Charles Baxter Lets Stories Tell Him When It’s Time to Write (and Other Literary Morsels)

Date:

Share post:


Charles Baxter’s novel, Blood Test, is available now from Pantheon, so we asked him a few questions about writing, reading, organizing books, and more.

Article continues after advertisement

*
Who do you most wish would read your book? (your boss, your childhood bully, etc.)
My ideal reader for Blood Test: A Comedy would be anyone who needs a good laugh and wants to be taken away by a story. I would like to raise the spirits of the downcast, the broken-hearted, the unconsoled, the lonely, and the troubled. I hope to make them smile and to help them forget their troubles while they’re reading my book.

How do you tackle writers block?
I wait it out. I try not to get anxious. It’s good to forget yourself, to get free of self-consciousness and worry. I look at the world and observe it, and I try, in a small way, to help others who could use some help, and I work at other tasks. Your life does not depend on your writing another book. If a story wants you to write it down, it will let you know.

I keep a little notebook and write down what I hear people saying, and sometimes I get ideas for something new. You can always watch and help your friends and ask yourself what sort of trouble they might get themselves into. Or: what trouble might you yourself get into? There’s always a story there.

What was the first book you fell in love with (why)?
The first book I fell in love with would have been a little drugstore paperback selling for fifty cents in 1963: The Night of the Hunter by Davis Grubb, a lyrical nightmare/melodrama novel about orphaned children and a mad preacher, Harry Powell. I read it in tenth grade and was startled to realize that good novels have beautiful sentences.

Article continues after advertisement

That thought had never occurred to me before. I didn’t even know what a beautiful sentence was until I read that novel.

How do you decide what to read next?
Sometimes someone grabs me, metaphorically, and tells me about a great book that I must read. I love hearing, “You’ve got to read this!”

Sometimes I find a book that fits my mood, and at other times I want to read about a particular subject: happy/unhappy marriages; identity theft; not knowing how to cope. And sometimes I just want to go back to a favorite author. And sometimes a book pushes itself at me, wanting to be read.

Which non-literary piece of culture—film, tv show, painting, song—could you not imagine your life without?
Classical music and in particular the music of certain composers: Brahms, Ravel, Debussy, Myaskovsky, Virgil Thomson, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Alan Hovhaness, Caroline Shaw, and many many others. I couldn’t live without them. I wouldn’t want to.

______________________________

Article continues after advertisement

Blood Test: A Comedy by Charles Baxter is available via Pantheon.



Source link

Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lamber is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes about arts, entertainment, lifestyle, and home news. Nicole has been a journalist for years and loves to write about what's going on in the world.

Recent posts

Related articles

Lit Hub Daily: October 22, 2024

TODAY: In 1964, Jean-Paul Sartre explains his refusal...

The False Radicalism of Corporate Disability Literature

I first encountered The Anti-Ableist Manifesto: Smashing Stereotypes, Forging Change, and Building a Disability-Inclusive World by Tiffany...

How a Hidden Corner of the American West Became a Refuge For Outlaws

There were three main hideouts in what we now think of as they “Wild West,” and they...

Jeff VanderMeer! Ben Okri! Peter Singer talks turkey! 24 new books out today.

October 22, 2024, 4:55am We’re moving ever deeper into October, that month of mundane and marvelous transformations (and,...

Here’s the winner of the 2024 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction.

October 21, 2024, 1:56pm Anne de Marcken has won the 2024 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction...

Lit Hub Daily: October 21, 2024

TODAY: In 1967, Norman Mailer is arrested along...

Somaia Abu Nada Remembers Her Slain Sister, Heba Abu Nada, Palestinian Poet and Novelist

Heba Abu Nada, an acclaimed Palestinian poet and novelist, was killed by an Israeli airstrike on her...