Enjoy this Q&A with the gifted Stuart Dybek.
Do you consider yourself a regional writer? Aren’t most writers, in some respects, regional writers?
Your question is something like your earlier question about what to call stories that add up into something larger. On one level it is a question about semantics and on another level a question about definitions. In both cases there is critical debate: is something regional by definition limited? Is a novel-in-stories a real hybrid or some bogus sales gimmick? As I said about the latter, it has a long, glorious and seminal literary tradition. As to regionalism, I think if a writer is simply using local color, that is a limitation. But, as you say, original voice and style is often linked to a writer’s relations to place — Faulkner, Sherwood Anderson, Joyce, Dickens, Welty, Bellow, Algren; the list could go on for pages. If those are regional writers, I’d love to be admitted into the club.
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