Category: Indie Authors Podcast

My indie authors podcast began as IndieVoices, when I was executive editor at Foreword Reviews, and is now called Inspirational Indie Authors in its incarnation for the Alliance of Independent Authors. But no matter what it’s called, I enjoy making these podcasts because I get to interview some incredibly brilliant authors.

For me, it’s not about the authors’ business plans, marketing strategy, or other aspects of indie publishing that don’t have to do with the actual content of the books. I’ll let smart businesspeople handle those kinds of interviews. For me, my indie authors podcast is all about the joy of writing and reading.

You can listen to all my latest author interviews at this link.

  • Author Imagines an Alternate-History Rome

    Author Imagines an Alternate-History Rome

    Alternate History

    I recently spoke to Alison Morton, whose background as a translator, historian, and British army veteran makes her uniquely qualified to write an alternate history of Rome, asking what would have happened had the Roman Empire survived into modern times … and it was ruled by women.

    Alison’s varied background gave her the opportunity to meet all kinds of people and observe them. And, as most writers know, what you experience in life, the characters you meet, is all part of your book research.

    In this show, Alison talks about her obsession with Rome, how and why she chose to write an alternate history, feminism, and gives advice to other writers on how to create whole new worlds.

    You can listen to my interview with Diana Stevan by clicking the arrow below.

    Or take a look at the entire post, and transcripts, at the Alliance of Independent Authors. You can listen and subscribe to all my author-interview podcasts for the Alliance of Independent over here.

  • Author in 70s Draws on Deep Well of Experience

    Author in 70s Draws on Deep Well of Experience

    Diana Stevan

    Diana Stevan is in her 70s and is beginning to hit her stride as a prolific indie author of novels about family, love, and relationships.

    Her third self-published book, called Sunflowers Under Fire, is set in WWI and the Bolshevik Revolution. It’s based on stories told to her by her mother and it’s a finalist for the 2019 Whistler Independent Book Awards, sponsored by the Writers Union of Canada.

    Diana is able to draw on a wide range of experience, from working at a meat-packing plant to an actress and model—but most of all as a family counselor—to accurately portray people in difficult circumstances.

    You can listen to my interview with Diana Stevan by clicking the arrow below.

    Or take a look at the entire post, and transcripts, at the Alliance of Independent Authors. You can listen and subscribe to all my author-interview podcasts for the Alliance of Independent over here.

  • Interview With Top Indie Author Jane Davis

    Interview With Top Indie Author Jane Davis

    Jane Davis

    We don’t have very many rock stars in the indie publishing world, but a few have risen to the top with a reputation for producing wonderfully written, compelling books that stand out as great literature, no matter what label you put on it. One of them is Inspirational Indie Author Jane Davis.

    Jane was recently recognized as one of the best self-published authors of the year with the new Selfie awards for her book called Smash All The Windows, which is also smashing all the preconceptions many people have about self published books.

    Smash all the Windows is based on a real disaster in a football stadium in 1989. Jane discusses how fiction can help humanize big disasters, placing them in perspective while assigning what she calls “unblame.”

    Read more of my interview with Jane at the Alliance of Independent Authors, or listen to the podcast below.

  • Susan Grossey Writes of Money, Human Nature

    Susan Grossey Writes of Money, Human Nature

    Susan Grossey
    Susan Grossey

    Author Susan Grossey successfully uses financial intrigue when she crosses over from the real world into the world of fiction. In real life, Susan helps prevent financial crimes.

    Her day job is in anti-money laundering, advising institutions such as banks and casinos. In her books, Susan goes back in time to the Regency period to explore money as the root of evil. She does it through here Constable Plank books.

    Read the full blog post at the Alliance of Independent Authors site. Or, if you have nine minutes and fourteen seconds to spare, click on the audio link below and listen to my interview with Susan.

    Listen to all my podcasts for the Alliance of Independent Authors here!

  • Author Podcast: I’m Inspired By Backstories

    Author Podcast: I’m Inspired By Backstories

    As host of an author podcast for the Alliance of Independent Authors, I have a fun job. I get to talk to some incredible people. What I enjoy most is hearing their life stories. What made them want to write? What experiences did they bring before they ever began to set their ideas down on paper?

    There is a pattern to our interviews. Right out the gate, the authors usually race forward and talk about the ins and outs of various plot points in their books. That’s when I stop them and say, “Hold that thought. We’ll talk about your book later.”

    I try to take them back to the moment they decided to become a writer. It takes them a few seconds, then they grow a little more relaxed. The script they had planned is set aside. As we go through their life story, I always get something surprising, or something they hadn’t planned on telling me.

    Indie authors usually have lived varied and interesting lives before they ever decided to become authors. They have backstories, themselves, that informed their worldview, writing style, genre choice, and usually a deep well of experience from which to draw. I have selfish reasons for hosting this show, too. These authors inspire me to use my own backstory to become a better writer.

    You can listen to my author podcast below.

     

    Subscribe to our AskALLi podcasts on iTunes, Stitcher, Player.FM, Overcast, Pocket Casts, or Spotify.

