Episode 276: Earl Swift Takes Us to the Moon

Photo by Mark Edward Atkinson
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By Brendan O’Meara

Earl Swift returns!

He’s back as we take a deep dive into Across the Airless Wilds: The Lunar Rover and the Triumph of the Final Moon Landings, an epic book that details the creative genius and the people behind the “moon car” and the three greatest feats of human exploration, largely forgotten.

Earl is an incredible reporter and writer, spinning intrepid yarns that are densely packed but not weighed down. Incredible stuff.

In this episode we dig into:

  • Writing and reporting the book during the pandemic
  • Breaking up longer chapters into shorter chapters
  • What surprised him about his moon research
  • And his incredible collaborative relationship with his book editor
  • And much much more.
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Episode 275: Nile Cappello and Her Atavist Story ‘The Girl in the Picture’

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By Brendan O’Meara

Nile Capello (@liketheriver) is here to talk about her Atavist Magazine piece “The Girl in the Picture.” It’s a riveting piece of true crime taken on by two amateur sleuths.

First I speak with editor-in-chief Seyward Darby and then let Nile take it from there.

With Nile, we talk about the writing lessons she’s gleaned from bouldering, how she got into true crime as a kind of self-preservation, and how she determines what stories are “worthy.” We also dig into how she got her foot in the door to full time freelancing.

Please enjoy, and consider supporting the show in myriad ways, be that subscribing, leaving a kind review on Apple Podcasts, or even plunking down a few bucks at patreon.com/cnfpod.

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Episode 274: Ruby McConnell on Stalling Out and Finding Hope Through Writing

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By Brendan O’Meara

Ruby McConnell (@RubyGoneWild) is the author of Ground Truth: A Geological Survey of a Life and A Woman’s Guide to the Wild, and she returns to the podcast (on short notice!) to talk about being in between projects, finding hope through writing, and being frustrated despite having an objectively productive year.

As you know, you can keep the conversation going on Twitter @BrendanOMeara or @CNFPod. Let me know what you dug about this episode, or other ones.

And if you’re feeling especially froggy, you can support the show by heading over to patreon.com/cnfpod and see what tier appeals to you. Transcripts, questions, coaching, and the knowledge that your dollars get fed right back into the community. I was able to pay the essay and poem writers because of the Patreon community. That’s cool, right?

Newsletters sub is below. You’re gonna want to sign up for that and subvert the algorithm. I’ve got some cool stuff planned that will be like the CNFin’ Happy Hour, but somehow better, and it all stems from the newsletter. Once a month. No spam. Can’t beat it!

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Episode 273: My #Hippocamp21 Talk — In Their Words: Lessons Learned from the Best of The Creative Nonfiction Podcast

Sponsor: West Virginia Wesleyan College’s MFA in Creative Writing

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By Brendan O’Meara

So this is it.

This is my Hippocamp21 talk.

What an experience Hippocamp was this year. Donna Talarico stuck the landing in pandemic times. The degree of difficulty is Simone Biles-esque!

I don’t I’ve worked as hard on any one thing like I did on this Hippocamp talk in a long, long while. I put everything I had into it. That said, I had a very hard time gauging what the audience thought of it. It was a pretty sparse turnout, so far as Hippocamp talks go. Everyone was masked, so I couldn’t tell if people were smiling or dying inside. There were only two questions, whereas most breakout sessions of this nature have several questions.

Naturally I felt like a comic who bombed.

Still, some people came up to me and said they loved it. Not meaning to undercut their good will, I was like, “Really? Cuz it felt dead to me up there and there were no questions …”

They usually said the talk itself didn’t lend itself to questions. It leant itself to thought. In any case, I still gave it my all to the gracious folks who showed up.

Like Shirley Showwalter!

I “invited” about 20 of my best friends to give this talk on a range of topics from voice, research, drafting, community, jealousy, and social media.

I brought in tape from:

Lee Gutkind

Alexander Norman

Lilly Dancyger

Steven Kurutz

Laura Hillenbrand

Chuck Klosterman

Bronwen Dickey

Ted Conover

Glenn Stout

Mary Karr

Dinty W. Moore

Elizabeth Rush

Chase Jarvis

Rebecca Fish Ewan

Jane Friedman

Jericho Brown

Anika Fajardo

Andre Dubus III

I tell you, it was a privilege to put this together. I hope you enjoy it, and if you do, consider becoming a Patron at patreon.com/cnfpod, as I think I’ll start doing similar things like this (much, much shorter) as Patreon exclusives.

