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First Person Present
Hewes House
5 episodes
5 days ago
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
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All content for First Person Present is the property of Hewes House and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
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
Show more...
Books
Arts
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Arsenic Milkshake
First Person Present
30 minutes 48 seconds
1 month ago
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

First Person Present
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