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Smoking With Lennart Lundh

Art by Marty D. Ison
Art by Marty D. Ison
What inspired this piece?
This, and a companion piece that is its evil twin by being somber and wearing not a stitch of dialogue, came from seeing a photograph of a cowboy and his horse by a campfire at sunset.

Do you have any pets? If so, do they talk to you? What are their names?
My wife and I are dog breeders (just trash the letters from PETA and the recipes from Indonesia, please), so we're owned by quite a few animals. They "talk" to us through body language and expression. I know what we call them, but not what they call themselves.


We are always told to write about what you know. Do you?
A: Why would anybody tell you to write about what I know?

Yeah, yeah. I know Groucho's dead. I can still tell you where I was when I heard the news. Take two.

A. Empirical knowledge? Often, but not always — in this life, at least, I've yet to be a sociopath or horse, in Paris or Phu Bai, female or gay, whatever. What I don't know or haven't witnessed, though, I can find out. That's the other way to give "true" flesh to the imagination's bones.

What books or authors most influence(d) you?

Jeez, I started paying attention to words in 1952. Okay, this isn't an Academy Awards speech, so: McKillip and Brautigan, for their entire bodies of work; Bradbury, Sandburg, Haldeman; the old Dell SFF anthologies Judith Merrill edited. Seeing the written word as an offspring of both the troubador and cave-painting traditions, I've got to include Anderson, Mitchell, Newhart, etc.; Caillebotte, Hopper, Adams, unnamed photographers, etc., etc.; Kurosawa, Wilder, Huston, Brooks, three etcs. I won't name the "do as I say, not as I do" influences.

Is there anything else you'd like to tell our readers? Or would you like to promote your literary-based website? Or to tell us what gifts you would like for your birthday? Or to say "Hi Mom!"?
Be kind when you don't want to or have to.

I'm not full enough of myself (or anything else) yet to have a Web site. Gift cards from Borders would be nice. My Mom, and my Dad for that matter, doesn't have a computer for me to say "hi" through.

Read Campfire Conversation.
Issue Two (December 15, 2003): The Natural Order by Barbara Jacksha «» View From A Flying Jimmy by Tammy Turner «» ISO by Bret Fetzer «» Magic Yeast by Louisa Howerow «» Must Sign for Delivery by Jade Walker «» Memoirs of a Jump Rope Queen by Margaret A. Frey «» Nolo Contendere by Sean Oakley «» Campfire Conversation by Lennart Lundh «» Snap Shot by Peggy Duffy «» Fear by Rose McDonagh «» Because of Penguins by Jane Sales «» With Love, Moon by Eugenia E. Gratto «» Private Services by Diana Forrester «» Red Flecks by Louise Jackson «» Pictures—The Beach Outside of Nice by Nance Knauer «» Love and Death in Legoland by Kay Sexton «» Sunset in Santa Monica by Didi Wood «» Fragile by Eric Wrisley «» Interviews: Barbara Jacksha «» Tammy Turner «» Bret Fetzer «» Louisa Howerow «» Jade Walker «» Margaret A. Frey «» Sean Oakley «» Lennart Lundh «» Peggy Duffy «» Rose McDonagh «» Jane Sales «» Eugenia E. Gratto «» Diana Forrester «» Louise Jackson «» Nance Knauer «» Kay Sexton «» Didi Wood «» Eric Wrisleya «» Cover Art "Platinum" by Malina «» Letter From the Editor
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