Archive for the ‘Interviews’ Category

On “Walter” and Writing: An Interview with Ed Winkofsky

Sunday, February 24th, 2013

Ed Winkofsky

Ed Winkofsky is a writer and lawyer in Chicago. His short story “Walter” appeared in FWJ’s fall 2012 issue. He is currently writing more Walter stories. We asked him to tell us a bit more about Walter and his writing process. Here is what he says.

Why did you choose an amusement park parking lot as the setting for “Walter”?

There are really two answers to that.  First, and I think that this is always the answer, I picked a place that was interesting to me.  The parking lots at those parks can be astoundingly huge – shocking even, the way the size of a Wal-Mart use to be shocking.  There are, or seem to be, rules of procedure.  The attendees tend to fall into set classes (e.g. families with young children, tweens with chaperones, teens, etc.).  So there is a lot going on there, a lot of opportunity for exploration, and that is all I know when I get started.

Second, once I get going, I have to make sure that it is still working for the character and the story.  There is something sad about the parks themselves – everyone chasing amusement – or, if not sad, there is at least the opportunity to fail – seeking fun and not finding it.  At the same time, the parking lot is right next door to the fun.  Walter wants to genuinely be a part of that world and so he gets as close as he can.  At that point, I decided, Ok, the setting seems to be working, adding some real value to the story as a whole.

It is also a bit absurd – and I like that.  Maybe that was three answers.

Did you have a specific amusement park in mind when you were writing the story?

Growing up, we would spend occasional summer days at King’s Island near Cincinnati, Ohio, and later at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio.  Those places are both a part of it, but so is the parking lot at Six Flags Great America.  I can see it from the highway when driving up to Wisconsin.

Are there certain people in your life who provide inspiration for your characters? If so, do you piece together each character from a few people or just one?

The characters are, at a minimum, always composites of more than one person.  There is a little bit of me and a little bit of my family and friends.  For example, I knew a guy in college who drove a fabulous, gray Buick Century.  I remember the way it would rock from side to side whenever we hit a bump in the road, as if it was proving to the world just how elegant it could be.  Of course, the similarities between Walter and the kid who owned the Buick probably end with the car.  This may seem a bit ridiculous to say, but the characters are also made up.  A piece from this real person or that real person, sure, but also a piece from my concept of what “loneliness” or “middle-age” or “bearded man” means.

Loneliness is a very strong theme in “Walter.” Though brief, the personal ads give readers a quick yet deep glimpse into the lives of your characters. Do you use the personal ads device in some of your other stories? Also, how did you come up with using them to aid in character development?

I have not used the personal ad device in any of my other stories and, frankly, I have mixed feelings about [the ads].  They are gimmicky and are, I believe, a bit antiquated.  Yet, they are also so efficient and such an obvious talisman of the lonely life.  In the end, I left them in, telling myself that it is ok to do something that feels lazy and distracting if it is also working.

As to their origin, I, like everyone else, was reading David Foster Wallace, and, like everyone else, was enthralled with the footnotes.  So much information in such a small space.

As an aside, I do really enjoy loneliness as a theme and feel as if everyone completely underestimates the impact that it has on the trajectory of a life.

You mention David Foster Wallace as a source of inspiration. Which other writers have influenced your work? How so?

This one is always a tough one.  I am not messing around when I say that everything I read influences my work.  Example: Paul Luikart, a local guy and fellow [University of Chicago] Graham School alum, was just nominated for a Pushcart Prize.  Paul is a friend of mine.  He wrote me a funny Christmas card one year.  I find myself stealing from that to craft my next story.  But, I am sure that this is not what you were looking for when you asked this question.??Honestly, I really have no idea.  I am impacted by the stories that I read, certainly, but I cannot tell you who is channeled into my writing and who is not.  I read CivilWarLand in Bad Decline by George Saunders just last year, and that resonated with me.  The way that he tells stories – blending real and unreal into irreverent and ridiculous truth – is the way that I would like to tell stories.  Paul Auster was big for me in some of my more formative years – college and immediately after – The New York Trilogy, The Music of Chance.  Gabriel Garcia Marquez was also a big deal – both short stories and his longer works.  I like stories that are accessible but not pandering.  I am insanely jealous of Patrick Somerville (another local), who seems to have the universe whisper the essence of dialogue into his ear while cranking out drafts of terrific novels.  All influences to be sure, but I don’t know how, exactly, or how much.?? And right now I am reading The Once and Future King and loving it.  Will T.H. White have a big influence on my work?  Who knows, but I will never look at the migration of geese in the same way and have been reminded how amazing it is to learn new things.

What is the main thing you want readers to take away from your writing as a whole?

Gosh, Annie, I don’t know.  I guess I want the same things for readers that I want for me – as reader, writer, husband, father, and person.  I want to be entertained and engaged, and to uncover unexpected and elegant but nonetheless messy truths.  I want to get done with something and say, “That was fun,” and to mean it in a simple way, but to also know that whatever it was took me someplace new and, at the very best, will come back to me to enrich a future moment or force me to reconsider the past.  Simple, right?

