Wednesday Apr 24

LippmannSara Sara Lippmann’s stories and essays have appeared in Women Arts Quarterly, The Brooklyner, Our Stories, Word Riot, Jewish Fiction, Slice Magazine, Fourth Genre, Potomac Review, Used Furniture Review and many other publications. Her work has been included in a handful of anthologies and placed on Wigleaf’s list of top 50 [very] short fictions. A freelance writer and editor, she has published reviews, interviews, and articles in GQ, PublishersWeekly, American Baby, PANK, LIT, Kveller, Stymie, Details and elsewhere. She co-hosts the Sunday Salon, a monthly NYC reading series, and lives with her family in Brooklyn.
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Sara Lippmann interview with Meg Tuite

I was riveted throughout "Body Scan" as I am with all of the stories you write, Sara. We've all had that hellish experience of being caught in traffic with so many things going through our heads. There are these multi-levels going on with the narrator, inner and outer dialogue, the kids, her husband, his cell phone and the conversation with her friend, Ruby. The structure of this story is excellent. How do you go about putting together a story like this?

Thanks so much, Meg. I'm thrilled to have Body Scan featured in Connotation Press. I'm glad the structure worked for you. The story started with the body scan porn, with that pivotal moment: when a wife discovers a husband's utter fixation not on average everyday porn but on the naked scans of strangers from airport security machines - where does one go from there? I built it out from that point. Sure, it's a before/after story but instead of that cracking everything open it's also a story of confinement. When I wrote this, I was on a real containment kick, where maybe a window cracks, air rushes in (i.e. conversation from Ruby), but ultimately the story closes back on itself. This is one of those. Maybe that's frustrating to read. The narrator is stuck. Putting her in a car in bumper to bumper traffic made metaphorical sense - it also gives it that boxed effect - which is how I arrived at the structure.
 

The feeling of confinement adds to the tension beautifully, Sara. I have always been drawn to that inside/outside dialogue. What's going on in a character's head and what they're saying out loud doesn't often coincide. And Damn! The Body Scan porn was hysterical and a shock when the narrator pulled that up on the cell phone. I have to ask where the inspiration for this one came from? Unforgettable!!!!

Ha, thanks. I wrote this story last year, soon after the increased security and use of advanced imaging technology machines became protocol at nationwide airports. When was that, Thanksgiving? People were freaking out about the breach of civil liberties and invasion of privacy while traveling, of course, but then all these images were leaked, and suddenly, there was a rash of strip-searched strangers on the Internet. At the time, I was looking at a lot of fetishes (balloons, furries, blow-up dolls, etc) in my stories so this felt like kismet. Certainly, from the point of character it was irresistibly revealing. To draw a man obsessed with anonymous outlines of people, of strangers passing through? Once that thought took I was done.
 

I remember your story with the blow-up doll. Another exceptional story. Do you tend to go with something tactile, an object, first when putting together a story or where does your inspiration usually come from?

I'm not sure. Different things. Sometimes, it's a line in my head that plays on repeat with increased urgency until I figure I better see what it's about. An image salvaged from a dream. Chalk on the sidewalk. This one, as I said, came from body scans. The news. Sure, thematically there is stuff I tend to chew on, that I continue to work through and question. Common bones. But usually material boils down to its staying power. My mind can be a cheap porous cup, so if an idea passes through it as fast as it comes - I'm not great about whipping out a notebook -  I move on. I used to beat myself up, and certainly, I could stand to be more diligent about getting things down - but it's likely that whatever I thought was worth keeping didn't have enough meat. But if something lingers. Or returns. I once wrote a story ten years after one of its sentences first occurred to me - it kept cycling back until I couldn't ignore it. Right now that's happening with character. I have three rather noisy and persistent voices vying for attention, so I've made enough notes to put them into stories, hopefully, eventually. But I also know as soon as I start folding that element into the framework of a story the original substance may change or melt away or become something else entirely. So it's important never to marry the thing as it first appears but to stay open to possibility. I wouldn't call it inspiration so much as curiosity. Why does something grab me? I don't know, but I want to know, so I'll trick myself for long enough to stumble down that path.
 

“Staying open to possibility.” That is the key to inspired writing. I love that you have these three characters working you over. I'm guessing you're not one of those writers who's working just one project at a time. You also write a column at Used Furniture Review and I just read an exciting book review you wrote over at Pank, not to mention hosting the Sunday Salon. How do you manage your writing time?
 
Have we still not figured out how to make the day longer? There's never enough time, and my management skills are lousy. I can be painfully slow - or rather, I spew fast but then shape and whittle and pluck and prune forever - so days never feel terribly productive. My finger constantly rests on the "abort mission" switch, and I've the very real feeling that I've developed adult-onset ADHD - is that possible? - which is a long way of saying I'm all over the place. Juggling. I work when my kids are at school, and a couple nights a week I try to steal some hours when everyone's asleep. That's for everything - writing, editing, freelance stuff, Sunday Salon, and of course, all of my favorite online procrastination vices.
 

What books are you reading at this time?

Mary Karr's memoir, LIT, which I've been visiting in brief spells over a long stretch of time. Laura van den Berg's collection, What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us. A new novel slated for review. Oh, and I'm re-reading The Book of Night Women by Marlon James, who I'm very excited to host at the Sunday Salon in February.
 

Who would you say are your greatest influences in writing?
 
The question of influence always leads me to the question of who made me want to write in the first place. That answer lies in childhood. Early on, I.B. Singer and Malamud turned me on to the magic of storytelling. In high school, Roth's Goodbye, Columbus and Salinger's Nine Stories became Bibles. I decided to major in creative writing after reading Jayne Anne Phillips' Black Tickets first semester freshman year. Then, like a good co-ed the modernists got me drunk on language. Woolf, Joyce, Stein, etc. They remain important. Early Roth and Salinger are constants. But then, I don't know. It changes. There's Tillie Olsen. I'm crazy for the fierce anti-sentimentalism of Richard Yates.
 

WOW! You are speaking my language. I read everything of I. B. Singer and Malamud and “Black Tickets” was my constant companion for a while. When I met J.A. Phillips I almost bowed to her after she read. What projects are you working on at this time?
 
Stories, mostly. The occasional review. Freelance magazine work. Frank Lloyd Wright's Falling Water in LEGOS (if my son lets me help.)
 

Thank you so much, Sara, for your insights and incredible writing! And congratulations on all your Pushcart prize nominations. Well-deserved! We are honored to be featuring your work for the month of January!! Starting off 2012 with a BANG!!!
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