January 7, 2025
12 Essential Lessons for Writers from Bookspo Season 2
Bookspo Season 2 was a triumph in all kinds of ways, not least of which was that, in terms of listeners, it grew exponentially over the first season, hitting 4000 downloads by the season finale. Even more importantly, it featured a fantastic group of excellent books published in the second half of 2024 with a terrific range of genres and approaches, with authors celebrating the pleasures and joys of reading and creative inspiration. There is some amazing guidance for writers here, which you can scroll down to get a taste of.
Episode 1: Corinna Chong, Bad Land
The key to a slow-burn plot is building TENSION!
Episode 2: Ayelet Tsabari, Songs for the Brokenhearted
To dare to rewrite old and familiar stories is to be part of a long tradition.
Episode 3: Alice Zorn, Colours in Her Hands
Learn to trust your imagination.
Episode 4: Marissa Stapley, The Lightning Bottles
When you’re basing a character on a real person, it’s only when you let go of their reality in the world that they become truly real in your fiction.
Episode 5: Suzy Krause, I Think We’ve Been Here Before
It’s refreshing to reminded—both in writing and in life—that most people are fundamentally good and trying really hard.
Episode 6: Jennifer Whiteford, Make Me a Mixtape
Give yourself a kind of punk rock permission to create your own vision.
Episode 7: Anne Hawk, The Pages of the Sea
To sit down to write a novel is to be chasing something magical (which can take a long time!)
Episode 8: Kirti Bhadresa, An Astonishment of Stars
Just get started. One can build an entire work of fiction from a list poem! (Who knew??)
Episode 9: Richard Van Camp, Beast
Incredible things can happen when you raise the stakes for your characters.
Episode 10: Priya Ramsingh, The Elevator
A good book makes the reader really care about its characters.
Episode 11: Jenny Haysom, Keep
Fiction allows you to wear many hats and to take on different perspectives.
Episode 12, Andrew Forbes, The Diapause
When you’re writing, it’s useful to keep the books that inspire you close at hand.