108 episodes

Author and literary magazine editor, Rachel Thompson, helps you write, publish, and shine. Learn how to write and share your brilliant writing with the world.
Episodes delve into how to polish and prepare your writing for publication, and the journey from emerging writer to published author.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Write, Publish, and Shine Rachel Thompson

    • Arts
    • 4.8 • 19 Ratings

Author and literary magazine editor, Rachel Thompson, helps you write, publish, and shine. Learn how to write and share your brilliant writing with the world.
Episodes delve into how to polish and prepare your writing for publication, and the journey from emerging writer to published author.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    #97 Resist Expectations with Author Cicely Belle Blain

    #97 Resist Expectations with Author Cicely Belle Blain

    Welcome to our last instalment of this string of episodes on writing with limitations and disabilities.
    I’m so happy to end this with the wonderful Cicely Belle Blain, the final member of my writing community who kindly agreed to join us to discuss limitations and disabilities when it comes to writing.
    Reading from Cicely’s bio: Cicely Belle Blain is a Black/mixed, queer femme activist, equity and inclusion consultant, and writer. Their bestselling poetry collection Burning Sugar was called “an intimately powerful debut” by Quill and Quire. With laughter and fearlessness, they harness a passion for justice, liberation and meaningful change via transformative education.
    They talk about their consulting work as well as writing and how the fairly recent journey of learning about their ADHD intersects with both of these practices.
    Cicely also reads work on the theme of grief, aptly bringing to the fore the subtext of what is often the experience of having limitations and disability.
    Their bio mentions their passion for justice, and so, of course, they shared their sage perspective, which underscored the enormity of this series of themed episodes—not asking for simply understanding of their or others' individual limitations and disabilities but solidarity with those attempting to resist the expectations of writing, the publishing world, social media, social capital, deadlines, and capitalism.
    All of the notes for this episode are up at rachelthompson.co/97

    Sign up for my Writerly Love Digest, which is sent weekly and includes support for your writing practice, prompts, and lit mag publications.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 45 min
    #96 Set L. Shuter on Using Humour and Being Kind to Herself as a Chronically Ill Writer

    #96 Set L. Shuter on Using Humour and Being Kind to Herself as a Chronically Ill Writer

    Welcome to our semi-final instalment of this string of episodes on writing with limitations and disabilities.
    In this episode, writer S.L. Shuter, a member of my Writerly Love Community, talks about embracing an identity related to her diagnosis and the push back she received for this.
    Set L. Shuter is a writer, filmmaker and storyteller from Toronto. She holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from The University of King's College and is currently querying her horror-comedy medical memoir, Ovaries Gone Wild. Her essays have appeared in The Toronto Star, Chatelaine Magazine, Understorey Magazine, CBC, and Creative Nonfiction Magazine.
    Set reads from an essay about access to medicine related to her condition published in a special COVID-19 edition of Understorey Magazine.
    Listen to how she embraces humour related to her limitations but more recently finds more kindness for herself as she writes and makes films about chronic illness.
    All of the notes for this episode are up at rachelthompson.co/96

    Sign up for my Writerly Love Digest, which is sent weekly and includes support for your writing practice, prompts, and lit mag publications.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 48 min
    #95 Crystal Randall Barnett on Writing, Disability & Intuition

    #95 Crystal Randall Barnett on Writing, Disability & Intuition

    Welcome to the next instalment of this string of episodes on writing with limitations and disabilities.
    In this episode, Crystal Randall Barnett, a member of my Writerly Love Community, adds to the conversations we’ve been having in this series of episodes on writing slowly and listening to your body.
    Crystal Randall Barnett is an emerging writer from Ontario. She has been published by The League of Canadian Poets and Blank Spaces and her first-place short story appeared in a 2023 fiction anthology from Chicken House Press. Her writing is physically impacted and creatively influenced by her disability, Persistent Post-Concussion Syndrome.
    Crystal shares how she adapted her reading habits when her experience of persistent post-concussive symptoms made reading on the page a barrier. She also shares a simple hack to make audiobooks even more accessible—one I’ve implemented for myself.
    And she reads from a poem I had the pleasure of publishing as an editor with Room.
    All of the notes for this episode are up at rachelthompson.co/95

