Interview in Superstition Review

May 12th, 2011

A few months ago I had a lovely email from Britney Gulbertson, one of the interviewers for Superstition Review. She had read my story, “Chicks,” which was published a few years ago in the South Dakota Review, and then looked up more of my stories. She said she liked my writing, which got a big smile from me. I love it when I get a compliment like that, love it when anyone says they like my writing. But when it’s someone who doesn’t know me, doesn’t know the sound of my voice or my face or where I come from, well, that’s pretty nice because it means it’s purely about the writing.

Britney asked if I’d be willing to be interviewed for Issue 7 of the online magazine. OF COURSE!  Then the questions came along and I got to really think about why I did certain things in my stories. It was fun and I said a lot. Here’s a link to the interview if you’d like to know a bit more, and also if you’d like to check out this fine publication.

Thao Nguyen at the Wonder Ballroom

May 3rd, 2011

On my recent stay at Hedgebrook I had the delight of meeting Thao Nguyen. Her voice, her guitar playing, her lyrics. All beautiful. And so is she, inside and out. She’s going to be playing at the Wonder Ballroom in Portland on on Sunday, May 8th. I hope you go see her.

Ah, the Grace of Time

April 27th, 2011

Some of the best experiences are the hardest to describe. I began each day at Hedgebrook with a deep appreciation for the gift that was given in being selected to come here. And from the moment I stepped onto the property, I carried that gift and took it in. The staff welcomed me in an open-armed welcome. They sheltered me, as they do all of the residents here. Vito Z. gave me a tour and then showed me to Cedar cottage, my cottage for the time. It was spotlessly clean and had only and exactly what I needed (one plate, one bowl, one mug, one water glass, one wine glass…) perfect! A fire was ready to light in the woodstove. Ah, the woodstove.

Cedar is the very last cottage before the path into the forest that covers much of the property here. Though it is trite, the only way to describe the labyrinthine paths in these woods is magical. It is so magical that we writers — poets and prose, memoirists, journalists, songwriters, and activists, ages 27 to 74, of varying colors and sizes and with vastly different voices, including two with singing voices that brought me to tears — joked about expecting to meet up with an elf or a unicorn on the path.

We were encouraged to walk the beautiful gardens and cut whatever flowers we wanted for the vases that are kept in each cottage (with pruners provided too!). There are bikes to ride, maps of walks to take and food. Oh yes, the food. Seven writers met at the farmhouse each evening and enjoyed the dinners prepared by one of the many wonderful chef’s at Hedgebrook. The chef’s joined us at the table, listened and guided us. After dinner and conversation we packed our baskets with our lunches for the next day and jars of the things we might want in the morning or afternoon or evening while we spent time alone, writing, in our cottages.

And that is what I came to do, to write. And write I did.

Cedar cottage, with its’ Dutch door made of yew, the creaky ladder stairs to the loft bedroom with the tulip stained-glass window, became my haven, my cocoon. I finished the revisions of my novel, At The Wheat Line. I’m really happy with it and it’s almost ready to go out into the world. For the rest of my time at Hedgebrook, I returned to the memoir, The Strength of Scars, which I’d written eight years ago, about having been raped when I was a young woman. I began that story again, from a blank page in that safe place. The pulled-back lens of these past eight years, some solid writing experience, and some things that happened at Hedgebrook helped me find the story. After 20 days I have a strong start and a complete outline for the project. I am very excited because I see how I’ve developed as a writer over these years.

And when it was time to come home, I was ready. I’d gotten plenty done and I looked forward to seeings Bill and friends and home and family. And Fred the cat. But still, it was hard that last day, cleaning and putting away, taking the flowers from the vase that has been on my window sill. Saying goodbye to these women, these new friends. And saying goodbye to the rabbits and deer, the frogs and foxes that speak in the night; the owls, with their sexy call, goodbye to the mossy path, the rain, the woodstove smoke, the bathhouse — oh haven of warmth and hot showers — the long wood table, the eagle who soars by the farmhouse, the garden which filled in more each day.

My friend, Kate Gray said I would be changed by this place. I am.

 

 

Thank You, Kate

April 5th, 2011

Last summer I was talking with my friend Kate Gray about my struggle to find uninterrupted time to write. Kate is a wonderful writer and I’m honored to be in a critique group with her. The best way I can describe Kate, aside from her smarts and strength and good sense of humor and curiosity about the world, is that she is one of the kindest people I know. Truely. Kind. She is also someone I trust. At the end of that conversation, Kate encouraged me to apply for a writing residency at Hedgebrook. So I did. And I was selected as one of the 2011 writers in residence. Yaaaaayyyyy!

Today, as I pack for 19 days at Hedgebrook, I’m appreciating Kate for seeing what I needed, for encouraging me to apply and for helping prepare me for the experience. The days at Hedgebrook will be spent in solitude, me and my writing in my own little cottage and, I’m sure, many many long walks on that part of Whidbey Island. The evening dinner will be shared with the other six writers who will be in there. A writer can never have enough writers in her life.

Yes, I’ll miss Bill. I’ll miss home and friends and family and garden and Fred the cat (you are all my delicious temptations). I’m sure at some point I’ll even miss all my usual distractions (Yes, I’m talking to YOU Facebook, HBO/FX/AMC, telephone, laundry, vacuum cleaner, sudoku, Angry Bird). But I am thrilled and honored that I’ve been given this opportunity. I leave on Thursday morning and I’m chompin’ at the bit to hit the road and settle in and dig in and see where my writing takes me. As Buckaroo Bonzai said, “Where ever you go, there you are.” It’ll be interesting to see what comes up.

So thank’s Kate, for the good idea.

A Fragile Strength

March 15th, 2011

Turtle Release in San Pancho

I was in San Pancho, Mexico and didn’t hear about  the earthquake and tsunami in Japan until the next morning. The sun was shining, the ocean blue, and bright pink bougainvillea spilled over walls and trellis. I felt small and spoiled; the things of my life–each worry, each need—insignificant and almost shameful. There it was: the struggle between taking pleasure in the moment and knowing how fragile it all is. A person near me, or many people an ocean across, can be amidst the deepest loss while I write or read or lay in the sun.

But there are the simple things. A few evenings before, we’d watched the release of about 60 just-hatched turtles. It was a pure delight. The tiny hatchlings moved toward the ocean by paddling their small fins in the sand. They left their particular and beautiful tracks behind. This process of moving through the sand causes their lungs to expand, necessary as they meet the water. I took a video on my phone and it turned out pretty well, but I like this video even better.

Even in the beauty and thrill of the release we learned that the odds of survival of the hatchlings are very poor. Frank Smith, the Director of Grupo Ecológico de la Costa Verde, A.C, the group responsible for the preservation program on the Nayarit coast of Mexico, told us that only one in 177 hatchlings will reach adulthood. Once in the water, out beyond the surf, the turtles will catch the current and continue for about eight days before they eat, surviving on what’s in them, the yolk sac from the egg.

We watched them go, we applauded, the sun went down and those tiny creatures were making their way in that big ocean. Many years from now (they don’t reach maturity until they are well into their teens), perhaps one or two will come back to leave her own eggs in a nest in the sand.