<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[#AmWriting: Hot Seat Coaching]]></title><description><![CDATA[Listen live as we break through creative blocks and polish works-in-progress, turning common writing struggles into actionable breakthroughs.]]></description><link>https://amwriting.substack.com/s/hot-seat-coaching</link><image><url>https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!O3Zv!,w_256,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F61716cd4-f0d5-4772-af27-01286db7656c_256x256.png</url><title>#AmWriting: Hot Seat Coaching</title><link>https://amwriting.substack.com/s/hot-seat-coaching</link></image><generator>Substack</generator><lastBuildDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2026 11:45:05 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://amwriting.substack.com/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><copyright><![CDATA[KJ DellAntonia]]></copyright><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><webMaster><![CDATA[amwriting@substack.com]]></webMaster><itunes:owner><itunes:email><![CDATA[amwriting@substack.com]]></itunes:email><itunes:name><![CDATA[Jennie Nash]]></itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author><![CDATA[Jennie Nash]]></itunes:author><googleplay:owner><![CDATA[amwriting@substack.com]]></googleplay:owner><googleplay:email><![CDATA[amwriting@substack.com]]></googleplay:email><googleplay:author><![CDATA[Jennie Nash]]></googleplay:author><itunes:block><![CDATA[Yes]]></itunes:block><item><title><![CDATA[Hot Seat Coaching: Choosing to Write Big with Andrew Parella]]></title><description><![CDATA[Listen now (43 mins) | Episode 497: Producer Andrew Parrella moves beyond the shadow of Dracula to claim his own gothic world, grappling with POV shifts, historical research, and the "revelation" that changed everything.]]></description><link>https://amwriting.substack.com/p/hot-seat-coaching-choosing-to-write</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://amwriting.substack.com/p/hot-seat-coaching-choosing-to-write</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Jennie Nash]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2026 04:01:34 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/191266557/cf2c443da83b0e6dbdff7dd416b2b536.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Producer Andrew Parrella Claims His Own Gothic World</strong></p><p>In this follow-up session, Jennie Nash checks in with producer-turned-novelist Andrew Parrella, who returns to the &#8220;hot seat&#8221; with a major breakthrough. After a week of &#8220;staring at the screen and walking the dog,&#8221; Andrew realizes he has been &#8220;writing small&#8221; to keep the project manageable. By leaning too heavily on the existing framework of Bram Stoker&#8217;s <em>Dracula</em>, he was inadvertently stifling his own creativity. He decides to &#8220;embrace the big,&#8221; shifting the story from a cautious tribute into a standalone Historical Gothic Mystery. This evolution includes a high-stakes world-building choice: making vampires a known, though unaccepted, part of the public consciousness in 1920s London, adding a layer of modern resonance and social tension to the atmosphere of dread.</p><p>The duo also digs into the &#8220;glaring holes&#8221; that surface when a writer decides to expand their narrative scope. Andrew identifies a need for deeper research into the Suffragette movement to ensure his protagonist&#8217;s familial history feels integrated rather than &#8220;tacked on.&#8221; By connecting the mystery of the protagonist&#8217;s mother to historical activism, Andrew finds a way to ground the supernatural elements in a more 3D reality. As they grapple with the structural puzzle of Point of View&#8212;weighing the benefits of including voices from the past versus staying close to the present&#8212;Jennie challenges Andrew to choose the perspective that best amplifies the protagonist&#8217;s transformation and the secrets hidden within a mysterious Gladstone bag.</p><p><strong>Visit Andrew on the web: </strong><a href="https://www.andrewparrella.com">https://www.andrewparrella.com</a></p><div><hr></div><p>Listen to the first session with Andrew:</p><div class="digest-post-embed" data-attrs="{&quot;nodeId&quot;:&quot;0663d063-f4bf-4442-b7e7-64c84979109a&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;Jennie Nash launches a brand-new Hot Seat Coaching series on the podcast&#8212;real, on-air coaching sessions where listeners get to hear a story develop in real time.&quot;,&quot;cta&quot;:&quot;Listen now&quot;,&quot;showBylines&quot;:true,&quot;showDescription&quot;:true,&quot;showImage&quot;:true,&quot;size&quot;:&quot;lg&quot;,&quot;isEditorNode&quot;:true,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;Hot Seat Coaching: Producer Andrew Parrella Steps Out From Behind the Mic&quot;,&quot;publishedBylines&quot;:[{&quot;id&quot;:111860094,&quot;name&quot;:&quot;Jennie Nash&quot;,&quot;bio&quot;:&quot;I help book coaches level up their editorial and entrepreneurial skills so they can help writers bring their books to life.&quot;,&quot;photo_url&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/6a395aa1-206e-4e81-85ca-6c9fc02c0496_1933x1933.jpeg&quot;,&quot;is_guest&quot;:false,&quot;bestseller_tier&quot;:100}],&quot;post_date&quot;:&quot;2026-03-13T04:01:52.111Z&quot;,&quot;cover_image&quot;:&quot;https://substack-video.s3.amazonaws.com/video_upload/post/189736805/3eed6249-fae5-45b0-9d7b-edc98472b36b/transcoded-1772573299.png&quot;,&quot;cover_image_alt&quot;:null,&quot;canonical_url&quot;:&quot;https://amwriting.substack.com/p/hot-seat-coaching-producer-andrew&quot;,&quot;section_name&quot;:null,&quot;video_upload_id&quot;:null,&quot;id&quot;:189736805,&quot;type&quot;:&quot;podcast&quot;,&quot;reaction_count&quot;:2,&quot;comment_count&quot;:0,&quot;publication_id&quot;:10252,&quot;publication_name&quot;:&quot;#AmWriting&quot;,&quot;publication_logo_url&quot;:&quot;https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!O3Zv!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F61716cd4-f0d5-4772-af27-01286db7656c_256x256.png&quot;,&quot;belowTheFold&quot;:false,&quot;youtube_url&quot;:null,&quot;show_links&quot;:null,&quot;feed_url&quot;:null}"></div><div><hr></div><div class="subscription-widget-wrap-editor" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://amwriting.substack.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe&quot;,&quot;language&quot;:&quot;en&quot;}" data-component-name="SubscribeWidgetToDOM"><div class="subscription-widget show-subscribe"><div class="preamble"><p class="cta-caption">#AmWriting is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></div><form class="subscription-widget-subscribe"><input type="email" class="email-input" name="email" placeholder="Type your email&#8230;" tabindex="-1"><input type="submit" class="button primary" value="Subscribe"><div class="fake-input-wrapper"><div class="fake-input"></div><div class="fake-button"></div></div></form></div></div><p></p><h2>Transcript</h2><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> [00:00:00] Hi, I&#8217;m Jennie Nash and you&#8217;re listening to the hashtag am Writing podcast, the place where we help writers of all kinds play big in your writing life, love the process, and stick with it long enough to finish what matters most. This is a hot seat coaching episode where we work through a real writing challenge in real time.</p><p>Today I&#8217;m talking again with Andrew Perella, the hashtag am writing podcast producer who stepped out from behind the mic to work on his novel. He completed our winter blueprint challenge and is now working on blueprint revisions, which is such an important stage in the writing process, digging into what you really want the book to be, what you really wanna say.</p><p>And Andrew&#8217;s told me he just had a revelation, which I&#8217;m dying to hear about. But um, before we get to that. Um, when we&#8217;re talking here today, the first episode where we did hot seat coaching launched out into the world, and I wanted to ask how [00:01:00] you&#8217;re feeling about that.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Um, it feels a little weird. Um, you know, I&#8217;m used to being behind the mic.</p><p>I&#8217;m used to, um, helping obviously produce a lot of audio over the years and, and, and helped get a lot of podcast episodes out into the world. It&#8217;s strange to. Kind of be featured in a podcast episode. Um, that is a new experience for me. Um, uh, you know, when we recorded it, it was just you and I talking, but now it&#8217;s like out in the world and, uh, and, and people can listen, um, and, uh, and, and, and judge, um, which of course they&#8217;re welcome to do.</p><p>Uh, but uh, but yeah, so it&#8217;s a little, it&#8217;s a little weird, but it&#8217;s fun. It&#8217;s fun.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah, that&#8217;s, that&#8217;s you, you hit the nail on the head, the, the judge part. As soon as you put anything into the world, you put yourself up for judgment. And what we&#8217;re doing here in these sessions is, is really, in some ways so intimate because we&#8217;re getting to watch [00:02:00] somebody&#8217;s thinking as it&#8217;s unfolding, as it&#8217;s progressing before they know what they want it to be.</p><p>And we&#8217;re watching someone hopefully, um. You know, hone in on their, their voice, their story, their point, their whole thing. And it&#8217;s, um, it&#8217;s really special to get to see it unfold, I think. Um, so thank you for. Putting yourself out there.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I&#8217;m, I&#8217;m happy to do it. This is, this has been a really value, this is a really valuable exercise for me personally.</p><p>So, uh, happy to, happy to share that with folks.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So what happened last time was you left with some, uh, homework, which you did. Mm-hmm. And what was interesting from my point of view was when I. Looked at what you did. My first thought was, well, he didn&#8217;t do very much. And I, I sort of thought, uh, okay, that&#8217;s funny.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I kind of felt the same way.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Oh, that&#8217;s really funny. But then when I read it, it was like, oh no, you worked out a [00:03:00] lot of things that we had been circling around. And primarily the, um, I would say the. Personal familial history of abriana and her connection to this famous vampire hunter. So that all got really sorted.</p><p>Um, but the, the one that really made me chuckle was you have this beautiful description of your ideal reader in the blueprint, and it, it&#8217;s probably. I don&#8217;t know, it might be 500 words. It&#8217;s, it&#8217;s like, you know, this ideal reader really well, and I can tell that you actually really love this ideal reader and want to I do, I do.</p><p>Yeah. It&#8217;s really sort of beautiful, um, the specificity of, of who she is, but you added like three lines to the end of that. That was part of what you, what you did. And, um, [00:04:00] one of those lines was. In response to something we talked about, which was, does your ideal reader, are they familiar with Dracula? And you said, now, no.</p><p>So that was really interesting to me. Do you wanna talk a little bit how you landed on that? Because I, I do think it might impact the genre.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Uh, yeah, I agree. And I, I saw your note about the genre too, which, which, um, I&#8217;m, I&#8217;d be eager to talk more about, but yeah, I mean, as, as I was thinking about this, I say I feel like I didn&#8217;t do much.