Reading the World | قراءة العالم | World Literature, Critical Reading, & Culture

Terry Whalin on Publishing Myths: Why Being Published Is Not the Same as Being Read

42 min · 16. juni 2026
episode Terry Whalin on Publishing Myths: Why Being Published Is Not the Same as Being Read cover

Description

What does it really mean for a book to be published—and why does publication not guarantee that a book will actually be read? In this episode of Reading the World, Ali Alhajji speaks with Terry Whalin [https://terrywhalin.blogspot.com], author of 10 Publishing Myths [https://www.marketing4books.com/us-ord] and an acquisitions editor at Morgan James Publishing, about the hidden machinery behind book publishing. Drawing on his experience as an author, editor, literary agent, and acquisitions editor, Whalin explains what many writers misunderstand about publishing: author platform, acquisition decisions, distribution, bestseller lists, self-publishing, and the difficult work of reaching readers. The conversation moves beyond practical publishing advice to ask a larger cultural question: how do books become visible, valued, and socially present? Together, Ali and Terry explore the gap between a book being available and a book being read, and what that gap reveals about authorship, readership, literary value, and the systems that shape what reaches public attention. A reflective conversation for writers, readers, students, editors, and anyone interested in publishing, books, literary visibility, and how culture decides what is worth reading. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566933/fan_mail/new] Reading the World | قراءة العالم A bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested. Each episode takes one question at a time, carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification. Follow the podcast to continue the conversation. Want to be a guest on Reading the World | قراءة العالم | World Literature, Critical Reading, & Culture? Send Ali Alhajji a message on PodMatch, here: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/readingtheworld  [https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/readingtheworld ]

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18 episodes

episode How Law, Social Work, and Meditation Shape the Way We Read People — with Bob Martin artwork

How Law, Social Work, and Meditation Shape the Way We Read People — with Bob Martin

What does it mean to read another person, and what happens when the framework that helps us see also blinds us? In this episode of Reading the World, Ali Alhajji speaks with Bob Martin, a former criminal trial lawyer, clinical social worker, meditation teacher, and author, about the different ways law, therapy, and contemplative practice interpret human behavior. The conversation explores how the courtroom reads testimony, silence, credibility, and evidence; how social work shifts attention from judgment to understanding; and how meditation helps us step back from our thoughts, biases, and inherited assumptions. Bob reflects on what each of these frameworks reveals, and what each one is structurally unable to see. The episode also examines the relationship between Taoism and Christianity, including where the two traditions converge in their practical teachings and where their cosmologies remain irreconcilable. Bob discusses his book, which places the Tao Te Ching in conversation with Christian wisdom, and explains why meaningful comparison must preserve difference rather than erase it. Ali and Bob also consider whether political neutrality can become its own ideology, how institutions classify people before they speak, and why being heard can sometimes matter as much as the outcome of a legal case. This is a conversation about law, mindfulness, social work, religion, interpretation, and the ethics of reading human beings carefully. Topics include: * law, evidence, testimony, and courtroom interpretation * social work, judgment, empathy, and accountability * meditation, mindfulness, and cognitive bias * Taoism, Christianity, and comparative religion * the Tao Te Ching and spiritual translation * political polarization and ideological frameworks * institutional power and the categories used to define people * meaning, happiness, compassion, and human insignificance Guest: Bob Martin, JD, MSW, CMT [https://theflowmedia.com] Host: Ali Alhajji [https://alialhajji.me] Podcast: Reading the World [https://www.readingtheworldpodcast.com] Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566933/fan_mail/new] Reading the World | قراءة العالم A bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested. Each episode takes one question at a time, carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification. Follow the podcast to continue the conversation. Want to be a guest on Reading the World | قراءة العالم | World Literature, Critical Reading, & Culture? Send Ali Alhajji a message on PodMatch, here: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/readingtheworld  [https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/readingtheworld ]

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episode Terry Whalin on Publishing Myths: Why Being Published Is Not the Same as Being Read artwork

Terry Whalin on Publishing Myths: Why Being Published Is Not the Same as Being Read

What does it really mean for a book to be published—and why does publication not guarantee that a book will actually be read? In this episode of Reading the World, Ali Alhajji speaks with Terry Whalin [https://terrywhalin.blogspot.com], author of 10 Publishing Myths [https://www.marketing4books.com/us-ord] and an acquisitions editor at Morgan James Publishing, about the hidden machinery behind book publishing. Drawing on his experience as an author, editor, literary agent, and acquisitions editor, Whalin explains what many writers misunderstand about publishing: author platform, acquisition decisions, distribution, bestseller lists, self-publishing, and the difficult work of reaching readers. The conversation moves beyond practical publishing advice to ask a larger cultural question: how do books become visible, valued, and socially present? Together, Ali and Terry explore the gap between a book being available and a book being read, and what that gap reveals about authorship, readership, literary value, and the systems that shape what reaches public attention. A reflective conversation for writers, readers, students, editors, and anyone interested in publishing, books, literary visibility, and how culture decides what is worth reading. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566933/fan_mail/new] Reading the World | قراءة العالم A bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested. Each episode takes one question at a time, carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification. Follow the podcast to continue the conversation. Want to be a guest on Reading the World | قراءة العالم | World Literature, Critical Reading, & Culture? Send Ali Alhajji a message on PodMatch, here: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/readingtheworld  [https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/readingtheworld ]

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