Monday, March 24, 2025

TBR: If You Say So by Michelle Herman

Established in 2018, TBR [to be read] is a semi-regular, invitation-only interview series with authors of newly released/forthcoming, interesting books.

 

 


Give us your elevator pitch: what’s your book about in 2-3 sentences?

 

If You Say So is a set of true stories about loss and reinvention, longing, loneliness, friendship, community, and family. It’s also about grief, and the way it lives in the body—and joy, and the way it lives in the body too.

 

Which essay did you most enjoy writing? Why? And, which essay gave you the most trouble, and why?

 

“Enjoy” is such a funny word when it comes to writing! (Or is that just me?) I mean, if I’m not writing (something, anything), I feel pretty miserable, so just working on a new essay or story or novel is enjoyable by comparison (my paternal grandma used to say, if I complained about being bored and unhappy, “Go bang your head against the wall”—presumably to make me better appreciate the feeling of not banging my head against the wall—but I digress). Still, I guess I could say that the two essays I most “enjoyed” writing were the one called “Old House” (both because it required me to do research on the turn-of-the-twentieth-century house I’ve lived in for going on four decades—and research with a personal angle is one of my favorite things—and because I wrote it in the months directly following my retirement from full-time university professing, thus wrote pretty joyously all the livelong day) and the one called “On Balance,” because I wrote it very fast and with great certainty, clarity, and ease, which doesn’t happen all that often (and which, come to think of it, is a pretty meta thing to say about this essay).

 

The one that gave me the most trouble was the book’s final and title essay, “If You Say So.” I started writing it in the immediate wake of a close friend’s death, while still in the thick of dealing with it (not just my grief, but all of her belongings and everything else that a death leaves behind), which in itself made it hard to get my arms around (but I felt I had no choice—I had to write it, then and there; I feared that if I didn’t, my heart and brain would explode), but I also had to figure out what it was “really” about, which took a while and a bunch of drafts.

 

Tell us a bit about the highs and lows of your book’s road to publication.

 

I could tell a long version, full of heartbreak, but as I went on at such length in my answer to the last question, I’ll just say this, about the lows: My former literary agent read it and said, “Nope, can’t send out a miscellaneous essay collection! Nobody’s publishing them.” My current literary agent declined to read it at all (“What’s the point?”). And so I sent it out myself, carefully--agonzingly. The “high” in this road is having landed at Galileo Press, where working with my editor, Barrett Warner, has been a dream.

 

What’s your favorite piece of writing advice?

 

If you’re stuck, it’s most likely not a writing problem—it’s a thinking problem.

 

My favorite writing advice is “write until something surprises you.” What surprised you in the writing of this book?

 

I wrote each of these essays separately over a period of about five years. When I put them together—and especially when I read the final one in the context of the others—I was stunned to see the threads that ran through all of them and bound them tightly together. So, not a “miscellaneous collection” at all! When I revised them as a whole, now thinking of them as a whole, I kept that surprise in mind . . . and let myself be surprised along the way, all over again.


What’s something about your book that you want readers to know?

 

This book is a love letter: to my friend Judith—who used to say, “If you say so,” sweetly and utterly insincerely, whenever I said something she didn’t agree with or just didn’t want to hear (which was often)—and to the tight community of serious amateur dancers we were, and I still am, a part of; to my father, who looms as large in my life a decade after his death as he did for the six decades before it; to all the rest of my human family, as well as all the animals (the dog who was supposed to be mine, but who was singularly devoted to my father; the dog who was supposed to be my daughter’s, but was singularly devoted to me, and was my closest companion and only consolation after my father’s death; and all the others—including, most painfully, the pandemic-adopted puppy whose life story is at the heart of the essay “Animal Behavior”) I have considered family; the Victorian-era house that has come to feel like part of me; and, well, to be completely honest, just about all the other things and people that constitute the story of my life. (Except for a few things/people that it’s the opposite of a love letter to, like my high school boyfriend, or a love/hate letter to, like the cigarettes I smoked for fifteen years.)

