Silverthought Press presents a new podcast for writers, critics, readers, publishers, editors, and fans of fiction. Our host, author Mark R. Brand, cooks a delicious breakfast for an author or two each episode and they talk shop about writing, writers, and the industry of producing fiction. Gossip, humor, and hijinks are very much encouraged.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Episode 5: Lindsay Hunter and Natalie Edwards
We are pleased to bring you the premiere of Breakfast With the Author Episode 5, with special guests Lindsay Hunter and Natalie Edwards!
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Extra: Korean Sweet Potato Pancakes
Episode 5 will premiere on November 11th, 2011. In the meantime, we are proud to present Korean Sweet Potato Pancakes: A Breakfast With the Author Extra.
In this short special feature video, the first of a planned series of mini-episodes, I demonstrate how to make one of the dishes I cooked for the guests of Episode 6. Sick of the same tired old home-fries? Try these. Enjoy!
Get your yams on. |
In this short special feature video, the first of a planned series of mini-episodes, I demonstrate how to make one of the dishes I cooked for the guests of Episode 6. Sick of the same tired old home-fries? Try these. Enjoy!
Labels:
Extra,
Host,
Korean,
Production,
Recipe,
Sweet Potato,
Technical
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Behind the Scenes: Roosters, Iron Men, Frying Bacon, and the sounds of Breakfast With the Author
One of the most fun parts of editing down the footage of Breakfast With the Author is putting together the soundscape. From the rooster crowing at the beginning to first strains of our title song, every moment of each episode is carefully calculated to come out sounding its best.
The rooster sound is a public domain .wav file that I downloaded quite some time ago from a free sound effects page, and the bacon frying sound effect and title song are both used under a generous creative commons license from SoundJay.com. The title song of the show, incidentally, is called "Iron Man" and can be heard in full on the SoundJay website along with loads of other great background music for your own projects if you so choose.
One thing that's been a real challenge for me as I've recorded these episodes is that the two cameras I use (an iPhone 4 in a custom tripod mount and a Kodak Z650) each have very different microphone gains. Which means one usually records too loudly and the other too softly. Sometimes the iPhone will lose the lower register of my guests' voices and I'll need to boost the volume/gain of the audio track or even occasionally swap in the audio from the other camera for that shot in the mixdown. Other times the Z650 will be so sensitive that it zeroes in on the stove fan in the kitchen and overlays everything with an infernal hum that will have to be fixed and de-hissed later.
For things like the on-location video shot at Jumbo's Diner in Gouverneur, NY, I had to actually strip the audio completely out of the original video footage and reprocess it in Apple's handy GarageBand software, extruding the voices, canceling out the at-times-overwhelming background noise, and then compressing it back down so it sounded normal. This ended up being the most time-consuming part of producing that entire episode, but at least now in the final version all the voices are audible. I can't say enough good things about the Apple hardware I use to edit and master the videos. There's no way I'd be able to achieve the final quality I get without it.
The rooster sound is a public domain .wav file that I downloaded quite some time ago from a free sound effects page, and the bacon frying sound effect and title song are both used under a generous creative commons license from SoundJay.com. The title song of the show, incidentally, is called "Iron Man" and can be heard in full on the SoundJay website along with loads of other great background music for your own projects if you so choose.
One thing that's been a real challenge for me as I've recorded these episodes is that the two cameras I use (an iPhone 4 in a custom tripod mount and a Kodak Z650) each have very different microphone gains. Which means one usually records too loudly and the other too softly. Sometimes the iPhone will lose the lower register of my guests' voices and I'll need to boost the volume/gain of the audio track or even occasionally swap in the audio from the other camera for that shot in the mixdown. Other times the Z650 will be so sensitive that it zeroes in on the stove fan in the kitchen and overlays everything with an infernal hum that will have to be fixed and de-hissed later.
For things like the on-location video shot at Jumbo's Diner in Gouverneur, NY, I had to actually strip the audio completely out of the original video footage and reprocess it in Apple's handy GarageBand software, extruding the voices, canceling out the at-times-overwhelming background noise, and then compressing it back down so it sounded normal. This ended up being the most time-consuming part of producing that entire episode, but at least now in the final version all the voices are audible. I can't say enough good things about the Apple hardware I use to edit and master the videos. There's no way I'd be able to achieve the final quality I get without it.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Author Spotlight: Gina Frangello
Gina Frangello is the author of the novel My Sister's Continent (2006) and the collection Slut Lullabies (2010). She is the editor of the collection Falling Backwards: Stories of Fathers and Daughters (2004), and she co-edited the collection Men Undressed: Women Writers on the Male Sexual Experience (2011). She is the fiction editor of The Nervous Breakdown, co-founder and Executive Editor of Other Voices Books, and she teaches creative writing at Columbia College and Northwestern University's School of Continuing Studies. Her next book, A Life in Men will be released in 2013 by Algonquin Books.
