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Book Writing & Publishing

{The Blog}

Ep 141: From Fantasy to Memoir with Betsy Cornwell

Maid meets Under the Tuscan Sun!

Betsy Cornwell built her career writing young adult fantasy, but her newest book tells an entirely different story. In this episode, Betsy opens up about her memoir, Ring of Salt, which chronicles her escape from an abusive marriage and her creation of a sanctuary for single-parent artists.

At the center is the Old Knitting Factory in western Ireland, a historic building she transformed into a childcare-inclusive residency. What began as a crowdfunded dream became both a physical refuge and a symbol of resilience, reshaping her creative life.

Betsy also shares wisdom about the writing process itself. Teaching creative writing at the University of Galway, she knows firsthand how perfectionism derails authors and offers that waiting to write or release a book until it’s guaranteed “good” is like refusing to give birth unless you know the baby will be perfect.

This is an episode for anyone wrestling with the voice that says “not good enough.” Ring o...

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Ep 140: Writing Tips from Bestselling Author Jane Hamilton

Most authors have as big a stack (if not bigger) of abandoned drafts as they do books that actually make it into the world. Jane Hamilton—bestselling author of The Book of Ruth and A Map of the World and two-time Oprah Book Club pick—is refreshingly open about that reality.

Her newest novel, The Phoebe Variations, took nearly a decade to finish. Not because she was “blocked,” but because finding the center of a story often means writing and tossing out entire versions until one finally lands. “I wrote probably seven distinct novels before I got to what it is now,” she told me.

She talks about putting “Spanx” on her drafts while acknowledging the boxes of pages she’ll likely never read again. As I always say, those pages weren’t wasted; they were the stepping stones to the book she ultimately wrote. “I just have to make it the best failure I can,” she says, “and in doing so I get to the next place.”

For writers who may also feel stuck (*raises own hand), her perspective is free...

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Ep 136: Writing a Novel While Raising Kids with Jill Beissel

Writers dream of the day they’ll hold their finished book, but few warn you about how intense the editing phase can be. In this episode, debut novelist Jill Beissel gets real about the messy, magical process of turning a rough draft into a polished novel readers will love.

Jill’s upcoming book, Glitter and Gold (out October 7!), went through what she calls “color-coded chaos”—a DIY system using highlighters, sticky notes, and sheer persistence to untangle plot issues and deepen character arcs.

She also shares what it’s like to write while raising two young kids and working full-time. Some nights she wrote 500 words, others just 50, but she kept showing up. Her writing sprints, “progress over perfection” mindset, and decision to celebrate any words written (instead of beating herself up for what she didn’t write) are what more of us need to hear.

We talk about dual timelines, beta readers, and why sometimes, the bravest thing a writer can do is shelve a manuscript after 100+ re...

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Ep 134: Crafting Complex Narratives with Lauren Oliver

If you’re the kind of person who devours psychological thrillers but also wants to be emotionally sucker-punched (in the best way), Lauren Oliver’s What Happened to Lucy Vale needs to be on your radar. 

In this episode, Lauren takes us behind the scenes of what might be her most structurally daring novel to date. Set in a small Indiana town with a possibly-haunted house at its core, Lucy Vale unspools two eerie mysteries—one set in the past, one unraveling in real time—using both traditional storytelling and a collective “we” voice (think The Virgin Suicides meets Reddit sleuth thread). 

This book took years to write, and when you hear how the pieces click into place, you’ll understand why. 

Through this book, she challenges us to ask: What if we’re not always the hero in someone else’s story? 

We also dive into Lauren’s writing journey, which is less “neat staircase to the top” and more “rollercoaster meets overgrown hiking trail.” She talks honestly about the pressure to st...

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Ep 133: Living Proof with Tiffany Graham Charkosky

 

In this episode, I sit down with Tiffany Graham Charkosky to talk about her forthcoming memoir, Living Proof (October 21, Little A), a book written and shaped over years of writing and rewriting.

At just 11 years old, Tiffany lost her mother. For decades, she believed it was an unexplainable tragedy, until a DNA test unearthed information that changed everything. That discovery didn’t just reshape her understanding of her mother’s death; it also made her question what she might unknowingly pass on to her own children.

INSIDE THE EPISODE

  • The emotional (and editorial) decision-making around what belongs in a book
  • How long it took for her story to find its true shape (and why)
  • The surprising speed of her publishing deal once it all came together
  • How do we process loss as kids versus adults? And what happens when new information forces us to reinterpret our past?

Tiffany’s story is as deeply personal as it is universally relatable. 


ABOUT TIFFANY

Tiffany Graham Char...

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Ep 131: The Paper Palace and Beyond with Miranda Cowley Heller

Miranda Cowley Heller's father was a book editor; her grandfather edited Jack Kerouac and was friends with Hemingway. That legacy, while inspiring, left her frozen when it came to pursuing her own writing. 

