DoHaeng Michael Kitchen

Human Created

Friday, Finally!
June 6, 2014

– Country living discoveries:
We recently moved from an apartment to a home with a half-acre of land and a creek running the western border.  I call it country living, though really, it’s not out-in-the-boondocks country.  A half mile away is a major intersection and freeway exit, with every big box store imaginable (except for a Barnes & Noble…apparently reading is not financially supported out here).  Still, it’s more country than I’m comfortable with.  The city rat in me would prefer a Detroit riverfront apartment or condo, close to where the action is, or a college town like Ann Arbor, bustling with people with a bevy of book stores.  Thus far in our brief residency, we’ve had some interesting situations and discoveries.

For one, the trees we have are epic.  There’s one out front that was a late bloomer, but she’s huge and generous with shade in the front of the house.  In the back, a large maple occupies substantial real estate.  Then there are the lilacs.  Deep purple ones toward the back, and lighter ones along the creek near the driveway that provide a nice fragrance carried by a spring breeze as you enter or exit the car.

DSC05317

Then, there’s the wildlife.  A rabbit has been seen often scampering across the back yard.  Toads in the patch of landscaping on the side of the mother-in-law house.  Then, a couple of robins occupied a nest atop the front porch light, hatching two little babies.  They’ve since grown and moved on.

DSC05326 DSC05335

And of course, squirrels, including one brave soul who decided to climb the side of the house and perch on the window sill of my office.  I’ve since dropped some nuts outside the window, but there has not been a return visit.  Yet.

DSC05333 DSC05334

I hear this is the month for turtles to be nesting.  Maybe we’ll get lucky to see them, too.

Oh, and the mosquitoes.  They have made their appearance known.  I foresee a future purchase of a bat house to help with that problem.  Bats are in the area.  My wife saw one during one of the first evenings we moved in.

However, with the abundance of life also comes death.  A few days ago I had the window open in the office.  As the breeze passed by, there was this feint foul odor that would occasionally drift by.  On Tuesday, when my mother-in-law entered the mother-in-law house for the first time as a resident, after spending better than two weeks in the hospital, my wife and I took the garbage out to the curb.  On the way back, the stench hit us, like a wall, in one specific location.  It was so noticeable that the guy delivering the oxygen tanks and hospital bed for mother-in-law asked “Am I too late?”  The aroma was strongest near the well next to the creek.  We peeked inside, but it was empty.  It has to be something down in the creek.  Since then the fragrance of death has faded.  Locals to the area suggest it may have been a muskrat.

It’s only been five weeks.  It will be interesting to see how things change as the seasons change.

– The Precepts.

Sunday morning at Still Point Zen Buddhist Temple will be this year’s Precept Taking and Abbot Installation Ceremony.  It is a ceremony for individuals who commit to undertake the Buddhist path by embracing the Three Refuges and Eight Precepts.  The participants in the ceremony are then given a Buddhist name and a set of meditation beads.

Having moved yet further away from my spiritual home makes regular attendance a challenge.  Sitting alone is good.  Sitting with a group in the presence of a guiding teacher helps strengthen one’s practice.  Like the Buddha’s Birthday ceremony and the evening sitting in honor of the Buddha’s awakening, the Precept Ceremony is a must-attend event for me.  I make that commitment for two reasons; to support those who are participating in the ceremony, and, for personal reflection and re-commitment of when I took the Precept Ceremony on May 18, 2008.

DSC07232

-Detroit City FC host the Erie Admirals tonight at Cass Tech Stadium.  Special jerseys to recognize the “You Can Play” project to support LGBT athletes will be worn and auctioned at the conclusion of the match.  The anticipation is for another sell out.  City Til I Die.

Quote:  “Everything I know about morality and the obligations of men, I owe it to football (soccer).”  Albert Camus.

“What I’m Thinking About” Wednesday
June 4, 2014

Friday night is soccer night in Detroit. Detroit City FC is hosting the Erie Admirals, which promises to be an exciting night. Erie is the team that eliminated DCFC from the playoffs last season, sparking an instant hatred of that team by supporters.