As relaxed and unpretentious as she is, Gina would probably laugh and disagree if you called her out on being a little bit of a super-mom, but she not only writes, edits, publishes, and teaches; she's also a busy wife and mother with three kids at home. Like many of my favorite authors, she lets her family inform her writing, and it's clear if you spend more than five minutes around her that they enrich her life as much as we can be sure having her enriches theirs.
Aside from her arsenal of writing projects and teaching/editorial duties, and of course being the mom that we all (including us men) wish we could be, she also has contributed to just an astonishing number of interviews, guest blog appearances, articles, essays, and so forth online; everywhere from the Chicago Tribune to the Huffington Post. When I say "astonishing" I mean go to Google's search page and type in any random phrase, like "Irish jug band music" and you can be sure that at some point Gina has had something nuanced, incisive, and on-point to say about it that you'll wish you had thought of first. I'm only half-joking about this.
Readers of my blog will remember that her collection Slut Lullabies was one of my two favorite books of 2010 (tied with The Hunger Games), and I have a second copy of it on my bookshelf that I rescued from the diabolical clutches of Davis Schneiderman's book-dunking guillotine apparatus during Printer's Ball 2011. At first I thought I might lend out the second orphan copy but now I think I'm just going to keep both of them and make you buy your own. You'll thank me later.
As relaxed and unpretentious as she is, Gina would probably laugh and disagree if you called her out on being a little bit of a super-mom, but she not only writes, edits, publishes, and teaches; she's also a busy wife and mother with three kids at home. Like many of my favorite authors, she lets her family inform her writing, and it's clear if you spend more than five minutes around her that they enrich her life as much as we can be sure having her enriches theirs.
Aside from her arsenal of writing projects and teaching/editorial duties, and of course being the mom that we all (including us men) wish we could be, she also has contributed to just an astonishing number of interviews, guest blog appearances, articles, essays, and so forth online; everywhere from the Chicago Tribune to the Huffington Post. When I say "astonishing" I mean go to Google's search page and type in any random phrase, like "Irish jug band music" and you can be sure that at some point Gina has had something nuanced, incisive, and on-point to say about it that you'll wish you had thought of first. I'm only half-joking about this.
Readers of my blog will remember that her collection Slut Lullabies was one of my two favorite books of 2010 (tied with The Hunger Games), and I have a second copy of it on my bookshelf that I rescued from the diabolical clutches of Davis Schneiderman's book-dunking guillotine apparatus during Printer's Ball 2011. At first I thought I might lend out the second orphan copy but now I think I'm just going to keep both of them and make you buy your own. You'll thank me later.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Author Spotlight: Kathleen Rooney
Author, editor, and professor Kathleen Rooney is up to something. Lots of things, as it turns out. She is the author of the non-fiction books For You, For You, I Am Trilling These Songs (2010), Live Nude Girl: My Life as an Object (2009), Reading with Oprah: the Book Club that Changed America (2008), the chapbook After Robinson Has Gone, (2011), and a poetry collection with the pronunciation-defying title Oniromance (an epithalamion) (2007).
Oh and, you know, a couple of other things: Rooney co-wrote two chapbooks and a full-length poetry collection with Elisa Gabbert, she's an editor and co-founder of Rose Metal Press, she's a visiting assistant professor at DePaul University where she teaches both undergraduate and graduate level courses in English, she's the writer-in-residence at Roosevelt University this year, she participates in the Chicago Poetry Brothel, and has been featured in basically every reading and literary event in the city at one point or another. So yeah. She's up to something all right. She's making me feel like if I wanted to keep up with her tempo of participation in the literary world I'd need to clone myself several times and obtain at least one H.G. Wells-style time machine.
Keeping in tradition with many of the other writers and editors I've had on the show, Rooney defies the sheer number of hours in a day by seemingly being everywhere at once, and not just in the perfunctory sense. She and her husband (the author Martin Seay) are constant fixtures of the literary world in Chicago and chances are if something cool is happening there on any given night, one or both of them will be there. She has an encyclopedic knowledge of good reading the way that one friend everyone has can always come up with the perfect song for any mood. I'm not afraid to say that she's suggested several of my favorite most recent reads, and if she happens to mention in passing that you should check out a particular book, my advice, friends, is to do so.