</p><p>I spend a lot of time staring at the screen, uh, over the last couple of weeks and like. Walking my dog and thinking about these questions that you were posing. I feel like I spent hours doing it and like it, like, and, and like the words on the page since we last spoke, don&#8217;t, I don&#8217;t know, have reflect like the number of, the number of new words on the page.</p><p>Don&#8217;t reflect that. But I spent, I spent a lot of time thinking about, about that question and [00:05:00] some of the other questions that, that you posed. And I think for a long time I wanted to presume a familiarity with Stoker&#8217;s Dracula, um, because it made my job easier. And, and so I think I, I kind of had to come to terms with the fact that though it is a popular book, not everybody has read it.</p><p>And while many people, because it&#8217;s a popular book, many people have some. Passing knowledge about the structure, about the plot, about some of the characters maybe, but they won&#8217;t know. They won&#8217;t know the level of detail that I do having read it many times. And so I need to create, I need to expand the world.</p><p>I need to create my own world. I can&#8217;t just live in Stoker&#8217;s world. I need to create my own world. These characters, while they have the same names as the characters in in Stoker&#8217;s novel. They are, they become different characters in my world, the [00:06:00] world I&#8217;m creating. And so I need to, I need to kind of accept that.</p><p>And so it doesn&#8217;t matter if you&#8217;ve read Dracula before you pick up this book, and these, these characters have a rich backstory that I will allude to. And if you&#8217;ve read Dracula, you might pick up on some extra, some extra bits, but this is still going to be a cohesive, discreet novel that you&#8217;ll be able to enjoy.</p><p>Regardless of, uh, whether you&#8217;ve read the, the, the original or not.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay. That&#8217;s huge. Is that the revelation or is there something else?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> No, that is not</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> the</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> revelation.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay. So we&#8217;ll get, wow, okay. We&#8217;ll get to that in a minute. But that, the reason I said it impacts the genre is that you said your ideal right reader wouldn&#8217;t describe herself as a horror fan and that her.</p><p>Most, she&#8217;s, she loves this, um, period of time. She loves London. Um, you know, there&#8217;s a lot of things that [00:07:00] connect her to this story, but not horror. And so my thought was, should, should it still be classified as horror? Uh, there are lots of other ways to classify it, you know, historic, um, a historic thriller, a historic mystery.</p><p>You know, gothic could be in there, but what, what are your thoughts at this point about that?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah, and I, I, I think we&#8217;ve, we&#8217;ve, we&#8217;ve used the term horror when we talk about it, but when I, when I, when I did the blueprint challenge, I think I did kind of identify more like historical gothic as the genre.</p><p>And, and, and as, as you say in one of your notes, this is feeling more like a mystery, a murder mystery than it is horror. Like, I feel like the horror genre leans into the gore, and I don&#8217;t know that that&#8217;s where. My book lives, I think, I think the gothic kind of sense of imminent doom, pervading, you know, every page is definitely something I wanna lead into.</p><p>So, so I think gothic is, is [00:08:00] relevant, historic, gothic, and ultimately it is a murder mystery. And so who, and so, and so solving that mystery is the protagonist&#8217;s kind of ultimate mission.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Right. So the, the sort of moodiness of the world and, and something, yeah. The dread, uh, that&#8217;s out there. Right. Um, which fits really nicely, uh, with what you&#8217;re doing.</p><p>Okay. So what&#8217;s the revelation?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> So it came from the question that you asked me last or two weeks ago now. Um, and one that I&#8217;ve been asking myself, which is. Are vampires part of the public consciousness in this world that I&#8217;m building. And for a long time I&#8217;ve been saying, no, no, no, no. They&#8217;re not part, they&#8217;re still, they&#8217;re still a secret society.</p><p>They&#8217;re still a secret community. They&#8217;re still a secret species. They&#8217;re, they&#8217;re, and nobody knows about them. And, and anyone who talks about vampires is seen as being a [00:09:00] lunatic. Um. And I was realizing, and, and as you probably saw in the, in, in the, in the document, I was, I, I was trying to explore both, both possibilities.</p><p>There&#8217;s a possibility where, where the public understands vampire exists and then there&#8217;s a, a, a possibility where that it doesn&#8217;t, where they don&#8217;t understand they exist. And I&#8217;ve been leaning towards maintaining the secrecy of vampires among the public. And I think the reason I&#8217;ve been doing that, it ties back, ties into what we were just talking about in that I was, I saw that creating like a whole vampire society that, uh, that human, that human society has been interacting with for a number of years, it felt like a distraction from the primary.</p><p>From the primary plot, but I&#8217;ve been struggling because it does offer some really nice motivation for my murderer.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. [00:10:00]</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> So</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> you&#8217;ve been flip flopping back and forth in your mind.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I&#8217;ve been flip flopping back and forth in my mind until last night. And I was, I was reading, I was reading some of your comments, uh, on my document and I was like, why am I stuck on this?</p><p>Why am I hung up on this? Why can&#8217;t I make a decision about this? Um, and it&#8217;s because. I was writing small, I was trying to keep it, you know, this is something I could manage. Like I was trying to keep it, I was trying to keep it like manageable. I was trying to keep it, I, I don&#8217;t know. I was trying to give my, I was trying to like pen myself in, I guess, and lean.</p><p>More heavily on the work of Stoker. And it&#8217;s like he&#8217;s already done his work. He&#8217;s already So the, so the, the, the, the revelation I said he&#8217;s already done his work. He&#8217;s already created his book. Mine is a different book. Mine is, is, uh, a different [00:11:00] world and like. As we have been saying, I need to write big, so I need to embrace the big.</p><p>And so that gonna, that&#8217;s gonna mean creating more characters. That&#8217;s going to mean creating, uh, more exposition. That&#8217;s going to mean creating, um, more interactions between these communities. Creating a lot more than I had initially been thinking about. I feel like my original idea was a nice idea. You know, I&#8217;m, and I&#8217;m using air quotes with a nice idea, but like, I feel like this is now.</p><p>Becoming a novel by, by choosing to, by choosing to go big here.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Well, you&#8217;re, you make me like actually wanna cry because of happiness, because you&#8217;ve obviously been listening to the right. Big episodes and Yes. That whole um, thing and winter blueprint, um, listening to me hammer away at. Uh, [00:12:00] that this is all we have.</p><p>This is all a writer has, is what is in their heart and mind mm-hmm. And comes from their experiences and interests. And it is so crazy how we shy away from that. We tamp it down, we hide from it, all the things because it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s terrifying in many ways. And for you to just get that and in both. The conversations we&#8217;ve had this morning already, like, like the, um, you were afraid.</p><p>Yeah. Afraid of your own creation, which is actually very sort of, I guess that&#8217;s more, um, well, more Frankenstein, more Frankenstein than Dracula, but, but you know, it is like the monster of our own creation. Mm-hmm. You know, like, oh, I wanna write this book. There&#8217;s a kind of dread in just even saying that.</p><p>Yeah. And then, oh, I [00:13:00] wanna write this book and</p><p>Right.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And that question of am I up to it? Am I capable of, it lies at the heart of. So many problems that we make for ourselves because, you know, we tell ourselves, no, I couldn&#8217;t do that or that Yeah, that&#8217;s too, I just, I, you know, that&#8217;s for somebody else, or I, I&#8217;ll keep it small, I&#8217;ll keep it mm-hmm.</p><p>Attached to this other, I&#8217;ll keep it easy. That was what mm-hmm. You know, and, and what you&#8217;re saying is, okay, now I&#8217;m gonna. I&#8217;m gonna write the book I wanna write.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Oh man, that&#8217;s so big. So that,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> yeah, that was my, that was my big revelation last night as I was, &#8216;cause I still didn&#8217;t have an answer for you on that question as late as last night.</p><p>And I was like, I don&#8217;t know what to say. And then I was like, why is this heart so hard for me? And so that was, that was, that was really nice to kind of make that, find that understanding and that gave me peace and like. I started, I started just throwing words on the page [00:14:00] last night about what that meant.</p><p>Um, what that will mean for the story, what that will mean for the, for the characters. So,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> well, I&#8217;m gonna write down this question &#8216;cause I wanna, I wanna explore that more. Why is this so hard for me? That&#8217;s such a good question because what I was doing last night after I wrote that note to you was I did a whole pro con thing.</p><p>You know, pro, um, the vampires are here and present and known, or, you know, be, they&#8217;re not like, you know? Mm-hmm. Or even c nobody knows if they&#8217;re real or, you know, like I was trying to parse out what do I have to do to guide Andrew toward. A decision. So I was thinking more what&#8217;s gonna prompt your brain to decide, and your question, why is this so hard for [00:15:00] me is really what the right question is instead of the pro con list.</p><p>So that is brilliant. Um, I&#8217;m, I&#8217;m writing down so good. Um.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Well, thank you for pushing me.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Oh, well that&#8217;s my job. So, um, it&#8217;s fun. I mean, it&#8217;s fun. And what&#8217;s interesting, particularly with this project is as we know, I don&#8217;t know Dracula, I don&#8217;t read a lot of horror. And so I&#8217;m, I am, I am reacting to you more than this story, you know?</p><p>So that was, that was why, how am I gonna get Andrew to. Figure this out. I have absolutely no, you know, opinion or, or you know, um, any reason why we choose one or the other. Uh, sure. You know, it&#8217;s really what you want. So once you decide that, then does that help with. Other open questions? [00:16:00] Does it sort of have a domino effect in your mind on some of the other things?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I think it, yeah, it, yeah, I think it&#8217;s gonna affect, I mean, it&#8217;s gonna affect, so it&#8217;s gonna affect the whole tenor of the book. Um, I think it, it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s going to change the motivations of so many other characters. It&#8217;s going to change. The relationship between, um, uh, between all of the characters. Um, it&#8217;s going to change the politics of the moment inside this world.