Q&A: author Jenna Blum, The Stormchasers

May 28, 2010

Title: The Stormchasers
Author: Jenna Blum
ISBN: 978-0525951551
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: Dutton Adult (May 27, 2010)
Category: modern fiction
Review source: publisher
Rating: 5/5

Jenna Blum’s second novel, The Stormchasers, focuses on estranged twins Karena and Charles. After two decades, Karena follows a stormchasing group as a reporter in an effort to find her bipolar brother. Blum mixes a dark past, the bonds between twins [even those who’ve lived apart for many years], unpredictable often scary weather patterns and nearly almost more frightening vast territory- chasing tornadoes and violent storms– in the middle of America with a bold woman, Karena, and her dedication to find and possibly reconcile with her brother after so many years.

In my interview with Jenna, she discusses many of the topics addressed in The Stormchasers, her meticulous research, various aspects of writing, elements of the craft and her own propensity to seek out bizarre weather patterns. Recently, Oprah listed Jenna one of her top 30 favorite writers. Jenna lives in Boston.

Amy Steele [AS]: What appealed to you about writing a story about twins?

Jenna Blum [JB]: For THE STORMCHASERS, which is at its heart a novel about bipolar disorder and its consequences, I wanted to explore the relationship between siblings, one who has the disorder and one who doesn’t. Family members of people with bipolar disorder often feel guilty that they don’t have it themselves, and Karena’s guilt is exponential because her brother Charles, who’s bipolar, is also her twin. I’m not a twin—though I had an imaginary twin when I was a girl—but I had an amazing time researching the bond, reading and asking twins questions. I was interested too in how devastating it would be to be a “twinless twin,” or in the case of my characters estranged twins. How completely twinship informs twins’ lives! and often not in the ways we non-twins would expect.

AS: Why storm chasing?

JB: I’ve always been fascinated with storms. When I was a little girl, we used to visit my grandmother in southern Minnesota in the summers, and often, in the middle of the night, the tornado siren would go off and we’d have to run to the cellar. To me, a girl obsessed with The Wizard of Oz, this was terribly exciting. When I was four, I had the experience my heroine Karena has in THE STORMCHASERS: of seeing a tornado while everyone else was asleep. Like Karena, I hid beneath the living room couch and watched the black rope twister move across the picture window. I then spent much of my life trying to see another. My obsession with severe weather led me to stormchase as an adult, first as an amateur in Minnesota with my poor mom in tow, later with the professional stormchase group Tempest Tours (for description of what this was like, see Chase Diaries on my website). Like my characters, I’m still trying to understand the mysterious, majestic machinery behind big weather: how something as powerful and destructive as a tornado can happen so quickly, seemingly from a clear blue sky. And as a writer I’ve always been interested in how people put their lives back together after they’ve been devastated by huge forces beyond their control.

AS: What was the research like for this book—5 years with Tempest Tours—is that a long time to research?

JB: Not for me. Keep in mind that for my first novel, THOSE WHO SAVE US, I spent ten years researching the Holocaust, including interviewing survivors for Stephen Spielberg’s Survivors of the Shoah Foundation. So you’re talking to a girl who believes in getting the details right. But both THOSE WHO SAVE US and STORMCHASERS deal with complex subjects—the Holocaust, the mechanics of severe weather—and for ‘CHASERS, I was basically taking a crash course in meteorology. This was tough for somebody with no math brain whatsoever. Plus, the storms are so awe-inspiring that my first couple of trips out with Tempest—which is the best storm tour company in the business, by the way—I was basically just standing there with my mouth open. It has taken five years to be able to a) understand even some of what’s going on in the atmosphere and b) get used to it enough to be able to ignore it for a few minutes so I can gather the attendant details that make a scene come alive for a reader.

AS: Can you describe what happened?

JB: I got to see the greatest show on earth: the phenomenal sky sculptures known as supercells (rotating thunderstorms that sometimes produce tornadoes). I got to see some tornadoes! I got to see the stark, lonesome, majestic parts of this country you can get to only by driving, not to mention the World’s Largest Ball of Twine, the Mitchell, South Dakota Corn Palace, and Wall Drug. I got to eat a lot of road food. I now know how to make a healthy meal at a convenience store (string cheese, pretzels, V-8) and how to make a root beer float from A&W and an ice cream sandwich—while driving 75 mph.

