Debut Review Podcast

Debut Review Podcast Welcome to PWN’s Debut Review, a weekly podcast devoted to debut art and its creators. This podcast i

We're excited to share Cellblocks to Mountaintops, a new podcast and video series about Sterling Cunio, who was sentence...
04/02/2024

We're excited to share Cellblocks to Mountaintops, a new podcast and video series about Sterling Cunio, who was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole at Oregon State Penitentiary. Sterling was featured in PWN's Debut Review, speaking about the book he co-authored, "The Sentences That Create Us."

This eight-episode podcast documents Sterling’s journey throughout his incarceration and includes interviews with experts in the criminal justice field. Guests include Professor Aliza Kaplan, co-founder of the Oregon and New England Innocence Projects and Director of the Criminal Justice Law Reform Clinic at Lewis & Clark, and Danielle Sered, founder of Common Justice and the author of Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration, and the Road to Repair.

For more information on the series and to watch the audio and visual trailers, please visit cellblockstomountaintops.com.

Today we celebrate TWO YEARS of PWN's Debut Review Podcast, a weekly podcast devoted to debut art and its creators! We a...
11/02/2023

Today we celebrate TWO YEARS of PWN's Debut Review Podcast, a weekly podcast devoted to debut art and its creators!

We are so grateful to all of the writers and artists who've joined us in thoughtful, engaging conversations about their work and their inspirations.

Check out all of our episodes wherever you listen to podcasts!

https://projectwritenow.org/writers-institute/pwns-debut-review

05/18/2023
We end Season Five with a fantastic conversation with Courtney Zoffness and Courtney Maum. Be sure to check out their bo...
04/27/2023

We end Season Five with a fantastic conversation with Courtney Zoffness and Courtney Maum.

Be sure to check out their books (Spilt Milk, by Courtney Zoffness, and Before and After the Book Deal, by Courtney Maum) wherever you purchase books.

Learn more about both Courtneys at:
https://www.courtneyzoffness.com/ & https://www.courtneymaum.com/

Thank you so much for listening to all the incredible episodes this season! We could not do this podcast without you!

04/25/2023

For the final episode of Season Five, Courtney Harler speaks with two Courtneys, Courtney Zoffness and Courtney Maum. Maum is, of course, a returning guest, and Zoffness is new to the podcast.

Courtney Zoffness is the author of the debut memoir in essays called Spilt Milk, out in 2021 from McSweeney’s. As a fiction writer, Zoffness was the second-ever woman to win the Sunday Times Short Story Award in 2018, the world’s richest prize for a single short story. She’s taught for many institutions and currently directs the creative writing program at Drew University.

Courtney Maum is the author of several novels, and most recently the memoir called The Year of the Horses, out in 2022 from Tin House. She’s also helped countless writers navigate the publication process with her craft guide, Before and After the Book Deal. Courtney Maum is a writing coach and executive director of the nonprofit learning collaborative called The Cabins.

Today we talk about the humble beginnings and early invisible work of writers, vulnerability, publication and promotion in the digital age, distractibility, reading recommendations, and more.

Listen wherever you listen to podcasts!

For the final episode of Season Five, we are excited to bring back Courtney Maum in conversation with Courtney Zoffness....
04/21/2023

For the final episode of Season Five, we are excited to bring back Courtney Maum in conversation with Courtney Zoffness.

Courtney Zoffness is the author of Spilt Milk: Memoirs (McSweeney's, 2021). Also a fiction writer, she won the Sunday Times Short Story Award, an Emerging Writer Fellowship from The Center for Fiction, and artist residencies from MacDowell. Her work has appeared in The Paris Review, The Southern Review, Guernica, No Tokens, and elsewhere. She directs the Creative Writing Program at Drew University and lives with her family in Brooklyn, New York.

Courtney Maum is the author of five books, including the groundbreaking publishing guide Before and After the Book Deal and the memoir The Year of the Horses, chosen by The Today Show as the best read for mental health awareness. A writing coach and educator, Courtney's mission is to help people hold on to the joy of art-making in a culture obsessed with turning artists into brands. You can sign up for her publishing tips newsletter and online classes at CourtneyMaum.com.

Please join us for this incredible final conversation of Season Five!

Wow! What an important conversation we had with memoirists Amy Long and Emma Bolden! Amy Long is the author of the debut...
04/20/2023

Wow! What an important conversation we had with memoirists Amy Long and Emma Bolden!

Amy Long is the author of the debut memoir, Codependence, winner of the 2018 Essay Collection Competition with the Cleveland State University Poetry Center.