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Episode 272: The Arc of a Goal with Shanna B. Tiayon

Sponsors: West Virginia Wesleyan College’s MFA in Creative Writing and Hippocamp 21!

By Brendan O’Meara

Shanna B. Tiayon came on the show to talk about her Pipe Wrench Magazine piece “If We Can Soar.” It’s a remarkable piece.

We talk about that and much, much more.

Check out her TEDx talk about her experience at the Grand Canyon, and read about it on Longreads.

As always, keep the conversation going @CNFPod and consider becoming a member at Patreon, patreon.com/cnfpod.

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Episode 271: Brin-Jonathan Butler, ‘The Passenger,’ and ‘Giving Up the Ghost’

Brin-Jonathan Butler, Brendan O'Meara

By Brendan O’Meara

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Brin-Jonathan Butler returns to talk about his new piece “Giving Up the Ghost.” It ran on Hazlitt.net.

It’s one of the greatest things I’ve ever read. It’s 23,000 words. I read it twice. I still can’t stop thinking about it.

Continue reading “Episode 271: Brin-Jonathan Butler, ‘The Passenger,’ and ‘Giving Up the Ghost’”

Episode 270: How did Daniel Kolitz Pull Off His Atavist Story?

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By Brendan O’Meara

Daniel Kolitz wrote about Enthusiastic Sobriety for The Atavist Magazine, so we talk about how he went about reporting and writing the piece.

I also speak with lead editor Jonah Ogles about what made this story so special.

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Episode 268: Overcoming Bad Viewing Hygiene with The Ringer’s Alison Herman

Sponsors: West Virginia Wesleyan College’s MFA in Creative Writing and HippoCamp 2021.

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By Brendan O’Meara

Alison Herman (@aherman2006) is a staff writer for The Ringer, who writes about all kinds of TV and movies and the like.

What prompted this conversation was her piece about David Gelb, the filmmaker behind Jiro Dreams of Sushi and Chef’s Table.

In this episode we talk about:

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Episode 264: Rachel Monroe Talks About the Things Writers Don’t Tweet About

Rachel Monroe

Sponsors: West Virginia Weslyen College’s MFA in Creative Writing and HippoCamp2021 (Enter CNFPod21 for $50 off your registration!)

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By Brendan O’Meara

Rachel Monroe (@rachmonroe) is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic and myriad other places.

Her latest piece for The New Yorker is about ransomware and hacker negotiators. She wrote a piece about #vanlife for The New Yorker back in 2017 that garnered all kinds of buzz.

Continue reading “Episode 264: Rachel Monroe Talks About the Things Writers Don’t Tweet About”

Episode 262: Passion + Desperation = Bob Welch

Bob Welch with 4 millionth book!
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By Brendan O’Meara

“I. Will. Write. This. Book. There’s no turning back,” says Bob Welch, @bob_welch23 on Twitter.

Bob is the author of several books, most recently is Saving My Enemy, a story of an American and a German WWII vet who forged a friendship late in life that led them down the path to forgiveness. Great book.

Bob was a long-time columnist at The Register-Guard in Eugene and has written books like The Wizard of Foz: Dick Fosbury’s One-Man High-Jump Revolution and Resolve.

We had a great conversation about “hiking your own hike” and how the famous writer Jon Krakauer actually stole Bob’s girlfriend back in high school in Corvallis, Oregon.

Great talk and good, good fun.

Keep the conversation going on social media @CNFPod and consider becoming a member at the Patreon page. It’s how you get access to the audio magazine, as well as transcripts and coaching. You dollars go directly into (50% goes to Patreon and Uncle Sam) the making of the podcast and paying writers. If you freelance, you get the titanic tax burden that’s on the freelancer. Oh, you got a $1,000 check! That’s nice! $500 of that needs to be skimmed off and goes to taxes, sooooo….

Anyway!

Enjoy this conversation and let me know what you think. HMU!

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