My introduction to this year's Writer's in the Attic anthology of stories by Idaho writers. Will be released by The Cabin on December 5.
Necessary Detours
Lately, I’ve been getting into
arguments with my GPS, who insists, among other things, that it is necessary to
drive through, rather than around, Sacramento when we return to Boise from the
coast. Maybe it’s just me, but I’m
pretty sure I detect a little irritation in her voice as she says
“recalculating” whenever I ignore her directions. Overall, though, I’m grateful for her help
with navigation. I am not good at this,
often taking a left turn when I should take a right, driving eastbound when it
should be west, often following the longer distance between where I am and
where I’m going. Writing, of course, is
something else entirely. To navigate the
world with words is to recalculate all the time.
One of the commonest conversations
I have with writing students begins something like this: “I had this idea in my head of wanted I
wanted to say and how I wanted to say it, and I simply couldn’t get it down
right.” This is the main reason writers
abandon drafts. They imagine that
writing should be a straight shot from where they are to where they’re going,
avoiding the inefficiency of detours, much less accidents. But I’m always hoping for accidents. Why else do the hard work of writing if not
for the chance that you’ll find out what you didn’t know you knew? If there was a literary GPS, it would lead us
right off the cliff every time.
I don’t know it for sure, but I
suspect that most of the wonderful stories in this collection began as cars
that their authors drove off the road but refused to abandon. Writing often
demands this kind of stubborn faith in necessary detours, but so does reading;
we learn to expect the unexpected. TheCabin invites you slide into the passenger seat and trust your drivers, some of
southern Idaho’s finest writers, as they navigate this year’s theme: Detours.
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