The 7am Novelist
The 7am Novelist
Milo Todd and Julie Carrick Dalton on Asparagus (and Making Room for Writers Unlike Yourself)
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Milo Todd and Julie Carrick Dalton on Asparagus (and Making Room for Writers Unlike Yourself)

From our January 2025 Writing Challenge

Today, we hear from Milo Todd and Julie Carrick Dalton, close friends and supporters of each other, from their early novel drafts to their debuts and beyond. They’re going to talk about how they’ve done it, the work they do for others, and their hopes for the New Year.

Watch a recording here. This audio/video version is available for one week. Missed it? Check out the podcast version above or on your favorite podcast platform.

To find Todd and Dalton’s latest books as well as many other books by our authors, visit our Bookshop page.

Want to join our January write-a-thon? Go here for more information: 7amnovelist.substack.com/p/join-our-january-group-write

Looking for a writing community? Join our Facebook page.

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Milo Todd is co-EIC at Foglifter Journal, runs The Queer Writer newsletter, and teaches creative writing primarily to queer and trans adults. He’s received awards, accolades, and fellowships from such places as Lambda Literary, Tin House, Pitch Wars, GrubStreet, Monson Arts, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. His debut, THE LILAC PEOPLE, publishes through Counterpoint on April 29, 2025.

Julie Carrick Dalton is the Boston-based author of Waiting for the Night Song and The Last Beekeeper. She is the winner of the New Hampshire Writers' Project's People's Choice Award for Best Novel, and a finalist for the Massachusetts Book Award and the Siskiyou Prize for New Environmental Literature. A former beekeeper and farmer, she is a frequent speaker on the topic of fiction in the age of climate crisis at universities, museums, and conferences nationally and internationally. She is on the faculty of Drexel University's Creative Writing MFA program and is an adjunct instructor at Tufts University where she teaches Climate Fiction & Activism. When she isn't reading or writing, you can usually find Julie skiing, swimming, kayaking, or working in her garden.

Photo by Alisa Golovinska on Unsplash

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