The Author's Mind

Shilo Creed

The Author’s Mind takes you behind the scenes of bestselling fiction—one author at a time. From plotting secrets to productivity hacks, industry truths to creative breakthroughs, this show gives writers the tools, inspiration, and insider access you can’t find anywhere else. No fluff. No surface-level chatter. Real conversations with real authors doing the work. If you want to write better stories, stay motivated, and understand how successful writers think, you’re in the right place.

  1. Jun 29

    He Worked on Braveheart & Independence Day — Now He Engineers Flow State for Writers

    What if the difference between a bestseller and a book that stays buried isn't talent — it's flow state? LISTEN TO EVERY MINUTE OF THIS POD! Steven Puri spent his career at the crossroads of Hollywood and technology. Visual effects for Braveheart, Independence Day, True Lies, and Seven. Senior executive at multiple motion picture studios. $20M in venture capital raised. And now — tools used by creative professionals worldwide to do their best work without burning out. In this episode of The Author's Mind, Shilo Creed and Steven Puri break down the exact system behind entering deep creative flow — and why most writers are unknowingly working against their own brains. What you'll learn: ✅ What flow state actually is — and why the classic definition changes how you write ✅ How your chronotype determines when to write vs. when to edit ✅ The exact music parameters (60–90 BPM, non-vocal, long melodic passages) that trigger deep focus ✅ Why "Himalayan Dream Rain" is the #1 focus sound for writers — and the neuroscience behind it ✅ Why hard distraction blockers fail — and what actually works instead ✅ How community accelerates output even for solitary writers ✅ The "One Big Thing" method for protecting your most important creative hour ✅ Why multitasking is a myth — and how context switching burns your creative energy ✅ What AI really threatens for writers — and what it can never replace ✅ The "Other Thing" principle that unlocks your best creative breakthroughs "Reels break your brain. Short form videos break your ability to concentrate. Full stop." — Shilo Creed "If you align your boat with the current, it carries you, it magnifies your efforts." — Steven Puri About the Guest: Steven Puri is the founder of the Sukha Company. He's done visual effects for major Hollywood blockbusters, served as a senior executive at multiple motion picture studios, and raised over $20 million in venture capital. He now helps creative professionals enter deep, timeless flow state — and finish their best work faster, without burnout. About the Host: Shilo Creed is the author of 42 novels with 1.4 million copies sold. He is the host of The Author's Mind and Studio Magic. #FlowState #WritingAdvice #HowToWriteANovel #FictionWriting #WritersBlock #DeepWork #AuthorLife #WritingCommunity #StudioMagic #TheAuthorsMind

    He Worked on Braveheart & Independence Day — Now He Engineers Flow State for Writers
  2. Jun 8

    How to Write a Novel Readers Can't Put Down | Villains, Dialogue & Suspense

    Want to write a novel readers can't put down? In this episode of The Author's Mind, Shilo Creed talks with romantic fantasy author P.K. Stuart about the fiction craft tools that make stories feel alive: believable villains, realistic dialogue, suspense, fight scenes, character development, and the mindset it takes to actually finish a book. P.K. shares how she approaches writing as a pantser, why deep character work can become its own kind of outline, and how she once wrote a 40,000-word biography just to understand one antagonist. We also talk about why villains must believe they are right, how to make dialogue sound natural, why every scene needs goal, motivation, and conflict, and what writers should know before committing to a series. In this conversation, you'll learn: • How to write villains readers actually fear • How to make dialogue sound real instead of forced • Why suspense depends on real consequences • How to write fight scenes with emotional conflict • Why character development matters before drafting • How goal, motivation, and conflict can strengthen every scene • What finishing a novel teaches you that planning never can • What P.K. Stuart learned from writing a five-book series If you are writing a novel, drafting a fantasy series, struggling with dialogue, building a villain, or trying to finish your first book, this episode is full of practical fiction writing advice. Guest: P.K. Stuart Series: Time's End First book: Inside the Tree Line Website: pkstuart.com Subscribe to The Author's Mind for more conversations on writing craft, fiction, publishing, author mindset, storytelling, and the creative life. #authortube #writingadvice #novelwriting #fictionwriting #howtowriteanovel #writingtips #writingvillains #writingdialogue #fantasywriting #authorinterview

    How to Write a Novel Readers Can't Put Down | Villains, Dialogue & Suspense
  3. Jun 1

