I recently
had the chance to be a guest on the fantastic Writers Read Their Early Sh*t
podcast hosted by the amazing Jason Emde.
We talked about
the world of online travel writing along with a range of interesting topics
such as the coolest places to visit in Japan and whether Aussie space-rockers
The Church are the best band to ever come out of Australia. We also had a
chance to delve into some of my very early blog writing.
Today,
Jason has returned the favour by guest posting on Japan Australia to tell us
all about his wonderful new podcast, but before we get into all of that, let’s
find out a little about the man himself.
Jason was
born in Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada, and grew up in the Okanagan
Valley. He received his BA from UBC in 1995 and moved to Japan, where he taught
English to students of all age groups. He also bartended, edited scientific
journals, officiated at hundreds of weddings, played bass in a KISS tribute
band, made amateur films, won his debut boxing match by TKO in the second
round, and traveled extensively in Japan, the rest of Asia and Europe. His
first book, “My Hand’s Tired & My Heart Aches: Letters from Japan
1995-2005,’ was published by Kalamalka Press in 2005.
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A young Jason Emde in the middle |
Now, let’s
hear from Jason about the inspiration for the Writers Read Their Early Sh*t
podcast.
The idea for the Writers Read Their Early Sh*t podcast
first came to me while I was working on my Master’s Degree in Creative Writing
and happened to read a poem I wrote in elementary school about a tree. It
wasn’t much of a poem (“Emphatic!” reads my teacher’s only comment) and I
realized—or remembered—that all writers, famous and obscure, are probably sitting
on treasure troves of undeft early work, shitty first drafts, and undeveloped
and unsophisticated efforts, all of it stuck in a box in some closet or drawer.
I know I am: there are whole filing cabinets back in my hometown overflowing
with frothing journals, notebooks full of utterly pretentious waffle and
twaddle, stacks of mind-humpingly primitive poetry, and old letters full of
flatulent bombast and smut. Some of those early attempts and experiments, I
thought, might do at least three things when exposed to the air: provide a
charming autobiographical snapshot of the writer, with space for entering into
friendly relations with early ineptitude or artistic immaturity; encourage
considering everything an experiment,
and release some artistic pressure; and do their splendid to entertain. Early,
unripe work might provide an opportunity to confront a former version of
oneself, and maybe even forgive him or her, and it might delight and divert
other artists, no matter what stage of the game they’re at. That, in any case,
was the idea.
I launched the podcast in the
summer of 2021 and have interviewed—and vastly enjoyed the early sh*t of—poets
like Sarah Tsiang and James Tyler Russell, songwriters like David White and
Dave Antich (otherwise known as DJ Max in Tokyo, who provides all of the
podcast’s music), memoirists like Victoria Taylor, novelists like Adam Lewis
Schroeder, and travel writers like John Asano from Japan Australia. One
legendary episode featured my sister, Alison Emde, reading gems from her teenage
journals. The conversations so far have been freewheeling and funny and
unpretentious and intimate and moving, fueled by a love of language, a
fascination with craft, and a kind of broad-minded sympathy. There have also
been digressions into such things as literary pilgrimages, the best and worst
punctuation marks, macrame soap holders, secretly rooting for the monkey, how
The Church is (possibly) the best band Australia ever produced, why Japan is so
ace, and kabuki thunder-rockers KISS. I’m very much looking forward to talking
to more writers of all kinds (and all levels of success and achievement) and
exploring the occasionally unruly pleasures of their early, wet-behind-the-ears
work.
You can listen to all the episodes of the podcast at the Writers Read Their Early Sh*t podcast page, and give Jason and the
podcast a follow on both Facebook and Instagram.