Épisodes

  • Writers: Do You Have a Reading Habit or a Reading Hobby?
    Jun 16 2025

    We’re going Behind the Book with someone who plays a critical role in the literary ecosystem, you!

    On episode 55 we’re replaying my short but important pep talk about why writers need a reading habit and not just a reading hobby.

    Even if you heard this episode last year when it first aired, I encourage you to listen again to remind yourself why it’s so important for you as a writer, to develop a consistent reading habit in order to up-level your writing skills. And, of course, to contribute to the literary ecosystem. I mean if we writers aren’t consuming good books on a regular basis, then we can hardly expect the industry to survive, much less thrive.

    You’ll learn:

    • The difference between a reading habit and a reading hobby.
    • How to cultivate a reading habit to up-level your writing skills.
    • How to read like a writer.
    • Why writers should avoid the basic book club.

    Let’s get a good reading habit going for the summer!

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Follow Reed, Write, & Create on Instagram at ReedWriteandCre8

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Follow Lori on YouTube at LiteraryLori

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    26 min
  • Behind the Book with Bookseller Jeannine A. Cook: Founder of Harriett's Bookshop in Philly
    Jun 9 2025

    On episode 54 we’re going Behind the Book with bookseller Jeannine A. Cook, founder of Harriett’s Bookshop in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    Jeannine A. Cook is a self-described word worker. In 2020, she opened Harriett’s Bookshop in the Fishtown section of North Philadelphia with the mission to celebrate women authors, women artists, and women activists. In 2021, she opened Ida’s Bookshop in Collingswood, NJ, and Josephine’s Bookshop (a bookshop installation in Paris).

    Jeannine’s work as a literary activist has been recognized by several national and international news outlets including The New York Times, Vogue Magazine, Google, and Forbes, Inc.

    Jeannine is also a writer and author who writes about the complex intersections of motherhood, globalism, activism, and the arts. Her delicious debut novel, It’s Me They Follow will be released in September, 2025.

    During our conversation, Jeannine shares:

    • How magic, synchronicity, and obedience to spirit play a part in her success as a bookseller.
    • The history of word working and miracles in her own family that inspire her own literary work.
    • Why she doesn’t worship money.
    • The challenges she faces as a bookseller who is also a writer.
    • What she’s working on next in honor of the late Kenyan environmental activist and Nobel Prize winner Wangari Maathii.

    This is a magical and motivating episode.

    To learn more about the amazing Jeannine A. Cook and what she’s up to, visit her website.

    To Follow all the fun at Harriett’s Bookstore and her sister shop, Ida’s Bookstore, visit their website and/or Follow on Instagram.

    You can pre-order Jeanine’s debut novel, It’s Me The Follow at the Reed, Write & Create bookstore.

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Follow Reed, Write, & Create on Instagram at ReedWriteandCre8

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Follow Lori on YouTube at LiteraryLori

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    42 min
  • Behind the Book with David Ruggles: The First Black Man in America to Open a Bookstore
    Jun 2 2025

    On episode 53 of the podcast, we’re going Behind the Book and back in time, to meet David Ruggles, the first Black American to own and operate a bookstore for Black people.

    David Ruggles was a revolutionary thinker, a bibliophile, a healer, and a radical abolitionist who believed that reading and the written word would set his people free.

    He opened the first Black-owned bookstore, D. Ruggles Books, in 1834 in New York City.

    On this episode you’ll hear all about David Ruggles' incredible life, his revolutionary bookstore, and the extraordinary career pivot he was forced to make after losing his eyesight as a young man.

    I promise, you will love this story. And you will feel even more motivated to get your stories out into the world after listening.

    David Ruggles was living proof that a bookstore is a powerful weapon against oppression.

    To learn more about David Ruggles, visit the David Ruggles Center for History and Education website.

    If you want to read a complete biography of Ruggles, try this well regarded biography by Graham Russell Gao Hodges.

    Grab a copy of Prose to the People, an excellent book about the history of Black bookstores in the United States.

    ***

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Follow Lori and her global literary life on YouTube at LiteraryLori

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    27 min
  • Behind the Book with Sylvia Arthur, Founder of the the Library of Africa and the African Diaspora
    May 26 2025

    On episode 52 we’re going Behind the Book with Sylvia Arthur, the founder of the Library of Africa and the African Diaspora in Accra, Ghana.

    Remember, for Season Five of the podcast, we’re going behind the book to talk to people whose livelihood and careers depend on the free flowing circulation of books in society.

    Sylvia Arthur is the Founder of the Library Of Africa and The African Diaspora (LOATAD), a library, archive, writing residency, and research institute in Accra, Ghana, dedicated to the work of African and Diaspora writers from the late 19th century to the present day.

    Sylvia started LOATAD using 1,300 of her own books in 2017 and she has since curated six libraries in Ghana, including school, community, and corporate libraries. She is an advocate for the restitution of African literary archives to the continent, and she is a 2024 Ford Global Fellow.

    On this episode, Sylvia shares:

    • How and why she started the Library of Africa and the African Diaspora.
    • What are the unique challenges of running a library in Ghana.
    • Why she wanted to launch a residency for Diasporic writers.
    • Why she thinks books are transformational in the lives of marginalized people.
    • What keeps her motivated as a one-woman show to make sure LOATAD continues to thrive.
    • Besides reading, what kinds of activities happen in the library.