</p><p>Um, and it&#8217;s going to kind of raise the stakes, uh, a little bit more. And I think in, in, in another way, it&#8217;s going to make it resonate more with a modern audience. Um,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Ooh. Say more. Why do you think that?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Well, I think, uh, I think. Just because the vampires are no longer a secret, uh, society, just because they are, um, part of the public zeitgeist, that doesn&#8217;t mean they are accepted by the public.</p><p>Um, and so there&#8217;s going to be [00:17:00] misunderstanding and fear, um, and uh, and violence all around this, uh, group of individuals, which I think. Again, as I, as I said, resonates with, with, with modern, with a modern audience.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Wow. That&#8217;s, that&#8217;s awesome. Um, so I&#8217;m also curious, one of the questions I had, you did some work around a Brianna&#8217;s mother who</p><p>mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Died in childbirth, giving birth to her. Mm-hmm. And, um. She was involved in this whole previous generation&#8217;s relationship to the vampire hunting and</p><p>mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Um, all of that. And it, it&#8217;s been a little vague. Um, we&#8217;ve talked about it a little, but it sounds like that is becoming more of a connection for, for two things, both for a [00:18:00] Adrianna&#8217;s motivation, um.</p><p>To, to solve these murders, but also her connection to the suffragette movement, which prior to this draft, I kept feeling a little bit like it was shoehorned in there, like</p><p>mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Oh, there&#8217;s this vampire story and it&#8217;s London and it&#8217;s at this time, and there&#8217;s this young woman in suffragette. You know, and, and now that small change really locks the, the suffragette movement into Aub Brianna&#8217;s world and life.</p><p>Um, so what do you now know about the mother that feels new or, um, that you&#8217;ve pinned down more because of these thoughts?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I&#8217;m still fleshing that out. But let me, let me say, one of the reasons I think that the suffragette movement element of the book feels a little tacked on is I have not [00:19:00] yet done my research there.</p><p>And so it&#8217;s like, that&#8217;s a really, that&#8217;s a, that&#8217;s a glaring, that&#8217;s a glaring hole right now that I need to fill with more research. I&#8217;ve been doing a lot of vampire research now. Um, and, but I need to switch. I need to switch tax and start and start doing more, uh, suffrage, uh, research. Um, but that said, yeah, I think.</p><p>A Brianna&#8217;s mother, Mina, um, was involved briefly in the suffrage movement because she dies or does she? And um, and, and I think she continues, she continues to play a role in the suffrage suffrage movement. What. What I&#8217;ve been grappling with now is how much of that does abriana know how much of that has her father told her?</p><p>And I could see that being another point of contention between the two of them. If she discovers later that this was [00:20:00] another, another piece of information that was, that was hidden from her. And so,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Ooh, that&#8217;s so good. It&#8217;s so good. This, this young, yeah, this young woman. All these things stacked up against her that she, yeah.</p><p>Sort of knows about or maybe suspects. Um, right. So you&#8217;re right. The work is, there&#8217;s always in any story who, the question of who knows what, when. Mm-hmm. I mean, particularly in a mystery or thriller, obviously.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Right.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. But who knows what, when, you know, can. Change who you choose to be your narrator. Who, who has right point of view, um, who gets point of view in the story.</p><p>Uh, you know, do we go to a chapter in somebody&#8217;s point of view? You know, all of those, all of those questions hang on. This idea of who knows what went. So, you as the author, are the first person that has to know. Everything. Right. And [00:21:00] then choose to, you know, how like, like putting little breadcrumbs or, you know, planting little seeds, um</p><p>mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> That you have to manage that material. Um, so that&#8217;s a big question. And here&#8217;s a question. Do you think you need those answers before you can pin the whole story down, or do you feel like. You can pin the plot down and that that is, gives more texture, more, more to a Adriana&#8217;s motivation. Maybe it&#8217;ll move certain scenes about her discovery of certain things, but do you, what do you feel about that research?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> About the suffrage research they need</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> to do? Yeah, yeah,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> yeah. I think it&#8217;s going to get, I think it&#8217;s gonna open avenues for me. To identify what Mina&#8217;s role was, what her mother, what, what breanna&#8217;s mother&#8217;s role was in the suffrage suffragette movement. [00:22:00] Who some of the players were, who some of the, some of the larger names, the, some of the larger, um, protesters and advocates for it were.</p><p>Because the, you know, being a historical novel, I do want to incorporate some historical figures, which I, I think, um, is always a kind of a fun element of, of, of a novel. And so being able to incorporate some of that, I think will lay out a lot of avenues for a Brianna&#8217;s story arc.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So I just wanna point out for our listeners that what is happening here, um, is that every question we ask or we pose.</p><p>Is work, right? So some of it is, you know, work of walking the dog and thinking and saying, well, I don&#8217;t know. Or Why don&#8217;t I now? Or why is this hard for me? Or, uh, or, you know, all of that. And then now we&#8217;re talking about. This question is work, um, figuring out research and, you know, at every turn it&#8217;s, [00:23:00] when you do the thing that you wanna do, when you really lean into that, it, it gets harder.</p><p>I mean, you&#8217;re making it harder for yourself. So,</p><p>yeah,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> I just wanna point that out. &#8216;cause it, it&#8217;s so interesting here as this is unfolding, um, that, that, that is just a, a truth. And the other thing I wanna point out is. Where this story started is where every story starts, which is you have this idea, it&#8217;s a really cool idea.</p><p>You have this sense of a plot. And, and in some ways, that very central idea of the plot is never gonna change. No matter what you do to this book, it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s a, mm-hmm. It&#8217;s a murder, you know, there&#8217;s murders and this young woman&#8217;s gonna solve it, so. Mm-hmm. Like, that plot&#8217;s not changing, but the, where it started was.</p><p>These kind of card work cutout characters, kind of placeholder characters. And if you leave it at that, you can see where that would go, you know? Mm-hmm. It&#8217;s like, [00:24:00] oh, mother died in childbirth. Of course child&#8217;s motivated to, you know, something. Um, or Oh, distant and emotional dad, you know, you sort of start, start there.</p><p>But now by understanding. The whole life that her mother lived and the whole role that she played, and is she even dead or not? You know, like huge, huge questions. Yeah. Make the mother a fully fleshed out 3D character. You know, that&#8217;s where you&#8217;re gonna go. And then you can see how that will make a Brianna.</p><p>A more fully fleshed out 3D character. So instead of, instead of the tropes or the expected things, there&#8217;s gonna be these nuances to it and</p><p>mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Um, specific things. And then your question of what, how much does she know and, and what does she find out? [00:25:00] Um, there&#8217;s gonna be plot points that come from that.</p><p>Right. You know? Uh, do you have a sense. At this point, are there letters, are there diaries? Is there a friend who hasn&#8217;t spoken? Like is there some source of information in your mind that Abriana might encounter?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yes. And I think, and, and I think there are a couple of different sources. I think, I think her mother Mina will have had diaries, um, and potentially letters.</p><p>I think also Van Helsing will also certainly have papers. Um. And letters. Um, and, uh, there&#8217;s a, there&#8217;s a, there&#8217;s a prop. He, when he dies, he bequeaths to abriana his Gladstone bag. Um, and I think there&#8217;s going to be some sort of revelatory piece of information in the Gladstone bag, and I haven&#8217;t figured [00:26:00] out what that piece of information is.</p><p>So,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> is that black bag that doctors had</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> that doctors carry around? Yeah. That the old time, that old, that old timey doctors carry?</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. Why was it ca called that?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> You know, that&#8217;s a good, that&#8217;s a good question. I don&#8217;t know where, uh, what the etymology for, for, for the Gladstone bag is. I don&#8217;t know why that is.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Interesting. So that&#8217;s like a toolbox basically. Yeah. It&#8217;s filled, filled with things and,</p><p><strong>Outro:</strong> yeah. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Uh, that&#8217;s cool. That&#8217;s cool. Um, that, I love that. So this is a silly thing. I was so confused. And I know you told me this, um, but that there&#8217;s a character, John Seward, who&#8217;s a character from Dracula. Mm-hmm.</p><p>And Abriana refers to him as her uncle, but he&#8217;s not her uncle. Correct. But the reason I continue to be confused is that her dad&#8217;s name is also John</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Jonathan. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Jonathan.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Does it have to [00:27:00] be or is that just like, oh, Jennie, come on. Surely the reader can handle a John and a Jonathan.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Well, I mean, no, that&#8217;s a legitimate question because, um, can they, um, especially if we&#8217;ve got two characters named Abraham and Abriana, right?</p><p>And so like, and so now I, I, I&#8217;ve been struggling with that too. I think I&#8217;ve been, I&#8217;ve been trying to carry forward some of, some of the characters from Dracula. I think I like the character of Seward because he is a protege of Van Helsing, but perhaps the protege bit is important and not the actual name of the person.</p><p>So maybe it&#8217;s another character that I&#8217;ve, that I&#8217;m introducing here who was a protege of Van Helsing.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Oh. But see, I think that&#8217;s where you get into. So your ideal reader you&#8217;ve established may not know Dracula right. Inside and out. Right. But you will have a lot [00:28:00] of readers who do.</p><p>Yes.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And there is a world of people who really love this stuff and who really.</p><p>Right. You know, and if you were to change an actual character</p><p>mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And give it, give him a different name or a different whatever, people will come after you.</p><p>Yeah. People will be obsessed.