PLAY PODCASTS
#AmWriting

#AmWriting

500 episodes — Page 8 of 10

165: #Twitter#@*!Storm

Sometimes, the internet turns against you. What to do, what not to do, how to ride it out and remember--the loudest voices aren't necessarily the most numerous. Over the course of our careers, both Jess and I have endured some PR storms. We share some of the gory details, but more importantly, advice from PR pros and from our experiences on how to handle it when you go a little bit viral in the worst way.We heard from PR experts Ophir Lehavy and Carol Blymire. Ophir pointed us to a crisis control article, and Jess called out (in the good way) a couple of books that are useful when you're at the eye of the storm: Shame Nation: The Global Epidemic of Online Hate, from Sue Scheff and So You've Been Publicly Shamed, Jon Ronson.#AmReadingKJ adored Ben Schott's P. G. Wodehouse homage, Jeeves and the King of Clubs.Jess is treasuring The Truffle Underground: A Tale of Mystery, Mayhem, and Manipulation in the Shadowy Market of the World's Most Expensive Fungus, Ryan Jacobs and Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling by Ross King--which she found at the dump, possibly the most indie book source of them all.#FaveIndieBookstoreShout out to one in Jess's new home town, Burlington, VT: The PhoenixThis episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

Jun 28, 201939 min

164: #WhoIsThisHelping

Subscription services like Kindle Unlimited and Audible do make books—some books—cheaper for readers, but what do they do for authors—and what are readers missing? (with Sarina Bowen)A few highlights from this episode: If you take something expensive—good content—and you pay people reasonably to create it, it’s tough to make this work. What we're often seeing as consumers are loss leaders for big media. Amazon doesn't have to make money from Kindle Unlimited. One you might not have heard of: Scribd. So far, it's reasonable for authors and for readers (although their "unlimited" may really mean "unlimited unless you're a superuser, in which case maybe not"). The takeaway for writers: limit yourself to Kindle Unlimited with great caution.The takeaway for readers: Unlimited is still limited--to what's there and available. Relying on suggestions and highlights from various services is probably limiting what you see, and maybe what you read. #AmReadingSarina is seeking "great books with ghosts in them." Which reminds me (KJ) of one Sarina and I both enjoyed: The Keeper of Lost Things, Ruth HoganJess is listening to Nick Hornby's Slam, and Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World from David Epstein. She added an appreciation for Stephen King's Ur. KJ is slowly reading Author In Progress and regretting some Kindle Unlimited downloads from an author she once enjoyed (Katie Fforde). She also read, appreciated and did not enact the advice from Newsletter Ninja!This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.Want more Sarina Bowen? Go here.

Jun 21, 201949 min

163: #BookTourReality

Mary Laura Philpott tells all. It's glorious. It's embarrassing. Nobody told you you'd be sitting on a barstool in front of a crowd in a short skirt. Mary Laura Philpott is the author of I Miss You When I Blink, a book with the most awesome subtitle ever: Essays. That's it. Here's a little something she wrote on subtitles and why we love to hate them, from LitHub. We've been following her book launch (check back to Episode 150, #NeverReady) and now, her triumphant tour. Or maybe not so much and certainly not all the time. Links to some of the fantastic Indies who hosted Mary Laura: Whistlestop Bookshop Books Are Magic M. Judson Bookseller Word Bookstore in Brooklyn and New Jersey Malaprops Bookstore in Asheville, NC The Snail on the Wall Huntsville, AL Politics and Prose Washington, DC Books and Books, Florida #AmReading City of Girls, Elizabeth Gilbert #FaveIndieBookstore And finally, no interview with Mary Laura would be complete without a shoutout to her favorite Indie--and her beloved employer--Parnassus Books in Nashville. Find out more about our guest, Mary Laura Philpott, here —and check out her latest book, I Miss You When I Blink, on IndieBound or at Libro.fm. This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template. Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here. If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

