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podcast Tag

  1. Posts tagged "podcast"
  2. (Page 8)

Laurie Halse Anderson – Shout

Laurie Halse Anderson – Shout
April 22, 2019February 20, 2020 in Poetry by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I was walking down the street in New York City and just lines of poetry started to drop into my head.” Laurie Halse Anderson speaks about her memoir in verse – Shout. ” I was thinking about the thousands and thousands of ( survivors of sexual abuse) who have shared their stories with me…. and Read More

Marc Lessor

Marc Lessor
April 15, 2019February 20, 2020 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“In almost all contemplative traditions…at the core of them is this sense of helping others, this sense of compassion.” Marc Lesser author and teacher talks with Writers Voices about his new book – Seven Practices of a Mindful Leader – lessons from Google and a Zen monastery kitchen -. ” I think we totally underestimate Read More

Sunita Puri

Sunita Puri
April 8, 2019May 28, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“… We need to help patients prepare for is all possible outcomes. As it stands we only talk about the good outcomes.” Sunita Puri author of – That Good Night – Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour, shares insights and stories of her time as a palliative care doctor. “Part of how I ended Read More

Martha Hall Kelly – Lost Roses

Martha Hall Kelly – Lost Roses
March 22, 2019April 19, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“If I have the true version of a scene or a story I stick with that….you cannot make anything up that is more interesting or rings truer than the truth.” Martha Hall Kelly talks about her writing and researching of historical fiction with her latest novel – Lost Roses. “The more I find out about Read More

Jillian Cantor

Jillian Cantor
March 15, 2019May 9, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Writing this book (set in Germany during WW2) I thought alot about…what you would become numb to just by being there and experiencing things day after day, week after week and how would that look different to you than how it looks to us now, all these years later.” Jillian Cantor talks about her love Read More

Mitchell S. Jackson

Mitchell S. Jackson
March 11, 2019May 17, 2019 in Memoir by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“The tough stuff is the stuff you need to write about, ’cause that’s where the conflict is; that’s also where the challenge is, to figure out how to write about it.” Mitchell S. Jackson shares his insights on writing and his own life, talking about his “memoir in essays” – Survival Math. “And then for Read More

Sandy Allen

Sandy Allen
March 4, 2019April 17, 2019 in Memoir by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“How do you get people to listen to a story tha, I think, we are socialized to ignore?” Sandy Allen talks about her memoir of her uncle’s life – A Kind of Mirraculas Paradise. – A True Story about Schizophrenia. “I really wanted people to be able to hear just what Bob had gone through Read More

John Thorndike

John Thorndike
February 25, 2019April 2, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“My mother died when I was only thirty, she was fifty-seven. I hoped to give her a chance at another life…” John Thorndike talks about his motivation for writing his new historical novel – One Hundred Fires in Cuba. “Clare (the heroine) was generated by my mother…..The book is really her story and her battle Read More

Pam Jenoff – The Lost Girls of Paris

Pam Jenoff  –   The Lost Girls of Paris
February 18, 2019April 3, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Historical fiction novelist Pam Jenoff talks with Writers Voices about her fascination with WW2 “I regard my books as love songs to the people who lived through that most difficult era; and even if the story doesn’t come from personal experiences…my love for the period and the things it can illuminate for us, come from Read More

Jane Healey

Jane Healey
February 11, 2019March 14, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I created these characters that were really composites of the different women I had read about. The characters came out of the research in different ways.” Jane Healey brings to life the stories of Red Cross Clubmoble girls during WW2 in her novel – The Beantown Girls. “They brought the comforts of home but also Read More

Sara Ruhl

Sara Ruhl
February 4, 2019March 5, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“We were more mastering the art of sharing, than critiquing. It was less about take this apart and it was more, you know, respond to this,…how did it play upon you, what does it make you think of.” Sara Ruhl talking about her correspondence with poet Max Ritvo and her book – Letters from Max, Read More

John Wray

John Wray
January 28, 2019March 29, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin 1 Comment

“When I was in Afghanistan I would really try to get a sense of how it smelled there, and how dusty it was, and what it felt like when the sun was shining on you….There’s stuff you just can’t get if you don’t go,” John Wray talks with Writers Voices about the research and the Read More

John B. Lane

John B. Lane
January 21, 2019February 8, 2019 in Poetry by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Let us investigate the ways in which we fool ourselves, so that we may cease to do so.” John B Lane quoting from his book – The Beatin’ Path – a lyrical guide to lucid evolution. “Beliefs or belief systems are one of the kind of root sources of much of our difficulty, because they Read More