 

 Inquiring foodies and hungry book clubs want to know: Any food/s associated with your book? (Any recipes I might share?)

 

Oh, my goodness, one of the essays in the book—“Like an Egg”—is all about food (yes, so also a love letter to the objectively disgusting foods of my childhood—the TV dinners and canned ravioli and instant mashed potatoes—and the wonderful ones my grandmother cooked and taught me how to cook, and to learning to cook, and cooking for friends, and now cooking for my mother). I actually had considered including recipes in that essay, but I decided they would have overtaken the essay itself. So I am delighted to offer the recipe here for the “healthy” (it isn’t) pound cake my daughter and I invented together over a quarter of a century ago, inspired by the “plain, unfrosted cake” mentioned in the Betsy-Tacy* books by Maud Hart Lovelace—books that she and I were/are in love with. It’s dense and moist and delicious and sort of healthy, in that it calls for whole wheat instead of white flour.

 

 

 

Michelle and Grace’s Plain, Unfrosted Pound Cake

 

Ingredients

1 ¼ cups good quality butter

2 tsp vanilla

5 large eggs

2 ¾ to 3 cups sugar (depending on just how sweet you want it)

3 cups whole wheat flour

1 tsp baking powder

¼ tsp salt

½ tsp cinnamon

¼ tsp nutmeg

¼ tsp ginger

8 to 10 ounces evaporated milk or canned full-fat coconut milk (see below)

 

-        Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter up a tube pan, springform pan, or bundt cake pan.

-        Let the butter soften so that it’s easy to beat (microwaving on lower power very briefly is OK—just don’t let it liquify).

-        Beat softened butter, vanilla, eggs, and sugar together in a large bowl (I use an immersion blender—I use an immersion blender for everything, always).

-        In a separate bowl, stir together flour, baking powder, salt, and spices.

-        Add the dry mix and the canned milk alternately to the large bowl, beating gently after each addition (you’ll want the batter to be very moist but not soupy; you’ll need at least 8 oz of milk, but after that, proceed carefully, a very little bit at a time, alternating with pinches of the dry mix).

-        Pour into pan and bake. Start checking on it at an hour and five minutes in (wood toothpick-test). It’s never needed more than an hour and fifteen minutes for me, but every oven and kitchen is different.

-        Let cool completely before turning the cake upside down onto a plate from the pan. (Or, if you’re lazy like me, release the sides of a springform pan and just leave the cake in the bottom of the pan.)

-        It’s very good while still warm, but even better, I think, after it’s been in the refrigerator. (I bet it would be better still taken out to a little bench on the top of a hill and shared with your best friend.) (I should admit here that I used to send Grace to elementary school sometimes with nothing but a big hunk of it, wrapped in foil, for lunch [it was full of fiber, in the form of whole wheat flour, and protein, thanks to all those eggs, after all], but that’s probably not the most excellent parenting.)

 

 

*****

 

READ MORE ABOUT THIS AUTHOR: https://michelleherman.com/

 

ORDER THIS BOOK FOR YOUR OWN TBR STACK: https://freegalileo.com/

(but anywhere else books are sold would be fine too J)

 

READ AN ESSAY FROM THIS BOOK, “Armed for a Panic”:

 

https://theamericanscholar.org/armed-for-a-pandemic/

 



* As an adult, my daughter’s constellation of tattoos includes a quite large one of Lois Lenski’s drawing of Betsy and Tacy’s beloved tree—the one Betsy climbs, in the first book, in order to carefully place a dyed-blue Easter egg in a bird’s nest in one of its highest branches, “for” Tacy’s baby sister, who has died. This was my daughter’s introduction to the idea of death—and its aftermath for those who remain. (The nest and blue egg are part of the tattoo too.)

Monday, March 17, 2025

TBR: Lucky Bodies by Marianne Jay Erhardt

Established in 2018, TBR [to be read] is a semi-regular, invitation-only interview series with authors of newly released/forthcoming, interesting books.

