We can see from Emily Dickinson's poetry that she is, arguably,
fascinated by death. And why shouldn't she be? Mortality - the inevitability of
death - is a constant in our lives. We may not think about it every minute of
every day, but it is nevertheless a part of life. Perhaps Dickinson had more
close encounters with death than other authors or perhaps it was the fact that
she lived a secluded life and she had time to muse and let her mind wander on
the topic.
Cheever had his fascinations, too; alcoholism crops up again and again
in his work. His inability to let his characters live happily, always forcing
them into self-sabotage somehow is probably a fascination in its own right.
But does that fascination necessarily mean that’s all a person can write
about? Are dystopian fiction writers, like Suzanne Collins and Veronica Roth,
obsessed with end-of-the-world scenarios where humanity has become irreparably
corrupted? Are crime writers – Kathy Reichs, Lee Child, Patricia Cornwell – fixated
on the motives and the means by which humans are capable or wronging one
another? Who can say, I suppose.
What fascinates you as a writer?
It's a strange, introspective process to think about the underlying
content of your own work. I suppose I'm fascinated by the fantastical - finding
everyday occurrences in strange, novel situations. Even in a world where magic
exists, where young girls slay dragons, where new worlds unfold in front of me,
friendships and relationships and family still create conflicts.
And I hate to say goodnight, but this is it.
I think you've shown a thin borderline between fascination and obsession here, and you've done that well. And it's interesting that what interests you are standard everyday conflicts - even when incorporated to fiction. Pretty cool!
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