The Daily Stoic - Ask Daily Stoic: Ryan and Niki Papadopoulos Go Inside Writing About Stoicism
Episode Date: September 9, 2020On today’s Daily Stoic Podcast, Ryan talks with his editor Niki Papadopoulous about their long career together, from the origins of The Obstacle Is the Way and how Ryan became a writer to t...he development of Ryan’s books on Stoicism, the inner workings of the editing process, and Ryan’s latest book, Lives of the Stoics (now available for preorder).Niki Papadopoulous is the editorial director for the Portfolio imprint at Penguin Random House. She has been Ryan’s editor since The Obstacle Is the Way, and has published several New York Times and Wall Street Journal best sellers. Besides Ryan’s books, Niki has also published works such as Hooked by Nir Eyal, Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke, and The Four by Scott Galloway.This episode is brought to you by Four Sigmatic. Four Sigmatic is a maker of mushroom coffee, lattes, elixirs, and more. Their drinks all taste amazing and they've full of all sorts of all-natural compounds and immunity boosters to help you think clearly and live well. Four Sigmatic has a new exclusive deal for Daily Stoic listeners: get up to 39% off their bestselling Lion’s Mane bundle by visiting foursigmatic.com/stoic.This episode is also brought to you by Trends. Trends is the ultimate online community for entrepreneurs and business aficionados who want to know the latest news about business trends and analysis. It features articles from the most knowledgeable people, interviews with movers and shakers, and a private community of like-minded people with whom you can discuss the latest insights from Trends. Visit trends.co/stoic to start your two-week trial for just one dollar.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicFollow Niki Papadopoulous:  Homepage: http://www.nikipapadopoulos.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/niki_popSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, this is Ryan Holiday.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast.
I tell the story a little bit in the interview,
but almost 10 years ago now,
I flew to New York City for my first set of publisher meetings
for what would be my first set of publisher meetings
for what would be my first book. And I left those meetings.
I went into those meetings as a marketing director
and I left those meetings and author
my first published book would come out
I think six or seven months later.
And my guest today is the woman who helped make all that possible.
Nikki Papadopoulos.
She's the editorial director for Portfolio
and imprinted Penguin Random House.
And she's been my editor on all my books.
I think 10 or 11, who knows at this point,
but she, I think I was the second book that she acquired
there at Portfolio, Trust Man Mlying,
and then she bought the proposal for the obstacle as way.
She had the idea for growth hacker marketing.
And so, Nicky and I kind of talk not just about
that relationship and we get into some personal stuff
about collaborating and some of the conflict we've had even.
But we talk about sort of evolution of sort of
stillism in publishing, the writing process.
And then we delve into sort of something I wanted to tease
in this episode, which is my next book,
which comes out on September 29th,
Lives of the Stoics, the art of living from Xenota,
Marcus Aurelius, I think is the best, most complete sort of exploration of
stoicism as a philosophy for living.
It's instead of focusing on what these philosophers said historically,
I wanted to look at what they did,
who they were as people, how they lived these words.
As Epictetus said, embody your philosophy.
Don't just talk about it.
And so, I wouldn't if you would kind of talk about
how that book came to be.
And the reason I wanted to talk about that now
is just give you a little preview of the book
because the book is now available for pre-order.
Go to, you can obviously pre-order it anywhere,
books are sold, support your local indie retailer
if you want, Amazon.com.
But if you pre-order it, if you follow the instructions
on our website, dailystoke.com slash pre-order,
you'll see we have a whole bunch of awesome bonuses,
including three extra chapters that are not in the book.
So you can check that out at dailystoic.com slash preorder.
But Nikki is one of the best editors in publishing.
She's worked on dozen or more New York Times bestsellers,
close to two dozen Wall Street Journal bestsellers.
She did the four by Scott Galloway,
captivate by Vanessa Van Edwards,
thinking in bets by Andy Duke,
cooked by near-e-all American Kingpin by Nick B builtin. Previously she was an editor at McGraw Hill,
and she worked at Public Affairs Perseus, where she worked on one of my favorite books about
the internet, The Net Delusion by Evgeny Morazov. She's a graduate of Brown University, which
as a large replica of the Marxist-relations-of-question statue on it, she's got a daughter,
and as we are finishing this interview,
she was about to go on tourney leave to have her second kid,
and she has a Cavalier King Charles named Ruby Rue.
So check out my interview with Nikki Papadopoulos,
get it inside peek into how I write,
how my books have evolved,
maybe some insight into how crazy and insane I am. And of course,
don't forget to pre-order lies at the Stoics daily stoke.com slash pre-order.
So here we are. I actually don't know what book this is. This is 10 or 11. I think it's 11.
You would know better than me. You've had
actually had to write them. Yeah, I just, I, I sometimes I lose track, which is weird,
but then I guess I don't know if I should include the journal as a book or not. And then
I'm always working on the next one. So it's hard to know if you include only published
ones, but another one is officially done. Another one. When did we start this?
Writing this book or when did we start working together? Working together.
Well, that's actually where I wanted to start too. I think it would have been
it would have been October or November, I think it was November of 2011.
That sounds like to me.
I was curious, maybe we should,
what are your recollections of that meeting?
I think the first thing is that I don't know
if you were actually wearing a hoodie,
but you certainly gave the impression
of someone who was wearing a hoodie. Okay, what does that mean?
Well, you didn't show up in a suit and I thought that that was kind of cool.
Like, you were showing up on your own terms, not on the terms of someone who is trying to
make an impression on what they thought a big five publisher would be like.
And actually, that's when we were sick because we were on pig wind.
So we're not part of random health.
Do a lot of people show up in suits at Polish
shows? No, not really, but especially I think you were like 23 at the time and it it was like a very, it was like a very
marked Zuckerberg kind of move.
I'm not sure about that.
I think so it was definitely older,
it's definitely older than 23.
I think I was 24 maybe 25,
but I do, it is funny.