Jun 14, 201947 min

162: #HalfwaytoGoal

Remember those goals you set with Jess and KJ back in January? Neither did they, but they dug them out and sort out how the year’s going so far. In Episode 140, we set our 2019 goals. (Listen here). Now, at 2019's halfway mark, it's time to check in on those--and we'd love to hear how you're doing on your goals in the #AmWriting Facebook group. Halfway here? More? En route? Revising the endgame? We get it all. Jess, in particular, gets moving the goal posts--and in fact, the whole point of a check in is to consider doing just that. Goals aren't there to help you fail, they're there to help you move towards them--and if a goal is unreachable this year, it's time to set a goal you can achieve that moves you in the right direction. For Jess, that's a new, revised book deadline.I'm reporting a big fat checkmark on one goal--finding a publisher for my novel (hello, Episode 147). The Chicken Sisters will be out in the summer of 2020, and the new goal I'm slotting in there is to finish my revisions on time.One bonus to the mid-year review is realizing that while you probably haven't checked something off yet, you really have been moving the dial. We did some math in January and realized that we've spent $10,000 producing #AmWriting between us (that was a bit of a shock). With one fantastic sponsor, we're on our way to, if not getting paid for our time, at least not paying to podcast, but we're still working on this one. We've asked, and you all have resoundingly said you'd like to sponsor us yourselves (no mattress ads for us!). We're more than halfway to offering a way to do just that. I love a good midyear goal review because revising goals and recommitting to them feels like a fresh start at the beginning of a season when I do like to slow down a bit--but not TOO much. I refined some personal goals, and made sure that my calendar allows for staying on track when it comes to the professional ones--but that I'm also not putting so much on my plate that I can't enjoy the summer when it finally gets here. And then--it will be time for another re-grouping in the fall. #AmReadingJess: The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath, Leslie JamisonKJ: The Collected Schizophrenias, Esme Wang #FaveIndieBookstore The Norwich Bookstore in Norwich, VT--a favorite of us both, a reliable source of favorites the minute you walk through the door and a fantastic host of events. And a reminder--when you just HAVE to order that book right now before you forget, it's quite likely you can do that right on your fave Indie's website and then pick it up in the store--where you'll have the opportunity to buy more books. We love our sponsor! If you’re not quite where you want to be on your writing goals for the year—or suspect that after this summer, you might be a wee bit behind—join us and our sponsor, Author Accelerator for the Find Your Book, Find Your Mojo retreat in Bar Harbor, Maine from September 12-15, 2019. Now is the perfect time to get this on the calendar so that the inevitable August slowdown will just be the lead-up to your big fall fresh start. Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship, and The Secret Library, an interview podcast about real people who made time to write, often against the odds, because they believe that books matter. Find both on iTunes or on your podcast player of choice.

Jun 7, 201951 min

161: #WritingAtMyNightmare

We welcome Shane Burcaw. You thought writing was hard? Try doing it with no muscles.Shane Burcaw is the author of three books: Laughing at My Nightmare, the picture book Not So Different: What You Really Want to Ask About Having a Disability, and his new book, Strangers Assume My Girlfriend is My Nurse. Shane and his girlfriend, Hannah Aylward, host the YouTube channel, Squirmy and Grubs, with nearly 400k subscribers. Their YouTube channel reads: “Once upon a time, a boy with no muscles fell madly in love with a beautiful girl who had plenty of muscles to spare. The townsfolk gasped with horror at the sight of their disgusting interabled relationship, but they didn’t care.”Kirkus calls Strangers Assume My Girlfriend Is My Nurse, "An accessible, smart-assed, and unexpectedly tender exploration of life, love, and disability."We talked about the how of writing for Shane, (which included a shout out to the Remote Mouse App) but even more about the why--and why Jess's students in particular (along with many many others) have loved Shane's books since his first. Think "trademark acidic wit" which is also fully present here.Shane’s nonprofit, Laughing at My Nightmare, funds adaptive technology for people with muscular dystrophy: https://www.laughingatmynightmare.com/Squirmy and Grubs on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdomP1JqhnyBQGaBmfDl4KQShane’s instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaneburcaw/?hl=enShane’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaner528?lang=enHannah’s instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hannahayl/?hl=en#AmReading This Is Not a Love Scene, S.C. Megale A Season of Dragonflies, Sarah Creech Beeline: What Spelling Bees Reveal About Generation Z's New Path to Success, Shalini Shankar#FaveIndieBookstore Wild Rumpus in Minneapolis, where they mix chickens and lizards in with books for kids and young adults. This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

