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Smoking With Vanessa Gebbie

Art by Marty D. Ison
Art by Marty D. Ison
In addition to bones, stone and teeth are important images in this piece. Did you find it challenging to work with these images?
No! I collect stones everywhere I go. My windowsills and my garden are home to many stones picked up on my travels, collected just because I like them. I like their sense of age, of having seen a lot. Their shapes. What they feel like. That feeling was transposed onto the gravestones here, I think.

And teeth... the graveyard that inspired this is very ancient; the stones are at crazy angles, higgledy piggledy, like a mouth full of uneven teeth. The analogy was just right.

This is not a typical Father/Daughter moment. What inspired this piece?
"Bones" was inspired by a photograph I took of the old graveyard in Prague's Jewish Quarter. Also, having my own children, I am very aware of the power children have to make us "see" things differently, if we are ready to "see". In this case, I put my characters, a young girl, and her somewhat prejudiced father, in an emotive setting, and followed them to see what would happen.

What do you find challenging about writing? What do you enjoy most?
All of writing is challenging! If it wasn't I wouldn't want to do it. The most difficult thing for me, if that is the real question, is learning to stand back from a piece, learning to see where the mistakes are, and rewriting!

What do I enjoy most? Letting go completely and letting a character run with their own story. Getting so surprised by what a character does, that there is no point in working out a plot beforehand. I'm still learning... so this doesn't happen enough. I also enjoy my studying writing in a fantastically stimulating, tough group, Alex Kegan's Bootcamp.

What writing style/theme do you most enjoy working in?
My style hasn't settled yet. I am trying all sorts of different things, and love having the support of Bootcamp, regular learning through critiquing the work of others, loads of feedback, but above all I love having the freedom to experiment. I settle most easily at the moment into a child's voice, and enjoy trying to see the world through a child's eyes. It looks different that way.

What would your creative outlet be if you were not able to write?
That's easy. Sculpture. Organic shapes. I wish I'd met Barbara Hepworth.

Read Bones.
Issue Four (June 15, 2004): Bones by Vanessa Gebbie «» Possessed by Louise Jackson «» Clouds, the Gills of Fish by Myfanwy Collins «» Her Face in the Light by Sue Bond «» Left Standing by Susan Henderson «» Moonlighting by Jen Wright «» The Evening of the Dock by Steve Almond «» Microsecond by Stacy Taylor «» All the Good People by Kathy Fish «» The Problem with Logic by Theresa Boyar «» Layover by H. A. Fleming «» The Girl and the Snake by TJ Rivard «» Indulgence by Brian Howell «» Other Times at Sunrise by Melanie Ann Campbell «» The Beauty Of Estelle by Darby Larson «» Carnivale by Pia Z. Ehrhardt «» Remembering Elizabeth by Bob Arter «» Tiny Bombers by Jeff Landon «» Green Socks, White Lies by Liesl Jobson «» Certitude by Rusty Barnes «» Interviews: Vanessa Gebbie «» Myfanwy Collins «» Sue Bond «» Susan Henderson «» Jen Wright «» Steve Almond «» Stacy Taylor «» Kathy Fish «» Theresa Boyar «» H. A. Fleming «» TJ Rivard «» Brian Howell «» Melanie Ann Campbell «» Darby Larson «» Pia Z. Ehrhardt «» Bob Arter «» Jeff Landon «» Liesl Jobson «» Rusty Barnes «» Cover Art "Jealousy" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor
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