    Sign up for my Writerly Love Digest, which is sent weekly and includes support for your writing practice, prompts, and lit mag publications.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 28 min
    #94 Andrea Martineau: Believe Writers About Limitations and Disabilities

    #94 Andrea Martineau: Believe Writers About Limitations and Disabilities

    Welcome to the fourth instalment of this string of episodes on the theme of writing with limitations and disabilities.
    Andrea Martineau is a writer, poet, bibliophile, and phytomaniac (I had to look that one up: a plant lover!) with a penchant for heritage buildings and their paranormal tenants. Her poetry has previously been published and shared in untethered magazine, Blank Spaces, [SPACE], Figroot Press, and The League of Canadian Poets’ Poetry Pause.
    Andrea is a wonderful part of our membership community, has such clarity around her practice and finds ways to work with her limitations. She calls on us to believe writers with limitations and disabilities when they say what they need or need to pause or bow out from doing something during a flare-up or when it doesn’t work for their health and wellness.
    All of the notes for this episode are up at rachelthompson.co/94

    Sign up for my Writerly Love Digest, which is sent weekly and includes support for your writing practice, prompts, and lit mag publications.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 24 min
    #93 Amy Vickers, An Autistic Writer on Beautiful Flaws

    #93 Amy Vickers, An Autistic Writer on Beautiful Flaws

    Welcome to my next conversation in this run of episodes on writing with disabilities and limitations.
    In this episode, I sit down with Amy Yuki Vickers, a new writer in our community and a recent alum of my Lit Mag Love course. Amy is the author of the blog and newsletter The Intentional Hulk, writes short stories and personal essays, and is at work on a memoir.
    And, as she says in her bio, because she’s autistic, she see-saws between intense occupation and recovery. This is just one subject we discuss in our conversation. She shares her experiences as a writer and how she has set up her writing life to work for her.
    All of the notes for this episode are up at rachelthompson.co/93

    Sign up for my Writerly Love Digest, filled with support for your writing practice, prompts, and lit mag publications sent every week.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 36 min
    #92 Olwen Wilson on Following Joy While Writing with a Chronic Condition

    #92 Olwen Wilson on Following Joy While Writing with a Chronic Condition

    Welcome to the next episode in this run of episodes on writing with disabilities and limitations.
    In this episode, a wonderful Writerly Love Community member, Olwen Wilson talks with me about following joy and writing with a chronic condition. We discuss labels and their conflicting appeal/repellent nature. And, what I suspect will be a through line of all these episodes: listening to our bodies and how we’re feeling. Olwen reads a slantly-written short piece then generously gifts us with details on a practice called Rainbow Walks. Listen in to hear from a writer who does things their way, someone I deeply admire for this spirit.
    Show notes: https://rachelthompson.co/92
    --
    Sign up for my Writerly Love Digest, filled with support for your writing practice, prompts, and lit mag publications sent every week.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 40 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
19 Ratings

19 Ratings

Awsome face 1254 ,

Really thoughtful and well produced

It’s great to get snippets of various interviews (really impressive writers/editors) within a relatively short podcast. And the recap at the end is quite helpful!

LouiseSoCal ,

Thoughtful and thorough

Rachel’s interviews are always so thoughtful and thorough. She has obviously done her homework before interviewing each editor or set of editors, and I like the way she includes a wrap-up of the most important takeaways at the end. There are so many lit mags out there — Write, Publish & Shine is a great way to get a quick feel for whether these ones are for you.

Jeffrey A. Ricker ,

Promising!

Rachel Thompson has a wonderful delivery and I really like her style of gentle encouragement and support (with a few well-placed nudges). As a practicing writer, I look forward to more of her conversations with litmag editors and more great insights into each one's publishing process.

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