Gail Hosking |
Gail Hosking, a writer and poet, is the author of Snake's Daughter: The Roads In and Out of War, a family memoir focused on the life of her father, Charles E. "Snake" Hosking, Jr., an Army master sergeant who was killed in action in 1967 while serving in Vietnam and posthumously won a Medal of Honor. Gail Hosking (who wrote Snake's Daughter under the name Gail Hosking Gilberg) was 17 at the time of her father's death. She teaches in the English department of the Rochester Institute of Technology.
Q: In the process of writing Snake's
Daughter, do you feel that you found out as much about yourself as about your
father?
A: I suppose I found out that I really
missed him, and that I had cut off feelings about the relationship in order to
survive beforehand. I found out how beloved he was to so many soldiers who
looked up to him. I was told a Vietnamese soldier came out of retirement to
fight alongside my dad. I found out that the VC would send messages about my
father--trying to capture him, promising good things if the U.S. gave him up. I
found out just how lonely I imagine my father was and perhaps even disappointed
in his country by the end. Though I have nothing to prove that, it seemed to
seep out of the edges of conversations.
I think I realized how different I am
from my friends, my civilian friends whose experiences were so different than
mine. It helped me sort that out, accept it.
The writing made me see the threads
that connect my father's life to mine--how clearly I am his daughter. I had not
thought of that before.
I saw the wider picture of what the war
did to our country, its families, its trust...
It got me in touch with a grass roots
organization called Sons and Daughters in Touch.
Q: How did your family members react to the book?
Q: How did your family members react to the book?
A: I think my family was proud, though
a sister asked why I had to delve into all this sadness. Another sister was
running a group of Vets (therapy) and many of them started talking more after
they read the book. That I was proud of.
Q: You write of your experience visiting the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, "I had not expected to feel anything at this wall everyone was talking about because I had grown accustomed to the walls around my heart. But when I saw my father's name and my family's reflection in the black stone, I stood there with tears flowing down my face....I found myself for the first time wanting to talk to those who surrounded me....Tell me your story, I wanted to say." Why do you think the wall evoked this reaction in you?
Q: You write of your experience visiting the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, "I had not expected to feel anything at this wall everyone was talking about because I had grown accustomed to the walls around my heart. But when I saw my father's name and my family's reflection in the black stone, I stood there with tears flowing down my face....I found myself for the first time wanting to talk to those who surrounded me....Tell me your story, I wanted to say." Why do you think the wall evoked this reaction in you?
A: There was so much silence during the
war, especially from family members. We all pretended not to be involved or
believed that no one else in civilian life would know about this war. That was
a bit of denial since it was on TV news.
I never met another person whose father
was in the war until I went to Vietnam with Sons and Daughters in Touch. It was
there I found out through these fellow military brats (now all of us grown)
what they experienced.
It wasn't pleasant--people avoiding us
because we had fathers there--people sending nasty letters or phone
calls--people calling our fathers "baby killers"--people who stopped
dating us because of Vietnam--people who refused to come to our house—etc. etc.
etc...
It made me angry, I have to say. Very
angry for the first time. I wanted so badly to find more people--perhaps that's
why at the wall I wanted to meet these others who knew of this particular
sorrow, like long lost relatives. I didn't want to be alone anymore. I had felt
like I was off the mainland--not military anymore and not civilian...so where
did I belong? These people seemed like family in an odd way.
Q: What role did your father's photographs play for you, both in the writing of the book and in your understanding of his life?
Q: What role did your father's photographs play for you, both in the writing of the book and in your understanding of his life?
A: It seemed eerie for a man on the go
to have left these labeled and organized photographs--that he had given me a
typewriter as a final gift--that this had fallen into my hands...eerie as
though he planned this all along. My son just got his MFA in photography and
think of the thread back towards my dad who was always interested in
documenting life, taking photographs.
Q: What are you working on now?
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I've written a book on the healing
from trauma (divorce in this case)--short lyrical essay collection. It's with
an agent (Leigh Feldman) in NYC at the moment. Cross your fingers! I wrote a
book about my mother and the war on the homefront but it got rejected and I
think needs a lot more work. I write poems and essays, short things at the
moment since teaching takes up so much time.
Q: Anything else we should know?
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I did not start out to write Snake's
Daughter. I did it as a photograph/essay project for a class. Then a
photographer friend suggested I get a grant and frame them. I did...and the
reaction was powerful. Why don't I put this into a book, people asked. So I
did. Slowly. I would have been too self-conscious if I had known from the start
it would be a book. I'm so glad I did. It changed my life...got an MFA in
literature and writing after that and now teach at a university. I didn't think
that would ever happen.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. This interview is also posted at www.hauntinglegacy.com.
Very interesting interview, thank you.
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