It was like sometimes people will cut,
like I remember I did this talk with Peter Teal
at the Reagan Library. This was like two years ago, this is a very conspiracy and he showed up in
a suit and I was more closer to a hoodie than a suit and it was very uncomfortable and then I
realized that I don't know if I actually have a suit or I didn't at that time. It's like I feel like
one of the reasons you become a writer is to not have to dress up.
And then weirdly you're in these scenarios
where people are then appalled or surprised
that you are not in the proper attire.
It was a good meeting.
I mean, I remember being really impressed,
although I was really prepared to be impressed.
You know, I had reached out to your agent, Steve, Hanselman, when I got to portfolio, which
was in October of 2011. And you know, and just like I'm here and I'm you know
really interested in these kinds of books, and I look to hear from you. And and I
hadn't really known him very well before that. So it was delightful with his funny
circle global for your book.
And I remember I was on a plane.
And I was reading him, I was like,
this is not like anything I have ever read.
It's sort of crackling and special
and exciting and a little dangerous.
And I feel very original. And so I remember having that feeling of like, oh, like maybe
we, maybe this is like, maybe this could really, really work. And I'm having the conversation with my
boss, Adrian Zachime. And so we were, we were ready, like we were excited to meet you. We weren't like
ready like we were excited to meet you. We weren't like who is the guy. So, and I think the story that opened the proposal was the story of you defacing a billboard somewhere in L.A.
And it was just so exciting and naughty. And so we were kind of ready to meet someone who was
you know, playing things on their own terms. I do feel like most business books seem to start with,
I was delivering the keynote address.
And it's like, or some we, you know, it's always this weird,
really lame scene with the author doing something that's not
very interesting.
It's either that or I gotta tell you if I can just share the
one thing that I never want to see ever, ever, ever, ever on a
business with the public again, is to quote an engagement survey, like an employee engagement survey
and just for the, for the need for the book. It's like, oh, like, you know, it, I would say,
like, one out of every four. Like, did you know that, you know, X percentage of people say that they're not engaged at work? And, um, yes, I'm aware at this stage, I'm very aware.
I had this weird memory, maybe because it's always like the, the thing that started a project,
but I seem to remember like the moment, it intros of books have always been strange for me.
Like, I never sit down and go, this is going to be the intro of the book.
It's formally like, it's your sort of hits me from somewhere,
which I guess gets into this kind of Steven Pressfield concept
of the muses.
But like I remember, and we'll talk about obstacle later,
but I remember I was on a run in Manhattan along the East River.
And I had the idea for the sort of scene of Mark's
to really writing meditations.
But I, the trust me, I'm lying one.
If my memory serves me correctly,
I was eating at quiznos down the street
from the American Apparel factory,
and some version of that intro of the book hit me,
and I jotted it down on a piece of paper,
and that folded up this piece of paper
and did not think about it or touch it
for like a few years and then obviously when I decided to write a book it sort of unfolded that
piece of paper and the intro was all there. So that's funny that that's what resonated with you.
Do you still have that piece of paper? I know I have all the note cards still of the books.
I'm I may have the folded up piece of the books. I may have folded up piece of paper
might not have worked as well for carrying it in the box,
but I just found all the note cards
for Trust Me I'm Lying the other day
and then I'm gonna close it upstairs in my house.
Wow, what was it like to look at them now
with the benefit of almost 10 years of hindsight?
Yeah, it's weird.
I mean, that whole book was strange
and it's funny that you were saying
that it was sort of crackling.
I mean, for people who don't know,
almost all nonfiction books are sold with a proposal.
And in that case, I basically sort of half quit my job,
moved across the country and wrote.
Like two thirds or, you know, most of that book
and then went out with it.
I think there's a proposal too, but it, I certainly didn't know what I was doing,
but I guess the benefit of it was that I didn't know that I didn't quite know what I was doing
because, you know, I worked for Robert, so I had some vague understanding of the process,
but I just sort of went out and did it. So there's kind of, I think when I look at the no cards,
I'm both sort of impressed and appalled
at the same time if that makes sense.
I also remember from that meeting, it was a week,
so my grandfather had died who I was very close to.
And so I'd flown to Sacramento for the funeral.
And then I took the red eye that night from Sacramento
to New York. I crashed it in American apparel. I landed it like 7 a.m. or it's 5 a.m. whatever
the time difference was and crashed it in American apparel apartment for like three hours.
And then I don't remember if your guys' meeting was first or what order they came in, but I remember just mostly running on sort of adrenaline and fumes and not sort of, and then
it all kind of got wrapped up very quickly because you guys preempted for people that
know like you go to multiple publishers and then sometimes they bid against each other
or if you feel like there's a connection, you can, someone can preempt and you guys preempted.
So, like, I basically went to New York, not a writer, and then like a few hours later, I remember
walking around, I guess, Soho, and it was like, oh, my life has totally changed. not just sort of financially, but as a writer.
Wow. Like that's what I've become.
Wow. And then I then I ordered an entire pizza at Lombardies and I ate it all by myself.
That's kind of amazing. Yeah, it was a lot of happens since then.
I mean, today I've seen so natural to think about talking about a new book What's kind of amazing. Yeah, it was a lot of happens since then.
I mean, today I've seen so natural to think about talking about a new book or, you know, talking about the next one.
And it's it's funny to think back on that that time.
It is, it is. Yeah, it feels like a very long time ago.
And, and I think what's weird, so when I wrote Trust Me I'm Lying
because I'd sort of written about philosophy
on my blog and stuff.
And that was probably what, like, it was weird.
I'd sort of kept the marketing side of my life,
not a secret, but that wasn't what my sort of online audience was.
And then I came out this marketing book
and so a bunch of people were like surprised. And they were like I thought you know I think people anticipated
maybe something more philosophical for me and then the book was sort of
controversial and weird and then I and then then the audience was very surprised
when the next when the when the sort of philosophy books started which it was
itself sort of a radical departure.
I'm curious, like, what do you, after a trust family
I'm like, what do you remember?
Because I remember the proposal came very quickly.
I can't imagine you were expecting that as my follow-up book.
