NEW EPISODE: Jen Pollock Michel: Writing, Patience, and Hope

Jen Pollock Michel talks with us about the importance of waiting (patience, young writer), the practical realities important to consider (am I asking questions that readers care about?), and the role that writing can play during difficult times like the ones we’re living in. Oh, and why don’t men buy theology books written by women?

You know–all the easy topics.

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. If you enjoy the podcast, please consider joining our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Keep writing!

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One of the best ways to support the writers you love is to preorder their books. If you’d like to preorder my next novel, These Nameless Things (releases 6/30), you can find out more by heading HERE.

NEW EPISODE! D.L. Mayfield and the Intermingling of Creativity and Activism

Today, D.L. Mayfield reminds us creative folks to tend to our bodies. She turns the tables on Shawn and Maile and asks them, “Can beauty really save the world?” And she helps us to begin thinking about how creative writing and activism can go hand-in-hand.

You can find out more about the books and other writing Danielle has done at dlmayfield.com

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. If you enjoy the podcast, please consider joining our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Keep writing!

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One of the best ways to support the writers you love is to preorder their books. If you’d like to preorder my next novel, These Nameless Things (releases 6/30), you can find out more by heading HERE.

Postmarked – The End

Today, Jen wraps up our Postmarked series with a kind and hopeful conclusion:

“These letters, arriving weekly, have reminded me that we’re never meant to go it alone. To be needy and vulnerable is to be human. To be discouraged, tired, and anxious is pretty normal. It just helps to have someone in your corner when you sit down, feeling a little bruised, someone who believes that you’ve got more in you for than the fight than you can even see yourself.”

To read this final letter in its entirety, head HERE.

What an encouraging almost-year of letters it’s been. Thank you so much, Jen.

 

 

 

 

 

 

NEW EPISODE! In Which Shawn Confesses to Maile and It Involves a Royalty Statement

Shawn admits that he received a royalty statement last week but threw it in the trash. Maile is perplexed as to why he didn’t tell her when this happened. Find out why. They also talk about how to deal with disappointing sales and their new puppy, Winnifred.

We’re giving away five advance copies of Shawn’s soon-to-be-released novel, These Nameless Things. To have your name entered in a drawing for one of the copies, simply share this podcast to any social media profile you have and use the hashtag, #TheStoriesBetweenUs.

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. If you enjoy the podcast, please consider joining our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Keep writing!

* * * * *

One of the best ways to support the writers you love is to preorder their books. If you’d like to preorder my next novel, These Nameless Things (releases 6/30), you can find out more by heading HERE.

Tara K. Ross: Creativity as a Healing Force In Us and the World

Years ago, Tara K. Ross found herself dealing with a serious case of post-partum anxiety, not wanting to leave the house at all. And with this new role of motherhood, she began to feel that she had lost her identity. Part of what helped her navigate that time was creativity and writing. We dig into the saving power of creativity and also talk about releasing a book during these difficult days, and what taking a step back has to teach us.

You can find out more about Tara and her new book at https://www.tarakross.com/

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. If you enjoy the podcast, please consider joining our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Keep writing!

* * * * *

One of the best ways to support the writers you love is to preorder their books. If you’d like to preorder my next novel, These Nameless Things (releases 6/30), you can find out more by heading HERE.

Postmarked: Dear Jen (My Last Letter – #40)

Dear Jen

Well, here we go. I’m sitting on the bedroom floor where my youngest two sleep. Leo is already out, the fan raising wisps of his long hair as the night settles outside. Poppy has restless legs, though her eyelids are nearly too heavy for her to hold open. I have my laptop in front of me, but a pillow that one of them discarded is calling my name. Honestly. I’m so tired, I think I could sleep for a year.

We’ve reached the end of the road, at least as far as these letters are concerned. Today is the last letter I’ll write to you. And next week, you’ll take us home. What an enjoyable routine this has been for me over the last 40 or so weeks. Nearly a year. That’s quite a thing.

Our exchange might be coming to an end, yet everything else around me is screaming that the world is stuck in this liminal space: Covid-19 simmers somewhere below the surface, no longer peaking yet still not behind us; the city streets of this nation are pouring forth a kind of mangled pain and grief. We can see where we’ve been—do we know where we are going? What do the coming days and weeks have in store for us?

I have to be honest: some days I wonder if these festering wounds of racism and white supremacy in the Unites States can ever heal. I hold onto hope, though—not for me, but for those most effected by the systemic injustices that abound. It is such an uncomfortable space to lean into, a topic that for nearly forty years of my life I knew so little about, but it’s important work, and it involves people I love. I hope we all find the strength to play our part, to tend to our garden, no matter the fires that rage.

And in the midst of all this, a book release. These Nameless Things releases in less than four weeks. To be honest, I don’t even know what to say about that right now, in these times. I don’t know where to begin.

As I considered what I might like to write in this, my part of our final exchange, there was really only one main thing I wanted to express, one message that kept rising to the front of my mind:

Jen, keep going!

Just about every day, writers like us encounter a new reason to stop writing. Either it feels like we’ll never get to where we want to go, or someone doesn’t appreciate our work, or rejections large and small dot the landscape, or, as Wallace Stegner once said, the stories never turn out on paper the way they had in our head.

And, yet. What else would I do, but write? I can’t think of a thing. Honestly. Not a thing. Some days, this seems like a fruitless calling, and other days, a glorious one.

Outside my children’s bedroom window, I can see blue sky behind the last, thinning remnants of storm clouds that have passed. They brought in their wake a delicious coolness, a dim kind of summer evening light, and a stillness that can be felt as much as seen. Even the willow tree growing over the alley, with its light limbs normally willing to move at the slightest rustle, stands completely still.

Dare we hope for such peace, such calm, in our world? Dare we hope these storms will pass us by and leave us with something better than the charged, pre-storm air? Dare we hope that something will come of these words we constantly try to string together? Perhaps it’s the message we all need right now, in this difficult space. Keep going.

Sometimes, in these liminal spaces, hope is all we have. Sometimes, taking the next step is all we can do.

It’s been a lot of fun, building up a kind of collective hope in these letters, with you.

Thank you, and, until our paths cross again…

Keep going,

Shawn