May 31, 201943 min

160: #10MonthsfromStarttoDeadline

Parkland author Dave Cullen on everything you ever wanted to know about pitching and writing a topical nonfiction book at top speed (and going broke doing it).We talked to Dave Cullen, about writing Parkland: Birth of a Movement, in ten months while he was 3 years overdue on his current book. "I'm just not gonna tell Gail," he said of his editor when he took the first assignment from Vanity Fair--but there was something going on with the Parkland students that grabbed him, and he--with the help of his agent, Betsy Lerner--grabbed it. "I just had to."He describes the process of writing the book, how the length, plan and due dates evolved--and how he almost went broke doing it. #FaveIndieBookstoreDave's #FaveIndieBookstore is Books & Books in Miami Beach, FL. "It was the only store I specifically asked to visit on my tour."#AmReading A Manual for Cleaning Women, Lucia Berlin Motherless Brooklyn, Jonathan LethamThis episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

May 24, 201940 min

159: #StoryGenius

Story expert Lisa Cron joins Jess and KJ to dig into the mechanics of a good book, including the difference between plot and story, and looking beyond “what happened” to “why did it happen”. To talk to Lisa Cron is--unless you've already read Story Genius or Wired for Story--to possibly flip everything you thought you knew about story--fiction, nonfiction, short, long, whatever--onto its head. Story, she points out, isn't plot. It isn't what happens, and then what happens next, and then what happens next. It's the why behind those happenings. It's not, well, a spaceship just landed on the green in front of the library, and I'll either a) rush towards it or b) head for my car. It's WHY I do those things. It's not just what I do next, but what it is about me, now the main character in this rather stressful tale that may end with us all being the entrees on some giant interstellar menu, that makes me make the no doubt terrible choices that I make (good choices make bad books). And that's my backstory. Which brings me to one of the many, many quick-write-that-down moments in this episode. Backstory isn't backstory. It IS the story. It informs every line of every page, every decision, every "because of this, then that," right up until the end, when whatever screwed me up in the first place becomes something I can overcome in order to win the aliens over and persuade them that we're not tasty after all (before I fry them with my laser gun and it's alien nuggets for everyone, with a variety of dipping sauces). Our guest, Lisa Cron, is the author of Story Genius: How to Use Brain Science to Go Beyond Outlining and Write a Riveting Novel* [*Before You Waste Three Years Writing 327 Pages That Go Nowhere] and Wired for Story: The Writer's Guide to Using Brain Science to Hook Readers from the Very First Sentence. She also contributed to Author in Progress: A No-Holds-Barred Guide to What It Really Takes to Get Published. #AmReading Jess sings the praises of The Lewis Trilogy, Peter May Lisa recommends Everything I Never Told You, Celeste Ng KJ is still finishing her favorite novel of this year so far, There's a Word for That, Sloane Tanen. #FaveIndieBookstore Book Soup, Los Angeles This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template. Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here. If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

