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Jay
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Sep 07, 2016 08:45AM

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Jay, why not answer it?

I never really felt like I mastered the art of place. A few great writers have said that place is character. A place has a personality and impact, and even sometimes an agenda. This is something I've struggled with in my own writing.
One of my short stories, "Mogi" was an attempt to master place (or let it master me). Alas, I feel like it was a flawed attempt.

In other words, I think there is a dialectic at work in which experiences of past landscapes affect one's interpretations of present and future ones, which in turn lead to a revision of one's understanding of earlier landscapes. But, like I say, months of reflection ... :-)

What role do you think place and geography play in your novel?
Place and geography were important. The beginning in Northwest Ohio was important, personally, because that's where I am from. After that, the spine of the novel unfolded through an America that was mainly horizontal--the Great Plains. The joke was that Joe and Violet would drive and drive and then end up at another strip mall freeway exit that looked exactly like the one they had been at several hours before. I-80 became an East-West Mississippi River in the more or less implicit allusions to Huck Finn. I have driven across the country a couple of times and am always disappointed in how much it is the same, culturally, from coast to coast. We have no places anymore, in the sense of cultural geography.
You can read the whole review and interview here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Geography-No...
Very Ballardian, to move it to a UK context.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Geography-No...
Very Ballardian, to move it to a UK context."
Hmmm...interesting because Gary also wrote this book:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Geography-No...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1...