DSC02946

Sports are interesting, aren’t they? The pitting of two teams, and their supporters, against one another in competition creates a dynamic whereby rivalries and grudges are created. University of Michigan fans and Michigan State University fans hope for in-state bragging rights against the other. The Michigan – Ohio State rivalry is one of the top of all time rivalries in any sport. The professional sports world experiences them, too, such as the Yankees/Red Sox in baseball, Redskins/Cowboys in football, Leafs/Canadiens in hockey, and Celtics/Lakers in basketball. We have soccer rivalries here in the US – Portland Timbers/Seattle Sounders and San Jose Earthquakes/LA Galaxy are a couple that come to mind. But over the pond, where soccer is even more prominent and proximate, there are some heated rivalries, called derbys (pronounced “darbys”). Manchester United and Manchester City. Liverpool and Everton. FC Barcelona and Real Madrid. Arsenal and Tottenham’s stadiums are only five miles apart. Someone once said that you could change your home, change your job, even change your spouse, but you never change your soccer team.

Last Friday I drove to Cincinnati where my sister and her family live. DCFC battled the Cincinnati Saints, and my sister and two of my nieces attended the game. I sat with the traveling Detroit supporters, while my sister and her kids stayed true to their hometown team. The banter prior and subsequent to the match was fun.

This Friday will be interesting also because the Detroit City FC players will be wearing special jerseys promoting the “You Can Play” project which creates a welcoming and inclusive environment in sports for athletes to be judged on their talent, heart, desire and work ethic and not discriminated against because of sexual orientation. The jerseys will be auctioned following the game with a portion of the proceeds to go to the Ruth Ellis Center in Highland Park, Michigan, which provides short and long term residential support for runaway, homeless, and at-risk gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender youth.

Parents rejecting sons and daughters for prejudicial reasons is not a new phenomenon. People have a hard time understanding and accepting someone from a different culture or different religion or different race or different sexual preference than their own. Parents believe they instill their values in their children.  So when one’s offspring brings home a date who is not of the same religion or nationality, or skin color, or if their date is of the same sex, the parents feel rejection and failure. If anything, these parents should be proud, for they have taught their child that love and acceptance isn’t limited to people who look like, think like, and/or believe like them.  Love transcends those artificial barriers.

There’s a lot I don’t understand. I don’t understand how people proclaiming to be Christian would deny a couple the right to marry.  Sure, if you believe it is against the narrow tenants of your religion, then deny them a ceremony.  But don’t deny them the right.  I don’t understand how one’s sexual orientation affects his or her potential to be a great family member, employee, athlete, or all around human being.  To paraphrase Martin Luther King Jr. from his legendary speech, we should judge people by the content of their character. I liked the way the Northern Guard Supporters phrased it on their Facebook cover photo, “If they wear our crest, they are family. Regardless of who they love.”

Former Columbus Crew/current Los Angeles Galaxy player Robbie Rogers publicly came out in February, 2013. The NFL’s St. Louis Rams drafted openly gay, Michael Sam, this summer.  Brave men and excellent examples of organizations accepting players for their talents on the field. Add to that DCFC who, on the eve of Motor City Pride weekend in Detroit, embrace the “You Can Play” philosophy and help raise funds to help those shunned by their families.

224529_10150240255600826_88555_n

Sports rivalries encourage hatred for those on the other team. But this is just sports. We can go into the night hating and verbally abusing the Erie Admirals. But in the end, we’re not going to disown our family and friends simply because they root for the opponent. My sister still let me spend the night at their house after DCFC beat their Saints.  Similarly we should not disown our family and friends merely because they are of a different sexual orientation than ourselves.

I hope we trounce those bastards from Erie.  And I hope I win a silent auction, too.