Incidentally, the word epithalamion means "a poem or song in honor of a bride and groom".
Oh and, you know, a couple of other things: Rooney co-wrote two chapbooks and a full-length poetry collection with Elisa Gabbert, she's an editor and co-founder of Rose Metal Press, she's a visiting assistant professor at DePaul University where she teaches both undergraduate and graduate level courses in English, she's the writer-in-residence at Roosevelt University this year, she participates in the Chicago Poetry Brothel, and has been featured in basically every reading and literary event in the city at one point or another. So yeah. She's up to something all right. She's making me feel like if I wanted to keep up with her tempo of participation in the literary world I'd need to clone myself several times and obtain at least one H.G. Wells-style time machine.
Keeping in tradition with many of the other writers and editors I've had on the show, Rooney defies the sheer number of hours in a day by seemingly being everywhere at once, and not just in the perfunctory sense. She and her husband (the author Martin Seay) are constant fixtures of the literary world in Chicago and chances are if something cool is happening there on any given night, one or both of them will be there. She has an encyclopedic knowledge of good reading the way that one friend everyone has can always come up with the perfect song for any mood. I'm not afraid to say that she's suggested several of my favorite most recent reads, and if she happens to mention in passing that you should check out a particular book, my advice, friends, is to do so.
Incidentally, the word epithalamion means "a poem or song in honor of a bride and groom".
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Author Spotlight: Jason Fisk
Photo by Jason Pettus |
Like past guests Ben Tanzer and Davis Schneiderman, Fisk is also a dad, and this fact is not lost on his audience. Families and, perhaps more specifically, the proverbial ones-we-love figure prominently in his work. The contemplative way he approaches this subject brings roaring, sustaining relevance to otherwise disarmingly quiet, understated prose and poems. He also doesn't shy away from tackling the harder-to-swallow moments of everyday life in a masterful way that will leave you feeling at first like everything's going to be okay, and later like maybe you aren't so sure.
While I'm thinking of it, note that three of the books above were released in 2011, which makes this year something a hat-trick for Fisk.With so much recent work you might imagine he's relatively new to writing, but you'd be very wrong about that. His poetry and/or prose has been featured in ChicagoPoetry.com, remark, Black Book Press, Blowback Magazine, True Poet Magazine, Showcase Press - Online Journal, Literary Fever, decomP, Word Riot, Litsnack, Boston Literary Magazine, Alternating Current, Breadcrumb Scabs, Ex Cathedra... (deep breath) ...Leaf Garden Press, Mastodon Dentist, The Medulla Review, Midwest Literary Magazine, The Circle Magazine, Zygote In My Coffee, Tamafyhr Mountain Poetry, Underground Voices, Laura Hird Poetry Showcase, Thieves Jargon, The Orange Room Review, This Zine Will Change Your Life, What to Wear During an Orange Alert, Origami Condom, Nibble, Pure Francis, See You're Not Really Reading This Anymore Are You This List Is Just Enormous I Could Type Anything Here And You'd Never Even See It Banana Sheboygan Darth Vader Applesauce Twelve Cockpit Elephant Sombrero, Nerve Cowboy, Oak Bend Review, In Between Altered States, Gloom Cupboard, Experiments in Manhood, and New York Quarterly.
Whew.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Coming Soon: Episode 5!
Episode 5 is going to be premiering very soon, featuring guests Lindsay Hunter and Natalie Edwards. Both former residents of the Sunshine State, and both very funny, entertaining guests, they made Episode 5 easily one of the liveliest installments of Breakfast With the Author yet. To whet your appetite during the countdown to our release, I wanted to post a couple of things. The video below is of Lindsay reading one of her pieces during AWP last year. She's one of my favorite live readers and if you watch this it'll be obvious why.
I wanted to find a video of Natalie reading as well, because she's equally excellent live, but instead I'm going to point you here to one of my favorite short stories of hers. This hilarious piece from the Rumpus.com does a good job of showing off her sense of humor.
Enjoy, and stay tuned for Episode 5!
I wanted to find a video of Natalie reading as well, because she's equally excellent live, but instead I'm going to point you here to one of my favorite short stories of hers. This hilarious piece from the Rumpus.com does a good job of showing off her sense of humor.