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  • Podcast: Cozy Mystery Author Debbie Young

    Podcast: Cozy Mystery Author Debbie Young

    Cozy Mystery
    Debbie Young

    Recently, my guest on my author-interview podcast was cozy mystery author Debbie Young. This is the story of how Debbie has traveled from early promise, to a detour writing promotional blurbs, to fulfilling her dream as an indie author of mysteries in the best of the British tradition. I’ve also worked with Debbie at the Alliance of Independent Authors, whose praises I cannot sing enough. I’ve enjoyed helping ALLi grow, and to improve my multimedia skills along with them.

    In my podcasts, I continue to experiment with a documentary style rather than a Q&A. This gives me more control over production and, best of all, allows me to highlight the interviewee’s voice, while I supply some connecting narrative. I’m still wondering what, if anything, I should be doing with music in the background. I keep it low-key, to not distract from the interviews, but at the same time, I enjoy setting a certain kind of mood as we go through various aspects of my subject’s life and career.

    Anyway, please listen to my feature on cozy mystery author Debbie Young. Oh, and yes, she will tell us what exactly a cozy mystery is!

  • Author Interview: H. N. Deeb Writes Young Adult Climate Fiction With Strong Female Characters

    Author Interview: H. N. Deeb Writes Young Adult Climate Fiction With Strong Female Characters

    Young Adult Climate FictionMy recent guest on my author-interview podcast was HN Deeb, a TV writer who also writes young adult climate fiction or cli-fi. His path was a winding one to Hollywood, where he noticed California’s water crisis and wanted to write something that both warned and entertained.

    Deeb and I discuss why he switched careers from law to writing, and how he’s helping to change sci-fi from its sexist past. Along the way, we talk about the real root cause of much conflict around the world: water and access to it.

    As you know, I write a great deal about conflict in the Mideast, and I wonder how much of it is not based on religion at all, but access to water.

    You can listen and subscribe to all my author-interview podcasts for the Alliance of Independent over here. Read the transcript to this podcast here.

  • Rohan Quine Speaks at the Speed of Ideas

    Rohan Quine Speaks at the Speed of Ideas

    Rohan Quine
    Rohan Quine

    In my interview with author Rohan Quine, I continue my experimentation with a more-documentary style in podcasts. I think they’re turning out better than the usual Q&A format. This method gives me more control, and I personally hate to hear the sound of my own voice stumbling through questions. So, my author-interview podcasts for the Alliance of Independent Authors contain less me and more author.

    And this one featuring author Rohan Quine is perfect because he’s an eloquent, interesting speaker who you have to hear to believe. Words flow from him at the speed of ideas. I need the writing filter to appear eloquent. For Rohan, it’s all there in his stream of consciousness.

    To read his “voice” does not do him justice. That is why he is recording his books on audio and video, and it’s why I chose to interview him for my author-interview podcast.

    With themes of magic realism, technology, horror, LGBTQ characters, Rohan produces both genre- and gender-bending indie books. He’s also a former actor with credits you’d recognize. Enjoy

  • My Podcast, Interviews with Authors Who Have Creative Solutions to Criminal Justice Reform

    My Podcast, Interviews with Authors Who Have Creative Solutions to Criminal Justice Reform

    Criminal Justice Reform

    I began my research into criminal justice reform about ten years ago, when I wrote an article about a corrections officer who was doing innovative things with the local jail inmates under her care. She had this crazy idea that if you care about the inmates, listen to their problems, give them the support and tools to succeed, then they might not make return visits. She would lead them on guided meditation. Playing soothing New Age music, she would have them close their eyes and think of themselves as having the slate wiped clean and have a plan for when they left.

    “This uniform confuses people,” she told me in an interview. And by “people,” she means the people who wear the uniforms. “It confuses your ego.” Civilians, she said, “outrank” police officers. “We’re here to provide a service.”

    When I spoke to other officers about her on the phone, I could practically see their eyes roll to the backs of their heads. She was considered a little bit crazy. And maybe she was. The idea of trying to make life comfortable for those who have broken the law does seem crazy in the context of a criminal justice system in the United States that is mad in itself. The convicted—mostly the poor and African Americans, the mentally ill and the drug addicted—are forced into a system of perpetual abuse that make us no safer. In fact, the system is self-perpetuating, traumatizing its captives and causing collateral damage in devastated families and communities.

    So, for years, I’ve made it a side project of mine to interview as many authors as possible who have studied the problem and possible solutions to our barbaric criminal justice system. I recorded these interviews with groundbreaking authors a couple of years ago when I was executive editor of a book-review publication. But all the information here is just as relevant today as ever. I was ambitious in scope when I first started podcasting, so my shows featured many, many guests, including the talented authors below:

    After Exoneration: Alison Flowers first caught my attention a year ago, when I reviewed her book, Exoneree Diaries: The Fight for Innocence, Independence, and Identity, published by Haymarket Books. What struck me about the book was its matter-of-fact style as it described the daily lives of those who have been released from prison after having been wrongly convicted.

