Thursday, July 16, 2020
Riot Asks Joshua Henkin
Riot Asks Joshua Henkin Joshua Henkin is the author of the novels Swimming Across the Hudson (a Los Angeles Times Notable Book) and Matrimony (a New York Times Notable Book). His stories have been published widely, cited for distinction in Best American Short Stories, and broadcast on NPRâs Selected Shorts. He directs the MFA Program in Fiction Writing at Brooklyn College. His latest novel, The World Without You (Knopf/Pantheon) has received much critical acclaim. ____________________________ Book Riot: What are you reading now? Joshua Henkin: So Iâm reading a lot of things at the same time, including American Rust by Philip Meyer, Goodnight Nebraska by Tom McNeal, and Maile Meloyâs Both Ways Is the Only Way I Like It, and the manuscript of a novel from one of my students. Iâm always a few weeks behind on The New Yorker; I knew this guy in Ann Arbor who used to read the New York Times from cover to cover every day, and he was years behind, so Iâm a little bit like that. There was a Donald Antrim story from a few weeks ago that was very good, and it reminded me of reading an essay of his about finding a mattress with his girlfriend. Oh, Iâm also reading the first of Edward St. Aubynâs Patrick Melrose series, Never Mind. I donât always finish things I try. I used to, on principal, but now if Iâm halfway through a book and itâs not doing it for me, I stop. However, everything Iâm reading so far seems really strong. BR: Which book do you wish you had written? JH: I feel like every book I love, I wish Iâd written. Madame Bovary, The Great Gatsby, any of Alice Munroâs short stories as well as John Cheeverâs journalsas long as I would not have had to live his life! Dubliners. Augie March, Revolutionary Road. I think David Foster Wallaceâs essays are tremendousthe one on English grammar and usage in particular. BR: Which book do you recommend over and over again? JH: I like to recommend books that havenât gotten the attention they deserve, like Tom McNealâs book To Be Sung Underwater that has a strange, slightly implausible premise. There was a collection of stories from about 25 years ago titled Sweet Talk by Stephanie Vaughan that has recently been reissued with an introduction by Tobias Wolff, which makes me really psyched. Oh, and The Privileges by Jonathan Dee. I think certain books are better for being imperfect, toothose that take risks and do things that surprise you and donât entirely work but nonetheless make you experience things you wouldnât otherwise, so even though the Dee may not be flawless, he knows how to write characters, and Iâm a character guy. In that novel, character just jumps off of the page at you. I also often recommend early Jane Smiley novellas, like The Age of Grief, which is devastatingly good in a quiet, heartbreaking way. Sheâs one of those writers whose books feel dissimilar. BR: Has a book every disappointed you? JH: Most books disappoint me, in the sense that I think itâs really hard to write a good novel. In grad school, Richard Ford and Richard Russo both emphasized that âeven writing a bad novel is a major accomplishment.â But you know, if its hard to write a bad novel, its even harder to write a good novel! Most books disappoint, but I keep on reading because itâs worth it for the novels that are great. Even if a novel disappoints, that feeling, for me, is tempered by a kind of humility. I happen to teach grad students; Iâve gotta say, some of them are writing work that blows me away and is better than most published work. BR: Which book changed your life? JH: I remember my childhood pretty clearly but I donât feel there was a bookperhaps E.B. Whites The Trumpet of the Swan?that changed my life or rocked my world. However, all of the books I read then had a big impact on me as a writer. All the books you read affect you in ways that you often cant fully figure out. I remember when Ethan Canins The Emperor of the Air came out and I read one of the stories in it, The Year of Getting to Know Us and thought: Oh! Id like to do that, too. My first writing instructor was Leonard Michaels, and the way he writes about sex and violence was very powerful for me. It took me 10 years to write Matrimony. I re-read Empire Falls by Richard Russo, and there was something about the way he dealt with time in that book that helped me find a way to structure Matrimony so that it opened up and worked. This Boys Life by Tobias Wolff was life changing in terms of my model book as a writer. It is so deeply unwritten you are unaware of the author. Thatsâs how I like to write. Its not the only way, but it takes a lot of effort to make something seem effortlessyou have to be so on top of things in order to disappear! BR: Whats your reading process while youâre writing? JH: Its basically the samethat is, Iâm writing all the time. To me, I want to read as widely and deeply as possible. I never understand this anxiety of influence stuffI feel the opposite! I just dont buy not being influenced. You should be influenced, and be influenced by the good writing. When I was in grad school, there was a lass on imitation. People are so concerned about originality, but if youre good and you have a voice, that will show. There are really only a couple of stories: A stranger comes to town, or someone goes on a trip. The more you read, the more you can riff on those plots. If youre not a reader, youre not a writer. Sign up to Unusual Suspects to receive news and recommendations for mystery/thriller readers.
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