Ian Morris is the author of the new novel Simple Machines. He also has written the novel When Bad Things Happen to Rich People and co-edited The Little Magazine in Contemporary America. His work has appeared in various publications, including Crab Orchard Review and Creative Nonfiction. He is the managing editor of the magazine Punctuate, and he lives in Chicago.
Q:
How did you come up with the idea for Simple Machines, and for your main
character, Tomas?
A:
The idea of the book came out of a combination of factors. My father ran a bike
store, and I have been riding a bike a lot since I was 5. I had written
nonfiction pieces about bicycles but, for some reason, not fiction.
When
I conceived of the book, I happened to be reading a lot about people-powered
flying machines. The most successful of these actually flew from Crete to the
Greek mainland and was named Icarus. That got me thinking about that myth.
I
learned that Daedalus was the carpenter to the Gods until he betrayed King
Minos and was exiled to the labyrinth of Crete. So, the idea of a father and
son who were laborers and exiled to an island was flying around in my mind you
could say.
As
for the character of Tomas, he was born out a desire to explore my relationship
with my father. He was in no way abusive, but he did drink a lot when I was
younger, which made his moods somewhat tricky to navigate.
From
when I was around 10 years old, I spent most of my free time down at the shop,
and I began working there when I was 13, so we were around each other a lot. Plus,
we often rode together, as do Tomas and Ernst in the book.
I’m
sure there were a lot of times when he was glad I was there and times when he
wished I wasn’t. There’s a lot of good and bad that comes when a father teaches
a trade to his son.
Q:
The novel is set in Wisconsin. How important is setting to you in your writing?
A:
Setting is very important. I was born in upstate New York, and we moved to
Wisconsin when I was 5 where I was viewed as an outsider. I quickly assimilated,
as kids do, and came to view myself and my fellow Wisconsonites as typical of
the American existence.
It
wasn’t until I moved to Arkansas for graduate school that I realized how
distinctive the people I grew up with were in their speech and pastimes, and, for
the first time, I started to think about what it meant to live in a northern
climate and culture. I knew I wanted to write a novel that was set in the north.
Q:
Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you
make many changes along the way?
A:
That’s a really interesting question. Because the novel is partially based on
the myth of Icarus and Daedelus, I knew how the story would end in a structural
sense. In fact, I lost a very good agent because she thought the ending was too
sad and wanted me to brighten it up a little, which I couldn’t do.
However,
everything that happens when Tomas is away at college was spontaneous invention
at the time I wrote it. It’s always nice to be surprised by your own
imagination.
Q:
How was the novel’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?
A:
Simple machines are a class of objects, including the wheel, the lever, the
wedge, and the inclined plane—the earliest tools devised by the human mind.
A
friend of mine once told she was going to do her PhD thesis on the “Theme of
Construction in the Works of Ian Morris” because people who build things or
make things with their hands are overrepresented in my writing.
I
came to think about the idea that the forces that influence us and move about
world might be not so much divine as practical.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
Oh, thank you for asking. I’m writing a novel about a stand-up comic set in the
Catskill resorts of the 1960s that culminates in an obscenity trial.
This
goes back to what we were saying earlier about a sense of place. I was born
along Route 17 in New York, which is the highway running between the city and
what the people who vacationed in the Catskills called “the mountains.”
As
I was researching the comics of the era, and I was amazed had how offensive a
lot of their material was. We think of Lenny Bruce as hero of free speech, but
we would find most of what even his less edgy fellow comics were doing back
then unutterable today, so the project has become a reflection on the fall of
white privilege.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
Let’s see. I’m going to be writing a blog in conjunction with the 50th
anniversary of the Woodstock festival, starting in February when then the
organizers first met and ending in August when it was staged.
My
interest in the festival sprung out of research I was doing into the Catskills
and my experience growing up in Madison, Wisconsin, which was heavily
influenced by ‘60s counter-culture.
Thank
you for these great questions. I really enjoyed talking about Simple Machines.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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