Instead, she built a thriving career in publishing and TV, eventually heading up drama series at HBO. Then, in her 50s, she wrote the novel she’d been carrying around for years, The Paper Palace, which became a New York Times #1 bestseller and a Reese’s Book Club pick. 

Now, she's returned to her first creative love—poetry—with a stunning new collection: The Deep Water Knows. “Poetry is almost like putting snapshots of your soul into the world,” she tells me. 

In this episode, Miranda gets real about the myth of getting wiser with age, the vulnerability of releasing creative work into the world, and why your voice is never too late to matter.

ABOUT MIRANDA

Miranda Cowley Heller has worked as senior vice president and head of drama series at HBO, developing and overseeing ...

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Ep 130: When Fiction Meets AI with Lori Gold

Author Lori Gold is pulling back the curtain on publishing, in both this conversation and her newest novel, Romantic Friction. 

INSIDE THE EPISODE

⭐️ Yet another reason bestseller lists aren’t what you think (I didn't know this until I read her book!)

⭐️ A great tip for handing reviews without spiraling (or swearing off Goodreads forever)

⭐️ What AI is doing to authors' voices, and why it should concern all of us

⭐️ How writing happens even when you're not writing

⭐️ How Lori studies the bones of books she loves to make her own writing even stronger

CONNECT WITH LORI

Instagram: @lorigoldsteinbooks

Grab a copy of Romantic Friction


👉 CLICK HERE to write the first draft of your nonfiction or memoir written in 33 days!

...even if you don't have a cabin in the wilderness, 4 uninterrupted hours a day to write, or confidence that you're a "real" writer. No overwhelm, no confusion. Just simple, actionable steps.


Awesome Email Templates for Authors

From communicating with...

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Ep 129: From LinkedIn to Penguin Random House with Gigi Robinson

What started as sharing her story online about living with chronic illness turned into a book deal with Penguin Random House. In this episode, Gigi Robinson shares how she leveraged consistency, relationships, and a clear vision to go from content creator to published author.

Here’s what we get into:

  • Why she chose to write A Kid’s Book About Chronic Illness (and how it ended up getting picked up by Penguin/DK).
  • The ridiculously simple promo strategy Gigi swears by: bring the book everywhere and make it part of the conversation.
  • Why she went the children’s book route to make a heavy topic more digestible.
  • Her take on promotion as storytelling, not selling.
  • How she filters advice from all the "experts” while staying aligned with her bigger vision.

CONNECT WITH GIGI

Website: gigirobinson.com

Instagram: @itsgigirobinson

TikTok: @itsgigirobinson


👉 CLICK HERE to write the first draft of your nonfiction or memoir written in 33 days!

...even if you don't have a cabin in th...

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Ep 128: Book Publicity with Emily Florence

This week, I’m joined by publicist Emily Florence, and we’re talking about how to set publicity goals before you start chasing them, why a Today Show appearance might not sell nearly as many books as you think, and how to make your marketing feel less like shouting into the void and more like having conversations that matter.

Here’s what we get into:

  • Why knowing your goals (career author? credibility? visibility?) makes all the difference
  • The surprising truth about big media hits (and what works better)
  • Building an author platform that doesn’t rely on hacking the algorithm or pretending to be someone you’re not
  • How to build a real-deal, supportive author community (no fake “collabs” required)

 


👉 CLICK HERE to get the first draft of your nonfiction or memoir written in 33 days!

...even if you don't have a cabin in the wilderness, 4 uninterrupted hours a day to write, or confidence that you're a "real" writer. No overwhelm, no confusion. Just simple, actionable steps.

...
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Ep 127: On Writing...Everything, with Melissa de la Cruz

Bestselling author Melissa de la Cruz has published nearly 80 books (yes, 80), and in this episode, she shares what it really takes to build and sustain a long-term writing career. From surviving the shifting tides of publishing to protecting what gets you "in the mood" to write, she shares the kind of wisdom every author loves hearing. 

INSIDE THE EPISODE:

🎉 Melissa's advice: Don’t quit your day job until the math says you can

🎉 Success is wonderful; it also resets with every new book

🎉 How to protect your creative hours (8am–1pm, in her case)

🎉 Books are logic puzzles, not lightning strikes (I love this analogy!)

🎉 If social media isn’t fun, don’t do it. Period. (Who's cheering?)

🎉 The final sprint before deadline is where the magic (and panic) often happen

Whether you're writing book 1 or book 71, this episode's packed with truths you'll be grateful for.


CONNECT WITH MELISSA

Website: melissa-delacruz.com

Instagram: @authormelissadelacruz

X: @MelissadelaCruz

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