– Last week, I finished reading When Darkness was a Virtue by Michael Grant Jaffe.   When it comes to selecting the next novel I want to read usually one of two things happen;  either I know exactly which novel is next in line, or I have an elimination process that helps me make that decision.  In the first case, I know exactly which novel is next because of some very specific reason, such as the author is coming to town soon so reading it will prepare me for meeting the author, or having met an author at an event and his or her book is relevant in some way that lures me into reading it.

But the second case is much more involved.  I pull sixteen novels from my shelves that I consider on my ‘must read’ list.  Then, much like a sports tournament bracket, I pair them up and between the two I decide which is more compelling for me to read right now.  For example, the first two books on the stack were A Walk Among the Tombstones by Lawrence Block and Liza of Lambeth by Somerset Maugham.  The movie based on Block’s novel is due out in September, so I decided I could hold off and eliminated it, and Maugham’s first novel advanced.  Sixteen books soon become eight, then four, then down to the final two.

For some reason, the process this time was extremely difficult because of the quality of books on my ‘must read’ list.  There were instances where two books met head-to-head, and I really wanted to read them both…now!  However, I did settle on a winner, and last night I started in on Rene Denfeld’s The Enchanted.

–  Speaking of books, I went down to my sister’s house in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky.  Detroit City FC was playing Cincinnati’s new National Premiere Soccer League team, the Cincinnati Saints.  She and my two nieces went to the Friday night match.  But before the game, and before dinner, they took me to Half Price Books.  It was my first visit there, and when the nieces asked why we had to go, my sister told them because book stores are a tourist attraction for me.  Indeed.

The visit was short, wise on their part to take me just a couple hours before kick off.  My first impression?  I think I just met my first used book store corporate franchise.  They stock books, CD’s, audio books, comic books, even vinyl records, a vast majority of it purchased from its previous owners.  All of this in a big box storefront.  The Florence, Kentucky store I was taken to is not the only one.  In fact today’s Shelf Awareness email newsletter reported that Half Price Books opened a 10,000 square foot store in  Chesterfield, Missouri.  My initial visit was short, but I took a little time and added to my personal library when I made my second visit Saturday morning before leaving town.

DSC05339

– Speaking of Cincinnati:  I have a confession to make to my fellow DCFC fans/Northern Guard Supporters.  I like Skyline Chili.

Prior to kickoff at the match, I overheard a conversation amongst the Rouge Rovers – DCFC and Northern Guard Supporters’ traveling support (of which I am now one) – about their dislike for Skyline and Gold Star chili.  I won’t go into great detail about it because it was pretty graphic.  A lifetime Michigander and Detroiter, when my sister and her husband moved to Cincinnati in 1990, I discovered Skyline and fell in love.  When my wife and I spent a wedding anniversary down in Cincy a number of years ago, we took a guided tour of the city.  That’s when I learned why I preferred Skyline over our Coney Islands.  One of the secret ingredients in Skyline Chili is baker’s chocolate.

My name is Mike, and I am a chocoholic.  However, I refuse to recover.  The source of my addiction an ingredient in the chili is my weakness.

DSC03206

– Speaking of Detroit City FC soccer:  The match was awesome.  On the way to the match, my sister asked my nieces whether they thought they’d see anyone they knew.  I piped in and said I will probably see more people I know than they will.  And it proved true.  I haven’t seen attendance numbers for the match, but were I to guess I’d approximate maybe three hundred people spectated the game, with about 10% of them Rouge Rovers.  We scored, we shouted, then we smoked them out, naturally.  It was a great game, especially for my sister and nieces.  It was their introduction to a professional soccer match – their prior experience being the youth leagues that both nieces play in.  Staying true to their Cincinnati turf, they preferred to sit opposite the crazy Detroiters, even though I taught them a couple of our chants (“We will sing for you City” and “No one likes us”)  Whereas I joined those in rouge and gold.

Detroit had a 2-0 lead after twelve minutes, and was set to be a route in the making.  The score held to halftime, and meeting my family during the break they were critical of our supporters.  My eleven year old niece complained that we said “a lot of bad words”  My fifteen year old niece complained that we were “annoying.”

