Write The Book: Conversations on Craft
Arts:Books
Author Thomas H. McNeely, whose new collection is Pictures of the Shark: Stories (Texas Review Press).
This week’s Write the Book Prompt was generously suggested by my guest, Thomas H. McNeely, and it is drawn from our conversation. We talked about the objects that writers bring into stories, and the power that objects can hold. This week, consider doing one of two things as you work. First, write about objects that you remember from a certain period of your life. What did they mean to you at the time? Do you still have them? If not, what happened to them–do you know, or did they just disappear? What do they mean to you now? How might you use one of the important objects from your past in a story? Second, consider how you might use objects to help characters - as Thomas put it in our interview - reflect off of something. Allow that focus on an object to help them to express what they themselves probably could not express otherwise. For example, Buddy’s mother’s reaction to Richard Nixon. And Buddy’s own focus on a yellow leaf on black asphalt while he’s speaking with his father, an inconsistent and often duplicitous presence in his life.
Good luck with your work in the coming week, and tune in next week for another prompt or suggestion.
Music Credit: Aaron Shapiro
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Nancy Hayes Kilgore - 8/30/21
Carolyn Conger, PhD - Archive Interview (8/23/21)
Tony Trigilio (8/16/21)
Caroline Leavitt - 8/9/21
Barbara Henning - Archive Interview (8/2/21)
Christina Baker Kline - 7/29/21
Kyle Ferguson - 7/19/21
Patrick Hicks (7/12/21)
Rachel Donohue (7/5/21)
Daniel Lusk - Archive Interview (6/28/21)
Natasha Sajé (6/21/21)
Marcia Butler (6/14/21)
Alec Hastings - Archive Interview (6/7/21)
Rupert Thomson (May 31, 2021)
Diane Setterfield - Archive Interview (5/24/21)
Erika Nichols-Frazer with A.E. Hines (5/17/21)
David Laskin - Archive Interview (5/10/21)
Joseph Covais (5/3/21)
David Arnold (4/26/21)
Ralph Culver / James Fallon - Archive Interviews (4/19/21)
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