    Writing Historical Fiction That Feels Real | Cinda Gault

    How do you write historical fiction that feels real without drowning your reader in research? In this episode of The Author’s Mind, Shilo Creed sits down with Canadian novelist, literature scholar, and criminologist Cinda Gault to talk about writing historical fiction, creating believable characters, and transforming years of research into a story readers actually want to finish. Cinda shares how she built novels around real historical figures, including Isabel Gunn, a woman who disguised herself as a man to work in the Canadian fur trade. She explains how writers can use history as inspiration without letting facts overwhelm the story, why strong characters are built from choices rather than circumstances, and how to decide which details belong on the page. This conversation is especially helpful for writers who want to create vivid settings, strong female characters, believable historical worlds, and fiction that keeps readers immersed. In this episode, we discuss: How to write historical fiction that feels aliveHow much research should actually go on the pageWhy story must come before historical accuracyCreating strong female characters from real historyThe difference between what really happened and what readers will believeHow genre affects suspended disbeliefHow sensory detail makes fiction feel realWhy writers need editors, fresh eyes, and honest feedbackWhat to do when your novel becomes “gnarly”If you are writing historical fiction, developing stronger characters, or trying to turn research into a compelling novel, this episode will help you think more clearly about what belongs in your story — and what should stay in your notes. 🔔 Subscribe to The Author’s Mind for weekly craft conversations with professional writers. Connect with Cinda Gault: cindagult.com Connect with Shilo Creed: shilocreed.com Get ProWritingAid: https://prowritingaid.com/ #historicalfiction #writingtips #authortube #characterdevelopment #creativewriting #writinghistoricalfiction #fictionwriting #novelwriting #writers #theauthorsmind

    Writing Historical Fiction That Feels Real | Cinda Gault
  4. May 25

    How to Write a Novel That Readers Can't Put Down | Rick Glaze

    Most writers think readers quit because the plot is boring. They're wrong. According to Stanford-trained, Amazon #1 bestselling novelist Rick Glaze — readers quit because the stakes weren't high enough to begin with. In this episode of The Author's Mind, Shilo Creed sits down with Rick Glaze — author of Eight Pieces of Eight, Amazon bestseller, and one of the most unconventional storytellers working today — to dig into what separates fiction that gets put down from fiction that gets devoured. What you'll learn: The real reason readers abandon your novel (and the stakes fix that changes everything)Why Rick's editor told him his book "starts on chapter four" — and what that taught him about modern readersHow Rick wrote an entire novel from his dog's point of view (and why it works)The "Universal Fantasies" framework: how to write stories readers crave but would never live themselvesHow to develop your unique author voice (hint: it starts with mimicry)Why marketing is no longer optional for serious novelistsRick brings 20+ years of sailing the Virgin Islands, a Stanford creative writing background, and a songwriter's ear to fiction — and it shows in every answer. Whether you're writing your first novel or your fifth, this episode will change how you think about keeping readers on the page. 🔔 Subscribe to The Author's Mind for weekly craft conversations with professional novelists. www.rickglaze.com Get Chapter One of Shilo's novel, Plunged for free... https://www.tactical-press.com/get-plunged-chapter-one-for-free Contact Shilo: shilo@shilocreed.com

    How to Write a Novel That Readers Can't Put Down | Rick Glaze
  5. May 18

    Story Structure, Villains & the Hollywood Rules That Make Novels Unputdownable

    What do Hollywood screenwriters know about story structure that most novelists never learn? In this episode, two professional authors pull back the curtain on the rules that actually make fiction work — from writing villains that terrify readers to the editing secrets behind the world's greatest novels. Richard Sparks (40+ years as a professional scriptwriter, the man who wrote the sketch that launched Rowan Atkinson's career) and Gerald Everett Jones (11 published novels, 20+ book awards, Hollywood-based author and publisher) join Shilo Creed for a no-fluff conversation on the craft that separates published authors from aspiring ones. In this episode: Why a stronger villain automatically creates a stronger hero — and how to use that to your advantageThe "set up and payoff" rule that is the heart and soul of every great story structureWhat screenwriting disciplines teach you that novel writing alone never willHow Pride and Prejudice — arguably the greatest novel ever written — was shaped by its editor, and what that means for YOUR manuscriptThe "backward integration" technique: how to plant seeds earlier in your draft once you've discovered a plot point laterWhy P.G. Wodehouse needed 300 pages of notes before writing a single word of his "effortless" proseDan Brown's single most important rule for keeping readers hooked on every pageWhat "keeping the reader's suspended disbelief sacred" really means — and what happens when you break it🔗 Guest Links Richard Sparks — richardsparks.com Gerald Everett Jones — geraldeverettjones.com Puerta Books and Media — Gerald's publishing imprint 📚 Books Mentioned Jonathan's Journal by Gerald Everett Jones — Gerald's new historical fiction novel The Light in His Soul: Lessons from My Brother's Schizophrenia — co-authored by Gerald Everett Jones and Rebecca Schaper Richard Sparks's New Rock fantasy series Referenced Works: The Hero with a Thousand Faces — Joseph CampbellThe Art of Dramatic Writing — Lajos EgriAristotle's PoeticsPride and Prejudice — Jane AustenInvisible — Paul AusterUnder Milk Wood — Dylan ThomasMurder on the Orient Express — Agatha Christie📖 Resources Dan Brown's Writing Masterclass — masterclass.com National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) — nami.org The Author's Mind gives aspiring fiction writers direct access to the thinking and craft of professional authors. No theory — just real experience. 🔔 Subscribe so you never miss an episode.

    Story Structure, Villains & the Hollywood Rules That Make Novels Unputdownable

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About

The Author’s Mind takes you behind the scenes of bestselling fiction—one author at a time. From plotting secrets to productivity hacks, industry truths to creative breakthroughs, this show gives writers the tools, inspiration, and insider access you can’t find anywhere else. No fluff. No surface-level chatter. Real conversations with real authors doing the work. If you want to write better stories, stay motivated, and understand how successful writers think, you’re in the right place.