So you were told, when you say that, you mean obstacle,
the book that became the obstacle, it's the way, which I think that was the title that it came in with that I can't know I think the title was turning obstacles upside down. It wasn't quite the phrase. Yeah, it was turn the a conversation with my publisher where we were sort of like, well Ryan is going to write
many more fantastic marketing books and we want to keep in so I guess we'll do this
pride project for now, which is hilarious because you know I mean and you did write some
very good marketing books but but I think that that style of thinking is sort of, you know,
the trays, a little bit of what's wrong with, you know, the publishing industry, of
always sort of looking at the review in the air, we'd had a success with Trust Me, which
is in some ways a marketing book, and we were looking to the future and saying, okay,
we're going to have more of this, and not really seeing the potential of this set of ideas in the same way.
Now, I say not seeing the potential, we still knew that we really wanted to give you.
And I credit, again, my boss, Adrienne, because he's really good at sticking with writers for the long haul and saying,
you know, I might not see, you know, it just far into the future, but, but I believe that
this person believes that they can. And I'm willing to stick with them. And so, you know,
by the time obstacle was written, I had a lot more of like, oh, I see what this is and I see what Ryan is doing and what his vision is and I think this is going to work.
But I remember having that initial conversation and being like, you know, let's like, let's do this. And and then, you know, he'll, he'll come back to the marketing, which is what he really should be doing.
So, because I did write another marketing book in between, right?
It was weird.
I'm trying to remember the order.
It was a growth hack of marketing,
which was kind of an experimental publishing thing.
That started as, I think that started as what
used to be called a Kindle Single,
which was a very, very short e-book.
And then that took off really, really well,
and we ended up expanding it into a book.
But yeah, I'm a little fuzzy on the timing
between all of those things.
Yeah, because I remember, I remember,
so I guess this sort of,
it's funny to hear your guys's sort of vision,
but what your guys' vision was at the time in
mine, because if I remember the timing right, the proposal for obstacle came within a week
or two of Trustman line coming out.
Obviously, I've been working on it for a while.
I think my intention had always been, I want to get this marketing book out of the way and then write what I want to write about. And you guys are
thinking about it the exact opposite order.
Well, it worked out. Yes.
And, um, and, and I'm glad that it did, you know, and I think that, you know, that's an
argument to be made that, you know, when you find a writer that you trust, you really should,
you should trust 100% and you can advise them and you can get from feedback and you can share
with them what you're seeing in the market or internally, but you really can't be having
a long-term investment with someone and their creative vision.
And what I love about portfolio, which is the imprint that I work at, is that we are really good
about sticking with people for the long run. And I think something like a quarter or
or third of our authors are two, three, four or five book profaters. Nobody's quiet at 10 books in 10 years.
So I think you will be record there,
but it's unusual and nonfiction, especially
to have that kind of long relationship.
So that's something really saddled.
So I mean, Seth Dodens had a pretty good run with you guys.
He did, he took a break.
He took a break.
He took a break. He put it mildly. He took a break.
He published some books with us, and then he went
and did this really interesting start up with Amazon
called The Domino Project.
And he did some books with them, and then he came back to us,
and then he did some other side projects.
And he's come back to us a new book actually,
which was coming out as well
which I won't plug on your podcast if you're very good.
No, it's the I remember two, the decision was not without its risk. I mean obviously
you guys were willing to sort of take a book out of left field.
But there was this sort of criticism later on
from people where it's like,
oh, he's just sort of doing this to make money.
And I remember, I find that to be very funny
because it certainly wasn't a financial step up
to go at a business imprint to go,
hey, I know I'm just coming off this book
about this controversial marketing book.
What do you say we try and obscure school
of ancient philosophy next?
Like you guys were not rude,
but I don't think you weren't ecstatic about it, if I remember.
Well, it wasn't, again, we know, we didn't have a lot of data
in the market as it existed,
but said there was a huge market for soic philosophy,
which that's not the best way to make publishing decisions,
but it certainly does influence how you think about things.
And it's funny now because if I,
you know, if you could see the number of proposals
that come in that use the obstacles away as a comp,
as a signal of the strength of the market
and the appetite for books of popular philosophy
in the sort of business, self-improvement marketplace,
I think it would really make you laugh.
It's nothing that I was watching with a lot of interest
over the years on just thinking, you know,
what if we were so wrong about that,
what else are we wrong about today?
Hey, it's Ryan.
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Well, people have this weird impulse, which and I talk about this a little bit in perennial seller, but I think Peter Teal talks about it best in zero to one, which is like
people think that because someone is doing something that's proof of concept and you should copy it,
when really you should think about how,
when they were the one to do it,
no one was doing it.
And so, like, I think people see that my books
are about stoicism, for instance,
and they go, oh, stoicism is a safe, you know,
you know, a safe nature, a lucrative nature, you know,
whatever.
And it's like, it wasn't that when I started writing about it.
And, you know, if you really read the obstacles the way,
I think that's the other thing people miss,
is that only kind of retroactively did that book,
did that book get sort of fully branded as being about stuacism.
Very deliberately, there's an asterisk or a, you know,
a footnote in the introduction
of the book that says, although I'm very interested in stoicism, this will not be a book
primarily about stoicism because people are not interested in those kinds of books.
Or something to that effect.
And I wanted it to be sort of a book that's about the ideas inside Stoicism, but not beating anyone over the head with it.
And so then, yeah, then people go,
oh, I'm going to write this book about this subject,
or that subject thinking that it's like, no,
this was really a multi-book process of building an audience
and building a style.
And then people think that either they can just sort of tap
into it or that you can do that without laying the groundwork.
I'm glad you brought that up because I
think that's something that has always contributed quite a lot
to your success.
If you have a very authentic connection to your material,
and I think people look at you at the success of the books
and they think that it must be engineered in some way,
that maybe you look at a set of search terms
and work backward to make stylicism the thing.
But the reason why the books are successful
is because they originate
with a very authentic connection between you and these ideas
that you're willing to follow no matter where it goes.
And even if you're issuing caveats with obstacles,
it's stoicism, but this isn't a stoic philosophy book.