Emma Bolden is the author of the memoir The Tiger and the Cage (Soft Skull). (You can learn more about her and her work here: emmabolden.com.)

You can purchase their books wherever you buy books.

Thank you for listening!

04/18/2023

Today I speak with two talented memoirists, Amy Long and Emma Bolden.

Amy Long is the author of the debut memoir, Codependence, winner of the 2018 Essay Collection Competition with the Cleveland State University Poetry Center. Amy holds an MFA from Virginia Tech and an MA from the University of Florida. She’s also the creative genius behind Taylor Swift as Books, the very popular Instagram account.

Emma Bolden is the author of several chapbooks and collections of poetry. She is the recipient of fellowships from both the National Endowment for the Arts and the Alabama State Council on the Arts. Her debut memoir, Tiger in a Cage: A Memoir of a Body in Crisis, was published by Soft Skull Press in 2022.

Today we discuss advocacy and agency in women’s health, social media in service to the literary community, narrative structure and voice in memoir, and the joy found in artistic anticipation.

For Episode 7, we are talking with memoirists Amy Long and Emma Bolden. Amy Long is the author of Codependence (2019), c...
04/14/2023

For Episode 7, we are talking with memoirists Amy Long and Emma Bolden.

Amy Long is the author of Codependence (2019), chosen by Brian Blanchfield as the winner of Cleveland State University Poetry Center’s 2018 Essay Collection Competition. Her work has appeared in Diagram, Hayden’s Ferry, Ninth Letter, and elsewhere, including as a Notable essay in Best American Essays 2019.

Emma Bolden is the author of a memoir, The Tiger and the Cage (Soft Skull), and the poetry collections House Is an Enigma (Southeast Missouri State University Press), medi(t)ations (Noctuary Press), and Maleficae (GenPop Books). The recipient of a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and a Literary Arts Fellowship from the Alabama State Council on the Arts, her work has appeared in The Norton Introduction to Literature, The Best American Poetry, The Best Small Fictions, Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and such journals as The Seneca Review, StoryQuarterly, Prairie Schooner, TriQuarterly, and Shenandoah. She currently serves as an editor of Screen Door Review.

Please join us Tuesday, April 18, wherever you listen to podcasts!

What a great conversation we had with Anna Qu and Mihaela Mosculiac this week!Anna Qu’s debut memoir, Made in China: A M...
04/13/2023

What a great conversation we had with Anna Qu and Mihaela Mosculiac this week!

Anna Qu’s debut memoir, Made in China: A Memoir of Love and Labor, is available wherever you buy books. You can also find more of her writing on identity and growing up in New York as an immigrant here: https://www.annaqu.com.

Also check out Mihaela’s latest collection of poetry, Cemetery Ink. You can read more of Mihaela’s work at https://www.mmoscaliuc.com.

Thank you for listening!

We are back next Tuesday with a very special episode in honor of National Poetry Month.We welcome back Mihaela Moscaliuc...
04/07/2023

We are back next Tuesday with a very special episode in honor of National Poetry Month.

We welcome back Mihaela Moscaliuc in conversation with Anna Qu.

Mihaela Moscaliuc was born and raised in Romania. She is the author of three poetry collections—Cemetery Ink, Immigrant Model, and Father Dirt. She is also translator of Liliana Ursu’s Clay and Star and Carmelia Leonte’s The Hiss of the Viper, editor of Insane Devotion: On the Writing of Gerald Stern, and co-editor of Border Lines: Poems of Migration. Moscaliuc has received two Glenna Luschei Awards from Prairie Schooner, residency fellowships from The Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, MacDowell, and Le Chateau de Lavigny (Switzerland), Dairy Hollow, an Individual Artist Fellowship from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, and a Fulbright fellowship to Romania. She is the translation editor for Plume and graduate program director and associate professor of English at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, NJ.

Anna Qu is a Chinese American writer. Her critically acclaimed debut memoir, Made In China: A Memoir of Love and Labor, was named a New York Times Editors’ Choice pick. Her work has appeared in Threepenny Review, Lumina, Kartika, and Kweli Journal, among others. She has received support from Yaddo and was just awarded the 2023 Black Mountain Institute Shearing Fellowship. She holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Sarah Lawrence College and teaches at New England College and Catapult. She recently moved to the Denver area with her partner and their cat, Momo.

Please join us Tuesday, April 11, wherever you listen to podcasts!

We loved talking with authors Janice Obuchowski and William Pei Shih in this week’s episode. Janice Obuchowski is the au...
03/23/2023

We loved talking with authors Janice Obuchowski and William Pei Shih in this week’s episode.

Janice Obuchowski is the author of The Woods, which won the 2022 John Simmons Short Fiction Award (University of Iowa Press). If you happen to be in Manchester, Vermont, this weekend, Janice will be in conversation with Genevieve Plunkett at Northshire Books tomorrow, March 24. On Friday, April 7, she will be in conversation with Peter Orner at Still North Books in Hanover, New Hampshire. You can learn more about her and her work at janiceobuchowski.com.

William Pei Shih had stories published recently in The Boston Review, The Southern Review, The Michigan Quarterly Review, swamp pink, and Ursa Short Fiction. Learn about him and his work at williampeishih.com.

We will be taking a short spring break and will see you back with Episode 6 on Tuesday, April 11.

03/21/2023

Today, Courtney Harler talks with Janice Obuchowski and William Pei Shih. Janice and William first met as scholars at the 2017 Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference and now continue to admire and support one another’s work.

Janice Obuchowski is the author of The Woods, a short story collection that won the prestigious John Simmons Short Fiction Award and was published by the University of Iowa Press in 2022. More stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Electric Literature, Alaska Quarterly Review, Gettysburg Review, Conjunctions, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA from the University of California, Irvine and lives in Middlebury, Vermont.

William Pei Shih’s short stories have appeared or are forthcoming in The Best American Short Stories 2020, McSweeney’s Quarterly, The Asian American Literary Review, The Masters Review, Carve Magazine, and many others. William is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop with an MFA in Fiction. He lives in New York City and teaches at New York University.

Today’s topics include getting MAs and MFAs, melding critical analysis and creative writing, balancing interiority and exteriority, drafting and revising, swerving between literary genres, crafting sentences and structures, as well as exploring rural and urban landscapes in short fiction.

Our guests for Episode 5 are Janice Obuchowski and William Pei Shih.Janice Obuchowski is the author of The Woods, which ...
03/17/2023

Our guests for Episode 5 are Janice Obuchowski and William Pei Shih.

Janice Obuchowski is the author of The Woods, which won the 2022 John Simmons Short Fiction Award (University of Iowa Press). Her stories have twice received special mention in the Pushcart Prize anthologies and have appeared or are forthcoming in Electric Literature, Crazyhorse, Alaska Quarterly Review, Iowa Review, Gettysburg Review, Conjunctions online, and LitHub. She earned her MFA from UC Irvine and served as a fiction editor for the New England Review. She’s taught writing at the University of Vermont and Middlebury College, and lives in Middlebury, Vermont.

William Pei Shih’s stories have been published or are forthcoming in The Best American Short Stories 2020, Ursa Short Fiction, VQR, McSweeney’s Quarterly, The Southern Review, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The Boston Review, Crazyhorse, F(r)iction, Catapult, The Asian American Literary Review, The Des Moines Register, The Masters Review, Reed Magazine, Carve Magazine, Hyphen, and more. His stories have been recognized by the John Steinbeck Award in Fiction, the Flannery O’Connor Award in Short Fiction, the Raymond Carver Short Story Award, the UK Bridport Prize, The London Magazine Short Story Award, among others. His stories have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He has been awarded scholarships and support from the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Sun Valley Writers’ Conference, Kundiman, the Napa Valley Writers’ Conference, and the Ragdale Residency. He has served on the admissions board for the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, and is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop (MFA in Fiction), where he was a recipient of the Dean’s Graduate Fellowship. He currently lives in New York City and teaches at NYU.

Please join us next Tuesday, March 21!

We so enjoyed talking with Krystal A. Sital and Peter Mountford during our most recent episode.Krystal is the author of ...
03/17/2023

We so enjoyed talking with Krystal A. Sital and Peter Mountford during our most recent episode.

Krystal is the author of Secrets We Kept: Three Women of Trinidad, which was a finalist for the PEN America Emerging Writers Award. You can learn more about Krystal at https://www.krystalsital.com.

Peter is the author of A Young Man's Guide to Late Capitalism (2012 Washington State Book Award in fiction) and The Dismal Science (a NYT editor's choice). He also has a long craft essay on short stories in the November/December issue of Writer's Digest. You can learn more about Peter, including his coaching and editing services, at http://petermountford.com.

03/14/2023

Krystal A. Sital and Peter Mountford join Courtney Harler for Episode Four of Season Five.

