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Smoking With Stuart Dybek The shame in Brisket comes from the character's recognition that he's been feeling sorry for himself, self-involved in his own very manageable woes, and suddenly his situation is contrasted to the unimagineable suffering of the death camps. For me, one of the great challenges and problems facing American literature is the recognition of privilege and of the contradictions that define America. America has made its own numbers. How many Vietnamese dead? How many still suffering from Agent Orange? How many civilians who continue to be slaughtered in Iraq. Bringing freedom to the world can be a bloody business indeed. I don't think we need to worry about running out of numbers that shame us. What “lesson” has writing taught you? What does writing continue to keep you in the dark about? Writing has taught me that the practice of craft can come to be nearly simultaneous with the experience of imagining. People often make a distinction between the two. I think that's a misunderstanding of what craft in any art form is. What role has short-shorts/flash fiction played in the larger world of fiction writing—and what’s the future look like? There are numerous ways to look at the short short. Three that especially interest me are the way it blurs the line between conventional distinctions between poetry and prose, and related to that what it has to teach about compression in prose which is directly related to one's definition of story, and finally—and this relates to definition of story as well—of the short short in sequence becomes a method of fragmentation. Past generations have of course experimented along the lines of all these notions and the experiments continue: that's all I can surmise about the future. If you were to guide beginning writers to the secrets of writing successful short- shorts, what essential skills would you try to convey to them? Short shorts are for me little laboratories of prose rhythm so I'd advise one to pay attention to that often overlooked aspect of writing. "I Sailed With Magellan" is described as a novel in short stories. "The Coast of Chicago" and "Childhood and Other Neighborhood Neighborhoods" both had common themes as well, but were more anthologies than novels. What brought about the decision to work more toward a novel approach? "I Sailed With Magellan" began as a conventional novel based on family stories. I was dissatisfied with it in that form so tried it in the novel-in-stories format. Neither of my previous two books of fiction began that way. Read Brisket. |
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| Issue Nine (June 15, 2005): Irvin Hammers a Cat House by Mike Young «» In the Dust by Joseph Young «» Pet Snail by Sam Vaknin «» Living in Sin by Stephen Ausherman «» China by Michelle Garren Flye «» In Too Deep by Kay Sexton «» How We Can Be Saved by Max Ruback «» Eros by Henry Stanton «» Saft by Jai Clare «» The Woman Who Sold Her Flute to Buy a Cabbage by Maggie Shearon «» Bird Tree by Lesley C. Weston «» Pornography by Steve Almond «» Brisket by Stuart Dybek «» A Deep Desire for Blue by Alexandra Fox «» The Names of Things by Cami Park «» Interviews: Mike Young «» Joseph Young «» Sam Vaknin «» Stephen Ausherman «» Michelle Garren Flye «» Kay Sexton «» Max Ruback «» Henry Stanton «» Jai Clare «» Maggie Shearon «» Lesley C. Weston «» Steve Almond «» Stuart Dybek «» Alexandra Fox «» Cami Park «» Cover Art "Groom Left Waiting at the Altar" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor | |||