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"Before I was a writer I was a reader; and reading remains a necessary
activity, occupying several joyous hours of every day. I like novels,
essays, and biographies; but most of all I like the short story: narrative
at its most confiding.
"My own work, and particularly the stories in Vaquita, aims at a similar
intimacy between writer and reader. My imagined reader wants to know who
loves whom, who drinks what, and, mostly, who answers to what summons.
Thank Heavens for Spike Lee! Before his movies writers and critics had
to natter about moral stances; now I can say with a more tripping tongue
that my characters are people in peculiar circumstances aching to Do The
Right Thing if only they can figure out what The Right Thing is. If not,
they'll at least Do Their Own Thing Right.
"And I'm drawn to heat: sweltering Central American cities; a steamy soup
kitchen; Jerusalem in midsummer; the rekindled passion of an old historian;
the steady fire of terminal pain. I like solitaries, oddities, charlatans,
and children. My characters are secretive; in almost every story somebody
harbors a hidden love, dread, regret, or the memory of an insult awaiting
revenge.
"When I stop writing stories I plan to write letters, short and then shorter.
My mother could put three sentences onto a postcard and make the recipient
think he'd read a novel. I'm working towards a similar compression."
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