

Writers of the Future Podcast
John Goodwin
Providing writing and illustrating tips and advice from Contest Judges, Winners and industry professionals for writers and artists, along with needed inspiration to keep on going! Based on the world-famous Writers of the Future Contest created in 1983 by L. Ron Hubbard.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 28, 2022 • 59min
188. Em Dupre and Jim Zacarria: author and artist
Writers of the Future winner Em Dupre and Illustrators of the Future winner Jim Zacarria discuss working together for "L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 38." We also discuss their journey to winning the Contests and what they plan for their future.

Aug 21, 2022 • 59min
187. Scott Dickey, CEO of Podium Audio, on a new business model for audiobooks
Scott Dickey is the CEO of Podium Audio.
Podium is probably the fastest growing audio publisher globally, mainly focusing on Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Romance. The company gained international notice for turning once unknown author Andy Weir’s e-book “The Martian” into one of the most successful audiobooks in the world.
In this podcast, we discuss the Podium model and how authors can potentially take advantage of this to get their books made into audiobooks.
https://podiumaudio.com/

Aug 13, 2022 • 60min
186. Jody Lynn Nye, the role of SF&F on the future of civilization
Jody Lynn Nye is a New York Times bestselling author and the Writers of the Future Coordinating judge and discusses her vision of the future of science fiction and fantasy and the role and value it can have in forming the future of civilization.
She also gives what she is looking for in stories for the Contest.
See her works at: jodynye.com

Aug 6, 2022 • 57min
185. Desmond Astaire is career military and Grand Prize writer winner
Desmond Astaire is the Gold Award winner for Writers of the Future Volume 38. He is career Air Force who also aspires to a career as an author.
Learn more at www.desmondastaire.com.

Jul 30, 2022 • 1h 3min
184. Craig Alanson turned the alien invasion trope on its head
Craig Alanson publishes 3 novels a year. He went from being a paid accountant writing code to a full-time author making 6 figures after only 6 months—as a self-published author! He created "Expeditionary Force" as a reaction to the “plucky band of soldiers with rifles defeat an alien invasion” trope. These stories are so serious, straight ahead, and unrealistic—how can human soldiers on the ground defeat an alien assault, when the aliens can nuke us from orbit? "I set out to write a military space opera that was a hell of a lot more fun. Enjoy."

Jul 23, 2022 • 57min
183. Elizabeth Ticknor & Rebecca Treasure making their dreams happen
M. Elizabeth Ticknor and Rebecca E. Treasure discuss the importance of friendship in writing and making their dream of being authors happen. We discuss their journeys, overcoming self-doubt, and persevering to win the Contest.

Jul 16, 2022 • 1h 5min
182. Larry Elmore Dungeons & Dragons and Dragonlance artist
Larry Elmore became an Illustrators of the Future judge in 2012 and is routinely a highlight anytime he attends the annual workshop.
Larry discusses how the original D&D art came to be and, following this, Dragonlance art. Larry talks about how he can just look at something, duplicate the shape, and draw it from memory.

Jul 8, 2022 • 1h 3min
181. Dean Wesley Smith discusses the brand new world of publishing
Dean Wesley Smith is one of the most prolific authors today, a master of selling the first draft of his stories. He was the first Writers of the Future winner to be awarded in the history of the Contest. In this podcast, he covers writing what you want to write, what you have fun with. He discusses what today are called "guidelines." In L. Ron Hubbard's day, these were called taboos, which he discusses in his how-to article called "Boos and Taboos."
In addition to creating his own worlds, Dean has written "Star Trek," "Spider-Man," "X-Men," "Iron Man," and "Men in Black" novels and ghostwritten dozens of others.

Jul 3, 2022 • 1h 7min
180. Nancy Cartwright, voice of Bart Simpson, provides 6 steps to survival
Nancy Cartwright, the voice of Bart Simpson, wrote and did her own voice-over for her book, "I'm Still a 10-Year Old Boy" and she is also an artist and sculptor. We discuss her growth and subsequent influence as an artist which includes my favorite chapter, "Six Salient Steps to Successful Survival," which is very applicable to the aspiring writer and artist...and we talk about all 6 steps!

Jun 25, 2022 • 59min
179. Meet 3 amazing winners from the United Kingdom
The UK is very important to Writers and Illustrators of the Future!
Illustrator grand prize winner volume 37 Dan Watson (top), writer winner volume 36 J. L. George (center), and writer winner volume 38 Michael Panter (bottom)were interviewed during the workshop week where we discussed their individual journeys to winner and what they plan to do in the future.
Dan Watson: danwatsonart.com/
J. L. George: jlgeorgewrites.wordpress.com/
Michael Panter: michaelpanter.com/