 


Give us your elevator pitch: what’s your book about in 2-3 sentences?

 

Lucky Bodies is a collection of essays on motherhood, imagination, and care. The essays range from the personal to the political and include subjects such as Aesop’s Fables, 90s television, mythology, family lore, fairy tales, religion, and Busby Berekly chorus girls. These essays take inventory of what we demand and withhold from mothers. Together, they imagine how we might make and inhabit stories that cultivate an ethic of care.

 

Which essay did you most enjoy writing? Why? And which essay gave you the most trouble, and why?

 

“Blueberry Hill” was the first essay I wrote for this book. I was reading Richard McClosky’s Blueberries for Sal with my son -- 5 or so at the time -- and he asked me why the mother in the book didn’t have a name. We then turned to other storybooks on his shelf and saw that those mothers, too, were nameless. I wrote “Blueberry Hill” as a letter to Sal’s mother. It was the first time I’d written creative nonfiction in years. And I felt a whole world of possibilities open up...how I might explore personal questions through some of the stories that have made me.

 

I struggled with writing “Relentless Healing.” This essay has been many things, including a deep dive into a 1990’s TV show (Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman). I struggled with allowing it to be as odd and focused as it is. The essay itself is interested in what is worth remembering / saving / writing about. In one episode I discuss, the town gets ready for its Founder’s Day celebration and prepares a time capsule. There is a debate about what to include. A bottle of whiskey? A newspaper? Hair clippings from the barber shop? The characters argue. Are these things artifacts or symptoms? As I wrote this section, I realized that this is a question that lives in me every time I sit down to write. Why this? Why this? At present, I think what’s important is the attention, and not the object or subject of that attention. Put anything in the time capsule. It will tell the story.

 

Tell us a bit about the highs and lows of your book’s road to publication.

 

I pitched this book to a number of agents, some of whom loved it but said they couldn’t sell an essay collection. I submitted to different presses and contests and was a finalist for a number of prizes. Along the way, I published many of the essays individually. Last year, I made peace with the fact that this book might never be published as a book, and I was happy enough that a number of the essays had found a home. Soon after, I learned that I won the Iron Horse Prize!

 

What’s your favorite piece of writing advice?

 

At a Tin House Winter Workshop lecture a couple of years ago, Paul Tran said something that I now think of every time I sit down to write: “Write the thing that will set you free and then give it a body.”

 

My favorite writing advice is “write until something surprises you.” What surprised you in the writing of this book?

 

I was surprised at how winning the Iron Horse Prize brought me a clearer vision of the book. I knew what I needed to revise (and I revised a lot!) More importantly, I knew when the book was done. I was shocked to find myself at the end of it!

 

How did you find the title of your book?

 

The word “luck” shows up more than 25 times in the book. At one point in the essay “Luck Now,” there is a 20-year gap in time between a formative teenage experience and my marriage. I wake up next to my husband “many lucky bodies later.” The bodies here are mostly mine -- the versions of me that have had good fortune, or narrow misses, or bad experiences that could have been much worse, and also the things I have worked for and earned but have been dismissed as mere “luck.” The bodies are also the essays themselves. Lucky to be written, published, gathered in a book. (Maybe they don’t feel lucky; I will never know.) For a while, the book was called Lucky Bodies Later but eventually I settled on Lucky Bodies.

 

Inquiring foodies and hungry book clubs want to know: Any food/s associated with your book? (Any recipes I might share?)

 

In the essay “Relentless Healing,” we spend some time in a 1996 television commercial for Kellogg’s Rice Krispy Treats. If you were to make them as they appear in the ad, simply use the standard recipe. Once they are cut and cooled, stay in your kitchen reading and eating them alone. Call out to your family, “These things take time!” When you have had your fill, smudge your face with flour. Sprinkle yourself with water from your kids’ fishtank. Make it look like these treats were a lot of work. Carry the plate into the next room, where you family waits, perpetually hungry.

