Science Write Now
Science Write Now
The Science Write Now (SWN) Podcast is a podcast for people who love science and the arts. If you’re interested in learning more about great books, plays, and films; writing, research or editing; the lives of scientists; and creative insights into contemporary science; then you’ve come to the right place! The SWN Podcast is hosted and produced by the SWN editorial team with funding from the Australia Council for the Arts. www.sciencewritenow.com
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Science Write Now
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Podcast website
Latest episode
Jun 15, 2026
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Episodes
Exploring Big Questions and Big Feelings through Speculative Fiction with Grace Chan 03.06.2024 1:02:40
In this episode, Krystle chats with Grace Chan about her novel Every Version of You , the story of which Grace tongue-in-cheekly describes as being about ‘staying in love after mind-uploading into virtual reality’. Spoiler: it’s loaded with meaning and big feelings and has us question what it is to be human. Krystle and Grace also geek out, discussing Neuralink (Elon Musk’s brain implant company),...
Comfort in the Cosmic with Alicia Sometimes 30.04.2024 57:45
In this episode, Krystle speaks with Alicia Sometimes about her new poetry book Stellar Atmospheres, a collection that interweaves the scientific, the literary, and the personal. Sometimes’s lyrical yet accessible poems give musicality to cosmic ideas and remind us, in the best way, of our smallness. About Alicia Sometimes: Alicia Sometimes is a writer, award-winning poet and broadcaster. She&ap...
Curiosity, Kindness and Storytelling with Jodi Rodgers 10.04.2024 59:51
In this episode, Krystle speaks with Jodi Rodgers about her new book Unique: What autism can teach us about difference, connection and belonging – which Jodi describes as ‘a love letter to autism’. In her book, Jodi reflects on her experiences with autistic and neurodivergent people, and what these experiences have illuminated regarding human connection, empathy and understanding. Additionally, Jo...
Cells, Ears, Impairments and Memoir, with with Amanda Tink, Lauren Poole and Heather Taylor Johnson 03.03.2024 40:34
In this episode, Jessica White chats with Amanda Tink, Lauren Poole and Heather Taylor Johnson about the ways that impairments, and historical responses to impairments, shape our bodies and writing. About Amanda Tink: Amanda Tink is a blind and neurodivergent creative, personal and academic essayist. She researches the influence of impairment on writing, most recently in a PhD on the poet Les Murr...
Bursting with Science and Story 03.05.2023 55:47
In this episode, Jess talks to Claire Bowen and Kevin Vinsen about Storyburst, a writing project that they established in 2020. They invited Australian writers of all ages to collaborate with researchers to write science-inspired monologues. The monologues can be performed in any of 15 languages including Auslan, and can include diverse performance styles such as puppetry, dance, and song. Claire...
All Things Comedy with Anne Libera (The Second City) 28.10.2022 51:59
In this episode, Amanda chats with Professor Anne Libera—Director of Comedy Studies at the prestigious comedy club The Second City in Chicago—about how comedy works and why we need it. Anne Libera is an Associate Professor and Director of Comedy Studies at Columbia College Chicago and The Second City and served as Director of Pedagogy for The Second Science Project. She has presented on topics in...
The Absurdist Truths of Climate Change 31.08.2022 49:50
In this episode, Amanda speaks with Australian playwrights Oliver Gough and Stephen Carleton about performing climate change on the stage—and the role of absurdity in communicating dire issues. Oliver Gough is an emerging playwright and MPhil Candidate in Creative Writing at the University of Queensland. He was a participant in Playlab ’s 2021 ‘Incubator’ program, and his plays have been produced...
The stories of seeds with Fiona McMillan-Webster 03.08.2022 45:28
Why do some seeds live for thousands of years, while others only a few? What made Nikolai Vavilov the Indiana Jones of the ‘seed world’? And how do you write a book about something in which you’re not already an expert? In this episode, Amanda talks to science writer Fiona McMillan-Webster about her first book The Age of Seeds: How Plants Hacked Time and Why Our Future Depends on It . Fiona McMi...
Keeping Secrets and Finding Science with Danielle Clode 14.06.2022 29:53
In this episode, Jess talks to Danielle Clode about how, from the 18th to the 20th centuries, women have employed great ingenuity to discover new knowledge. Danielle Clode is an award-winning author of Australian non-fiction books. Her writing includes natural history, essays, science writing, historical fiction and best-selling children’s books as well as documentaries. In this episode, we focus...
Writing Beyond the Human with Chris Flynn 21.05.2022 1:16:18
In this episode, Amanda speaks with Chris Flynn about writing beyond the human, stories led by imagination, and thinking through place beyond setting. Chris Flynn is the author of Mammoth , The Glass Kingdom and A Tiger in Eden . He is Editor-in-Residence at Museums Victoria, and is the creator of Horridus: Journey of a Triceratops , and Horridus and the Hidden Valley . His work has appeared in...
Lost Lives Found in Fiction and Ecobiography with Melissa Ashley and Jessica White 11.05.2022 51:21
In this episode, Amanda talks with novelist Melissa Ashley and our own Jessica White about writing the lives of 19th-century female natural historians in fiction and ecobiography—and the importance of bringing untold stories to the light. Jessica White i s the award-winning author of two novels, A Curious Intimacy and Entitlement , and a hybrid memoir about deafness, Hearing Maud . Her short stori...