Krystal A. Sital is the author of the memoir Secrets We Kept: Three Women of Trinidad, a finalist for the PEN America Emerging Writers Award. Her essays have been anthologized in A Map Is Only One Story: Twenty Writers on Immigration, Family, and the Meaning of Home as well as Fury: Women’s Lived Experiences in the Trump Era. Her work has also been featured in The New York Times, ELLE, The Huffington Post, Today’s Parent, Salon, Catapult, LitHub, and elsewhere. Krystal currently teaches nonfiction writing.

Peter Mountford is the author of two novels: A Young Man’s Guide to Late Capitalism, which won the 2012 Washington State Book Award in Fiction, and The Dismal Science, which was named a New York Times Editors’ Choice. His work has appeared in The Paris Review, The Southern Review, The Atlantic, The Sun, Granta, The Missouri Review, and Writer’s Digest. Peter is also a writing coach and developmental editor.

In this episode, we discuss writing a collaborative, code-switching memoir; learning, through failure, ways to capture and hold the reader’s attention; and using voice, language, point of view, and setting to craft vivid, engaging, authentic prose on the page.

We hope you enjoy!

Join us next Tuesday, March 14, for our conversation with authors Krystal A. Sital and Peter Mountford. Krystal A. Sital...
03/10/2023

Join us next Tuesday, March 14, for our conversation with authors Krystal A. Sital and Peter Mountford.

Krystal A. Sital is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir Secrets We Kept: Three Women of Trinidad, which was a finalist for the PEN America Emerging Writers Award. Her essays have been anthologized in A Map Is Only One Story: Twenty Writers on Immigration, Family, and the Meaning of Home and Fury: Women’s Lived Experiences in the Trump Era. Krystal’s work has been featured in The New York Times, ELLE, Huffington Post, Today’s Parent, Salon, Catapult, LitHub, and elsewhere. She currently teaches nonfiction at the University of Reno in Tahoe’s low residency MFA program.

Peter Mountford is the author of the novels A Young Man's Guide to Late Capitalism (2012 Washington State Book Award in fiction) and The Dismal Science (a NYT editor's choice). His work has appeared in The Paris Review, Southern Review, The Atlantic, The Sun, Granta, and The Missouri Review. He is on faculty at University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe's MFA program, also teaches at Creative Nonfiction, Hugo House, and is a writing coach and developmental editor.

We had a fantastic conversation with Lisa Lee Herrick and Lee Herrick in this week’s episode.Lisa’s latest work is part ...
03/09/2023

We had a fantastic conversation with Lisa Lee Herrick and Lee Herrick in this week’s episode.

Lisa’s latest work is part of the anthology Nonwhite and Woman, published by Woodhall Press. If you’re at AWP in Seattle, be sure to check out her panel on CNF and food writing on Saturday, May 11.

Lee’s latest book of poems is Scar and Flower. Lee will also be at AWP on Saturday, participating on a panel with adopted and donor-conceived poets.

03/07/2023

Today, Courtney talks to Lisa Lee Herrick and Lee Herrick. Yes, to be clear, they are married.

Lisa Lee Herrick is an award-winning Hmong-American writer, illustrator, and producer. A 2021 PEN America Emerging Voices Fellow in Creative Nonfiction as well as a 2021 Finalist for the Restless Books Prize for New Immigrant Writing, Lisa is currently at work on her debut memoir.

Lee Herrick is a Korean-American poet and professor. He is the author of three books of poetry: Scar and Flower, Gardening Secrets of the Dead, and This Many Miles from Desire. Lee Herrick was appointed as California Poet Laureate on November 18, 2022.

We discuss language and power, immigration and adoption, and curiosity and empathy.

We hope you’ll join us wherever you listen to podcasts!

For our next episode, we’re talking with guests Lisa Lee Herrick and Lee Herrick.Lisa Lee Herrick is a Hmong American wr...
03/03/2023

For our next episode, we’re talking with guests Lisa Lee Herrick and Lee Herrick.

Lisa Lee Herrick is a Hmong American writer, editor, and artist based in California. She is a PEN America Emerging Voices fellow, a regular contributor to The Rumpus literary magazine, co-founder of the LitHop literary arts festival in Fresno, and editor at large of Hyphen magazine.