  

****

 

READ MORE ABOUT THIS AUTHOR: www.mariannejayerhardt.com

 

ORDER THIS BOOK FOR YOUR TBR STACK: https://bookshop.org/p/books/lucky-bodies-essays-marianne-jay-erhardt/22032505?ean=9781682832523

 

READ AN ESSAY FROM THIS BOOK, “You Call That Wild”:

https://oxfordamerican.org/magazine/issue-106/you-call-that-wild

 

 

Monday, March 10, 2025

TBR: Mothers and Other Fictional Characters by Nicole Graev Lipson

Established in 2018, TBR [to be read] is a semi-regular, invitation-only interview series with authors of newly released/forthcoming, interesting books.

  


Give us your elevator pitch: what’s your book about in 2-3 sentences?

 

Mothers and Other Fictional Characters explores the world’s strange and relentless desire to reduce women to stock characters, and how easy it is to find ourselves complicit in this process, until we no longer know what parts of us are real. I mine this territory by writing as intimately and honestly as I possibly can about the ways fiction has infiltrated my lifeas a girl, a young adult, a mother, and a woman at middle ageand by searching the work of my literary foremothers for clues to truer ways of being. In some ways, Mothers and Other Fictional Characters is as much about the subversive power of reading as it is about womanhood.  

 

What boundaries did you break in the writing of this memoir? Where does that sort of courage come from?

 

My whole purpose in writing this book was to break boundaries! The boundaries imposed on women to keep us in our place, the boundaries between the surface stories we tell about ourselves and the messier truths below, the boundaries between our genuine selves and the selves we’ve been conditioned to project.

 

To crack through these boundaries, I knew I had to be as honest about my experiences and internal weather as possible, which often led me into territory considered taboo, especially for women. In one essay, I write about my brief but utterly destabilizing extramarital attraction to a younger man when I hit middle age. In another, I explore the tension of being both an introvert and a mother of three, and my recurring urges to flee my family for solitude; and in another, I write about the difficult chemistry between me and my middle child, whose temperament is so different than mine.

 

These are all things we as women aren’t supposed to feel or admit to. We aren’t supposed to lust after other men when we are happily married; we aren’t supposed to fantasize about abandoning our family; and we aren’t supposed to talk honestly about the difficult aspects of our relationships with our children. But these urges and desires and complexities are precisely what make us human. I’ve tried to show in my book that when a woman stifles her own complexity, she stifles her humanity—which I’d argue, in a patriarchal culture, is precisely the point. In her beautiful blurb, Kelly McMasters describes Mothers and Other Fictional Characters as an “urgent searchlight, shining across the most complicated parts of existing as a multidimensional woman in a binary world.” I love this description so much. This is precisely what I longed to do on every page.


In terms of courage, I have my children to thank for this. Becoming a mother magnified all of the concerns and injustices that had always consumed me, because having children made the stakes more urgent than ever. It was one thing, say, for our culture’s misogynistic beauty standards to turn me against my own body, but the thought of my daughters one day despising their own perfect bodies, or of my son suppressing his tender spirit to adhere to masculine norms, pulled me to the page in whole new way.

 

Tell us a bit about the highs and lows of your book’s road to publication.

 

One of the high points has been the incredible creative community writing and publishing this book helped me find. I began the writing process in a very solitary way—it was just me and a vision and the page, and this could often feel scary and lonely. But over time, working on the book became a portal to incredible friendships and connections with other writers and aspiring authors, both here in Boston where I live, and elsewhere--thanks to the internet, online writing groups, and conferences. I’ve drawn so much comfort and inspiration from these relationships.

 

I wouldn’t necessarily call this a “low,” but one challenge I grappled with was navigating writing about loved ones. My story is so rooted in domestic life and the nuances of family relationships, and it was impossible to tell such a story without conjuring the people who animate the landscape of my daily life: my husband, my children, my parents, and my dearest friends. I wished so often that there were a single hard and fast rule I could follow to ensure I would handle this flawlessly, but really, I just had to feel my way through, making sure at every turn that I’d rendered the people in my life with truthfulness, compassion and kindness. I don’t mean a saccharine or glossed-over sort of kindness, but rather a spirit of deep regard for the humanity, complexity, and struggles of others. I don’t think what we as humans most deeply yearn for is to be seen as perfect. I think we yearn to be seen in all of our complexity and imperfection, and loved nonetheless. It was this type of love that guided my choices on the page.  