Dr Bryan Robinson – # Chill

Dr Bryan Robinson – # Chill
January 14, 2019February 5, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“The book is really about being drawn instead of driven.” Dr Bryan Robinson shares his insights on stress management and his new book # Chill – Turn off your Job and Turn on Your Life. “Self care and self compassion are some of the best medicine to help us be better people…. Unfortunately many people Read More

Eva Hagberg Fisher

Eva Hagberg Fisher
January 7, 2019February 4, 2019 in Memoir by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Why didn’t anyone remind me that this was going to be published?” Monica talks with Eva Hagburg Fisher about the making of her book – How To Be Loved – a memoir of a lifesaving friendship. ” When I was writing the book, I really was just in the world of the book. The book Read More

Tyler Knott Gregson and Sarah Linden

Tyler Knott Gregson and Sarah Linden
December 24, 2018January 31, 2019 in Childrens Books by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“The first year that I did it I remember kind of thinking ‘What did I get myself into?’ ’cause every night I’d have to come up with a mission for the next morning.” Sarah Linden joins Writers voices to talk about the creation of – North Pole Ninjas – Mission Christmas, along with her co-author Read More

Lisa Unger

Lisa Unger
December 17, 2018January 30, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I think a lot of writers who write crime fiction have turned to it to metabolize fear. Probably a lot of readers turn to crime fiction for the same reason.” Lisa Unger talking about her novel “Under My Skin. “For me the human psyche, the brain..that is the place of intense curiosity and probably most Read More

Two Sisters Publishing

Two Sisters Publishing
December 10, 2018January 18, 2019 in Self-help by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Every book we do is about inspiration; people beating the odds and telling their story.” Writers Voices talks with Elizabeth Ann Atkins and Catherine Marie Atkins Greenspan of Two Sisters Writing and Publishing. “Catherine and I are just on a mission to do good in the world.” Who I am is deep down inside me, Read More

Lisa Joy Mitchell

Lisa Joy Mitchell
December 4, 2018December 13, 2018 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Monica and Caroline talk food with Lisa Joy Mitchell and her new cookbook – Sacred and Delicious. …”all living creatures and all human beings have these patterns…dynamic principals that are working in our body. So we are looking to uncover what is the basic imbalance your experiencing and therefore how can we balance it….Most people Read More

Marie Lu – Wild Card

Marie Lu – Wild Card
November 27, 2018January 3, 2019 in Young adult fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Monica talks with tech novel writer Marie Lu on her new novel – Wild Card. “…There’s both good and bad things that come with technology; allot of those questions went into Wild Card. …. In our real world, our tech giants, they tried to make things.. in the beginning, with very good intentions… but the Read More

Tammy Lynne Stoner

Tammy Lynne Stoner
November 19, 2018January 3, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“She ( the main character) was traveling along the same lines that our country had, when it came to some of the gay rights movement, in a way.” Tammy Lynne Stoner talks about her novel, Sugarland ” It was a difficult time to be a woman for sure and she really was there to represent Read More

Kiese Laymon

Kiese Laymon
November 11, 2018January 4, 2019 in Memoir by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I think human beings have to deal with a lot of weird things regardless of race/class/gender; and a lot of things that are like terrifying. So as an artist I just want to explore these things.” Kiese Laymon talks to Writers Voices about his new memoir – Heavy, an American memoir. ” My mom just Read More

Suzanne Gordon

Suzanne Gordon
November 5, 2018January 3, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I think people who are more liberal and progressive need to stop drinking the purple kool aid that the media is serving up….I’m writing an expose about how great (the Veterans Health Administration ) is.” Journalist Suzanne Gordon speaks about veterans, health care and her new book – Wounds of War. “The VHA is way Read More

Ellen Keith

Ellen Keith
October 29, 2018January 3, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Ellen Keith speaks with Writers Voices about her new historical novel – The Dutch Wife. Set in Amsterdam and Germany during WW2 and in Argentina in the 1970’s. “I was really amazed that after the horrors of WW2 and the cases of mass genocide, that there were still so many other atrocities that took place Read More

