The
themes of the 11 essays collected in this issue, What Men Write, What Men
Think, are curious to consider. Men, it seems, write about their fathers,
their heritage, their professions and their cars, not about their mothers,
their wives or their children. Even sex, although a subject that may obsess
some men in conversation and/or fantasy, is paid scant attention by these
essayists. In an issue of all women writers published last year (Issue
No.12, Emerging Women Writers II), the essays were much more eclectic from
an overall, thematic point of view: Husbands, families, mothers, children,
animals (and sex) were fair game. "What does this mean?" a woman colleague
asked at a recent production meeting. "Do men not consider women and children
worthy of writing about? Are women and children (and sex) too difficult
to contemplate in writing?" This issue is certainly not meant to be a representative
sample of men's attitudes and general conflicts and ideas they choose to
ponder, but the question is an interesting one. While deliberations of
sex, women, mothers and families are not central themes, missing too from
this issue is the topic of sports, about which men do constantly obsess
and frequently write.
What Men Write, What Men Think embraces a rich brew of topics, however:
Orman Day's encounters with credit-card companies; Norman Farrell Jr.'s
transition to Japan and his fascination with plant life; J. David Stevens'
mania for driving and storytelling; Robert Vivian's supernatural ruminations
about crows; distinguished short-story writer Peter LaSalle's freezing
of a moment in Manhattan in "The City at Three P.M.: An Essay on Writing."
The spirit of the work men do, having experiences that we translate into
compelling and enlightening prose, is reflected in the "other" professions
of some of the writers: Farrell teaches conversational English in Tokyo;
Vivian is a graduate student playwright from the University of Nebraska;
Orman Day is a public relations consultant and backpacker who has hiked
through 90 countries. Charles Fanning ("I Haven't Been That Far, But I've
Been to Norwood") is an academician whose research encompasses Irish ethnic/immigrant
writing in America; this is his first personal essay about his own Irish-American
heritage. Greg Martin's first book, "Mountain City," from which his essay
("Cutting the Snow") is taken, is forthcoming this spring from North Point
Press.
This issue of Creative Nonfiction also includes the third and final installment
of Madison Smartt Bell's Haitian saga, "Soul in a Bottle." Bell, whose
second novel of a trilogy about the Haitian revolution, titled "Master
of the Crossroads," will soon be published, is but one of our many writers
who achieve excellence in more than one genre. Another is Pulitzer Prize
finalist C.K. Williams, a poet. His bittersweet ruminations about his father
appear in this issue and come from his memoir, "Misgivings," which will
be published later this year.
Although the themes of What Men Write, What Men Think significantly differ
from those in our Emerging Women Writers II issue, what is worth noting
about good narrative nonfiction is not so much what distinguishes the men
writers from the women, but more so, what doesn't. The best of this work
tells a story, defines character, provides (journalistic) information,
allows for reflection and the establishment of a personal voice. The works
of Fanning, Lee Martin ("Traps"), and Kenneth Sherman ("Void and Voice:
Notes from Poland") are especially effective in that classic context.
All of the essays in this and every issue we have published over the past
seven years reflect the kind of work we are soliciting for the Creative
Nonfiction Millennium Award, sponsored by the Bayer Corporation: $2,000
for the best original essay, as well as three fellowships worth approximately
$700 each to the Fifth Annual Mid-Atlantic Creative Nonfiction Summer Writers'
Conference, August 8-13 at Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland.
For the Millennium Award, we are looking for an essay characterized by
the skillful blending of information on topics that unite the arts and
sciences, for reportage that uses dramatic narrative and provides incisive
reflection. All writers are eligible. For the conference fellowships, essays
by all writers on any subject will be considered, but priority will be
given to emerging writers and to writers whose work evokes an ethnically
diverse experience. Write to us for submission information.
The Mid-Atlantic Creative Nonfiction Summer Writers' Conference is devoted
exclusively to the emerging genre of creative nonfiction and offers workshops,
readings, personal manuscript evaluations, and panels on creative nonfiction.
The faculty this year includes Katherine Russell Rich ("The Red Devil:
To Hell with Cancer-and Back"), Susan Hack (Condé Nast Traveler Magazine),
Marita Golden ("A Miracle Every Day: Triumph and Transformation in the
Lives of Single Mothers"), Jo Ann Beard ("The Boys of My Youth"), and Dinty
Moore ("The Accidental Buddhist") and features special guests Edmund Morris,
author of "Dutch" (the controversial new biography of Ronald Reagan) and
William Least Heat-Moon, author of "Blue Highways."
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