Sarah Knight

How did you become a writer?

I’ve always been a writer—a dabbler, a periodic poster, an infrequently paid contributor—but how did I become a real, live, published author of two books? Well, after I quit my job as a book editor at Simon & Schuster, I had an idea, drafted a proposal, showed it to a literary agent (who had expressed interest in whatever I might do after I left corporate publishing), and she sold the hell out of it. My path was certainly less fraught than many of the writers I’ve worked with, because I had good connections and a deep understanding of the business, but ultimately it was all about getting struck with a great idea and then executing it.

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

My high school English teacher, Bonnie Jean Cousineau, was a great champion of mine, and I credit her with developing my childhood love of reading into a deeper intellectual pursuit of literature. My Uncle Bob, who recently passed away, was my “biggest fan” (his words) and always said I would write a book someday. Turns out, he was right.

As to stylists, I love any writer who can grab me from the first line and propel me through a book, whether a novel or nonfiction. My favorite first line of all time is from John Irving’s A Prayer for Owen Meany:

"I am doomed to remember a boy with a wrecked voice—not because of his voice, or because he was the smallest person I ever knew, or even because he was the instrument of my mother’s death, but because he is the reason I believe in God; I am a Christian because of Owen Meany."

When you think about it, even just the first three words are more compelling than the opening lines of most books!

I always want to be surprised and entertained when I read, which is probably why, during my career as an editor, I gravitated toward commercial fiction (specifically thrillers and suspense), humor, and celebrity memoir. But I also worked with many literary writers whose prose and plotting was equally page-turning. I’m not one to revel in a beautifully crafted but static novel—I like to feel invigorated when I read.

Finally, I’m such a word nerd that I love writers who are inventive and playful with language, like Nabokov. My own books (The Life-Changing Magic of Not Giving a F*ck and Get Your Sh*t Together) are nowhere near his orbit, of course, but I do like to play around with language and I have several fuckmanteaus to show for it.

When and where do you write? 

I am a creature of habit, and my brain works best between about noon and four p.m., so that’s when I do most of my work. Now that I live in the Dominican Republic (my husband and I moved here from Brooklyn last year), I write at our outdoor dining table, overlooking the pool and garden, and with a never-ending parade of lizards to provide distraction.

What are you working on now? 

I’m crafting a piece for Medium called How To Switch Seats On An Airplane, inspired by my recent trip to Miami to give a TEDx talk. As I say in Get Your Sh*t Together, I have a real beef with people who think I guess I’ll just sit wherever is a viable strategy for ticketed airline travel.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block? 

Not in a serious way, thankfully. Both of my books were written on extremely tight deadlines (four weeks and ten weeks, respectively) so I really had to put my butt in the seat every day to grind out the words. Some days, they came more easily than others, and every once in a while I had to admit defeat and just take a day off—and inevitably, the words poured forth with gusto after my brief mental vacation.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received?

If you have to explain the joke, it’s not funny.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Respect the process. Whether you’re just trying to finish a draft of a book, or sending out query letters to agents, or you’ve got a contract and are working with a publisher, there are no magic shortcuts to writing a book or publishing one. Eventually there will be lots of people other than you whose opinions and experience shape the book’s trajectory. It’s important to keep that in mind and not try to cut corners. Patience, Grasshopper.

Sarah Knight is the internationally-bestselling author of two profane self-help books: The Life-Changing Magic of Not Giving a F*ck and Get Your Sh*t Together, which have been translated into seventeen languages and counting. She lives in the Dominican Republic, and you can follow her on Twitter, Instagram, and Medium @MCSnugz.

Amy Ephron

How did you become a writer?

I think I’ve always written; my sister Delia embarrassingly recited a poem I wrote when I was four the other day in front of a crowd at a crowded bookstore. It rhymed. Writing was something I always did and was encouraged to do by my mother and father and also possibly something I compelled to do, because I liked it and…and I had stories in my head and sometimes I’d discover a story along the way.

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

My parents were writers and I think they encouraged us to “tell stories,” either about our day at the dinner table or on paper. They certainly encouraged and enticed us to read I also felt that books were magical places when I was a kid, places I could get lost in, that the characters were real and the places they lived, even if they were fantasies, totally existed. I still feel that way. And it was a lovely place to get lost in.

When and where do you write?

I always say that, for me, books get written a sentence at a time…that you write in your head sometimes and then put it on paper, and having once been a single mother to three kids, I never quite had the kind of schedule where I could block hours, weeks, days…. Some people need to do that, to have a set time and place. But write best with the view though on a window…possibly essential element in my office which is why I often have a writing table in the middle (or corner) or the living room...if that’s the better view.

What are you working on now?

I’ve just published my first novel for children, I call it a modern day mash-up of an old-fashioned children’s book, “The Castle in the Mist.”

