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Season 2 Ep 5 | Justen Ahren | Creativity, Community, & Devotion to Art

Some Things Considered

Release Date: 01/21/2025

Season 5 Ep 6 | Sara Stibitz | A Ladder to the Stars show art Season 5 Ep 6 | Sara Stibitz | A Ladder to the Stars

Some Things Considered

In this episode of Some Things Considered, I had the pleasure of speaking with Sara Stibitz—NYT-bestselling collaborative writer, author of Writing on Purpose, and creator of the Substack A Ladder to the Stars—about creativity, narrative, and how story shapes everything we do. We went deep and wide, and some of the highlights include: Sara’s relationship to story:Why storytelling is central to human meaning, healing, and creative practice. A Ladder to the Stars:Helping writers navigate craft, publishing, emotional resilience, and building a sustainable creative life. Creativity as...

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Some Things Considered

This episode of Some Things Considered features the always-brilliant Jenna Blum, New York Times and #1 international bestselling author of Those Who Save Us, The Stormchasers, The Lost Family, Woodrow on the Bench, and her forthcoming psychological thriller Murder Your Darlings (out January 2026). It’s a wide-ranging, candid conversation about writing across genres, the realities of literary success, and what it really means to build a sustainable creative life. Murder Your Darlings & Genre Shifts Jenna’s first psychological thriller Why she chose to tackle the genre now Writing...

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Season 5 Ep 3 | Tim Wendel | Baseball, History, and Craft show art Season 5 Ep 3 | Tim Wendel | Baseball, History, and Craft

Some Things Considered

In this episode, I speak with award-winning author and Johns Hopkins writing professor Tim Wendel, whose books include Summer of ’68, Castro’s Curveball, Cancer Crossings, and his newest novel Rebel Falls. Tim is productive, well-read, and well-traveled, so our conversation inexorably covered a great deal of ground, and some topics include: Baseball & storytelling: How the game shaped Tim’s life as a writer; the mythology of Bull Durham; the legend of Steve Dalkowski. Substack & citizen historians: Why Tim believes everyday people must help preserve historical truth,...

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From Prison to Advocacy: Stephanie Shepard on Justice and Reform show art From Prison to Advocacy: Stephanie Shepard on Justice and Reform

Some Things Considered

In this episode, I speak with Stephanie Shepard, Executive Director of Last Prisoner Project. She was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for a first-time, nonviolent cannabis offense and now leads the Last Prisoner Project (LPP). Her story—and her advocacy—reveals the human cost of the War on Drugs and the urgent need for restorative justice. Some key takeaways from our conversation include: Stephanie’s story: From her 2010 conviction and nine-year sentence to becoming Executive Director of LPP. What LPP does: Freeing cannabis prisoners, record clearance, reentry support, and...

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Season 5 Ep 1 | Matt Davis | What does Mount Rushmore tell us about America? show art Season 5 Ep 1 | Matt Davis | What does Mount Rushmore tell us about America?

Some Things Considered

Some Things Considered returns with our fifth season, and we could not be more excited. Episode One features Matthew Davis, with whom I speak about his new book Biography of a Mountain, an in-depth examination of Mt. Rushmore as both a monument and a metaphor for America. Drawing on years of research and personal engagement with the Black Hills, Davis unpacks the layered histories, mythologies, and political tensions embedded in this iconic site. We cover a ton of ground, and highlights include: Why Mt. Rushmore: How Davis realized this was the book he needed to write — and why the...

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Season 4 Ep 11 | Karen E. Bender | Literary Fiction, Storytelling, and the Times We Live In show art Season 4 Ep 11 | Karen E. Bender | Literary Fiction, Storytelling, and the Times We Live In

Some Things Considered

What is the role of literary fiction in 2025? Is it simply escapism, or is it something deeper — a mirror to the world we inhabit, a lens on its inequities, contradictions, and quiet truths? In my latest episode of Some Things Considered, I spoke with Karen E. Bender, National Book Award finalist and author of The Words of Dr. L, to explore these questions. Karen’s new collection is a meditation on our times. Her stories navigate the uneasy space between overt political urgency and narrative subtlety, achieving what only the most mature and authoritative fiction can: illuminating society...