I think that your attraction to that set of ideas and your ability to explore it with authenticity and sincerity is what made that book work and also set the stage for a lot of other people to discover and explore the same idea of. I don't know why people struggle with that. It's a weird thing because,
so with obstacle, it's like, okay,
I was really interested in, and, and remain deeply fascinated
by, by stoic philosophy.
I mean, like you don't, I, I was running,
marketing at a publicly traded fashion company
in my early 20s, like if, if, if, to, to leave that for,
you know, writing books about philosophy, writing books about philosophy, you have to actually
like it. Otherwise, you're basically committing career suicide. And so you do have to really
like it. But then I think this is the thing that people miss. You have to like what you're
doing so much, whether it's like a book or a company or starting or some
recipe for some new kind of food or whatever.
You have to love the things so much and then you have to get to this place where you go,
I love this, but nobody else gives a shit.
And in fact, not only they not give a shit, they are under the impression that they are infatically not interested in that style or type
or thing or genre or whatever.
And then you have to figure out how to translate
your fascination and love into something
that they would be interested in.
And so, I so loved the Stoics when I read them,
and then I would read the books about stoicism,
and there were a few
and they were always like one tenth of as interesting and I found that was because
they were just saying, like Seneca said or Marcus really said or they were just like,
you know, it's like the Bible is interesting, people writing about the Bible is not that interesting
by definition, it's because it's derivative and so what I wanted to do with obstacle was find a way, like what is the way
into the ideas? And it turned out it was sort of illustrating the ideas and stories. But I
don't know, I guess people, if you're too self-involved about your love of a thing,
you don't do the work that makes it interesting to people who are self-involved
in their own things.
It's definitely a two-step process.
You make a very good point.
I mean, the first thing is the authentic connection.
And then the next thing is to be a professional about turning that connection into something
that other people can connect with.
And you've got to have both, really.
I mean, I think a little bit of what I'm really asking to is,
I think I see sometimes people trying to very coldly
and rationally produce a book that they think would be
commercial based on what they see in the marketplace.
And those things, they might be carefully constructed
and researched, but they lack an emotional core.
And I don't hate the word passion,
just as almost as much as you do,
but I don't know if anyone hates it as much as you do.
But because they are manufactured, readers are smart, they can pick up on that.
And I don't think people respond well to that. On the flip side, once you have that authentic
connection and passion, you really do have to work quite hard. And this is where the work of a
writer comes in to turn that into something that other people can connect with.
And, you know, and to do it in a way that allows
for another person's experience and point of view,
which is really hard.
Yeah, I mean, I've always felt that the way
to sort of thread that needle is you have to sort of step back
and go, what is the thing that I wished existed earlier on, either in my journey or in my
fandom or whatever.
And so, like, you have to make the thing that you would want to exist and you being a
representative of hopefully a fairly large underserved audience.
Exactly.
Yeah. underserved audience. Exactly, yeah. Which was tricky, so if we talk about lies, which is the
new one, and it's actually an interesting sort of, there was the tricky part on lives of the
Stokes, which is obviously I love Stoicism, somewhat coincidentally, my agent Steve Hanselman and co-author on the book
also love stoicism, but I would say we,
it's not that we come at it from different perspectives,
but we have very different backgrounds, right?
So I'm a college shop out,
Steve's a graduate of Harvard Divinity School,
Steve can translate Greek and Latin,
I can't even pronounce the words.
And so I would say like sort of Steve's
fascination with the stoic figures. It's not that it's more academic, but it's much more
sort of detailed oriented. And my fascination with the stoics is much, I would, I don't
know, I would say I'm much more interested in their essence or in the moral example that they set.
And so even as we sort of tried to break down this book, I mean, for instance,
one of the early iterations of it was like, do you split it up in chapters
or do you split it up in many biographies of each one of the figures?
And if you're interested in how they all, you know, like if you're interested in the themes
of stoicism throughout history,
then you kind of loop them in together
and you have them overlap.
If what you're really interested in is what does each one teach you,
you're not sort of breaking it up like we did.
So it's, it's, it was interesting on this book
to have to like, to do what we were just talking about,
but then also involve an additional party.
They're telling more about that, the process,
because by the time I saw the manuscript,
it was very, very big.
Like you guys would really solve a lot of, you know,
what might have been earlier structural issues
or issues of tone and it felt very, very
complete.
We did have some discussions about whether to include certain details or not or the normal
editing conversation you have.
But structurally, the book felt like it had been the product of
some very intense thinking.
I mean, I feel like that's one of the things I've learned now doing this ten times is
like, you have to, the more you do that hard thinking upfront, the better the final product will be,
because if you're just sort of like going along,
you haven't thought of all these different,
contingencies or issues or concerns,
what happens is like you and I might get on the phone,
you and being the editor,
or you being a random friend or someone reading the book,
and then someone goes,
Hey, if you thought about doing X,
an X might sound perfectly reasonable
in the context of that immediate conversation.
And so you end up making this change or this change.
And then you add enough of those together
and you get this sort of weird amalgamation
of small short-term decisions,
when really you needed to be like,
what is this thing?
What's the main goal?
What is it accomplishing structurally how is it set up?
What's the vision for it?
So then you kind of understand how all these little things
fit into it.
Like, you know, for instance, on this book,
the decision to say like, this is about what the Stoics did,
not what they wrote or what their theories were.
Like that, that solved a lot of problems
when we got to someone like Cicero, Cicero
being this sort of complicated figure of someone
who was like a propagator of the Stoics,
and he wrote a lot about what the Stoics wrote about, but then had trouble actually,
like what sort of could never fully commit, sort of like, well, how do you end up portraying
that person? If this book is just about Stoicism's evolution through history, you end up with,
I think, a really boring chapter there,
where you're just like, and then Cicero said this,
and then Cicero said this.
But to make it, if it's like, no, no,
this is a book about philosophies sort of role
in the real world, then you end up portraying Cicero
as this sort of tragic figure who, like, knew
what he should be doing, but could never quite bring himself
to do it. So,
yeah, I think you have to, as a writer or as a leader or whatever you're doing, I really do feel like
you, if you're not doing that hard thinking, then like, who is doing it?