AS: What was the best part of the research experience?

JB: I love everything about chasing: the beauty of the storms; the beauty of the landscape; the way chasing catapults you out of your everyday life and concerns and, because you’re playing a potentially deadly game of chess with severe weather, forces you to concentrate on the moment. What surprised me about chasing was the friends I made. I didn’t expect what I now think of as the “Band of Brothers” effect, but what happened was, I met total strangers who shared my passion for severe weather, and then we spent several days and nights on the road together, talking during down times, sharing the terrifying adrenaline-filled moments. Now half my closest friends are stormchasers who live on the Plains. And they will all be at my book launch!

AS: Karena is a journalist. Why did you pick that career for her?

JB: Karena was originally an on-air meteorologist—a weathergirl, and I tailed Pete Bouchard at Boston’s WHDH and Belinda Jensen at the Twin Cities’ KARE-11 news to get the details of her profession (they were so kind to let me crash into their studios). I loved being able to show readers what this was like, but I realized that Karena knew more about weather than the reader did, so much of the novel became “reader-feeder,” trying to find ways to wedge her knowledge in without being obtrusive. In the end, I couldn’t do it, so I gave Karena a profession that enabled her to ask a lot of questions about chasing—what most readers wouldn’t know but would want to know. Like: Why do people DO this? I’m lucky to have many friends who are reporters at the Globe, and they generously read and vetted Karena’s experience.

AS: What were your greatest challenges in writing The Stormchasers?

JB: The toughest thing was that because of the miraculous success of my first novel, THOSE WHO SAVE US, the ‘CHASERS was sold before it was written, when it was very much in the architectural stages. I had never written fiction on a deadline before, and it paralyzed me. For days and days I would get up, do my email, trawl Facebook, go shopping, walk the dog, then think, too late, I’ll try again tomorrow. I fantasized about running away from Boston, with all its distractions, and going somewhere really isolated to write; I went so far as to pack the car and sat in it the afternoons with the dog, eating road snacks and then going back inside for a nap. Finally my agent, who is French and fierce and doesn’t miss a trick, called me and demanded that I write her a scene by the end of the day. “Now?” I said. “But it’s naptime.” “Go,” she said, so I did. She continued to demand a scene a day, and she gave me permission to run away from home to do it. So I went to live in a motel in rural Minnesota, where the ‘CHASERS is set, with my dog, Woodrow. And we stayed there until the novel was done.

AS: When you write do you use your own experiences or completely separate yourself?

JB: A little bit of both. I don’t know any fiction writer who makes everything up completely. If they do, I envy their imagination. Then again, I am incapable of telling anything truthfully—even stories in my own life get a little embellished, according to my reporter friends. What happens is I take an emotional situation that fascinates me—usually having to do with people’s lives being wrenched out of socket by huge forces beyond their control. And then I plug it into a fictional situation. Any truths I start with, including characters “inspired by” actual people, as they say on TV—they become totally alchemized into fiction through this process.

AS: How do you manage to remove yourself and your opinions from a story? Do you/ is it possible?

JB: It is extremely important to me not to proselytize to the reader, to give my opinion or take a moral stance. To me, that’s not what fiction is for, and if I read fiction that seems preachy or obvious, it’s not doing its job. And particularly given the subject matter I work with—the Holocaust, mental instability—it’s actually a moral imperative for me to steer very clear of providing easy answers or platforms. In fact, quite the opposite: I give main characters opposing points of view and let the reader bring his or her own opinion to the table. It’s a Hegelian principle that drama consists not of right and wrong but two equally powerful points of view, both of which are right.

AS: What is the most difficult emotion to write?

JB: Fear, is my first response—but any emotion can be challenging to write because you don’t want it to be heavy-handed. There’s the struggle between wanting to personalize the emotion by making it physical—a character’s stomach knots when she’s frightened, for instance. Show, don’t tell. But a little of that goes a long way and can seem clumsy and disingenuous, too. I mean, you don’t want a character habitually sobbing, barfing, or getting an eye-twitch every time something exciting happens, for instance. I finally decided after trying to calibrate this delicate balance that the best way to do it, for me, was to be honest and direct about what the character is feeling. “Karena looks up at the black boiling sky. She is terrified.” And unless a specific physical symptom that’s organic to that character suggests itself, that’s it.