May 17, 201939 min

158: #WhyStickers

Jess and KJ extemporize on the power of stickers - where the only thing that matters is getting into the work, and getting the words out. And some bonus advice to authors on what not to do. Kj here, with a confession: I've been lying to myself Letting myself off the hook. Not keeping my butt in the chair and my head in the game. I mean, sure, I had lots of excuses. I've been traveling or doing intense farm stuff since April 12. That's almost a month with--count them--only two days of being entirely home without travel or a major, all-day farm commitment. So okay then. Some of those days I called it. I knew I wouldn't get anything done on my next book, and I didn't. Some of those days I had a reasonable plan. Open the file. Stay with the work. That's all. But SOME days... some days I futzed around. I kept moving the needle. I let myself quit because "I'm really not focusing" or "this isn't getting anywhere" and although I had time to do something, and plans to do something, I didn't manage to do anything. So here's the thing about goals, and getting your daily (or 5 days a week, or 6 days a week) sticker: the achievement needs to be hard, but do-able. Something that will pull you alll the way in and ask something of you. Something that will measurably move the dial. If your sticker goal doesn't demand that you say no to some things--no to lunch, maybe, or no to taking a walk on the nice day, or no to a child who wants but doesn't exactly NEED a ride somewhere--in order to say yes to the goal, then the goal isn't high enough. Because it's the saying no that makes you, as Steven Pressfield would say, a pro. It's the saying no that means you're saying yes to yourself as a serious person with work that needs to get done, whether there's anyone else waiting for that work or not. You're waiting. I'm waiting. So this is my declaration of re-intent. My "sticker" for the next 30 days (at a minimum) is 1000 words. No shortcuts, no lowered goals. SOME DAYS I MIGHT NOT GET A STICKER--but there will be no participation awards. No A-for-effort. It's sticker or nothing around here, baby. And that's #WhySticker. Other links in the episode: The Secret Library Podcast, episode 147: Martine Fournier Watson What happens when your editor asks you to change a major plot point? The famed 2-tier outline process at Author Accelerator. #AmReading Chasing Cosby, Nicole Weisensee Egan The best novel KJ's read yet this year (drumroll please): There's a Word for That, Sloane Tanen #FaveIndieBookstore Book People Austin, TX This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template. Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here. If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

May 10, 201944 min

157: #ExcitedAboutWords

Podcasting from Mom 2.0 Conference with podcaster, journalist and author, Nicole Blades. She tells us about the pros and cons of skipping an agent, using rejection as fuel, and the joys of the writer community.Nicole Blades is a Podcaster (Hey, Sis! Podcast), Author of Have You Met Nora?, The Thunder Beneath Us, & Earth's Waters --and this is a glorious episode, recorded live and in person at Mom 2.0, in which we really capture the joy of writing, of finding your novel, of getting to do what we do. We also get into Tall Poppies, the writer's sharing group (I'm not sure what to call it) started by Ann Garvin, which also includes the Bloom website. I've been seeing this crew ALL OVER Insta this week, sharing each other's books like crazy, and I love it. It's a formalizing of the writer's community we all love and dream of and hopefully have (and we DO--it's called the #AmWriting Facebook group, and while we may not formalize the sharing of each other's work, we sure do do it). And I say, as I so often do, that one of my favorite things about being a writer is that it's so easy and wonderful to share and celebrate each other. Because for one thing, we're all in this because we love books and good writing. And for another, nobody who likes books ever just bought one book. Other links mentioned in the episode: Steven Pressfield BookPeople, Austin, TX#AmReading Daisy Jones & The Six, Taylor Jenkins Reid The Accidentals, Sarina Bowen Heavy: An American Memoir, Kiese Laymon My Father's Stack of Books, Kathryn Schulz Chase Darkness With Me: How One True-Crime Writer Started Solving Murders, Billy Jensen The Other Americans, Laila Lalami#FaveIndieBookstoreThis episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwriting for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template. Nicole's #FaveIndieBookstore is Books Are Magic, Brooklyn, NY "Even though I now live in Connecticut, I still feel like I can own this bookstore. Because ... Books Are Magic"Find out more about our guest, Nicole Blades, here — and check out her latest book, Have You Met Nora? here or at Libro.fm.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