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Season 4 Ep 10 | Caroline Bock & Jona Colson | Talking Season 4 Ep 10 | Caroline Bock & Jona Colson | Talking "America's Future" with Washington Writer's Publishing House

Some Things Considered

In this episode of Some Things Considered, I’m joined by Caroline Bock and Jona Colson, co-presidents of . They are two of my favorite DC-area writers and advocates, but today we gather to discuss–and celebrate–the publication of a brand new anthology “America’s Future: poetry & prose in response to tomorrow.” Caroline is the author of the story collection “Carry Her Home” and Jona’s poetry collection “Said Through Glass” (both published in 2018). Washington Writers’ Publishing House is the longest, continuously operating nonprofit, cooperative, literary...

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Season 4 Ep 9 | Karen Eber | The Art & Science of Storytelling show art Season 4 Ep 9 | Karen Eber | The Art & Science of Storytelling

Some Things Considered

In this episode of Some Things Considered, I sit down with Karen Eber — TED speaker, award-winning author of The Perfect Story, and former Fortune 500 executive whose talks have reached millions worldwide. Karen specializes in the science and skill of storytelling, helping leaders and creatives alike use stories to inform, influence, and inspire. The conversation explores: The science of storytelling: what happens in the brain when a story works, and why humans are wired to connect through narrative. What makes a story succeed—or fail: common pitfalls and how to avoid them. Trust and...

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Season 4 Ep 8 | Lisa Cooper Ellison | Writing, Resilience, and the Creative Life show art Season 4 Ep 8 | Lisa Cooper Ellison | Writing, Resilience, and the Creative Life

Some Things Considered

In this episode, I’m joined by Lisa Cooper Ellison—author, speaker, trauma-informed writing coach, and host of Writing Your Resilience. Lisa works at the intersection of storytelling and healing, using her personal experiences and clinical training to help writers transform difficult life events into meaningful art. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, HuffPost, Risk!, and more. She recently completed her memoir Please Stage Dive Carefully: How I Survived My Brother’s Suicide and Forgave Myself. Our conversation explores: The multiple hats every modern writer must wear:...

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Today’s guest is Justen Ahren, a photographer, poet, musician and writing workshop facilitator. I met Justen at the Noepe Center a decade ago, and he and I share—among other things—a passion for writing and how to push creative boundaries, the rewards of cultivating communities (both in and outside artistic spaces), and balancing how to make a living and how to suck the marrow out of life, as Thoreau encouraged. Justen has, in addition to running the Noepe Center and producing his own work across multiple genres, been developing his Devotion to Writing program, which is at once a series of workshops, part of 1455’s Moveable Feast series, and an entire philosophy—and we talk in depth about what he’s done and plans to do going forward.

Speaking of Thoreau, Justen is the best contemporary comp for that American icon, although he’s as gregarious and positive as Thoreau was austere and solitary; he is fascinated by the ways our natural world compliments and encourages creativity, and once you’ve seen him in his day-to-day routine, his multi-faceted talents come into sharp, spectacular focus. Justen’s photographs are held in several private collections, and have been exhibited in both solo and group shows and at Miner Family Gallery on Martha’s Vineyard. He is Emeritus Poet Laureate of Martha’s Vineyard and founder of Noepe Center of Literary Arts. He has received two commissions for poetry from Wendy Taucher Dance Theater Opera, and one from John Sims’ Afro Dixie Project. His two poetry collections are A Strange Catechism (2013) and A Machine for Remembering (2019).


ABOUT GUEST JUSTEN AHREN

Learn more about Justen's work at justenahren.com


ABOUT SOME THINGS CONSIDERED

Award-winning author Sean Murphy in conversation with creative thinkers, spanning the literary, music, art, politics, and tech industries. As a cultural critic, professor, founder of a literary non-profit, Sean is always looking to explore and celebrate the ways Story is integral to how we define ourselves, as artists and human beings. This Substack newsletter and weekly podcast peels back the layers of how creativity works, why it matters, how our most brilliant minds achieve mastery. Join us to explore how our most successful and inspired storytellers engage by discussing craft, routines, brand, and mostly through authentic and honest expression.

 

ABOUT HOST SEAN MURPHY

Website: seanmurphy.net

Twitter: @bullmurph

Instagram: @bullmurph

Facebook: facebook.com/AuthorSeanMurphy

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/sean-murphy-4986b41

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