We went our separate ways for the second half.  Cincinnati got back in the game with two goals, and I waited for the cell phone in my pocket to ring.  But in the end, a last minute goal by Michael Lamb (captured on video – please excuse my enthusiasm after the goal) gave Detroit the win.

I don’t like seeing us give up goals or leads.  But this was a winning night.  After the game, the excitement in all three of their voices due to the Saints’ comeback and domination of the second half, helped win them over.  Detroit City FC won the match, and soccer won three new fans.  They were impressed by the value they got for their $8 ticket, and of course, my fifteen year old niece wants to go back for more.  I think it’s because of the players more so than the soccer, but who cares, right?  Three new soccer fans is a good thing.

DSC05347

Due to our recent move, I didn’t get the opportunity to list my April, 2014 reading.  This month, it’s a culmination of both April and May’s reading (which is less than I read in a usual month, but hey, sometimes life gets in the way).

Novels:
The Sun and Other Stars by Brigid Pasulka.  I especially recommend this book to soccer fans.  A solid story within a soccer fan environment.  I gave this 5 stars on Goodreads.

When Darkness was a Virtue by Michael Grant Jaffe.   Gritty, down-to-earth story about how far must one go to get by in today’s world.  I gave this 4 stars on Goodreads.

Graphic Novels/Tradepaperbacks:
Satellite Sam Volume One
Batwoman Volume Three:  World’s Finest
Lone Wolf and Cub Omnibus Volume Four
Liberator Volume One
Sex Criminals Volume One: One Weird Trick

Comic Books:
Satellite Sam #6, 7
Hactivist #1, 2, 3, 4

Magazine articles:
Two from The Writer
One from Poets & Writers
One from The Writer’s Chronicle

DSC05164

Wow.  What a weekend.  The best way to describe it is in bite-size pieces.

Motor City Comic Con (Novi, MI):  This year was the 25th Anniversary of the Motor City Comic Con – an event held over a three-day weekend in May – which features comic and media celebrities from the past and present.  Over the years, I’ve found the best time to go is Friday when the doors open, and this year was no exception.  There was room to breathe walking the aisles of comic artists, comic book and related vendors, and media celebrities.  I was on a single-minded mission this year.  Prior to the convention I contacted legendary artist Frank Brunner, to commission him for a sketch.  I needed a special element to add to my personal home library, and a sketch of a anthropomorphized duck sitting in a chair, smoking a stogie and reading a book, by the artist of the popular 1970’s Marvel Comics character Howard the Duck was just the ticket.  Meeting Mr. Brunner was an honor, and the sketch was exceptional.  All I need now is a frame to put it up on the wall.  I can’t say much else about the convention.  I spent only a couple hours there as I had an evening event.

Detroit City FC 3, Michigan Stars 0, (Detroit, MI):  Friday evening it was a trip to Harry’s in Detroit for the festivities prior to the Detroit City FC match against the Michigan Stars.  The Michigan Stars are Sparta FC Version 2.0, as described by the Northern Guard Supporters.  They are Canadian-owned, and came into the league to try to draw the same kind of success that DCFC has.  It flopped.  Name change and location change, but the same weak product.   Detroit City FC commanded a 3-0 lead going into the half, and the Stars failed to mount any form of a comeback.  The supporters’ chant, “This Is Awesome!” after DCFC’s Zach Myers and William Mellors-Blair’s goals within a minute of each other, was appropriate to sum up the night.  And it was another record-setting crowd at Cass Tech High School stadium, with 2,614 fans on a cool May evening.

Why do the crowds continue to grow at DCFC matches?  The pre-game fun prior to the march to the stadium may have something to do with it.

