Creative Dynamos Podcast Por Scott Roche arte de portada

Creative Dynamos

Creative Dynamos

De: Scott Roche
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I interview creative people; artists, writers, musicians, and others. We talk about their creative process, what inspires them, and how they got started.Scott Roche Arte Historia y Crítica Literaria
Episodios
  • Creative Dynamos 036 - Brian Rathbone on Fantasy, Marketing, and “Witches and Scoundrels and Fools"
    Mar 16 2026

    In episode 36 of Creative Dynamos, fantasy author Brian Rathbone discusses his path from horse training and a 35-year technology career to self-publishing, including mentally developing stories for years before writing after a 2005 layoff. He recounts early mistakes like an expensive print run with no distribution, later success selling eBooks via MobiPocket (before Amazon acquired it), and setbacks from Amazon’s 2016 algorithm and Kindle Unlimited shift. Rathbone explains defining personal success, building audience through free podcast novels, and focusing on long-term backlist sales using aggressive price rotations, SEO-focused metadata, and wide distribution, with Google Play and Chirp as key channels. He outlines his 12-book epic fantasy series built as four complete trilogies, a children’s book success (“The Silliest Dragon”), lessons on cliffhangers, community collaboration, and his in-progress historical fantasy duology “Witches and Scoundrels and Fools,” aiming for completion by year’s end. He shares where to find him at https://brianrathbone.com, on Threads as “Fantasy author Brian Rathbone,” and via email at brian@brianrathbone.com.

    00:00 Meet Brian Rathbone

    00:32 From Farm to Fantasy

    02:24 First Epic and Publishing Reality

    04:35 Print Run Mistakes and Early Ebooks

    06:17 Amazon Shifts and Cliffhanger Lessons

    07:58 Defining Success and Audiobooks

    12:12 Backlist Strategy and Going Wide

    16:33 World of Gods Premise

    19:19 Accidental Kids Books

    21:50 Unexpected Global Readers

    23:45 What Epic Fantasy Means

    26:33 Writing Accessible Series and Social Snippets

    29:03 Content That Feels Human

    30:19 Platform Wins and Flops

    31:49 Plotting an Epic Series

    32:09 Writing Like a Coder

    33:12 Finding the Series Ending

    34:26 New Historical Fantasy

    36:16 Duology for Marketing

    37:18 Shorts as Proof of Concept

    41:02 Pricing and Free Hooks

    42:16 Retailer SEO Strategy

    44:40 Chirp and Box Sets

    47:43 Collabs and Promoting Others

    50:23 Building Writer Community

    54:39 Podcasts and Approachability

    56:57 Where to Find Brian

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    59 m
  • Creative Dynamos 035: Eric Swett on Armageddon Angels, Faith in Fiction, and Selling Books at Events
    Mar 5 2026

    In episode 35 of Creative Dynamos, I talk with author Eric Swett, discussing the value of local writer communities for sharing advice on writing, marketing, and events. Swett traces his path from D&D dungeon mastering to fiction, shifting from formulaic fantasy to a post-apocalyptic serial and a daily 100-word exercise that became his first published book. He describes his Armageddon Angels series, featuring Justin—an angel who becomes the Grim Reaper—and a four-book arc focused on the horsemen, plus mystery-focused books filling a five-year gap. Swett explains his approach to worldbuilding, his blend of Christian-influenced mythology with fantasy elements, and inspirations like Supernatural and Lovecraft. We cover the benefits and costs of in-person events, strategies for low-cost venues, supportive author communities, and the guiding principle “progress, not perfection,” before sharing where to find Swett online and at upcoming events.


    https://www.instagram.com/innocenteric/

    https://www.facebook.com/ericswettauthorinprogress/

    https://bsky.app/profile/innocenteric.bsky.social

    https://www.tiktok.com/@eswett_mywritersc


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    1 h y 16 m
  • Creative Dynamos Ep. 34: Author Jake Bible on Drabbles, Podcast Fiction, and Writing for Dr. NoSleep
    Feb 23 2026

    I interview horror author Jake Bible, a Bram Stoker–nominated novelist, co-chair of the North Carolina Horror Writers Association chapter, and a primary story writer for Dr. NoSleep podcast studios. Bible shares his writing history (first short-story sale in 2006/2007), his output (about 65 novels and roughly 250 short works), and how he began writing for Dr. NoSleep after responding to a freelancer ad in May 2024, now averaging 3–4 stories a week (sometimes more). He discusses early podcasting his novel “Dead Mech”, building a large audience through free podcast fiction, and his current approach of compiling Dr. NoSleep stories into monthly collections while posting free serialized stories on his Substack without paid subscriptions. Our conversation covers the early “new media” podcast-fiction community, cycles of gatekeeping in indie spaces (including Substack), his views on AI and online pile-ons, and his belief in avoiding self-editing out of fear of offense. Bible explains his focus on drabbles (exactly 100-word stories), including his drabble-structured first novel, and how the form sharpens editing and concision. He talks about balancing paid writing with passion projects, developing screenplays, and his flexible approach to scheduling and writing frequency. Bible also explains why he loves horror—its rule-free creativity, adaptable tropes, and supportive fandom—and how he approaches tropes while maintaining story logic. He directs listeners to jakebible.com and jakebible.substack.com for free fiction every Wednesday and a free drabble every Friday, and highlights his latest release, “It’s Under the Shroud: 10 More NoSleep Stories, Volume Three.” The episode ends with an ad for Mark Burton’s horror/sci-fi thriller “Aroughcoune”, about a genetically modified 15-foot military-bred raccoon escaping a secret lab on Plum Island.


    00:00 Welcome + Meet Horror Author Jake Bible

    00:25 Jake’s Writing Origin Story & Prolific Career Snapshot

    01:50 Landing the Dr. NoSleep Podcast Gig (and Writing at High Volume)

    03:35 The Early Days of Podcast Fiction: iPods, GarageBand, and Serializing a Novel

    06:12 Free Fiction vs. Giving It All Away: Substack Teasers & Collections

    08:34 ‘New Media’ Then and Now: The Wild West Era of Digital Publishing

    11:58 When Indie Movements Become Gatekeepers: Cliques, Rules, and Substack Cycles

    15:53 AI, Accusations, and Genre Dogma: Why the Struggles Stay the Same

    19:21 Drabbles 101: The 100-Word Story and Why Jake Swears by It

    25:06 Writing ‘Bonkers’ Horror: No Idea Is Too Much (and Handling Controversy)

    29:25 Don’t Self-Edit: Writing Characters Who Disagree With You

    31:08 Tea, Picard, and Trusting Your Creative Instincts (Indie Freedom)

    32:29 The Working Writer Reality: Too Many Ideas, Not Enough Time

    36:13 Time Management Without a Schedule: Writing in the Cracks

    38:08 “Write Every Day” Is Bad Advice: Grace, No Rules, and Chaos English

    41:48 Why Horror? Halloween DNA, No Rules, and the Nicest Fandom

    47:07 Using Tropes Without Getting Trapped: The Road Trip Analogy

    50:49 Genre Rulebooks vs Horror Freedom (LitRPG, Romance, and Story Logic)

    54:54 Wrap-Up: Where to Find Jake Bible + New Releases

    56:31 Outro Ad: Raccoon—Conspiracies, Genetic Experiments, and a Giant Predator

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    57 m
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