Kathryn Berla

Kathryn Berla
October 22, 2018January 11, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Kathryn Berla talks about her new novel – the Kitty Committee, a haunting novel of obsession, regret and the search for absolution. “I usually write about redemption or I like to write about redemption. There is usually an aspect of that in all of my books. So I feel like Grace, ( the main character) Read More

Roger Johns

Roger Johns
October 15, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“It’s a dangerous story about a dangerous place..” Roger Johns talks about his newest mystery novel – River of Secrets. “Baton Rouge has a lot of elements to it that seemed…at some instinctive level more accommodating to stories of the kind I wanted to tell…. When you write a mystery it has to work like Read More

Cai Emmons

Cai Emmons
October 8, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I often did try to kind of look up at the clouds and imagine that I was moving them myself. .. (a ) little glimmer of this idea of a character, a long, long time ago”. Cai Emmons talks to Writers’ Voices about her new book – Weather Woman. ” I wanted her power to Read More

Christina Dalcher

Christina Dalcher
September 21, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Christina Dalcher on her new novel – Vox. “It’s a dystopian novel about what happens when a particular faction gains power and decides to silence a large portion of the population…. I did write Vox with a particular faction being in charge and a particular faction being oppressed, but it could have gone the other Read More

Marie Unanue

Marie Unanue
September 17, 2018January 4, 2019 in Childrens Books by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Marie Unanue talks with Monica and Caroline about her new children’s book – The Adventures of Phatty & Payaso, Central Park. “Characterlab.org (has) researched children.. they have come up with the character skills that are missing in today’s children…Empathy is such a hard skill to teach, because you have to ask the child to be Read More

Kristan Higgins

September 10, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Being uncomfortable in your body is not relegated to people who weigh a certain amount…I think it’s a universal experience, unfortunately.” Writers Voices talks with Kristan Higgins about body image and her new novel – Good Luck With That. “I really wanted to dig into how insidious these messages are and how they can eat Read More

Vanessa Hua

Vanessa Hua
September 3, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Writers Voices talks to Vanessa Hua about her novel – River of Stars. ” A pregnant Thelma and Louise tale.” about chinese immigrants. “I think that’s sort of the fun and challenge of fiction. You start with a blank page that feels as big as the world…but then as you go along…you sort of see Read More

Sue Klebold

Sue Klebold
August 31, 2018September 14, 2018 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I suspect that most if not all the people we have thought of as evil…I suspect that there has been some extreme malfunction going on in their brains, that is what I believe.” Writers Voices talks with Sue Klebold on her book – A Mother’s Reckoning – Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy, Sue is Read More

Allie Rowbottom

Allie Rowbottom
August 28, 2018January 4, 2019 in Memoir by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“This book was the story I had to write before I could write other things.” Writers Voices talks with Allie Rowbottom about her family memoir – Jell-O Girls. “She ( my mother) was especially vulnerable to the really damaging messaging of living in a patriarchy as a woman, especially at that point in history….Jello was Read More

Amy Blumenfeld

Amy Blumenfeld
August 20, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Amy Blumenfeld talks to Writers Voices about her new book – The Cast. “It’s about authenticity about listening to your gut and not giving up on your gut, knowing who you are, but also respecting the person that you love the most….I was really interested in exploring what happens when there’s love and respect and Read More

Ann Hood

Ann Hood
July 27, 2018January 4, 2019 in Young adult fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Monica and Caroline talk with Ann Hood about the writing life and her new novel for young readers – She loves you Yeah, Yeah, Yeah. ” It was fun to remember my young self like that and how earnest I was about all these things….One of the things that was fun was recreating, for the Read More

Brian H. Peterson

Brian H. Peterson
July 24, 2018January 11, 2019 in Memoir, Poetry by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I have to feel strongly, it is a kind of catharsis for me” Writers Voices speaks with Bryan Peterson on his book – I Give My Eyes. “I try and be very, very disciplined with the actual words chosen and be very careful with adjectives. Adjectives tend to muck things up. they don’t leave enough Read More

Randy Susan Meyers

Randy Susan Meyers
July 23, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“To me this was a true Shakespearean tragedy… the falling of the family patriarch.” Randy Susan Meyers, on her new book – The Widow of Wall Street – ” Everybody wants to think they are above being fooled…. Here is this women who, in my book, gets totally bamboozled and they want to think it Read More

Camille DiMaio

Camille DiMaio
July 19, 2018January 4, 2019 in Historical fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Monica and Caroline chat with Camille DiMaio, author of – The Way of Beauty about her writing process and some of the themes she touches on in her novels. “That’s what I love about historical fiction. The issues that people were dealing with a hundred years ago are not really different. We are dealing with Read More