    I hope you enjoy this inspiring episode and you consider visiting or supporting The Library of Africa and the African Diaspora.

    Follow LOATAD on Instagram to see what kind of events and offerings they have.

    Sylvia’s last favorite read was The Message by Ta-Nehisi Coates

    Sylvia’s suggestion for a book by a Ghanaian author everyone should read, Our Sister Killjoy by Ama Ata Aidoo, one of Ghana’s most famous female authors.

    Check out Lori's video about her experience as a resident at LOATAD on her YouTube channel, Literary Lori.

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Follow Reed, Write, & Create on Instagram at ReedWriteandCre8

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Follow Lori on YouTube at LiteraryLori

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    40 min
  • Behind the Book with Bad-Ass Bibliophile Arturo Schomburg
    May 19 2025

    For Season Five of the podcast, we’re going behind the book and talking to people and reviewing the lives of our literary ancestors whose livelihood and life missions require(d) the free circulation of books in society.

    On episode 51, we’re going back in time to talk about literary ancestor, Arturo Schomburg. Schomburg was a bad-ass bibliophile who dedicated his life to collecting proof of global Black excellence. The majority of his collection was, of course, books.

    “Schomburg is arguably the most iconic Black bibliophile in American and African diasporic history,” said author Laura Helton.

    During the episode, you’ll hear what inspired Schomburg to start searching for “proof” of Black excellence, why he believed so strongly in the written word, and how he used books and writing to disseminate the knowledge he was collecting.

    I hope that by listening to Schomburg’s incredible story, you are reminded of just how important books written by and about Black people really are. We have to write them, and keep them safe.

    If you’d like to read more about the fascinating life and work of Arturo Schomburg, get your hands on a copy of Diasporic Blackness: The Life and Times of Arturo Alfonso Schomburg by Vanessa K. Valdés.

    Also, you can see the fruits of Schomburg’s lifelong labor by visiting The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem, New York.

    FYI, March 2025 marked the 100th anniversary of Schomburg’s iconic essay, “The Negro Digs Up His Past.” Here is an article from the New York Public Library revisiting its importance and impact.

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Follow Lori and her global literary life on YouTube at LiteraryLori

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    34 min
  • Behind the Book with Bibliotherapist Emely Rumble
    May 12 2025

    For Season Five of the podcast, we’re going behind the book to talk to people whose livelihood and careers depend on the free flowing circulation of books in society.

    On episode 50, our guest is Emely Rumble, LCSW. Emely is a distinguished licensed clinical social worker, school social worker, and a bibliotherapist. Committed to making mental health services more accessible, Emely specializes in the transformative practice of bibliotherapy. Emely is also the author of the exciting new book, Bibliotherapy in the Bronx.

    During our conversation, Emely explains:

    • What is bibliotherapy?
    • Why bibliotherapy works for people struggling with mental health issues.
    • Who is the African-American ‘Hidden Figure’ of bibliotherapy.
    • Why she wants more BIPOC authors to be aware of this powerful modality.
    • How her experience as an Afro-Puerto Rican child who spent time in the foster care system influenced her decision to become a bibliotherapist.

    I hope listening to Emely’s story and her fascinating explanations about the intersections of racial identity, literature, and mental health, leave you lit.

    Buy a copy of Emely’s book, Bibliotherapy in the Bronx at the Reed, Write, & Create Online bookstore. Support Emily and the Podcast at the same time!

    Follow Emely on Instagram at Literapy_NYC

    If you’re interested in getting credentialed as a bibliotherapist, visit the International Federation for Biblio/Poetry Therapy.

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Join the Tell Me More email list to get your invite to join the Reed, Write, & Create Sanctuary at the end of May, 2025.

    Follow Lori on YouTube at LiteraryLori

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    32 min
  • Get Ready for Something New! On Season 5 We're Going Behind the Book
    May 5 2025

    Welcome to Season 5 of the Podcast! On this brief episode, Loril will provide a quick recap about her time living in a library in Ghana, followed by a sneak peek into what we have planned for this special season of the podcast.

    For Season 5, we’re going Behind the Book, bringing you interviews and stories about people who depend on the free circulation of books in the world. From librarians, to agents, to activists and entrepreneurs, this season we're pulling back the curtain on the people who keep the book business flowing and growing.

    To learn more about the Library of African and the African Diaspora, visit their website.

    If you want to read more about Lori’s experience in Ghana, read this blog post about her experience.

    If you're looking for more creative writing inspiration, and useful resources for your literary life, check out the Reed, Write, & Create website at ReedWriteandCreate.com.

    Sign up for the Reed, Write, & Create monthly newsletter.

    Join the Tell Me More email list to find out when we start taking new applicants to the Reed, Write, & Create Sanctuary.

    Follow Lori on YouTube at LiteraryLori

    Please feel free to show your love and support for this podcast by making a small donation via Buy Me A Coffee.

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    18 min
  • What's Happening with the Reed, Write, & Create Podcast in 2025?
    Feb 10 2025

    Tune in to this brief episode for updates about the Reed, Write, and Create podcast, and some exciting news from host, Lori L. Tharps.

    Links for more resources and information.

    The Reed, Write, and Create Website

    Find Out More about The Reed, Write, & Create Sanctuary for BIPOC women writers.

    Apply to The Sanctuary HERE

    The Blog Post About Lori's Upcoming Trip to Ghana

    The Literary Lori YouTube Channel. Don't forget to subscribe by February 13.

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    11 min