On Seeing the World

On Seeing the World

A Conversation with Writer RACHAEL HOLLIDAY

While I read my Bible and tried to behave, I found it impossible to stop searching for answers to questions I had that dogma couldn’t answer. Reading illuminated my world by giving me the opportunity to encounter different ideas and people in spite of my parents efforts to keep me sequestered.

The Tenderness & Terror of Being Alive

The Tenderness & Terror of Being Alive

A Conversation with Writer LISA MECHAM

I try not to edit until a draft is done, because the perfectionist in me is always searching for a way to sabotage the vulnerability it takes to write in the first place.

The Memory Museum

The Memory Museum

A Conversation with Writer M LIN

The artist’s body, in addition to their mind, forms a relationship with the work, as well as the physical space. Language, by nature, lacks that, or it’s almost the antithesis of body - it takes you out of your own body, out of the physical space you’re in. Nevertheless, it does have the power to evoke a visceral feeling.

Mouth

Mouth

A Conversation with Writer KERRY DONOGHUE

Maybe my goal will be grand, like finishing a scene, but I also count submitting, marketing, and posting book-related content on social media. By breaking it down into one attainable achievement, I’ve found that I actually get more done.

There Is a Home in All of Us

There Is a Home in All of Us

A Conversation with Writer YUKTI NARANG

In fact, sometimes it’s not knowing that generates the most compelling stories. The wondersome quality of art. The what-ifs. The buts. And I think readers sense that. They engage differently when they know the story was written by another person, someone who has felt strongly about the moments, even wriggled at some level.

Indie Music & Feral Women

Indie Music & Feral Women

A Conversation with Writer YASMINA DIN MADDEN

I do not outline stories, but do have a quasi-outline for my novel-in-progress. When I write I edit as I go--can't fight nature, I've tried. The beauty of being an edit-as-you-go writer is that when you finish a manuscript, it's pretty polished and doesn't need a ton of revision. The beast is that I write excruciatingly slowly.

Training for Both Ends of the Leash
Soi-même

Soi-même

A Conversation with Writer VICTORIA SPIRES

I am drawn to the idea of water as the dominant force that shapes a landscape, and the contrast to the ways it does this, through seeping, sifting, trickling and torrenting. I also think about the fens as a place of great compression, conversely for a place which is so flat and where the sky is such a dominant force. It's almost as if the weight of all that sky cramps you, forces you into yourself.

The Size of Your Joy

The Size of Your Joy

A Conversation with Poet ELISE POWERS

I think it’s vital that humans remain at the center of the creative process because stories are how we better understand ourselves and each other. They remind us that we are, above all else, alive.

A Beautiful Loop

A Beautiful Loop

A Conversation with Writer TINA CARTWRIGHT

In terms of the process I usually write the first draft quickly, seek feedback around the third or fourth draft, but this one is only ready for feedback now. It's taken much longer than I anticipated.

Medicine, Motherhood, & Showing Up

Medicine, Motherhood, & Showing Up

A Conversation with Writer VERONICA TUCKER

I balance writing around my full-time work in emergency and addiction medicine and the rhythm of raising three kids, so I have learned to be flexible. Sometimes I write in bursts between shifts or during short pauses in the day. I rarely outline in a traditional way; I tend to discover the work as it unfolds, following an image, phrase, or emotion until it finds its form.

Exclusions

Exclusions

A Conversation with Writer NOAH FALCK

I have too many notebooks. They are filled with sketches of language. Things I see when I'm on the bus, at the park, in the car driving to the store. Some have collages inside them. Some hold the language of other writers.

Rust Belt Femme
Identity and Poetry
City of Dis

City of Dis

A Conversation with Writer RANDALL J. TYRONE

I will have a song playing on repeat for a few hours and use that background noise to create a mental echo chamber. The song becomes a drumming or bass strumming that allows me to play/stretch myself over instrumentation. I become the varying noise in the room.

Smooth Jazz and Other Forms of Torture

Smooth Jazz and Other Forms of Torture

A Conversation with Writer SELENA MERCURI

The creative process involved a lot of sitting with uncomfortable emotions—the exhaustion of depression, the confusion of growing up and not understanding your own desires or sexuality, the way people closest to you often hurt you the most. Fundamentally, it's about the difference between surviving your life and actually inhabiting it.

Country of Under
Judah Can't Tell

Judah Can't Tell

A Conversation with Writer CAL HOFFMAN

I have an idea about the other characters and the main event of the novel, yet I work without an outline and I go hour-by-hour, page-by-page. I astonish myself every time I sit down to write. I keep this daily process fresh and spontaneous.

Judas & Suicide

Judas & Suicide

A Conversation with Poet MAYA WILLIAMS

Because I was raised by a Biracial, single mom who was raised to move around as a third culture kid, it makes sense that she raised me in three different states in the South: Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina. It influenced my writing and thinking about the world by making me sit with the identities I hold amidst different settings of migration.

Lynnhaven

Lynnhaven

A Conversation with Writer KENNETH MAITLAND

In third grade I got a cassette tape of highlights from Tchaikovsky's 'Nutcracker' and rapturously analyzed the photo inserts: Russian ballrooms at midnight, with parquet floors, velvet draperies, and crystal chandeliers, and I wondered how much marvels could possibly exist. It was like looking at photos taken on a distant planet.