– Interview by Annie Bruckner, Media Assistant at Fifth Wednesday Journal.

An Interview with Nina Corwin

Wednesday, January 16th, 2013

Nina Corwin. Photo courtesy of Nina Corwin.

Poet, editor, literary curator, and psychotherapist are just some of Nina Corwin’s identities. She first became involved in Fifth Wednesday Journal (FWJ) in 2007, when the journal was just starting. “I agreed to edit one issue because I was afraid to get in over my head,” she admits. “I had to be careful since I have a tendency to get overcommitted.” After serving as the guest poetry editor of the journal’s inaugural issue, she started helping host FWJ events before returning as the guest poetry editor for the fourth issue. Nina is currently an advisory editor and still helps host FWJ readings. She has become an integral part of the FWJ team.

When editing the first issue, she and Vern Miller, the founder and publisher of FWJ, reckoned that having different guest editors for each issue would prevent one stylistic bias from overtaking the journal. She also mentions that having several readers screen submissions ensures that one reader’s aesthetic isn’t “weeding out” pieces that are truly good. As for her own literary preferences when editing FWJ, she says, “I was really interested in bringing in more of what some people call ‘experimental’ poets, what others might call ‘innovative’ poets.”

Creating a stylistically balanced journal is just one of the challenges editors face. Publishing a journal featuring both emerging and established writers is important because it introduces new talent to the literary world while attracting recognition from the literary world. Finding this range of writers, however, is difficult: “When a journal starts and has no reputation, some of the highest quality writers aren’t going to submit to a journal that hasn’t proved itself,” she says. Fortunately, Nina is great at connecting people and has helped draw in talented writers to FWJ. She is also very active in the Chicago poetry scene, which she describes as “incredibly and wonderfully diverse,” and she often curates poetry readings. She credits her days of waitressing as something that helped develop her interest in curating; she enjoyed putting together a pleasing meal for others and sees curating as a kind of extension of that: “[When you are] curating, hosting, you are welcoming authors and lovers of writing. You are serving both of those groups, and you are presenting—creating—a wonderful meal of literature.”

Sharing work and talking about it play an important part in the literary community, Nina says. While she relishes her role in bringing together readers and writers at readings, she also loves what happens in writing workshops. “The conversation between writers that begins,” she says, “is one of the vibrant, vital aspects of my experience as writer, curator, and editor. It brings me into conversation not only with my work but also [with other writers] in an exchange of ideas.” This exchange of ideas, Nina notes, can happen anywhere. She acknowledges that while social media sites are full of people sometimes connecting over silly things, they also provide a space for more serious conversations, including literary ones. “I think it’s the community aspects of those formats that draw people to want to read and to want to write. It’s great not only in fostering writers, but in engaging and motivating kids to take part in literacy.” Social media sites, she points out, play an important role in developing today’s and tomorrow’s literary community.

Nina’s focus on bringing things together—whether it’s poems in a journal, people at a reading, or writers in a workshop—reveals her own poetic inclinations. Her most recent book of poetry, The Uncertainty of Maps, brings together her diverse interests and identities in its themes: “The themes in the book—imperfection, uncertainty, and impermanence—really reflect [the] joining of my interests. It’s a convergence of my psychotherapist self, my poet self, and my aging philosopher self.” Gathering together these various aspects of her life and merging them into a larger work gives them more weight. And this, she says, is what FWJ is doing as well. “[Fifth Wednesday Journal] really creates something that is far more than the sum of its parts.”

– Interview by Annie Bruckner, Media Assistant at Fifth Wednesday Journal.

FWJ Fall 2012 Preview

Monday, August 27th, 2012

Our managing editor, Rachel Hamsmith, takes us through the production process at FWJ and discusses what’s in store for Fall 2012 Issue 11.

Stay tuned for more news about the Fall 2012 issue, the release event at the Book Cellar in Chicago, and other FWJ events coming soon.

The Fall 2012 issue will arrive in November, but you can pre-order the issue here for $1 off the cover price. Order yours today!

Saturday, October 15th, 2011

Hi Fifth Wednesdayarians:

I just sat down with Ana Castillo, who will be our third author in our Taking the Fifth series. She joins the ranks of Stephen Dixon and Elizabeth Strout, whose interview is going to be pub’d in the upcoming issue of Fifth Wednesday, set to drop in November.

For me this is the best part of working on these interviews. Sure it’s fun to the research, to submerge yourself in an artist’s entire oeuvre, taking notes and shaping questions. It’s also fun to do the actual interview, to sit across from someone you admire and have a conversation, though there is some anxiety that goes along with that — I think to a certain to degree for both parties. But then comes the work: transcribing several hours of conversation, then molding that conversation ever so slightly — trimming the edges off answers, rearranging the questions slightly, turning the verbal into print, and having it become — hopefully — useful and literary at the same time. All that begins this morning, just after I finish typing this paragraph and refilling my coffee cup.

See you at the other end.

Daniel S. Libman