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Thursday, April 8, 2010

Insights from Simon Van Booy, author of "The Secret Lives of People in Love"

I just finished reading a phenomenal collection of short stories: The Secret Lives of People in Love by Simon Van Booy. My favorite story, "Snow Falls and Then Disappears," is alone worth the $13.99 paperback price. It's one of those stories that curls up inside you and becomes a part of you.

The stories themselves are beautiful, and the book has an extra gift at the end: a "P.S." section with "insights from the author." This section is a goldmine. I love reading about writers' processes, curiosities, loves, and inspirations. I love reading about writers' journeys to become writers.

Here is a gem from Van Booy's section "History of Stories":

"One of my first assignments as an MFA student was to write a short story for discussion in a workshop. I sat at my desk looking into the shallow woods beyond. And then it began to snow. I began to write.

"After two paragraphs I knew something was different. It felt effortless, but required almost an impossible presence of mind -- a poise, a balance of feeling. I wrote 'Snow Falls and Then Disappears' in a few hours. ...

"When you find your voice, it will be obvious to you. The voice isn't just a choice of words but the sense of rhythm and, perhaps most important, the tone. This is why I could never be the sort of writer who is competitive. Everyone has their own style; no two writers are alike, even if they pretend to be."

5 comments:

  1. Hi, can I ask if you got your copy of Arcadia yet? I'm still waiting for mine!

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  2. No, I haven't! I'm eagerly waiting for it as well. Hopefully soon!

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  3. Can you read what I wrote.I have a poem that I think is decent and my friends like it and I want to know what a real author thinks


    I looked in his eyes today
    and after a second I had to look away.
    I couldn’t bring myself to say
    what I had planned all day

    Here’s what I want him to know
    but wasn’t sure how to show

    Thank you
    for staying true
    to your word
    when I spoke. I know you heard
    what I had to say
    and you treated me as more than just another student I have to see today

    You taught me to grow up to be strong
    to prove myself strong
    the years were long

    That I worked with you
    and every day I knew
    that one day it’s possible that you

    may leave and go on your own
    I only wish I knew that I had known
    that you had shown

    More signs of leaving me
    to be whoever I’d be
    without you to see
    on a tough day where I needed to be set free

    Of the stress and made smile
    I knew you could do that for me if just for a while.

    But now you decided to set yourself free
    do something I thought I’d never see
    be a person I never knew….leave me lonely

    But I’m happy I knew you and I need to say
    I want to thank you for every day
    and with that I have nothing left to say


    the spacing isnt perfect on here but I hope you get the idea. The rhyming words should b the end of the line.

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  4. Hi Megs,

    Thank you for sharing your poem! I really liked the rhythm you've created, which I think is reinforced nicely by the rhyme scheme. Do you have a title? I wasn't quite sure who the "you" is that the poem refers to, and a title might help clarify that.

    Keep writing, you definitely are talented!!

    :) Dallas

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  5. Hey Dallas,

    Any sign of Arcadia yet your end?

    Best.

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