John Kaag

How did you become a writer?

My brother went into the hard sciences, so I went into philosophy. I think I didn’t want to have to compete with him. Writing is what you do as a professional philosopher. But writing well is not. I have only in the last year considered myself a writer because I got tenure and had the freedom not to be strictly a philosopher. 

Name your writing influences (writers, books, teachers, etc.).

My mother (I know it is trite) is a beautiful writer and an English teacher. Probably my most formidable critic too. I have learned the most from her. I taught Expository Writing at Harvard for a time so my students (both there and at UMass Lowell) actually taught me a great deal about how to make an argument in compelling ways. I hated reading growing up. I just couldn’t sit still. But when I hit grade school, I began to pick up my brother’s books from college—Victor Frankl, Dostoyevsky (I am still blown away by his shorter pieces), and Tolstoy. They seemed exotic and somehow kept my attention long enough to learn something, I think. You can learn a lot about writing from reading philosophy (not today’s for the most part): Thoreau, Emerson, and Jane Addams are some of my favorites.  I have never read much contemporary fiction, but I should. I think I get some sense why David Foster Wallace is so enormously popular. I have learned something about writing personally from his Kenyon speech and the essays from Consider the Lobster. So his non-fiction, I guess. 

When and where do you write?

At home, on the couch, in the hour or two that I can steal when my toddler daughter is napping. I tend not to write at night (things get muddled and I tend to get a little anxious). I used to write in the early morning. But I usually can’t rouse myself before the little one gets up at 6.00. When she grows up, I suspect I will return to writing in the three hours between 6 and 9 in the morning with a cup of coffee, piece of toast and a banana. 

What are you working on now?

I am working on a collection of essays tentatively entitled “Think Again.” It is a book that came out of a conversation with a friend-philosopher about the irrelevance of today’s mainstream philosophy. We promised each other to submit an op-ed or popular essay a week for a year. We didn’t quite make that ambitious output, but we came close. A sort of experiment in public philosophy. The pieces/chapters address current issues in education, politics and culture. I guess I am really just working to find a publisher for that book. I am not really sure how to go about it since I am not keen to write another university-press book. Also, I am writing a book about drone warfare with Sarah Kreps which is due in August, but that is more standard philosophical fare. 

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

Yes. One horrible bout of it. Only one. It lasted three years. I was fifteen, which might seem too young to have a real bout of writer’s block, but you would be surprised. My mother had just raked me over the coals for one of my English essays, and I just clammed up. I couldn’t work on another piece of writing for the rest of high school without her help and guidance. She sort of led through the block by making me her writing apprentice. Every time I had an assignment, she would make me write the draft first and then spend an evening with me working through the remaining problems. That companionship and tutelage made a big difference when it came to writer’s block.   

What’s your advice to new writers?

Write every day. But you already know that. I guess the one piece of advice that some might miss out on is what I fondly call “creative procrastination.” When you get stuck in one piece, or arrive at a transition that you are having trouble with, find another (perhaps more bite-size) piece of writing that can give you a break from your creative problem-child. Come back to the problem after you have done something productive and let the momentum from the small project carry through the larger one. Just make sure that you come back to the larger one. 

John Kaag is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. He has held academic appointments at the Harvard Humanities Center, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Harvard Writing Center. He is the author of two books: Thinking Through the Imagination and Idealism, Pragmatism, and Feminism. In the last year he has turned his attention to more public writing, including essays in the New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor, The Chronicle of Higher Education, the Times Higher Education, the New Left Project, and Shambhala Sun. He lives in Boston with his partner, Carol, and daughter, Becca.  

Kerry Hannon

How did you become a writer?

I began by writing about something I was passionate about—horses!

I always knew I wanted to become writer. I kept a journal from the time I was eight. I wrote my first horsey “novel” when I was 12, scrolled in longhand in three spiral notebooks. It’s still pending publication.

My first paid writing assignments were for equestrian magazines when I was 18. Since I was 9, I have competed in horse shows. So it was a natural for me to begin interview and writing profiles of well-known professional horsemen and women who I met at the competitions–and then selling those profiles to horse specialty magazines, such as The Chronicle of The Horse, Spur and On Course, for anywhere from $75 to $125 a piece.

