• S4 E6- Trapping Joe Abercrombie: Crusader Kings III and a well-worn copy of Lonesome Dove.
    Mar 18 2026

    Some books remind you that fantasy can be brutal, funny, and painfully human all at once.

    This week, I’m joined by Joe Abercrombie, author of the First Law series and his latest, The Devils, for a conversation about the strange dance between fantasy and the expectations that come with it. We talk about drifting around the edges of genre labels (including the ever persistent “grimdark”) and what it means to write stories that refuse to behave exactly the way readers expect.

    Joe shares how his background as a film editor shaped the way he builds a story, from pacing to perspective to the careful balancing act of an ensemble cast. We also commiserate over a familiar writerly condition: the convenient amnesia that allows us to forget the horrors of drafting just long enough to start the next book. Joe compares the process to laying bricks. You keep placing them, one after another, even when some are crooked and others will need replacing later. Eventually you look up and realize a wall has begun to take shape.


    Links:

    Follow No Write Way on Instagram

    V.E. Schwab’s Website

    Joe Abercrombie’s Website


    Credits:

    Host: V.E. Schwab

    Producer/Editor/Mixer: Jenna Maurice


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    59 mins
  • S4 E5 Trapping Ashley Winstead: A bottle of grand cru wine, a baby animal, and the key to a secret door
    Mar 11 2026

    Some books feel like a rom com written in a minor key.

    This week, I’m talking with Ashley Winstead, author of In My Dreams I Hold a Knife and her latest, Future Saints. We chat about the idea that first drafts are just secret monsters, something you have to let out just to learn their shape. Ashley tells me about the sticky note she kept on her laptop that read, “no one will ever see this,” a small, stubborn permission that made it possible for her to keep going.

    She walks me through her rigorous and deeply self-aware writing process, including how she lets her brain decide what it can realistically handle each day instead of having word count goals or a time frame. And somewhere along the way, I realize I’ve found a kindred spirit, especially when it comes to our shared tendency toward slightly psychotic outlining. What a joy.


    Check out the playlist for Ashley’s book Future Saints (mentioned in this podcast) in the links below.


    Links:

    Follow No Write Way on Instagram

    V.E. Schwab’s Website

    Ashley Winstead’s WebsiteOfficial Future Saints Playlist


    Credits:

    Host: V.E. Schwab

    Producer/Editor/Mixer: Jenna Maurice


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    52 mins
  • S4 E4 Trapping T.L. Huchu: Overpriced running shoes, swimming socks, and a ticket to a place he’s never been
    Mar 4 2026

    Some stories are portals. Some storytellers are too.

    This week, I’m joined by T. L. Huchu, author of The Edinburgh Nights series, for a conversation that feels a little like falling down a rabbit hole together. T. L. often interviews me when my tours bring me through Edinburgh, so this time we flipped the script, and as always, time behaved strangely around us.

    We talk about bookstores as cathedrals, the idea that a writer is less an architect and more a conduit for the stories that seize them, and what it means to be an atheist who still has religious experiences on the page, moments of possession, of surrender, of something bigger moving through you.

    T. L. believes you are what you eat, creatively speaking, and we dig into the stories he devoured, loved, and metabolized into his own work. We wander into the magical practice space of short stories, the long and persistent road to publication, and the origin story that proves success is often built on a refusal to quit.


    Links:

    Follow No Write Way on Instagram

    V.E. Schwab’s Website


    Credits:

    Host: V.E. Schwab

    Producer/Editor/Mixer: Jenna Maurice

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    1 hr and 10 mins
  • S4E3- Trapping Mona Awad: Something scented with Tom Ford’s Rose Prick
    Feb 25 2026

    Some books tilt the world just slightly off its axis and dare you to find your footing.

    This week, I’m joined by Mona Awad, author of Bunny and Rouge, whose stories feel at once unsettling and luminous. We talk about the poem she once wrote for a class, one her teacher loved so much it terrified her into dropping the course, and how that early moment shaped her relationship with risk and praise.

