📚 5 Books mentioned in "Joe Rogan Experience #2095 - Moshe Kasher" of The Joe Rogan Experience

Podcast: The Joe Rogan Experience
Episode: Joe Rogan Experience #2095 - Moshe Kasher
Published on June 27, 2024
Here’s a list of all the books mentioned in this episode. Click on the links to watch specific excerpts on YouTube and feel free to purchase the books if they caught your interest!

AutobiografÃa Malcolm X
Buy AutobiografÃa Malcolm X by Alex Haley, Malcolm X on Amazon
What's like that dude in Malcolm X's autobiography?
Moshe Kasher mentions the autobiography of Malcolm X, specifically referring to the work without providing its full title.

Boys and sex
Buy Boys and sex by Wardell Baxter Pomeroy on Amazon
No, really, she used to sit my brother and me down on Tuesday nights and read to us from a book called "Boys and Sex."
Moshe Kasher shares that his mother would read to him and his brother from a book titled 'Boys and Sex' on Tuesday nights.

Subculture Vulture
Buy Subculture Vulture by Moshe Kasher on Amazon
Well, I guess that's kind of in a way that's what this book that I just wrote is about: these little—show your book—these little...
In episode #2095 of The Joe Rogan Experience, Moshe Kasher discusses the content of his recently written book, which he implies is focused on specific themes, though he doesn't explicitly mention its title during the conversation.

The Hustler
Buy The Hustler by Walter Tevis on Amazon
But that Walter T guy was amazing; he wrote The Hustler—it really is like a psychological drama as much as it is about pool.
Joe Rogan and his guest Moshe Kasher discuss Walter Tevis and his book 'The Hustler', highlighting its nature as a psychological drama intertwined with the game of pool.

The Queen's gambit
Buy The Queen's gambit by Walter S. Tevis on Amazon
Walter Tevis, who also wrote The Queen's Gambit about that amazing chess player; she was an orphan.
In this segment, Joe Rogan and Moshe Kasher delve into the works of Walter Tevis, particularly focusing on his novel 'The Queen's Gambit,' which tells the story of an orphaned chess prodigy.