During my senior year at Duke University, I was an intern with Washingtonian Magazine in Washington, DC, as part of a Washington Journalism semester. When I graduated in 1982, that internship opened the door to a job writing for Pittsburgh Magazine in my hometown of Pittsburgh, PA.

I was lucky enough to be assigned to cover nightlife for the monthly publication, writing profiles of jazz musicians, pianists and comedians, for example, each month and then listing where to go in Pittsburgh for that entertainment.

Talk about a dream job for a 22-year-old.

Brick by brick, I added local business newspapers, and then was hired as a regional correspondent for Advertising Age and Business Week. I wrote a dance column for an alternative newspaper in town. I wrote about anything anyone would assign me to cover from small businesses to local school board meetings to Heinz Ketchup advertising campaigns and ballerinas.

Before I knew it, I had enough clips to score an interview with Forbes magazine, a publication that I had a hankering to write for, mostly because my father was a subscriber and a huge fan of Malcolm Forbes. That interview was landed via chutzpah and by cold-calling the editor who hired reporters and saying that I would be in New York City and asking her if I could I come by to meet her.

Remarkably, she said yes, and I flew to New York. I didn't get a job that day. But six months later, she called and offered me a full-time position as a reporter. Over the next few years, I was promoted to staff writer and editor in the New York office.

After five terrific years at Forbes, I accepted a writing and editing position at Money, followed a few years later by a move to US News & World Report, and then USA Today. Books fell into place as I gained expertise and experience. I now have seven published books. And 12 years ago, I started my own freelance writing business. In addition, I’m now a career transition consultant, mostly for Baby Boomers eyeing career transitions.

Name your writing influences (writers, books, teachers, etc.).

In a random order–my freshman high school teacher Richard Gregory at Shady Side Academy in Pittsburgh, Joan Didion, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Virginia Woolf, Time Magazine editor James Atwater, Anne Lamott, Money magazine editor Richard Eisenberg (now at PBS Next Avenue), Randy Rieland, my editor at Pittsburgh magazine,Forbes Magazine editor Steve Lawrence, Diane Harris, my editor at Working Woman magazine and at Money magazine, John Wiley & Sons editor Debra Englander and Joanna Krotz, one of my editors at Money magazine.

When and where do you write?

I generally write between 5:30 am and 1 pm. Have laptop (MacBook Pro), will travel. I write wherever I happen to be, every day. I write on a couch, at a desk, on a plane, on a train, in a car (if I am a passenger), in bed, on a deck overlooking the ocean. You name it. I can get comfortable and focused practically anywhere. My personal favorite spot is on a porch, or in a comfortable chair, gazing out at Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains.

What are you working on now?

I’m revising and updating my book What’s Next? Follow Your Passion and Find Your Dream Job for the paperback edition, which will be published by The Berkley division of Penguin Group in the spring of 2014. I just finished writing a new book proposal and it is ready to be sent out by my agent in the next week or so. In addition, I write a weekly column for PBS Next Avenue for boomer women focused on personal finance issues. I write a weekly column for Forbes.com on career transitions for workers over 50. I write a monthly column for AARP, where I am the resident Jobs Expert.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

You bet, but it never lasts too long. I just have to wait it out, do something else until the moment strikes, and off I go, lost in the words. For me, it’s the creative spark of deciding where to start the narrative that pushes me off the mark. Once I have a lede, I’m gone into the zone. I don’t look back.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Write every day. Take assignments that push you outside your comfort zone. Be curious. Stretch to learn new subjects.

Meet people in person for interviews whenever you can. Phone and email lose something in translation.

Don't worry too much about the pay, if possible. It’s the discipline, practice and experience that you’re working for in those early stages. Seek out a variety of editors to work with who can help you hone your craft.

Importantly, when it comes to the actual writing process, just write that first draft. It doesn’t have to be perfect, or even close to it. Just do it. The next step-editing and smoothing is simple mechanics. Your heart is in that first draft no matter how bad it is. That’s the joy of writing.