It's a very good question. Yeah, I mean, it's critical. It's absolutely critical. And I think it really helps, as you
say, it really helps people write the book. You know, if you, I mean, you can write quite
a lot of well polished words without ever figuring out what they're for or what you're trying to do with them.
I think that's probably like the biggest psychological hazard of your profession is
not doing that problem solving before the writing process. Because writing is it's not, I mean, I'm an editor I know writing is not magic. It's the tool. It's a tool for achieving a certain outcome in the in the mind of your reader and then by extension in the culture.
And so if you don't know what you're trying to achieve, you can dance around without getting a lot done pretty easily. And which is, you know, frustrating to your reader
doesn't get, you know, doesn't move your career ahead much.
And, you know, it's definitely frustrating for your editors.
No, there's a great centric of code.
He says, if you don't know what port you're sailing to,
no wind is favorable.
And, and I think as a, as a, as a writer, the trickiest thing,
it's like when I get notes back from you
or when I would get notes back from Steve
or from Niels, the other editor I work with,
is like, the notes are the notes.
And they're not right or wrong,
they can, but they have to be evaluated
in the context of what are you trying to accomplish, right?
So it's like, I remember here in Brian Coppel
I'm talking about in rounders,
people kept sort of criticizing
that there was all this sort of like dialogue
in the movie and it's like, the whole point is that this is like a quotable
dialogue driven movie so like your note is taken and
politely ignored because that's
literally like you think you're criticizing the movie, but you're actually like confirming what we that we did what we said and so
I think if you don't sort of strategically figure out
what you're trying to accomplish as a writer,
it's very hard to get feedback.
And it's weirdly very easy to be led
astray by seemingly well-intentioned feedback.
That's definitely true.
I'm curious. So do you edit a lot of the test of my stoicism was of course, right?
Like with with daily stoic, the which I also did was Steve,
the delineation of roles was so much cleaner and clearer, right?
It's like, we picked the quotes together, Steve translates them,
I sort of write the sections and then Steve's sort of checking the work, so to speak.
But I can't imagine that most multi, like I just read another book, portfolio, did the
unacceptable about the college admission scandal, and I noticed it was written by two reporters.
And I just sort of like, I can't imagine writing a book
with another writer often goes well.
Well, those two worked a lot quite a bit.
And I think had their relationship figured out before they saw the proposal, which is key.
You know, I haven't done a ton of books where you have two equal co-authors.
You know, there are definitely books where people have had someone helping them,
you know, whether it's on the structure or on the pro-level, but you know, I think it's very difficult as an
in your relationship, but especially in a creative relationship, to have two
people who are doing the same thing. So, you need to figure out
what your comparative advantage is, and be honest with each other about
about what that is. And that can be easy for some people and very difficult for other people I imagine.
You know, I thankfully and I'm very grateful to you and to you for this.
I did not, you know, you guys presented a very united front.
And if there was, if there was drama,
but it was it was all the way for my, my eyes, I got a beautiful manuscript on the day I was drawn to it, but it was on the way for my eyes.
I got a beautiful manuscript on the day I was promised it,
which is rare than a unicorn, by the way,
and I was very grateful for that.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Got a quick message from one of our sponsors
and then we'll get right back to the show.
Stay tuned.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
I am so excited to tell you about my next book,
Lives of the Stoics, the Art of Living from Xeno to Mark's Relias,
your fan of Stoicism, and you want to know about the people behind the ideas
that have been so influential in history that have shaped this philosophy
that's had such a big impact on your life in my life.
Well, that's what I wrote this book to do.
It's sort of a follow up sequel to the Daily Stoic. It's 26 biographies of the most fascinating Stoic figures in history.
Mark Srealis, Zeno, Santa Cate, Santa Cato and so many others.
And there's a whole bunch of bonuses.
If you pre-order and we even have a limited edition run of signed copies,
which you can get from Barnes and Noble.
So for the pre-order information, go to dailystowoc.com slash
pre-order, the book is out September 29th,
but you've got a pre-order it now
that helps me in a big way and gets you the bonus.
It's dailystowoc.com slash pre-order.
No, there really wasn't any drama.
And I do try to, I don't think I've delivered any of my books late.
It's a weird, like, I don't think I've delivered any of them late,
although it's sort of that thing where it's like, if you've never,
if you've never missed a flight, you spent too much time at the airport.
I don't know maybe if I, if I should have delivered some of the books late.
Well, you know, it's's it's maddening because it
takes away any psychological leverage I have over you. Interesting. What
would that do? No I mean you know I think as writers should be they're very
you know people people worry about missing their deadlines and I was just
kidding but I mean we appreciate it we just kidding, but I mean, we appreciate it.
We do appreciate it, but I think there's also a little bit more
understanding in the system than some writers,
especially for some writers, give us credit for.
If you're writing a book for a major house that has a long
investment in your career and your talent, then
you know, we wouldn't be making that if we didn't believe in you and believe that you would
be able to produce something special. And you know, there are exceptions, of course. I mean,
I think there's, you know, if the book is very news driven, and or if it's competing with another book that we know is coming,
then the deadline gets very important.
But, um, but if it's, you know, if it's the kind of book where you're putting
in a ton of research and it really has to be a fantastic read.
And, you know, I mean, I'm not going to like cut your legs off for being a weeklaid.
No, you can edit part out, right?
Yes, no, it is weird though.
And I think the sort of stoic virtue
of self-discipline moderation being an important one.
I do feel like a lot of writers
have created people's struggle with deadlines.
You know, they act like it's like,
oh, you know, they act that it's sort of inspiration
or that what they're doing is very hard
or you can't rush magic, whatever.
And there's an element of that to it,
but I do suspect that a lot of it is just sort of,
it's very hard to manage oneself
when you have a lot of freedom.
And like writing a book is crazy.
I mean, if you think about my first book,
it's like I was 24 years old.
I'd never published a book before.
You guys gave me like a couple hundred thousand dollars.
And you were like, please come back with a book soon.
You know, like that.