May 3, 201941 min

156 #WhenFansPay

It's hard enough to start a subscriber email. But what if--like freelance writer Lyz Lenz, who has two books coming out in the next twelve months--you asked your fans to pay for it? It's so crazy, it might just work.Hello from the Mom 2.0 conference, where Jess and I just did a panel on Launching a Speaking Career. More on that in an upcoming episode--but meanwhile, this one's a real thought-provoker. Most of us struggle with what's a good use of our time in our writing careers. We've talked a lot about the value of an email subscriber list when it comes to selling books and sharing your work--but what if the email is your work, or becomes a way to share your work? Journalist Lyz Lenz uses Substack to share a largely subscriber-only email with a group of readers/fans whose financial support has helped to carry her through the ups and downs of a freelance career. Other links mentioned in the episode: Lyz Lenz's Contently Not That Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture, Roxane Gay Ann Friedman's Newsletter#AmReading Heavy: An American Memoir, Kiese Laymon Inheritance: A Memoir of Genealogy, Paternity, and Love, Dani Shapiro Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania, Erik Larson Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War, Mark Bowden The Last Stone: A Masterpiece of Criminal Interrogation, Mark Bowden#FaveIndieBookstoreLyz Lenz's fave is Next Page Books in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. "Bart knows all the local gossip and has always been a great supporter of my work." Find out more about our guest, Lyz Lenz, here—and check out the first of the TWO books she's working on this year, God Land: A Story of Faith, Loss and Renewal in Middle America on IndieBound.This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwritingfor details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template (the one KJ swears by).Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

Apr 26, 201940 min

155: #GetUnstuck

Uber-Coach Jennifer Louden on finding your "enough" and letting it power you forward.

Apr 19, 201943 min

154: #MathandDictationAreFun

Math storyteller Steven Strogatz makes both calculus and dictation seem approachable and fun. #notkiddingJess, we learn, was told in an early math class not to give up her day job, and so she gave up on math—until she found Steven Strogatz, whose writing puts a human, topical, understandable face on numbers from algebra to calculus, and glories in seeing “the math in everything”. If you’re the master of a topic that seems too narrow, academic or wonky for a larger audience, consider finding fresh ways into the subject—or “every way,” says Strogatz. If you can’t relate to one analogy, he’s ready with another, and it’s that willingness to try multiple ways to get his ideas across that’s made his work popular.Strogatz is a teacher first, writer second (now you know why he and Jess bond)---and he uses dictation to find his way into a more natural voice in his writing in the simplest way possible: he holds his phone up to his mouth while he walks the dog and talks into his notes app, the one where you just press the little microphone button on the iPhone.I’ve tried this (this is KJ) and it makes me crazy, because I struggle not to watch the words come out and correct them. For Strogatz, though, the opposite is true. “It helps me get around my OCD tendencies,” he says. “If I’m writing on a keyboard and see the words, my immediate instinct is to start deleting them.”#AmReadingEducated, Tara WestoverThe Tangled Tree, David Quammen Inheritance, Dani ShapiroDead Wake, Erik Larson#FaveIndieBookstoreSteven Strogatz's Fave is Buffalo Street Books in Ithaca, NY. It's his local--"I was just in there last week. You just feel surrounded by great books." Buffalo Street Books is a co-op! Members join and get dividends, year-end profit-sharing (I'm guessing they're not getting rich there, but still) and--best of all--their local bookstore is still alive and kicking. Find out more about our guest, Steven Strogatz, here — and check out his latest book, Infinite Powers: How Calculus Reveals the Secrets of the Universe, on IndieBoundor at Twitter.This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit Author Accelerator for details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template.Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here.If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