AS: Why do you write?

JB: I’ve always wanted to be a writer, ever since I can remember. I’ve never been good at anything but writing, talking about writing, teaching writing, and food service. This doesn’t really answer your question, though. Really, I write because I have to. I have people in my head and they have stories that need to be told, and if I don’t get them down, it makes me feel a little crazy.

AS: You teach a novel writing workshop at Grub Street? How does teaching impact your writing?

JB: I absolutely adore Grub Street, and it’s the reason I stay in Boston. I’ve lived in different cities and they’ve had their charms, but they didn’t have Grub—this friendly, dynamic, serious life-support system for such talented writers. I’m taking a break from my “Council”—my ongoing, 5-year master novel class—right now to promote THE STORMCHASERS, but I miss it powerfully, because one thing being among my Grub novelists allows me to do is talk writing. What’s working, what could be improved, why. The creative process, its magic and its balkiness. Talking about pure writing is an oasis for me amidst the business of writing, which is also amazing but a horse of a completely different color.

AS: What characteristics do you like best about Karena?

JB: Oh, goodness. It’s like asking, what do you like about your child? I love Karena—all my characters in this book! Well, I like how smart Karena is, and her sense of humor, and her persistence—although she’s scared a lot of the time, and who wouldn’t be given the things that have happened to her, she doesn’t give up. In fact, I think the trait I like best in Karena is her courage. She might not describe herself as courageous, but then again many courageous people don’t, because they feel fear. Karena has been through a lot of trauma and it has made her wary, yet she is willing to keep extending herself to other people—especially if it means finding and helping her twin brother, Charles. To be afraid and act anyway is the definition of courage.

AS: When do you know that you’ve developed a character enough and when do you know when a story has been completely told?

JB: I don’t really think in terms of developing my characters enough because to me, they’re real people, and as with real people, there’s always more you don’t know. Even the people I know best in my life have their mysteries—even the person you think you know best, yourself, can surprise you! I look at my characters through this window of time I’ve been given, the parameters of the story, and I get to know them as best I can for that duration. I probably know them better than anybody, but I like to give them the dignity of their own lives. As for the story, I’m an adamant structuralist, so before I set out to write anything—story, novel, scene—I’ve already charted where it’s going and why. That’s what “plot” means, in the strictest sense: “To chart out in points” (Webster’s). So I know when the story should end. As to when a book is done, slightly different question, I think when you’re dickering between word choices—“Gaze or stare? Gaze or stare? GAZE or STARE, damn it?”—you’re ready to release it into the world.

As I am about to do with THE STORMCHASERS. I hope everyone enjoys it!

Shop Indie Bookstores


Shop Indie Bookstores

buy at Amazon: The Stormchasers

TOUR DATES FOR JENNA BLUM:

May 27 (Thursday)
6:00 P.M.
THE STORMCHASERS LAUNCH
Reading: 6 P.M., Coolidge Corner Theater
Signing: 7 P.M. Brookline Booksmith (across street)
279 Harvard Street
Brookline, MA
*YOU MUST RESERVE TICKETS FOR THIS EVENT. PLEASE CALL (617) 566-6660*

June 1 (Tuesday)
7:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Blue Willow Bookshop
14532 Memorial Drive
Houston, TX

June 4 (Friday)
7:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Borders Bookstore
800 West 78th Street
Richfield, MN

June 5 (Saturday)
4 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
Caledonia Public Library
231 E. Main Steet
Caledonia, MN
for directions: 507-725-2671

June 7 (Monday)
7:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Prairie Lights Books
15 South Dubuque Street
Iowa City, IA

June 9 (Wednesday)
7:30 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Women & Children First
5233 North Clark Street
Chicago, IL

June 10 (Thursday)
7:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Next Chapter Bookshop
10976 N. Port Washington Road
Mequon, WI

June 11 (Friday)
4 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Del City Library
4509 Southeast 15th Street
Oklahoma City, OK

June 13 (Sunday)
2:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Full Circle Bookstore
1900 NW Expressway
Oklahoma City, OK

June 15 (Tuesday)
6:30 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Rainy Day Books at the Kansas City Public Library
14 West 10th Street
Kansas City, MO

