December 5-8, 2012
[photo taken in Paris, France in October 2012 by Christine McNair]
Pearl Pirie tagged me in
this series of interviews [see her interview here], originally pointing out an
interview by Christine Fischer Guy, who writes:
There are a few
others I’ve read as well, including Darryl Joel Berger, Ariel Gordon, Tanis Rideout, Laurie D. Graham, Alex Leslie, Jennifer LoveGrove, Gillian Wallace, Sandra Nicholls, Gary Barwin and Lauren B. Davis.
Here are my answers to these questions:
- What is the working title of your book?
The working
title for my current work-in-progress collection of short stories is “On
Beauty.” I admit, it’s a title I’m not married to. It was long ago previously
called “The Wedding Present,” after a short story that might still be dropped
from the whole. For the time being, I’m worrying less about the title of the
collection than the stories themselves.
- Where did the idea come from for the book?
A singular
story dates from February 2010 (a story that, depending on my mood, I regularly
consider cutting from the collection entirely), but otherwise, the collection
had its initial impulse during a trip we made to Toronto for Christmas/Boxing
Week, 2011. We were spending a couple of days with my now-wife’s mother, and
ended up spending part of December 27th [see my post on such here] on
Bloor Street West, attempting a few hours of writing. We had wandered through a
since-closed location of Book City and picked up a number of things, including a
collection of essays by Milan Kundera, an issue of Believer, an issue of Geist,
some back issues of Granta and McSweeney’s. I read the most amazing
short story by Miranda July, “Majesty,” which immediately generated the beginning
sketches of a short story, “Fourteen things you don’t know about Arturus
Booth.”
I eventually
had to find her collection of short stories, No one belongs here more than you (Scribner, 2007).
But the ideas
themselves: sometimes I start with an idea for a story, sometimes a short
scene, sometimes only a title. From the anthology Prince of Stories: the Many Worlds of Neil Gaiman (2008), I adapted
the idea of the semi-fictional “A Short Film About John Bolton” (2003) to a
semi-fictional story set in 1968, “A short film about my father.” Another story
in the collection continues one particular thread from my second novel, Missing Persons (2009), because Amanda
Earl, quite literally, asked to know more. I have been attempting another piece
to further another thread from the same novel, but the story hasn’t quite
figured itself out yet.
For this
collection, I am very much interested in the collage aspect of accumulating
short, nearly stand-alone scene-fragments into a coherent, cohesive narrative
of some three pages in length. To articulate the essence of a short story, one
does not necessarily need to spell out all the facts.
- What genre does your book fall under?
Short stories.
Tightly-packed.
- Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
Johnny Depp. Or
the kid who was in that terrible John Carter flick.
- What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Short, sharp
and intensely personal; a large book packed into a small space. And yet, this
is entirely incomplete. The work should speak for itself.
- Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
I’m not really
interested in self-publishing this collection, and am represented by no
agencies of any sort. So far, my fiction has had but a single trade home, which
appears to be no longer an option.
I look with
envy at works of fiction published by Anansi and Scribner and McSweeney’s and
Douglas & McIntyre (even with their recent financial upheavals).
- How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
I am still in
the midst of the first draft, and rework many of the stories daily, slowly
carving, carving, carving. Over the twelve months I’ve been actively working on
this as my main writing project, I’ve got nearly ten finished stories I like,
another half-dozen in progress that I think have good potential, and another
half-dozen I haven’t decided on yet.
- What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
I’m not sure. I
would attempt to ascribe my fiction alongside works by Sheila Heti, Ken Sparling, Jean McKay, Etgar Keret, Lydia Davis and Sarah Manguso, but that
might all be vanity. It might be wishful thinking on my part.
I’ve composed a
couple of short essays over the past year or so on writing short fiction that
discuss some of my goals and concerns, including this blog post, and this short essay over at The Puritan.
- Who or what inspired you to write this book?
Living, and
writing. Part of what I’ve been enjoying about working in the realm of short
fiction is in watching how various unrelated strands – fragments of real life,
memory, information gleaned from television, newspapers, overheard tales, works
of non-fiction, etcetera – all manage to wrap themselves into a comprehensive
narrative weave. I don’t know where it all comes from, but it somehow make
sense in the three-page stretch of prose.
I seek
inspiration, at times, from other great works. Lately I’ve been reading Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities and
re-reading Milan Kundera’s The Book of Laughter and Forgetting.
- What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
I’m hoping the
combination of the collection’s sharp brevity and articulation of deeply
personal moments are enough to interest anyone.
As per the rules of this series, here
are the five writers I’ve tagged for self-interviews of their own:
Watch for their
interviews. Hopefully they’ll be posting over the next little bit.
(and for the sake of gender-balance: over a period of two weeks, I asked a total of ten female writers and five male writers. This is the list of writers who, for whatever reason, said yes.)
(and for the sake of gender-balance: over a period of two weeks, I asked a total of ten female writers and five male writers. This is the list of writers who, for whatever reason, said yes.)
Message for tagged authors:
Rules of the Next Big Thing
***Use this
format for your post
***Answer the
ten questions about your current WIP (work in progress)
***Tag five
other writers/bloggers and add their links so we can hop over and meet them.
Ten Interview
Questions for the Next Big Thing:
What is your
working title of your book?
Where did the
idea come from for the book?
What genre does
your book fall under?
Which actors
would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
What is the
one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Will your book
be self-published or represented by an agency?
How long did it
take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
What other
books would you compare this story to within your genre?
Who or what
inspired you to write this book?
What else about
your book might pique the reader’s interest?
Include the
link of who tagged you and this explanation for the people you have tagged.
Be sure to line
up your five people in advance.
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