a group of experts speak about the Quiet Revival.

tickets available now

 

With All Your Heart: a retreat in preparation for Lent

14 February 2026

Church Times/Canterbury Press online retreat.

tickets available now

 

Merlin’s Isle: A Journey in Words and Music with Malcolm Guite and the St Martin's Voices

17 February 2026

Canterbury Press event at Temple Church, London. The Poet and Priest draws out the Christian bedrock at the heart of the Arthurian stories, revealing their spiritual depth and enduring resonance.

tickets available now

 

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read up to four free articles a month. (You will need to register.)