Apr 12, 201944 min

153: #GrammarGirl

Mignon Fogerty on Pet Peeves, riding a wave and what to do if you're a writer--and grammar still scares the bejabbers out of you. Plenty of writers #fangirl on Mignon Fogerty, who took her own quest to make grammar rules easy and accessible and turned it into a mini-empire. In her case, the podcast came first, the books second--and what followed is a fun exploration of being creative around a subject and finding a way to make it your own. A few links from the episode: Peeve Wars Board Game The Grammar Devotional: Daily Tips for Successful Writing from Grammar Girl #AmReading: Semicolon, McKayla Debonis Story Genius: How to Use Brain Science to Go Beyond Outlining and Write a Riveting Novel (Before You Waste Three Years Writing 327 Pages That Go Nowhere), Lisa Cron I Miss You When I Blink: Essays, Mary Laura PhilpottA KJ mentioned A Circle of Quiet, from Madeline L'Engle. And then she ended up not liking it. Infinite Powers: How Calculus Reveals the Secrets of the Universe, Steven Strogatz Laughing at My Nightmare, Shane Burcaw Find out more about our guest, Mignon Fogerty, here —and check out her books on IndieBound or at Libro.fm. This episode was sponsored by Author Accelerator, the book coaching program that helps you get your work DONE. Visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com/amwritingfor details, special offers and Jennie Nash’s 2-tier outline template. Find more about Jess here, and about KJ here. If you enjoyed this episode, we suggest you check out Marginally, a podcast about writing, work and friendship.

Apr 5, 201942 min

152: #ContinueHereforEmailLists

Part 2 continues with Sarina Bowen's guidance about what you should put in your email list, and how to market your email before, or after, you’re published.

Mar 29, 201945 min

151: #StartHereforEmailLists

Sarina Bowen guides us through where and how to start up an email list, how to grow it and how to keep it healthy in the first part of a two parter on email lists.

Mar 22, 201939 min

150: #NeverReady

Mary Laura Philpott on how to launch a book into the world, with a few regrets and ideas for do-overs.

Mar 15, 201948 min

149: #PlagarismVersusJustWrong

Accusations of plagiarism and general bad behavior are everywhere in the writing world. Sarina Bowen joins the conversation about what plagiarism is and isn't and how to protect yourself (and keep from accidentally screwing up).

Mar 8, 201937 min

148: #GreenEyedMonster

Omitting wan words to tighten your writing, and battling the inevitable arrival of professional jealousy.

Mar 1, 201935 min

147: #GoodNewsandHowIGotThere

You heard it here first: KJ sold her novel. We talk about how the deal happened, why she took a pre-empt, and building a career.

Feb 22, 201943 min

146: #AnthologyWriting

...in which Jess and KJ share tips about about answering calls for anthology submissions

Feb 15, 201946 min

145: #DethroneThePhone

...in which Jess and KJ talk with computer science professor, and author, Cal Newport on the concept of digital minimalism and the benefits it can have on the writing process.

Feb 8, 201946 min

144: #ReadingWhileWriting

...in which Jess and KJ tackle a classic writing question: can you read in your genre while you’re writing in it without absorbing other voices and ideas?

Feb 1, 201947 min

143: #AlwaysBeHustling

…in which successful freelancer Kimberly Moran describes how she has created a home and work life that feeds her writing, and how she's always hustling to find new opportunities.

Jan 25, 201950 min

142: #SixYearsOfWork

…in which Jess and KJ talk with award-winning biographer, Ruth Franklin, author of Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life, and find out what it takes to write an account of someone else’s life.

Jan 18, 201950 min

141: #ItsTrueSoWriteIt

...in which Jess and KJ talk raw honest memoir with Janelle Hanchett, author of I'm Just Happy to Be Here. It's not easy to write memoir, or to put it out there, but as Janelle says, you're either going to tell the truth, or don't bother.

Jan 11, 201943 min

Ep 11: 140: #2019Goals

...in which Jess and KJ open the new year with their goals and words for the upcoming year.

Jan 4, 201944 min

139: #GoalReview

...in which Jess and KJ take stock of 2018 with a review of their goals and their words of the year.

Dec 28, 201845 min

138: #WhatsYourGenre

...in which Jess and KJ weigh the many ambiguous definitions of fiction genres with Emily Tredowe, and her short-story path to novel writing.

Dec 22, 201848 min

137: #SocialProofMatters

...in which Jess and KJ speak with author Sarina Bowen about how to get Amazon reviews and why you want them.

Dec 14, 201844 min

136: #GiftShow!

…in which Jess and KJ are in the same place! And sharing all the perfect gift ideas for you and your writerly friends.