Lee Herrick is the author of three books of poems: Scar and Flower, finalist for the 2020 Northern California Book Award; Gardening Secrets of the Dead; and This Many Miles from Desire. He co-edited The World I Leave You: Asian American Poets on Faith and Spirit (Orison Books, 2020). His writing appears widely in literary magazines, textbooks, and anthologies such as Here: Poems for the Planet, with an introduction by the Dalai Lama; Indivisible: Poems of Social Justice, with an introduction by Common; The Place That Inhabits Us: Poems from the San Francisco Bay Watershed; Naming the Lost; The Fresno Poets: Interviews and Essays; Dear America: Letters of Hope, Habitat, Defiance, and Democracy, and on the Grammy-nominated album, The Poets Are Gathering, among others. He served as Fresno Poet Laureate from 2015-2017. Born in Daejeon, Korea, and adopted to the United States at ten months, he teaches at Fresno City College and the MFA program at the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe.

Be sure to listen wherever you listen to podcasts on Tuesday, March 7!

What a fun conversation we had this week with Pablo Cartaya and Ray Brunt. Pablo’s books include THE EPIC FAIL OF ARTURO...
03/02/2023

What a fun conversation we had this week with Pablo Cartaya and Ray Brunt. Pablo’s books include THE EPIC FAIL OF ARTURO ZAMORA, MARCUS VEGA DOESN’T SPEAK SPANISH, EACH TINY SPARK, the climate dystopia THE LAST BEEKEEPER, and the collection of essays HOPE WINS: A COLLECTION OF INSPIRING STORIES FOR YOUNG READERS.

Pablo also teaches writing for children and young adults in the UNR-Lake Tahoe Low Residency program.

Purchase his books wherever you buy books and learn more about Pablo at https://www.pablocartaya.com.

02/28/2023

For Episode Two of Season Five, Ray Brunt joins host Courtney Harler once more to talk with Pablo Cartaya.

Pablo is the award-winning author of several books for children and young adults, as well as a screenwriter, speaker, and educator. His debut novel, The Epic Fail of Arturo Zamora, published in 2017. His latest novel, The Last Beekeeper, a climate dystopia, published in July 2022.

Today’s topics include authenticity, voice, creative process, community, family, culture, identity, pandemic parenting, environmental responsibility, unions, and the literary adoration of abuelas.

For Episode 2, we are excited to chat with Pablo Cartaya, an internationally acclaimed author, screenwriter, and speaker...
02/24/2023

For Episode 2, we are excited to chat with Pablo Cartaya, an internationally acclaimed author, screenwriter, and speaker. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, NBC, and on Oprah’s Booklist. He has received multiple starred reviews from Kirkus, Publisher’s Weekly, Booklist, School Library Journal, and Audiofile Magazine for his novels and audiobook narrations.

Pablo has worked with Disney, Apple+, and Sesame Street on projects adapted from television series. In 2021, he served as a judge for the National Book Award in Young People's Literature and has taught creative writing workshops and spoken at various universities, community centers, K-12 schools, and conferences throughout the world. Most recent novels include: THE EPIC FAIL OF ARTURO ZAMORA, MARCUS VEGA DOESN’T SPEAK SPANISH, EACH TINY SPARK, the climate dystopia THE LAST BEEKEEPER, and the collection of essays HOPE WINS: A COLLECTION OF INSPIRING STORIES FOR YOUNG READERS.

Please join us on Tuesday, February 28, for this insightful conversation!

What an incredible conversation with authors Rebecca Makkai and Meghan Lamb for our first episode of Season Five!Congrat...
02/23/2023

What an incredible conversation with authors Rebecca Makkai and Meghan Lamb for our first episode of Season Five!

Congratulations to Rebecca on the release of her latest book, I HAVE SOME QUESTIONS FOR YOU, this week. For more information and to join Rebecca on her book tour, click here: https://rebeccamakkai.com/events.

Also check out Meghan’s debut book FAILURE TO THRIVE and read more of her work here: http://meghanlamb.com/index.html.

02/21/2023

We’re launching Season Five with two wonderful writers, Rebecca Makkai and Meghan Lamb!

Rebecca is the author of four novels and a collection of short stories. Her novel “The Great Believers” was a finalist for both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. Her latest novel, “I Have Some Questions for You,” publishes today from Penguin Random House.

Meghan has authored several books as well. Her debut novel, “Failure to Thrive,” launched in 2021, and her latest novel, “Coward,” published in September of 2022 from Spuyten Duyvil. Meghan is also the lead singer of an eighties cinema-inspired band called Kill Scenes.

In this first episode of the new season, we talk about how to be a “real writer,” how to pick the perfect title for your book, how to find strange jobs in strange towns, and how to break the rules.