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And that&#8217;s fine. Right. But</p><p>yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Is, is that one of the things that could be in the book that those readers. That would delight those readers.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Right. I like, I feel like there are a lot of ways I can leave Easter eggs for Dracula fans.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Um, that aren&#8217;t, that aren&#8217;t germane to understanding the plot of the motivations of the characters, but that, like a Dracula fan will appreciate, oh, I see what you did there. That was a nice touch. Um,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> and so</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> oh, I think they, they&#8217;re gonna love that and</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p>Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> You know, there&#8217;s also then. This is just where my brain goes in terms of marketing. There&#8217;s also then a whole [00:29:00] thing of, you know, a connection to a literary, uh, to literature readers, which could potentially be students and scholars and, you know, that sort of thing. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So I don&#8217;t, I don&#8217;t think you should so quickly dismiss.</p><p>John Stewart, but it&#8217;s a Adrianna&#8217;s father being named Jonathan, I was wondering about.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Mm-hmm. Okay.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And, and you do not have to care that Jennie can&#8217;t keep him straight. Uh, I&#8217;m, I&#8217;m 62. My brain doesn&#8217;t work the same way it used to, but I can&#8217;t tell you the number of times. I&#8217;m like, wait. Was that like I was</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> right.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Really snagging on that. So, um, just a point of information.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Gotcha, gotcha. No, it&#8217;s worth thinking about though. It&#8217;s worth thinking about. But I, I had a, I had a question for you.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> If now is an appropriate time to ask it.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Ask it. [00:30:00] Yeah.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I&#8217;ve been, I&#8217;ve been spending a lot of brain power on the question of POV.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> and I&#8217;ve been go like, and going back and forth about whether this is going to be a single POV, uh, and Abriana is, Abriana is our narrator, or if it&#8217;s more third person omniscient, or maybe this is a dual POV. And I think most recently I&#8217;ve been thinking this is a dual POV between Abriana and her namesake Van Helsing, and like.</p><p>Which is also create some time traveling, uh, mechanisms because we&#8217;ll be, we&#8217;ll be talk, he&#8217;ll be talking about his experiences, uh, before Abriana was born and as she, as she&#8217;s a child, and she&#8217;ll be talking about her experiences as a young woman. And so, but now as we&#8217;re talking about a Adrianna&#8217;s mother, I&#8217;m more, I&#8217;m wondering like, do I want the dual POV to between, between Abriana and her mother?</p><p>Um. What question should I [00:31:00] be considering to help me make that decision?</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Uh, well this is a huge question, Andrew. Um, there, I feel like you just named so many excellent structural ways forward, right? And the question of what do you ask yourself? You&#8217;re asking such good questions, like what do you ask yourself to make that decision?</p><p>And. I&#8217;m gonna, my answer&#8217;s gonna be something really unsatisfying in many ways because it&#8217;s, you gotta go back to your why, why are you writing the story? Mm-hmm. Okay. Why does it matter to you? Mm-hmm. What is your point? Who do you, who do you want to speak to? Uh, those fundamental questions are going to inform the POV because if you, well, I know you originally had an idea about the brother.</p><p>Um, her brother being a narrator, and you didn&#8217;t mention him this time, you mentioned No, [00:32:00] the mom. So a story in which the mom and daughter are narrating and the mom and they&#8217;re never going to meet.</p><p>Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Those two people in, I don&#8217;t think, well, no, that&#8217;s not true. Uh, uh, an unden person could meet a, a human walking the earth, um, right.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> And that may be, that may be part of the climax.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. So</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> of the novel. But</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> that, um, that a mother daughter who, who don&#8217;t think that they can, maybe the daughter doesn&#8217;t think that they will ever meet, you know, that&#8217;s a real particular. Kind of a story. Mm-hmm. So I do think, going back to your why, why do I care about this?</p><p>Why, you know, I, I asked you in our, our initial conversation, you know, you&#8217;re, you&#8217;re a man. You&#8217;re writing about [00:33:00] suffragettes, you&#8217;re writing about a woman protagonist, a young woman, protagonist, and you talked a lot about your sister.</p><p>Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Understanding those motivations and interests and passions because that mother-daughter story will carry a certain kind of weight.</p><p>The, if we think of the, the Van Haling being a narrator, that taps into what we were talking about before. How connected is your story to that lineage of</p><p>right,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> of that one. &#8216;cause now you&#8217;re. Not only having Bram Stoker&#8217;s character, you&#8217;re giving that character a POV voice. Mm-hmm. Which is another level of connection to that mm-hmm.</p><p>Literary lineage. Mm-hmm. Um, so that would take it in a different, you can see how that would take it in a really different direction. So POV is, [00:34:00] you know, in some stories it&#8217;s quite. Instant. Um, you just sort of know, um, in other stories it&#8217;s not, and this one, it, it is not. Um mm-hmm. I think it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s clear Abriana is your protagonist.</p><p>It&#8217;s her our core following. Mm-hmm. It&#8217;s her. Transformation. We&#8217;re interested in her, uh, solving the murder, her understanding her legacy, her coming into her own power. Those are the things we want to see resolved. Um, so whether or not she is a POV though, because there&#8217;s a, then there&#8217;s, there&#8217;s third person.</p><p>Mm-hmm. I mean, third person has different, you know, there&#8217;s different permutations of it. There&#8217;s third person close mm-hmm. Which is sort of functions in some ways, like first person, because in third person close, you don&#8217;t go into anybody else&#8217;s head. Mm-hmm. Um, I, I sometimes don&#8217;t understand why, [00:35:00] why that is even a choice.</p><p>Then I read books that do it, that work beautifully, and it&#8217;s like, oh, okay. You know? So, uh, you know, everything can be a choice, but, um, you know, so we know that she&#8217;s at the center. So then the question I&#8217;m circling around to answering your question, how do you help yourself solve this? What other voices would amplify?</p><p>Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Her transformation, that&#8217;s really what it is, is it&#8217;s her story. You know, the, the mother, POV would take it in one direction. Van Helsing would take it in a different mm-hmm. Uh, third person where we&#8217;re,</p><p>I don&#8217;t know, a third person narrator that goes back in time feels odd to me.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Okay.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> I think if it&#8217;s, and I&#8217;m just talking out loud here. I think if it&#8217;s third person, it, it, we could go into all the heads of everybody. Walking the earth [00:36:00] right now. But I feel like if you go into someone you can see I&#8217;m betraying my not understanding Vampire vampires very well.</p><p>They never die, right?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yes. They&#8217;re undead.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> They never die. So. Okay, so I think, ignore what I just said, A third person, omniscient narrator, could go into their heads as well. Um, right. And go back in time as well. But your time travel, like, like actually having that, that&#8217;s a really different story, so.</p><p>Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Um, how you&#8217;re going to answer is you&#8217;re gonna sit with that question of what is gonna make a adrianna&#8217;s story resonate the most at that end, right? What, mm-hmm. What knowing is going to, to amplify that the most. And then the second thing to ask yourself, and you might need to do a little more work, uh, in order to answer [00:37:00] this once you get the inside outline done.</p><p>Looking at the key scenes. Yeah, you may just see, oh, there is no way that this is gonna work in a certain POV, or I have to have this other POVI can&#8217;t convey. I can&#8217;t go to that scene. I have to go to that scene. Or alternatively a scene that you can&#8217;t go to. Then you think, alright, how will I get this?</p><p>Into How do I convey this? I&#8217;m thinking of that. Um. You know, there&#8217;s so many, uh, there&#8217;s so many, uh, what&#8217;s the word I&#8217;m looking for? I&#8217;m thinking of JK Rowling and Harry Potter and all the things that she did, you know, the mirror Yeah. That shows Harry or his parents and the pen sea that, you know, gets the memories outta somebody&#8217;s head.</p><p>Like all these, um mm-hmm. Mechanical ways Yeah. Of show, showing us what happened.</p><p>Yeah. [00:38:00]</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Back, back in the day. You know, that&#8217;s a particularly kind of story with particularly kind of magic. But there, there, you don&#8217;t know. You might have this, they&#8217;re devices.</p><p>Yeah,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> that&#8217;s the word I was looking for. Devices, yes.</p><p>That you might have one or two scenes, it&#8217;s like, do I need a whole POV just to convey these scenes or is there another way I could get this information in? So it&#8217;s two parts, it&#8217;s both. Um, I would say heart a heart. A heart-centered thing. What, what do I want? What will amplify my why and my point the most?</p><p>What, what I think would be interesting and fun to write the question of, um, then Helsing, do I want to embrace that? Mm-hmm. For some reason I&#8217;m thinking of that, um, novel, um, the Hillary Clinton alternative history novel. Um. Called Rodham, uh oh, by, [00:39:00] is it Curtis Sittenfeld, I think. Um, Rodham, but so courageous and daring.</p><p>She, yeah, she imagines, um, what would have happened had, had Hillary not married Bill, and it follows the, their lives and their meeting and their love story and all this whole thing, which he just chooses not to marry him. And, you know, like. That&#8217;s a certain kind of bravery as an author to, to take that sort of a character.</p><p>And you&#8217;d be, you&#8217;d be doing that. So do you, do I wanna do that? So it&#8217;s all those hard questions and then there&#8217;s plot questions, so Right. I&#8217;m gonna say that for the next, your next bit of homework. Mm-hmm. Um. Is to, I would go to the inside outline and start trying to pin this plot down and noodling around with it.