I do see where, I do see where people,
sort of, that's almost like the worst punishment
you could inflict on someone because no one is actually
like making sure you show up for work every day in doing it.
And a book is this really hard thing
where you're working on it.
The finished product, the finished manuscript
you're talking about that sort of magically shows up on your desk,
is the result of a whole bunch of sort of average mediocre work days added together,
but you have only you, the person doing it can accumulate those,
and no one can sort of squeeze them out of you.
It's absolutely terrifying. And I think some people use the deadline as almost a way of ducking that gigantic crushing
fear that comes with the idea that like, it's only works if I get it right.
And I'm here on my own and and people can help me, but really it's my name and giant letters on the covers
and nobody else.
And that, like you said,
I mean, it's almost a form of punishment.
For some people, it's very motivating
and it provides a lot of avenues for doing the work
that they truly love.
But, but as you said, you know, it can also be very lonely, I think.
Yeah.
It's lonely.
And I think the other hard part is like, you, like I was writing, I'm writing today on the next project
that I'm doing, which we don't need to tell people about, but I was writing.
It's like, what I did to, I did my workload,
but I don't feel like great about it.
What I put down, I wasn't like,
this is genius, this will obviously work,
this will go untouched into the manuscript.
It's just sort of like, that's too judgmental. It's more like, you know, meh.
You know, like it is, it is, and it exists. And you have to
weirdly be able to manage the like, okay, I can, now that it
exists, I can refine and shape it, but you first have to get,
be able to get over that hump and
deal with the discomfort of mediocrity almost.
So how do you deal with that?
I think you just do it every day.
Well, how do you lie and deal with it?
No, that's what I'm saying.
I think I don't really deal with it.
I just do it every day.
And like, I've been, as I've been working on this one,
I have to, especially having done this many books now,
I have, weirdly, I remember most of my books
as the finished product.
And you kind of have to push that out of your mind
and remember that all the books were sort of
in that sort of pseudo-Rough,
like that you just have to get comfortable
with the discomfort of it for extended periods of time.
So I just remind myself like it's like pages add up
to published work.
So I just, I show up every day and I work on it. And then I remember that like when I go for a run or a ride later this evening, probably two or three things will pop in my head that I inserted into earlier pages this morning
after I finished doing my actual writing
that kind of closed the loop or tightened that,
it was like, it was exactly that missing piece
that tied that previously sort of half finished thing altogether.
So you just have to have the fortitude
to be able to sit with that.
I think it's a lot for some people.
And it's a muscle that you have to build up every day
to like, it's not something you can switch on.
No, that's the job.
Yeah, I feel like.
And the hardest part too is like,
okay, so I've been working on lives for,
I don't know, a year and a half or two years
or however long it's been.
And I find that editors don't talk about this period enough
but it's the really hard one,
which is like, okay, I did this book, it's now done.
I felt pretty good about it when I finished.
I felt pretty good about it when I read the audiobook.
And then you go into this kind,
so we're recording this, it's mid-August.
It won't come out, it comes out in the end of September.
And then obviously you don't want to,
as stoked, you don't want to be validated
by the external results.
But you really don't, it's now just like
sitting, this thing is just like sitting there and you don't know, it's like you sent in,
speaking of college admissions, it's like you sent in your application, you did your absolute best,
but you don't know for several months until the random letter comes in the mail that tells you
whether you've been, you know, whether you've whether you've been accepted or rejected or not. So to me, the most existential hard part is not
the writing stuff because day in and day out, like I control the writing stuff, the really shitty
part is between rap and release. That's to me the most uncertain period.
at least, that's to me the most uncertain period.
So you said Ediver's don't talk about that enough. What do you think that Ediver's own publishers
could be doing in this period to support their authors?
I mean, really, I'm like, you know,
oh, books at the printer and being down
and distributed like, I don't have to worry about it.
Okay.
But it's good, you know But it's good to point out that it might be a time
of quite a lot of anxiety.
Yeah, I mean, I do think talking about it that sort of,
you know, sort of if there was some name for this valley,
well, actually in, in Julius Caesar, Shakespeare says like
between the decision and the deed,
what does he say?
It's like a vague illusion or this weird phantasm.
It's like when they decide to assassinate Caesar
and then the morning they do it,
it's like, that's the roughest period.
And so I wish there was some name
for that kind of like limbo-y period,
but honestly, I mean, I think what writers should
do and what publishers should push them to do and my model with you guys a little bit closer
to enabling that. But I think what most people should do is start writing the next project,
which is what I did. I mean, I started working on ego before obstacle came out and I was already working on daily stoic when ego came out.
And I think having just going back into that grind
is actually like maybe the safest place to be.
That's interesting.
I'm gonna fill out.
You should, I mean, I think I stole it from Stephen Pressfield,
which is like, you know, you finish one manuscript
and the next day you start the next one.
That doesn't mean that there's not some pause and that you're not in sort of different stages
on stuff, because you obviously do have to go back and work.
But I really feel like, and for, like, when obstacle came out, I mean, it did well.
It didn't do poorly at all, but it certainly wasn't,
if we're just now here crossing the 1 million mark,
it probably sold 100,000 copies in the first two years.
Something like that.
It certainly didn't come out of the gate.
It didn't hit any bestseller list.
And it didn't like, it was not clear what it would become,
but the fact that I already had my next book
under contract and was working on it
was a great place to be.
I would love to talk to you more about the content in life.
Because, you know, I have, I always have all these questions for authors that, you know, they're
not problems to be solved.
They're more in curiosity, but, you know, I guess, like, I would love to know about how your feelings towards these characters changed, at all in the process of writing.
Because it's like, especially in the biography
and the book did end up being sort of series
of many biographies, you hear from writers
that you get like these very intense sort
of psychological relationships going with your subject.
And the book doesn't betray that in any way.
It's not clear that any one person is, you know,
struck you more than others.
But I would just love to hear more about,
as you were writing, like, how are you thinking about these people,
and how did you think you changed?
It was, it was weird. I mean, I think Marcus really is.
I've had the longest relationship with.