I’m on book tour, which is amazing and fascinating, as I’m visiting not only wonderful bookstores, cities, conference, but also doing a lot of school events and interfacing with young and amazing students 3-7th grade…so in a way, at the moment, I’m having a lot of fun teaching as the book is a little about believing in yourself, believing in magic, with a bit of wild astronomy and possible other-worldly-ness thrown in and the deep belief that wishes can come true. But secretly, I might be writing something.

Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?

Some things are harder to write than others but difficult to structure or to crack or to get right, but I’ve never quite had that “writer’s block” thing.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received?

That if more than one person gives you a note, there’s probably some thing you should look at. Not that the person who gave you the note necessarily gave you the right fix, but that if two or three people tag the same section or sentence, there’s probably something you look take a look at.

What’s your advice to new writers?

Find your own voice. And find the right voice for the piece you’re writing, whether it’s first person or a narrator, the voice a story is told in is an excellent place to start.

Amy Ephron (www.amyephron.com) is the author of several adult books, including A Cup of Tea, which was an international bestseller and won the 2005 Southern California Booksellers Association award for fiction. Her book One Sunday Morning received the Booklist Best Fiction of the Year and Best Historical Fiction of the Year Awards and was a Barnes & Noble Book Club selection. She is a contributor and contributing editor at Vogue and Vogue.com, and her work has appeared in The New York Times, House Beautiful, and the LA Times, among other publications. Amy was also the executive producer of Warner Brothers’ A Little Princess. The Castle in the Mist is her first book for children. Amy lives in Los Angeles with her husband; between them they have five children.

Daniel Paisner

How did you become a writer?

I've always thought of myself as a writer, going all the way back to elementary school. First grade or so, I used to publish a neighborhood newspaper with some friends, hand-written, which one of our mothers would run off on a mimeograph machine at work. Out of that, coming to political awareness in the Watergate-era, I wanted to be Woodward or Bernstein. And I did start out as a reporter, of a kind, although not the swashbuckling, muckraking kind I'd imagined. I was the editor of the student newspaper at college, and then I became a stringer for the New York Times and the Associated Press. In grad school, while I was pursuing a master's in journalism, I worked part-time for a local daily, covering school board meetings and suspicious fires - mostly ho-hum stuff. Alongside of that, I started writing fiction. I wrote my first novel while I was still in school, and it was apparently good enough to land me a venerable New York City literary agent but not quite good enough to land me a book deal. (Sigh.) Somewhere in there, I found I had a talent for capturing people's voices and personalities on the page, so I fell in to the collaborative work that has stamped my career.

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

I was introduced to Hemingway early on -- The Nick Adams Stories, back when I was still in middle school. Thank goodness for the teacher who turned me on to them. What struck me then, and since, was the simplicity of the language, the simplicity of the stories. Not a whole lot happened, and there was not a whole lot of adornment in the telling of what happened, and I thought that was exciting as hell. It ran completely counter to the ways we were invariably taught to write in class, in purplish prose, with big words we couldn't possible understand without a thesaurus. Soon, Hemingway led to Mailer, only not in the ways most people come to admire Mailer. I'd been struck by Why Are We in Vietnam? and An American Dream, but what really floored me was his long-form non-fiction. His magazine work. Miami and the Seige of Chicago. It was startling, vigorous. It was fresh. And he was a part of the story, as often as not. And then, with keen interest, I read The Executioner's Song as soon as it came out, and I was floored. Like Hemingway, the writing was spare, taut. But it was also electric. There was a current to it — you could feel it! I set that book down, probably the longest book I'd read to that point, and I came away thinking I wanted to write like that. The story read like an epic novel, but it was painstaking and true and intimate. Powerful. And what a lot of people forget was that the reporting of that book was well underway before Mailer ever signed on to the project. In many ways, he was like Gary Gilmore's "ghost," rooting around inside the head of this broken man and inviting his readers to join him. And so, for the work I would come to do in collaboration with others, the book became a kind of road map. It showed me what was possible, writing within the constraints of someone else's story.

When and where do you write?

Here and there. Now and then. When I'm working on a novel, the words seem to find me best at my desk, in the wee hours, when the house is quiet and the world has been put on pause. For the collaborative work I do, I'm able to work anywhere -- on the fly, if I have to. One of my favorite things is to sit and write on a plane, middle-seated, believing that my seat mates on either side are probably stealing a glance or two at the screen on my tray table. Or, not...and yet I get it in my head that I'm writing for an audience, in real-time, although of course this is only in my head, because I can't imagine there are too many idiots like me who like to "eavesdrop" on other people's work in this way.

What are you working on now?

