First Person Present

Hewes House

Two writers. A home studio. Questions from people who are stuck, spiraling, or just trying to finish the damn thing. Josh Boardman and Dasha Sikmashvili answer real questions about craft, revision, and the writing life. From seventh-draft despair to penny-a-word markets, these conversations feel less like a workshop and more like eavesdropping on two friends who know their way around a manuscript. Expect literary references, puppy videos, and tangents about furniture shopping. Because that's how writers actually talk about writing. Submit your questions: podcast@heweshouse.com

Episodes

  1. Night Moves (Part 2)

    2D AGO

    Night Moves (Part 2)

    Crowded trains, rolled manuscripts, and ten stolen minutes with a sleeping baby—Part 2 of First Person Present’s special Night Moves episode opens with an honest look at what a writing practice actually looks like when life refuses to cooperate. Dasha reports from the trenches of a major draft milestone, describing the particular satisfaction of physically wrestling with a printed manuscript on a standing-room-only subway car, and what it means when your writing window closes the moment you zip your bag. Josh reflects on the difference between long designated chunks and the daily incremental habit he's trying to reclaim. Together they push back on the romance of the four-hour writing session and the Paris Review mythology of artists with endless leisure—and make the case that accumulation, not marathon output, is what actually finishes books. Then, a caller question about the hardest thing writers face when working close to home: writing about real people. Josh and Dasha dig into the Art Monster controversy, Knausgaard's My Struggle and the uncle who sued, the way people find themselves in fiction that was never about them, and why the person you least expect is almost always the one who ends up upset. They argue for removing every barrier when the work is being made (you can always not publish) while being clear-eyed that fallout is probably coming, and that the antidote to it is complication over thesis, nuance over score-settling. Also: Walter the dog has been depicted beautifully throughout, and he doesn't know how good he has it. Call in with questions Visit our site for full show notes Links: Who Is the Bad Art Friend? - New York Times Knausgaard’s Ruthless Freedom - Public Books A take on Czesław Miłosz’s family quote by Julian Barnes - New Statesman The Paris Review Interviews Archive Sincerity, Irony, Autofiction - by Christian Lorentzen Theme music: “1982” by See Jazz

    29 min
  2. Short Story Sex Worker

    FEB 2

    Short Story Sex Worker

    Full show notes on our website. A snowstorm, a little free library discovery, and the eternal question of creative fidelity collide as Josh and Dasha experiment with something new: live Reddit questions about the craft. But first, Dasha reports a development that would make Hemingway wince—she's started a short story while supposedly committed to a decade-long novel project. Is this creative adultery, or has she finally made peace with visiting what she delicately calls "the prostitute of the short story"? The conversation turns to inspiration versus observation, and why stumbling onto a beatnik anthology by Ed Sanders on the way to the train might be exactly the kind of randomness every writer needs. Then, attempting to channel authors they've never read (and occasionally misgendering 😬), they tackle questions about writing fight scenes and generating ideas. The secret to a good fight scene? Constant reversals—borrowed wisdom from too many hours of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. As for where ideas come from, forget the "what if" premise generator; try living presently with your notes app open. Apologies in advance to Lee Child, Riley Sager, and anyone else caught in the crossfire of their confident ignorance. Call in with questions Watch on YouTube Links: Tales of Beatnik Glory by Ed Sanders The Garden of Eden by Ernest Hemingway "The Battler" / "Fifty Grand" by Ernest Hemingway (Men Without Women) "A Sound of Thunder" by Ray Bradbury Buffy the Vampire Slayer Fight Compilation Theme music: "1982" by See Jazz

    30 min
  3. Flip Flop & Waffle

    JAN 26

    Flip Flop & Waffle

    Call in with your question For inquiries: https://www.heweshouse.com/ The holidays are over, obligations are piling up, and the buffet of overthinking is open for business. In this episode, Josh and Dasha dive into the peculiar vertigo of early-year overstimulation—that state where thoughts loop like a broken record and writing about yourself only amplifies the chaos. Is this mania? Is this just being human? (Our one listener with a psychiatry degree better let us know.) Jenny Offill's "Depression-era writer" approach to salvaging old work sparks a conversation about the folders we keep (whether you call it "failures" or "the well") and why nothing you write ever truly goes to waste. Sometimes the bucket comes up with exactly what you need. Then, a caller frozen between memoir, autofiction, and essay collection gets unstuck. Genre, it turns out, is largely a marketing decision masquerading as an artistic one. The real question isn't what to call your book—it's whether labeling it is preventing you from finishing it. We explore the freedom of thinking "fiction" even when writing from life, the John D'Agata school of bending truth for emotional resonance, and the James Frey rehabilitation tour (now featuring AI-generated content, apparently). Links: Jenny Offill, Weather Nicholson Baker, Vox John D'Agata’s "What Happens There" and his subsequent interview “A Million Little Lies” at The Smoking Gun James Frey and AI Theme music: "1982" by See Jazz