 

What’s your favorite piece of writing advice?

 

I’ve recommended Brenda Ueland’s totally charming craft book If You Want to Write to so many fellow writers and aspiring authors over the years. It’s frank, big-hearted and full of helpful wisdom. Ueland wrote the book in 1938, which is miraculous to me because her insights feel so modern. You’ll have to excuse the dated universal male pronouns in my favorite quote from the book, which is: “Everybody is original if he tells the truth, if he speaks from himself. But it must be from his true self, and not from the self he thinks he should be.”

 

This is such simple but profound advice. I know firsthand how easy it is to default to writing from a place of should, which in the end is a pretty dreary place to write from. While I was working on Mothers and Other Fictional Characters, pushing past should to write from a place of what is—in all its messiness and weirdness and beauty and splendor—made the writing process far more interesting and unexpected than it would otherwise have been. And I’m hopeful that this openness of spirit shows up in the writing.  

 

My favorite writing advice is “write until something surprises you.” What surprised you in the writing of this book?

 

As a bookworm and former high school English teacher, I knew that my encounters with literature would be an important part of the book. From the start, there were some writers I knew I’d focus on—like Kate Chopin and Adrienne Rich—because their influence has been so central to my life. But otherwise, the process of weaving in literature was very organic, and I was often surprised by the connections that emerged between my reading life and whatever lived experience I was writing about: Philip Roth shows up in an essay about raising a son. Gwendolyn Brooks shows up in an essay about trying to decide what do with my unused frozen embryos. Michel de Montaigne shows up in an essay about my love for my closest friend Sara. I wasn’t aware how much these writers had shaped my world view until they showed up unannounced in my work!

 

What’s something about your book that you want readers to know?

 

I want readers to know that I wrote the book for them. Over coffee recently, a novelist friend of mine mentioned that he never thinks about his audience when writing. “The moment I picture a reader,” he said, “I start doubting myself, ruining the entire process.” While I was working on Mothers and Other Fictional Characters, my feelings toward my own imagined readers could not have been more different. I wrote with an awareness that my words—like any writer’s words—were only half the story, a tale lying dormant until another human stepped in to give it pulse and meaning. My greatest hope for the book is that it helps readers feel seen, understood, and a little less alone.

 

Inquiring foodies and hungry book clubs want to know: Any food/s associated with your book?

 

I love this question! I had to go back through the book to jog my memory, and a few tasty things do appear in its pages, including cherry wine, birthday cake, mint chocolate chip ice cream, cheese fondue, tostones, hamburgers, macaroni, Runts, lasagna, canned soup, potato chips. It’s dawning on me that I may need to see a nutritionist.

 

*****

 

READ MORE ABOUT THIS AUTHOR: https://nicolegraevlipson.com/

 

ORDER THIS BOOK FOR YOUR OWN TBR STACK: https://bookshop.org/p/books/mothers-and-other-fictional-characters-a-memoir-in-essays-nicole-graev-lipson/21565078?ean=9781797228563

 

READ AN EXCERPT, “Macho Baby”: https://www.thesunmagazine.org/articles/22506-macho-baby

 

 

 

Monday, March 3, 2025

TBR: Locomotive Cathedral by Brandel France de Bravo

Established in 2018, TBR [to be read] is a semi-regular, invitation-only interview series with authors of newly released/forthcoming, interesting books.

 


We don’t expect an elevator pitch from a poet, but can you tell us about your work in 2-3 sentences?

