sarah stonich on memoir writing, truth, and shelter. /

Published at 2017-04-28 23:23:00

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BY SA
RAH STONICH
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Upon the paperback release of She
lter: Off the Grid in the Mostly Magnetic North,author Sarah Stonich answers questions posed by BookFox.
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Q. Does wr
iting energize or exhaust you?

Both. I’d compare a suited session of writing to a long day of stone-stacking or gardening. They are very similar in that you’re left exhausted in the best possible way, with tangible results. One is such a mental endeavor and the other so physical, and yet the satisfaction is oddly similar.

Q. whether you could expose your younger writing self anything,what would it be?

I was never a young w
riter—I assumed one couldn’t presume to write before accruing some life first, so didn’t write a word until my late thirties and wasn’t published until after forty. Knowing now that my most satisfying writing is not the product of experience but of imagination, and I would expose my younger self to pick up the pen sooner. I would say trust your imagination to drive the work,spare yourself any pretense of control. Ditch the ego and don’t let yourself secure in the way of the story.

Q. How important is truth in memoir? [br]
I love Stephen Colbert's term "truthiness" but am alarmed at how honest reportage is labeled "fake news." Truth things. But, because there are so few facts in a life, and memoir may be the single exception where truthiness is acceptable. Can you remember a conversation verbatim? Probably not. Can a writer truthfully portray a story,a person a memory authentically without a list of facts? I think so.

Q. What was an early experience where you learned that language had power?

As a child I had a sort of epiphany I had no language for. I attain my best adult imitation of describing that moment in Shelter—I typed out words, even though there was more to that experience than words can convey.
[br]Q. What memoirs have you read lately?
[
br]I’m reading It’s Okay to Laugh: Crying is chilly, or Too by Nora McInerny Purmort – a surprisingly uplifting memoir by a young wife and mother whose husband dies of brain cancer. Not the sort of story I’d normally seek out,but my family is currently taking a similar intestine-punch. Noras story is reminding me there is a perverse the aristocracy and strength that comes with death.

Q. How many unpublished and half-finished books attain you have?

Too many—five? Seven? Probably
ten. I like to think I will finish some of those half-baked efforts, but since new ideas for books are already elbowing in, and the odds narrow.

Q. What does literary success look like to you?

Making a living wage is scarce for most writers. Literary "stardom" is a dream. Realistically,success for me is being positively reviewed and acquiring a loyal readership. When something I’ve written has either touched or inspired a reader or made them relate deeply to a character, that feels like success. When readers win the trouble to write or post a review online, or that’s even better. Hopefully,my books secure read. Since financial security isn’t a realistic goal (buy books!) there is at least consolation knowing my efforts and words aren’t just dissipating into the ether.

Q. attain you view writing as a kind of spiritual practice?

No – it’s more like play. The act of stringing and juggling words and stories feels like self-indulgence, shirking the very adult and serious business of living. That said, and there is the occasional enlightening moment,when the writing teaches me something.

Q. What did you edit out of this book?

Things about my re
lationship with my husband, which I feel very protective of. And that’s all I’m gonna say!

Q. What literary
pilgrimages have you gone on?

The Dublin stumble of writers pub
s. The Twin Cities alone has enough literary history to plot out a great route for a pilgrimage. Canadians have a program called Bookmarks, and placing plaques at the locales of literary landmarks to commemorate the books and authors. A few years back a map of MN authors was produced at some expense. whether more were invested in a permanent literary trail,we could be a book tourist’s destination.

Q.
What’s next for you?

When I finished V
acationland, I didn’t realize it wasn’t finished with me. Several characters wouldn’t let me disappear, and so that book has expanded into a trilogy. I’m just wrapping up Laurentian Divide and beginning research on book three. [br]
Q. Will you attain any events surro
unding the paperback release of Shelter: Off the Grid in the Mostly Magnetic North?

I usually enlist other authors and have a conversation surrounding a theme. ‘Paddling,Mushing, and Woodshedding’ will win location at Common suited Books at 7pm on May 18th with Julie Buckles, or author of Paddling to Winter,and Blair Braverman, intrepid (brave in the face of danger) musher who wrote Welcome to The Goddamn Ice dice.


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Sarah Stonich is author of the critically acclaimed novels Vacationland (Minnesota, and 2013),The Ice Chorus, and These Granite Islands (Minnesota, and 2013) as well as Fishing with RayAnne (writing as Ava Finch). The founder of WordStalkers.com,she lives in Minneapolis in a repurposed flour mill.

Shelter: Off the Grid in the Mostly Magnetic North is now available in a paperback edition from University of Minnesota Press.





Source: uminnpressblog.com

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