
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Yurina Yoshikawa is a writer, educator and Director of Education at The Porch Literary Collective here in Nashville. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, NPR, Lit Hub, The Japan Times, The New Inquiry and this autumn she won the inaugural $25,000 Southern Prize for Literary Arts.
Yurina is also a gifted musician, playing viola for the Nashville Philharmonic and serving on the board.
You might think a cap with that many feathers would be a comfortable fit for the head it covers. Not always. Even with the prizes, Yurina battles that sense of not being in the club. I share that feeling, so we got into it — where it comes from, whether it’s true.
That sense of apartness is one of the themes of her short story Dogwood, which she sent me in advance of our conversation. We broke down that piece, the inspiration behind it, and then we talked about the challenge she feels — as a mother, as an educator — of finding time to write.
As someone who lives on the panic side of the writer’s need to create, I was surprised and impressed by Yurina’s light touch. She takes her time. At some point in the conversation I blurted “You strike me as a well-adjusted person!” I’m just not used to meeting creative people who are equal parts talented and sanguine.
This episode of the Morse Code Podcast is sponsored by Writerfest, a creative gathering for aspiring writers, published authors, screenwriters, poets, and songwriters in Nashville. Attendees enjoy keynote talks by the best book, song, and screenplay writers in the business as well as in-depth break-out sessions with professional editors, literary agents, filmmakers, and music industry insiders. Writerfest is happening Nov 22 and 23. Find out more information on writerfestnashville.com
5
2929 ratings
Yurina Yoshikawa is a writer, educator and Director of Education at The Porch Literary Collective here in Nashville. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, NPR, Lit Hub, The Japan Times, The New Inquiry and this autumn she won the inaugural $25,000 Southern Prize for Literary Arts.
Yurina is also a gifted musician, playing viola for the Nashville Philharmonic and serving on the board.
You might think a cap with that many feathers would be a comfortable fit for the head it covers. Not always. Even with the prizes, Yurina battles that sense of not being in the club. I share that feeling, so we got into it — where it comes from, whether it’s true.
That sense of apartness is one of the themes of her short story Dogwood, which she sent me in advance of our conversation. We broke down that piece, the inspiration behind it, and then we talked about the challenge she feels — as a mother, as an educator — of finding time to write.
As someone who lives on the panic side of the writer’s need to create, I was surprised and impressed by Yurina’s light touch. She takes her time. At some point in the conversation I blurted “You strike me as a well-adjusted person!” I’m just not used to meeting creative people who are equal parts talented and sanguine.
This episode of the Morse Code Podcast is sponsored by Writerfest, a creative gathering for aspiring writers, published authors, screenwriters, poets, and songwriters in Nashville. Attendees enjoy keynote talks by the best book, song, and screenplay writers in the business as well as in-depth break-out sessions with professional editors, literary agents, filmmakers, and music industry insiders. Writerfest is happening Nov 22 and 23. Find out more information on writerfestnashville.com
3,878 Listeners
90,535 Listeners
268 Listeners
29,439 Listeners
5,944 Listeners
10,918 Listeners
86,718 Listeners
110,870 Listeners
55,897 Listeners
59,160 Listeners
15,512 Listeners
41,410 Listeners
80 Listeners
1,917 Listeners
1,099 Listeners