And that was the kind of most fascinating
and weirdest one to write, because it was at the end
of a fairly long process that I got to that one.
So that one kind of just kind of flowed out and it was really sort of cathartic.
Like, because obviously I've read this person and interacted with him and having this conversation
with him for, you know, going on like 15 years now.
But I just, I wasn't aware of all the details, right?
I think that was the weirdest part with even Seneca and some of the other figures is like, is you I kind of feel like I always
intuitively understood their essence. And then you were kind of going and finding
out these figures and scenes and moments that revealed the essence.
sense. So, you know, like really, really, like really going into Kato and his death, I found to be sort of haunting and sort of
morally vexing. Santa, obviously, to me, as a sort of figure for
our time, you know, this sort of deeply ambitious, deeply
talented wise person who ends up, who ends up serving in Nero's administration.
And I don't know. I think it's just, it was a moving, weird experience to be sort of biograficizing
these people after having spent so much time
with them. I don't know if that makes sense. Yeah, definitely. It's interesting about
Sena-Fa. He's definitely a very complex character and you can see that it's not much of changed
between that and now and some ways. You know, I was just reading this James Rom,
PC wrote in the New Yorker and he was like,
Senna could have been the anonymous writer of that,
that Trump tell all or the, you know,
the person who wrote that op-ed in the New York Times.
Like that was what Senna could have thought he was doing.
Whether you support Trump or not,
that's what Senna could have thought he was doing. He thought he was doing, whether you support Trump or not, that's what Sennaka thought he was doing.
He thought he was the sort of adult in the room,
and then it really quickly becomes a complicated discussion
about whether you're the adult in the room
or whether you're complicit with the bad things
that people in the room are doing.
And I think Sennaka kind of embodies that.
Yeah, definitely.
And then I think at the core of all the figures
is this sort of courage,
especially the ones,
especially the courage of the sort of Roman Stokes.
So if you go from like sort of Kato through,
Kato through, let's say Musoneus Rufus, there's just this kind of incredible courage
with their sort of constantly challenging the powers of B
that they're on the razor's edge of losing everything
at all times.
I mean, Musoneus Rufus is exiled four times,
Thrasia and Helvides and Agrippinus all lose their lives,
you know, sort of challenging, Miro.
I think that the weird part too was,
there was a sadness there for me that now there are senators
who, the consequence of being courageous
is that you don't get reelected 40 years from now,
potentially, and then you go make a ton of money
as a lobbyist or a lawyer or a Fox News correspondent
and still don't want to do it
because somebody might tweet something mainly at them.
Yeah, it really puts some people's behavior
and perspective, that's all so about that.
Yes, well, I do know portfolio works with some of these figures
with these Sentinel imprint, so we won't go too much into it.
Thank you.
I had one last question.
And this might be sort of crazy or inappropriate,
but I thought I'd be interesting to talk about.
Sometimes you just don't get opportunities to do this.
But I'm curious.
So we started it in 2011.
I was like a kid.
You hadn't had you done any other books at Portfolio,
or was I the first author that you signed?
I think it was the second book I signed,
but the first one that I signed that came out.
Got it.
That makes sense.
Yeah, yeah, no.
And so it's been, yeah, almost 10 years now,
we've done at least 10 books,
and then we've collaborated in some other projects.
I don't know, I feel like,
sometimes I feel like there's more sort of tension
and conflict in our relationship than I would like.
What do you think?
Where do you think we've gone astray as a strong word?
What do you think is at the root of that and how do we collaborate better?
I think it's true of everybody who has my job that you, that's a lot of masters to please, you know, I,
I work as an editor because I love books and I love working with authors, but I don't
want for you.
You know, I work for Penguin Random House and, and I represent the interest of my company as I should, as it seems to.
And sometimes I think there is tension or conflict
over what you want to do or what something you want to try
that as a representative of my organization, I can't advocate for it as effectively as I would if, you know, if I was like on your team or as your agent, but, you know, I think that that kind of tension is is probably present in lots of business relationships that are around a creative product. You know, I've never worked in Hollywood, but I've read about it.
And it seems like there's a lot of the same kind of thing, you know, where you're balancing, you know, your responsibility to your authors and their work and your responsibility is really the work for us.
And also your responsibilities
to whoever is funding that work and distributing it.
So that's what I would say for the Vosikov.
It's weird too because I think most,
like even the other authors that you have
that you've worked with for a long time,
they don't have as many touch points, right? Like I think the tricky part about doing 10 books in 10 years or whatever
is that there's an exponential amount, that creates an exponential amount of things that can go wrong or that need to be managed.
And so I think I don't know how to get away from it,
but it does feel like, I feel like most of our sort of disputes
or arguments or conflict is never about editorial matters.
It's about administrative matters or financial details.
Or like, you know what I mean?
We end up, it's like, it's like people who are married
who also work together, you're arguing over like expense reports or something
when and the dishes at the same time.
So it's like, I think that's been a tricky part of it.
And just the duration of it, normally authors tend to bounce around
or whatever, so they're, or the editor leaves
and then you go to a new house or whatever, so they're, or the editor leaves, and then you go to a new house or whatever.
And so it's, I think that's a wrinkle in it
that we haven't quite figured out how to manage.
Yeah, I mean, it is definitely true that there are,
I mean, hilariously, like, because you are successful,
we have more ICMs assigned to you and more titles
and more editions and more reprints.
And each one of those has a point for one for fan chance
of having some kind of grew up on it,
just because publishing is made up of humans.
But if you could only have a published one book
with in one edition, you might not
have had the full range of everything that can go wrong.
So I wonder sometimes I wonder if I should set you up
with one of the commercial fiction
authors who, you know, were also writing like to, you know,
one or two books a year and who's really had like a long
experience. I'm like, Oh, I think that like that actually is
probably more your experience than like a typical nonfiction
author, because you know, every, I mean, every addition has
it has it's wrinkles, wrinkles right whether it's like
I'm covering it ebook the audiobook paperback a free of a dream a paperback we did a box set of
of three of your books and you know you'd think that like that wouldn't take as much conversation
I think work as it did but it did you know like it's it's a it's an ICN and it's a remalor, it's a redesign, we have to try and keep it in stock.
