Episodes
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Episode 24 of PUBLISH THIS! OVER LUNCH with historical fiction writer D.W. Hogan
Hogan is a full-time author and lives in Huntsville, Alabama with her husband. She’s been interviewed on Leah Jones podcast “Finding Favorites” and her writing has appeared in Hypertext Magazine and TNBBC’s The Next Best Book Blog. She’s been interviewed with four other talented female authors in he LitReactor article “Leaving a legacy of equality and hope. Her Debut novel Unbroken Bonds is available wherever books are sold. You can find her at DWHogan.com, Facebook as D.W. Hogan author and on Instagram as dawnhoganauthor.
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Episode 23 of PUBLISH THIS! OVER LUNCH with writer Gregory L. Norris
Norris writes The Day After Tomorrow series for Anderson Entertainment in the U.K. based on the Gerry Anderson NBC made-for-TV movie, which he watched and loved as a boy, and worked on Paramount’s Star Trek: Voyager series as a screenwriter. Norris lives at the Outer Limits of New Hampshire’s North Country in a century-old house called Xanadu with his giant rescue cat and emerald-eyed muse. For more information check out gregorynorris.com
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A conversation with writer Tiffanie DeBartolo
Tiffanie DeBartolo is an author, runner, hiker, yogi, traveler, cook, poet, artist and feminist. Her most recent novel is Sorrow and her previous novels include God Shaped Hole, How To Kill a Rock Star, and the graphic novel Grace: Based on the Jeff Buckley Story. She also wrote and directed the film Dream for an Insomniac starring Jennifer Aniston and Ione Skye. Tiffanie is the founder and CEO of the record label Bright Antenna, and is the co-founder of the ShineMaker Foundation, a charity organization dedicated to supporting human rights, women's rights, education, animal welfare, and the environment. Tiffanie lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband Scott Schumaker and her Irish Wolfhound Kazoo.
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A conversation with writer Sarah Wesley Lemire
Sarah Wesley Lemire is originally from Minneapolis and has spent the last two decades in the Northeast unsuccessfully trying to lose her Midwestern accent and figure out the difference between a hoagie and a sub. She is an award-winning writer and humor columnist. Her work appears in the NY Daily News, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, and in the books Flash Nonfiction Funny (Woodhall Press, 2018) & Opinionated Women in the Land of Steady Habits (ELM Grove Press, 2018). Follow Sarah on Twitter @swlemire or Instagram @sarah_wesley_lemire and tune into her lifestyle podcast, Hack The Chat. Her most recent publication is I'll Never Be a Hand Model: And Other Stories I Tell My Therapist
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A conversation with writer A.J. O'Connell
A.J. O’Connell is a freelance writer who got started as a newspaper reporter before she started writing books. Her work has been published by NPR.org, The Establishment, and Electric Literature magazine. She's had two novellas published and earned an MFA in creative fiction from Fairfield University in 2011. Her newest book is “A Perfect Facebook Life” and is available wherever books are sold.
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A conversation with horror writer Amanda Headlee. With a love of scary stories and folklore, Amanda spent her entire life crafting works of dark fiction. She has a fascination with the emotion of fear and believes it is the first emotion humans feel at the moment they are born. Most of her work focuses on dark fiction associated with folklore and cosmic horror. The fear of humanity’s insignificance in the vastness of the Universe intrigues her. You can find Amanda on her website at amandaheadlee.com, Instagram & Twitter @amandaheadlee , and TheHorrorTree.com
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A conversation with writer Rebecca Dimyan. Rebecca is an award-winning writer whose nonfiction essays and short fiction have appeared in national and international publications including Vox, xoJane, The Mighty, 34th Parallel, The Hunger, and many others. She is also a freelance contributor to Hearst Connecticut Media. In addition to teaching at several colleges in Connecticut, Rebecca is co-founder and co-chair of The Ridgefield Writers’ Conference. She has recently completed a novel, Waiting for Beirut, an excerpt of which was selected as a semi-finalist for the Baltic Writing Residency, and a memoir about her experience with chronic illness. Rebecca is also an editor at Running Wild Press.
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Episode 17 of PUBLISH THIS! OVER LUNCH with Monique Heller, comedic writer and contributor of FAST FUNNY WOMEN, available wherever books are sold.
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A conversation with writer Brooke Adams Law. Brooke is a writer and writing teacher. Based in Connecticut, she leads online workshops for writers from around the world. Her debut novel, Catchlight, was published last month, which is also the winner of the Fairfield University Book Prize. You can learn more about her work and connect with her on Instagram, @brookeadamslaw.
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A conversation with writer Carol VanDenHende. Carol has a background in digital technology, strategy and marketing, having worked in both the United States and China. Her debut novel, Goodbye, Orchid, was listed as an anticipated fall read by Buzzfeed, Parade, and Travel & Leisure, and it’s also been named as the 2020 American Fiction Award winner for urban fiction, and 2020 Pinnacle Achievement Award winner for multicultural fiction. The official release date for the book was October 1, 2020. For more information visit www.carolvandenhende.com.
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A conversation with writer Emily Heiden.
Emily’s writing has appeared in The Washington Post, Lit Hub, Electric Literature, The Seattle Times, The Hartford Courant, Brevity Magazine, Colorado Review, and elsewhere. She has also recently appeared on NPR. Her essays will be published this year in the books Don't Look Now: Things We Wish We Hadn't Seen, from Ohio State University Press, which is currently out, and Fast Funny Women: 75 Essays of Flash Nonfiction, from Wood Hall Press. She is a PhD student in creative writing and literature at the University of Cincinnati.
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A conversation with writer Laura Allnutt. Laura is the author of Below Them the Horizon, available everywhere books are sold. It’s the story of Lucy, a young woman on a hopeful quest to overcome a crippling mental illness, and the illuminating friendship that lights her way. This coming-of-age novel illuminates the hazards of family, the price of loss, and the guiding light of enduring friendship.
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A conversation with Lisa Judge from Dublin, Ireland, who is a writer of flash fiction in both English and the Irish language
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A conversation with writer Erica Buehler from FAST FUNNY WOMEN about comedy, writing, and literary life
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A conversation with writer Bonnie Jean Feldkamp
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A conversation with writer Darien Hsu Gee. Darien is an award-winning author of five novels, and winner of the 2019 Poetry Society of America's Chapbook Fellowship.
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A conversation with actor and writer ELLIE ARAIZA
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