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Short Story Month: Tumbleweed
In his latest collection Tumbleweed (Vehiculé Press), Josip Novakovich crafts short stories with a sharp eye, dry humour, and rhythmic prose. Included in the book are stories about the immigrant experience, seen in the title story in which a Croatian immigrant ends up in a small-town jail in the American Midwest after failing to secure a job; and autofiction that feature animals. Below we share an interview with Josip and an excerpt from his collection.
This Short Story Month, we’re interviewing short story writers every Wednesday, here on the All Lit Up blog.In his latest collection Tumbleweed (Vehiculé Press), Josip Novakovich crafts short stories with a sharp eye, dry humour, and rhythmic prose. Included in the book are stories about the immigrant experience, seen in the title story in which a Croatian immigrant ends up in a small-town jail in the American Midwest after failing to secure a job; and autofiction that feature animals. Below we share an interview with Josip and an excerpt from his collection.
ALU: If you had to describe your collection in nouns only, what would they be?JN: Bohemia, drift, animals, emigration, soccer, fiction, nonfiction.ALU: Who are your favourite short story writers and why?JN: Maupassant because of wonderful plotting. Aimee Bender because of the fantastic imagination and the sense of the absurd, with humorous results. Heinrich von Kleist—each of his stories could be a novel.ALU: What do you like most about the short story as a form?JN: That you can pursue one event, or one moment, one idea, and not beat around the bush. It’s like a conversation with a friend to whom you retell something odd.ALU: Have you ever written a story you would develop into a novel? If so, tell us about it.JN: Yes, my story “Sheepskin” is heavily plotted with reversals and confusion, a story about revenge after the Balkan wars. I ended it abruptly and short changed myself from developing a novel from it. Currently I am writing a short story about a man who loses his soul. I wrote it a long time ago and lost it completely without publishing it. Now I am reconstructing it from memory and it’s taking me to different places than what I remember of it…it’s already 12,000 words and I have a good momentum and ideas for development. It will probably become a novella.* * * Josip Novakovich was a finalist for the 2013 Man Booker International Prize and is a recipient of the Whiting Writers’ Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He has published several short story and narrative essay collections, and one novel (April Fool’s Day). He teaches Creative Writing at Concordia University, Montreal.* * * Thanks to Josip for answering our questions, and to Maya at Vehiculé for making the connection. For more Short Story Month reads, click here.