June 16 (Wednesday)
7 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Borders Bookstore
1519 South Brentwood Boulevard
Brentwood, MO

June 19 (Saturday)
2:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Arlington Barnes & Noble
3881 South Cooper Street & Parks
Arlington, TX

June 22 (Tuesday)
4 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
Guymon Public Library
206 NW 5th Street
Guymon, OK

June 25 (Friday)
7:30 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Tattered Cover Book Store
2526 East Colfax Avenue
Denver, CO

~June 28-July 5th: The Stormchasers Tour, Tempest 10/10, when I will actually be stormchasing! To sign up and come with me, please visit www.tempesttours.com~

July 6 (Tuesday)
6:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
The Bookworm Of Edwards
295 Main Street C101
Edwards, CO

August 24 (Tuesday)
7:00 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
RiverRun Bookstore
20 Congress Street
Portsmouth, NH

August 26 (Thursday)
7 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
Gibson’s Bookstore
27 South Main Street
Concord, NH

September 4 (Saturday)
2 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
Westwinds Bookshop
45 Depot Street
Duxbury, MA

September 14 (Tuesday)
5:30 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Beacon Hill Author Series
The Hampshire House
84 Beacon Street
Boston, MA

September 15 (Wednesday)
5:30 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Haley Booksellers at Stellina Restaurant
47 Main Street
Watertown, MA

September 16 (Thursday)
7 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Andover Bookstore
89 Main St
Andover, MA

September 19 (Sunday)
2 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/signing
Newtonville Books
296 Walnut Street
Newton, MA

September 26 (Sunday)
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
2 P.M.
Blue Door Books
501a Central Ave.
Cedarhurst, NY

September 29 (Wednesday)
7 P.M.
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
Watchung Booksellers
54 Fairfield St.
Montclair, NJ

September 30 (Thursday)
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
7 P.M.
Manhasset Barnes & Noble
1542 Northern Boulevard
Manhasset, NY

October 19 (Tuesday)
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
with author Jon Papernick
7 P.M.
Porter Square Books
25 White Street
Cambridge, MA

October 23 (Saturday)
The Stormchasers reading/ signing
2 P.M.
4745 Ashford Dunwoody Road
Dunwoody, GA
www.borders.com


FILM: Love Ranch with Helen Mirren

May 27, 2010

Love Ranch with Helen Mirren and Joe Pesci is now way up on my must-see list for this summer.

The Guardian has the full breakdown here.

Based on a true story about a couple who opened first legal brothel in Nevada.
1976– gambling, boxing and prostitution intersect.

Pesci: “There’s no business like HO business.”

Mirren: “I’ve got 25 psychotic whores to handle. That’s a full dance card.”

trailer:


MUSIC: Charlotte Gainsbourg video for Time of the Assassins

May 26, 2010

amazing, haunting voice


Girls Rock Camp Boston, August 2-6

May 23, 2010

One of my favorite and one of the sweetest Boston musicians, Hilken Mancini has started Girls Rock Camp Boston.

what is better than sending girls off for a week of rock and roll?

Hilken Mancini [former band member of Fuzzy]–Program Director
Mary Lou Lord–Music Director
Nora Allen-Willes- Administrative Director / Camper Coordinator [she worked for Girls Rock Camp in Portland, Ore.]

mission:
Our mission to help build self-esteem and leadership skills for girls through music education and performance is now happening in the Greater Boston Area. We hope to stimulate and enrich the communities surrounding us and provide space to foster and showcase that power.

see more info at the GIRLS ROCK CAMP site

details
–for girls ages 8-16
–day camp
–girls will learn how to play instruments (guitar, bass, drums, vocals and keyboards), write an original song, and perform it at a rock venue- in just one week
–takes place August 2-6


The Broken Blue Line: book review

May 23, 2010

Title: The Broken Blue Line
Author: Connie Dial
ISBN: 978-1579622008
Hardcover: 240 pages
Publisher: Permanent Press (June 1, 2010)
Category: mystery/thriller
Review source: publisher
Rating: 3.5/5

The Broken Blue Line is the second Mike Turner thriller by Connie Dial. It’s a decent procedural follow-up although it pales in comparison to Internal Affairs which provided a riveting glimpse, both expansive and specific, into what police officers might be going through on a daily, weekly and yearly basis in their careers. What most appealed to me in her debut is that Dial delved into the feminist aspect of the police force and the LAPD with “The Mafia,” a group of highly ranked women who meet weekly. Few women make it that far up in the ranks on any police force and Dial touched on this often in her debut.

