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Smoking With Jeff Landon
I don't really long for the past, that much, but I like to write about teenagers because at that age everything is new and raw and dramatic and terrible and delirious. I like the extremes, and I miss that, absolutely. How has teaching elementary school affected your writing? Not much. But if I ever want to write about wedgies and ear flicks, farts and burps, crybabies and bullies, and an insatiable hunger for candy—well, I have my sources. How do you feel about Flash versus other literary forms? Flash—or whatever you want to call it—is close to poetry, but you can say the same thing about short stories. It's all about finding the right characters, the right words, and the odd details—and losing everything that isn't necessary. I love to write short stories and short-short stories. I've tried to write novels, but they were all, deeply, awful. When I read, it's almost always short stories or poetry. Do you have your own Carrie Wallace? Uhm, uhm, sort of, in a way. The story is fiction, and for the most part it's not about any specific person—it's more about memory and time and the people and places that never go away, inside you. Besides writing, what one activity would you really miss if it was taken from you? Walking and baseball—I like to walk for a long time every day because that's when I think about the things I want to write about. I like sports, but baseball, sitting outside at twilight with your beer and peanuts, man, I'd hate to lose that. What authors have most strongly influenced your work? A partial list of contemporary writers: Ron Carlson, Richard Bausch, Bobbie Ann Mason, Amy Hempel, Mary Robison, Judy Troy, Charles Dickinson, Nick Hornby, Tobias Wolff, Frederick Barthelme, Jill McCorkle, Susan Minot, Andre Dubus, J.D. Salinger, Mark Strand, Barry Hannah, Richard Yates, Raymond Carver, James Agee, Lee Smith, Jonathan Penner, Lynda Barry, Susan Hubbard, Nancy Lehman, and Theodore Weesner—and so many more. I'm also influenced and moved, daily, by the work of my writer friends. Read Thirty-Nine Years of Carrie Wallace. |
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| Issue Three (March 15, 2004): The Lunchbox by Rebecca Marshall-Courtois «» Does It Please You? by Ellen Meister «» The Last Summer by John Mantooth «» Black Mollies by Jayne Pupek «» Mille Fleur by Bunny Goodjohn «» Holy Water by Rhonda Belt «» Jewel by Gary Cadwallader «» Fog by Maryanne Stahl «» The Floating by Brandon Hobson «» Metallic by Ellen Parker «» The Beekman Hill Window Box Contest by Patti Weisgerber «» Raptus Brisk by Brian Gaolor «» Salinger Pays Caulfield a Visit by Terry DeHart «» The Circle of His Arms by Wayne Scheer «» Streetlights in Rome by Aaron McQuiston «» Tea and Biscuits by Louise Jackson «» Mere Oblivion by Jane Sales «» Thirty-Nine Years of Carrie Wallace by Jeff Landon «» The Old Man Who Made Whistles by Tom Sheehan «» For Rent by DJ McDougle «» Interviews: Rebecca Marshall-Courtois «» Ellen Meister «» John Mantooth «» Jayne Pupek «» Bunny Goodjohn «» Rhonda Belt «» Gary Cadwallader «» Maryanne Stahl «» Brandon Hobson «» Ellen Parker «» Patti Weisgerber «» Brian Gaolor «» Terry DeHart «» Wayne Scheer «» Aaron McQuiston «» Louise Jackson «» Jane Sales «» Jeff Landon «» Tom Sheehan «» DJ McDougle «» Cover Art "Lady Considers" by Robert Dornberg «» Letter From the Editor | |||