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A Geography of Reading

"It is by reading novels, stories, and myths that we come to understand the world in which we live." -Orhan Pamuk

Finding Community in BOMB: The Author Interviews

March 23, 2014 by Isla McKetta, MFA 6 Comments

bomb the author interviews

The first clue (or at least an early one) that I wanted to be a writer should have been when I started reading, then heavily underlining, author interviews in The Paris Review. I loved reading about the writing lives of major writers like Joan Didion and William Faulkner so much that I collected every edition of The Paris Review Interviews and then started putting the editions of Writers at Work (an earlier collection of interviews from The Paris Review) on my Christmas list.

I still love reading author interviews, but the ones that get me most excited these days are in BOMB, so when I saw an advance sampler of BOMB: The Author Interviews at AWP, I had to have it.

The Difference Between BOMB and The Paris Review

I flat-out love both of these magazines and the interviews therein, but I read them for different reasons. Where The Paris Review is polished and full of names that have been accepted into the literary world (and often elevated to the canon) and often focuses on the craft of writing, BOMB is edgier–frequently introducing me to people I haven’t yet heard of–and can veer into whatever the writers want to discuss. Many of the writers interviewed in BOMB are well known in some circles, but they haven’t broken through the mainstream for whatever reason. That’s true of the interviewers too.

What I mean is that in The Paris Review Interviews, especially the collected interviews, you’re likely to learn more about the best writers you encountered in high school. In BOMB, you’re more likely to encounter writers that your really in-the-know college lit professor talks about. BOMB is where I first heard of Heidi Julavits, who I’ve gushed about here and here.

One of the things I love about both magazines is that they cross artistic genres. And I don’t mean poetry vs. fiction (although they do that). Both thoughtfully incorporate visual art too. BOMB takes it a step further by going into performance art, sculpture, and video, and one of my favorite things is reading interviews between artists who work in media I’ll never attempt. I like to see in what ways their discussions of art and process are the same and different as the ways writers talk about their work. And it’s all edgy and I hate (don’t understand) 80% of the artwork, but I learn from what they’re doing and become a more thoughtful artist as a result.

“Reading BOMB interviews was one of the ways I began to conceive of myself as an artist.” – Miranda July

Discussions Between Writers

Where The Paris Review seems to send an up-and-coming writer (who is often barely present in the interview except in the shape of the questions) out to focus on the writer they are interviewing, the interviews in BOMB: The Author Interviews are a collaboration and a discussion. I think that’s part of the reason I like them at this stage in my writing life.

Watching Edwidge Danticat riff off of Junot Diaz (or was it the other way around) teaches me so much more about life on Hispaniola (the island that contains Haiti and the Dominican Republic) than I could ever learn if one or the other was being interviewed by someone who was expected to facilitate the interview instead of being part of the conversation. So you often get introduced to two great authors at once and to see them in context.

Danticat’s first question of Diaz is “What the heck took you so long?” in writing The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, and he responds, “I’m a slow writer. Which is bad enough but given that I’m in a world where it’s considered abnormal if a writer doesn’t produce a book every year or two–it makes me look even worse.”

“I’m a crazy perfectionist. I suffer from crippling bouts of depression. I write two score pages for every one I keep. I hear this question and want to laugh and cry because there’s no answer.” – Junot Diaz, BOMB: The Author Interviews

The conversation feels real and revealing. Diaz talks about everything from his use of the N-word (which I know is a question he speaks to often) to the relationship between writers and dictators.

Meanwhile, when Mark Magill interviews Kathy Acker, the short, almost bullet-like back and forth comes off like performance art. He asks her about everything from her biographical facts to quotidian things like how often she brushes. It could be (and is) really weird, but it works and it speaks to the experimental nature of Acker’s work. At one point Magill gives her multiple choice questions on preferred dinner table discussions and what to do with the last bit of pie. The interview is revealing in an unexpected way.

A Writing Community on the Page

The thing about being a writer is that it’s lonely. You both need people and you need to be alone. BOMB: The Author Interviews lets me poke my head up on a writing break and learn about what other writers are thinking and how they approach their art even when my writing friends are holed up creating their masterpieces. It’s not a substitute for an actual community, but it’s a fantastic addendum.

I’m only reading a sample copy of BOMB: The Author Interviews right now, but the full edition will contain interviews by and with writers like Chris Abani, Oscar Hijuelos, Ben Marcus, Heidi Julavits, and Amy Hempel. I can’t wait to get the full book when it comes out in November and highly recommend it to anyone who loves author interviews as much as I do.