Police thrillers are not a genre I seek out to read. However, Dial’s first novel, Internal Affairs, proved so compelling I wanted to read this next one. While I didn’t find The Broken Blue Line to be a page turner that I couldn’t wait to find out what happened in the end, stands on its own and proves entertaining for the most part.

In The Broken Blue Line, female police officers remain mostly at the peripheral and those involved are needy [Turner’s on/off again girlfriend Miriam], protective and motherly [Beverly, the mother of a corrupt cop that Turner and his team investigate], or just plain conniving and evil [Helen, an illegal immigrant]. Turner and his rogue group of Internal Affairs investigators become involved in a tangled web of deceit, danger, and greed. Dial does her best to expose the dichotomy between the laziness and red tape of the police force and the hard-working, devoted officers.

In The Broken Blue Line, Dial succeeds in showing the hypocrisy, the rise to power of those who’ve never even worked a beat and the tireless officers who risk their lives to protect citizens. For this, Dial is to be commended. Her nearly three decades on the LA police force seeps through onto every page: the good, the bad, and the ugly.

Purchase at Amazon: The Broken Blue Line


FILM: The Kids are Alright trailer

May 20, 2010

Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, Mark Ruffalo– great, great cast
written and directed by Lisa Cholodenko [The L Word, Laurel Canyon]


MUSIC PROFILE: Crooked Still

May 20, 2010

My guy and I have tons in common—films, literature, museums, theatre—but one thing: music. He’s a little bit country and I’m a little bit alternative. I’m a lot alternative. When I played my guy Crooked Still he said: “They’re good pickers.” I had no idea what that means but it’s a great compliment.

Though Crooked Still has been kicking around Boston for nearly a decade in what I just found out is a bustling bluegrass scene, I just heard the band on NPR recently. I also labeled the band alt-country. The eclectic sound and vocalist Aoife O’Donovan’s lush, stunning voice attracted me.

“The bluegrass scene in Boston is pretty huge,” O’Donovan told me yesterday. “There are a lot of bands coming out of Boston and there are a lot of great bands moving to Boston from all over the country, especially really young people. It is the place to be. It’s not necessarily bluegrass but new acoustic music. I don’t even consider Crooked Still to be bluegrass. We’re definitely a more progressive band. I think the music schools have a lot to do with [the popularity of new acoustic music in Boston]—Berkeley, NEC. There are some great teachers in Boston. There are a lot of supportive venues.”

Crooked still is: O’Donovan, bassist Corey DiMario, banjo player Greg Liszt, cellist Tristan Clarridge and fiddler Brittany Haas. Original members Aoife, Corey and Greg met while in college in Boston. Aoife and Corey went to New England Conservatory and Greg completed his PhD at MIT. Crooked Still’s fourth release, Some Strange Country, contains four original tracks and new arrangements of classic folk songs.

“What Crooked Still has always done is rearrangement of classic American folk songs and that’s where the songs come from, the American song book,” O’Donovan explained. “If something jumps out with a beautiful melody and great lyrics, then we go with it.”

Some Strange Country will be released on June 1.

Crooked Still is in the midst of a tour. Here are the remaining dates:

May 20—The Grand Auditorium—Ellsworth, ME
May 21—Stone Mountain Arts Center—Brownfield, ME
May 22—Sanders Theatre—Cambridge, MA
May 30—Strawberry Music Festival—Sonora, CA
June 1—AMSD Concerts—San Diego, CA
June 2—Largo at the Coronet—Los Angeles, CA
June 4—Kuumbwa Jazz Center—Santa Cruz, CA
June 5—Bluegrass for the Greenbelt—Oakland, CA
June 15–Snow Goose Theater–Anchorage, AK
June 16–Vagabond Blues–Palmer, AK
June 18–Midnight Sun Folk Festival–Nome, AK


The Lake Shore Limited by Sue Miller: quickie book review

May 19, 2010

Title: The Lake Shore Limited
Author: Sue Miller
ISBN: 978-0307264213
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Knopf; First Edition edition (April 6, 2010)
Category: modern fiction
Review source: publisher
Rating: 3.5/5

Her specialty before had always been sunless men. Dark, punishing, punished men. Men full of ambition and bitterness. She had fled Chicago, in fact, from such a man. Oh, certainly, there were professional reasons for the move, too. The job she’s gotten at BU, her feeling that she needed to leave the city she’d always lived in in order for anything big to happen to her, the sense that she was mired in familiar patterns in her work. She was not without ambition herself.