Detroit Working Writers (DWW) Conference (Clinton Township, MI):  On Saturday I attended the DWW Conference at the Clinton-Macomb Library.  The timing of this conference was perfect.  I’ve spent the last four-five weeks in transition from an apartment to a three-bedroom home.  It has severely disrupted my writing practice.  The dust is now settling and the conference provided a poke into getting my writing practice back on track.  Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli‘s session on finding an agent provided material that I’ll be able to use once the novel I’m currently working on is ready for submission (which won’t be for a while, that’s for sure).  Lynne Meredith Golodner‘s session on running a successful freelance business was a little off-topic for me, however prodded my mind to remember there is a business end of this writing craft.  The keynote speaker, Karen Dionne, was delightfully inspiring.  Her latest book, “The Killing: Common Denominator” will be out next month, and is an original novel based on the AMC series.   Sylvia Hubbard’s session on social media provided insight on some of the social media I haven’t used effectively.  That should change.  And finally, Dr. Stanley Williams‘ session on irony, goals and sub-plots fed me with some clarity for the novel I’m currently writing.  All in all, it was a beneficial writer’s conference again.

Buddha’s Birthday at Still Point Zen Buddhist Temple (Detroit, MI):  Sunday was the celebration of the Buddha’s birth at Still Point Zen Buddhist Temple.  We were living in St. Clair Shores when we discovered Still Point, and we were regular attendees and members of the temple.  We’re still members, but having moved a little further away six years ago, and now another five miles further from the City, getting down to Detroit for Sunday services has been difficult.  But services like the Buddha’s birthday, the Precept-Taking ceremony, and the evening sitting to honor the Buddha’s enlightenment I intentionally plan to participate.  Sitting is good.  Sitting with a sangha and teacher is so much better.

DSC07232

Ann Arbor Antiquarian Book Fair (Ann Arbor, MI):  This was the 36th annual antiquarian book fair, which is a benefit for the William L. Clements Library, and a first for me.  About a year ago, I was in a thrift store in downtown Mount Clemens, and stumbled upon a copy of A. Edward Newton’s “A Magnificent Farce and Other Diversions of a Book Collector.”  This man was a famous bibliophile in the early years of the Twentieth Century.  After he passed, his collection took nine days to auction off.  After reading it, I’ve become interested in building my library.  But there seems so much more to book collecting that a show like this was a bit overwhelming to a novice like me.  There are so many directions to go.  Yes, prior to this event, I’ve completed my collection of A. Edward Newton books, including the auction guides of his entire library.  And Somerset Maugham’s “The Razor’s Edge” being my favorite book has led me into collecting Maugham’s books.  I did add a volume to my collection today.  However, I filled out the comment card suggesting that at these events a workshop on book collecting would be helpful.

It was a great weekend, covering many interests in my life – comic books, soccer, writing and reading.  To think that today is the Metro Detroit Book & Author Society luncheon is just more awesomeness.

Life is good.

On Saturday, March 29, 2014, I was a guest at the Local Author Fair held at the Plymouth District Library in Plymouth, Michigan.

10152048_10151935396270826_2068472373_n

Twenty-four authors, including myself, set up our tables and greeted the public.  It was an interesting two hours as lovers of books and writers cruised the tables.

For me, this was homecoming and home certainly has changed.

I was raised in Plymouth.  My parents still live in the same house they purchased in 1960 which I grew up in.  During the summers away from Bird Elementary School, my sister and I participated in the summer reading program.  The library was referred to at the time as the Dunning-Hough Library.  It was named after Margaret Dunning who, in 1947, purchased the land and property on Main Street to house the Plymouth branch of the Wayne County Library, and Ed Hough, the second CEO of the Daisy Air Rifle company located in Plymouth,  who created the Hough Kimball Foundation which donated massively to the creation of the library.  It was a single floor building in the 1960’s.  The main entrance fronted Main Street, and the kids section was towards the back.  There was a small bike rack where we could chain our bikes if we rode them up to the library at the back entrance.  I remember wandering into the tall adult shelves, looking for books about hockey – 796.6 if I recall my Dewy Decimal System correctly.

The library has changed massively.  The structure is now two floors and a lower level.  The main entrance is in the back.  And plenty of computers which was unheard of in my day.