    We wander into our shared desire to invite fantasy and magic into the real world, and the way our minds can feel like haunted houses crowded with every character we’ve ever written. We talk about long walks as part of her drafting process, the strange alchemy of revision, and the quiet power of clothing in her books.

    PS. If you need us we will be under a cozy blanket watching Ru Paul’s Drag Race.

    Follow No Write Way on Instagram

    V.E. Schwab’s Website

    Mona Awad's Website


    Credits:

    Host: V.E. Schwab

    Producer/Editor/Mixer: Jenna Maurice

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    49 mins
  • S4 E2- Trapping Kennedy Ryan: The simple promise of 8 hours of sleep
    Feb 18 2026

    Some books arrive as love stories and leave you thinking about much more.

    This week, I’m joined by Kennedy Ryan, bestselling author of Can’t Get Enough and Before I Let Go, for a conversation that feels less like an interview and more like gabbing with a very wise bestie. We talk about the fragility of success, the realities of moving between traditional and self-publishing (and why she’s done both—more than once), and the way her novels operate as Trojan horses: sweeping romances that carry big, necessary conversations about justice, equity, and identity.

    Kennedy also shares how her background in journalism shapes her work, from the deep research phase that anchors each book to the responsibility she feels when writing stories meant to spark discourse. It’s thoughtful, honest, and deeply human—and a reminder that love stories can do much more than “that thing.”


    Links:

    Follow No Write Way on Instagram

    V.E. Schwab’s Website

    Kennedy Ryan’s Website


    Credits:

    Host: V.E. Schwab

    Producer/Editor/Mixer: Jenna Maurice



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    1 hr and 1 min
  • S4 E1- Trapping Matt Dinniman: A Hippopotamus, Bass Strings, and Pizza-Blasted Goldfish
    Feb 11 2026

    Some books feel like an escape hatch you didn’t know you needed.

    For the first episode of Season 4, I sat down with Matt Dinniman, author of the wildly popular Dungeon Crawler Carl series and his latest novel, Operation Bounce House. Matt calls himself a “psycho pantser” (affectionately), and he lives up to the title, walking me through a writing process that’s as wild and inventive as his stories—one that sometimes even leaves room for reader input.

    We talk about writing without a map: trusting chaos, breaking rules, and finding momentum by charging toward the thing you know isn’t going to happen. Matt shares his unconventional, sometimes delightfully unhinged process, how surprise keeps him writing, why play is often the surest way through a block, and his untraditional approach to rights—what he chooses to keep, what he lets go, and why ownership matters to him.

    Welcome to Season 4.



    Follow No Write Way on Instagram


    V.E. Schwab's website


    Credits:

    Host: V. E. Schwab
    Producer / Editor / Mixer: Jenna Maurice

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    48 mins
  • Summoning V. E. Schwab: a cup of black tea, a freshly rolled joint, a pair of running shoes, and a jigsaw puzzle
    May 28 2025

    Plot twist—I’m the guest this week.

    And there’s no one I’d rather hand the reins to than my BFF (and producer of this podcast), Jenna. We get into the details of my writing process—from early research to finding the right title—and talk about the kinds of fantasy I’m drawn to, and why. We explore how setting functions as a character in my stories, the balance between realism and the fantastical, and the logic behind how my worlds work.

    Also, yes, we talk about mermaids. Because the ocean is still mostly unexplored, and hope is a powerful thing.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Summoning Laura Steven: A flat white, a perfect pastry, and a chess match she's not favored to win
    May 21 2025

    This week, we summon Laura Steven, author of The Exact Opposite of Okay and Our Infinite Fates, for a thoughtful and refreshingly frank conversation. She walks us through the slow-burn nature of her creative process, opens up about the very real highs and lows of life in publishing, and reminds us that believing in yourself can be its own kind of survival skill. It’s a deep dive into persistence, perspective, and the long game of storytelling.

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    49 mins