• S. Gale Bleth: How a Retired Crime Prevention Officer Made Decades of Safety Expertise a Bestseller
    Jun 9 2026

    S. Gale Bleth spent decades teaching personal safety to students, employees, and community members—but it wasn't until her nieces started leaving for college that she finally wrote the book she'd been putting off for years.

    In this episode, Gale shares how she turned a 12-hour self-defense course into a character-driven, story-based safety playbook for young adults, what the AWARE method is and why it covers 90% of personal safety, and how her book hit #1 on Amazon within two days of launch.

    She also talks about finding Scribe, working with her editor Candace to bring the book to life, and why she believes A.W.A.R.E. belongs in every college orientation program in the country.

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    27 mins
  • From Walk-On to the Big Screen: How Candler Cook's Book Changed His Career and Started a Movie
    Jun 3 2026

    What happens when a book you wrote to inspire strangers ends up transforming your own life?

    In this episode, Eric sits down with Candler Cook, author of From Underdog to Bulldog, to talk about the unexpected and remarkable doors his book has opened since he published it seven years ago.

    Candler shares how a fraternity alumni email connected him with his now-CEO, how his personal story attracted a film production company, and why reaching the right 1,000 people matters more than chasing a bestseller list.

    He also opens up about working with Scribe, what it felt like to get a 6-out-of-10 first draft across the finish line, and what he'd tell anyone sitting on a book idea right now.

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    29 mins
  • Rachel A. Williamson on Turning 30 Years of Store Operations Experience into a Bestselling Book
    Jun 4 2026

    Rachel Williamson spent 30 years leading retail operations at some of the biggest brands in the industry — from Bath & Body Works to Ann Taylor — before launching her consulting firm and writing Running Great Stores, a 30-day implementation guide for store managers and district managers.

    In this episode, Rachel talks with Eric Jorgenson about how she finally committed to the book, the creative process that got it done in two focused months, and the hands-on marketing playbook she built from scratch — custom shipping envelopes, branded ribbon, Mini Cooper keychains, and personalized book signings — that turned a first-time author into an Amazon #1 bestseller and opened doors to new clients, speaking engagements, and a chance encounter with a Fortune 500 CEO.

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    44 mins
  • MyLinh Shattan on How West Point Shaped Two Generations
    Jun 1 2026

    MyLinh Shattan grew up between two cultures, an Irish American father and a Vietnamese mother, both storytellers.

    She went to West Point as one of the first women to graduate, then spent decades writing, teaching, and serving. When her oldest daughter decided West Point was the only place for her, MyLinh couldn't sleep. That fear became the engine for her memoir, Raising Athena, published by Scribe Media with an audiobook releasing July 7th, the 50th anniversary of women at West Point and the 250th anniversary of the United States.

    In this conversation, MyLinh and Eric discuss the decade-long writing process, the workshop model that sharpened her craft, what it means to be a mother in a family where all three children serve, and why she believes the widening civil-military gap is one of America's most urgent blind spots.

    To listen alongside an in depth episode summary, highlights, and full transcript, visit https://scribemedia.com/author-hour/episode/mylinh-shattan-on-how-west-point-shaped-two-generations

    For more information on MyLinh Shattan, visit https://scribemedia.com/authors/mylinh-shattan

    For more information on Raising Athena, visit https://scribemedia.com/published-books/raising-athena

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    33 mins
  • Gui Costin: Two Books, Two Dakotaisms, and the Greatest Authentic Hack of All Time
    May 15 2026

    Gui Costin, founder and CEO of Dakota, joins Eric Jorgenson to talk about writing two books with Scribe—The Dakota Way and Be Kind—and why he now calls authoring “the single best thing I’ve ever done for the business and for people.”

    Gui walks through the procrastination and self-doubt that nearly stalled his first Scribe book, the “world-class ghostwriter” who got him through it, and the Dakotaisms (“turn your brain off,” “throw your hat over the wall”) that finally pushed the book over the line. He explains how Dakota uses signed copies at every live event, why a book makes you a subject matter expert and an authority rather than a salesperson, and how showing up on LinkedIn pays off in unexpected ways, including a 20-years-no-contact college teammate who somehow knew his Starbucks order.

    The episode closes with Gui’s blunt advice to any CEO on the fence: figure out what you’re passionate about, call Scribe, and turn your brain off.

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    35 mins
  • Deneen Allen: How a Reluctant Author Turned 25 Years of Tourism Expertise Into a Book
    May 15 2026

    On this episode of Author Hour, Eric Jorgenson sits down with Deneen Allen, founder of FireCircle and creator of the 5x5 Method, to talk about her new book The FireCircle 5x5 Method.

    Deneen spent 25 years building tourism and hospitality businesses across Canada before distilling that expertise into a digital program, and resisting her team's push to put it in book form for three years.

    In this conversation, she shares why she finally said yes, how the book now functions as both a marketing tool and a companion guidebook to her digital program, the "secret code" funnel she built to convert readers into FireCircle members, and why she now wishes she'd written it sooner.

    A candid, useful conversation for any operator weighing whether their expertise belongs in a book.

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    28 mins
  • It Really Is All About Relationships: Eddy Arriola
    May 9 2026

    On this episode of Author Hour, host Eric Jorgenson sits down with entrepreneur, banker, and first-time author Eddy Arriola to talk about his new book, It's All About Relationships.

    Eddy shares the story of his sold-out launch event at Books and Books, the Miami independent bookstore he has loved since he was old enough to drive, and the unexpected ways readers have responded, including a Cornell donor who ordered 50 personalized copies for the lacrosse team.

    He reflects on the discipline of writing alone, the choice to publish with Scribe, and the magic of putting his old high school history teacher up on stage with him at the launch.

    For any leader who has ever thought about writing a book, this conversation is a master class in why the hard road is the right one.

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    27 mins
  • There'll Never Be a Right Time: Dr. Richard Harris on White Coat, Heavy Soul
    May 9 2026

    Dr. Richard Harris joins Eric Jorgenson roughly six weeks after the release of White Coat, Heavy Soul, and three weeks after the audiobook went live, to walk through how the book got written, why he left the traditional hospital system for direct primary care, and the unexpected goodness already showing up.

    Dr. Harris wrote the manuscript in 12-hour days for three months after his son's traumatic birth, leaning on eight years of stage-tested speaking material to sequence the story. He explains why he chose Scribe's hybrid publishing model ("the number one decision I made was I wanted full autonomy"), the moment a retired-judge family friend in small-town Indiana started handing the book to strangers, and why his real two-year hope is one full-circle moment: a kid telling him they became a doctor because of the book.

    The episode closes on a now-recurring Author Hour insight: the book is a tailwind on everything else you ever do, plus a five-star Scribe review and an admission that book two is already in the works.

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    32 mins