I know, I know. A public library is not an independent book store. But public libraries have opened their doors to annual “local author fairs” that feature independent authors and small independent publishing houses from the local area.  Furthermore, Plymouth, like a lot of towns, does not have a book store – big chain or small indie.  The Little Professor which used to be just a block away is long gone.  The library, in many towns, is the only source of books to the community.

It was a fun afternoon stepping back into my past, while celebrating the present.

10155339_10151935396150826_408867847_n

During the month of March, 2014, this is what I read:

Novels:
The Angry Buddhist by Seth Greenland (politics, sex, and murder, and a man trying to rein in his anger through Buddhist meditation)
The Truth by Michael Palin (A serious novel by the Monty Python comedian).

Short Stories:
Indulgence by Susan Perabo (One Story)

Graphic Novels:
The Shadow: The Master Series Volume One (Dynamite Comics)
Dark Nights: The Shadow/Green Hornet (Dynamite Comics)
Pang the Wandering Shaolin Monk Volume Two (Iron Crotch University Press)

Comic Books:
Velvet #4
12 Reasons to Die #6
The Shadow Now #5
Dark Horse Presents #33
The Movement #10

Magazine articles:
One article from The Writer’s Chronicle
One article from bookmarks
Four articles from Bookforum

dsc09631.jpg

Yesterday, I blogged the list of writings I read during the month of January, 2014.  To get caught up, here are the various writings I read during the month of February, 2014.

NOVELS
The Burglar Who Counted the Spoons by Lawrence Block (great fun, as always. Five Stars on Goodreads)
The Haunted Bookshop by Christopher Morley (intrigue & a book store in the early 1900’s. Five Goodreads Stars).

NONFICTION
Promise Land:  My Journey Through America’s Self-Help Culture by Jessica Lamb-Shapiro (Five Stars on Goodreads)

SHORT STORIES
The Messenger Who Did Not Become a Hero by Douglas Watson (One Story, Issue #177)
Little Red by Cate Caldwell (Legends: Summer 2013)
Shiny by Cate Caldwell (Legends: Summer 2013)
Sargasso Cove by Cate Caldwell (Legends: Autumn 2013)
Who Killed Paul Bourne? by Cate Caldwell (Legends: Autumn 2013)
Shelter Roof, Bloody Floor by Jennifer Koch (Write to Woof 2014)

COMIC BOOKS
Quack (Star-Reach) #2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Power Comics (Power Comics) #1, 2, 3
Cobalt Blue (Power Comics) #1
[Yes, waxing nostalgic over those independent comics from the 1970’s]
Velvet (Image Comics) #1, 2, 3
Sex Criminals (Image Comics) #4
SHOOT First (Dark Horse Comics) #3, 4
The Movement (DC Comics) #7, 8, 9
Dark Horse Presents (Dark Horse Comics ) #32
Shadow Year One (Dynamite Comics) #7
Shadow Now (Dynamite Comics) #4

MAGAZINE ARTICLES
4 articles from Bookforum
4 articles from Poets & Writers
3 articles from The Writer
1 article from Writer’s Digest

cropped-dsc00162.jpg

Nick Hornby’s memoir Fever Pitch is about Hornby’s love of soccer and of being a committed fan of the Arsenal Gunners specifically.  I’m an Arsenal fan, though I was not destined to grow up in North London and have it become a part of my genetic make-up.  Hornby’s introspection of being a soccer fan of the team I favor was my introduction to the writer.  It was while reading this book that I discovered Hornby wrote a regular column for Believer magazine titled “Stuff I’ve Been Reading.”  Each month Hornby summarizes the books he purchased and the books he read over the previous month.

Inspired by this, I started doing my own monthly purchasing/reading summary since September, 2012.  Certainly not on the level of deep analysis that Hornby puts in his column, I have privately kept track of the books I purchased and the different writings I’ve read during the course of a given month, with brief commentary.

Well, now that I have this blog here, my thought was to share what writings I’ve read over the previous month for those who are interested, and to engage in conversation, if you feel so moved.  The writings will not just be books, but also short stories, comic books, graphic novels, and the number of articles read within a specific magazine (most of which will be writing-related magazines).  This does not necessarily mean I read the entire book in the given month, but rather, it’s the month I completed reading the book.  Some books just take me longer than thirty days to get through.

