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Author Interview David Vann
with Norelle Done
Fiction writing requires a balance of storytelling, personal
experience, and realistic portrayals of characters’ emotions and
actions. It is a challenge to avoid tipping too far in one
direction, especially when the author’s personal experiences can
weigh so heavily.
David Vann is an author that
has successfully accomplished a balance in telling stories from a
depth that can only be reached through personal experience, but
without turning fiction into a thinly disguised memoir. Not that
writing a memoir is negative, by any means. David’s first published
book was A Mile Down, a memoir of his sea travels that was published
in 2005. “I decided to write about captaining the boat, and because
it was so crazy that it didn’t seem like real life. I really started
writing for the purpose of engagement, because being a captain and
just walking on the beach in Caribbean wasn’t happiness - it wasn’t
enough. Writing was engagement for me since I was bored with walking
on the beach,” Vann says.

Although A Mile Down was Vann’s first book in print, it was written
after a five-and-a-half year hiatus from writing. Previously, he had
spent ten years writing Legend of a Suicide, a collection of short
stories and one novella that are fictional, but reminiscent of
events surrounding Vann’s father’s suicide when David was just 13
years old.
“For the first three or so years after my dad’s suicide, I told
everyone that he had died from cancer,” Vann says of the time.
“Later, in college, I wanted to write something beautiful to
understand the story ... I never really viewed writing as a therapy
- the writing is something beautiful that transforms something ugly
into something lovely. It has to have a higher goal than just
therapy.”
He describes his process for writing the stories as depending on a
myriad of different literary examples and styles. “In Legend, I was
learning how to write from different writing examples at different
times, each in different styles. There was no one true story about
my dad and our family; the six different stories would be a more
accurate picture about what happened with our family and my dad. I
had to learn how to transform the true story into fiction,” he
says.
Vann finished writing Legend of a Suicide when he was about 29, ten
years after he began to write the stories. More than a decade after
its completion, during which time no one would publish the book,
David Vann submitted it for the Grace Paley prize in short fiction.
The judge liked it, and the book was eventually picked up by Harper
Collins, as was Caribou Island, which was released in January 2011.
Caribou Island is another work of fiction, this time a full-length
novel about the suicide and murder of David’s stepmother’s parents,
which occurred just 11 months before his own father’s suicide. For
Vann, these very personal stories are not meant to be buried and
hidden away; rather, “These were the stories of my life, and I
wanted them to be published ... It just seems inevitable that I
would share them.”
Like the decade it took to write Legend of a Suicide, Vann started
Caribou Island 14 years ago. “Up until two years ago, I didn’t know
how to write it - it was my first full-length novel, and that style
is very different from a memoir or short story,” Vann said.
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Despite
his struggle to craft Caribou Island into a full novel, David Vann
does not believe in writer’s block: “I’m not sure it exists; I’ve
experienced years of not writing, but when I’m writing, I just
write. I feel like writer’s block happens to people who are not
actually writers, but are trying to write,” he says.
According to David, the most important part of writing is momentum,
and doing whatever it takes to finish the first draft. “I did Legend
in fits and starts. A big thing for me was to trust that the story
is going to write itself out, although the process is unconscious,
and kind of out of control. For me, a big challenge is to get the
rest of life to go away ... to let the first draft happen without
getting distracted,” Vann said.
In his writing career, David Vann has used many different styles,
with his memoir A Mile Down, his collection of short stories in
Legend of a Suicide, his full-length novel Caribou Island, and
coming out this year is a nonfiction book entitled Last Day on
Earth, about the perpetrator in a school shooting. Last Day on Earth
was a new experience for Vann, since “it’s a book that stemmed from
an assignment for Esquire magazine. It’s full research and
investigative journalism, and I was lucky to get access to a 1500
page police file that no other journalist got access to. It was an
exciting process of discovery,” Vann said.
Although his books have tremendously emotional and dark themes, Vann
does not think they are as ‘depressing’ as American critics label
them. “For instance, Caribou has a lot of humor, and there are even
some characters that are mostly there for humor,” he says. “I wish
that more Americans would realize that for over 2,500 years, most of
our best literary works have been tragedies. In Europe, no one
really talks about my work being gloomy and dark, because it’s
actually humorous, and also fast-paced, which counteracts the dark
aspects.”
David is currently teaching writing workshops and literature
seminars as an associate professor at the University of San
Francisco. He also writes for the Sunday Times and the
Observer in the UK, and numerous publications world-wide. “I’ve
written everything from music to family, travel adventures,
disasters, going on the outback in Australia, cultural pieces, old
English and American fiction. I write essays, memoir, novels,
critical,” he lists, and notes that, “any writer can improve by
writing across all genres and seeing what you can learn from each.”
What’s next for David Vann? “I never can tell what the next book is
going to be, like the most recent - I had plans for another novel,
but something else came out. The process for writing is unconscious.
I really have no plan or idea for the next book ... who knows? I may
never write again,” he said, and I couldn’t quite tell if he was
joking or not.
More
Author Articles.. Norelle Done is
a Seattle freelance writer and editor who loves to curl up on a
rainy day with a good book. She regularly meets authors and writers
around Seattle to share their writing experiences, struggles, and
successes on her website,
SeattleWrote.blogspot.com. |
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