I've just finished working on a book with Ohio governor John Kasich that is partly about the 2016 Presidential campaign, and partly a hopeful look forward at ways to set right the American pendulum. We've worked together on two previous books, before he was elected governor, but this time out he's occupying a somewhat more prominent place on the national stage, so we're looking forward to how that book will be received. He has an important message to share with readers, and it's an honor to be on board to help him do so. I'm also working on a motivational business book with FUBU founder and "Shark Tank" panelist Daymond John, who's become a leading voice for young entrepreneurs; and, a desperately sad true crime story that I keep putting off in part because it's so desperately sad but also because I need to put a little space between the heartbreak I felt in learning the facts of this story and the objectivity I'll need to put in its place in order to share it effectively with readers. Also, I've started in on a new novel, so the plan is to carve out month-long chunks of uninterrupted time for me to work on it, in and around these other projects.

Have you ever suffered from writer's block?

Yes and no. Yes, when I'm working on a novel. I'll be brick-walled on a plot point, or a direction I may or may not want to be taking. I don't typically work with an outline, so even though I might have a sense of where a story is going, I have no idea how I'll get there. That feeling is a little bit thrilling, and a little bit terrifying, and I've learned over the years to trust in it and give myself over to it. And yet when I'm working on a non-fiction piece, especially in collaboration, on someone else's autobiography or memoirs, there's never a block. The story is the story - it's all so right there. The story has already been lived, it only falls to me to help tell it, and the writing at these times feels to me more like a craft than an art.

What's the best writing advice you've ever received?

I had a writing professor in college, really more of a mentor than a professor. His name was Alan Lebowitz — one of the world's great Melville scholars, and an accomplished novelist in his own right. He was the chairman of the English Department at Tufts University — and he was the one who turned me on to Mailer in a full-on way. Anyway, a group of used to sit around his coffee table for hours each week, sharing our work, breaking it down, pushing each other. I came to value Alan's opinion a great deal, and we stayed in touch for a while after I graduated. He'd weigh in from time to time on something I'd written, and I was always grateful for his comments. But then, a bunch of time went by, and I learned he was retiring, so I reached out to him and we fell in to talking. I told him I'd written a new novel and asked if I could send it to him. So I sent him my second novel, Mourning Wood, just to hear what he had to say about it. A couple weeks later, he sent me back a note that said, "Write another one." That's all. Now, maybe that meant he thought the novel was crap, and that I should set it aside and move on, but I took it to mean that the stuff of a writing life was to build a body of work, to look ever forward, to keep writing -- one way to look at it, right?

What's your advice to new writers?

Read. Read. Read. That's the groundwork, the foundation. When you read, you begin to see what's possible. When you read, you build a template. When you read, you absorb the language of literature, the structure, the form. You open your mind to new ways of thinking, new ways of looking out at the world. And so, read. It goes without saying, and yet it needs saying, so there's that. Also, this: write for yourself. Hold your own attention. Keep at it, and find ways to surprise yourself as you move along. Don't worry who will publish your book, who will read your book, who will review your book...just go ahead and write the damn thing. People will come to it, or they won't. People will spark to it, or they won't. But write the book you want to read. Print it out and hold it in your hands. Marvel at what you've accomplished. Then go ahead and write another one.  

Daniel Paisner is well-known to publishers (and somewhat less well-known to readers) as the author of more than 60 books, including 14 New York Times best-sellers. As a ghostwriter, he has written more than 50 books in collaboration with athletes, actors, politicians, business leaders and ordinary individuals with extraordinary stories to tell. He is co-author of the acclaimed Holocaust memoir The Girl in the Green Sweater, written with Krystyna Chiger and the gripping 9/11 diary Last Man Down: A Firefighter’s Story of Survival and Escape from the World Trade Center, with FDNY Deputy Chief Richard Picciotto –- both international best-sellers. He recently completed a campaign memoir with Ohio Governor John Kasich -- Two Paths: America Divided or United, to be published by St. Martin's Press in April.

He has also written several books of his own, including The Ball: Mark McGwire’s 70th Home Run Ball and the Marketing of the American Dream – a singular tale of the Rawlings baseball that stood for a few fleeting moments as the Holy Grail of sports memorabilia. He is the author of three novels: A Single Happened Thing ("... poignant and whimsical..." - The Millions); “Mourning Wood” (“… has the makings of a cult favorite…” – Booklist, starred review); and, Obit (“… a classic mystery novel…” – The Boston Globe).

Over the course of his ghostwriting career, Paisner has taken on the real-life personas of dozens of compelling individuals, including a World Series of Poker champion; the son of a Yanomami tribeswoman; a plus-size supermodel; an FBI hostage negotiator; a three-term Democratic Mayor of New York City; a three-term Republican Governor of New York State; a network television weatherman; a daytime television talk show host; a #1 ranked women's tennis player; a bilateral amputee mountaineer; an Oscar winner; an Emmy winner, a Tony winner; an "Apprentice" winner; a former First Daughter; a current First Daughter; a New York City bail bondsman; an undersea explorer; a world champion surfer; a foul-mouthed, misogynist comedian; an urban fashion mogul; a Cosby kid; an Olympic swimmer; an autistic high school student; and on and on. He has been nominated, improbably, for an NAACP Image Award, for his work on Daymond John's best-selling book, The Power of Broke.