Andrea Thome

Andrea Thome
July 16, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

” I think there is so much darkness and garbage in the world….I write for my girlfriends and all women I hope, I just think when I close a book at the end of the night and click my lamp off I want to go to sleep feeling good.” Andrea Thome talks with Writers Voices Read More

Allen Gannett

Allen Gannett
July 9, 2018January 4, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin 1 Comment

“People like ideas that have one foot in the familiar and one foot in the novel.” Allen Gannett on his new book, – The Creative Curve. ” Ideas that are familiar enough to feel safe but novel enough to be interesting, novel enough to be intriguing.”…”I think the reality is creators are creating for people Read More

Elena Hartwell

Elena Hartwell
July 2, 2018January 11, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Writing a novel and having it rejected…it’s like being an athlete and getting injured. I think you have to ask yourself what do I need to do to overcome.” Writers Voices talks writing and mystery writing with Elena Hartwell on her new novel – Three Strikes You’re Dead. “I think the two primary things that Read More

Sue Halpern Summer Hours

Sue Halpern  Summer Hours
June 18, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Writers voices talks writing with Sue Halpern author of Summer Hours at the Robbers Library. “They (the characters) definitely develop and I think what happens is that you sort of start, you wind them up a little bit and then they take on a life of their own and they may start talking to you. Read More

Brendan Kiely

Brendan Kiely
June 11, 2018January 4, 2019 in Young adult fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

Our culture of misogyny is the topic as Writers Voices speaks with Brendan Kiely about his new novel for young adults – Tradition. “I think that men too often construct their masculinity in ways that are anti-woman and that’s part of the problem. They haven’t even taken the time to imagine the individual. If you’re Read More

Mike Nemeth

Mike Nemeth
June 6, 2018January 4, 2019 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Randall, my lead character, is the kind of guy that I think a lot more of us should be. He instinctively questions authority. He doesn’t take things at face value…..People like that cause our civilization to evolve.” Writer’s Voices chats with Mile Nemeth, author of the crime fiction novel – The Undiscovered Country. “The theme Read More

Kim Brophey

Kim Brophey
May 21, 2018January 4, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

In the past thought was that ” if you just had the perfect dog training technique…if you just did everything right, then you could make (your dog) how you want them to be.” Kim Brophey talks to Writers Voices about her new book. Meet Your Dog. “Let’s look at what the dog was designed for… Read More

Marc Perrusquia

Marc Perrusquia
April 30, 2018January 11, 2019 in Non-fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“Such an ironic story. Here you have someone who is so closely associated with the ( Civil Rights) movement; but as it turns out there’s also a hidden life, that he is essentially the FBI’s eyes and ears.” Marc Perrusquia on his new book – A Spy in Canaan – How the FBI used a Read More

Elizabeth Moore

Elizabeth Moore
April 23, 2018September 4, 2018 in Fiction Writers by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“On the otherside she was just so amused by everything. everthing,was so freaking funny” Elizabeth Moore talks to Writers Voices about her novel The Dreaming Road, A vivid personal accounting of her connection with her daughter after her death by suicide. ” There are alot of people who will really doubt me if I try Read More

Veera Hiranandani

Veera Hiranandani
April 20, 2018January 11, 2019 in Young adult fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I don’t think anyone could imagine what would happen.” Veera Hiranandani talks to Writers Voices about her new book – The Night Diary – A young adult novel about the partitioning of India. ” My grandparents, basically one night said “We have to get out of here.” Packed bags, got on a train and made Read More

Matt Killeen

Matt  Killeen
April 7, 2018January 11, 2019 in Young adult fiction by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“I have long felt that it is more important to have well written, deep multifaceted female characters than it is to have strong roles. I think the strength is … often a by product of the depth.” Matt Killeen on writing -Orphan, Monster, Spy. ” She ( the main character) kind of talks to me Read More

Tim Wendel

Tim Wendel
March 30, 2018January 11, 2019 in Memoir by Chrystel Guerin Leave a comment

“We are born, somehow with some basic wiring, to understand story.” Tim Wendel on his book – Cancer Crossings. A brother, his doctors and the quest for a cure to childhood leukemia. “If you can put it in a story it makes it much more palpable, it makes it entertaining,…. If I put it out Read More

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