Episodes

  • Season 7: Episode 83: Debut authors – Lisa Moule and Dominic Amerena
    Jun 1 2026

    Karen and Irma chat about structuring a novel, in particular the use of prologues and epilogues.

    Then in the first of an occasional series with debut authors, Irma talks to Dominic Amerena and Lisa Moule about the challenging process of writing their first novels, how to trust your writing instincts, their very different paths to finding agents and publishers, the brutal reality of rejection (how it stopped Dominic writing novels for a decade and why one rejection made Lisa cry like a teenage girl), how to best approach agents, how writing short form pieces helped lay the ground for their novels, why Lisa Moule decided not to voice her own audiobook (even though she is a voice actor), and Lisa’s Teams mishap with a psychedelic filter during her first important publishing meeting.

    About Lisa and Dominic

    Lisa Moule is the author of The Mother of All Calamaties, released in March this year by Allen & Unwin. She is also an actor, voice artist, and presenter of 3CR’s ‘Published or Not’ program. She is based in Naarm/Melbourne.

    Dominic Amerena is the author of I Want Everything, which was the first novel published by Summit Books, the new literary imprint of Simon & Schuster, just over a year ago. It has since won or been shortlisted for a number of awards. He lives in Greece, and is coming to us from Athens today.

    Find out more about Irma and Karen

    Visit Irma Gold’s website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Visit Karen Viggers’ website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Follow Secrets From the Green Room on Instagram and Facebook


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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Season 7: Episode 82: Robbie Coburn (Poet)
    May 11 2026

    Irma and Karen answer a listener question about the transition from emerging writer to established, then chat about their latest reading recommendations.

    Then Karen talks to poet Robbie Coburn about how discovering Edgar Allan Poe when he was 14 was like being let out of jail, how mimicking great writers can help develop your writing early on, how he connects poems to memories like songs, the best way for poets to get their work out into the world, the value of mentorship for poets, why allowing horses to gallop into his work helped him find himself as a writer, how to persist despite devastating rejection, and how his granny would have been proud of him receiving an award sticker for his verse novel.

    About Robbie

    Robbie Coburn is the author of several poetry collections and a young adult verse novel The Foal in the Wire. He has published several chapbooks and zines, and his poems have been published in numerous Australian and international journals. He has run poetry workshops for Headspace – a youth mental health organisation. He grew up on a farm in regional Victoria and now lives in Melbourne.

    Find out more about Irma and Karen

    Visit Irma Gold’s website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Visit Karen Viggers’ website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Follow Secrets From the Green Room on Instagram and Facebook

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    41 mins
  • Season 7: Episode 81: Ingrid Laguna
    Apr 20 2026

    Karen and Irma chat about the environmental cost of publishing books, and uncover some positive take-aways.

    Then Irma talks to children’s author Ingrid Laguna about how running away from home impacted her as a creative, how the traumatic experience of losing her own twin boys led to her memoir and then a novel for kids, why her agent didn’t want to pitch her book but then her publisher ended up loving it, why kids books need to tackle tough subjects, how to keep going when you’re writing about traumatic personal events, writing book recommendations, and top tips for engaging school visits.

    About Ingrid

    Ingrid Laguna is a multi-award-winning novelist and educator. She has published a memoir and numerous books for children. Her work has been published internationally, featured by Reading Australia and given Notable recognition by the CBCA. Ingrid’s writing has featured in various publications, including The Monthly, The Age, Teacher Magazine and the AEU Magazine. She runs a range of writing courses and regularly presents to teachers and students at schools, libraries, festivals and conferences.

    Show notes

    Why plantation stock is better for making paper

    Arts Law for any legal issues

    The Writer’s Room by Charlotte Wood

    The 90-Day Novel by Alan Watts


    Find out more about Irma and Karen

    Visit Irma Gold’s website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Visit Karen Viggers’ website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Follow Secrets From the Green Room on Instagram and Facebook

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    47 mins
  • Season 7: Episode 80: Toni Jordan
    Mar 30 2026

    Irma and Karen talk about how different platforms – Instagram, Facebook, X, Substack and author websites – help sell books (or don’t!)

    Then Karen chats to Toni Jordan about how to successfully inject serious subjects with humour, the book to film process of Addition, why she structures her life to the nth degree but with writing is completely unstructured, how to approach writing as a business and why networking should be reframed, why being a skilled public speaker is important as a writer, how she has managed to make a living as a writer, the painful experience of having a book that didn’t sell well, and how that then led to her greatest career high.

    About Toni

    Toni Jordan is an award-winning, internationally best-selling author of 8 novels. Her debut novel Addition was longlisted for the Miles Franklin Award and has recently been made into a film. Her novel Nine Days was awarded Best Fiction at the 2012 Indie Awards, and Our Tiny, Useless Hearts was longlisted for the Dublin Literary Award. Toni is a physiologist who has also completed a PhD in creative writing and she lives in Melbourne.