Listen now wherever you listen to podcasts!

https://projectwritenow.org/writers-institute/pwns-debut-review/

We are so excited to kick off Season Five this Tuesday, February 21, with two guests, authors Rebecca Makkai - Author an...
02/17/2023

We are so excited to kick off Season Five this Tuesday, February 21, with two guests, authors Rebecca Makkai - Author and Meghan Lamb.

Rebecca Makkai’s latest novel, I HAVE SOME QUESTIONS FOR YOU, is due February 21, 2023 from Viking. Her last novel, THE GREAT BELIEVERS, was a finalist for both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award; it was the winner of the ALA Carnegie Medal, the Stonewall Book Award, the Clark Prize, and the LA Times Book Prize; and it was one of the New York Times' Ten Best Books of 2018. Her other books are the novels THE BORROWER and THE HUNDRED-YEAR HOUSE, and the collection MUSIC FOR WARTIME—four stories from which appeared in The Best American Short Stories. A 2022 Guggenheim Fellow, Rebecca is on the MFA faculties of Sierra Nevada University and Northwestern University, and is Artistic Director of StoryStudio Chicago.

Meghan Lamb is the author of COWARD (2022), Failure to Thrive (2021) All of Your Most Private Places (2020), and Silk Flowers (2017). She served as the Philip Roth Writer-in-Residence at Bucknell University, and teaches creative writing through the University of Chicago, StoryStudio, GrubStreet and the Speculative Literature Foundation. Her work has appeared in Quarterly West, DIAGRAM, Redivider, and Passages North, among other publications. She runs the shadow text reading series Significant Others, a project dedicated to elevating new books and the “behind-the scenes” texts that inspired them. In addition to being the fiction editor for Bridge (a Chicago-based literary arts publication), she serves as the nonfiction editor of Nat. Brut, a Whiting Award-winning journal of art and literature dedicated to advancing inclusivity in all creative fields. She is also the front woman of Kill Scenes: an 80s horror film-inspired dark wave band.

We hope you will join us for this incredible first episode!

Learn more at projectwritenow.org/writers-institute/pwns-debut-review.

A year ago this month, we wrapped up our first season with an interview with Shanda McManus, MD, who is a Peer Artist Le...
12/22/2022

A year ago this month, we wrapped up our first season with an interview with Shanda McManus, MD, who is a Peer Artist Leader in Project Write Now's book writing program, book inc. In this episode Shanda discusses balancing work (she's a family physician), family, and her writing life. You can also learn more about PWN's book inc program at bookinc.org.

We are still thinking about our inspiring conversation with poet and education student Nathalia Garcia, who is also a PW...
12/01/2022

We are still thinking about our inspiring conversation with poet and education student Nathalia Garcia, who is also a PWN Teen intern and teaching assistant for Project Write Now.

We were curious about those 100+ houseplants so we asked Nathalia for photo evidence.

If you haven’t already, please make sure you listen to our final episode of Season Four, “Go Crunch Leaves.” Nathalia’s approach to life and writing will leave you filled with joy and awe.

11/29/2022

For Giving Tuesday, we chat with Nathalia Garcia, a first-generation Brazilian-American and brilliant emerging poet. In recent years, Nathalia has been both a dedicated student and an assistant instructor at Project Write Now. Jennifer Chauhan returns as guest cohost to recall her memories of first meeting Nathalia.

For this final episode of Season Four, Nathalia also shares her love of words, water, nature, and people watching. We also explore the ideas of “haunted prose” and “alive,” “moving” poems. Finally, Nathalia introduces us to electro swing.

Join us wherever you listen to podcasts!

Thank you so much for listening to Season Four. We will be back for Season Five in February!

We have a special episode lined up for our final episode of Season Four on Giving Tuesday. We chat with poet, artist, an...
11/25/2022

We have a special episode lined up for our final episode of Season Four on Giving Tuesday. We chat with poet, artist, and education student Nathalia Garcia. Nathalia Garcia has been part of the Project Write Now family for more than six years. She joined as a teen intern and now is a teaching assistant in our youth writing programs. Nathalia has also been a frequent performer at our events.

Nathalia Garcia is a first-generation Brazilian-American studying English education at Georgian Court University to become a high school English teacher. Born in the spring, she used to often pick pretty flowers and, overcome with their loveliness, would pop them into her mouth and eat them! She seeks connection through poetry and what she likes to call haunted prose. These days, Nathalia can be found either on a river enjoying blooming lilies or at her home in Long Branch where she resides with a loving partner, their two cats, and 100+ houseplants.

Please join us for this conversation that will leave you joyful and inspired!

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