Author Interview: Tom McCarthy of Remainder
tags:
Interview, Men in Space, Remainder, Tom McCarthy
I thought I’d kick this interview off with Tom’s agent Jonny Pegg from Curtis Brown. I asked him about Tom and he had this to say: It’s been a joy to see Tom’s talents recognized, but I’m most excited about what’s to come. Tom combines…
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How Do You Edit Your Work?
tags:
editing, interview, revising
The Internet simply makes it too easy to publish. We need to learn how to edit before we send our work to a magazine editor, agent, or any kind of reader. I recently interviewed author Mur Lafferty about the topic. Her essay, “My Albatross,” laid…
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Interview: Sheila Heti (excerpt)
tags:
Interview, Sheila Heti, Ticknor
Here’s an excerpt from an interview with Sheila Heti, over at my site.
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M: I’m reading Ticknor for the second time now, and I’m that much more impressed this time through with how you took someone respected in his field, made him largely unsuccessful and thoroughly unlikeable, and then made a very likeable story out of that unlikeable person’s thoughts.
S: Thanks.
M: Early on, Ticknor describes Prescott as a man solidly, stubbornly rooted in the habits of his youth, and then as someone disinterested in recapturing the past. Ticknor seems to have access to a lot of Prescott’s life, before the fame, and would seem to know him quite well, but then we get statements like these, Ticknor contradicting himself, which give the impression that he doesn’t really know him at all.
At some points in the book, Ticknor seems to approach mental illness-levels of personality disorder. Do you see him that way?
S: I think we read literature in a funny way. We try to make sense of it the way we make sense of life, and by this route, look at the characters as though they’re our friends, by which I mean: we gossip about them and cheaply psychoanalyse them. I find this to be a very funny thing to do to a character! In a lot of interviews I’m asked to speculate on Ticknor in this way, as though he is something separate from myself, someone I know, that I can talk about objectively. But of course, he is only my words, my head, my understanding of things, my aesthetic – not a person at all. And so that makes it difficult to say what he’s like much the way that saying what you yourself are like is difficult. It’s stupid to ask an author about their characters, I think.
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Gabriel Josipovici
tags:
Interview
Moreover, though I love the form of the short story and think I have written several pretty good ones, I realised, as I made my calculations, that in thirty years of writing I had written no more than two dozen viable short stories, whereas here…
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John Koethe interviews NPS winner Nadine Sabra Meyer
tags:
Interview
Nadine Sabra Meyer’s The Anatomy Theater (Harper Perennial, 2006) was selected by John Koethe as a winner of the 2005 National Poetry Series Open Competition. John’s most recent collection of poetry Sally’s Hair (HarperCollins, 2006) is forthcoming in paperback this March. Last week they discussed…
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