"People Who Chose to Take Their Lives Seriously" with Hayley Brown
SHARE the MIC: a literary podcast
Release Date: 12/31/2018
SHARE the MIC: a literary podcast
Sara Robke, an undergraduate student at Northwest Missouri State University, shares her essay, "My Grandpa's Mechanical Bed."
info_outline Time Really Stopped for a Long Time with Tiffany ImperialeSHARE the MIC: a literary podcast
Tiffany Imperiale reads a couple of recent essays. Silver linings during a pandemic. Also: Richard learns about an app Tiffany used to read and then write One-Direction-inspired fan fiction.
info_outline Collapsing the Distance with John GallaherSHARE the MIC: a literary podcast
Richard Sonnenmoser talks with the poet John Gallaher about nostalgia and grief, nature and nurture, family trees and ghosts, mortality and free association. John reads a few poems from his manuscript-in-progress, MY LIFE IN BRUTALIST ARCHITECTURE.
info_outline Hobbling into the Light with Heather HarphamSHARE the MIC: a literary podcast
Richard Sonnenmoser talks with memoirist Heather Harpham about her book, HAPPINESS: THE CROOKED LITTLE ROAD TO SEMI-EVER AFTER, and recalls the last lines of John Milton's PARADISE LOST
info_outline "People Who Chose to Take Their Lives Seriously" with Hayley BrownSHARE the MIC: a literary podcast
Richard Sonnenmoser talks with his writing student and friend, Hayley Brown, about some of the differences between painting and writing, when it might be "too soon" to write about an experience, and the suspension of social etiquette in a nonfiction writing workshop. Richard thinks about but doesn't tell Hayley a story about the last time he sat in the gazebo at Coleman Hawkins Park in St. Joseph, Missouri.
info_outlineRichard Sonnenmoser talks with his writing student and friend, Hayley Brown, about some of the differences between painting and writing, when it might be "too soon" to write about an experience, and the suspension of some social etiquette in a creative writing workshop. Richard thinks about but doesn't tell Hayley a story about the last time he sat in the gazebo at Coleman Hawkins Park in St. Joseph, Missouri.