How do you put true stuff in your books when the truth is just too strange?
Fifteen minutes long, because you're in a hurry, and we're not that smart.
Fifteen minutes long, because you're in a hurry, and we're not that smart.
How do you put true stuff in your books when the truth is just too strange?
Sam Logan of “Sam and Fuzzy” talks long-form storytelling with Brandon, Mary, and Howard
Cherie Priest joins the cast for a discussion of dystopian fiction before a live audience.
How do you respond to bad reviews, publisher errors, or other possible “career fail” situations?
How do you help your readers relate to the non-human characters in your fiction?
What does “space opera” mean, and how might you go about writing it?
E.J. Patten joins us to talk about pre-writing — all that work that gets done before the prose happens.
Mary, Dan, and Howard help Brandon brainstorm a story, this time featuring psychic birds.
Robison Wells joins the ‘cast to talk to us about cliffhangers.
Brandon, Dan, Mary, and Howard each take a look at some changing aspect of the industry, and how they’re reacting to that change.