 

Locomotive Cathedral is a collection of poems and short essays that explore resilience in the face of climate change and a global pandemic, race, and the concept of a self, all the while celebrating breath as “baptism on repeat.” Whether inspired by 12th century Buddhist mind training slogans or the one-footed crow, René, who visits me daily, the poems grapple with the tension between the speaker’s resistance to change and her acceptance of it as transformation.

 

Which poem/s did you most enjoy writing? Why?

 

Looking for prompts in a 12th century Buddhist text comprised of 59 “slogans” or aphorisms was a challenge and source of joy. These slogans which aim to help us cultivate mindfulness and compassion, and diminish “self-grasping,” can be wise, funny, and without commentary from scholars, rather puzzling. Nevertheless, I really enjoyed using them as a starting line for poems, not knowing where the finish might be. I’ve linked to the audio of one of them, published in print-only in Conduit magazine: “Slogan 38, Don’t Seek Others’ Pain as the Limbs of Your Own Happiness.” The slogan, which has a slightly surreal title, is simply cautioning against schadenfreude. I decided to seize on the title as an opportunity to talk about the ways in which we/I take pleasure in others’ difficulty or failings, while taking the limbs of the title literally. “Just / look at my backstroke! I'm a water wheel / catching your fall, grinding you into bread.” This poem is one of several in Locomotive Cathedral in which the “I” of the speaker is at a remove from Brandel-the-author (or is it?). It’s a persona poem but the person speaking is unknown to the reader or has never been previously introduced.

 

And which poem/s gave you the most trouble, and why?

 

Locomotive Cathedral contains a number of poems where the “I” of the speaker and the writer are the same, poems replete with autobiography. In these poems, I had to decide what level of honesty and detail was necessary to elevate the writing above storytelling, journaling, sentimentality, or confession which serves to unburden the writer but may be of little benefit to the reader.

 

How did you find the title of your book?  

 

With difficulty! I submitted the book to contests, including the Backwaters Press contest (an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press), where I was awarded “honorable mention” and publication, under various titles. Early on, my manuscript’s title was Take and Give, which alludes to a Tibetan Buddhist practice (tonglen) of breathing in someone’s suffering and using the exhale to send out the antidote to that suffering. Later on, I started submitting the manuscript as either Locomotive Cathedral, or Regard Yourself as a Verb. The latter was the title my manuscript bore when judge Hilda Raz selected it in the Backwaters contest. Raz and/or the readers mentioned in their comments that they didn’t think the title was the best fit for the collection. The University of Nebraska Press was happy to have me swap out Regard Yourself as a Verb for Locomotive Cathedral, which they felt was going to be easier to develop cover art for.

 

The title Locomotive Cathedral comes from an essay in the collection called Now You Don’t See It, Now You Do,” which is loosely about my distrust of narrative and linearity:

 

Take a tragedy, a system, a movement, a moment and give it an ending. Give it a terminus in history. Build a station around it. Let it be a locomotive cathedral of steel and glass. Let it be a monument to meaning with marble statuary, a fountain, and geraniums.

 

My friend, the wonderful poet Jennifer Martelli, is the person who suggested Locomotive Cathedral as a title, and I immediately realized that this combination of words in many ways captures the tension the book seeks to mine: between the very human desire for stasis and eternity as symbolized by the “cathedral” (and in some ways, by poetry), and the perpetual motion of transformation. The “locomotive” of the title stands in for the wondrous churn of change and exchange that defines companionship, marriage, and ceding our place on earth. Locomotive Cathedral opens with a quote from the founder of modern chemistry, Antoine Lavoiser that says: “Nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed.” The book closes with a poem about my one-footed crow, the last line of which is: “Not dying, but molting.”

 

*****

 

READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK: https://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/the-backwaters-press/9781496240088/locomotive-cathedral/

 

BUY THIS BOOK FOR YOUR OWN TBR STACK: Bookshop.org

 

LISTEN TO A POEM: https://www.conduit.org/audio (Recording is the third one down.)

 

 

 

Work-in-Progress

DC-area author Leslie Pietrzyk explores the creative process and all things literary.