Last year, I absorbed Sue Miller’s The Senator’s Wife, a real page-turner, with rabid admiration and wonder. Her latest book, The Lake Shore Limited, focuses on another public obsession [and rightly so]: 9/11. I’ve read and enjoyed many novels about 9/11: Netherland and The Garden of Last Days among my favorites. Miller takes a curious, evocative approach in The Lake Shore Limited. The focus of the novel is a play about a terrorist attack on a train. Playwright Billy lost her lover, Gus, in 9/11. He was a passenger on one of the planes. Ironically, she had planned to move out and end the relationship. The characters in the novel– Billy, Rafe, the lead actor in the play, and Leslie, Gus’s sister– reflect on the play’s evocation of 9/11 as well as this theatrical catharsis. While not as gripping as I had hoped, Miller’s confident, thoughtful prose shines.

Sue Miller reads from The Lake Shore Limited at Brookline Booksmith tonight, May 19, 2010 at 7 pm.

Shop Indie Bookstores

buy at Amazon: The Lake Shore Limited


FILM: clip for Killers with Ashton Kutcher and Katherine Heigl

May 18, 2010

synopsis: After a recent break-up, Jen Kornfeldt (Katherine Heigl) believes she’ll never fall in love again [poor girl. I didn't find love until age 40]. On a trip to the French Riviera, Jen meets her dream guy– handsome Spencer Aimes (Ashton Kutcher). Three years the newlyweds are living the ideal suburban life [ how cliche is that?]– that is, until the morning after Spencer’s 30th birthday when bullets start flying. Turns out Spencer is a spy!

my take: Ashton Kutcher is quite dishy to look at for a few hours. Killers sounds completely predictable and unoriginal. It’s either a rainy or hot day escape or a netflix pick.

Killers opens June 4.

website.


INTERVIEW: author Robin Black– If I Loved You, I Would Tell You This

May 18, 2010

If I Loved you, I Would Tell You This is an exquisitely crafted, eclectic collection of short stories by Robin Black. Diverse characters and Black’s unique style and an eye for the darker side of humanity spring forth from the page. Recently, I spoke with Robin about her writing process and her debut collection of short stories.

Amy Steele [AS]: What do you like about writing short stories?

Robin Black [RB]: In a way I think that there are parts of short-story writing that tap your brain like doing a crossword puzzle or jigsaw puzzle because you’re working within a limited space and every part has to be the right part.

I think novels, even though it shouldn’t be this way, are more forgiving in a way. But since I’ve written some stories that have done well and one novel, that is really bad, it’s easier.

AS: What are the challenges in writing short stories?

RB: The biggest challenge in short stories is compression and re-learning that. In novels, a lot of it is about expanding things and following possibilities. At least it is for me. In short stories you really are asking yourself, “Do I need this?” or “Do I want this?” or “Should I use this space for something else?” or “Is this really relevant to the story?” In novels, you can have these long digressions. My stories are long. I pretty much have forgotten how to write a story under 8,000 words.

AS: How does your teaching affect your writing and writing affect your teaching?

RB: My teaching makes my writing much better. I find teaching incredibly stimulating and exciting. Every time I read someone else’s story in whatever shape it’s in, I always figure out things about my own work also. I always learn. I think that for a lot of us that are probably not going to be in the student role anymore, teaching is just as good for that. I hope my students get a lot out of it. I know I do. And I do think being a practitioner helps in the teaching. The assignments I give my students really grow out of my own struggles which are ongoing. One weird thing about writing is you learn how to do it and you never learn how to do it.

AS: What do you teach?

RB: I’ve taught general creative writing classes, undergraduate and graduate level, and I’ve taught short stories. I do individual coaching and have done some weekend workshops where the points I’m teaching are very applicable to short stories or novels. I try to make it that whoever’s taking it gets something out of it. I also teach non-fiction. I write memoir essays. So I teach that as well.