If you want to commune with some fantastic authors, pre-order a copy of BOMB: The Author Interviews from Powell’s Books. Your purchase keeps indie booksellers in business and I receive a commission.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: BOMB, Junot Diaz, Kathy Acker, Paula Fox

Remembering AWP 2014

March 5, 2014 by Isla McKetta, MFA 4 Comments

I needed AWP this year. I don’t think I knew how much until I was on my way to the airport to pick up my conference buddy, Liza and nearly started crying. It’s been a wonderful year of getting books accepted and working my ass off to get them in shape, but I haven’t been writing which means I haven’t felt much like a writer. AWP was a chance to commune with my people and to find that writer part of me, not just the marketer part of me. Here are my memories for AWP and a little advice for anyone who’s going to AWP in Minneapolis in 2015.

Readings

I was so glad to be invited to do a reading this year. It gave me a chance to gather with old friends and new. I got to engage with an audience and my work again. It even made me work up the balls to ask Ravenna Third Place to sell my book on consignment (because if you have a book, you should be selling that book). If you look around at your writing community and no one is setting up a reading, set one up yourself. My friend Ann did that at AWP Chicago and not only did she find a new audience, but she made new connections to boot.

Connecting with Friends

I have no idea what I did before I had a cell phone, because one of the highlights of the conference was the IMs I’d get from friends during this panel or that saying where they were headed next or where and when we’d meet for dinner. I know I missed people and of course I wanted more time than I had, but it was fantastic.

Leading a Panel

I also suggest you pitch a panel if you have any kind of expertise at all. In some ways it’s better and more interesting if that expertise is only tangentially related to writing. Figure out what sets you apart, then find some other writers who can add to the discussion. People are flattered to be asked.

I pulled together a panel entitled “Four Ways Blogging Benefits a Writer” with Rebecca Bridge, Ann Hedreen, Jack Remick, and Elissa Washuta. We tried to make it as conversational as possible (I hate the panels where people get up and read their essay on _____ for 15 minutes before passing the mic to the next droning essayist who also can’t make eye contact with the audience). I ended up being really grateful that our panel was the first panel of the first day. Our room filled up really early and by the time we got going, there was a crowd out in the hall. For the rest of the conference, people were coming up to all of us and telling us that it was the best blogging panel they’d seen at AWP.

The whole experience made me feel really confident and happy to be there. I had something to offer people and I was glad to share.

Connecting Your Work Life and Your Writing Life

If you have a day job like so many of us do, AWP is your chance to connect who you are in your day and night jobs. I work in Internet marketing, which means it wasn’t a stretch to build a panel around a writer’s biggest marketing tool. It was a good opportunity to put my and my company’s expertise in front of people and to expose us to a new market. It also meant that they paid for my conference fees and the time I was there. The fact that writing craft is an essential part of what I do on a day-to-day basis just made that argument easier because I learned a lot from the panels and connected with a couple of potential freelancers. I loved integrating my two selves.

Marketing for Publishers

I actually wrote an entire post on this for work, but the things I learned about marketing just by wandering the book fair were myriad and fascinating. Maybe that marketing self is more integrated than I thought…

Don’t Choose a Panel Based on the Author

More than one really big name did not show up at the conference this year. I think that happens a lot. And then sometimes when the big name shows up, they don’t live up to your expectations. I was pretty lucky that most of the panels I went to were really good, and even the one I chose based on the headliner was great in her absence. Turns out there are lots of other writers who write on the same subjects and I got to learn about them as well.

Taking Care of Yourself

AWP is happy writer fun time. From all-day panels to nighttime readings and then all night parties (I mostly skipped these), it’s easy to wear yourself out. A friend had offered me keys to her apartment near the Convention Center so I could take a nap. I wish I’d taken her up on it. I also wish I’d run home really quickly to drop off the full tote bag of books I bought early on Saturday. But I survived and haven’t even gotten sick yet. I may have fallen asleep during one conversation yesterday–my husband has been too nice to say whether that was true.

The day the writers all left, it started pouring in Seattle. But I’m not crying. I feel full and happy to move forward. There’s a lot of marketing in my future, and (I hope) some writing. However that balance shakes out, I’m really grateful that I was able to be part of AWP this year.

How do you reconnect with your writer self? Or am I the only one who loses that connection occasionally? I’d love to hear your stories in the comments.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, USA & Canada Tagged With: awp, awp14, book fair

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Polska, 1994

Polska 1994

Clear Out the Static in Your Attic

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What I’m Reading

Isla's bookshelf: currently-reading

Birds of America
Birds of America
by Lorrie Moore
The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc.
The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc.
by Jonathan Lethem
The Souls of Black Folk
The Souls of Black Folk
by W.E.B. Du Bois
Bomb: The Author Interviews
Bomb: The Author Interviews
by BOMB Magazine
On Writing
On Writing
by Jorge Luis Borges

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