Anne Lamott is a bestselling novelist and nonfiction writer. She is best known for her books Operating Instructions and Bird by Bird, enduring touchstones for readers and writers seeking honest insight into life and creativity. Her husband, Neal Allen, is a former journalist and corporate executive turned spiritual coach and author who writes and teaches on inner life and self-inquiry.
Lamott and Allen frequently collaborate on workshops and public events that blend writing, spirituality, and practical wisdom. They are the coauthors of the 2026 craft book Good Writing: 36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences, a concise, technique-driven guide that pairs Allen’s sentence-level principles with Lamott’s reflective, experience-based commentary.
0:00 Anne Lamott & Neal Allen
2:24 Writing as Rules vs. Writing as Life
4:10 Collaboration, Conversation, and Creative Partnership
6:02 Writing for Yourself and the Reader
9:48 Show, Tell, and the Inner Riff
13:23 Bird by Bird vs. Good Writing
14:46 First Drafts and the Real Work of Writing
16:52 Finding Your Voice and Letting Go of Imitation
18:48 Writing as Therapy, Curiosity, and Intimacy
21:01 Writing as Self-Realization and Awareness
25:36 Writing Without Knowing the Destination
27:40 Creativity as Mystery and Taking Dictation
29:15 Process Over Outline: Building Sentence by Sentence
31:31 Writing in the Dark: Trusting the Path
32:40 Strong Verbs, Precision, and Noticing
35:23 Identity, Change, and Becoming
37:40 Writing as Questions, Not Answers
43:36 Active Language, Presence, and Momentum
46:44 Authenticity Over Performance
49:10 Simplicity, Language, and Staying Human
53:20 Trusting Your Voice
55:49 Saying Less and Trusting the Reader
59:53 Clarity, Simplicity, and Cutting Excess
1:05:04 First Drafts Are Meant to Be Messy
1:07:45 Progress Over Perfection
1:08:32 Breaking Rules and Creative Freedom
1:10:54 Removing What’s Boring and Letting Go
1:17:11 Freshness, Language, and Finding the Right Word
1:24:11 Precision, Simplicity, and Avoiding Pretension
1:27:11 Metaphor, Cliché, and Learning to See
1:35:13 Rhythm, Flow, and the Shape of a Sentence