</p><p>And we know that it&#8217;s going to change based on your research. Mm-hmm. Based on the fact that it always changes. [00:40:00] Um, but just noodle around with it and try it from different POVs. See, see what happens. You know? Take, take the, um, this is the reason, by the way, listeners, why I insist that the insight outline at the beginning is only three pages because Andrew can do one that is a Briana&#8217;s, POV only.</p><p>What does that look like? Uh, AA and her mom, what does that look like? Abriana and um. Van health sink, what does that look like? Uh, third person, what does that look like? You could do four, three page outlines and it&#8217;s not gonna kill you. Right. Right. You could just to sort of get a feel for it, and I promise you mm-hmm.</p><p>That what&#8217;s gonna happen is one of &#8216;em is gonna feel more alive.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Right.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So that&#8217;s the sort</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> of, okay,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> unsatisfying [00:41:00] answer is one of them is gonna feel more alive. So you&#8217;re gonna start with your why. Start with your point. Try to sit with that, then try those things on. One of them&#8217;s gonna feel more alive.</p><p>Okay.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> So you&#8217;re not just gonna tell me which POVs to use then?</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> No, it&#8217;s</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> not. That&#8217;s not how this</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> works. I know, it&#8217;s such a bummer. Um. I mean, it&#8217;s such a, such an important question and people often skim past it, but</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> You know, take, I think it&#8217;s the time, like dig, dig into the outline with the intention mm-hmm.</p><p>Of landing on POV. How about, how about that for your homework?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Okay. That sounds good. That sounds good. I can do that.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay. Well, I can&#8217;t wait to hear how it goes. And for our listeners. Until next time, stop playing small and write like it matters.</p><p><strong>Outro:</strong> The hashtag am [00:42:00] Writing podcast is produced by Andrew Perilla. Our intro music aptly titled Unemployed Monday was written and played by Max Cohen. Andrew and Max were paid for their time and their creative output because everyone deserves to be paid for their work.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Hot Seat Coaching: Producer Andrew Parrella Steps Out From Behind the Mic]]></title><description><![CDATA[Episode 495: A first-time novelist brings a Dracula-inspired gothic mystery set in 1920s London to a new Hot Seat Coaching session&#8212;while listeners hear the story develop in real time.]]></description><link>https://amwriting.substack.com/p/hot-seat-coaching-producer-andrew</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://amwriting.substack.com/p/hot-seat-coaching-producer-andrew</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Jennie Nash]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 04:01:52 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/189736805/69f680cb8543e4c4fa48a7733b080d40.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>Jennie Nash launches a <strong>brand-new Hot Seat Coaching series</strong> on the podcast&#8212;real, on-air coaching sessions where listeners get to hear a story develop in real time.</p><p>In the first episode, Jennie brings <strong>#amwriting podcast producer Andrew Parrella</strong> out from behind the microphone as he begins work on his <strong>first novel</strong>. Fresh off completing the Blueprint challenge, Andrew shares his gothic horror premise: a <em>Dracula</em>-inspired story set in <strong>1920s London</strong>, where <strong>Abriana Harker</strong>&#8212;the daughter of Mina Harker&#8212;faces a string of mysterious deaths unfolding against the backdrop of the <strong>suffrage movement</strong>.</p><p>Jennie and Andrew pressure-test the blueprint together, refining the novel&#8217;s central point, exploring how Van Helsing&#8217;s legacy shapes the world of the story, and identifying ways to strengthen Abriana&#8217;s role so the plot is driven by her choices. Andrew leaves with clear next steps&#8212;and this is just the beginning: he&#8217;ll return in future episodes as Jennie continues coaching him through the process of developing the novel.</p><p>You can connect with Andrew via his website <a href="https://www.andrewparrella.com/">AndrewParrella.com</a></p><div><hr></div><div class="subscription-widget-wrap-editor" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://amwriting.substack.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe&quot;,&quot;language&quot;:&quot;en&quot;}" data-component-name="SubscribeWidgetToDOM"><div class="subscription-widget show-subscribe"><div class="preamble"><p class="cta-caption">#AmWriting is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></div><form class="subscription-widget-subscribe"><input type="email" class="email-input" name="email" placeholder="Type your email&#8230;" tabindex="-1"><input type="submit" class="button primary" value="Subscribe"><div class="fake-input-wrapper"><div class="fake-input"></div><div class="fake-button"></div></div></form></div></div><p></p><h3>Transcript</h3><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> [00:00:00] Hi, I&#8217;m Jennie Nash and you&#8217;re listening to the hashtag am Writing podcast. The place where we help writers of all kinds play big in your writing life. Love the process, and stick with it long enough to finish what matters most. Hi, I&#8217;m Jenny Nash and you&#8217;re listening to the hashtag am Writing podcast.</p><p>This is something new. It&#8217;s a hot seat coaching episode where we&#8217;re gonna work through a real challenge in real time with a real writer. And today. I&#8217;m joined by a really special guest. His name is Andrew Perella, and he has been the producer of this podcast for many, many years and is stepping out from behind the microphone to write his first novel.</p><p>Andrew participated in the Winter Blueprint challenge that we recently completed. Which is to say he answered all 14 of the blueprint questions during our challenge and, and produced a [00:01:00] finished blueprint. And so I wanted to get on with him and talk about what do we do next? How do we go from there to the next thing?</p><p>And he agreed to do that to help show our listeners how it goes. And I&#8217;m so excited about it because. He just did incredible work and also has so much work to go, so hopefully we&#8217;re gonna get to, we&#8217;re gonna get to follow Andrew as he does this for a few episodes and bring you along on the journey. So welcome Andrew from Behind the Microphone.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> So much work to go. Thank you, Jenny. I&#8217;m really excited to be here.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So Andrew is, has a long career in public radio and is a producer of podcast for many people and is a storytelling guy, you know, as well as a sound guy. So this is, this is a big move. I feel like this is a right big move for you for sure, for deciding.</p><p>This is the time to embrace the fact that you wanna do this thing. Does it [00:02:00] feel like that to you?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> It, it feels like a right big move for me that I&#8217;m kind of prioritizing now this writing project for me. I&#8217;m prioritizing my project, um, over, over, uh, the projects of others whom, whom I help with projects.</p><p>Yeah. So this is a big, big a right big moment for me.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> It is totally a riping moment and. You&#8217;re in the hot seat personal coaching, which I, I really appreciate you being willing to do So, um, where we stand today is, as I said, you, you finished the blueprint, you did all the work, you did the thing. So I&#8217;m just curious to sort of check in.</p><p>How do you feel? Do you feel like that&#8217;s an accomplishment? Do you feel some momentum? Like, what, where are you feeling, what are you feeling? Um,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I, I feel like it is a, a really big accomplishment because as we were working through the blueprint, I was getting feedback, uh, from you and KJ Dium about, uh, about, uh, how I was, how I was creating my [00:03:00] blueprint.</p><p>It got me, it forced me to think about the book in some very real terms, in ways that I hadn&#8217;t yet, and in ways that, you know, I had been kind of thinking about the book in more abstract notions. Um, and like this was putting pen to paper, uh, on so many things to think about, you know, beyond the, beyond the simple plot structure.</p><p>Um, and I realized as I was going through this. How much I hadn&#8217;t yet considered, and I think this helped to show me where the holes in my story were. Um. And he, even, even as I&#8217;ve finished, quote unquote, finished the blueprint, it&#8217;s like I finished one inter iteration of it and like already the story has changed since I first started work on the blueprint.</p><p>And so already I know I gotta go back and start reiterating on, on, on this, uh, uh, as we go along here.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. I mean, and that&#8217;s the point, right? Yeah. Is the whole point is this is a tool that reveals. [00:04:00] What&#8217;s working and what&#8217;s not working? Is this what I want? Does this reflect my vision? And you get to, to play with that wet clay of the idea.</p><p>So that&#8217;s really what what we&#8217;re doing. But the reason that I thought you&#8217;d be such a good candidate for coaching live in this way is your story. It really hangs together in so many ways. It&#8217;s so great in so many ways and it, it would be easy to feel like, oh, I&#8217;m, I&#8217;m not that far. I got this. I could, I could start right?</p><p>I can start writing. Yeah. But I hope, I hope what we&#8217;re gonna show is, is really pushing yourself to answer core questions is gonna just make it so much stronger.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Absolutely.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So, um, all that being said, do you. What do you think the best way to share what you&#8217;re writing with our listeners is? Do you think reading your book jacket copy feels good or do you wanna just say it out [00:05:00] loud?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Um, I feel like the book jacket copy, I. Um, that I, that I wrote doesn&#8217;t quite, doesn&#8217;t quite capture, I think in many ways what I think the book is going to be so Well,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> and we&#8217;re gonna actually get</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> to that. So I, and we&#8217;re gonna get to that, I think. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So why don&#8217;t you just, just share what, what it is.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> So, uh, the premise of the book is this happens, uh.</p><p>Uh, the, the novel, it happens 20 years after the events of, uh, Bram Stoker&#8217;s Dracula. Um, and so. It involves some of the same characters, and then it also involves the next generation of these characters. So these, those characters children. Um, the, uh, our protagonist is a Abriana Harker, who is the daughter of Mina Harker, who was, um, kind of the female, uh, lead in, in, in Dracula.</p><p>And she was, she was bitten by Dracula in, in the original novel. [00:06:00] Um, and she is, uh, someone who is defended, um. Uh, by her, uh, by her friends and, and counterparts in, in that story, Abriana is her daughter. And Abriana is now facing a similar challenge. There are bodies that are turning up around her circle and uh, they appear to have similar injuries that Dracula&#8217;s victims had 20 years ago, and some people recognize that and are.