After that long introduction, here’s the Writings I’ve Read in January, 2014.

NONFICTION BOOKS
The Art of Intimacy by Stacey D’erasmo
NOVELS
Stop Here by Beverly Gologorsky
Twelfth and Race by Eric Goodman
SHORT STORIES
Running Alone by Halima Marcus (One Story)
Rain by W. Somerset Maugham (The Collected Stories of Somerset Maugham, Volume One)
COMIC BOOKS
The Movement (DC Comics) #5 and 6.
The Shadow Now (Dynamite Comics) #1, 2, 3
Buck Rogers (Hermes) #1, 2, 3
Dark Horse Presents (Dark Horse) #31
Shadow/Green Hornet (Dynamite) #4 and 5.
12 Reasons to Die (Black Mask) #5
Satellite Sam (Image Comics) #1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Quack (Star-Reach) #1
ARTICLES
Writer’s Digest (7 articles)
Poets & Writers (4 articles)
Bookforum (2 articles)
The Writer’s Chronicle (1 article)
The Writer (1 article)

Mike (DoHaeng)

Grey Wolfe Publishing’s Diana Plopa interviewed me for their website.  Here is how it begins:

GWP: Do you have any writing rituals?  If so, what are they?

MK: I don’t have any writing rituals.  All the virgins are safe and won’t be sacrificed to the writing gods on my account.

GWP: What are the most important attributes to remaining sane as a writer?

MK: Is sanity a requirement?  No one told me!  Seriously, cultivate patience; with your own growth as a writer, with the process itself, and in receiving criticism.  Patience will go a long way to maintaining one’s sanity as a writer.

GWP: Are there any occupational hazards to being a writer?

MK: I’m guessing you mean those of us who write fiction.  I’m sure journalists and staff writers for television networks have their hazards.  I can only speak as someone who writes fiction.  And the only occupational hazard I can think of is expecting to have writing financially support yourself and a family.  I find it destructive to my creativity to think about writing strictly for the money.

GWP: Describe your Muse.  How does she/he/it influence your writing process?

MK: I don’t understand.  If “Muse” is to mean what my American Heritage Dictionary defines as a source of inspiration, then that would have to be life itself.  I try to write character-driven prose so people, in general, inspire me, especially those who live against the flow of the status quo.  That’s what inspires me to write. 

One essay shifted my writing and improved my development as a writer.  It was George Orwell’s “Why I Write.”  In it, Orwell identifies the four motives for writing prose which exist in different degrees within each writer.  Those motives are sheer egoism – the “desire to seem clever, to be talked about, to be remembered after death,” etc.; aesthetic enthusiasm – the perception of beauty in the world or in the placement of words in their right arrangement; historical impulse – to record things as they are for the use of posterity; and political purpose – “to push the world in a certain direction, to alter other people’s idea of the kind of society that they should strive after.”  When Orwell wrapped up the essay saying “I cannot say with certainty which of my motives are the strongest, but I know which of them deserve to be followed.  And looking back through my work, I see that it is invariably where I lacked a political purpose that I wrote lifeless books and was betrayed into purple passages, sentences without meaning, decorative adjectives and humbug, generally,” I resonated with that.

Some might say that The Y in Life is a political book, which I don’t fully agree.  It is a book about characters asking questions and the answers revealed or left unanswered.  Questioning life does not leave out the environment within which we live.  In Somerset Maugham’s The Razor’s Edge, the lead character – Larry Darrell – focused on the spiritual.  Though Maugham’s tale occurs during the roaring 20’s and the Depression which sends Larry’s “privileged” friends to financial ruin, Maugham doesn’t include these events into his questioning.  They appear more as a natural force, like a hurricane, which “happens” without questioning the why.  That’s where I wanted to push The Y in Life which, for me, gave me a novel worth writing.

You can continue reading at A Conversation with Michael Kitchen.

DSC01243