    European Justice: In his book, Unusually Cruel: Prisons, Punishment, and the Real American Exceptionalism, from Oxford University Press, Marc Howard compares and contrasts prison conditions in other industrialized democracies—France, Germany, and the UK—with that of the United States. Marc is professor of government and law and director of the Prisons and Justice Initiative at Georgetown University. He spoke with me about the idea of paying your debt to society and second chances, concepts that are absent in America’s justice system.

    College in Prison: We recently reviewed a book called Liberating Minds: The Case for College in Prison, published by The New Press. What first struck me about the book was the subtitle, The Case for College in Prison, as if a case needs to be made. To me, it seems like a no-brainer. Of course there should be educational opportunities in prison. It’s the perfect place for education—that is, if the idea of prison truly is “corrections.” But if anybody can effectively make that case it’s Ellen Condliffe Lagemann. She is is the Levy Institute Research Professor at Bard College, where she is also the Distinguished Fellow in the Bard Prison Initiative.

    Books to Prisoners: For prisoners, whether in your local jail or in state or federal prison, a book may be the only thing that keeps them sane. The ability to learn a new language, about history, or just to travel to other worlds, can help engage a mind and prevent it from spiraling into depression and despair. Seattle-based nonprofit Books to Prisoners has been donating books to inmates since 1973. Board member Joan Lehmiller Ross talked to me about the books prisoners prefer, and those that prison wardens ban. Some are more than a little surprising.

    Listen to my Podcast on Criminal Justice Reform

    Related Links

    Here are a few other authors I’ve interviewed on criminal justice reform.

    Indie Authors Are First To Rattle The Cage For Criminal Justice Reform

    Maya Schenwar always suspected, in theory, that something was wrong with the US prison-industrial complex, knew that our policy of mass incarceration wasn’t working. At least, she knew all the progressive talking points. But it wasn’t until Schenwar’s own sister became caught in the gears of the prison machine that she realized that the US criminal justice system didn’t need to be fixed; it is wrong on so many levels, it needs to be torn down and rebuilt from the ground up.

    Read my interview with Maya Schenwar on her book and criminal justice reform.

    Exoneree Diaries The Fight For Innocence, Independence, And Identity

    Every now and then, a tiny crack of light shows through the dark, brutal realities of the US criminal justice system, and a falsely convicted victim walks free of the prison doors after spending decades behind them. But for these former prisoners, exoneration is not the end of the story. It is only the beginning. And Alison Flowers, in Exoneree Diaries, effectively provides the narrative of their lives.

    Incarceration Nations: Author Searches World For Path To True Prison Reform

    By now, many Americans are aware that our brutal system of mass incarceration is out of control and ineffective. But acknowledging the problem is only the first step. Many reasonable people can recognize that the current prison system is barbaric, but wonder what the alternatives are. Turns out, there are plenty. And new indie authors like Baz Dreisinger are shining a light not only on the problem, but on possible solutions. Dreisinger’s Incarceration Nations: A Journey to Justice in Prisons Around the World will be released in February, and it’s an incredible journey of a book that shows possible paths out of the mess and the mockery the United States has made of criminal justice.

    Read my Review of Incarceration Nations

    Author Interview: For Falsely Imprisoned, Freedom Is Only The Beginning Of The Story

    There is a misconception that to apologize is to show weakness. Yet, the true test of a just society is not only how it treats those on the margins, but also how it atones for its mistakes. On both these counts, the United States has, more often than not, failed the test of an enlightened civilization. But, as Martin Luther King Jr. said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.” As proof of that, sift through the rhetoric of this nasty 2016 political season, and you’ll see a willingness to move forward on fixing our nation’s corrupt, morally bankrupt criminal justice system.

    Read my interview with author Baz Dreisinger.

  • Author Interview: Goth-Style Book on Bullying

    Author Interview: Goth-Style Book on Bullying

    On my latest author interview podcast for the Alliance of Independent Authors, I talk to New Zealand author Steff Green. She’s a paranormal romance author, teaches self-publishing courses, and is also a children’s author who just Kickstarted a Gothic Picture Book. It’s a book about bullying called Only Freaks Turn Things Into Bones.

    Steff talks about how she was bullied as a child due to her blindness, which gave her a deep understanding of how a bullying victim feels. And, like the main character in the book about bullying, she was a Goth kid. Steff also discusses how she successfully launched a Kickstarter drive to fund the book.

    The New Zealander is a successful indie author with many interests and talents. Plus, she talk about her previous life as an Indiana Jones-style archaeologist (sort of).

    A few highlights from our interview

    On Why She Wrote a Book About Bullying

    “When I was little, I was bullied because I was different. And so that’s why this book has a real personal connection to me; and the illustrator I worked with also went through similar things. So, it was kind of our way of trying to help future kids like us.”

    On a Successful Kickstarter Campaign

    “I was really surprised every single person that I approached said, “Absolutely. We would love to do that.” It was just amazing. We engaged our backers and we were always doing updates and showing them new art work and really encouraging them to share the project with their friends.”

    Click the play button below for the full interview.