Trust that it’s all there…and then bring out the paring knife and step away. You have to be heartless now, but the personal piece is behind you. Now you’re the reader, not the writer.

Kerry Hannon is a bestselling author and Washington, DC-based career, retirement and personal finance expert.

Kerry’s latest book is the national bestseller Great Jobs for Everyone 50+: Finding Work That Keeps You Happy and Healthy ... And Pays the Bills (John Wiley & Sons, 2012).

Kerry has spent more than 25 years covering all aspects of personal finance for the nation's leading media companies, including Forbes, Money, U.S. News & World Report and USA Today. She is a nationally recognized authority on boomer career transitions and retirement.

She is AARP’s Jobs Expert and is the Great Jobs columnist for AARP.org.

Kerry is a contributing editor at Forbes Magazine and the Second Verse columnist for Forbes.com and is recognized as the Forbes’ bard of career transitions and “working” retirement issues.

She is the PBS web site NextAvenue.org expert on career and personal finance for boomer women and writes a weekly column.

She is a MetLife Foundation and New America Media Fellow on Aging.

She is the award-winning author of What's Next? Follow Your Passion and Find Your Dream Job (Chronicle Books, 2010).

Kerry is also the author of Getting Started In Estate Planning (John Wiley & Sons), Suddenly Single: Money Skills for Divorcees and Widows (John Wiley & Sons), Ten Minute Guide to Retirement for Women (MacMillan Publishing), and You and Your Money: A Passage from Debt to Prosperity (Credit Education Group) and Trees in a Circle: The Teec Nos Pos Story.

Kerry contributes regularly to The New York Times, USA Today, Money magazine, The Wall Street Journal and other national print and online publications.

She has previously served as a staff reporter and personal finance columnist for USA Today and as a staff writer and editor for U.S. News & World Report, Money, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, and Forbes.

She has appeared as a financial expert on NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams. ABC News, CBS, Fox, CNBC, CNN, and PBS and has been a guest on numerous radio programs, including National Public Radio’s “Talk of The Nation” and "Making a Living" on SIRIUS XM radio show.

Hannon graduated from Shady Side Academy in Pittsburgh Pa. and received a Bachelor of Art’s degree from Duke University. She is currently a member of an editorial board at Duke.

Layton Green

How did you become a writer?

A little bit by accident. While I was working as an attorney, I set out to write a novel that I felt I needed to write. Not because I was a novelist (I had never written a word of fiction, outside of my legal briefs), but because I had a story I wanted to tell. During the process of fumbling through that first novel, I knew, without a shadow of a doubt, that writing novels was what I had to do with my life.

Name your writing influences (writers, books, teachers, etc.).

I’ve learned how to write by reading others, and some (but not nearly all) of my favorite authors are: Dennis Lehane, Herman Hesse, Dan Simmons, James Lee Burke, Michael Gruber, Toni Morrison, Charlie Huston, Hemingway, John Fowles, Fitzgerald, Martin Amis.

When and where do you write?

Every morning for as long as my schedule allows, either in my home office or at a coffee shop.

What are you working on now?

The fourth Dominic Grey novel, a new fantasy series, and polishing a stand alone.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

No.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Write write write, read read read, never write something you’re not passionate about, make sure you’re as original as you can be, voice is everything, go deeper into your story than you ever thought possible -- and then go deeper still.

Layton Green is a mystery-suspense-thriller writer and the author of the Dominic Grey series. In addition to writing, Layton attended law school in New Orleans and was a practicing attorney for the better part of a decade. He has also been an intern for the United Nations, an ESL teacher in Central America, a bartender in London, a seller of cheap knives on the streets of Brixton, a door to door phone book deliverer, and the list goes downhill from there.

He has traveled to more than fifty countries, lived in a number of them, and has a burning desire to see every country, city, beach, moor, castle, cemetery, twisted street and far flung dot on the map. Religion and cults, as well as all things spiritual and supernatural, are a lifelong interest. Roll in fifteen years of Japanese jujitsu training, and the Dominic Grey series was born.

Layton lives with his wife and children in the Atlanta area. Please stop by his website at www.laytongreen.com.