The Nature of Trees and Rivers with Ashley Hay and Simon Cleary 29.04.2022 39:28
In this episode, Jessica White speaks Ashley Hay and Simon Cleary about thinking—and writing—through rivers and trees, and how they connect people, places, histories, ecologies, landscapes and myths. Ashley Hay is the author of three novels and four books of narrative non-fiction. Her most recent novel, A Hundred Small Lessons , was published in 2017. Her second novel, The Railwayman’s Wife , was...
Science in Virtual Realities with Michael Angilletta 29.03.2022 56:24
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with biologist Michael Angilletta about his collaborative work building virtual reality science labs with Hollywood-born Dreamscape Immersive , student engagement through story, and the power of immersion— as well as Amanda’s aphantasia and Mike’s hard-learned rules of surviving the Zoom era. Michael Angilletta is President's Professor and Director of the...
Time, memory and the stories of our lives with Sven Birkerts 22.03.2022 47:57
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with writer & AGNI co-editor Sven Birkerts about time, memory, and the patterns that shape our writing. Sven Birkerts is the author of eleven books of essays and memoirs, most recently 'Speak, Memory', a personal reading of Nabokov's memoir. He is the former director of the Bennington Writing Seminars, and he co-edits the journal AGNI at Bos...
Writing, re-writing, and the scales of change with Matt Bell 07.03.2022 42:59
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with speculative fiction writer and Associate Professor of Fiction (Arizona State University) Matt Bell about his new craft book Refuse to be Done , the iterative craft of writing and rewriting, and conceptualising the vast timescales of climate change into his recent novel Appleseed . Matt Bell is the author most recently of the novels Appleseed (a New York T...
Re-imagining Darwin for the stage with David Morton 23.02.2022 38:54
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with David Morton, Creative Director of Dead Puppet Society, about taking young Darwin from the page — and the Galapagos — to the stage, in The Wider Earth . David Morton is a writer, director and designer, and the Creative Director of Dead Puppet Society. Over the last decade he has led DPS in the creation of large-scale visual theatre works developed with in...
Texture and mood with Kathleen Jennings 13.12.2021 53:00
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with award-winning writer and illustrator Kathleen Jennings about stitching together her observations into stories and worlds, writing with texture and creating narratives using mood. Kathleen Jenning s is an illustrator and writer based in Brisbane, Australia. As an illustrator, she has won one World Fantasy Award (and been a finalist three other times), and...
Writing and painting nature with Inda Ahmad Zahri 02.12.2021 46:22
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with Inda Ahmad Zahri about writing stories embedded in nature and creating across forms. Inda Ahmad Zahri believes in a world of wonder. She lives in Brisbane where she illustrates and writes for children and adults. Her stories are inspired by natural and cultural gems curated from her travels and lovingly added to her Malaysian heritage. She is also a surgi...
Eco-fiction for every reader with Andrea Baldwin 23.11.2021 57:01
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with writer and psychologist Andrea Baldwin about writing eco-fiction and crafting stories about the environment for different audiences and age groups. Andrea Baldwin is a psychologist and author who works at the intersection between arts, health and the environment. She holds PhDs in psychology and creative writing and a Masters in drama. Currently, Andrea i...
Animal characters and authentic environments with Renée Treml 08.11.2021 36:28
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with Renée Treml about graphic novels and picture books, science for kids, designing museums (and specimens!) for books, and changing careers from science to art. Renée Treml was inspired by Australia’s wildlife and native birds after moving from the USA to Australia in 2007. She loves to create artworks that highlight the subtle details of nature with delica...
The future of sex with Rob Brooks 03.11.2021 36:31
In this episode, Amanda Niehaus chats with University of New South Wales evolutionary biologist and author Rob Brooks about the future of sex, his new book Artificial Intimacy , and the science and politics of human relationships. Rob Brooks is an evolutionary biologist who studies the conflicting interests that make sex sizzle and render reproduction complicated. As Scientia Professor of Evoluti...
Writing ecological emergency with Rebecca Giggs 02.11.2021 33:16
In this episode, Jessica White chats with Rebecca Giggs about her beautiful nonfiction book Fathoms: The World in the Whale and how she translates abstracted aspects of the ecological emergency—like its unfathomable scale—into a visceral narrative that is relatable for readers. Rebecca Giggs is an award-winning author from Perth, Australia. Rebecca writes about how people feel toward animals in a...
Science in poetry with Tricia Dearborn and Benjamin Dodds 22.10.2021 52:22
In this episode, Jessica White chats with Tricia Dearborn and Benjamin Dodd about the inspiration for and writing of their recent poetry collections Autobiochemistry and Airplane Baby Banana Blanket . Tricia Dearborn is a Sydney poet, writer and editor. Her work has been widely published in literary journals, and has also been featured in significant anthologies such as Contemporary Australian Poe...
Women in science in fiction with Laura Elvery 16.09.2021 42:16
In this episode, Jess chats with Laura Elvery about her new collection of short stories, 'Ordinary Matter,' which is inspired by the twenty women who have won the Nobel Prize for science. You can purchase 'Ordinary Matter ' here: https://bit.ly/3FP983B Laura Elvery is one of Australia’s most beloved short story writers. She has won the Josephine Ulrick Prize for Literature, the...
Writing de/extinction with James Bradley, Donna Mazza & Chris Flynn 16.09.2021 1:01:38
In this episode, Jessica White chats with James Bradley, Donna Mazza, and Chris Flynn about the inspiration for and writing of their recent novels Ghost Species , Fauna and Mammoth— all of which consider the implications of de/extinction and, in one case, talking megafauna. James Bradley OAM is widely recognised as one of Australia’s greatest critics and climate fiction writers—including the multi...
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