Writers of the Future Podcast

John Goodwin
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Nov 3, 2020 • 33min

96. Nancy Kress gives the 3 key points of world-building

Nancy Kress is the author of thirty-three books, including twenty-six novels, four collections of short stories, and three books on writing. Her work has won six Nebulas, two Hugos, a Sturgeon, and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award, and has been translated into two dozen languages, including Klingon. In addition to writing, Kress often teaches at various venues around the country and abroad, including a visiting lectureship at the University of Leipzig, a 2017 writing class in Beijing, and the annual intensive workshop Taos Toolbox, which she teaches every summer with Walter Jon Williams. In this interview, Nancy discusses world-building addressing these key topics: 1. How much do you have to do? 2. When? 3. How? What are the resources? Who and how is the authority? What is the power line? What is the finance line? How are resources allocated? How is authority enforced? Who has rights? What are the caste levels in that society? A great start to Nancy's writing is her novel, the near-future speculative fiction "Beggars in Spain." If you prefer thrillers is "Stinger." For space opera read "The Probability Series."
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Oct 23, 2020 • 49min

95. Dave Chesson, the Kindlepreneur, discusses the evolution of self-publishing

Dave Chesson created Kindlepreneur to help authors get started with Amazon. In our interview, he discusses the evolution of self-publishing and the relevance of self-published authors comparing them to free-agents in sports. Self-publishing makes it easier for a publishing house to know who to take on. Self-publishing used to be the junior varsity team but this has evolved. The con to self-publishing includes such things as no backing of a publishing house; not have access to specific editors, no professional formatting, to name just a few of the points. With self-publishing, you need to learn to do these things yourself and have to learn marketing. Extremely important whether with a publisher or not, is to learn how to market and the importance of building an email list that will enable you to grow on other social platforms. Go to kindlepreneur.com as a way to get started and also to reach out to Dave.
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Oct 16, 2020 • 41min

94. Echo Chernik discusses talent, skill, and diversity in art

Echo Chernik is a freelance artist who has diversified her skills and creates art in all mediums which is important from her experience as she is able to ride with any bumps in the economy and changes in demand. In addition to being well known in corporate America for brands such as Celestial Seasonings tea packaging, she also created two now-famous decks of playing cards for Name of the Wind by Pat Rothfuss (WOTF 18). Echo is the coordinating judge for the Illustrators of the Future Contest and enjoys sharing her hard-won advice to assist aspiring illustrators. She is a big believer in different styles and diversity in art, which is why the last volume had winners from Iran, Turkey, Viet Nam as well as the US, Can, and the UK. She discusses what she looks for in Contest submissions: your own style, skill, and is it telling a story with the illustration, and send the art YOU want to do. And send in your own art, no plagiarism -- we do check for plagiarism. Visit her website at www.echo-x.com
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Oct 10, 2020 • 33min

93. Liz Busby discusses the value of SF&F to address religious issues

Liz Busby is a mom, homeschooler, SF critic, and superfan, and this interview was done to provide a perspective to writers on what fans are looking for in an author: turn-on and turn-off. We also discuss how to deal with religious themes in SF&F, its origin, and the current trend. Who does religion right in their SF&F? - Brandon Sanderson with his Stormlight Archive, - The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell We also discuss her favorite stories in L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 36: "Educational Tapes" by Katie Livingston "A Word That Means Everything" by Andy Dibble "Trading Ghosts" by David A. Elsensohn Find her at lizbusby.com/
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Oct 3, 2020 • 23min

92. Elizabeth Chatsworth successfully maneuvers a mid-life career change

Meet Elizabeth Chatsworth, originally from the UK and now living in the US, the first winner from WOTF 37 to be interviewed. After a successful career in marketing in the UK, Elizabeth began writing as a late-in-life second career writing fiction in her late 40s. She has now won Writers of the Future, sold her first novel, and was very happy to tell the story of how she approached learning to write. We also discuss the creation of steampunk as a subgenre and reference the article by Tim Powers. https://elizabethchatsworth.com
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Sep 28, 2020 • 1h 1min

91. Sean Patrick Hazlett combines real-world paranormal with dark fantasy

We met Sean Patrick Hazlett in 2017 when he was a winner in Writers of the Future Volume 33 with his short dark fantasy (horror) story, "Adramelech." He is an Army veteran with the elite 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, a finance executive in SFO Bay area, with an AB in history and BS in electrical engineering from Stanford University, and an MBA from Harvard Business School. In this podcast we discuss creating horror and dark fantasy and the form he likes. Sean is the editor of "Weird World War III" which combines real-world paranormal with dark fantasy. He acknowledges the late Mike Resnick for providing him with the knowhow to create this anthology. Visit Sean at seanpatrickhazlett@wordpress.com
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Sep 21, 2020 • 46min

90. Craig Elliott: from illustration to animation with Disney, Dreamworks, to Netflix

Craig Elliott is an illustrator, visual development artist, and layout artist who works in the animation industry. After graduating from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California in 1996, he went on to work on numerous films for Disney Feature Animation, DreamWorks, Nickelodeon, and Fox Animation Studios. He is now the Director of Animation for Netflix and is now a judge for the Illustrators of the Future.
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Sep 17, 2020 • 31min

89. Cassandre Bolan, surviving as an artist, a single mom with kids, and a midlife crisis

Cassandre was an illustrator winner in volume 30 where she painted two pieces of art for that volume. And this year, she created the art for the L. Ron Hubbard story, "Borrowed Glory," where she was her own model for both people in the painting. She believes that art and writing can change the world. The interview was done at a Panera Bread Restaurant in Chicago. Discover her art at www.cassandrebolan.com
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Sep 5, 2020 • 58min

88. Martin Shoemaker talks about Hard Sci-fi that he calls Neo-Apollo

Martin Shoemaker is a winner published in volume 31, with his story "Unrefined," a sub-genre he refers to as Neo-Apollo, a concept based on the next era of space exploration after the Apollo generation where humanity is struggling to reach the stars. He now has well over 60 publications including 3 novels. "Today I am Carey" is a ground-breaking novel following his award-winning short story, "Today I am Paul." Martin was ready to give up writing several years ago on January 1. A reject came back on December 31, the day before his "deadline", so he still had one last day before officially giving up on writing. So he submitted the story to Writers of the Future and forgot about it. A few months later, he received a call that he was a finalist and that Jerry Pournelle really liked his story. So he continued writing and submitting and did not give up. He submitted 13-14 times before finally winning. Martin is incredibly enthusiastic to help others trying to break into the writing business, helping with the Writers of the Future Forum found at www.writersofthefuture.com. Martin is now Assistant Editor Galaxy's Edge Magazine and is able to pay it forward, providing an avenue for new writers to get a start. Discover Martin at shoemaker.space He can be reached at martin@TheUMLGuy.com
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Aug 30, 2020 • 58min

87. Stoney Compton on the importance of research in historical fiction

Stoney Compton was a winner in 1993, published in WOTF 9, with his story, "Messages." Stoney writes historical fiction and alternate history published by Ring of Fire Press with Eric Flint, a co-winner in volume 9. He discusses the importance of good research in writing either genre. He also discusses self-publishing vs traditional publishing. Discover his books at StoneyCompton.com

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