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Patrick
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Aug 31, 2011 04:57PM

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Jesse, what were your favorite books when you were young?

When I was rather young, I loved dog books: any book with a dog, or a boy and a dog, etc. White Fang, Call of the Wild, Where the Red Fern Grows and about 40 others. I read every one I could find. But, I did not get a dog.
I liked Mark Twain very much. I liked A Yankee in King Arthur's Court, Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, and most of all, no.44 The Mysterious Stranger.
Sherlock Holmes, I adored. All Creatures Great and Small also -- a series about a country veterinarian in England.
Also, The Once and Future King. Also, the whole series with Castle of Llyr, The Black Cauldron, Taran Wanderer, etc.
And Chronicles of Narnia, of which The Voyage of the Dawn Treader is my personal favorite.
I had a book, too, about Erik the Red that I liked very much. Also that one about the building of the pyramids: Pyramid.
And -- I had many books about daily life in different ages, daily life for the Vikings, for the Romans, Greeks, Egyptians, etc. Those were beautiful little books.



Did you originally intend to use fairy tale elements, or did it happen organically? The effect is both magical and disconcerting, typical for a fairy tale. The puppets kept Mary occupied, while also mirroring the disconcerting worry about what was going on outside those dark drapes. Is she safe here or is she not. The question kept me feeling uncomfortable and uneasy. I assume that was your intention. Why did this element work so well?
Lisa


Yes -- it was difficult early on. Now, my publishers understand the work I am doing.

Kind of you to say so!

The world is our world, as it always is. I often feel the way Molly does.

Those elements, now thought of as fairy tale elements, are our common human property, and part of the general manner in which we have told stories for thousands of years. The current situation is that some aspects of contemporary culture are thought-poor, and deny themselves access to things that are natural.


Lucid dreaming is a thing that is central to being human, to being alive. It is a bit like knowing about a park, a very beautiful park that is close to your neighborhood. Somehow, many people don't know it exists, but you like to go there often and walk.

i recently read "the curfew" and then decided in the past few days to re-read "the way through doors" and "samedi the deafness". so i was delighted when i got the email notification today about this discussion group. serendipitous...
although, i don't really have a question! just wanted to take the opportunity to tell you how extremely much i've enjoyed your work (including your poetry in "march book") ever since i read "the early deaths of lubeck, brennan, etc." in the paris review (which remains one of my favorite stories).
actually, now i've thought of a question--in what ways does your poetry inspire/influence your fiction and vice versa?
thanks,
grace
ps "the way through doors", btw, is just beautiful and brilliant, and i love it.

i recently read "the curfew" and then decided in the past few days to re-read "the way through doors" and "samedi the deafness". so i was delighted when i got the email notification toda..."
I am glad you've found time to read so much of my work. I am sometimes humbled to learn the ways in which people manage to include me in their lives. To answer your question, I began as a poet. I have always written poetry, and always read it -- as instructions on how to think. So, poetry was there first, for me. I was disheartened when I published March Book and got no response, really. It seemed then to me that I should do more things and various things and see what I could make of it. I suppose the thing that people who don't like my books, well, one of the things they don't like, at least, is that I find ways to include poetry, whether by hiding it or obscuring it or contextualizing it. I feel almost that an idea or a human feeling could be treated either in verse or prose, depending on inclination and resources -- and audience, of course.

i think one of the things i like most about your books is that you find ways of including poetry. so... keep it up, please. thank you.
and speaking of, any new poetry due to be published soon?
g

Oh, I can't really complain about that first poetry book, as I have been very lucky so far... I mention it only to explain my progression from poetry to fiction.
It's nice to hear you like especially 'several replies in a numbered column' as I had to fight to include that one! Some were of the opinion it was better left out. But, I thought it was the best part, or had the best parts in it.
The newest poems that I have published make up the last volume in The Village on Horseback -- which came out last month with Milkweed. That last volume or last section is called The Skin Feat.

looking forward now to "the village on horseback".
so, what's the answer to a question you never get asked about your writing or your creative process, but wish you would? (if there is one.)


