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(Seated left
to right) Mary
Ward Brown,
Steve Yarbrough,
Gene Edwards,
Alistair MacLeod
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Short
Story Writers, is a master
class in the short story,
and has as guests some
of the best authors working
today. Alistair
MacLeod has been named
one of the 200 best writers
in English in the last
50 years, and he recently
won the Dublin Literary
IMPAC Award. From Windsor,
Ontario, Canada, he is
retired from the University
of Windsor, where he taught
creative writing and 19th
century British literature.
MacLeod was raised in
Cape Breton, Nova Scotia,
the site of many of his
short stories. He is regularly
proclaimed as one of the
living masters of the
short story.
If
Eudora Welty has an heir
in her mastery of the
southern short story,
it’s Mary Ward Brown,
from Marion Junction,
Alabama. After a career
as a wife and mother,
Mrs. Brown published her
first collection of short
stories in 1987. This
book was “Tongues
of Flames,” and
it won the 1987 PEN/Hemingway
Award. She has spent most
of her life on her farm
in Alabama's Black Belt,
the region where her short
stories are set.
Steve
Yarbrough was raised in
Indianola and currently
teaches creative writing
at the University of California
Fresno. He has published
several collections of
short stories as well
as several novels. His
settings are frequently
the Mississippi delta.
Yarbrough has been the
Grisham Writer in Residence
at the University of Mississippi
and has won the Mississippi
Authors Award and the
California Book Award.
All
three authors write about
ethnic and race relations
and abandonment of rural
life. They all are masters
of place., a strong characteristic
in southern writing.
Because
of their recurrent theme
of racial reconciliation,
we taped this program
at the Medgar Evers home
in Jackson, Mississippi.
Evers was the first field
secretary for the Mississippi
chapter of the NAACP and
his assassination helped
to propel the passage
of the Civil Rights act
of 1964.
On the evening
of June 12, 1963, when
the slaying occurred,
Eudora Welty was at her
typewriter just a few
miles away, working on
a novel. She wrote a powerful,
fictional account from
the killer’s point
of view. She said that
this story “pushed
its way up” and
she found she had to write
it. A few lines from this
story open the program. This
episode of “Writers”
moves from the topic of
racial reconciliation,
to the writing of place,
to individual writing
styles and the elegance
and solitude of writing.
These three masters talk
about bad reviews, how
they came to be writers,
and the nature of the
short story. The program
packs a wallop when they
start discussing how they
hone their ideas and present
them so completely in
such a short format.
In
fact, Steve Yarbrough
says, "I've always
felt that stories work,
not by accumulation like
novels do, but by exclusion.
Or that in another sense,
the story has to suggest
more than is actually
on the page. And I think
that's the magic."
Mary Ward Brown adds, "They
fascinate me because they tell so much.
They can if they're good,
tell so much in such a
little space."
Then
master Alistair MacLeod
sums it up," I think
when I'm writing that
I'm in a glass bowl and
there's always stuff pressing
its nose against the glass
bowl trying to get in.
And it's saying I'm the
description of the dinner.
I'm worth 22 pages. I'm
worth 4 pages. I say,
'No, no. You're only
worth one sentence.' Some
will say, 'I'm the villain.
I'm the person who's going
to kill the dog. I want
two pages.' 'No, no, I
say, you get two paragraphs.' "
Toward the
end of the program, the authors ask
each other questions and
discuss each other's work.
Alistair MacLeod powerfully
describes how he writes
his final sentences. They
are the lighthouses to
which he journeys.
According
to Eudora Welty, the short
story should be “like
a string pulled taut.”
These pieces of prose
range in style, but they
all capture a decisive
moment or a single event
with poetic precision.
From the precipitating
incident to the climax,
the short story doesn’t
waste a word on unnecessary
subplots or tangents.
Nor does it resolve everything.
Instead, the short story
leaves room for imagination.
In 10,000 words, or less,
the short story shines
a light on a less spectacular
aspect of life and with
poetic precision, unifies
the elements of character,
setting, plot and theme. |