AS: How do you decide whether to tell a story in first-person or third-person?

RB: That is one of the things I work hardest on and every story I go back and forth and more and more I end up in third-person. It’s always a question for me of how to tell the story best and what would be gained by having it in first-person because you lose a lot. You lose some distance. You lose some perspective. Most of the time, I feel that the central character is not the best person to tell the story. Usually they don’t have enough insight to do it. I don’t want them to be that smart, I don’t want to be that wise and I’m not trying to create an unreliable narrator. So I want a narrator who has a bit of wisdom about the situation.

AS: Where do you get most of your ideas?

RB: They’re not autobiographical. I’m not someone who goes through life and has things happen and thinks, “That would make a great story.” I actually really admire people who are able to do that because I’m not. Every story in there has some sort of spark of something that did happen to me. There’s a story about a neighbor and a fence [“If I Loved You, I Would Tell You This”] and there actually is a fence in my driveway. There’s a story about someone having electricity in the water and we actually did have our water electrified.

AS: Why did you want to tell that story about the woman and the father connection [“Gaining Ground”]?

RB: That’s one that I have no idea how exactly it came together although there are some autobiographical aspects in there. We did have electric water. My father did not kill himself. He died six months before that. I’m sure I was working through all kinds of stuff but for me the way that happens in stories is the way that happens in dreams. I can go back over them and see my obsession or my psyche but it’s all really changes and it’s really similar to dreams for me.

AS: The story, “If I Loved You, I Would Tell You This,” about a woman with cancer who has an inconsiderate, selfish neighbor who builds a fence that abuts in front of her house is told in an interesting style. How did you develop it?

RB:That one came about out of a real emotional impulse. Our neighbor built a fence that basically as in the story is in front of our front door. I couldn’t get over the fact that he could be that mean. I had this impulse to talk to him about it and then I realized that I didn’t care about him enough and I didn’t think he could learn anything. He was past caring. That was really wanting to talk to someone and that is why it is one person talking to another character. Emotionally there’s a lot of truth in that story.

AS: Can you talk about the woman with the prosthetic leg and the woman who was jealous of her [“Pine”]?

RB: That’s sort of a soccer mom story and I had one season of being a soccer mom. There was another mother there who kept inviting me to join support groups with her. It was clear to me that this was a woman who felt like there was something missing in her life. Again in that weird dream way, the way that came out in the character is that she’s literally missing a limb. But the way it started was someone who was in some way incomplete. Also, the people you meet through your children who are not necessarily a person you have anything in common with or would choose to spend time with but that’s part of the child-rearing years.

AS: What attracts you to writing about the darker side of people?

RB: I’ve always been drawn to how people cope to tragic situations. I grew up in a family whose grandmother was paraplegic. Around the time I went back to writing, I also had some losses in my own life. I think the stories for me were, in a way, trying to work it out and look at situations where people were grieving and write them into a more optimistic position.

AS: How do you decide which stories to put into a collection and what do you think makes a great short story collection?

RB: The reality of my stories is that they were not written to be read together. They were written over eight years and they were published separately. When I was writing them, I was not writing for a collection. I was writing each one to write the best story I could write. When I submitted a collection, I submitted the best stories I had. I wrote one more after I’d already submitted it. I have mixed feelings that they are in a collection. A lot of times I wish I could put a label on them that says, “Read one a week.” I didn’t write them to be read like a novel. I think in a way it does the stories a disservice to read them that way. I like that they are all together but I think that my collection would really benefit from people reading them [slowly] and [spaced out].

AS: What inspires you to write?

RB: I like to observe and share it. I want the words to be good because that’s the way to communicate. It’s that I saw something about the way people react and I think it’s cool and I want to describe it.

Robin Black is a graduate of the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers. Her essays and stories have been published in The Southern Review, The Georgia Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, Bellevue Literary Review, and other publications. She lives in Philadelphia.

Title: If I Loved You, I Would Tell You This: Stories
Author: Robin Black
ISBN: 978-1400068579
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Random House; 1 edition (March 30, 2010)
Category: short stories
Review source: publisher
Rating: 5/5

more information at Robin Black website

buy at Amazon: If I Loved You, I Would Tell You This: Stories

Shop Indie Bookstores


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,891 other followers