So, yeah, I think it's similarly, it's important to preserve that purity, I think, of the conversation
about the creators, about the title, about the cover, about the main script, and to try to keep the administrative stuff
on a sideline.
But it is hard because, you know, and I am keenly aware of this,
like, you know, this is a direct, like, all of the things that happen
on your books have a really direct effect on you and your life and your family
and in a major way.
And like that, you know, that fact has not escaped me.
Yeah, no, it's, yeah, we do it in that sense.
We kind of exist in different universes.
I remember when we had that issue with the pirated copies or something
and we won't get into the details, but you said something like, oh, so-and-so doesn't care
about the little guy, and you're referring to their relationship with Penguin Random House.
And I was like, Penguin Random House is not the little guy. Penguin Random House is a multi-billion dollar company.
I'm the little guy, right?
And so it's, yeah, it's like you have a job
and the things affect me differently than they affect the,
like you have a job and you have,
there's a bureaucracy as part of the job
and expectations and relationships
and I exist over here in this kind of fantasy world
of just me answering only to myself and whatever I wrote.
And so, yeah, I figure, I feel like that we have to do
a better job of keeping church and state separate too
in the sense of the editorial sort of content relationship
and then the the business administrative execution side
of the relationship where it seems
like the majority of the tension ends up actually being.
Well, let me flip the question on you
since we're doing a sort of sold-of-fold moment.
OK.
Like, you know, you're a man of many options,
and yet you've stuck by us.
You know, can I assume that the value we provide
is greater than the sum of our reprint mishap?
In some respects, yes, of course.
No, and certainly, the equation was very different
10 years ago, and it's a weird situation,
too, where the calculations made 10 years ago
are precise and the collaboration in the some of the parts are.
You know very are what have contributed to the increase in options you know now so that's like a weird thing to consider but.
Yeah, I don't I do I love.
I love working with portfolio.
I love the reach of it, of course.
But doing this leather-bound edition of Daily Stoke has been an interesting experience,
too. It's been a lot of work and it's like getting things shipped by boat from Europe
has been a nightmare and gave me a little bit of insight into what you guys are dealing with every day.
But it's also looking at the sort of retail environment.
It's the pandemic has been interesting because Amazon was dominant before.
And now it's like, who's even going inside bookstores?
Who can go inside bookstores?
So it's been weird to think about where the future
of the business is going.
Yeah, I'd be lying if I said that that didn't keep me up
at night, but it's an interesting point that you make.
I think that I've had many authors who either
prefer self-publishing or have tried self-publishing and have decided
that that's not how they want to spend their time. And I have total respect for both ways of
looking at it, right? I mean, if you are the kind of person who, you know, if you're doing a project
where it's more important to you than anything else to have total control over
the creative, over the cover, over the timing, over everything.
Then, yeah, you probably don't want to partner up with a general corporation.
Like that, you know, if you were a business, like you probably wouldn't want to take a huge
loan from JP Morgan either.
You know, like that, and so, you know, thinking about it in terms of like,
sort of sending the business decision
with the creative decision,
and like, is this partnership gonna be
something that adds value to my project,
or is it gonna, you know, am I sort of finding up
for this kind of wish fulfillment of like,
oh, I'll, you know, I'll take this investment
and then everything we look out.
I think that's really important for writers to think about.
And a lot of people, I'm gonna be happy to say,
I do think we add a lot of value
because people do come back to us.
And maybe it's because we handle a lot of those
and we ask them to help,
like the slowboat from,
from Belarus or wherever, you know, and in, in a way that is
efficient for them.
But, you know, I'm hopeful that also, you know, we add some kind of,
uh, some kind of value on the, on the creative and on the editorial as well.
The thing about doing yourself is that you can do anything you want,
which is both great and also an upgrade, you know, and you've written a lot before about the value
of having someone push back on you when you don't want to be pushed back on creatively. And
it do think that there's something to that. I mean, here I'm just talking to General, but.
No, I think those constraints are helpful creatively.
I just think it'll be interesting for publishers
going forward as the distribution side of things
becomes much and much less important.
And it's sort of like, yeah, we put your book up on Amazon
for you or whatever, or we put it on Audible for you.
Like this last one, I recorded the audio book
for Liza the Stoke.
I recorded Liza the Stokes in my, the annex to my office.
And so it becomes the sort of technical side of it becomes less important, I think, and
it will have to be, does the publisher help a person realize something that they would
have trouble realizing on their own, or does the publisher help get creatively more out
of the author than they might be able to get on their own.
In addition to handling, you know, pesky details, I think that's going to be,
I think that's going to be important because yeah, you we used to have lots of big marketing discussions about how many, you know, copies this account was ordering or that account and is not that that doesn't exist anymore, but it is a smaller percentage of the pie.
I mean, we're not even talking about airport distribution
on lives of the Stokes,
because who's spending time in airports, right?
And so it's a weird change that everyone has to adapt to,
I guess.
Yeah, I mean, hopefully this is temporary.
Yes. Yeah, I mean, hopefully this is temporary.
The Hentenine Play lasted for 15 years, Nikki.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I'll keep that in mind.
No, no, I think it makes sense.
Well, here's to many more books and we can tease two people that we are already set to be
in business together for several
more books.
And so all the discussion we're having is moot anyway because we're hitched for a few
more and people can stay tuned for those.
Awesome.
Well Ryan, I'm so pleased for you and excited about this one that's coming out in September.
It's called Life in the Stoic.
If you're interested, don't know about that yet.
You know, I think it's going to be really cool.
It's got a lot of fun stuff, Sam.
Well, thank you.
And yeah, thanks for taking the meeting 10 years ago.
And more importantly, thanks for taking the meeting 10 years ago and more importantly, thanks for
for, I guess, reluctantly purchasing the obstacles the way.
So I would get it out of my system and write other marketing books.
And because without that, we wouldn't be here right now.
Amazing.
All right.
Thanks.
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