Enjoy, and stay tuned for Episode 5!
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Author Spotlight: Ben Tanzer
Father, writer, and blogger Ben Tanzer is, as CCLaP editor Jason Pettus refers to him, arguably the hardest working man in Chicago. He is the author of the novels Lucky Man (2007), Most Likely You'll Go Your Way and I'll Go Mine (2008), You Can Make Him Like You (2011), and My Father's House (2011), the story collection Repetition Patterns (2008), the standalone story Cool, Not Removed (2010), and the collection of essays on running and writing called 99 Problems (2010).
In addition to a slew of excellent, well-recieved books under his belt, he's responsible for This Blog Will Change Your Life, the centerpiece of what he calls a "vast media empire" that encompasses book reviews (This Book Will Change Your Life), posted short fiction (This Zine Will Change Your Life) and regularly-held semi-drunken impromptu interviews with authors (This Podcast Will Change Your Life). He can also be found at a variety of reading series throughout Chicago and elsewhere, including past appearances at the very popular Orange Alert Reading Series, Reading Under the Influence, Quickies!, and So You Think You Have Nerves of Steel?
But as if all of this weren't enough for any non-superhero, Ben is also a devoted father and husband to his family, who figure prominently in his written work. His love for them, and their influence on his personality, bleeds through particularly in his newest books My Father's House and You Can Make Him Like You. He is an avid runner, and when I say "avid" I mean, "borderline obsessive", if, that is, his fascinating commentary about running and writing 99 Problems is to be believed. Given what's already on his plate, we can only presume he runs from 2:30-4:30 AM while the rest of us are just entering REM sleep. Incredibly, and this is an achievement that even he modestly plays down, he also just won an Emmy award for co-writing an award-winning public service announcement to help prevent child abuse.
In addition to a slew of excellent, well-recieved books under his belt, he's responsible for This Blog Will Change Your Life, the centerpiece of what he calls a "vast media empire" that encompasses book reviews (This Book Will Change Your Life), posted short fiction (This Zine Will Change Your Life) and regularly-held semi-drunken impromptu interviews with authors (This Podcast Will Change Your Life). He can also be found at a variety of reading series throughout Chicago and elsewhere, including past appearances at the very popular Orange Alert Reading Series, Reading Under the Influence, Quickies!, and So You Think You Have Nerves of Steel?
But as if all of this weren't enough for any non-superhero, Ben is also a devoted father and husband to his family, who figure prominently in his written work. His love for them, and their influence on his personality, bleeds through particularly in his newest books My Father's House and You Can Make Him Like You. He is an avid runner, and when I say "avid" I mean, "borderline obsessive", if, that is, his fascinating commentary about running and writing 99 Problems is to be believed. Given what's already on his plate, we can only presume he runs from 2:30-4:30 AM while the rest of us are just entering REM sleep. Incredibly, and this is an achievement that even he modestly plays down, he also just won an Emmy award for co-writing an award-winning public service announcement to help prevent child abuse.
Sunday, October 2, 2011
At the Outset
Writers and Friends,
The idea for Breakfast With the Author came to me one night after attending one of my favorite reading series in the city, Orange Alert. Following the readings, I sat for what must have been 2-3 hours with a few of my writer friends and we drank and talked shop about writing. The environment was so relaxed, the company so utterly great, that we soon forgot how long we'd been there. As we reluctantly pulled ourselves away from this impromptu little gathering, it occurred to me how uniquely friendly and welcoming the Chicago literature scene is, and what a shame it was that not every writer, no matter where they live or what the creative climate in their hometown is, has access to such fun, informal, candid, enriching dialogue with other authors. Breakfast With the Author is my attempt to bring this sit-down, this little insider moment, to the rest of the world, and I very much hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
I'm posting this today exactly one year after the initial pilot podcast appeared. In that time, it has gone from just a basic vague idea to the sort of thing people know about me before we've even met, which continues to delight and astound me. I'd like to take a moment at the outset to thank my wife for being so supportive of this project and offer a kind thank you to all of the writers and editors who took the time to come and have breakfast with me. I make the show, but it's you that make it happen.
-Mark
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Episode 4: Paul Hughes, Russell Lutz and Len Nicholas
Episode 4: Guests Paul Hughes, Russell Lutz and Len Nicholas
Monday, January 31, 2011
Episode 3: Davis Schneiderman and Lawrence Santoro
Episode 3: Guests Davis Schneiderman and Lawrence Santoro
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