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		<title>Questions for Miriam Gershow</title>
		<link>http://zfighter.com/2010/01/28/questions-for-miriam-gershow/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jan 2010 19:52:32 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Talk]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Each week, in &#8220;talk.&#8221;, NWBL will spend a little time getting to know a Northwest author. Miriam Gershow is a Eugene novelist, short story writer, teacher and mother of an infant son. Her debut novel, The Local News, was a &#8230; <a href="http://zfighter.com/2010/01/28/questions-for-miriam-gershow/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Each week, in &#8220;talk.&#8221;, NWBL will spend a little time getting to know a Northwest author.</p>
<p><a title="Miriam Gershow" href="http://miriamgershow.com/"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-32" title="Photo 1 Color" src="http://pnba.concentricsky.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Photo-1-Color-201x300.jpg" alt="Photo 1 Color" width="85" height="126" /></a></p>
<p><a title="Miriam Gershow" href="http://miriamgershow.com/">Miriam Gershow</a> is a Eugene novelist, short story writer, teacher and mother of an infant son. Her debut novel, <em>The Local News</em>, was a finalist for the 2009 Oregon Book Awards. It comes out in paperback in early February. In a favorable <a title="The New York Times" href="&lt;http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/16/books/16masl.html&gt;" target="_self">New York Times Review</a> last year, Janet Maslin compared it to the Lovely Bones and called it &#8220;deftly heartbreaking.&#8221; NWBL asked Gershow a few questions.</p>
<p><span id="more-31"></span><br />
<img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-33" title="Local News Paperback High Res" src="http://pnba.concentricsky.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Local-News-Paperback-High-Res-194x300.jpg" alt="Local News Paperback High Res" width="194" height="300" /><strong>NWBL</strong>: Your debut novel was published almost a year ago. What has surprised you most about being a first-time author?</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: This may sound absurd, but the most surprising thing was the fact that other people were actually reading the book. Obviously, I knew people would read the book–or at least I hoped they would. But before publication, I had mostly been anticipating the incidental trappings of being a new author–My name embossed on a hardcover spine! My book on bookstore shelves! Soon, though, I was hearing from readers via email and meeting them in book groups and I was just awed and humbled–and yes, surprised–by their rich, generous responses to the book and their own poignant stories about family or adolescence or loss that echoed Lydia’s.</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: You&#8217;ve said that the characters and circumstances of <em>The Local News</em>, in which a nerdy 15-year-old narrator reacts to her popular brother&#8217;s disappearance, were entirely made up and not based anything in your life. How do you get to a place where you can make up this stuff?</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: Well, I’m a creature of habit. I need to write in the same place (my desk at home or a particular table at the Eugene Public Library) and I need to drink the same drink (a double latte) out of the same mug (a heavy blue monstrosity I made in a ceramics class during my MFA days). Repeated ritual helps get me get past all the distractions. And if I do this regularly – ideally, daily–the ideas just come to me.</p>
<p>Also, more and more, I’m game for anything. I&#8217;m willing to try out most ideas that pop into my head. I used to be a much harsher critic of my own imagination, convincing myself an idea was stupid or silly or too hard to write before it even made it to the page. Now I try not to do that as much, and instead give any idea a whirl.  This leads to a lot more failures–you should see my aborted multi-narrator novel about a man driving his truck into a fast food restaurant (or better yet, perhaps you shouldn’t.)</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: You&#8217;re at work on a second novel. Can you give us a sneak peek?</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: I’m suspicious–almost to a fault–about sharing work too early. I will say, it features siblings again, but a very different set of siblings. And it also features tarot cards and prisons and the Portland Art Museum. I’m afraid you’ll have to wait for anything more.</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: What&#8217;s your relationship with reviews?<br />
<strong><br />
GERSHOW</strong>: In the beginning, I voraciously read every single one. I was delighted to see nearly all the editorial reviews embraced the book. But eventually, I had to stop.  As my smart friend,  <a title="Cai Emmons" href="http://www.caiemmons.com" target="_self">Cai Emmons</a>, pointed out, all reviews–good or bad–are just heady distraction from the real work of writing. And, of course, she’s right. So I try my hardest to stay away from the proliferation of online reviews–Goodreads and Amazon and LibraryThing and on and on.</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: Favorite line from something you’ve written?</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: I quite like this one from <em>The Local News</em>–“Had a linguist stood beside me in the front hallway, I was convinced he’d have discovered a new language that night, a guttural, frayed derivative of English, a tongue just barely comprehensible, inflected as heavily as it was by paroxysms of bewilderment and grief.”–mainly because of my use of “paroxysms.”  I’ve long loved that word.</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: Will you share a line from a work in progress?</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: “‘There are cigarette butts in the azaleas,’ Barb says, pointing to the bushes beside our porch, and I see the a couple butts littering the green leaves like flower buds.”</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: What&#8217;s on your nightstand:</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: Maile Meloy’s debut story collection, <em>Half in Love</em><br />
David Ebershoff’s historical novel, <em>The 19th Wife</em><br />
Jill Ciment’s newest novel, <em>Heroic Measures</em><br />
A notepad and pen<br />
A baby monitor</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: Name a book you’re an evangelist for right now:</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: Elizabeth McCracken’s devastatingly honest, spare, heartbreaking, funny and smart memoir, An Ex<em>act Replica of a Figment of My Imagination</em>. Anyone who’s ever had a child, wanted a child or lost a child–really anybody–should read this book.</p>
<p><strong>NWBL</strong>: Book you’d love to see made into a movie:</p>
<p><strong>GERSHOW</strong>: This is a tough one because I love books and I love movies, but I’m disappointed 99% of the time when books I love are adapted to film.  (A pox on the houses of all those responsible for turning <em>The Feast of Love</em> into a muddled and forgettable rom-com).  So as much as I’d like to see the fantastic, trippy world of <em>Geek Love</em> on the big screen or watch Edward Norton take on <em>Motherless Brooklyn’s</em> Lionel Essrog, I’d rather leave well enough alone.</p>
<p>NWBL: What distracts you from your writing:</p>
<p>GERSHOW: My infant son. Good weather. Bad weather. Email. The internet. The phone.  Television. Food. Drink. Washing dishes. Folding laundry. A glimpse of deer outside the window. A glimpse of cars outside the window. A glimpse of the mail truck outside the window. Getting the mail. Sorting the mail. Opening the mail.  Anything, if I let it.  Nothing, if I’m in a groove.</p>
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