    Show Notes

    'Social Media is Dead – Old School Marketing Tactics for Creatives' by Creative Plus Business

    ‘Millions of Followers? For Book Sales, it’s Unreliable’ on the New York Times

    ‘If you get a million views on a social media post, how many books will you sell?’ on Nicola Washington’s substack post about a viral Tweet about a book event that no one showed up to.

    Find out more about Irma and Karen

    Visit Irma Gold’s website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Visit Karen Viggers’ website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Follow Secrets From the Green Room on Instagram and Facebook



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    47 mins
  • Season 7: Episode 79: Tasma Walton
    Mar 10 2026

    Karen and Irma talk about the importance of writers centres, and urge listeners to sign the Writers Victoria petition.

    Then Irma chats to Tasma Walton about novelising the story of her ancestor Nannertgarrook, how she protected herself in the process of writing about trauma, the reclamation of her Boonwurrung language and the importance of language in her novel, how writing and acting feed into each other, the challenges of writing versus acting, how writers rooms for TV and film work, and an embarrassing green room encounter with an Australian music legend.

    About Tasma

    Tasma Walton is a proud Boonwurrung woman from the saltwater country of Melbourne and surrounding coastlines. She has had a hugely successful career as an actor in film and television, with acclaimed roles in everything from Blue Heelers and The Secret Life of Us to Mystery Road and How to Please a Woman. In 2009, her first novel, Heartless, was nominated for an ABIA Award, and the first book in her children’s series Nerra: Deep Time Traveller was longlisted for the DANZ Children’s Book Award. Her most recent novel, I am Nannertgarrook, won the 2025 ARA Historical Novel Prize.

    Show notes

    Writers Victoria petition

    I am Nannertgarrook


    Find out more about Irma and Karen

    Visit Irma Gold’s website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Visit Karen Viggers’ website, or follow her on Instagram and Facebook

    Follow Secrets From the Green Room on Instagram and Facebook


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    50 mins
  • Season 7: Episode 78: Fleur McDonald
    Feb 16 2026

    Karen and Irma debate whether AI is useful to break writer’s block.

    Then they both chat to Fleur McDonald about pioneering the way in rural crime writing, how she built her profile over the years and then rebranded, connecting emotionally with readers, using imposter-syndrome to motivate her next book, how an imaginary character changed her life, fighting for your rights as an author and why she changed publishers, why making a difference with her writing is so important to her, how experts help inform her crime fiction, why she is refusing to use AI, the value of having an agent (especially when you’re having a hissy fit!), why she insists on being involved in planning the publicity campaign, and how meeting her writing hero left her speechless.

    About Fleur

    Fleur McDonald is a prolific bestselling rural crime author who lives in Western Australia. She’s published 26 novels and sold over a million books, with her 27th book out in April. She is an active public speaker and an advocate for rural women experiencing domestic violence. She has worked as a jillaroo, and then a farmer and parent, and is now a fulltime author.

    Show notes

    ‘Should you use AI to break writer’s block?’ in The Conversation

    ‘AI can help authors beat writer’s block, says Bloomsbury chief’ in The Guardian

    DV Assist


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    39 mins
  • Season 7: Episode 77: Ingrid Rojas Contreras (Pulitzer Prize finalist)
    Jan 26 2026

    Irma and Karen chat about the year ahead, and dive into their first Book Chat of the year, championing Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell, and Colony by Annika Norlin.

    Then Karen talks to Colombian writer Ingrid Rojas Contreras about how she coped with all the international attention after being a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, how the violence of the Pablo Escobar era stimulated her curiosity as a writer, caring for yourself when writing from trauma, how she uses inherited stories and hauntings in her work, how she involved her family in fictionalising her childhood, how she hid microphones to collect her mother’s stories, using dreams in fiction, and why losing her memory was the best thing that’s ever happened to her.

    (Karen met Ingrid at the Ubud Writers & Readers Festival 2025)

    About Ingrid

    Ingrid Rojas Contreras was born and raised in Bogotá, Colombia. Her memoir,
    The Man Who Could Move Clouds won the California Book Award and was a
    finalist in multiple awards, including the Pulitzer Prize. Her debut novel was Fruit of the Drunken Tree, and her essays and short stories have appeared in numerous literary magazines. She lives in California.


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    40 mins
  • Ubud Writers & Readers Festival Special Series: Episode 76: Craig Leeson (impact film maker)
    Dec 21 2025

    In a special series direct from the Ubud Writers & Readers Festival, Karen chats to Craig Leeson (impact filmmaker) about how growing up in Tasmania made him an environmental activist, how to find a hook to capture your audience, how to tell a story in few words, the importance of character development, how to keep an audience engaged, how to avoid overwhelming people when telling tough stories, and how hitting the lowest low of his career paved the way for the highest high.

    Supported by the ACT Government

    About Craig

    Craig Leeson is an acclaimed Australian filmmaker, television presenter, explorer, public speaker, and entrepreneur. He is the director, narrator, and writer of the multi-award-winning documentary feature films A Plastic Ocean, and The Last Glaciers: Journey To The Extreme . He was the 2022 Tasmanian Australian of the Year and is an International Fellow of the Explorers Club.

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    37 mins