</p><p>Going to begin trying to unravel the mystery. And this is all set against the backdrop of the universal suffrage movement, which is also happening in, uh, you know, 1920s London, where, where the novel is, novel is set. And so in broad strokes, that is, that is the, the, the primary premise of the book.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So the genre is horror.</p><p>Gothic and I, I did some, some digging. I&#8217;m not a big reader of horror, so I did some digging into the genre to make sure that that was right. Because there [00:07:00] there&#8217;s also thriller elements. There&#8217;s mystery elements. Mm-hmm. There&#8217;s, you know, there&#8217;s other elements and it is, I always liked to, to test. Is this right?</p><p>Is this right? Could it be tweaked? Could it be better? And it feels, it feels like there&#8217;s really no question about the genre. Right. Do you feel that</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I, I feel that, I feel definitely, definitely feel that. And I think I, I, like gothic is, is, is a genre that I really enjoy and I want to develop some of those gothic themes in the story a little bit more than I have so far.</p><p>But yes, I think gothic and, and horror is very much where, where this, where this book lives. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. And that is something I wanna talk about for sure when we get to the inside outline. But I wanna start with, um, the second question of the blueprint is what&#8217;s your point? And I know this is something you&#8217;ve struggled with a little bit.</p><p>Yeah. Um, but so the current point that you have here is. I feel like maybe this came from me. So, [00:08:00] uh, I, it&#8217;s, you can&#8217;t change the world without upsetting people. The more you want to change, the more people you upset, and that&#8217;s fine, but it, but it doesn&#8217;t, it does, it doesn&#8217;t feel like it captures. There&#8217;s a real moral, philosophical debate at the center of your story.</p><p>Right.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah, absolutely. I think, you know, the, the characters are certainly, uh, in the midst of a paradigm shift, you know, there&#8217;s the, there, the, the world order is changing as, uh, as suffrage is, is being opened to more and more people. Um, and times a world order like that changes. There are people who are for it and there are a lot of people who are against it.</p><p>And so I think that&#8217;s. That&#8217;s an element in, in play here in the, in the novel. And that, and that&#8217;s something that I wanted to explore. And obviously there are parallels in current times as well for, uh, for this, for this sort of change. So I think that&#8217;s, I think that&#8217;s, that&#8217;s certainly, that&#8217;s certainly part of, uh, of, of [00:09:00] the story.</p><p>Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So I was, when I, when I review a blueprint, and for anybody who&#8217;s, who&#8217;s got one all on the page and, and you, you like it and it feels pretty good. The step is to, to really pressure test everything. So I, I read through the whole thing. I love looking at a blueprint. A blueprint as a whole rather than piece by piece.</p><p>And in this particular case, it&#8217;s like this. Yeah. This point feels bloodless, which is something we definitely don&#8217;t want in this story. So I went back to your why and your why is really powerful and really personal and really political. Um, it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s fiery, it&#8217;s articulate, like there&#8217;s so much about your why that I.</p><p>You can see my comments on the page. Mm-hmm. Not the listener, but Andrew can Right where I was going. Great. Yes. Very powerful. Awesome. You know, it&#8217;s just, it&#8217;s excellent. And you had some lines in there [00:10:00] about the, the monster in this story is not the vampire, but a man who is refusing to change with the times basically.</p><p>And. That felt to me, given everything else you&#8217;re saying about the parallels between this, the milieu of this story and the milieu we live in right now, the, the fraught. Climate, political climate. Cultural climate that felt more potent as a point. And I, I wondered what you thought about that.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah, I mean, I think that that is as mu that is as much a part of the, the premise as I&#8217;ve conceived it, as, as anything else that I&#8217;ve, I&#8217;ve said, um, you know, the, the, the.</p><p>Spoiler alert, the the murders aren&#8217;t being committed by, by the vampire, uh, or vampires. Uh, the murders are being committed by an old white dude who is not [00:11:00] happy with how the politics are shifting under his feet and how the world is changing around him, um, and is trying to, at all costs, prevent that from happening, even sacrificing a bit of his own humanity in, in the process.</p><p>And so I think that is. Is is something that certainly resonates, but I think it yeah. Is, as you say, there&#8217;s a passion, there&#8217;s a blood there that in in, in the why that didn&#8217;t quite make it to my point. Um,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> yeah, yeah, yeah. So I would suggest for the next iteration mm-hmm. To, to really push that point and.</p><p>It&#8217;s gonna keep changing, it&#8217;s gonna keep, um, you know, getting refined as you go. But I think it&#8217;s important to move it forward as you keep writing. So the, um, yeah, something that&#8217;s, that&#8217;s fiery and that&#8217;s, um, about, &#8216;cause that&#8217;s a, that&#8217;s a, you&#8217;re flipping an important trope in a. In a [00:12:00] classic novel, right?</p><p>Mm-hmm. That it, it&#8217;s not the vampire. So like, why that? Why, why are we flipping out? What is that showing us? What is the point of, of doing that in the story? That, so I would really play with that. Um, does that make sense? Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yes, it does. Okay. Yes, it does.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay, so the next thing I wanna talk about is your super, your super simple story.</p><p>Mm-hmm. And. What&#8217;s interesting about the super simple story is, I mean, I love everybody always. Here&#8217;s me say this, who&#8217;s listened to me for very long, but I love a constraint on in creativity. And this, trying to get this story in a really short space often reveals something. And what it, when it was revealing to me is, so you&#8217;ve got, you&#8217;ve got a abriana, she wants to, uh, become a doctor.</p><p>Because of her mother&#8217;s, [00:13:00] her mother died in childbirth with her. Um, so that&#8217;s the, that&#8217;s the storyline. You&#8217;ve got the murders that are happening and, and then you&#8217;ve got the universal suffragette movement, this political debate that&#8217;s going on. So there&#8217;s these three threads and. Even in the super simple story, it was feeling a little bit like they&#8217;re disconnected.</p><p>I don&#8217;t think they&#8217;re disconnected in your mind. I think they&#8217;re disconnected on the page.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Okay.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So I wanted to just ask you to articulate that a little bit more. &#8216;cause you hint in the um, book jacket copy later, AA has things in common with Finn halting who&#8217;s. Her uncle, the Vampire Hunter. Are you comfortable sharing what those are?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> What those commonalities are?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah, I think, I think, [00:14:00] um, uh, Abraham Von Helsing is, is a character from the original novel, um, and he helps guide the team to, uh, uh, find, track down and destroy Dracula. Um. In the world of my novel, his understanding of vampires changes as he&#8217;s, as he continues to do research on them.</p><p>And so he&#8217;s discovered, he&#8217;s discovered more about them. That will spell out a little bit more in the, uh, in the novel, but. First and foremost, and one of the, one of the primary roles he plays in the, in, in the original novel is a, as a doctor. And that&#8217;s one thing that Abriana really admires about him. He becomes a bit of a, a, um, a surrogate.</p><p>Parent to her with her mother dying and her, uh, her father&#8217;s grief, turning into a little bit of emotional distance from, uh, from Abriana. And so von uh, van Helsing kind of fills that gap and so she associates her. I think her desire [00:15:00] to become a doctor stems from both her birth, you know, ultimately killing her mother, but also because, and, and, and wanting to prevent that from happening to other women, but also because she&#8217;s seen, you know, van Helsing.</p><p>Perform his, his service as a doctor. He, she&#8217;s seen it in action and what it can do and wants to, and wants to, wants to emulate that. And so, and, and I think one of the, one of the things that, that I get excited about is incorporating a little bit of like historic realism into, into the novel as well. And there was in, uh, the 1920s a, a medi, the London School of Medicine for women.</p><p>Um, it had it, it had been. Open for a, a decade or so. It was still a fairly new school at the time. And so that there was an, uh, a real place that she would&#8217;ve been able to go and get an education is something that, uh, is something that I&#8217;m, I&#8217;m excited to have part of, part of the novel and like that school wouldn&#8217;t have been possible if it was not for the Women&#8217;s Liberation [00:16:00] Movement, which resulted obviously in the universal.</p><p>In the universal suffrage movement. And so all of that I feel, kind of ties, ties together in a way that I haven&#8217;t explained very well in my super simple copy, super simple story explanation there.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So, so that&#8217;s what I&#8217;m trying to get at is Adrianna is not just some random young woman. No, I mean she&#8217;s, she&#8217;s very clearly descended from.</p><p>A, a particular, uh, family who&#8217;s had a particular thing happen and you know, there several generations. So have you designed her as a protagonist using those elements of the family yet, or, or is it more kind of just convenient that she&#8217;s there? Does that make sense?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I think so, [00:17:00] and I think it&#8217;s probably somewhere in the middle.</p><p>I think I like the idea of tying her into these characters that who have an existing history, and it then gives her a little bit of, a little bit of, uh, gravitas for the listener when they, when they start digging in that maybe they, maybe they, maybe they have read Dracula, are familiar with those characters and so, okay, this is the next, this is the next generation.</p><p>But yeah, I mean, I think Abriana reflects. A lot of other things that, that aren&#8217;t in, that aren&#8217;t represented in the original novel. Um,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> I guess what I, I guess what I&#8217;m saying is it feels, one of my concerns is it feels as if you could write this story about Adriana and not have her beat from this family.</p><p>She could, she could be kind of. Anyone Gotcha. In this [00:18:00] situation? Gotcha. Does that, am I, am I missing, am I missing that? What would make, you know, let&#8217;s just, um, I know there&#8217;s, there&#8217;s several women in the novel who have, have important roles. So I&#8217;m gonna pick a name that&#8217;s not them. Let&#8217;s say that, uh, there&#8217;s a young woman, Catherine, you know, not connected to, um.