Hmmm, well -- if someone were to ask me about my love of objects and spaces, and what books he/she should read if such things are dear to him/her as well -- I would say:
bachelard, poetics of space, flame of a candle, etc -- all his books! if i could have someone to tea, it would probably be him.

Very glad to hear you love Kristof -- she is one of my all time favorites for The Notebook, which is about as good as a thing can be. She just died this summer. In my opinion, a real master.

I just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed The Way Through Doors. Its one of my favorite books and I re-read it often. Can't wait to read the new one :)

I just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed The Way Through Doors. Its one of my favorite books and I re-read it often. Can't wait to read the new one :)"
Thank you, Caitlin.

I enjoy your books very much. They seem to have an old fashioned quality that is rare in most fiction today. I guess I am trying to say your books have an unfussiness and calmness that I really like. Most contemporary fiction seems so busy and hyperactive and attention-grabbing.
So what I would like to ask is...do you consider yourself a solitary person? How or where do you place yourself in the current literary scene, if at all? And lastly what is one thing you would recommend to anyone to increase his/her happiness?
:) Thank you Jesse!

Yes she will be missed. If you haven't read the last two books of the trilogy you must! I love that bare bones sparse style of her writing. I found something similar in your work that you are able to tell a remarkable story with using a minimum of words. I definitely think that is really fantastic.

Ok. Oftentimes when reading I am so in my head I lose the feelings in a work, the odd turn of phrase and beauty of the lines really makes this one of the more emotional readsfor me,certainly. I like getting all muddled in Pynchon.
This line choked me up They don't want to have to ask permission for anything, least of all being alive. Whew! You said at Decatur you write straight through- but there are certain lines that pierce like poetry- do they just roll out? When a certain like rolls out do you sense a particular moment of clarity, or all the bits and pieces the same, groundwork for the rest? Do you sense the reader will suss out a particular line?

Some people become so immersed in their work that it becomes their life. When writing your stories, do you find it sometimes difficult to snap back into your reality from your fantasy? Or is it this constant struggle of in-between that you love about your work?
I'm very much looking forward to reading The Curfew. I fall more in love with your work each time I read it.

Ok. Oftentimes when reading I am so in my head I lose the feelings in a work, the odd turn of phrase and beauty of the lines really makes this one of the more emotional readsfor me,..."
When a sentence needs to bear weight for other sentences, or needs to crystallize a larger idea -- at such times, verse constructions can be strong. Yes -- they do come in a crowd with the rest, as the work proceeds.

I think the thing that can happen is to mistake constructions of thought, of scene, of mind-state, for being larger or more essentially strong in the fiber than they are. Then, one has to have a care not to stand on the wrong board, or risk falling through to the water below. Generally, though, the work arises out of my life, and the emotionality is valid in those terms, in the terms of my life. It is real then, in that sense.
Thank you for this encouragement.

I enjoy your books very much. They seem to have an old fashioned quality that is rare in most fiction today. I guess I am trying to say your books have an unfussiness and calmness that I..."
Yes, definitely a solitary person. I wouldn't know where to place myself -- maybe near the door for a quick getaway?
One thing to increase happiness -- put yourself in more situations where you can be surprised.

Basho---Narrow Road to the Deep North
Marquis de Saint Hervey---Dreams and How to Guide Them
Baudelaire---Paris Spleen
Murasaki---Tale of Genji
Pearl_poet---Sir Gawain & The Green Knight
Nerval---Aurelia

I just finished reading "The Curfew" late last night. I really liked it. William, Molly, and the Gibbons are so endearing and heartbreaking. I thought the use of the puppet show to tel..."
Oh, I shouldn't say that! At least, not in public.


He stands for one minute and then the other, he climbs up the ladder of rain and the roof beyond:and then; The Jester hands Molly the bone carved with directions. Might be an untruth but one of those that must be true since it needs to be, for all of us.

The next few books are complete and awaiting their turns. More than that, I shouldn't say.