U of Alberta writers-in-residence interviews: Tim Bowling (2010-11)
For the sake of the fortieth anniversary of the writer-in-residence program (the longest lasting of its kind in Canada) at the University of Alberta, I have taken it upon myself to interview as many former University of Alberta writers-in-residence as possible [see the ongoing list of writers here]. Seethe link to the entire series of interviews (updating weekly) here.
Tim Bowling’s 13th collection of poems,
The Duende of Tetherball
, will appear in the fall of 2016, and his 5thnovel, The Heavy Bear, will appear in the spring of 2017.He was writer-in-residence at the University of Alberta during the 2010-11 academic year.
Q: When you began your residency, you’d been publishing books for about fifteen years. Where did you feel you were in your writing? What did the opportunity mean to you?
A: Time. Time to think, to write, to feel validated as a working author (and a big part of the validation, of course, was the cold, hard cash). At the time, I had a number of projects on the go, was highly motivated creatively, but also highly stressed financially. So the opportunity was an absolute godsend.
Q: Were you solely working to further and complete various projects, or did you see your time as more of an opportunity to expand your repertoire?
A: Both, really. I’m usually finishing projects while others are incubating. That’s been my process from the start, but it’s intensified over the past decade. During the U of A residency, I was completing a book of poems and writing the draft of a novel (mostly, though, I was working with other writers on their work – that’s usually what a WIR does, as you know).
Q: How did you engage with students and the community during your residency?
A: Invitations to classrooms (including at a high school), but mostly writers with manuscripts contacted me by e-mail to arrange a meeting in my office.
Q: Was this your first residency?
A: My third, but my first of such length.
Q: How does your experience there compare to other residencies you’ve done?
Q: What do you see as your biggest accomplishment while there? What had you been hoping to achieve?
A: A great deal more money. Otherwise similar.
Q: Looking back on the experience now, how do you think it impacted on your work?
A: It bought me time to write without the usual level of financial anxiety.
Q: The bulk of writers-in-residence at the University of Alberta have been writers from outside the province. As an Edmonton-based writer, how did it feel to be acknowledged locally through the position?
A: Yeah, that was a fantastic part of it. But, to be really clear, Edmonton has been incredibly welcoming and supportive of me as a writer right from the beginning. And the U of A is a big part of that. I owe this city and its institutions a great deal.
Published on June 03, 2016 05:31
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