Tracy Daugherty is the author of the new book Let Us Build Us a City. His other books include The Last Love Song and American Originals, and his work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The New Yorker and Vanity Fair. He is Distinguished Professor of English and Creative Writing, Emeritus, at Oregon State University.
Q: Why did you decide to write this new book, and over how long
a period did you write the essays included in it?
A: After 30 years of writing and publishing, and working
with young writers, I wanted to pause and reflect on what I'd experienced and
discovered.
The book is a compendium of lessons learned in a life of
literature. It's not a how-to book or a craft manual. It's not
literary criticism. Rather, I wanted to meditate on the imagination's
engagement with the world--paying special attention to literary
engagement.
Many years ago, the poet Stanley Kunitz wrote a wonderful
essay volume entitled A Kind of Order, A Kind of Folly. It was
a very companionable book. It felt like a wise old friend was sharing his
thoughts with you, not to tell you how to live or to pursue your work, but
to say, "This is how I approach creative thinking--how would you
like to do it?" I was aiming for a similar appeal.
Some of the ideas in the book I wrestled
with over a 10-year period; the pieces themselves I revised very recently
as the book took shape.
Q: You begin with a discussion of John Cheever. Why did you
choose to start with him?
A: I began with the Cheever anecdote--I was a college
student and I met him right after he'd published his Collected
Stories--because it embodied the basic idea behind each of the
essays: that is, no one can teach you directly how to be
creative, but by modeling certain behaviors, modeling habits of thought
and conversation, by being-in-the-world in a particular way, someone might
demonstrate, indirectly, possibilities to help you along your path.
That's what watching John Cheever did for me. His
smallest gestures seemed "writerly" to me--not in a way that I could,
or would, imitate, but in a way that showed me a man fully engaged with
literary matters. He'd found a way to live in the world as a writer (it
was often torturous for him, though I didn't know that then).
"Possibility" is an oft-repeated word in this
book. Cheever showed me possibilities. That was his gift. It's
the most effective form of teaching.
Q: In your essay "Writing Political Fiction," you
state, "The fiction writer's challenge, as I see it, is to be a witness to
her time without getting trapped in her time." How would you advise
someone to meet this challenge?
A: If pressed to formulate a shorthand for writing
successful political fiction, I'd say, "Aspire to timelessness rather than
to what's timely."
Each generation faces particular political
volatilities, and as a writer, you want to address your place and time. It's
important to be an on-the-ground witness.
But particulars date quickly, like food that spoils
after a certain period. You don't want to ignore the particulars--specific
detail is the life-blood of fiction--but it's essential to seek the essence,
dare I say the eternal qualities, in those particulars. The spirit rather
than the flesh.
On the simplest level, what do today's conflicts in Syria,
Iraq, and Afghanistan have in common with the wars in Vietnam, in Europe in
1914, in Sparta and Greece, centuries past? The particulars of individual
battles will date; the nature of war, sadly, will always be with us. It's
the long view tied to the present moment--that seems to me the key to
powerful political writing.
Q: How was the book's title chosen, and what does it signify
for you?
A: The reference is to the biblical passage regarding the
Tower of Babel, and it has to do with language and community--both central
concerns of my book--as well as with humanity's proper place in the
world. The artist's proper place.
The Tower was an enormous creative undertaking. It was
also a challenge to God. Insofar as God is Silent, and writing by its very
nature is a breaking of silence . . . well, challenging the regular order of
things seems to me a core component of creativity.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I'm engaged with several projects at the moment. Many
close friends and members of my family have died in recent years, and a burst
of work seems to be my response to grief. I suspect an elegiac tone connects
the pieces I'm working on.
I've completed a biography of a rather obscure Texas writer
named Billy Lee Brammer. He embodied the best and worst of our culture,
and telling his story enabled me to tell the story of America's last
half-century, I think. It's just marvelous material.
I'm also finishing up a trilogy of novellas, linked by the
theme "art versus activism." One of the novellas has, as its central
character, Willa Cather; another explores the friendship of John Howard
Griffin, who wrote Black Like Me, and the monk Thomas Merton.
And I've got a new collection of linked short stories. I've
been a busy boy, and I'm thankful to still feel enthusiasm for work after
all these years.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: My old teacher, Don Barthelme, once said, wryly,
"One of the traditional obligations in our role as the public is the
obligation to neglect artists, writers, creators of every kind. As far as
I can see, neglect is proceeding at appropriate levels." Thank you for your kind attention to literature, Deborah,
and for pushing back, just a little, against neglect.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. For a previous Q&A with Tracy Daugherty, please click here.
No comments:
Post a Comment