Dec 7, 201837 min

135: #SteppingBack

…in which Jess and KJ are joined by book coach, and fan favorite, Jennie Nash to answer the question: What do you do when you wake up with 50,000 words of something? A guide for post-NaNoWriMo.

Nov 30, 201851 min

134: #WritingAroundFamily

...in which Jess and KJ share tips about making space for writing even around the holidays, when family is seemingly everywhere. They tackle a listener's question about working with a book coach, and we finally hear more about KJ's novel and tentative title.

Nov 23, 201843 min

133: #WorkingBackwards

...in which Jess and KJ speak with entrepreneur, author, and speaker, Seth Godin about how to market and promote your own writing by thinking about the end product.

Nov 16, 201833 min

132 #ThePitchCameFirst

Jess and KJ interview Jennifer Miller and Jason Feifer, the married co-authors of Mr. Nice Guy, a book with the perfect elevator pitch: What if two columnists had sex every week, and then reviewed each other? Turns out there's a catch to a great "what if:" you still have to figure out who you're writing about, and why it matters.

Nov 9, 201848 min

131: #RelentlesslyHelpful

…in which Jess (fighting thru a cold) and KJ highlight the opportunities panels present, and the importance of choosing your sponsorship carefully.

Nov 2, 201845 min

130: #HorseKick

...in which Jess and KJ update us on how their respective projects are coming along, including Jess's research and KJ's public speaking, all as something NaNoWriMo this way comes.

Oct 26, 201839 min

129: #Don'tGetBuzzed

...in which Jess and KJ are joined by actor, author, podcaster and science advocate Alan Alda to discuss reaching readers with good storytelling, and avoiding that moment when—buzz!—you've lost them.

Oct 19, 201843 min

128: #PlanItOut

…in which Jess and KJ speak with author and podcaster Virginia Sole Smith, who somehow did everything “in order”, about how to plan everything.

Oct 12, 201842 min

127: #AmBranding

...in which Jess and KJ ask Carol Blymire what the heck personal branding is, why you need one, and how you build it.

Oct 5, 201832 min

126: #PubDay3

...in which Jess and KJ review KJ’s recent Pub Day marketing strategy, and what worked and what didn’t.

Sep 28, 201843 min

125: #FindingAnAgent

...in which Jess and KJ welcome Laurie Abkemeier, agent extrodinaire, to discuss what you should do to get an agent, and what an agent can do for you.

Sep 21, 201842 min

124: #NomDePlume

...in which Jess and KJ Sarina Bowen about the advantages and consequences of using a pseudonym, and an update on CockyGate.

Sep 14, 201836 min

123: #ChasingTheAntelope

...in which Jess and KJ sit down with best-selling author Tim Grahl about how becoming a writer of any quality is not a sprint but a marathon.

Sep 7, 201844 min

122: #PubDay2

...in which Jess and KJ discuss prepping for PubDay, all the pub feels, and that fall feeling of getting back to work.

Aug 31, 201835 min

121: #ABillionsTimesNo

…in which Jess and KJ speak with Billions producer and screenwriter Brian Koppleman about how you sometimes have to say no when you’d rather say yes.

Aug 24, 201830 min

120: #IsolationIsForWimps

...in which Jess and KJ examine the jump from journalism to novels with Jo Piazza, and of course some tips for writing your novel.

Aug 18, 201834 min

119: #BestSellers

...in which Jess and KJ, by popular request, speak again with USA Today Best Selling author Sarina Bowen about the nitty gritty of best seller lists.

Aug 10, 201835 min

118: #BooksAboutWork

...in which Jess and KJ speak with Alysin Camerota about the shifting from writing TV news to writing a novel, finding time to write and the value of a good editor.

Aug 3, 201838 min

117: #BookLaunchTimeline

...in which Jess and KJ tackle a bunch of listener questions about building a timeline to give your book the best chance for commercial success.

Jul 27, 201846 min

116: #YouHaveTime

...in which Jess and KJ speak with author Laura Vanderkam about how to find time in even your busy schedule to write.

Jul 20, 201840 min