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On The Table Read Magazine, “the best book magazine in the UK“, author Joel Samberg talks about the inspiration behind his book, Weinerface: Stories, and his creative writing advice.
I interviewed Joel Samberg about his life and career, what inspired him to write Weinerface: Stories, and his creative writing process.
I am a magazine columnist (Connecticut Magazine), regional journalist, novelist, playwright, and passionate dreamer.
Probably when I was a kid. Since my earliest days, so much of what I witnessed, overheard, read in the news, learned in school, or simply wondered about I turned (in my head at first) into books and plays and movies and TV shows. I don’t know why. That’s just the way it was.
I wrote a screenplay when I was 13 years old (a musical western, no less) and sent it to MGM. I turned professional at age 17 as a stringer for my local newspaper.
My first book was a nonfiction assignment from a publisher (it was the publisher’s idea, not mine), and it took about 10 months to complete. That was back in 1998.
My latest is a book of short stories. Now, I have been writing short stories for decades, and this book, Weinerface, comprises 35 of them, some of which I first drafted two decades ago, others two or three years ago, and a number of them just quite recently.
As previously noted, I think of stories all the time. Some are simple, highly-focused ideas not necessarily fitting for a full-length novel. Others are just a little too quirky for a major work of fiction. A book of short stories seemed to be the perfect outlet for these stories.
When to stop. (That’s a problem many authors have, though in this case it has nothing to do with plot, scenes or dialogue the way it does for others, but merely when to put a cap on the number of stories.)
As there are 35 stories, there are 35 protagonists. In about a third of them, real life inspired them. Almost a dozen of the stories are based in some measure on something that happened to me or to someone I know. I really did go to junior high school one morning convinced I would be beaten to a blood pulp by a bully who I had insulted the day before, just like Aaron in “Weinerface,” the title tale in the book My daughter really did fall asleep once where she shouldn’t have, like the girl in ‘Molly in the Morning.’ When my parents met, Mom thought Dad was rich and Dad thought Mom was rich, although both were poor, just like Jacob and Rachel in ‘Manhattan Moon.’ There’s a time-tested writers’ maxim that goes “Write what you know.” I guess that’s what I did.
It’s more about what-if questions than conflicts. For example: What if you met someone who invented a machine that recorded your most embarrassing dreams on video? What if a popular boss got fired simply for mentioning a Viagra commercial? What if someone stole all your clothes during a lunchtime picnic in the middle of the workday? What if you stumbled upon a tree with a button that actually paused time? What if you needed to admit something to your spouse that you really didn’t want to admit? What would you do if you were convinced the world was going to blow up in a week? What if Hitler made it into heaven?
If a story is not loosely based on a real-life event, then it is based on an idea sparked by a random sighting, a comment that was overheard, an extrapolation on a what-if scenario, or an expansion of a conversation with a friend.
Between the publisher’s review, an independent online editing service, and the assistance of a number of beta readers, the book had several editorial passes to try to get it in the best shape possible.
Read a lot. John Steinbeck, Pearl S. Buck, Howard Fast–natural writers of that ilk.
I am currently working on final edits of two novels, Remember Me to Herald Square and Jackie Jester, and will then start a new one called My Several Pearls.
I write to share. As long as a few people are willing to engage, and better than that end up enjoying the experience, then it is well worth the effort.
http://hey-you-never-know.blogspot.com
https://weinerface-stories.blogspot.com/2022/08/coming-soon-from-brw-publishing-company.html
http://hey-you-never-know.blogspot.com
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