Tell us about 5 On! It's a different sort of interview
series and I want everyone to know about it. Why do you think here's such a
need for something like that now?
I
started the 5 On series (which posts every two weeks at JaneFriedman.com) with the intention of doing a few different things:
-
Entertain, by
providing some insight into the person being interviewed, whether that person
is a well-known author, a struggling writer, a selective editor, a bookstore
owner, a literary agent, or a publisher.
-
Create a platform where
people with experience finding agents, navigating the self-publishing world, or
developing marketing plans can speak directly (in a sense) to people who can
learn from that experience.
-
Encourage those
(and depending on the day, I’m one of “those”) who are getting impatient, disheartened,
or anxious. Writers who have kept going in spite of devastating rejections
ultimately have great success stories, too. Victories.
-
Provide a reality check.
Part of your question was about the need for something like this right now, and
there’s a *great video circulating on Facebook that documents how much time it
took successful people – Leonardo da Vinci, Marie Curie, Michael Faraday,
Stephen King, John Coltrane – to become the figures we know now. Typically, several
years of hard work and plenty of rejection. But the video also explains why the
prevailing belief is that a certain level of achievement must happen
immediately. However, as readers of **your 5 On interview will
learn when they read your story, it’s a long, difficult (and just as rewarding)
process. Or, as the video’s narrator calls it, “The difficult years,” and “The
story that never gets told.” 5 On
seeks, in part, to tell that story as a way to combat the Immediate Success
Fantasy, a fantasy which is not only unrealistic and tinged with entitlement
but also destructive to creativity. How can a person consumed with anxiety over
not having “made it” within a very short time expect to keep imagining,
practicing, even enjoying their passion?
There is a growing awareness now of the fact that female
writers just aren't reviewed as often as males. They don't get the attention.
There are people doing something about it--including you and Bill Wolfe, whose
wonderful blog, Read Her Like An Open Book, focuses just on women writers. What
else do you think we can do to encourage men to read women?
Pretend
to be men.
I wish
I meant that tongue-in-cheek. I adopted the pen name Chris Jane in small part because
my real name is a hassle for others to spell and pronounce, but in large part because
I wanted to be gender ambiguous to the average cover-scanning reader. I explain
why at Bill Wolfe’s website in my essay Right, Like a Man, but
in short, my female name and the female protagonist in my first novel turned
away potential readers and, as a bonus, inspired one male non-reader to
recommend I approach the Hallmark channel if I wanted to sell the story as a
film. You know, because girls.
Robin
Black, in her fantastic essay On Learning to Spell Women’s Names While Men Buy My New Book
for their Wives (also at Bill Wolfe’s website),
writes that men’s lack of interest in what we call “women’s fiction” has
implications beyond an innocent preference for male writers:
If you think that because I’m female
what I have to say in my novel won’t interest you, what about the things I say
when I am talking to you about the research project in which we’re both
engaged? About the funding needed for the public school system? How about when
I am arguing a case in court? Filing an insurance claim?Is it credible that fiction occupies a unique place? Credible that men who dismiss what female storytellers have to say as irrelevant to them, aren’t also inclined to dismiss – albeit unconsciously – what females of every variety have to say?
The
problem is so deeply rooted in a history of women being perceived as
superfluous but for baby-rearing that getting more men to read women would
first require a drastic shift in the overall value women are assigned by men.
In the meantime, deception by pseudonym seems legitimate enough.
Tell us about your own life as a writer. You write both
novels and journalistic pieces. Do you feel you have to get into a different
frame of mind to do so? And I certainly want you to talk about the smart,
witty, and oh-so-wise The Writer's Studio and the Paper Rats videos!
I
didn’t know how right-brained the journalistic pieces were – and these were
features, even, which I’d thought were pretty creative – until after my editor
assigned a paint bar story. A new paint bar, called The Muse, had just opened
and he wanted me to do a first-person experience piece.
It
turned out to be a great date night (not with my editor), but it was also a
revelation. The only word that will do justice to how painting made me feel is
“giddy,” and looking back now I can compare it to having a passionate (if
short-lived) affair.
I literally
(literally-literally, not figuratively-literally) dreamed about things I wanted
to paint. During conversations with my husband, I would accidentally zone out
because I’d have an idea for a painting I wanted to try. Every weekend, after
five days of writing about other people doing the things they loved, I’d fly to
my basement painting station so I could do something I loved. (Writing
creatively after a 40-hour week of writing for work wasn’t appealing.)
I
didn’t understand where the sudden passion for painting had come from, but once
I quit the newspaper and got back into creative writing, the painting frenzy
stopped. I’d still paint on weekends for a while, but the urgency was gone. It
took my husband saying it for me to see it, but it turned out I’d just needed a
creative outlet. Desperately. Feature writing was educational and interesting,
but it was still reporting rather than creating.
And
about the PaperRats’ Inside the Writers’ Studio!
We – author R.J.
Keller and I – haven’t made an episode in
a while (I think it means we’re both busy writing, which is a good thing), but
for those who haven’t seen the series, it’s just good, mostly-clean comic
relief that laughs not only with, but at, writers (and as writers, ourselves,
we’re allowed to make fun of us for taking ourselves too seriously, sometimes).
We acknowledge and poke fun at writer
stereotypes, make light of the darker side of writing
life (which includes receiving terrible
reviews), and in one of the two episodes
featuring the Fabulous Caroline Leavitt as a guest star and honorary PaperRat,
we question the logic of writers approaching other writers in an effort to sell
their books. (This happens all the time, and I think we make a pretty strong
case against it in Self-Promotion: FAIL.) Our
most popular video is “$#!+,”
Writers Say. (It’s not viral, or anything. But
it should be!)
What's obsessing you now and why?
In
addition to 5 On, I’m working on a
story I can’t talk too much about but that I’m in a hurry to finish. I have
this irrational (or is it rational??) fear, because the topic is timely, that
someone else has had a similar idea and is working on their own version of my
story right now. I don’t want them to finish first. I’m a little freaked out
daily.
What question didn't I ask that I should have?
“What’s your latest publication?”
Thank you for allowing me to ask
myself this. I’d resolved to let it be in the world without my help so I can
focus on the “now” project, but I owe it one last little push.
The Year of Dan Palace, available in
most places one buys books, answers the multi-part question, “Why don’t more
people break routine, escape a moderately satisfying but in no way gratifying
position of security, to live the life they really want to live? And if they
did, how would that affect the people closest to them?” Dan Palace finds the motivating
force he needs to leave his comfortable life and fine-enough wife in pursuit of
something more, including the forgiveness of his ex-wife, who’s hated him since
their wedding night almost a decade before.
It was a fun challenge to write.
Modern stories, and I’m probably thinking primarily of movies (my first love,
and almost the subject of my MFA thesis before fiction won out), seem to miss a
quality of the movies made in the ‘80s and prior, which was a perfect balance
of humor and gravitas. The World
According to Garp, St. Elmo’s Fire,
Working Girl, and even Dream a Little Dream. Just beautifully
choreographed moments of darkness and light, meaning and entertainment. The Year of Dan Palace strives for, and
I hope succeeds in managing, that kind of balance.
* Disregard
the inaccurate and inflammatory title assigned to the video at the website.
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