    25 min
  4. Tree Murderers

    JAN 19

    Tree Murderers

    Paper versus pixels, telekinesis versus typing, and an unexpectedly heated polemic against Charles Dickens that absolutely nobody asked for. In this episode of First Person Present, Josh and Dasha explore the tactile, vulnerable act of writing by hand in an increasingly digital age, and why the process of typing up handwritten drafts might be more valuable than you think. Fresh off their first Hewes House community write-together session, they dive into the reading life: Tove Ditlevsen's incisive characterization, the mortifying experience of returning books to bookstores, and why one of them thinks Charles Dickens "just sucks" (spoiler: it's Josh, and he's ready for your angry voice memos). Dasha champions the radical act of marking up your books, while Josh makes a case for SparkNotes as a legitimate literary alternative to Great Expectations. Then it's back to Reddit, where the questions get existential: How do you deal with the pain of transcribing handwritten drafts when telekinesis remains frustratingly unavailable? And what do you do when your suspense novel has so many interconnected plot points it requires an actual equation to explain? The answers involve Lauren Groff's ceremonial burning habits, the vulnerability of exposed handwriting in cafes, and a plea to just let things happen in the present tense already. Plus: handbag subreddits, tree murder via excessive printing, and the atmospheric difference between writing on paper versus hiding behind password-protected documents. Links: Dasha’s new Substack column The Case for Paper: Handwriting vs Typing If Your Novel’s Plot Is a Math Problem, Maybe It’s Time to Simplify The Copenhagen Trilogy by Tove Ditlevsen Flesh by David Szalay Pk: A Report on the Power of Psychokinesis, Mental Energy That Moves Matter by Michael H. Brown Peter Warren on IMDb r/writing subreddit Theme music: "1982" by See Jazz

    30 min
  5. Naked in the Airport

    JAN 12

    Naked in the Airport

    Dry January, the Year of the Red Horse, and the unexpected productivity of writing longhand in busy airports open Season 2 of First Person Present. When routine becomes stale and your home office starts feeling like a creative prison, what happens if you embrace the "scrappy performative energy" of public writing, even if it makes you feel exposed? (Exhibitionism, anybody?) Josh and Dasha introduce their new format with listener voicemails, starting with Brian B.'s guilty confession about generating a thousand words in an airport versus struggling in his quiet home office. The conversation explores the tension between beloved routines and the creative stagnation they can cause, from writing in bars (not this month) to the strategic use of location changes as a tool for breaking through writer's block. Then, diving into the science of habit formation and BJ Fogg's concept of habit anchoring, we examine why switching up small elements of your writing process (time of day, lighting, music, handwriting versus typing) can reveal something essential about the machine you're building. Plus: failed vampire novels, romance novels that turn into grief novels, and why Brad Listi's decade-long novel-in-progress should give us all hope. Links The Vampire Novel I’ll Never Write (And Why That's Okay) Habit Chaining for Writers: How to Build a Sustainable Writing Practice Without Forcing It Beach Read by Emily Henry Otherppl Podcast Be Brief and Tell Them Everything by Brad Listi BJ Fogg's Tiny Habits Atomic Habits by James Clear Too Much Birthday - The Cut (not New York Magazine lol) Theme music: "1982" by See Jazz

    28 min
  6. Arsenic Milkshake

    12/08/2025

    Arsenic Milkshake

    Episode Description Brain fog, baby preparation, and the brutal honesty of Reddit comments converge in a conversation about what happens when life's major changes collide with a writing practice you've maintained for years. Can discipline and self-compassion coexist? And when does productive routine become unsustainable perfectionism? Josh and Dasha wrestle with the culture of self-permission in 2025—the tendency to tell struggling writers that it's okay to step away, rest, take a break. But what happens when you've spent your entire adult life showing up to the page, and suddenly someone tells you that your baby and pregnant partner should matter more than your novel? The tension between Eastern European work ethic and modern self-care wisdom reveals something deeper about habit, choice elimination, and the unglamorous middle sections of long projects. Then, tackling questions about the dreaded query letter process and academic writing obligations that cannibalize creative work, we explore how distilling your entire novel into four sentences can actually teach you something essential about your story. Plus: why some writers need to keep their day jobs far away from their creative practice, and the controversial strategy of writing first thing in the morning while giving students "the dregs." Links The Driver's Seat by Muriel Spark Fresh, Green Life by Sebastian Castillo Chelsea Hodson’s Morning Writing Club Beyond How to Write a Query: Unlock Your Story’s Essence Is a Creative Writing Degree Worth It? /r/writing subreddit Theme music: "1982" by See Jazz

    31 min
  7. Table Grapes

    11/17/2025

    Table Grapes

    Episode Description What do psychedelic concert visuals, furniture shopping, and Raymond Carver's comma obsession have in common? They're all ways writers process the concept of spectacle—and avoid talking about revision while actually talking about revision the entire time. From King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard's mass hypnosis event to the masculine ambition of doorstop novels, Josh and Dasha explore what makes art spectacular and whether quiet, dialogue-driven stories can compete with literary behemoths like Moby Dick. Along the way, furniture becomes a metaphor for creative decision-making, and the eternal struggle between gut instinct and endless tinkering reveals itself in both interior design and sentence-level revision. Then, addressing a vulnerable question from Table Grapes about writing difficult autobiographical material for YA audiences, we navigate the delicate balance between graphic honesty and age-appropriate storytelling, plus practical strategies for creating emotional distance from traumatic personal material—including the therapeutic power of puppy videos. Links: How Book Revision Is Like Buying New Furniture King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard Forest Hills Stadium, Queens Moby Dick by Herman Melville Middlemarch by George Eliot Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy Edith Wharton Raymond Carver’s “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love” When Your Characters Break Free: Character Defamiliarization Techniques for Writing Trauma Fiction Safely /r/writing Too Cute on Animal Planet Puppy videos for recovery Theme music: “1982” by See Jazz

    32 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Two writers. A home studio. Questions from people who are stuck, spiraling, or just trying to finish the damn thing. Josh Boardman and Dasha Sikmashvili answer real questions about craft, revision, and the writing life. From seventh-draft despair to penny-a-word markets, these conversations feel less like a workshop and more like eavesdropping on two friends who know their way around a manuscript. Expect literary references, puppy videos, and tangents about furniture shopping. Because that's how writers actually talk about writing. Submit your questions: podcast@heweshouse.com