</p><p>Ben Helsing not connected to her mother, not connected to that whole thing. And same time period, same motivation. She wants to be a doctor. Maybe she had someone in her family die, and that&#8217;s her motivation. You know, like suffrages, like that whole story could still play out with Catherine. Uh, am I wrong? I want you to prove me wrong.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> So like, yes, it could, I feel like, I feel like one of the things I like about tying in Van Helsing is it, it presents a red herring, um, in the sense that it&#8217;s like, oh, we all think. [00:19:00] That we&#8217;re gonna find out vampires are responsible for all of these deaths. Um, like, I don&#8217;t know, like, and I, and I can kind of slow burn the, you know, the reveal of vampires in general and, and, and how they end up not actually being the antagonists in this By, by which is So by borrowing, by borrowing his name and sharing his glory a little bit.</p><p>Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Right. But back to Catherine, our, our mm-hmm. Mythical protagonist.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Same thing could happen there. Everybody thinks, oh, the vampires are back. Um, Catherine, you know, they, they keep happening around her. She&#8217;s gotta figure it out. You know what I mean? So,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> well, so, so</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> is</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> no, go ahead.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> The question, the question I, I think that I&#8217;ve been grappling a bit with too is do we exist in a world where.</p><p>Is, does the novel, does the world of the novel, a place where people [00:20:00] have recognized the efforts of Van Helsing and that vampires exist? Is that, is that common knowledge in this world, or is all of that still unknown to folks?</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay, this. Is the piece that I&#8217;ve been missing.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Okay.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> That&#8217;s exactly the piece that I&#8217;ve been missing.</p><p>That&#8217;s totally it. That, so here, this is world building. If anybody&#8217;s writing anything with magic, fantasy, sci-fi, even just straight up history, and maybe it&#8217;s a retelling or a re um, imagining, you often know those, those questions for sure. And especially for where for. My understanding, I, I&#8217;m, like I said, I&#8217;m not a horror reader, but I do know a little bit about Dracula, but the, it was a, a sort of science versus, um, like science played a big role in that.</p><p>What [00:21:00] can we know? Mm-hmm. What can we prove? What is, what is unknowable?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Those sorts of things. Absolutely. So that, you&#8217;ve gotta know that here. Mm-hmm. Has it been proved? Is it. Accepted knowledge. Is Van Helsing a hero who&#8217;s locked away in his lab continuing to, you know, with funding and whatever to research his thing?</p><p>Or is he some. You know, recluse who was shamed in the public eye and people think he&#8217;s crazy, like that&#8217;s gonna color everything. Mm-hmm. Okay. And that&#8217;s gonna be, that&#8217;s gonna then be the answer I&#8217;m looking for. Like, why Adriana as our protagonist and not Catherine. Right. So she&#8217;s gonna have that, you imagine her going to medical school with.</p><p>Those two different stories behind her, how different it&#8217;s [00:22:00] gonna be when she shows up in the classroom and people know, you know, or when they know who she is.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Right? Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So there, there&#8217;s a real, the reveal to the reveal to the reader about her connection and who she is and then her, her reveal to the society she lives in about.</p><p>Who she is and you know, the meaning she makes from all that you know, and did, no matter what you decide about Van Helsing, she then you have to all just also decide about her. Does she agree with the prevailing wisdom? If everybody thinks he&#8217;s a hero, does she think he, he is too? Or does she think he&#8217;s kind of whacked and then, um, learns otherwise or, you know, like the or, or the other way</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> around?</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Yeah. Or the other way around. Yeah. Yeah. Right. So yeah, this is the piece that&#8217;s missing is I feel like you have, and this is what I felt the second I heard you talk about your story. I&#8217;m like, oh, this could be so [00:23:00] good. Like, this is so potent, but you&#8217;re like, you&#8217;re missing it. You&#8217;re just, it&#8217;s like it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s like it&#8217;s not landing as as solid as it should, and I think this is why.</p><p>Right. I had not been able to figure it out, but. And you have, so I gotta make sure I understand the character. So a Adriana&#8217;s dad is the brother of Van Helsing.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Uh, they&#8217;re not related in the original, in the original novel. They&#8217;re, they&#8217;re, uh, they&#8217;re just friends. Okay. Okay. But they&#8217;re, but they&#8217;re clo Okay.</p><p>They&#8217;re, they&#8217;re close friends. And because Van Helsing ultimately saved both of their lives, uh, he is kind of a, a, a surrogate uncle. So, uncle, uncle in quotation marks. Yeah,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> yeah, yeah. Uncle is Is an honorific.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> An honorific, exactly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. Yep.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> That confused me. Okay. So I thought that there was a direct lineage there.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Right.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> But there&#8217;s not No,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> no genetic link. Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:24:00]</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> But a link through. Her mother a link to Van Healthing Through the mother.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yes.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Um, and, and what happened to her. So, okay. Yeah. We have to understand his role, who he is, what he&#8217;s doing in the world, what people think of him. Mm-hmm. Um, and also this is important for.</p><p>Just the environment of your story, because we&#8217;ve got this division, political division around the suffragette movement. Is there, is there o, are there other, um, like, I wanna say mood, like what&#8217;s the mood of the place where she&#8217;s, this story&#8217;s taking place? Is it, you know, a creeping sense of doom on many levels?</p><p>Uh, is the do the vampire, like, is the fact, oh, maybe the vampires are [00:25:00] back. Does that make sense for the times? Um, like you and I are talking right now in 2026, um, during very extreme political upheaval and also during the time when there&#8217;s this been this kidnapping of this prominent. Um, media personalities, family member that hasn&#8217;t been solved.</p><p>And there&#8217;s this sense like, well of course this is happening now. Like this, you know, is there a weird, are we gonna have a, um, famous serial killer? Story unfolding in our time. Right. Like, that&#8217;s what I keep thinking, right? Like there&#8217;s a sense of, of course these things are going to start happening now &#8216;cause things are, feel so unstable and unsettled.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Is that what&#8217;s going on there? [00:26:00]</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I mean, I think potentially yes. I, I&#8217;ve, because yeah, I feel like this, it, it, it, it was an unsettled moment politically. And also a little bit medically as they as like the medical establishment is transitioning from miasma theory to germ theory. And that was kind of late, late, uh, 19th century, early 20th century.</p><p>But like there&#8217;s, there&#8217;s kind of been a, a paradigm shift there. So I think, I feel like yeah, there does wanna be, as you were saying, kind of like this constant, creepy. Creepy feeling. Yeah. I&#8217;m like, I&#8217;m like to lean into the gothic, like I thought, like, I really want that to pervade every, every chapter, every page.</p><p>I want that kind of like creeping sensation that that doom is around the corner. Um, that, that</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Right. And doom for many sources. Right. Because I think that that&#8217;s kind of one of your points.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Is well, what I&#8217;m going back to what [00:27:00] the point, point was. The point we&#8217;re kind of, um. Leaning toward is people who review, refuse to evolve.</p><p>When the world demands, it can become monsters. So the world is evolving in many different ways and probably getting the opportunity for a lot of different people to have to evolve in a lot of different ways. It&#8217;s not just one way. It&#8217;s not just like, oh, get on this bus, or you&#8217;re missing. Get on, you know, what&#8217;s the metaphor?</p><p>Like you&#8217;ll miss the boat if you don&#8217;t get on the boat. But it feels like there&#8217;s all kinds of boats one, one might miss here, right? Um, I think so. And so that&#8217;s that. Yeah. Okay, so, so in terms of what to do next, I think your, your homework here is you&#8217;ve gotta get to know Van Haling. Yeah. And the, and the world a little bit better.</p><p>So I would do some character [00:28:00] development work on, on him and what the world thinks of him and what a Brianna&#8217;s stepping into the, the light by. Insisting on going to medical school does to Van Haling. Does it delight him? Does it challenge him? Does it, um, you know, what does he think of that? I think that&#8217;s important.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Um, to know too.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Um,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> a couple, a couple of things that are occurring to me. I think I had taken for granted the reader&#8217;s knowledge of the events of Dracula, and I don&#8217;t think I can do that. I think I need to. To develop these characters for my own, as you&#8217;re saying, I, I gotta, I have to develop Van Van Hels, the Van Helsing character.</p><p>I have to develop him for, for my own purposes for this novel. Um, which makes a lot of sense.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Well, that&#8217;s actually a really good question. You defined your ideal reader in a way that I thought was. [00:29:00] Completely delightful. Like she was so fleshed out. She felt like a, a full on character and I was like, oh, I know that.</p><p>I know that woman. I loved it. It was great. But an important piece you missed in that is you said that she enjoys books about. London, the city and maybe some horror and gothic, but what is her relationship to Dracula, your ideal reader? You need to know that.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> My, you know, this is what&#8217;s funny sometimes about being a book coach is I always say that the, the writers, the god of their own story, I can&#8217;t possibly know everything that the writer knows about what they&#8217;re writing about, what they&#8217;ve read, what they&#8217;ve thought, how they&#8217;ve lived, any of it.</p><p>And, and in this particular case, I don&#8217;t read. I don&#8217;t read horror. I, I, I could barely tell you the, the bear outlines of Dracula if, if press, [00:30:00] um, I mean, I know the, you know, cartoon, the cartoon version. I, I, I could tell you a little more about Frankenstein only because I, against my will, watched the recent, um.