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Writer Seeking Emotional Rescue; An Interview With Safe House Author
Safe House . I think of Burt as being very much a writer’s writer. Human, open, full of life and always working on the craft.
JD: How has your writing practice evolved over the years?
BS: I've become a serious mindfulness meditator (six years and counting) ... although I hope I’ve also hung on to my goofball roots.
JD: Burt, I sincerely think you have! I know we are both admirers of Sharon Salzberg's teachings on mindfulness.
BS: Yes, I think mindfulness has helped me become a lot more forgiving of my first drafts; now I try to blow through them quick as I can (which still isn't all that quick). Since I feel less anxiety as I write, it’s easier for me to allow my curiosity to take the wheel, rather than my pre-conceptions. The question "Can I be a 'great' writer?" used to completely obsess me, and is now mostly gone because I’ve come to see it as grandiose, irrelevant and potentially very destructive. The same is true for other, equally extraneous obsessions -- "Will this get published? By whom?" and even "Is this any good?". These have been replaced or at least matched in intensity, by truly interesting questions like "What's at the heart of this story?" "Where's the real energy in it for me as a writer?" and maybe "What would interest me in it most as a reader?" As for later drafts, I've become much more focused on finishing stories, though alas still not on finishing them quickly. I’m resigned to the reality that I will always be willing to devote however much time it takes to wring everything I can out of a story. And for me that usually means years, not weeks or even months. On the other hand, I'm in a transitional time right now, and the writing does seem to be coming more quickly. If the resulting stories turn out well I'll be a lot happier (not to mention more prolific). But I'm not holding my breath.
JD: Is there one thing in particular that stops you up, throws you off course with the writing? Or can you choose one thing to say a bit about?
BS: Having said all of the above -- feeling less anxiety, worrying less about extraneous questions, etc. -- I shall now contradict myself completely. My real point above was that I feel less of all that now than in the past. So -- the following three things still throw me face-down into the weeds: 1) reading about publicly successful writers can induce a corrosive envy that may begin as a subterranean twinge or longing, but almost invariably ends up doing very nasty things to my mind-state, my self-confidence, and my patience; 2) beating myself up about how amateurish and unfocused my early drafts almost always are, how slow I am to revise and rework them, and the fact that the big-time publications have never been very interested in my stories can cause me a lot of pointless pain – and underscore my lifelong bewilderment about why I seem to be fairly smart in some areas of my life, but very stupid when it comes to writing stories, which is of course the activity I most love (and hate) to do); 3) the relentless pressure of money-making work and other responsibilities, can impinge from all sides on my writing time – which can have a not-so-subtle effect on my belief in myself as a "real" writer. Though as to that, I once heard a definition of a "real" writer as someone who really writes. And I like that.
JD: Me too. So, when you were putting your story collection together, how did you choose which ones to include/leave out? How did you come up with the order?
BS: It was pretty clear to me that after many years of revision I finally had a group of stories that, to my reader's (and writer's) eye and ear, worked on some level -- though not all of them equally well. I was also sure that I'd taken each of them as far as I could. My ultimate goal has long been to create stories that are as solid and tough as a well-made piece of furniture; built to last, with every part working as well as it can within the overall design and "function" of that particular piece. While I didn't feel I'd achieved that, I did feel I'd come as close I was able to – and a publisher was telling me she wanted to publish them. At the same time, it was equally clear to me that most of my other stories were either unfinished or simply not working at all. The group I chose (with my publisher’s help) was also thematically consistent -- arguably too consistent, but never mind -- and they seemed to play off each other pretty well. I'd recently read a book of deliberately related stories by David Huddle called
JD: Thanks, Burt! So what about you out there in the blogosphere? Any contradictions or paradoxes in your life as a writer, in your writing practice?
Do tell!
And for more writerly insights, visit the salon at http://www.bangthekeys.com, and check out my new book, Bang the Keys
This blog is still evolving. If you are interested in being interviewed, drop me a line at Jill@JillDearman.com. And finally, Happy 4th of July!
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