</p><p>Retelling.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Oh yeah. I haven&#8217;t actually seen that yet.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So I say against my will because I was like, oh my gosh, this is too much for me. But um, you need to know if, so here&#8217;s a perfect, let me finish my sentence. You need to know if your reader is a fan, is a reader, is a immersed in the gothic world, is gonna know all these things.</p><p>Know all the tropes and know all the connections or not. And the, um, perfect example of that is, remember that book, um, pride and Prejudice and Zombies?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yes.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So that appeal to people who love Jane Austen.</p><p><strong>Outro:</strong> Mm-hmm.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Like, you&#8217;re probably not gonna read that book if you&#8217;re not a Jane Austen [00:31:00] fan, but if you are a Jane Austen fan, you&#8217;re, you cannot wait to get your hands on that.</p><p>And. Also probably if you&#8217;re a zombie horror fan, you know, you would delight in that even if you didn&#8217;t understand the depths of the Jane Austen piece. But that book spoke to such a very particular audience that turned out to be a massive audience. Right, right. So, yeah,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> yeah, yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> You know, I think you need to make a decision.</p><p>Are you writing for someone like me who&#8217;s, who&#8217;s like, I don&#8217;t know, like I think when I first read it, I was like. Who&#8217;s Ben Sing? And you&#8217;re like, he&#8217;s the famous guy from the thing, right? So are you writing for someone like me or does your, a avatar, your ideal reader hear, you know, does she watch the movie?</p><p>Does she, does she read the books? Does she gobble that stuff up?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Right? Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> What, what is your instinct right now?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Singling out one or the other is going to, is going to change [00:32:00] how I write the book. Um. What is my instinct? Uh, I dunno. When I think about the character that I, that the character of the reader that I fleshed out in the blueprint, um,</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> yeah,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I don&#8217;t think she necessarily would have read Dracula.</p><p>She might be familiar with the story, but she might not have, um, uh, have read, uh, Dracula itself.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay. So yeah, let&#8217;s get to, let&#8217;s get really clear on that. Mm-hmm. Because it&#8217;s gonna really change. And for those listening. The ideal reader. Oftentimes people think it&#8217;s just a throwaway part of the blueprint because they kind of can just picture, you know, generally who their reader is.</p><p>I mean, first of all, no part of the blueprint is the throwaway. Uh, something really important can come from any one of these. So really go back to your ideal reader. And think about them in relationship to their story. &#8216;cause this [00:33:00] conversation reveals how drastically you would change the writing of this book, depending on your ideal reader&#8217;s relationship to the, to Dracula.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And, and there&#8217;s no right answer. Either answer&#8217;s. Great. Right. So, um, so that&#8217;s, I just put that on the list of, of things too, um, that you&#8217;re gonna be thinking about. Um. So once you get that, so yeah, the understanding of of Van Healthy&#8217;s re reputation in the universe right now is going to be the way that you bring your reader up to speed a little bit.</p><p>Right? Like famous Vampire Hunter still doing his thing or, or. Famous vampire hunter, you know, shamed and, uh, not doing his thing. Um, that&#8217;s, those are gonna tie [00:34:00] together,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> right? Yeah, yeah, yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> And cement down the world that we&#8217;re coming into, um, more.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Absolutely. No, I can, I can see how that will change things.</p><p>Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> Okay. So, um. We&#8217;re not gonna have time to dig, to dig into this yet, but I just wanna touch on it so that, um, when you&#8217;re doing this work, you can be thinking about, um, thinking about this piece, but the, um, there&#8217;s a cause and effect trajectory that&#8217;s obviously what the inside outline is. And at some really key places in yours, you miss an opportunity to to tie in.</p><p>So we always want our protagonist to have agency to be making the [00:35:00] decisions that cause things to get worse or cause them to be in a worse position or, um, and, and there&#8217;s several places in your inside outline where. Things just sort of happen, which is the plot, and then she sort of happens to be there.</p><p>But if you understand better these parts of her and her connection to this, uh, the not her uncle now, uh, her, this guy, uh, and her connection to what&#8217;s happened with her mother and those things, then we wanna use that to push the story. To push the, so the plot has to serve the story. So the things that happen are gonna push your character in ways they don&#8217;t wanna be pushed to make decisions that are gonna then push them further and, and they&#8217;re gonna get deeper and deeper each time.</p><p>And [00:36:00] you have a murder mystery. So each murder, we wanna feel more and more as if. She is boxing herself in by what she does. By what she thinks. By what she believes, by what she wants. And the, the CLO is gonna squeeze her to the point where she asks to make a, a big decision, you know, comes, that&#8217;s the climax, comes to that like, will I, in this case, um, confront.</p><p>Uh, both the murderer and her father is kind of where it all ends, so,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> yeah. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> You know, it&#8217;s not gonna be just like, and now we arrive at a place where she confronts the people. It&#8217;s gotta be like. Gut wrenching along the way. Right,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> right.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So, um, there&#8217;s a lot to say there, and I made some comments on the outline, which, which you&#8217;ll see [00:37:00] sort of my thoughts and thinking there, but I actually think that this conversation we&#8217;ve had is gonna be the solution because the, the big question I had was, is it coincidental that Adriana is.</p><p>These murders are sort of following her around and people think that it, she might be responsible. Is that coincidental or is there something real there? Yeah. Do you know the answer or not?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> I, I, I&#8217;m, I&#8217;ve been thinking about that and I think there are ways that it&#8217;s not entirely coincidental. I mean, obviously she&#8217;s not causing the murders, but I think, I think yes, I think there are things that she does that prompts these.</p><p>That prompts these women to become targets of the murderer.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> That&#8217;s what I hoped you were gonna say. Yeah, because that&#8217;s what&#8217;s gonna, that&#8217;s like, it&#8217;s, I think this was on the page and maybe you didn&#8217;t realize it, but. [00:38:00] Being friends with Adriana is a little dangerous,</p><p>right?</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Yes. Yes. I think that could be, that could definitely be part of the part, part of the, part of the theme there. Yeah.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So that, that shouldn&#8217;t, that shouldn&#8217;t be coincidental. Well, and this is what&#8217;s so, so great about the blueprint and showing it to a critique partner or a writing group or an editor or a book coach, is.</p><p>Somebody else can say, do you see that you&#8217;re doing this thing that&#8217;s actually really cool? Or do you, do you see that you&#8217;re not doing this? Like it&#8217;s things are just revealed. So,</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> yeah. Yeah, yeah. Absolutely.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> So let&#8217;s just wrap this up. Your next iteration, you&#8217;re gonna work on sharpening your point. You&#8217;re gonna work on sharpening the super simple story so that the Dracula connection is clear.</p><p>Dracula connection to your [00:39:00] protagonist is, is more clear and you&#8217;re gonna under in order to do that. You&#8217;re gonna understand then Helsing, the world that we live in and what his relationship of that world is 20 years after Dracula. What, what is happening with him? What is happening with the world? And and that&#8217;s gonna help inform the connection between your.</p><p>Protagonist in these things. And then I think you already answered the ideal reader, but just make sure that you&#8217;re comfortable with that, that she&#8217;s not a super fan. This is not a insider. Um, folks who know and love and read Dracula, it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s more someone like me. He was a little clueless. And then if you have time to dig into.</p><p>How that all plays out in the cause and effect of the inside outline. That&#8217;s, that&#8217;s where I would go. [00:40:00] So it&#8217;s, um, I had an agent, my first agent, way back in the day, used to say, run it through the typewriter one more time because we were actually writing on typewriter. Yeah. Right. Back in the day. And, uh, that&#8217;s kind of what I feel, you know, with these ideas in mind, like, run it all through one more time and let, let it all flow through One more time.</p><p>Um, and we&#8217;ll see where it goes.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Excellent. No, this sounds good. This is, this is some good homework. I&#8217;m looking forward to, to digging into this now.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> I know. I can&#8217;t wait to see too, and I hope our listeners have enjoyed, uh, going along on this conversation and gotten some inspiration for what, how to pressure test your own, uh, blueprint.</p><p>And if you&#8217;re not doing the blueprint. Uh, also fine, but pressure test what you&#8217;re writing. Uh, this is just a tool for doing that, but there&#8217;s this kind of questioning and making sure that things are not [00:41:00] assumed. That&#8217;s, that&#8217;s the key, right? It&#8217;s that you, you sort of make these assumptions, but we have to articulate them and pin them down so that we can use them to make a much better story.</p><p>Well, thank you Andrew. Really thank you for being willing to, uh, expose yourself in this way. Come out from behind the mic, uh, share your journey. It&#8217;s not easy to do that, and I appreciate it.</p><p><strong>Andrew:</strong> Well, it&#8217;s, it&#8217;s fun. Thank you for pushing me outside my comfort zone. Uh, I&#8217;ve really enjoyed this.</p><p><strong>Jennie:</strong> I have too. So, uh, for our list.</p><p>Thanks for joining in. Now let&#8217;s get back to work.</p><p><strong>Outro:</strong> The hashtag am writing podcast is produced by Andrew Perilla. Our intro music aptly titled Unemployed Monday was written and played by Max Cohen. Andrew and Max were paid for their time and their creative output because everyone [00:42:00] deserves to be paid for their work.</p>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>